diff options
author | markm <markm@FreeBSD.org> | 1996-07-06 19:13:58 +0800 |
---|---|---|
committer | markm <markm@FreeBSD.org> | 1996-07-06 19:13:58 +0800 |
commit | b84168ee748469587fcfb5434c36eb5609997b3b (patch) | |
tree | fac542abd255693cd11cdd15d6194849228b8deb /mail | |
parent | 105dcf50ef3ccda2142c2430cfef9ab3775aa011 (diff) | |
download | freebsd-ports-gnome-b84168ee748469587fcfb5434c36eb5609997b3b.tar.gz freebsd-ports-gnome-b84168ee748469587fcfb5434c36eb5609997b3b.tar.zst freebsd-ports-gnome-b84168ee748469587fcfb5434c36eb5609997b3b.zip |
Add Exim. Exim is a high performance sendmail replacement (except no UUCP)
wiyh powerful retry/requeue and management features.
Written by Philip Hazel of Cambridge University.
OKed by: asami
Diffstat (limited to 'mail')
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/Makefile | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/distinfo | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/files/Makefile | 210 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/files/eximon.conf | 149 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/files/patch-aa | 43 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/pkg-comment | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/pkg-descr | 15 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-devel/pkg-plist | 22 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/Makefile | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/distinfo | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/files/Makefile | 210 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/files/eximon.conf | 149 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/files/patch-aa | 43 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/pkg-comment | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/pkg-descr | 15 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim-old/pkg-plist | 22 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/Makefile | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/distinfo | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/files/Makefile | 210 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/files/eximon.conf | 149 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/files/patch-aa | 43 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/pkg-comment | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/pkg-descr | 15 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mail/exim/pkg-plist | 22 |
24 files changed, 1407 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/Makefile b/mail/exim-devel/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7aa06642ff50 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +# New ports collection makefile for: exim +# Version required: 0.53 +# Date created: 23 June 1996 +# Whom: markm +# +# $Id$ +# + +DISTNAME= exim-0.53 +CATEGORIES+= mail +MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cus.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programs/exim/ +DISTFILES= exim-0.53.tar.gz exim-texinfo-0.52.gz +EXTRACT_ONLY= exim-0.53.tar.gz + +MAINTAINER= markm@FreeBSD.ORG + +post-extract: + @cp ${DISTDIR}/exim-texinfo-0.52.gz ${WRKSRC}/doc + @gunzip ${WRKSRC}/doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 + +do-configure: + mkdir ${WRKSRC}/Local + cp ${FILESDIR}/Makefile ${WRKSRC}/Local + cp ${FILESDIR}/eximon.conf ${WRKSRC}/Local + -(cd ${WRKSRC}; make) + +.include <bsd.port.mk> diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/distinfo b/mail/exim-devel/distinfo new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..5348e72f4559 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/distinfo @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +MD5 (exim-0.53.tar.gz) = 7da8888862849fed6610dc6376f09557 +MD5 (exim-texinfo-0.52.gz) = 13d8717da854dba08365074c931adf25 diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/files/Makefile b/mail/exim-devel/files/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f0432c722bf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/files/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,210 @@ +################################################## +# The Exim mail transport agent # +################################################## + +# This is the template for Exim's main build-time configuration file. It +# contains settings that are independent of any operating system. It should +# be edited and then saved to a file called Local/Makefile before first running +# the make command. + +# Things that depend on the operating system have default settings in files +# called OS/Makefile-<osname>. These can be overridden by creating files +# called Local/Makefile-<osname>, though it is hoped that this will rarely +# be necessary. + + +# The binary directory: This variable defines where the exim binary will be +# installed by "make install" or "exim_install". It is also used internally +# by exim when it needs to re-invoke itself, either to send an error message, +# or to recover root privilege. Exim's utility binaries and scripts are also +# installed in this directory. There is no default for this variable built into +# the source files; it must be set in one of the local configuration files. + +BIN_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/bin + + +# The info directory: This variable defines where the exim info files will be +# installed by "make install" or "exim_install". + +INFO_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/info + + +# The runtime configuration file: This variable defines where Exim's runtime +# configuration file is. There is no default built into the source files, so +# there must be a setting in one of the local configuration files. The +# location of all other runtime files and directories can be changed in the +# runtime configuration file. + +CONFIGURE_FILE=/usr/local/etc/exim.conf + + +# The size of the delivery buffer: This specifies the size of buffer which is +# used when copying a message from the spool to a destination. The default +# value built into the source is 8192. + +# DELIVER_BUFFER_SIZE=8192 + + +# Included directors: These variables determine which individual director +# drivers are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that +# are wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the +# value "yes". The actions of each director are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a director in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +DIRECTOR_ALIASFILE=yes +DIRECTOR_FORWARDFILE=yes +DIRECTOR_LOCALUSER=yes +DIRECTOR_SMARTUSER=yes + + +# The mode of the database directory: Exim creates a directory called "db" +# in its spool directory, to hold its databases of hints. This variable +# determines the mode of the created directory. The default value in the +# source is 0750. + +# DB_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Database locking: When trying to obtain a lock on one of its database files, +# there is a limit to the number of retries (default 10) and a time between +# retries (default 5 seconds). These can be altered here. + +# DB_LOCK_RETRIES=10 +# DB_LOCK_SLEEP=5 + + +# Database file mode: The mode of files created in the "db" directory defaults +# to 0640 in the source, and can be changed here. + +# DB_MODE=0640 + + +# Running Exim not as root: A uid and gid for Exim can be specified here. These +# are compiled into the binary, but can be changed by settings in the runtime +# configuration file. The default in the code is -1, which means "unset" - +# i.e. run as root unless specified otherwise at run time. Specifying 0 at +# run time has the effect of unsetting any configured values. + +# The settings here must be numeric; the run time file allows names to +# be used. When this uid and gid are set, the Exim binary still has to be +# setuid root if local deliveries are to be performed or a listener on port +# 25 is to be run, but it gives up its privilege when possible. There is a +# trade-off between security and efficiency, controlled by the runtime +# "security" setting, which controls how privilege is released (setuid vs +# seteuid). The default value of -1 here means "unset". + +# EXIM_GID=-1 +# EXIM_UID=-1 + + +# Compiling the Exim monitor: If you want to compile the Exim monitor, +# a program that requires an X11 display, then EXIM_MONITOR should be +# set to the value "eximon.bin". Comment out this setting to disable +# compilation of the binary file that is run by the eximon script. The +# locations of various X11 directories for libraries and include files +# are defaulted in the OS/Makefile-Default file, and can be overridden +# in local OS-specific make files. + +EXIM_MONITOR=eximon.bin + + +# The mode of the input directory: The input directory is where messages are +# kept while awaiting delivery. Exim creates it if necessary, using a mode +# which can be defined here (default 0750). + +# INPUT_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Exim log directory and files: Exim creates a directory called "log" inside +# its spool directory. The mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed here. +# The log files themselves are created with a default mode of 0640, but that +# can also be changed here. + +# LOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 +# LOG_MODE=0640 + + +# Per-message logs: While a message is in the process of being delivered, +# comments on its progress are written to a message log, for the benefit of +# human administrators. These logs are held in a directory called "msglog" +# in the spool directory. Its mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed here. +# The message log directory is also used for storing files that are used by +# transports for returning data to a message's sender (see the "return_output" +# option for transports). + +# MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Included routers: These variables determine which individual router drivers +# are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that are +# wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the value +# "yes". The actions of each router are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a router in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +ROUTER_DOMAINLIST=yes +ROUTER_LOOKUPHOST=yes +ROUTER_QUERYPROGRAM=yes + + +# The spool directory: This directory is where all the data for messages in +# transit is kept. There is no default in the source, so its location must be +# defined in a local configuration file. Exim creates it if it does not exist, +# using the mode required for the sub-directory that it is trying to create at +# the time. If a non-root uid and gid have been defined for Exim (either in +# this configuration file, or by the runtime configuration options), then this +# directory and all sub-directories and their files will be created with their +# owners and groups set to Exim's uid and gid. + +# Many installations will want something like this +SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/var/spool/exim + +# Others may prefer to keep all Exim things under one directory +# SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/usr/exim/spool + + +# If Exim creates the spool directory, it is given this mode, defaulting in the +# source to 0750. + +# SPOOL_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# The mode of files on the input spool which hold the contents of message can +# be changed here. The default is 0600. If you have defined a uid and gid for +# Exim and want information from the spool to be available to anyone who is a +# member of the Exim group, change the value to 0640. This is particularly +# relevant if you are going to run the Exim monitor. + +# SPOOL_MODE=0600 + + +# If STDERR_FILE is defined then the -df command line option causes Exim to +# redirect stderr to the named file. This is useful for catching debugging +# output when starting Exim via inetd. + +# STDERR_FILE= + + +# Included transports: These variables determine which individual transport +# drivers are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that +# are wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the +# value "yes". The actions of each transport are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a transport in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +TRANSPORT_APPENDFILE=yes +TRANSPORT_PIPE=yes +TRANSPORT_SMTP=yes + +# The Debug transport is special, and should be included only when low-level +# debugging is being performed. In conjunction with the "debug_transport" +# configuration option, it permits the subversion of all mail deliveries to +# a given file. + +# TRANSPORT_DEBUG= + +# End of EDITME diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/files/eximon.conf b/mail/exim-devel/files/eximon.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..350c7524a36a --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/files/eximon.conf @@ -0,0 +1,149 @@ +################################################## +# The Exim Monitor # +################################################## + +# This is the template for the Exim monitor's main build-time configuration +# file. It contains settings that are independent of any operating system. It +# should be edited and then saved to a file called Local/eximon.conf before +# running the make command to build the monitor, if any settings are required. +# Local/eximon.conf can be empty if no changes are needed. The examples given +# here (commented out) are the default settings. + + +################################################################## +# Set these variables as appropriate for your system # +################################################################## + +# The qualifying name for your domain. The only use made of this is for +# testing that certain addresses are the same when displaying the +# log tail, and for shortening sender addresses in the queue display. + +# QUALIFY_DOMAIN= + +# The initial depth for the main display window, in pixels. The minimum +# is 160, which is enough to hold the stripcharts but not the other +# display sub-windows. + +# START_DEPTH=700 + +# The title for eximon's main display window. It is possible to have +# host name of the machine you are running on substituted into the +# title string. If you include the string ${fullhostname} then the +# complete name is used. If you include ${hostname} then the full +# host name will have the string contained in the DOMAIN variable +# stripped from its right-hand end before being substituted. Any other +# shell or environment variables may also be included. + +# If you use any substitutions, remember to ensure that the $ and {} +# characters are escaped from the shell, e.g. by using single quotes. + +# WINDOW_TITLE='${hostname} eximon' + +# The domain that you want to be stripped from the machine's full hostname +# when forming the short host name for the eximon window title, as +# described above. + +# DOMAIN= + +# Parameters for the rolling display of the tail of the exim log file. +# The width and depth are measured in pixels; LOG_BUFFER specifies the +# amount of store to set aside for holding the log tail, which is displayed +# in a scrolling window. When this store is full, the earlier 50% of it +# is discarded - this is much more efficient that throwing it away line +# by line. The number given can be followed by the letter K to indicate +# that the value is in kilobytes. A minimum value of 1K is enforced. + +# LOG_DEPTH=300 +# LOG_WIDTH=950 +# LOG_BUFFER=20K + +# The font which is used in the log tail display. This is defined in +# the normal X manner. It must be a "character cell" font, because this +# is required by the text widget. + +# LOG_FONT=-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-14-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1 + +# Parameters for the display of message that are on the exim queue. +# The width and depth are measured in pixels. + +# QUEUE_DEPTH=200 +# QUEUE_WIDTH=950 + +# The font which is used in the queue display. + +# QUEUE_FONT=$LOG_FONT + +# When a message has more than one undelivered address, they are listed +# one below the other. A limit can be placed on the number of addresses +# displayed for any one message. If there are more, then "..." is used +# to indicate this. + +# QUEUE_MAX_ADDRESSES=10 + +# The display of the contents of the queue is updated every QUEUE_INTERVAL +# seconds by default (there is a button to request update). + +# QUEUE_INTERVAL=300 + +# The stripcharts are updated every STRIPCHART_INTERVAL seconds. + +# STRIPCHART_INTERVAL=60 + +# The following variable contains a specification of which stripcharts +# you want eximon to display based on log entries. The string consists of +# pairs of strings, delimited by slash characters. The first string in each +# pair is a regular expression that matches some distinguishing feature in a +# exim log entry. + +# Entries that match the expression will be counted and displayed in a +# stripchart whose title is given by the second string. The string may +# be continued over several input lines, provided that it is split +# after a slash, and an additional slash (optionally preceded by white +# space) is included at the start of the continuation line. + +# The regular expression syntax supported by eximon is as follows: + +# A regular expression is zero or more branches, separated by `|'. It +# matches anything that matches one of the branches. A branch is zero or +# more pieces, concatenated. It matches a match for the first, followed by +# a match for the second, etc. A piece is an atom possibly followed by +# `*', `+', or `?'. +# +# An atom followed by `*' matches a sequence of 0 or more matches of the atom. +# An atom followed by `+' matches a sequence of 1 or more matches of the atom. +# An atom followed by `?' matches a match of the atom, or the null string. +# +# An atom is a regular expression in parentheses (matching a match for the +# regular expression), a range (see below), `.' (matching any single +# character), `^' (matching the null string at the beginning of the input +# string), `$' (matching the null string at the end of the input string), +# a `\' followed by a single character (matching that character), or a +# single character with no other significance (matching that character). +# +# A range is a sequence of characters enclosed in `[]'. It normally +# matches any single character from the sequence. If the sequence begins +# with `^', it matches any single character not from the rest of the +# sequence. If two characters in the sequence are separated by `-', this +# is shorthand for the full list of ASCII characters between them (e.g. +# `[0-9]' matches any decimal digit). To include a literal `]' in the +# sequence, make it the first character (following a possible `^'). To +# include a literal `-', make it the first or last character. + +# A stripchart showing the count of messages in the queue is always +# displayed on the left of eximon's window. Stripcharts configured +# by this parameter are displayed to its right, in the order defined +# here. + +# LOG_STRIPCHARTS='/ <= /in/ +# / => /out/ +# /D=/local/ +# /T=smtp/smtp/' + +# The following variable may be set to the name of a disc partition. If +# it is, a stripchart showing the percentage fullness of the partition +# will be displayed as the second stripchart. This can be used to keep +# a display of a mail spool partition on the screen. + +# SIZE_STRIPCHART=/var/mail + +# End of exim_monitor/EDITME diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/files/patch-aa b/mail/exim-devel/files/patch-aa new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..1f37cb44967e --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/files/patch-aa @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ +diff -udr ../exim-0.52.ORG/scripts/exim_install ./scripts/exim_install +--- ../exim-0.52.ORG/scripts/exim_install Mon Jun 10 12:04:44 1996 ++++ ./scripts/exim_install Sun Jun 23 10:42:40 1996 +@@ -63,6 +63,20 @@ + fi + fi + ++# If info directory doesn't exist, try to create it ++ ++if [ ! -d ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ]; then ++ echo mkdir -p ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ ${real} mkdir -p ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ++ echo $com "" ++ echo $com "**** Exim installation ${ver}failed ****" ++ exit 1 ++ else ++ echo $com ${INFO_DIRECTORY} created ++ fi ++fi ++ + # If no arguments, install everything + + if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then +@@ -127,6 +141,18 @@ + echo $com ${name} is not newer than ${BIN_DIRECTORY}/${name} + fi + done ++ ++echo $com "" ++echo $com Installation directory is ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++echo $com "" ++ ++if [ -f ../doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 ]; then ++ makeinfo --output ../doc/exim.info ../doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 ++ for info in ../doc/exim.info*; do ++ echo ${CP} ${info} ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ ${real} ${CP} ${info} ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ; gzip -9n ${INFO_DIRECTORY}/${info} ++ done ++fi + + # If there is no configuration file, install the default, + # building the lib directory if necessary. diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/pkg-comment b/mail/exim-devel/pkg-comment new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..e8677d2b4577 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/pkg-comment @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +High performance MTA for Unix systems on the Internet. diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/pkg-descr b/mail/exim-devel/pkg-descr new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..ffc90bf0c43f --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/pkg-descr @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +Exim is a mail transfer agent for Unix systems connected to the Internet. + + . Exim is intended for use as an Internet mailer, and therefore handles + addresses in RFC 822 domain format only. + + . The only external transport currently implemented is an SMTP transport + over a TCP/IP network (using sockets). A pipe transport is available, + and this could be used to send messages to some other transport mechanism. + + . Exim is very configurable, and its management is very powerful. It can + be configured to be "fussy" about certain hosts or domains, and + can easily serve multiple domains. + + . Its requeuing and retry algorithms are very powerful. + diff --git a/mail/exim-devel/pkg-plist b/mail/exim-devel/pkg-plist new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..636fe3ce67f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-devel/pkg-plist @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +bin/exim +bin/eximon +bin/eximon.bin +bin/exim_dumpdb +bin/exim_fixdb +bin/exim_tidydb +bin/exinext +bin/exiwhat +bin/exim_dbmbuild +bin/exicyclog +bin/exigrep +bin/eximstats +etc/exim.conf +info/exim.info +info/exim.info-1 +info/exim.info-2 +info/exim.info-3 +info/exim.info-4 +info/exim.info-5 +info/exim.info-6 +info/exim.info-7 +info/exim.info-8 diff --git a/mail/exim-old/Makefile b/mail/exim-old/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7aa06642ff50 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +# New ports collection makefile for: exim +# Version required: 0.53 +# Date created: 23 June 1996 +# Whom: markm +# +# $Id$ +# + +DISTNAME= exim-0.53 +CATEGORIES+= mail +MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cus.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programs/exim/ +DISTFILES= exim-0.53.tar.gz exim-texinfo-0.52.gz +EXTRACT_ONLY= exim-0.53.tar.gz + +MAINTAINER= markm@FreeBSD.ORG + +post-extract: + @cp ${DISTDIR}/exim-texinfo-0.52.gz ${WRKSRC}/doc + @gunzip ${WRKSRC}/doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 + +do-configure: + mkdir ${WRKSRC}/Local + cp ${FILESDIR}/Makefile ${WRKSRC}/Local + cp ${FILESDIR}/eximon.conf ${WRKSRC}/Local + -(cd ${WRKSRC}; make) + +.include <bsd.port.mk> diff --git a/mail/exim-old/distinfo b/mail/exim-old/distinfo new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..5348e72f4559 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/distinfo @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +MD5 (exim-0.53.tar.gz) = 7da8888862849fed6610dc6376f09557 +MD5 (exim-texinfo-0.52.gz) = 13d8717da854dba08365074c931adf25 diff --git a/mail/exim-old/files/Makefile b/mail/exim-old/files/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f0432c722bf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/files/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,210 @@ +################################################## +# The Exim mail transport agent # +################################################## + +# This is the template for Exim's main build-time configuration file. It +# contains settings that are independent of any operating system. It should +# be edited and then saved to a file called Local/Makefile before first running +# the make command. + +# Things that depend on the operating system have default settings in files +# called OS/Makefile-<osname>. These can be overridden by creating files +# called Local/Makefile-<osname>, though it is hoped that this will rarely +# be necessary. + + +# The binary directory: This variable defines where the exim binary will be +# installed by "make install" or "exim_install". It is also used internally +# by exim when it needs to re-invoke itself, either to send an error message, +# or to recover root privilege. Exim's utility binaries and scripts are also +# installed in this directory. There is no default for this variable built into +# the source files; it must be set in one of the local configuration files. + +BIN_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/bin + + +# The info directory: This variable defines where the exim info files will be +# installed by "make install" or "exim_install". + +INFO_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/info + + +# The runtime configuration file: This variable defines where Exim's runtime +# configuration file is. There is no default built into the source files, so +# there must be a setting in one of the local configuration files. The +# location of all other runtime files and directories can be changed in the +# runtime configuration file. + +CONFIGURE_FILE=/usr/local/etc/exim.conf + + +# The size of the delivery buffer: This specifies the size of buffer which is +# used when copying a message from the spool to a destination. The default +# value built into the source is 8192. + +# DELIVER_BUFFER_SIZE=8192 + + +# Included directors: These variables determine which individual director +# drivers are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that +# are wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the +# value "yes". The actions of each director are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a director in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +DIRECTOR_ALIASFILE=yes +DIRECTOR_FORWARDFILE=yes +DIRECTOR_LOCALUSER=yes +DIRECTOR_SMARTUSER=yes + + +# The mode of the database directory: Exim creates a directory called "db" +# in its spool directory, to hold its databases of hints. This variable +# determines the mode of the created directory. The default value in the +# source is 0750. + +# DB_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Database locking: When trying to obtain a lock on one of its database files, +# there is a limit to the number of retries (default 10) and a time between +# retries (default 5 seconds). These can be altered here. + +# DB_LOCK_RETRIES=10 +# DB_LOCK_SLEEP=5 + + +# Database file mode: The mode of files created