INSTALL Instructions for fetchmail If you have installed binaries (e.g. from an RPM) you can skip to step 4. If you are a Linux system packager, be aware that the build process generates an RPM spec file at fetchmail.spec. 1. CONFIGURE Installing fetchmail is easy. From within this directory, type: ./configure The autoconfiguration script will spend a bit of time figuring out the specifics of your system. If you want to specify a particular compiler (e.g. you have gcc but want to compile with cc), set the environment variable CC before you run configure. The configure script accepts certain standard configuration options. These include --prefix, --exec-prefix, --bindir, --infodir, --mandir, and --srcdir. Do `config --help' for more. If you're running QNX, edit the distributed Makefile directly. The QNX values for various macros are there but commented out; all you have to do is uncomment them. 2. MAKE You may find you need flex at version 2.5.3 or greater to build fetchmail. The stock lex distributed with Linux does not work -- it yields a parser which core-dumps on syntax errors. Run make This will compile fetchmail for your system. If linking fails to resolve atexit(), go find a compiler that isn't lying about being ANSI-compliant (such as gcc). Some SunOS users have had this problem. 3. INSTALL Lastly, become root and run make install This will install fetchmail. By default, fetchmail will be installed in /usr/local/bin, with the man page in /usr/local/man/man1. If you wish to change these defaults, edit the Makefile AFTER you run "configure" but BEFORE you run "make install." You can easily choose a prefix other than /usr/local, or you can choose completely different directories for each item. NOTE: If you are using exim, you must configure it to accept local addresses as valid RCPT TO lines. 4. SET UP A RUN CONTROL FILE See the man page or the file sample.rcfile for a description of how to configure your individual preferences. If you're upgrading from popclient, see question F4 in the FAQ file. 5. TEST I strongly recommend that your first fetchmail run use the -v and -k options, in case there is something not quite right with your server, your local delivery configuration or your port 25 listener. Also, beware of aliases that direct your local mail back to the server host! This software is known to work with the qpop/popper series of freeware POP3 servers; also with the IMAP2bis and IMAP4 servers that are distributed with Pine from the University of Washington. A couple of users have reported that some recent (post-2.7.2) versions of gcc seem to have an optimizer bug that affects fetchmail. If your fetchmail core dumps (especially near startup) try recompiling without -O. Alternatively, you can drop back to gcc 2.7.2 or below. 6. REPORTING BUGS You should read the FAQ file question G1 before reporting a bug. 7. USE IT Enjoy!