-Supported platforms
-===================
-
-Mutt-ng has been reported to compile and run under the following Unix operating
-systems:
-
- AIX
- BSDI
- Convex
- Data General Unix (DG/UX)
- Digital Unix (OSF/1)
- DYNIX/ptx
- FreeBSD
- HP-UX
- IRIX
- Linux
- Atari MiNT
- MkLinux
- NetBSD
- OpenBSD
- QNX
- SCO Unix 3.2v4/5
- Solaris
- SunOS
- Ultrix
- UnixWare
-
-- An ANSI C compiler (such as gcc) is required.
-
-- You must also have a SysV compatible curses library, or you must
- install either
-
- GNU ncurses, ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/
-
- or
-
- S-Lang, ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/davis/slang/
-
-- Mutt-ng needs an implementation of the iconv API for character set
- conversions. A free one can be found under the following URL:
-
- http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/
-
-
-
-Installation
-============
-
-Installing Mutt-ng is rather painless through the use of the GNU
-autoconf package. Simply untar the Mutt-ng distribution, and run the
-``configure'' script. If you have obtained the distribution from
-the CVS repository, run the ``prepare'' script with the same command
-line parameters you would pass to configure. It will set up Mutt-ng's
-build environment and add the files which are present in the tar
-balls, but not in the CVS repository.
-
-In most cases, configure will automatically determine everything it
-needs to know in order to compile. However, there are a few options
-to ``configure'' to help it out, or change the default behavior:
-
---prefix=DIR
- install Mutt-ng in DIR instead of /usr/local
-
---with-curses=DIR
- use the curses lib in DIR/lib. If you have ncurses, ``configure''
- will automatically look in /usr/include/ncurses for the include
- files.
-
---with-slang[=DIR]
- use the S-Lang library instead of ncurses. This library seems to
- work better for some people because it is less picky about proper
- termcap entries than ncurses. It is recommended that you use at
- *least* version 0.99-38 with Mutt-ng.
-
---with-mailpath=DIR
- specify where the spool mailboxes are located on your system
-
---with-homespool[=FILE]
- treat file in the user's home directory as the spool mailbox. Note
- that this is *not* the full pathname, but relative to the user's
- home directory. Defaults to "mailbox" if FILE is not specified.
-
---enable-pop
- enable POP3 support
-
---enable-imap
- enable IMAP support
-
---with-gss[=PFX]
- Enable GSSAPI authentication to IMAP servers. This should work with
- both MIT and Heimdal GSSAPI implementations - others haven't been
- tested. Note that the Cyrus SASL library also supports GSSAPI,
- and may be able to encrypt your session with it - you should use
- SASL instead if you can.
-
---with-ssl[=PFX]
- enable SSL support with IMAP and POP. SSL support requires you to
- have OpenSSL headers and libraries properly installed before
- compiling. If the OpenSSL headers and libraries are not in the
- default system pats you can use the optional PFX argument to
- define the root directory of your installation. The libraries
- are then expected to be found in PFX/lib and headers in
- PFX/include/openssl.
-
---with-sasl[=PFX]
- Use the Cyrus SASL library for IMAP or POP authentication. This
- library provides generic support for several authentication methods,
- and more may be added by the system administrator without recompiling
- Mutt-ng. SASL may also be able to encrypt your mail session even if
- SSL is not available.
-
---disable-nls
- This switch disables Mutt-ng's native language support.
-
---with-included-gettext
- Mutt-ng will be built using the GNU gettext library included in
- the intl/ sub-directory. You may need to use this switch if
- your machine has something which looks like gettext to the
- configure script, but isn't able to cope with Mutt-ng's catalog
- files.
-
---with-regex
- use GNU regex instead of local regexp routines. Many systems
- don't have the POSIX compliant regcomp/regexec/regfree
- routines, so this provides a way to support them.
-
---enable-flock
- use flock() to lock files.
-
---disable-fcntl
- by default, Mutt-ng uses fcntl() to lock files. Over NFS this can
- result in poor performance on read/write. Note that using this
- option could be dangerous if dotlocking is also disabled.
-
---enable-nfs-fix
- some implementations of NFS do not always write the
- atime/mtime of small files. This means that Mutt-ng's ``mailboxes''
- feature does not always work properly, as it uses these
- attributes to work out whether the file has new mail. This
- option enables a workaround to this bug.
-
---enable-locales-fix
- on some systems, the result of isprint() can't be used reliably
- to decide which characters are printable, even if you set the
- LANG environment variable. If you set this option, Mutt-ng will
- assume all characters in the ISO-8859-* range are printable. If
- you leave it unset, Mutt-ng will attempt to use isprint() if either
- of the environment variables LANG, LC_ALL or LC_CTYPE is set,
- and will revert to the ISO-8859-* range if they aren't.
- If you need --enable-locales-fix then you will probably need
- --without-wc-funcs too. However, on a correctly configured
- modern system you shouldn't need either (try setting LANG,
- LC_ALL or LC_CTYPE instead).
-
---without-wc-funcs
- by default Mutt-ng uses the functions mbrtowc(), wctomb() and
- wcwidth() provided by the system, when they are available.
- With this option Mutt-ng will use its own version of those
- functions, which should work with 8-bit display charsets, UTF-8,
- euc-jp or shift_jis, even if the system doesn't normally support
- those multibyte charsets.
-
- If you find Mutt-ng is displaying non-ascii characters as octal
- escape sequences (e.g. \243), even though you have set LANG and
- LC_CTYPE correctly, then you might find you can solve the problem
- with either or both of --enable-locales-fix and --without-wc-funcs.
-
---with-exec-shell=SHELL
- on some versions of unix, /bin/sh has a bug that makes using emacs
- with Mutt-ng very difficult. If you have the problem that whenever
- you press control-G in emacs, Mutt-ng and emacs become very confused,
- you may want to try using a Bourne-derived shell other than
- /bin/sh here. Some shells that may work are bash, zsh, and ksh.
- C shells such as csh and tcsh will amost certainly not work right.
- Note that this option is unrelated to what shell Mutt-ng gives you
- when you press '!'. Only use this option to solve the above problem,
- and only specify one of the above shells as its argument.
-
- (If you encounter this problem with your platform's native
- Bourne shell, please send a short report to mutt-ng-devel@lists.berlios.de,
- so a short note on this topic can be added to the Platform notes
- section below.)
-
---enable-exact-address
- By default, Mutt-ng will rewrite all addresses in the form
- Personal Name <user@host.domain>
- regardless of the input. By enabling this option, Mutt-ng will write
- addresses in the same form they are parsed. NOTE: this requires
- significantly more memory.
-
-
-Once ``configure'' has completed, simply type ``make install.''
+This document describes the steps which are necessary to
+install and use Mutt-ng
-Mutt-ng should compile cleanly (without errors) and you should end up with a
-binary called ``muttng.'' If you get errors about undefined symbols like
-A_NORMAL or KEY_MIN, then you probably don't have a SysV compliant curses
-library. You should install either ncurses or S-Lang (see above), and then
-run the ``configure'' script again.
-Please note that "VPATH" builds currently do _not_ work.
+Supported platforms:
+====================
+Mutt-ng should run under the following platforms:
+AIX, BSDI, Convex, Data General Unix (DG/UX), Digital Unix (OSF/1),
+DYNIX/ptx, FreeBSD, HP-UX, IRIX, Linux, Atari MiNT, MkLinux, NetBSD,
+OpenBSD, QNX, SCO Unix 3.2v4/5, Solaris, SunOS, Ultrix, UnixWare,
+MacOSX
-Character set support
-=====================
-Mutt-ng no longer contains functions for doing character set conversion.
-Instead, it expects the iconv functions (iconv_open, iconv,
-iconv_close) to be provided. Most up-to-date systems provide these
-functions, often as part of the C library. If you are installing Mutt-ng
-on a system which does not have them, it is recommended that you
-install Bruno Haible's portable libiconv library, which you can obtain
-from:
+Requirements:
+=============
+
+1. ANSI C compilter. The GNU c compiler would be a good choice
+
+2. A SysV compatible semigraphic library.
+ Mutt-ng supports:
+ - GNU ncurses , ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ncurses/
+ - S-Lang, ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/davis/slang/
+
+3. An implementation of the iconv API for character set
+ conversions. This one is recommend:
+ http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/
+
+
+Installation:
+=============
+
+1. Installing Mutt-ng is very easy. Just use tar and gzip/bzip2.
+ For example type: `tar xvfz mutt-ng-20050515.tar.gz'.
+ If you have obtained the distribution from
+ the SVN (subversion) repository, run the `autogen.sh' script with the
+ same command line parameters like it is described in doc/devel-notes.txt
+
+2. The next step is to call `configure' to configure your installation
+ depending on your system.
+ In most cases, configure will automatically determine everything it
+ needs to know in order to compile. However, there are a few options
+ to `configure` to help it out, or change the default behavior:
+
+ Configure options:
+ ==================
+
+ --prefix=DIR
+ install Mutt-ng in DIR instead of /usr/local
+
+ --with-curses=DIR
+ use the curses lib in DIR/lib. If you have ncurses, `configure'
+ will automatically look in /usr/include/ncurses for the include
+ files.
- ftp://ftp.ilog.fr/pub/Users/haible/gnu/
+ --with-slang[=DIR]
+ use the S-Lang library instead of ncurses. This library seems to
+ work better for some people because it is less picky about proper
+ termcap entries than ncurses.
-Even if your system does provide the iconv functions, you might want
-to install libiconv, as some systems provide only a very limited
-version of iconv.
+ This are just a few configure options to get a complete list type:
+ `configure --help'
+3. Once `configure' has completed, simply type `make install.'
+
+Mutt-ng should compile cleanly (without errors) and you should end up with a
+binary called `muttng.' If you get errors about undefined symbols like
+A_NORMAL or KEY_MIN, then you probably don't have a SysV compliant curses
+library. You should install either ncurses or S-Lang (see above), and then
+run the `configure' script again.
+Depending on the features you included via configure you can get similliar
+errors from other libraries that are missing.
+
+
+Iconv character set support
+=====================
If you decide to use your system's iconv implementation, you may
need to tell Mutt-ng about implementation-defined names for some
source /usr/local/doc/muttng/samples/iconv/iconv.osf1-4.0d.rc
-into your system's global Muttrc, which normally resides in /etc or
+into your system's global Muttngrc, which normally resides in /etc or
/usr/local/etc.
-
If you really want to, you can configure Mutt-ng --disable-iconv, but
there will then be no character set conversion.
All platforms
- There is a bug in most (if not all) S-Lang versions which
- prevents the Meta key from working with Mutt-ng. A patch can
- be found in the file contrib/patch.slang-1.2.2.keypad.1 in
- this Mutt-ng distribution.
-
-
-Solaris 2.4
-
- The system regcomp() and regexec() routines are very badly
- broken. This should be automatically detected by the
- configure script. If not, use the --with-regex switch when
- configuring Mutt-ng.
-
- We are also hearing reports that Solaris 2.4's NLS libraries
- dump core with Mutt-ng when using a locale different from "C".
- Use the --with-included-gettext configuration switch if you
- experience this problem.
+There is a bug in most (if not all) S-Lang versions which
+prevents the Meta key from working with Mutt-ng. A patch can
+be found in the file contrib/patch.slang-1.2.2.keypad.1 in
+this Mutt-ng distribution.
- Color does not work right with Solaris curses. You will
- have to compile with either ncurses or slang to get working
- color support.
+- Solaris 2.4
-Solaris 2.6
+The system regcomp() and regexec() routines are very badly
+broken. This should be automatically detected by the
+configure script. If not, use the --with-regex switch when
+configuring Mutt-ng.
- There are reports that Mutt-ng behaves strangely when linked with
- the system regexp library. Please use the --with-regex switch
- when configuring on this platform.
+We are also hearing reports that Solaris 2.4's NLS libraries
+dump core with Mutt-ng when using a locale different from "C".
+Use the --with-included-gettext configuration switch if you
+experience this problem.
- For the real fix, applying Sun patches # 105490-05 (linker
- patch) and # 105210-17 (libc and malloc patch) from
- sunsolve.sun.com has been reported to stop these problems
- from occuring.
+Color does not work right with Solaris curses. You will
+have to compile with either ncurses or slang to get working
+color support.
-Linux
+- Solaris 2.6
- On recent Linux systems, flock() and fcntl() locks don't mix. If
- you use the --enable-flock switch on such systems, be sure to
- give the --disable-fcntl argument as well.
+There are reports that Mutt-ng behaves strangely when linked with
+the system regexp library. Please use the --with-regex switch
+when configuring on this platform.
-Sparc Linux
+For the real fix, applying Sun patches # 105490-05 (linker
+patch) and # 105210-17 (libc and malloc patch) from
+sunsolve.sun.com has been reported to stop these problems
+from occuring.
- Redhat 4.2 Sparc users reported problems with some system
- include files when building Mutt-ng. Configuring Mutt-ng with the
- --disable-warnings switch is said to help against this problem.
+- Linux
+On recent Linux systems, flock() and fcntl() locks don't mix. If
+you use the --enable-flock switch on such systems, be sure to
+give the --disable-fcntl argument as well.
-Digital Unix (OSF/1)
- The system curses library is said to be badly broken. Use GNU
- ncurses or SLang instead.
+Mo Mai 23 19:52:22 CEST 2005 Nico 'nion' Golde <nion@muttng.org>
-$Id: INSTALL,v 3.1 2002/11/25 14:16:46 roessler Exp $
+ * updated/rewrote document