in the "db" directory defaults +# to 0640 in the source, and can be changed here. + +# DB_MODE=0640 + + +# Running Exim not as root: A uid and gid for Exim can be specified here. These +# are compiled into the binary, but can be changed by settings in the runtime +# configuration file. The default in the code is -1, which means "unset" - +# i.e. run as root unless specified otherwise at run time. Specifying 0 at +# run time has the effect of unsetting any configured values. + +# The settings here must be numeric; the run time file allows names to +# be used. When this uid and gid are set, the Exim binary still has to be +# setuid root if local deliveries are to be performed or a listener on port +# 25 is to be run, but it gives up its privilege when possible. There is a +# trade-off between security and efficiency, controlled by the runtime +# "security" setting, which controls how privilege is released (setuid vs +# seteuid). The default value of -1 here means "unset". + +# EXIM_GID=-1 +# EXIM_UID=-1 + + +# Compiling the Exim monitor: If you want to compile the Exim monitor, +# a program that requires an X11 display, then EXIM_MONITOR should be +# set to the value "eximon.bin". Comment out this setting to disable +# compilation of the binary file that is run by the eximon script. The +# locations of various X11 directories for libraries and include files +# are defaulted in the OS/Makefile-Default file, and can be overridden +# in local OS-specific make files. + +EXIM_MONITOR=eximon.bin + + +# The mode of the input directory: The input directory is where messages are +# kept while awaiting delivery. Exim creates it if necessary, using a mode +# which can be defined here (default 0750). + +# INPUT_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Exim log directory and files: Exim creates a directory called "log" inside +# its spool directory. The mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed here. +# The log files themselves are created with a default mode of 0640, but that +# can also be changed here. + +# LOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 +# LOG_MODE=0640 + + +# Per-message logs: While a message is in the process of being delivered, +# comments on its progress are written to a message log, for the benefit of +# human administrators. These logs are held in a directory called "msglog" +# in the spool directory. Its mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed here. +# The message log directory is also used for storing files that are used by +# transports for returning data to a message's sender (see the "return_output" +# option for transports). + +# MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Included routers: These variables determine which individual router drivers +# are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that are +# wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the value +# "yes". The actions of each router are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a router in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +ROUTER_DOMAINLIST=yes +ROUTER_LOOKUPHOST=yes +ROUTER_QUERYPROGRAM=yes + + +# The spool directory: This directory is where all the data for messages in +# transit is kept. There is no default in the source, so its location must be +# defined in a local configuration file. Exim creates it if it does not exist, +# using the mode required for the sub-directory that it is trying to create at +# the time. If a non-root uid and gid have been defined for Exim (either in +# this configuration file, or by the runtime configuration options), then this +# directory and all sub-directories and their files will be created with their +# owners and groups set to Exim's uid and gid. + +# Many installations will want something like this +SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/var/spool/exim + +# Others may prefer to keep all Exim things under one directory +# SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/usr/exim/spool + + +# If Exim creates the spool directory, it is given this mode, defaulting in the +# source to 0750. + +# SPOOL_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# The mode of files on the input spool which hold the contents of message can +# be changed here. The default is 0600. If you have defined a uid and gid for +# Exim and want information from the spool to be available to anyone who is a +# member of the Exim group, change the value to 0640. This is particularly +# relevant if you are going to run the Exim monitor. + +# SPOOL_MODE=0600 + + +# If STDERR_FILE is defined then the -df command line option causes Exim to +# redirect stderr to the named file. This is useful for catching debugging +# output when starting Exim via inetd. + +# STDERR_FILE= + + +# Included transports: These variables determine which individual transport +# drivers are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that +# are wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the +# value "yes". The actions of each transport are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a transport in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +TRANSPORT_APPENDFILE=yes +TRANSPORT_PIPE=yes +TRANSPORT_SMTP=yes + +# The Debug transport is special, and should be included only when low-level +# debugging is being performed. In conjunction with the "debug_transport" +# configuration option, it permits the subversion of all mail deliveries to +# a given file. + +# TRANSPORT_DEBUG= + +# End of EDITME diff --git a/mail/exim-old/files/eximon.conf b/mail/exim-old/files/eximon.