Some BSD4.4 machines have problems when running nmh's configure script.
They will be unable to find the location of vi and sendmail. This is
due to POSIX features (breakage?) in the shell sh. The solution is to
Some BSD4.4 machines have problems when running nmh's configure script.
They will be unable to find the location of vi and sendmail. This is
due to POSIX features (breakage?) in the shell sh. The solution is to
-run the configure script under the shell `bash'
+run the configure script under the shell `bash':
+
+ % bash configure
+
+--------------------------------------
+Mac OS X/Rhapsody 5:
+
+Version 5.3 at least has the same sh/bash bug as the *BSD systems
+above. This appears to be fixed in 5.5.
Also, new versions of HPUX (10.20?) will core dump in `scan' because
of some workaround code in zotnet/tws/lexstring.c. This workaround is
needed for older versions of HPUX, but causes problems on newer versions.
Also, new versions of HPUX (10.20?) will core dump in `scan' because
of some workaround code in zotnet/tws/lexstring.c. This workaround is
needed for older versions of HPUX, but causes problems on newer versions.
-With --enable-nmh-debug you'll see a lot of warnings. This is even
-worse when compiling using the Sun Workshop compiler since it issues a
+With --enable-debug you'll see a lot of warnings. This is even worse
+when compiling using the Sun Workshop compiler since it issues a
warning for every instance of a problem instead of summarizing them.
The main one concerns arrays with an index of type char. This is ok.
The array itself is a hash of chars, so the array size and the type
warning for every instance of a problem instead of summarizing them.
The main one concerns arrays with an index of type char. This is ok.
The array itself is a hash of chars, so the array size and the type
You can't use the C compiler that comes with SunOS 4 since
it isn't ANSI C. But nmh builds just fine with gcc. With
You can't use the C compiler that comes with SunOS 4 since
it isn't ANSI C. But nmh builds just fine with gcc. With