innxbatch(8) - Linux man page
Name
innxbatch - send xbatched Usenet articles to a remote NNTP serverSynopsis
innxbatch [ -D ] [ -t timeout ] [ -T timeout ] [ -v ] host file ...Description
Each file is removed after it has been successfully transferred.
If a communication error such as a write(2) failure, or an unexpected reply from the remote server occurs, innxbatch will stop sending and leave all remaining files untouched for later retry.
Options
- -t seconds
- Innxbatch normally blocks until the connection is made. To specify a timeout on how long to try to make the connection, use the ''-t'' flag.
- -T seconds
- To specify the total amount of time that should be allowed for article transfers, use the ''-T'' flag.
The default is to wait until an I/O error occurs, or all the articles have been transferred. If the ''-T'' flag is used, the time is checked just before each article is started; it will not abort a transfer that is in progress. - -v
- Upon exit, innxbatch reports transfer and CPU usage statistics via syslog(3). If the ''-v'' flag is used, they will also be printed on the standard output.
- -D
- Use the ''-D'' flag to print debugging information on standard error. This will show the protocol transactions between innxbatch and the NNTP server on the remote host.
Examples
A sample newsfeeds(5) entry to produce appropriate xbatch files (thanks to Karsten Leipold <poldi@dfn.de>):nase\
:*\
:Tc,Wnb\
:/batcher \
-p "( >\
/nase.\$\$)" \
nase.do.mainA sample script to invoke innxbatch(8) is:
#!/bin/sh
## SH script to send xbatches for a site, wrapped around innxbatch
## Invocation:
## sendxbatches.sh <sitename> <hostname> <xbatch file name> ...
if [ $# -le 3 ]
then
echo "usage: $0 <sitename> <hostname> <xbatch file name>"
exit 1
fi
. <pathbin in inn.conf>/innshellvars
site="$1"; host="$2"; shift; shift
ctlinnd flush "$site" \
&& sleep 5 \
&& exec $NEWSBIN/innxbatch -v -D "$host" $*