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..350c7524a36a --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/files/eximon.conf @@ -0,0 +1,149 @@ +################################################## +# The Exim Monitor # +################################################## + +# This is the template for the Exim monitor's main build-time configuration +# file. It contains settings that are independent of any operating system. It +# should be edited and then saved to a file called Local/eximon.conf before +# running the make command to build the monitor, if any settings are required. +# Local/eximon.conf can be empty if no changes are needed. The examples given +# here (commented out) are the default settings. + + +################################################################## +# Set these variables as appropriate for your system # +################################################################## + +# The qualifying name for your domain. The only use made of this is for +# testing that certain addresses are the same when displaying the +# log tail, and for shortening sender addresses in the queue display. + +# QUALIFY_DOMAIN= + +# The initial depth for the main display window, in pixels. The minimum +# is 160, which is enough to hold the stripcharts but not the other +# display sub-windows. + +# START_DEPTH=700 + +# The title for eximon's main display window. It is possible to have +# host name of the machine you are running on substituted into the +# title string. If you include the string ${fullhostname} then the +# complete name is used. If you include ${hostname} then the full +# host name will have the string contained in the DOMAIN variable +# stripped from its right-hand end before being substituted. Any other +# shell or environment variables may also be included. + +# If you use any substitutions, remember to ensure that the $ and {} +# characters are escaped from the shell, e.g. by using single quotes. + +# WINDOW_TITLE='${hostname} eximon' + +# The domain that you want to be stripped from the machine's full hostname +# when forming the short host name for the eximon window title, as +# described above. + +# DOMAIN= + +# Parameters for the rolling display of the tail of the exim log file. +# The width and depth are measured in pixels; LOG_BUFFER specifies the +# amount of store to set aside for holding the log tail, which is displayed +# in a scrolling window. When this store is full, the earlier 50% of it +# is discarded - this is much more efficient that throwing it away line +# by line. The number given can be followed by the letter K to indicate +# that the value is in kilobytes. A minimum value of 1K is enforced. + +# LOG_DEPTH=300 +# LOG_WIDTH=950 +# LOG_BUFFER=20K + +# The font which is used in the log tail display. This is defined in +# the normal X manner. It must be a "character cell" font, because this +# is required by the text widget. + +# LOG_FONT=-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-14-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1 + +# Parameters for the display of message that are on the exim queue. +# The width and depth are measured in pixels. + +# QUEUE_DEPTH=200 +# QUEUE_WIDTH=950 + +# The font which is used in the queue display. + +# QUEUE_FONT=$LOG_FONT + +# When a message has more than one undelivered address, they are listed +# one below the other. A limit can be placed on the number of addresses +# displayed for any one message. If there are more, then "..." is used +# to indicate this. + +# QUEUE_MAX_ADDRESSES=10 + +# The display of the contents of the queue is updated every QUEUE_INTERVAL +# seconds by default (there is a button to request update). + +# QUEUE_INTERVAL=300 + +# The stripcharts are updated every STRIPCHART_INTERVAL seconds. + +# STRIPCHART_INTERVAL=60 + +# The following variable contains a specification of which stripcharts +# you want eximon to display based on log entries. The string consists of +# pairs of strings, delimited by slash characters. The first string in each +# pair is a regular expression that matches some distinguishing feature in a +# exim log entry. + +# Entries that match the expression will be counted and displayed in a +# stripchart whose title is given by the second string. The string may +# be continued over several input lines, provided that it is split +# after a slash, and an additional slash (optionally preceded by white +# space) is included at the start of the continuation line. + +# The regular expression syntax supported by eximon is as follows: + +# A regular expression is zero or more branches, separated by `|'. It +# matches anything that matches one of the branches. A branch is zero or +# more pieces, concatenated. It matches a match for the first, followed by +# a match for the second, etc. A piece is an atom possibly followed by +# `*', `+', or `?'