Provided by: dacs_1.4.40-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       dacsemail - Simple outgoing email agent

SYNOPSIS

       dacsemail [-bcc addr] [{-bf | --bodyfile} path] [{-bs | --bodystring} string] [-cc addr]
                 [-ct value] [{-f | --from} from] [-h | --help] [-header name value]
                 [{-mailer | -mta} path] [{-mailer-flags | -mta-flags} string] [-p | --prompt]
                 [-save path] [{-s | --subject} subject] [-sender sender] [{-t | --to} addr]
                 [-transform] [-v | --verbose] [-var name value]

       dacsemail --version

DESCRIPTION

       This program is part of the DACS suite.

       The dacsemail utility is a simple agent for sending email messages. It is a stand-alone
       program that neither accepts the usual DACS command line options (dacsoptions[1]) nor
       accesses any DACS configuration files.

       dacsemail constructs an RFC 822[2] format message but does not transmit it. It requires an
       external mailer, such as sendmail(8)[3], to transfer the message. The mailer command and
       its arguments can be specified on the dacsemail command line (see -mailer) or at build
       time (see dacs.install(7)[4]).

OPTIONS

       If the source for the message body is not specified on the command line, it will be read
       from the standard input. At least one recipient must be specified using -t, -cc, or -bcc.

       -bcc addr
           Send the message to the undisclosed recipient address addr. It is the responsibility
           of the mailer to delete these recipient addresses before transmitting the message.
           This flag may be repeated.

       -bf path
       --bodyfile path
           Read the message body from path. If path is -, the standard input is read.

       -bs string
       --bodystring string
           Use string as the message body.

       -cc addr
           Send the message to recipient addr as a carbon copy. This flag may be repeated.

       -ct value
           Add a Content-type header of MIME type value to the message. If value is
           multipart/alternative, an appropriate boundary variable will be created, unless one
           has already been specified on the command line with the -var flag. It is assumed that
           the message body has already been correctly formatted for this MIME type, or will be
           after it has been transformed (see -transform).

       -f from
       --from from
           Use from as the value of the message's From header.

       -h
       --help
           Print usage information and then exit.

       -header name value
           Add a message header named name with value value. This flag should only be used for
           headers that do not have specific flags (-t, -ct, -f, and so on).

       -mailer path
       -mta path
           Use the message transfer agent command path (a full pathname) instead of the
           configured program. This program must read the message from its standard input and
           extract the list of recipients from the message's To, Cc, and Bcc headers. (If such a
           mailer is unavailable, it will be necessary to write a small program to wrap a mailer
           and provide the required interface to dacsemail.) The default is to run sendmail(8)[3]
           with its -t flag.

       -mailer-flags string
       -mta-flags string
           Regardless of the mailer, use string for its command line flags.

       -p
       --prompt
           Just before the message is to be sent, display it (to stderr) and wait for the user to
           respond to a prompt. At the prompt, the user may abort the message or allow it to be
           sent.

       -save path
           Just before sending (or prompting), write a copy of the outgoing message to path,
           replacing any previous contents of the file.

       -s subject
       --subject subject
           Set the message's Subject header to subject.

       -sender sender
           Set the message's Sender header to sender.

       -t addr
       --to addr
           Add addr as a "To" recipient. This flag may be repeated.

       -transform
           The message body, regardless of how it is specified, is filtered through the DACS
           transformation function. Please refer to dacs_transform(8)[5] for details. No access
           control rules may be associated with any transformation; i.e., they are all
           unconditional. A similar effect can be obtained by piping the output of
           dacstransform(1)[6] into dacsemail.

       -v
       --verbose
           Enable verbose output for debugging.

       --version
           Display the program's version information and then exit.

       -var name value
           Create a variable[7] named name set to value for the transform function. The
           variable's value can be referenced within the message body in the DACS namespace as
           ${DACS::name}. The variable must not already be defined.

EXAMPLES

       Suppose myfile contains the following text:

           <!--DACS expand="*" -->
           This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

           --${DACS::boundary}
           Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
           Content-Disposition: inline
           Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

           Hello, ${DACS::user}!

           --${DACS::boundary}
           Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
           Content-Disposition: inline
           Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

           <p>
           <font color="red">Hello, ${DACS::user}!</font>
           </p>
           --${DACS::boundary}--
           <!--DACS end="*" -->

       The following command might be used to send a message with a multipart/alternative
       structured body:

           % dacsemail -ct multipart/alternative -f auggie@example.com \
                 -t harley@example.com -s "Hello" -transform -var user Auggie -bf myfile

       The resulting message will look something like the following:

           To: harley@example.com
           From: auggie@example.com
           Subject: Hello
           Content-type: multipart/alternative; boundary="_----------=_03885942562898683484"
           Date: Wed, 07 Apr 2010 16:48:41 -0700 (PDT)
           Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
           X-mailer: DACS 1.4.24a

           This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

           --_----------=_03885942562898683484
           Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
           Content-Disposition: inline
           Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

           Hello, Auggie!

           --_----------=_03885942562898683484
           Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
           Content-Disposition: inline
           Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

           <p>
           <font color="red">Hello, Auggie!</font>
           </p>

           --_----------=_03885942562898683484--

FILES

       None.

DIAGNOSTICS

       The program exits 0 if everything was fine, 1 if an error occurred. Error messages are
       printed to stderr. Errors and routine messages from the mailer are recorded wherever they
       are normally logged, outside of DACS

BUGS

       This program's primary purpose is for testing DACS functionality that is needed for
       internal purposes. No significant improvements are envisioned. You could throw a rock and
       hit a better email agent.

SEE ALSO

       dacs.exprs(5)[8], dacs.install(7)[4], dacs_transform(8)[5], sendmail(8)[3]

AUTHOR

       Distributed Systems Software (www.dss.ca[9])

COPYING

       Copyright © 2003-2018 Distributed Systems Software. See the LICENSE[10] file that
       accompanies the distribution for licensing information.

NOTES

        1. dacsoptions
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.1.html#dacsoptions

        2. RFC 822
           http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt

        3. sendmail(8)
           https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=sendmail&apropos=0&sektion=8&manpath=FreeBSD+10.3-RELEASE&format=html

        4. dacs.install(7)
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.install.7.html#configure_options

        5. dacs_transform(8)
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_transform.8.html

        6. dacstransform(1)
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacstransform.1.html

        7. a variable
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.exprs.5.html#variable_syntax

        8. dacs.exprs(5)
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.exprs.5.html#transform

        9. www.dss.ca
           http://www.dss.ca

       10. LICENSE
           http://dacs.dss.ca/man/../misc/LICENSE