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uucp Options
------------

   The following options may be given to `uucp'.

`-c'
`--nocopy'
     Do not copy local source files to the spool directory.  If they are
     removed before being processed by the `uucico' daemon, the copy
     will fail.  The files must be readable by the `uucico' daemon, and
     by the invoking user.

`-C'
`--copy'
     Copy local source files to the spool directory.  This is the
     default.

`-d'
`--directories'
     Create all necessary directories when doing the copy.  This is the
     default.

`-f'
`--nodirectories'
     If any necessary directories do not exist for the destination file
     name, abort the copy.

`-R'
`--recursive'
     If any of the source file names are directories, copy their
     contents recursively to the destination (which must itself be a
     directory).

`-g grade'
`--grade grade'
     Set the grade of the file transfer command.  Jobs of a higher
     grade are executed first.  Grades run `0' to `9', `A' to `Z', `a'
     to `z', from high to low.  See When to Call.

`-m'
`--mail'
     Report completion or failure of the file transfer by sending mail.

`-n user'
`--notify user'
     Report completion or failure of the file transfer by sending mail
     to the named user on the destination system.

`-r'
`--nouucico'
     Do not start the `uucico' daemon immediately; merely queue up the
     file transfer for later execution.

`-j'
`--jobid'
     Print the jobid on standard output.  The job may be later
     cancelled by passing this jobid to the `-kill' switch of `uustat'.
     See Invoking uustat.

     It is possible for some complex operations to produce more than one
     jobid, in which case each will be printed on a separate line.  For
     example
          uucp sys1!~user1/file1 sys2!~user2/file2 ~user3
     will generate two separate jobs, one for the system `sys1' and one
     for the system `sys2'.

`-W'
`--noexpand'
     Do not prepend remote relative file names with the current
     directory.

`-t'
`--uuto'
     This option is used by the `uuto' shell script; see *Note Invoking
     uuto::.  It causes `uucp' to interpret the final argument as
     `system!user'.  The file(s) are sent to `~/receive/USER/LOCAL' on
     the remote system, where USER is from the final argument and LOCAL
     is the local UUCP system name.  Also, `uucp' will act as though
     `--notify user' were specified.

`-x type'
`--debug type'
`-I file'
`--config file'
`-v'
`--version'
`--help'
     See Standard Options.