Node:dot.biffrc, Previous:Configuring comsatd, Up:comsatd
By default, when a notification arrives, comsatd
prints subject,
from headers and the first five lines from the new message to the user's
tty. The user is allowed to change this behavior by using his own
configuration file. This file should be located in the user's home
directory and should be named .biffrc
. It must be owned by the
user and have its permissions bits set to 0600. (Please note,
that the use of per-user configuration files may be disabled, by
specifying allow-biffrc no
in the main configuration file, see
see Configuring comsatd).
The .biffrc
file consists of a series of statements. Each
statement occupies one line and defines an action to be taken upon
arrival of a new mail. Very long lines may be split using \
as
the last character on the line. As usual, comments may be introduced with
#
character.
The actions specified in .biffrc
file are executed in turn.
The following actions are defined:
In the description above, string denotes any sequence of
characters. This sequence must be enclosed in a pair of double-quotes,
if it contains whitespace characters. The \
character inside a
string starts a C escape sequence. Following meta-characters may be
used in strings:
name
.
Dump to the user's terminal the contents of From
and
Subject
headers followed by at most 5 lines of message body.
echo "Mail to \a$u@$h\a\n---\n\ From: $H{from}\n\ Subject: $H{Subject}\n\ ---\n\ $B(,5)\ ---\n"
Produce a bell, then pop up the xmessage window on display :0.0 with
the text formatted in the same manner as in the previous example.
beep exec /usr/X11R6/bin/xmessage \ -display :0.0 -timeout 10 "Mail to $u@$h \n---\n\ From: $H{from}\n\ Subject: $H{Subject}\n\ ---\n\ $B(,5)\ ---\n"