On Sun, 2006-06-11 at 17:33, William Case wrote: > This is just a curiosity question? I have been using Linux (FC) for > over two years now, and I have never found a use for /var/spool/mail. > Whenever I login as root I get messages telling me that I have mail. I > just clean it out every 5 or 6 months. I read through it first using > the mail utility but there never seems to be any information that is > useful to me. > > I understand that on the original Unix systems 'mail' was how the system > and the kernel would communicate with the user and root, but does it > have any use now? > > Do people on the list use it anymore? If so, for what? How? Or, am I > missing something basic? There is nothing special regarding the kernel or the root user involved. Unix and unix-like systems provide a general purpose mail facility for all users. The '/bin/mail' program is generally obsolete now since programs with more features are also included, but it still works and the others share the ability to use the same transport programs and mailboxes. The reason you only see mail to root is that nothing else is being sent. There are some status and error reporting programs included in linux distributions that periodically send messages to the root user. If your system had more users, they could send mail to each other and other internet users with the same mechanism (and a small configuration change to accept mail from the network). -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx