From 1a5381e07e97fe482c2b3a7c75f99938f0b105d4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas Roessler Date: Mon, 8 Jun 1998 09:16:03 +0000 Subject: Initial revision --- INSTALL | 144 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 144 insertions(+) create mode 100644 INSTALL (limited to 'INSTALL') diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL new file mode 100644 index 00000000..edef9e84 --- /dev/null +++ b/INSTALL @@ -0,0 +1,144 @@ +Supported platforms +=================== + +Mutt 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 + QNX + 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/ + +Installation +============ + +Installing Mutt is rather painless through the use of the GNU autoconf +package. Simply untar the Mutt distribution, and run the ``configure'' +script. In most cases, it 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 in DIR instead of /usr/local + +--with-sharedir=DIR + specify where to put architecture independent data files + +--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. + +--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-hidden-host + local hostname is not part of the FQDN. + +--with-rx + use GNU rx 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 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'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 will + assume all characters in the ISO-8859-* range are printable. If + you leave it unset, Mutt 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. + +--with-exec-shell=SHELL + on some versions of unix, /bin/sh has a bug that makes using emacs + with mutt very difficult. If you have the problem that whenever + you press control-G in emacs, mutt 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 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. + +--enable-exact-address + By default, Mutt will rewrite all addresses in the form + Personal Name + regardless of the input. By enabling this option, Mutt will write + addresses in the same form they are parsed. NOTE: this requires + significantly more memory + +Once ``configure'' has completed, simply type ``make install.'' + +Mutt should compile cleanly (without errors) and you should end up with a +binary called ``mutt.'' 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. + +Platform Notes +============== + +Solaris 2.4 + + The system regcomp() and regexec() routines are very badly broken. + So much so that using them will cause Mutt to be totally unusable. + The --with-rx option to `configure' should always be used. (Note: + the problems have apparently been fixed in Solaris 2.5) + + Color does not work right with Solaris curses. You will have to + compile with either ncurses or slang to get working color support. + -- cgit v1.2.3