200 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
200 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Blat v3.2.12 (build : Dec 4 2015 19:32:55)
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32-bit Windows, Full, Unicode
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Windows console utility to send mail via SMTP or post to usenet via NNTP
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by P.Mendes,M.Neal,G.Vollant,T.Charron,T.Musson,H.Pesonen,A.Donchey,C.Hyde
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http://www.blat.net
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syntax:
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Blat <filename> -to <recipient> [optional switches (see below)]
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Blat -SaveSettings -f <sender email addy> -server <server addr>
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[-port <port>] [-try <try>] [-profile <profile>]
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[-u <login id>] [-pw <password>]
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or
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Blat -install <server addr> <sender's addr> [<try>[<port>[<profile>]]] [-q]
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Blat -profile [-delete | "<default>"] [profile1] [profileN] [-q]
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Blat -h
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-------------------------------- Installation ---------------------------------
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-SaveSettings : store common settings to the Windows Registry. Takes the
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same parameters as -install, and is only for SMTP settings.
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-install[SMTP|NNTP|POP3|IMAP] <server addr> <sender email addr> [<try n times>
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[<port> [<profile> [<username> [<password>]]]]]
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: set server, sender, number of tries and port for profile
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(<try n times> and <port> may be replaced by '-')
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port defaults are SMTP=25, NNTP=119, POP3=110, IMAP=143
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default profile can be specified with a '-'
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username and/or password may be stored to the registry
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order of options is specific
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use -installNNTP for storing NNTP information
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use -installPOP3 for storing POP3 information
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(sender and try are ignored, use '-' in place of these)
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use -installIMAP for storing IMAP information
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(sender and try are ignored, use '-' in place of these)
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--------------------------------- The Basics ----------------------------------
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<filename> : file with the message body to be sent
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if your message body is on the command line, use a hyphen (-)
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as your first argument, and -body followed by your message
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if your message will come from the console/keyboard, use the
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hyphen as your first argument, but do not use -body option.
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-of <file> : text file containing more options (also -optionfile)
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-to <recipient> : recipient list (also -t) (comma separated)
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-tf <file> : recipient list filename
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-cc <recipient> : carbon copy recipient list (also -c) (comma separated)
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-cf <file> : cc recipient list filename
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-bcc <recipient>: blind carbon copy recipient list (also -b)
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(comma separated)
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-bf <file> : bcc recipient list filename
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-maxNames <x> : send to groups of <x> number of recipients
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-ur : set To: header to Undisclosed Recipients if not using the
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-to and -cc options
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-subject <subj> : subject line, surround with quotes to include spaces(also -s)
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-ss : suppress subject line if not defined
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-sf <file> : file containing subject line
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-bodyF <file> : file containing the message body
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-body <text> : message body, surround with quotes (") to include spaces
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-sig <file> : text file containing your email signature
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-tag <file> : text file containing taglines, to be randomly chosen
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-ps <file> : final message text, possibly for unsubscribe instructions
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----------------------------- Registry overrides ------------------------------
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-p <profile> : send with server, user, and port defined in <profile>
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: use username and password if defined in <profile>
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-profile : list all profiles in the Registry
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-server <addr> : specify SMTP server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
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-serverSMTP <addr>
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: same as -server
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-serverNNTP <addr>
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: specify NNTP server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
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-serverPOP3 <addr>
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: specify POP3 server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
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when POP3 access is required before sending email
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-serverIMAP <addr>
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: specify IMAP server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
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when IMAP access is required before sending email
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-f <sender> : override the default sender address (must be known to server)
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-i <addr> : a 'From:' address, not necessarily known to the server
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-port <port> : port to be used on the SMTP server, defaults to SMTP (25)
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-portSMTP <port>: same as -port
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-portNNTP <port>: port to be used on the NNTP server, defaults to NNTP (119)
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-portPOP3 <port>: port to be used on the POP3 server, defaults to POP3 (110)
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-portIMAP <port>: port to be used on the IMAP server, defaults to IMAP (110)
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-u <username> : username for AUTH LOGIN (use with -pw)
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or for AUTH GSSAPI with -k
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-pw <password> : password for AUTH LOGIN (use with -u)
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-pu <username> : username for POP3 LOGIN (use with -ppw)
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-ppw <password> : password for POP3 LOGIN (use with -pu)
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-iu <username> : username for IMAP LOGIN (use with -ipw)
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-ipw <password> : password for IMAP LOGIN (use with -iu)
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-k : Use UNKNOWN mutual authentication and AUTH GSSAPI
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-kc : Use UNKNOWN client-only authentication and AUTH GSSAPI
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-service <name> : Set GSSAPI service name (use with -k), default "smtp@server"
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-level <lev> : Set GSSAPI protection level to <lev>, which should be one of
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: None, Integrity, or Privacy (default GSSAPI level is Privacy)
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-nomd5 : Do NOT use CRAM-MD5 authentication. Use this in cases where
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the server's CRAM-MD5 is broken, such as Network Solutions.
