FAXINFO(8) | System Manager's Manual | FAXINFO(8) |
faxinfo - print information about a received facsimile
Basic usage:
/usr/sbin/faxinfo [ -b ] [ -n ] [ -D ] file.tif [ file2.tif [...] ]
Formatting shortcuts:
/usr/sbin/faxinfo [ -C delim | -c delim | -r ] file.tif [ file2.tif ] ]
Raw formatting:
/usr/sbin/faxinfo [ -S fmt ] [ -s fmt ] [ -e fmt ] [ -E fmt ] file.tif [ file2.tif ] ]
faxinfo prints descriptive information on the standard output about a received facsimile file. For example:
/var/spool/hylafax/recvq/fax00017.tif:
Sender: +14159657824
Pages: 3
Quality: Normal
Page: North American Letter
Received: 1996:01:19 13:51:02 TimeToRecv: 0:39 SignalRate: 14400 bit/s DataFormat: 2-D MR ErrCorrect: No
CallID1: 2152345678
CallID2: 1234
This information is typically included in the notification mail generated by the faxrcvd(8) script when a facsimile is received by HylaFAX.
Formatting shortcuts:
-S '"%s"' -s ',"' -e '"' -E '\n'
-S '%s' -s ',' -e '' -E '\n'
-S '' -s '' -e '0 -E ''
Raw formatting:
The information that faxinfo prints is obtained from the tags stored in the TIFF image that is written by the HylaFAX software. If faxinfo is presented with an invalid TIFF image it may print uninteresting information. Similarly if a TIFF image that was not written by HylaFAX is supplied as an argument then only partial information may be printed—this is because HylaFAX stores certain information in private tags that other TIFF writers may not emit.
Use of the raw fmt options to allow you to directly control the print format strings used when formatting the output. These format strings are passed directly to printf, with basic \<char> sequences being interpreted, including \n, \r, and \t, and can be used to make the faxinfo output conform to specific requirements, like peculiar CVS, tables, HTML, etc.
The order of the options is important. They are parsed from first to last, so any later options will override settings of previous ones.
faxinfo return 0 on success and 1 if the file passed as argument is not valid.
November 15, 1996 |