/****** BEGIN USER CONFIGURATION SECTION *****/ /* * IMPORTANT: You should no longer need to edit this file to handle * your operating system. That should be handled and set correctly by * configure now. * * These are slowly being phased out, but currently * not everyone is auto-configured. Then decide if you * wish to change the features that are compiled into nmh. */ /* * If you have defined DOT_LOCKING, then the default is to * place the lock files in the same directory as the file that * is to be locked. Alternately, if you define LOCKDIR, you * can specify that all lock files go in a specific directory. * Don't define this unless you know you need it. */ /* #define LOCKDIR "/usr/spool/locks" */ /* * Define this if your passwords are stored in some type of * distributed name service, such as NIS, or NIS+. */ #define DBMPWD 1 /* * Directs nmh not to try and rewrite addresses * to their official form. You probably don't * want to change this without good reason. */ #define DUMB 1 /* * Define this if you do not want nmh to attach the local hostname * to local addresses. You must also define DUMB. You probably * 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 * header which is then added to the message. */ #define RPATHS 1 /***** END USER CONFIGURATION SECTION *****/ @TOP@