# INSTALL -- installation instructions
#
---------------
-Installing nmh
---------------
+--------------------------------
+Installing nmh, guided by script
+--------------------------------
+For routine installation on popular platforms, the shell script in
+docs/contrib/build_nmh 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.
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 CVS, 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
+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
./configure [options]
This will check the configuration of your OS, and create the
- include file config.h, as well as the various Makefiles.
+ 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
./configure --help
-2) Look through the user configuration section at the beginning
- of the generated include file `config.h'. You may
- want to customize some #defines for your environment.
+2) make
-3) 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. The only directory that isn't
- true for is the `etc' directory -- in that directory, the previous
- copy of each <file> will be backed up as <file>.prev if it differs
- from the newly-installed copy. Watch for any diff output while
- make is processing that directory to see if you need to merge
- changes from *.prev files into the new versions.
+ 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
which `inc' and `msgchk' will always query for new mail.
c) "servers" defines the server to which you send outgoing SMTP
- traffic.
+ traffic. See the discussion of the --with-smtpserver configure
+ option below.
- If you compile with POP support, but don't want to use it exclusively,
- you can use the `-host' and `-user' options to `inc' and `msgchk'
- rather than hardcoding pophost in `mts.conf'.
+ 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 ("masquerade" may be of particular interest).
+ 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
-----------------------------------------------
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 either editing the user
-configuration section of the top level Makefile (after running configure)
-or giving "configure" initial values for these variables by setting them
-in the environment. Using a Bourne-compatible shell (such as sh,ksh,zsh),
-you can do that on the command line like this:
- CC=c89 CFLAGS=-O2 LIBS=-lposix ./configure
+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=c89 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'
-Or on systems that have the "env" program, you can do it like this:
- env CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/local/include LDFLAGS=-s ./configure
+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:
-If you want to add to, not replace, compile flags, you can use
-OURDEFS with env or like this:
- OURDEFS='-Wextra -Wno-sign-compare' ./configure
+ make AM_CFLAGS=--coverage
----------------------------------------
Building nmh on additional architectures
source code in the directory that "configure" is in. For example,
cd /usr/local/solaris/nmh
- /usr/local/src/nmh-1.0/configure
+ /usr/local/src/nmh-1.5/configure
make
---------------------
--enable-debug
Enable debugging support.
---enable-masquerade[='draft_from mmailid username_extension']
- If this option is disabled, the mts.conf file will contain the
- line "masquerade: " (with no value), 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. By default, it is enabled.
-
- The above usage shows the default, with all three masquerade
- options being specified. Any subset of the three may be
- specified.
-
- See the mh-tailor(5) man page for full documentation of "masquerade:".
-
---enable-pop
- Enable client-side support for pop.
-
---enable-apop
- Enable client-side support for apop (Authenticated POP).
-
--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
nmh command `prompter'. If you specify `prompter', then you don't
need to give the full pathname.
---with-hesiod=PREFIX
- Specify the location of Hesiod.
-
---with-krb4=PREFIX
- Specify the location of Kerberos V4 for KPOP support. After
- running configure, you will need to change the POPSERVICE #define in
- config.h if you want to use KPOP exclusively (rather than being able
- to switch between KPOP and normal POP3). See the comments inside
- config.h for details.
-
--with-locking=LOCKTYPE (DEFAULT is dot)
Specify the locking mechanism when attempting to "inc" or
"msgchk" a local mail spool. Valid options are "dot",
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 two
acceptable options are "smtp" (which is the default), and
See the mh-tailor(5) man page for full documentation of "servers:".
+--with-cyrus-sasl (DEFAULT is without)
+ 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 without)
+ Enable TLS session encryption support for SMTP via the STARTTLS command.
+
+--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