X-Git-Url: http://git.marmaro.de/?p=mmh;a=blobdiff_plain;f=man%2Fmhbuild.man1;h=9c68f3654cffa3d858e774924f13cbd393af6199;hp=babc1b2c166a13ee1e2257f75e0988c9fef30913;hb=90d53cbbe431a89ac2066a527bbfe46ac0f3cbe7;hpb=41b6eadbcecf63c9a66aa5e582011987494abefb diff --git a/man/mhbuild.man1 b/man/mhbuild.man1 index babc1b2..9c68f36 100644 --- a/man/mhbuild.man1 +++ b/man/mhbuild.man1 @@ -114,9 +114,8 @@ than one line, e.g., .fi .RE .PP -There are four kinds of directives: +There are three kinds of directives: \*(lqtype\*(rq, -\*(lqexternal-type\*(rq, \*(lqmessage\*(rq (#forw), and \*(lqbegin\*(rq (#begin). .PP @@ -197,55 +196,7 @@ contents should probably be put in the file specified by the environment variable, instead of directly in your user profile. .PP -.B "(2) The \*(lqexternal-type\*(rq directives -are used to provide a MIME -reference to a content, rather than enclosing the contents itself -(for instance, by specifying an ftp site). Hence, instead of -providing a filename as with the type directives, external-parameters -are supplied. These look like regular parameters, so they must be -separated accordingly. For example, -.PP -.RS 5 -.nf -#@application/octet-stream; \\ - type=tar; \\ - conversions=compress \\ - [this is the nmh distribution] \\ - {application; filename="nmh.tar.gz"} \\ - name="nmh.tar.gz"; \\ - directory="/pub/nmh"; \\ - site="ftp.math.gatech.edu"; \\ - access-type=anon-ftp; \\ - mode="image" -.fi -.RE -.PP -You must give a description string to separate the content parameters -from the external-parameters (although this string may be empty). -This description string is specified by enclosing it within -\*(lq[]\*(rq. A disposition string, to appear in a -\*(lqContent-Disposition\*(rq header, may appear in the optional -\*(lq{}\*(rq. -.PP -These parameters are of the form: -.PP -.RS 5 -.nf -.ta \w'access-type= 'u -access-type= usually \fIanon-ftp\fR or \fImail-server\fR -name= filename -permission= read-only or read-write -site= hostname -directory= directoryname (optional) -mode= usually \fIascii\fR or \fIimage\fR (optional) -size= number of octets -server= mailbox -subject= subject to send -body= command to send for retrieval -.fi -.RE -.PP -.B "(3) The \*(lqmessage\*(rq directive (#forw) +.B "(2) The \*(lqmessage\*(rq directive (#forw) is used to specify a message or group of messages to include. You may optionally specify the name of the folder and which messages are to be forwarded. If a folder is not @@ -284,7 +235,7 @@ do not contain encapsulated messages themselves. The drawback of this approach is that the encapsulations are generated by placing an extra newline at the end of the body of each message. .PP -.B "(4) The \*(lqbegin\*(rq directive +.B "(3) The \*(lqbegin\*(rq directive is used to create a multipart content. When using the \*(lqbegin\*(rq directive, you must specify at least one content between the begin and end pairs. @@ -522,15 +473,6 @@ directive ::= "#" type "/" subtype [ filename ] EOL - | "#@" type "/" subtype - 0*(";" attribute "=" value) - [ "(" comment ")" ] - [ "<" id ">" ] - [ "[" description "]" ] - [ "{" disposition "}" ] - external-parameters - EOL - | "#forw" [ "<" id ">" ] [ "[" description "]" ]