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VACATION(1)		    General Commands Manual		   VACATION(1)

NAME
       vacation	-- return "I am	not here" indication

SYNOPSIS
       vacation	-i [-r interval]
       vacation	-l
       vacation	-x
       vacation	[-a alias] [-c ccaddr] [-d] [-f	db] [-m	msg] [-j] [-z] login

DESCRIPTION
       vacation	returns	a message to the sender	of a message telling them that
       you  are	 currently  not	 reading  your mail.  The intended use is in a
       .forward	file.  For example, your .forward file might have:

	     \eric, "|/usr/bin/vacation	-a allman eric"

       which would send	messages to you	(assuming your login  name  was	 eric)
       and reply to any	messages for "eric" or "allman".

       Available options:

       -a alias
	       Handle  messages	for alias in the same manner as	those received
	       for the user's login name. Using	-a  alias  multiple  times  is
	       possible.

       -c ccaddr
	       Copy the	vacation messages to ccaddr.

       -d      Print messages to stderr	instead	of syslog.

       -f db   Uses db as the database file.

       -m msg  Uses msg	as the message file.

       -j      Reply to	the message even if our	address	cannot be found	in the
	       "To:"  or  "Cc:"	 headers.   This  option is very dangerous and
	       should be used with extreme care.

       -z      Set the envelope	sender of the reply message to "<>".

       -i      Initialize the vacation database	files.	It should be used  be-
	       fore you	modify your .forward file.

       -r      Set  the	 reply	interval to interval days.  The	default	is one
	       week.  An interval of "0" means that a reply is	sent  to  each
	       message,	 and  an interval of "infinite"	(actually, any non-nu-
	       meric character)	will never  send  more	than  one  reply.   It
	       should  be  noted that intervals	of "0" are quite dangerous, as
	       it allows mailers to get	into "I	am on vacation"	loops.

       -x      Reads a list of addresses from standard input,  one  per	 line,
	       and adds	them to	the vacation database.	Mail coming from these
	       excluded	 addresses will	not get	a reply.  Whole	domains	can be
	       excluded	using the syntax "@domain".

       -l      Print the contents of the vacation database  files.   For  each
	       entry,  the  address the	reply has been sent to and the associ-
	       ated time will be printed to standard output.

       When started without arguments, vacation	will guide  the	 user  through
       the configuration process.

       No message will be sent unless login (or	an alias supplied using	the -a
       option)	is  part of either the "To:" or	"Cc:" headers of the mail.  No
       messages	 from  "???-REQUEST",  "Postmaster",  "UUCP",	"MAILER",   or
       "MAILER-DAEMON" will be replied to (where these strings are case	insen-
       sitive)	 nor   is   a  notification  sent  if  a  "Precedence:	bulk",
       "Precedence:  list",  "Precedence:   junk",   "X-Spam-Flag:   yes"   or
       "Auto-submitted:	 (something  other  than  no)" line is included	in the
       mail headers.  The people who have sent you messages are	maintained  as
       a db(3) database	in the file .vacation.db in your home directory.

       vacation	expects	a file .vacation.msg, in your home directory, contain-
       ing  a  message to be sent back to each sender.	It should be an	entire
       message (including headers).  For example, it might contain:

	     From: eric@CS.Berkeley.EDU	(Eric Allman)
	     Subject: I	am on vacation
	     Delivered-By-The-Graces-Of: The Vacation program
	     Precedence: bulk

	     I am on vacation until July 22.  If you have something urgent,
	     please contact Keith Bostic <bostic@CS.Berkeley.EDU>.
	     --eric

       Any occurrence of the string $SUBJECT in	.vacation.msg will be replaced
       by the subject of the message that triggered the	vacation program.

       vacation	reads the incoming message from	standard input,	 checking  the
       message	headers	 for  either  the  Unix	"From" line or a "Return-Path"
       header to determine the sender.	If both	are present  the  sender  from
       the  "Return-Path"  header  is  used.  Sendmail(8) includes this	"From"
       line automatically.

       Fatal errors, such as calling vacation  with  incorrect	arguments,  or
       with  non-existent  logins, are logged on the standard error output and
       in the system log file, using syslog(3).

DIAGNOSTICS
       The vacation utility exits 0 on success,	and >0 if an error occurs.

FILES
       ~/.vacation.db	database file
       ~/.vacation.msg	message	to send
       ~/.forward

SEE ALSO
       aliases(5), sendmail(8),	syslogd(8)

HISTORY
       The vacation command appeared in	4.3BSD.

AUTHOR
       vacation	was developed by Eric Allman and the University	of California,
       Berkeley	in 1983.
       This version is maintained by Marco d'Itri <md@linux.it>	 and  contains
       code  taken from	the three free BSD and some patches applied to a linux
       port.

Linux				 June 15, 2003			   VACATION(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=vacation&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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