/*
* Define this if you do not want nmh to attach the local hostname
* to local addresses. You must also define DUMB. You probably
- * dont' need this unless you are behind a firewall.
+ * don't need this unless you are behind a firewall.
*/
/* #define REALLYDUMB 1 */
/*
+ * Starting on January 1, 2000, some MUAs like ELM and Ultrix's DXmail started
+ * generated bad dates ("00" or "100" for the year). If this #define is active,
+ * we use windowing to correct those dates to what we presume to be the intended
+ * values. About the only time this could get us into trouble would be if a MUA
+ * was generating a year of "00" in 2001 or later, due to an unrelated bug. In
+ * this case we would "correct" the year to 2000, which could result in
+ * inaccurate bug reports against the offending MUA. A much more esoteric case
+ * in which you might not want to #define this would be if you were OCR'ing in
+ * old written correspondence and saving it in email format, and you had dates
+ * of 1899 or earlier.
+ */
+#define FIX_NON_Y2K_COMPLIANT_MUA_DATES 1
+
+/*
* Directs inc/slocal to extract the envelope sender from "From "
* line. If inc/slocal is saving message to folder, then this
* sender information is then used to create a Return-Path
#define BUILTIN_FTP 1
/*
- * If you enable POP support, this is the the port name that nmh will use. Make
- * sure this is defined in your /etc/services file (or its NIS/NIS+ equivalent).
- * If you are using KPOP, you will need to change this to "kpop" unless you want
- * to be able to use both POP3 _and_ Kerberized POP and plan to use inc and
- * msgchk's -kpop switch every time in the latter case.
+ * If you enable POP support, this is the the port name
+ * that nmh will use. Make sure this is defined in your
+ * /etc/services file (or its NIS/NIS+ equivalent). If you
+ * are using KPOP, you will probably need to change this
+ * to "kpop".
*/
#define POPSERVICE "pop3"
/* Define if your system has gethostbyname */
#undef HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME
+/* Define to the header containing the declaration of initgroups() on your
+ system, if any. AIX 4.[13], SunOS 4.1.3, and ULTRIX 4.2A have the function
+ in libc but don't have a declaration anywhere. */
+#undef INITGROUPS_HEADER
+
/* Define if your system actually has a prototype for snprintf() in <stdio.h>
(or a file it includes) rather than just having a "stealth" definition of it
in libc.a the way AIX 4.1 does. */