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* Ready to ship.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-151-0/+7
* Make -d0 work when keepall and fetch are on.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-141-20/+21
* Almost ready to ship.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-141-0/+1
* Handle IMAP folder names with embedded spaces.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-142-4/+4
* Don't demand writespace after colon.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-141-10/+10
* Fix for fetchmailconf.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-122-3/+4
* Added a TODO list.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-125-29/+21
* Added a new maintainer.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-121-2/+2
* Added C6.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-121-6/+19
* Handle NO response to getsizes.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-122-1/+40
* Don't go through elaborate shutdown just after connect.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-121-4/+4
* Cosmetic fixes.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-101-3/+10
* BSD portability patch.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-071-0/+3
* *** empty log message ***Eric S. Raymond2000-02-071-1/+1
* Ready to ship.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-073-16/+29
* Version bump.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-071-1/+1
* Version bump.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-052-2/+5
* Mail sysadmin a notification on unreachable server.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-052-13/+18
* LinuxWorld hacks.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-0515-53/+114
* Simplify the error handling.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-011-23/+22
* Debian buglist cleanup.Eric S. Raymond2000-02-013-7/+18
* Graceful socket closing.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-317-15/+51
* Version bump.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-313-41/+55
* Label save closes.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-317-10/+10
* Before trying to clean up closes.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-314-82/+83
* Added M8.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-311-2/+24
* *** empty log message ***Eric S. Raymond2000-01-291-3/+3
* Fix a bug.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-171-1/+0
* Fix a bug.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-171-1/+0
* Version bump.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-172-1/+5
* Explain a feature.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-171-1/+3
* Check for logfile existence.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-171-1/+1
* Enable -L to work in foreground.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-173-1/+11
* drive.c now tracks stage.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-174-37/+18
* Better authentication-failure handling.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-162-5/+30
* Various minor fixes.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-166-38/+39
* Too many reports.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-161-19/+21
* Include the message.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-091-2/+6
* Translation upgrades.Eric S. Raymond2000-01-09-RPA'. Support for Microsoft's NTLM authentication method is also available but also not included in the standard build. You can compile it in with `configure --enable-NTLM'. Support for authentication using RFC1731 GSSAPI is available but also not included by default. You can compile it in with `configure --with-gssapi', which looks for GSSAPI support in standard locations (/usr, /usr/local). If you set --with-GSSAPI=DIR you can direct the build to look for GSSAPI support under DIR. Hooks for the OpenSSL library (see http://www.openssl.org/) are included in the distribution. To enable these, configure with --with-ssl; they are not included in the standard build. Note that due to U.S. crypto export regulations (which we hope will soon be overturned on Constitutional grounds), no actual cryptography code is included in the distribution. If you want to build for debugging, CFLAGS=-g LDFLAGS=" " ./configure will do that. To enable multilingual support using GNU gettext, configure --enable-nls Advanced configuration: Specifying --with-kerberos=DIR or --with-kerberos5=DIR will tell the fetchmail build process to look in DIR for Kerberos support. Configure normally looks in /usr/kerberos and /usr/athena; if you specify this option with an argument it will look in DIR first. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be good standardization of where Kerberos lives. If your configuration doesn't match one of the four that fetchmail's configure.in knows about, you may find you have to hand-hack the Makefile a bit. You may also want to hand-hack the Makefile if you're writing a custom or bleeding-edge resolver library. In that case you will probably want to add -lresolv or whatever to the definition of LOADLIBS. It is also possible to explicitly condition out the support for POP3, IMAP, and ETRN (with configure arguments of --disable-POP3, --disable-IMAP, and --disable-ETRN respectively). However, none of these wins back more that 3 to 4K on an Intel box. 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. 3. MAKE You may find you need flex at version 2.5.3 or greater to build fetchmail. The stock lex distributed with some versions of Linux does not work -- it yields a parser which core-dumps on syntax errors. You can get flex at the GNU ftp site, ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu. Run make This should compile fetchmail for your system. If fetchmail fails to build properly, see the FAQ section B on build-time problems. Note: parallelized make (e.g. make -j 4) fails due to some weirdness in the yacc productions. 4. 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. You can use the configure options --bindir and --mandir to change these. NOTE: If you are using an MTA other than sendmail (such as qmail, exim, or smail), see the FAQ (section T) for discussion of any special configuration steps that may be necessary. 5. SET UP A RUN CONTROL FILE See the man page and 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. 6. TEST I strongly recommend that your first fetchmail run use the -v, -a 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; also with the Cyrus IMAP server from CMU. This covers all the servers commonly hosted on Linux and *BSD systems. It also works with the IMAP service of Microsoft Exchange, despite the fact that Microsoft Exchange is extremely broken (returns incorrect message lengths in LIST responses). See the FAQ, section S, for detailed advice on running with various servers. 7. REPORTING BUGS You should read the FAQ file question G3 before reporting a bug. 8. USE IT Once you've verified your configuration, you can start fetchmail to run in background and forget about it. Enjoy!