uudecode(1)


NAME

   uudecode - decode an encoded file

SYNOPSIS

   uudecode   [-flags]   [-flag   [value]]   [--option-name[[=|   ]value]]
   [<file>...]

   If no file(s) are provided, then standard input is decoded.

DESCRIPTION

   uudecode transforms uuencoded files into their original form.

   The encoded file(s) may be specified on the command line, or one may be
   read  from  standard  input.   The output file name is specified in the
   encoded file, but may be overridden with the -o option.  It  will  have
   the  mode of the original file, except that setuid and execute bits are
   not retained.  If the output file is specified to be /dev/stdout or  -,
   the  result  will  be written to standard output. If there are multiple
   input files and the second or subsquent file specifies standard output,
   the  decoded  data  will  be  written  to the same file as the previous
   output.  Don't do that.

   uudecode ignores any leading and trailing lines.  It looks for  a  line
   that  starts with "begin" and proceeds until the end-of-encoding marker
   is found.  The program determines from the header line of  the  encoded
   file  which  of the two supported encoding schemes was used and whether
   or not the output file name has been encoded with base64 encoding.  See
   uuencode(5).

OPTIONS

   -o file, --output-file=file
          direct output to file.

          If  specified,  decoded  data  are  written  to this file.  When
          multiple inputs are specified on the command line,  this  option
          cannot  be  specified.   All decoded data must be written to the
          file name encoded in the data.

   -c, --ignore-chmod
          ignore fchmod(3P) errors.

          By default, if the output file permissions cannot be changed  to
          the permissions specified in the encoded data, the file will not
          be written out and execution stops.  This option will cause that
          error to be ignored.  The resulting file will have all the data,
          but the incorrect mode settings.

          fchmod() errors are also ignored if POSIXLY_CORRECT  is  set  in
          the environment.  RE: http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=635

          A warning is always emitted when fchmod() fails.

   -h, --help
          Display usage information and exit.

   -!, --more-help
          Pass the extended usage information through a pager.

   -R [cfgfile], --save-opts [=cfgfile]
          Save  the  option  state  to  cfgfile.   The default is the last
          configuration file listed in the OPTION PRESETS section,  below.
          The command will exit after updating the config file.

   -r cfgfile, --load-opts=cfgfile, --no-load-opts
          Load  options  from cfgfile.  The no-load-opts form will disable
          the loading of earlier config/rc/ini files.   --no-load-opts  is
          handled early, out of order.

   -v [{v|c|n --version [{v|c|n}]}]
          Output  version of program and exit.  The default mode is `v', a
          simple version.  The `c' mode will print  copyright  information
          and `n' will print the full copyright notice.

OPTION PRESETS

   Any  option  that  is  not  marked  as not presettable may be preset by
   loading values from configuration ("RC" or ".INI") file(s).   The  file
   "$HOME/.sharrc" will be used, if present.

STANDARDS

   This implementation is compliant with P1003.2b/D11.

FILES

   See OPTION PRESETS for configuration files.

EXIT STATUS

   One of the following exit values will be returned:

   0  (EXIT_SUCCESS)
          Successful program execution.

   1  (EXIT_OPTION_ERROR)
          The command options were misconfigured.

   2  (EXIT_INVALID)
          (warning) One or more input files contained no valid data

   4  (EXIT_NO_INPUT)
          (warning) The specified input file was not found

   8  (EXIT_NO_OUTPUT)
          The  specified output file could not be created (error); or else
          one of the output files could not be written or its access  mode
          could  not  be  changed (warnings).  The accompanying message(s)
          will distinguish.

   9  (EXIT_NO_MEM)
          No process memory available

   66  (EX_NOINPUT)
          A specified configuration file could not be loaded.

   70  (EX_SOFTWARE)
          libopts had an internal operational error.  Please report it  to
          autogen-users@lists.sourceforge.net.  Thank you.

          The exit status codes are (mostly) warning codes.  As such, each
          code is "or"-ed into the final exit code as the input files  are
          processed.   For  example,  an  exit  code  of '6' is not listed
          above.  It is the sum of  EXIT_INVALID  and  EXIT_NO_INPUT.   It
          would  mean  that at least one input file contained invalid data
          and also at least one input file could not be found at all.

SEE ALSO

   uuencode(1), uuencode(5)

AUTHORS

   Free Software Foundation, Inc.

COPYRIGHT

   Copyright (C) 1994-2015  Free  Software  Foundation,  Inc.  all  rights
   reserved.   This program is released under the terms of the GNU General
   Public License, version 3 or later.

BUGS

   Please put sharutils in the subject line for emailed bug  reports.   It
   helps to spot the message.

   If  more  than  one  name  in the encoded files are the same, or if the
   second or following input  files  specifies  standard  output  for  the
   output  file,  then  the  result  is  probably  not  what  is expected.
   Specifically, standard output will be  appended  to  and  named  output
   files will be replaced.

   Please send bug reports to: bug-gnu-utils@gnu.org

NOTES

   This   manual   page   was  AutoGen-erated  from  the  uudecode  option
   definitions.





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