#
# README.developers
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# $Id$
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This file is intended to provide a few tips for anyone doing development on nmh.
Developers who learn things "the hard way" about the nmh codebase (as opposed to
local info best encoded in a comment) are encouraged to share their wisdom here.
The topics are organized alphabetically.
--------------
autoconf files
--------------
If you wish to change the `configure' script or its related files, you'll need
to first install GNU m4, available from and then
GNU autoconf ().
Most of the configure-related files are automatically generated. The only files
you should need to manually edit are acconfig.h and configure.in. Don't, for
instance, edit config.h.in. Though it is an input file from the point of view
of the users (and the configure script) it is an output file from the point of
view of the developers (and the autoconf script).
If you do change acconfig.h or configure.in and want to `cvs commit' them, be
sure to regenerate the output files and commit them as well. The easiest way to
regenerate the files is to simply run `make' -- it'll do the necessary calls of
autoconf and autoheader and will do a `./config.status --recheck', which will
exercise your new configure script.
When you commit the configure-related files, it's very important to commit them
in the right order. The timestamps on the files in the CVS archive are based on
the current time at the moment they were committed -- the timestamps from the
local files you commit are not copied over. If you commit the files in the
wrong order, you'll cause unnecessary calls of `autoconf' to occur when people
try to `make' their copies of the latest CVS source. These people may be
end-users who don't have any interest in changing the configure-related files
and don't have autoconf installed. They'll be unable to make without playing
around with `touch'.
The correct procedure to commit the configure-related files is:
% cvs commit acconfig.h aclocal.m4 configure.in
% autoheader; autoconf; date > stamp-h.in
% cvs commit config.h.in configure stamp-h.in
The reason for the three-step commit is that configure.in contains the RCS $Id
keyword, so when you commit it, a new version is written locally. Therefore,
the autoconf regeneration should be held off until after the commit, or your
local stamp-h.in will become out-of-sync with the CVS version (granted, not that
big a deal). For the second step, you're doing the same commands as a
`make reset' would do, but using that command would require extra configure runs
to make Makefile be up-to-date.
If you haven't changed all the files noted above, just commit the ones you have
changed, in the stated order (for instance, configure.in, then configure and
stamp-h.in).
-------------------
directory structure
-------------------
Following is a list of nmh's directories along with a brief description of the
purpose of each one. Meanings are given for the abbreviations, but note that
these meanings are just informed guesses as to what the MH developers were
thinking.
./
The top-level directory. Contains files like README and INSTALL.
config/
Contains utility files for the `configure' process. Ordinarily nothing in
here needs to be messed with.
doc/
Contains more specialized documentation, such as this file and
the FAQ.
etc/
Contains files, file templates, and scripts to generate files that will be
installed in the ${prefix}/etc directory. Stuff like replcomps.
h/
Most of nmh's header (.h) files are kept not in the individual source
directories, but in this central location.
man/
Contains all the input files that are processed to generate nmh's manual
pages.
mts/
"mts" stands for "Message Transfer Service". Source files specific to the
different MTSs go in the subdirectories.
mts/mmdf/ (deprecated)
"mmdf" stands for "Multichannel Memorandum Distribution Facility". It is an
alternative to sendmail used primarily on SCO UNIX.
mts/sendmail/ (deprecated: handled by mts.conf)
When nmh is configured --with-mts=sendmail, the files in this directory are
used.
mts/smtp/
When nmh is configured to just talk to an SMTP server over TCP/IP, the
source in this directory is compiled.
sbr/
"sbr" stands for "subroutine(s)". For the most part, each source file in
this directory contains a single function with the same name as the source
file. These functions are of general use and are called from throughout
nmh.
uip/
"uip" stands for "User Interface Programs". Most nmh commands have a file
in this directory named .c containing the code for that command
(e.g. repl.c). In some cases there is also an auxiliary file called
sbr.c which contains additional subroutines called from .c
(which would contain not much else besides main()).
zotnet/ (deprecated)
Files in this hierarchy were either written by or moved here by UCI
(University of California, Irvine) after they took over MH from the Rand
Corporation. "Zot!" is the sound effect made by the anteater in the "B.C."
