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PMDF normally looks for your .forward
 file in your home  directory. However, your PMDF system manager may have chosen to configure PMDF  to look in a different location for user .forward
 files;  check with your PMDF system manager if you have any question about where your  .forward
 file should reside.
The format for a .forward
  file is one or more lines, each line containing one or more 
  comma-separated recipient entries. A recipient entry may take the 
  following forms.
user@domain
 directs a copy of the message to the specified address.
  \your-account-name
 delivers a copy to you "normally" (in addition to any other 
 forwarding specified by other entries).
  /directory/path/filename
appends a copy of the message to the specified file. (The specified 
file must be writeable by you.)
  +/directory/path/filename
appends a copy of the message to the specified file using digest-like 
boundary markers between the messages. (The specified file must be 
writeable by you.)
  |command
 where  command
 is a shell command will execute that command as you, with your access 
 and privileges, with standard input coming from the message being 
 delivered.
  |command args
 where  command args
 is a shell command with arguments will execute that command as you, 
 with your access and privileges, with standard input coming from the 
 message being delivered.
Lines beginning with an exclamation point character, !
, are considered to be comment lines.
Note that when executing certain actions of your .forward
file, PMDF becomes you. In particular, any scripts executed by your  .forward
 file will be executed as you, with your access and privileges.
Example 2-1 shows a sample .forward
file for a user jdoe who wants one copy of his messages delivered normally,  one copy sent to another of his accounts, one copy sent to his pager, one copy  filed in the file thismonthsmailarchive
, and also wants  to pipe the message through the procmail
 utility.    
Example 2-1 Sample .forward file 
    for user John.Doe | 
  
|---|
      \jdoe, John.Doe@system2.example.com, John.Doe@pager.example.com /usr/users/jdoe/thismonthsmailarchive "|/usr/bin/procmail jdoe"  | 
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