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---------------------- Miscellaneous RFC header switches ----------------------
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-organization <organization>
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: Organization field (also -o and -org)
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-ua : include User-Agent header line instead of X-Mailer
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-x <X-Header: detail>
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: custom 'X-' header. eg: -x "X-INFO: Blat is Great!"
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-noh : prevent X-Mailer/User-Agent header from showing Blat homepage
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-noh2 : prevent X-Mailer header entirely
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-d : request disposition notification
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-r : request return receipt
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-charset <cs> : user defined charset. The default is iso-8859-1
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-a1 <header> : add custom header line at the end of the regular headers
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-a2 <header> : same as -a1, for a second custom header line
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-dsn <nsfd> : use Delivery Status Notifications (RFC 3461)
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n = never, s = successful, f = failure, d = delayed
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can be used together, however N takes precedence
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-hdrencb : use base64 for encoding headers, if necessary
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-hdrencq : use quoted-printable for encoding headers, if necessary
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-priority <pr> : set message priority 0 for low, 1 for high
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-sensitivity <s>: set message sensitivity 0 for personal, 1 for private,
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2 for company-confidential
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----------------------- Attachment and encoding options -----------------------
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-attach <file> : attach binary file(s) to message (filenames comma separated)
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-attacht <file> : attach text file(s) to message (filenames comma separated)
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-attachi <file> : attach text file(s) as INLINE (filenames comma separated)
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-embed <file> : embed file(s) in HTML. Object tag in HTML must specify
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content-id using cid: tag. eg: <img src="cid:image.jpg">
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-af <file> : file containing list of binary file(s) to attach (comma
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separated)
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-atf <file> : file containing list of text file(s) to attach (comma
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separated)
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-aef <file> : file containing list of embed file(s) to attach (comma
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separated)
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-imaf : ignore missing attachment files. Do not stop for missing
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files.
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-base64 : send binary files using base64 (binary MIME)
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-uuencode : send binary files UUEncoded
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-enriched : send an enriched text message (Content-Type=text/enriched)
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-unicode : message body is in 16- or 32-bit Unicode format
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-html : send an HTML message (Content-Type=text/html)
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-alttext <text> : plain text for use as alternate text
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-alttextf <file>: plain text file for use as alternate text
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-mime : MIME Quoted-Printable Content-Transfer-Encoding
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-8bitmime : ask for 8bit data support when sending MIME
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-multipart <size>
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: send multipart messages, breaking attachments on <size>
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KB boundaries, where <size> is per 1000 bytes
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-nomps : do not allow multipart messages
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-contentType <string>
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: use <string> in the ContentType header for attachments that
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do not have a registered content type for the extension
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For example: -contenttype "text/calendar"
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---------------------------- NNTP specific options ----------------------------
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-groups <usenet groups>
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: list of newsgroups (comma separated)
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-------------------------------- Other options --------------------------------
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-xtndxmit : Attempt to use POP3 to transmit when accessing POP3 first
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-h : displays this help (also -?, /?, -help or /help)
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-q : suppresses all output to the screen
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-debug : echoes server communications to a log file or screen
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(overrides -q if echoes to the screen)
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-log <file> : log everything but usage to <file>
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-timestamp : when -log is used, a timestamp is added to each log line
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-overwritelog : when -log is used, overwrite the log file
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-logcmds : when -log is used, write command line options to log file
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-ti <n> : set timeout to 'n' seconds. Blat will wait 'n' seconds for
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server responses
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-try <n times> : how many times blat should try to send (1 to 'INFINITE')
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The default is 1.)
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-binary : do not convert ASCII | (pipe, 0x7c) to CrLf in the message
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body
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-hostname <hst> : select the hostname used to send the message via SMTP
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this is typically your local machine name
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-raw : do not add CR/LF after headers
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-delay <x> : wait x seconds between messages being sent when used with
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-maxnames or -multipart
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-comment <char> : use this character to mark the start of comments in
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options files and recipient list files. The default is ;
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-superdebug : hex/ascii dump the data between Blat and the server
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-superdebugT : ascii dump the data between Blat and the server
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Note that if the '-i' option is used, <sender> is included in 'Reply-to:'
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and 'Sender:' fields in the header of the message.
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Optionally, the following options can be used instead of the -f and -i
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options:
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-mailfrom <addr> The RFC 821 MAIL From: statement
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-from <addr> The RFC 822 From: statement
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-replyto <addr> The RFC 822 Reply-To: statement
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-returnpath <addr> The RFC 822 Return-Path: statement
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-sender <addr> The RFC 822 Sender: statement
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For backward consistency, the -f and -i options have precedence over these
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RFC 822 defined options. If both -f and -i options are omitted then the
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RFC 821 MAIL FROM statement will be defaulted to use the installation-defined
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default sender address.
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