1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288
|
# INSTALL -- installation instructions
#
--------------------------------
Installing nmh, guided by script
--------------------------------
For routine installation on popular platforms, the build_nmh shell
script can be used to guide you through configuration. It will then
build and optionally (with -i) install in the configured location.
------------------------
Installing nmh, manually
------------------------
Please read all of the following instructions before you begin
building nmh.
You should check the MACHINES file to see if there are any specific
build instructions for your operating system. To build nmh, you will
need an ANSI C compiler such as gcc.
0) If you have obtained nmh by checking it out of the git repository,
you will need to run the GNU autotools to regenerate some files.
(If your directory already contains a file 'config.h.in' then this
has already been done and you do not need to do it.) You can
regenerate the files by running the command
./autogen.sh
(Note that if you're doing nmh development, you should look at
docs/README.developers, since there is other developer-friendly
advice there as well.)
If you have obtained nmh in the form of a tar archive and are
trying to unpack it with cpio: due to an apparent bug in cpio, it
might fail with "Malformed number" error messages. Try another
tool to unpack, such as tar or pax.
1) From the top-level source directory, run the command
./configure [options]
This will check the configuration of your OS, and create the
include file config.h, as well as the Makefile.
The configure script accepts various options. The options of
most interest are listed in a section below. To see the list
of all available options, you can run
./configure --help
2) make
3) (Optional) make check
This takes a bit of time, around one minute on a modern machine,
but is highly recommended.
test/inc/test-deb359167 uses valgrind, which detects use of an
uninitialized variable on older Linux distributions such as
Mandriva 2007.0 and CentOS 5.4. That particular failure is
beyond the scope of nmh and can be ignored.
4) make install
Note that if you have [n]mh files in your install directories with
the same names as the files being installed, the old ones will get
overwritten without any warning.
5) Edit the file `mts.conf' (installed in the nmh `etc' directory)
and make any necessary changes for the mail transport interface
you are using.
The default `mts.conf' file assumes you retrieve new mail from
a local (or NFS mounted) maildrop, and send outgoing mail by
injecting the message to a mail transfer agent (such as sendmail)
on the local machine via SMTP.
If, instead, all your mail sending and receiving occurs on a
remote POP/SMTP server, you will need to look at the values of the
variables "localname", "pophost", and "servers":
a) "localname" defines the hostname that nmh considers local.
If not set, then nmh queries your OS for this value. You will
want to change this if you wish your e-mail to appear as if it
originated on the POP server.
b) "pophost" defines the server that runs the POP daemon, and to
which `inc' and `msgchk' will always query for new mail.
c) "servers" defines the server to which you send outgoing SMTP
traffic. See the discussion of the --with-smtpserver configure
option below.
If you don't want to hardcode pophost in `mts.conf', you can use
the `-host' and `-user' options to `inc' and `msgchk'.
Check the `mh-tailor' man page for a list of all the available options
for this file.
6) Edit the file `mhn.defaults' (installed in the nmh `etc' directory).
This file contains the default profile entries for the nmh command
`mhn' and is created by the script `mhn.defaults.sh'. This script
will search a generic path (essentially your $PATH) for programs to
handle various content types (for example, xv to display images).
You can re-run this script and give it a more tailored path. You may
want to re-run this script later if you install new programs to
display content. An example of this is:
% cd support/general
% ./mhn.defaults.sh /usr/local/bin:/usr/X11/bin:/usr/ucb > mhn.defaults
and then move `mhn.defaults' into the nmh `etc' directory.
The `mhn.defaults.sh' script only searches for a simple set of programs.
If you have specialized programs to handle various types, you will need
to edit the `mhn.defaults' file manually. The syntax of this file is
described in the man page for `mhn', and in section 9.4 of the book
"MH & xmh: Email for Users and Programmers", 3rd edition, by Jerry Peek,
on the Internet at <http://rand-mh.sourceforge.net/book/mh/confmhn.html>.
7) Add an optional global mh.profile, if desired. This profile should be
placed in the nmh `etc' directory with the name `mh.profile'. This
file will be used to construct the initial .mh_profile of a new nmh
user, but will not be consulted after that.
-----------------------------------------------
Compiler options, or using a different compiler
-----------------------------------------------
By default, configure will use the "gcc" compiler if found. You can
use a different compiler, or add unusual options for compiling or
linking that the "configure" script does not know about, by giving
"configure" initial values for these on its command line or in its
environment. For example,
./configure CC=c99 CFLAGS=-O2 LIBS=-lposix
If you wish to add options that are only used at compile time instead of
link time, you can use the CPPFLAGS variable:
./configure CPPFLAGS='-Wextra -Wno-sign-compare'
If you want to add to both compile and link flags at build time
without putting them in the configuration, you can use the AM_CFLAGS
Makefile macro:
make AM_CFLAGS=--coverage
----------------------------------------
Building nmh on additional architectures
----------------------------------------
To build nmh on additional architectures, you can do a "make distclean".
This should restore the nmh source distribution back to its original
state. You can then configure nmh as above on other architectures in
which you wish to build nmh. Or alternatively, you can use a different
build directory for each architecture.
