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How to use the DRI Mail/FTP Server(See also: Overview)The Digital Resource Institute's Mail/FTP Server can be reached by anonymous FTP at bruno.cs.colorado.edu or digital.resource.org. Alternatively, the server can be reached via electronic mail at "infosrv@bruno.cs.colorado.edu" or "infosrv@digital.resource.org". If your mailer doesn't understand domain addresses, try a nearby gateway like "uunet". Currently, the archives available are the CCITT Blue Book, plus some miscellaneous software for easy access to these documents. There are several files available to help you find your way around this server. The file pub/standards/ccitt/conditions.txt describes the conditions under which this archive server operates. The file pub/standards/ccitt/formats explains the formats available for the various standards documents. The file pub/standards/ccitt/1988/blue.book.org explains the organization of the Blue Book directories and file naming conventions. The file pub/standards/INDEX contains a list of files in the archives (but no description of the various documents). It is about 146k bytes long, so you may want to retrieve the compressed version of this file (INDEX.Z), which is only about 26k bytes long. We suggest that you start by retrieving conditions.txt and formats, and optionally blue.book.org and/or INDEX.Z.
To access the server via anonymous FTP, login as user "anonymous",
and specify your user@hostname for the passwd. You can then change
directories using "cd
The remainder of the current help file contains instructions on how
to use the mail server interface.
When the Mail Server receives a message, it reads the mail headers
to determine the requester's address. If a "Reply-To:" header is
found, the indicated address is used. If not, it uses the address
as specified in the "From:" header.
The message body is scanned for server commands. Every line in the
message should contain a valid server command. NOTE: All commands
are in the body of the message, not in the subject. The Subject:
field is ignored by the server.
A report is sent to you by return mail if there are any errors present
in the request. Any requests will be handled as soon as the load
of the server system permits.
Files larger than 64K will be automatically split into 64K chunks
before sending, so mailers don't die. Alternatively, you can use
the LIMIT command to specify the maximum size of mail. (Described
below).
The mail server is still under development. Things may change in
the near future.
The following commands are understood by the server:
NOTE: binary files (including tar files and compressed files) must
be sent with either UUENCODE or BTOA encoding, or else the data will
be garbled during transmission. Infosrv knows that it needs to send
tar, compressed, and zoo files uuencoded, but encoding must be explicitly
requested for other binary files (such as object code).
Multiple items may be specified with one SEND command. NOTE:
the names of the
Packages sent in "shar" format require /bin/sh to unpack.
This server evolved from the MultiHouse Mail Server, written by Johan
Vromans
For questions, information, bug reports, and remarks, contact:
Dept. of Computer Science Univ. of Colorado - Boulder Boulder, CO 80309 (303) 492-3902 Internet: schwartz@cs.colorado.edu
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