comic strip when its tongue lashes out at ants. The anteater is UCI's
official mascot. Not sure whether UCInet was once called ZotNet...
zotnet/bboards/ (deprecated)
UCI added Bulletin Board functionality to MH with the `bbc' command. This
functionality has been removed from nmh but apparently files in this
directory are still needed for other purposes.
zotnet/mf/ (deprecated, now in sbr/)
"mf" stands for "Mail Filter". The filtering in this case apparently refers
to translation between different address and mailbox formats.
zotnet/mts/ (deprecated, now in sbr/)
MTS code not specific to any single MTS apparently goes here.
zotnet/tws/ (deprecated, now in sbr/)
"tws" apparently stands for "time with structure", a rather odd phrase.
This directory used to be the place for date and time manipulation code, but
currently nothing in here is compiled. There are new, more portable
versions of the key files in h/ and sbr/, and this directory will soon go
away completely.
-------------------------------------------------------
nmh-local functions to use in preference to OS versions
-------------------------------------------------------
For some system functions whose availability or behavior varies from OS to OS,
nmh conditionally uses a local definition with the same name as the OS function
(e.g. snprintf()). For other functions, developers need to avoid the OS
versions and always use the nmh-supplied function. Here is a list of such
functions:
OS function nmh-local version to use instead
=========== ================================
getpass() nmh_getpass()
-------------
releasing nmh
-------------
To make a public release of nmh (we'll use version 1.0.4 and my mhost.com
account, danh, as examples here):
1. % echo 1.0.4 > VERSION
% date +"%e %B %Y" > DATE
(DATE should contain something like "30 December 2000")
2. Put a comment like "Released nmh-1.0.4." in the ChangeLog.
3. % cvs commit ChangeLog VERSION DATE
4. % cvs tag nmh-1_0_4
(cvs treats dots specially, so underscores are substituted here.)
5. % make nmhdist
6. Untar nmh-1.0.4.tar.gz and `diff -r' it vs. your CVS tree. Make sure no
files got left out of the distribution that should be in it (due to someone
forgetting to update the DIST variables in the Makefiles).
7. If you have root access on your machine, it's good at this point to do:
% chown -R 0:0 nmh-1.0.4
% tar cvf nmh-1.0.4.tar nmh-1.0.4
% gzip nmh-1.0.4.tar
If you leave the files in the archive as being owned by yourself, your UID
may coincide with one of a user on a machine where nmh is being installed,
making it possible for that user to Trojan the nmh code before the system
administrator finishes installing it.
8. Make sure your new tarball uncompresses and untars with no problem. Make
sure you can configure, make, and install nmh from it.
9. If all is well and your tarball is final, go back to your CVS tree and do:
% echo 1.0.4+dev > VERSION
10. Put a comment like "Upped the version number to 1.0.4+dev until the next nmh
release." in the ChangeLog.
11. % cvs commit ChangeLog VERSION
12. If possible, make an MD5 hash and/or a PGP signature of nmh-1.0.4.tar.gz.
13. % scp -p nmh-1.0.4.tar.gz* danh@mhost.com:/var/ftp/pub/nmh
14. Send an announcement to exmh-users@redhat.com, exmh-workers@redhat.com,
mh-users@ics.uci.edu, and nmh-announce@mhost.com. If the release fixes
significant security holes, also send an announcement to
bugtraq@securityfocus.com. The exmh lists require you to be subscribed in
order to post. Note that you don't need to post separately to comp.mail.mh,
as the mh-users mailing list is apparently bidirectionally gatewayed to it.
Preferably, the announcement should contain the MD5 hash generated above,
and should be PGP-signed. It should include the FTP URL for the tarball as
well as the URL of the website. It should contain a brief summary of
visible changes, as well as the URL of the cvsweb diff page that would show
a detailed list of changes. The changes between 1.0.3 and 1.0.4 would be
shown by:
http://www.mhost.com/cgi-bin/cvsweb/nmh/ChangeLog?r1=1.40&r2=1.71