---------------------------------
Using a different build directory
---------------------------------
You can compile the nmh in a different directory from the one containing
the source code. Doing so allows you to compile it on more than one
architecture at the same time. To do this, you must use a version of
"make" that supports the "VPATH" variable, such as GNU "make". "cd" to
the directory where you want the object files and executables to go and
run the "configure" script. "configure" automatically checks for the
source code in the directory that "configure" is in. For example,
cd /usr/local/solaris/nmh
/usr/local/src/nmh-1.5/configure
make
---------------------
Options for configure
---------------------
--prefix=DIR (DEFAULT is /usr/local/nmh)
This will change the base prefix for the installation location
for the various parts of nmh. Unless overridden, nmh is installed
in ${prefix}/bin, ${prefix}/etc, ${prefix}/lib, ${prefix}/man.
--bindir=DIR (DEFAULT is ${prefix}/bin)
nmh's binaries (show, inc, comp, ...) are installed here.
--libexecdir=DIR (DEFAULT is ${prefix}/libexec)
nmh's support binaries (post, slocal, mhl, ...) are installed
in ${libexecdir}/nmh.
--sysconfdir=DIR (DEFAULT is ${prefix}/etc)
nmh's config files (mts.conf, mhn.defaults, ...) are installed
in ${sysconfdir}/nmh.
--mandir=DIR (DEFAULT is ${prefix}/man)
nmh's man pages are installed here.
--with-editor=EDITOR (DEFAULT is vi)
specify the full path of the default editor to use. If this
option is not given, then the configuration process will search
for the `vi' command and use it as the default. If you wish to
specify an interface which is compatible with MH, then use the
nmh command `prompter'. If you specify `prompter', then you don't
need to give the full pathname.
--with-locking=LOCKTYPE (DEFAULT is based on operating system)
Specify the locking mechanism when attempting to "inc" or
"msgchk" a local mail spool. Valid options are "dot",
"fcntl", "flock", and "lockf". Of the four, dot-locking
requires no special kernel or filesystem support, and simply
creates a file called "FILE.lock" to indicate that "FILE" is
locked.
In order to be effective, you should contact the site
administrator to find out what locking mechanisms other
mail delivery and user programs respect. The most common
reason not to use dot-locking is if the mail spool directory
is not world- or user-writeable, and thus a lock file cannot
be created.
--enable-lockdir=DIR (DEFAULT is disabled)
If dot locking is being used, store all dot-lock files in "DIR".
The default is to store them in the directory of the file being
locked.
--with-mts=MTS (DEFAULT is smtp)
Specify the default mail transport system you want to use. The three
acceptable options are "smtp" (which is the default),
"sendmail/smtp", and "sendmail/pipe". This value will be put into
the mts.conf file. You may find it convenient to specify a value
at configure-time, however, so that each time nmh is reinstalled,
the right value will be there.
If you use "smtp", this will enable a direct SMTP (simple mail
transport protocol) interface in nmh. When sending mail, instead
of passing the message to the mail transport agent, `post' will
open a socket connection to the mail port on the machine specified
in the `mts.conf' file (default is localhost), and speak SMTP
directly.
If you use "sendmail/smtp", then `post' will send messages by forking a
local copy of sendmail. Currently it will still speak SMTP with
this local copy of sendmail.
If you use "sendmail/pipe", then `post' will open a pipe to the
sendmail program and invoke it with the '-t' and '-i' options
and write the message to sendmail's standard input. Note that
some nmh functionality is not available in this mode.
--with-ndbm=LIB (DEFAULT is to autodetect)
--with-ndbmheader=HEADER (DEFAULT is to autodetect)
Specify the header file (eg ndbm.h) and library (eg ndbm) to use
to compile against the ndbm database library. By default, configure
will try various possibilities until it finds one that works; this
option only needs to be specified if the autodetection fails or
makes the wrong choice.
If either of these options is given then the other must also be
specified.
--with-smtpserver='SMTPSERVER' (DEFAULT is localhost)
If this option is not specified, the mts.conf file will contain
the line "servers: localhost", which may be manually edited later.
You may find it convenient to specify a value at configure-time,
however, so that each time nmh is reinstalled, the right value will be
there.
See mh-tailor(5) for full documentation of "servers:".
--with-cyrus-sasl (DEFAULT is to autodetect))
Enable SASL support for SMTP and POP via the Cyrus SASL library.
This is used for the POP AUTH and SMTP AUTH protocols. This supports
a wide variety of security mechanisms, including Kerberos/GSSAPI.
Session encryption via SASL is supported for both POP and SMTP
(depending on server-side support and the security mechanism in use).
--with-tls (DEFAULT is to autodetect)
Enable TLS session encryption support for SMTP via the STARTTLS command
and TLS at connection start for both SMTP and POP.
--with-oauth (DEFAULT is to enable if curl is installed)
Enable OAuth2 authentication for SMTP and POP.
--with-readline (DEFAULT is to autodetect)
Enable support for readline functionality (command history/editing) at
the WhatNow? prompt.
--
The nmh team
nmh-workers@nongnu.org
|