INSTALL Instructions for fetchmail If you have installed binaries (e.g. from an RPM) you can skip to step 5. If you are a Linux system packager, be aware that the build process generates an RPM spec file at fetchmail.spec, and you can "make rpm" to generate an RPM and SRPM. The Frequently Asked Questions list, included as the file FAQ in this distributions, answers the most common questions about configuring and running fetchmail. 1. USEFUL THINGS TO INSTALL FIRST If you want support for RFC1938-compliant one-time passwords, you'll need to install Craig Metz's OPIE libraries first and *make sure they're on the normal library path* where configure will find them. Then configure with --enable-OPIE, and fetchmail build process will detect them and compile appropriately. Note: there is no point in doing this unless your server is OTP-enabled. To test this, telnet to the server port and give it a valid USER id. If the OK response includes the string "otp-", you should install OPIE. You need version 2.32 or better. The OPIE library sources are available at http://www.inner.net/pub/opie/ You can also find OPIE and IPV6-capable servers there. Building in IPv6 support *requires* glibc 2.1.1 (or newer) or that Craig Metz's inet6-apps kit be installed. The IPsec patches *requires* inet6-apps kit.; the IPsec patches require that the kit be built with network security API support enabled. The kit can be gotten from ftp.ipv6.inner.net:/pub/ipv6 (via IPv6) or ftp.inner.net /pub/ipv6 (via IPv4). Fetchmail has had serious grief from buggy versions of the gettext suite. If your version is older than 1.10.40, you should use the configure option `--with-included-gettext'. 2. CONFIGURE Installing fetchmail is easy. From within this directory, type: ./configure (If your getext is old, you need to include the --with-included-gettext option, which I recommend anyway). 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 `configure --help' for more. POP2 support is no longer compiled in by default, as POP2 is way obsolete and there don't seem to be any live servers for it anymore. You can configure it back in if you want with `configure --enable-POP2', but leaving it out cuts the executable's size slightly. Support for CompuServe's RPA authentication method (rather similar to APOP) is available but also not included in the standard build. You can compile it in with `configure --enable-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 f