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uux(1)                                                                                                uux(1)



NAME
       uux - Remote command execution over UUCP

SYNOPSIS
       uux [ options ] command

DESCRIPTION
       The uux command is used to execute a command on a remote system, or to execute a command on the local
       system using files from remote systems.  The command is not  executed  immediately;  the  request  is
       queued until the uucico (8) daemon calls the system and executes it.  The daemon is started automati-cally automatically
       cally unless one of the -r or --nouucico options is given.

       The actual command execution is done by the uuxqt (8) daemon.

       File arguments can be gathered from remote systems to the execution system, as  can  standard  input.
       Standard output may be directed to a file on a remote system.

       The  command  name  may  be preceded by a system name followed by an exclamation point if it is to be
       executed on a remote system.  An empty system name is taken as the local system.

       Each argument that contains an exclamation point is treated as naming a file.  The system  which  the
       file  is  on  is  before the exclamation point, and the pathname on that system follows it.  An empty
       system name is taken as the local system; this must be used to transfer a file  to  a  command  being
       executed on a remote system.  If the path is not absolute, it will be appended to the current working
       directory on the local system; the result may not be meaningful on the remote system.  A pathname may
       begin with ~/, in which case it is relative to the UUCP public directory (usually /usr/spool/uucppub-lic /usr/spool/uucppublic
       lic or /var/spool/uucppublic) on the appropriate system.  A pathname may begin with ~name/, in  which
       case it is relative to the home directory of the named user on the appropriate system.

       Standard  input  and  output  may  be redirected as usual; the pathnames used may contain exclamation
       points to indicate that they are on remote systems.  Note that the  redirection  characters  must  be
       quoted  so that they are passed to uux rather than interpreted by the shell.  Append redirection (>>)
       does not work.

       All specified files are gathered together into a single directory before  execution  of  the  command
       begins.  This means that each file must have a distinct base name.  For example,
            uux 'sys1!diff sys2!~user1/foo sys3!~user2/foo >!foo.diff'
       will fail because both files will be copied to sys1 and stored under the name foo.

       Arguments may be quoted by parentheses to avoid interpretation of exclamation points.  This is useful
       when executing the uucp command on a remote system.

       A request to execute an empty command (e.g., uux sys!)  will create a poll  file  for  the  specified
       system.

       The exit status of uux is one of the codes found in the header file sysexits.h.  In particular, EX_OK
       ( 0 ) indicates success, and EX_TEMPFAIL ( 75 ) indicates a temporary failure.

OPTIONS
       The following options may be given to uux.

       -, -p, --stdin
            Read standard input and use it as the standard input for the command to be executed.

       -c, --nocopy
            Do not copy local files to the spool directory.  This is  the  default.   If  they  are  removed
            before being processed by the uucico (8) daemon, the copy will fail.  The files must be readable
            by the uucico (8) daemon, as well as the by the invoker of uux.

       -C, --copy
            Copy local files to the spool directory.

       -l, --link
            Link local files into the spool directory.  If a file can not be linked because it is on a  dif-ferent different
            ferent device, it will be copied unless one of the -c or --nocopy options also appears (in other
            words, use of --link switches the default from --nocopy to --copy).  If the  files  are  changed
            before  being  processed by the uucico (8) daemon, the changed versions will be used.  The files
            must be readable by the uucico (8) daemon, as well as by the invoker of uux.

       -g grade, --grade grade
            Set the grade of the file transfer command.  Jobs of a higher grade are executed first.   Grades
            run 0 ... 9 A ... Z a ... z from high to low.

       -n, --notification=no
            Do not send mail about the status of the job, even if it fails.

       -z, --notification=error
            Send mail about the status of the job if an error occurs.  For many uuxqt daemons, including the
            Taylor UUCP uuxqt, this is the default action; for  those,  --notification=error  will  have  no
            effect.   However,  some uuxqt daemons will send mail if the job succeeds unless the --notifica-tion=error --notification=error
            tion=error option is used, and some other uuxqt daemons will not send  mail  if  the  job  fails
            unless the --notification=error option is used.

       -r, --nouucico
            Do  not start the uucico (8) daemon immediately; merely queue up the execution request for later
            processing.

       -j, --jobid
            Print jobids on standard output.  A jobid  will  be  generated  for  each  file  copy  operation
            required  to  perform the operation.  These file copies may be cancelled by passing the jobid to
            the --kill switch of uustat (1), which will make the execution impossible to complete.

       -a address, --requestor address
            Report job status to the specified e-mail address.

       -x type, --debug type
            Turn on particular debugging types.  The following types are recognized: abnormal,  chat,  hand-shake, handshake,
            shake,  uucp-proto,  proto, port, config, spooldir, execute, incoming, outgoing.  Only abnormal,
            config, spooldir and execute are meaningful for uux.

            Multiple types may be given, separated by commas, and the --debug  option  may  appear  multiple
            times.   A number may also be given, which will turn on that many types from the foregoing list;
            for example, --debug 2 is equivalent to --debug abnormal,chat.

       -I file, --config file
            Set configuration file to use.  This option may not be available, depending  upon  how  uux  was
            compiled.

       -v, --version
            Report version information and exit.

       --help
            Print a help message and exit.

EXAMPLES
       uux -z - sys1!rmail user1
       Execute the command ``rmail user1'' on the system sys1, giving it as standard input whatever is given
       to uux as standard input.  If a failure occurs, send a message using mail (1).

       uux 'diff -c sys1!~user1/file1 sys2!~user2/file2 >!file.diff'
       Fetch the two named files from system sys1 and system sys2 and execute diff  putting  the  result  in
       file.diff  in  the current directory.  The current directory must be writable by the uuxqt (8) daemon
       for this to work.

       uux 'sys1!uucp ~user1/file1 (sys2!~user2/file2)'
       Execute uucp on the system sys1 copying file1 (on system sys1) to sys2.  This illustrates the use  of
       parentheses for quoting.

RESTRICTIONS
       The  remote  system  may not permit you to execute certain commands.  Many remote systems only permit
       the execution of rmail and rnews.

       Some of the options are dependent on the capabilities of the uuxqt (8) daemon on the remote system.

SEE ALSO
       mail(1), uustat(1), uucp(1), uucico(8), uuxqt(8)

BUGS
       Files can not be referenced across multiple systems.

       Too many jobids are output by --jobid, and there is no good way to cancel a local execution requiring
       remote files.

AUTHOR
       Ian Lance Taylor (ian@airs.com)



                                              Taylor UUCP 1.07                                        uux(1)

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