send-nntp - Send Usenet articles to remote sites
send-nntp [-d]
sitename[:[port@]hostname]
[sitename[:[port@]hostname] ...]
send-nntp processes the batch files written by innd to send Usenet
articles to remote NNTP sites. The sites to be fed are specified by giving
"sitename:hostname" pairs on the command
line. The sitename is the label the site has in the newsfeeds
file, the hostname is the real hostname of the remote site, a FQDN
(Fully Qualified Domain Name). Normally, the sitename and the
hostname are the same, and as such don't have to be specified as
"sitename:hostname" pairs but just as
"sitename".
send-nntp starts innxmit to send the articles to
remote sites. By default, NNTP port 119 is used to
connect to remote sites. In case another port should be used, it has to be
prepended to hostname in a syntax like
"sitename:port@hostname".
The batch files generated by send-nntp for a given site is
named sitename in the pathoutgoing directory. To prevent batch
file corruption, shlock(1) is used ensure these files are not
processed by two running instances in parallel.
- -d
- The -d flag causes send-nntp to send output to stdout rather
than the send-nntp.log log files in pathlog.
You should probably not use send-nntp, but innfeed, or if that is
not possible, nntpsend. The usual flags for a batch file for
send-nntp are "Tf,Wfm" in
newsfeeds.
Rewritten into POD by Julien Elie.
innxmit(8), newsfeeds(5), nntpsend(8).