. +# +# An atom followed by `*' matches a sequence of 0 or more matches of the atom. +# An atom followed by `+' matches a sequence of 1 or more matches of the atom. +# An atom followed by `?' matches a match of the atom, or the null string. +# +# An atom is a regular expression in parentheses (matching a match for the +# regular expression), a range (see below), `.' (matching any single +# character), `^' (matching the null string at the beginning of the input +# string), `$' (matching the null string at the end of the input string), +# a `\' followed by a single character (matching that character), or a +# single character with no other significance (matching that character). +# +# A range is a sequence of characters enclosed in `[]'. It normally +# matches any single character from the sequence. If the sequence begins +# with `^', it matches any single character not from the rest of the +# sequence. If two characters in the sequence are separated by `-', this +# is shorthand for the full list of ASCII characters between them (e.g. +# `[0-9]' matches any decimal digit). To include a literal `]' in the +# sequence, make it the first character (following a possible `^'). To +# include a literal `-', make it the first or last character. + +# A stripchart showing the count of messages in the queue is always +# displayed on the left of eximon's window. Stripcharts configured +# by this parameter are displayed to its right, in the order defined +# here. + +# LOG_STRIPCHARTS='/ <= /in/ +# / => /out/ +# /D=/local/ +# /T=smtp/smtp/' + +# The following variable may be set to the name of a disc partition. If +# it is, a stripchart showing the percentage fullness of the partition +# will be displayed as the second stripchart. This can be used to keep +# a display of a mail spool partition on the screen. + +# SIZE_STRIPCHART=/var/mail + +# End of exim_monitor/EDITME diff --git a/mail/exim-old/files/patch-aa b/mail/exim-old/files/patch-aa new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..1f37cb44967e --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/files/patch-aa @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ +diff -udr ../exim-0.52.ORG/scripts/exim_install ./scripts/exim_install +--- ../exim-0.52.ORG/scripts/exim_install Mon Jun 10 12:04:44 1996 ++++ ./scripts/exim_install Sun Jun 23 10:42:40 1996 +@@ -63,6 +63,20 @@ + fi + fi + ++# If info directory doesn't exist, try to create it ++ ++if [ ! -d ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ]; then ++ echo mkdir -p ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ ${real} mkdir -p ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ++ echo $com "" ++ echo $com "**** Exim installation ${ver}failed ****" ++ exit 1 ++ else ++ echo $com ${INFO_DIRECTORY} created ++ fi ++fi ++ + # If no arguments, install everything + + if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then +@@ -127,6 +141,18 @@ + echo $com ${name} is not newer than ${BIN_DIRECTORY}/${name} + fi + done ++ ++echo $com "" ++echo $com Installation directory is ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++echo $com "" ++ ++if [ -f ../doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 ]; then ++ makeinfo --output ../doc/exim.info ../doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 ++ for info in ../doc/exim.info*; do ++ echo ${CP} ${info} ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ ${real} ${CP} ${info} ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ; gzip -9n ${INFO_DIRECTORY}/${info} ++ done ++fi + + # If there is no configuration file, install the default, + # building the lib directory if necessary. diff --git a/mail/exim-old/pkg-comment b/mail/exim-old/pkg-comment new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..e8677d2b4577 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/pkg-comment @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +High performance MTA for Unix systems on the Internet. diff --git a/mail/exim-old/pkg-descr b/mail/exim-old/pkg-descr new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..ffc90bf0c43f --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/pkg-descr @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +Exim is a mail transfer agent for Unix systems connected to the Internet. + + . Exim is intended for use as an Internet mailer, and therefore handles + addresses in RFC 822 domain format only. + + . The only external transport currently implemented is an SMTP transport + over a TCP/IP network (using sockets). A pipe transport is available, + and this could be used to send messages to some other transport mechanism. + + . Exim is very configurable, and its management is very powerful. It can + be configured to be "fussy" about certain hosts or domains, and + can easily serve multiple domains. + + . Its requeuing and retry algorithms are very powerful. + diff --git a/mail/exim-old/pkg-plist b/mail/exim-old/pkg-plist new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..636fe3ce67f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim-old/pkg-plist @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +bin/exim +bin/eximon +bin/eximon.bin +bin/exim_dumpdb +bin/exim_fixdb +bin/exim_tidydb +bin/exinext +bin/exiwhat +bin/exim_dbmbuild +bin/exicyclog +bin/exigrep +bin/eximstats +etc/exim.conf +info/exim.info +info/exim.info-1 +info/exim.info-2 +info/exim.info-3 +info/exim.info-4 +info/exim.info-5 +info/exim.info-6 +info/exim.info-7 +info/exim.info-8 diff --git a/mail/exim/Makefile b/mail/exim/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7aa06642ff50 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +# New ports collection makefile for: exim +# Version required: 0.53 +# Date created: 23 June 1996 +# Whom: markm +# +# $Id$ +# + +DISTNAME= exim-0.53 +CATEGORIES+= mail +MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cus.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programs/exim/ +DISTFILES= exim-0.53.tar.gz exim-texinfo-0.52.gz +EXTRACT_ONLY= exim-0.53.tar.gz + +MAINTAINER= markm@FreeBSD.ORG + +post-extract: + @cp ${DISTDIR}/exim-texinfo-0.52.gz ${WRKSRC}/doc + @gunzip ${WRKSRC}/doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 + +do-configure: + mkdir ${WRKSRC}/Local + cp ${FILESDIR}/Makefile ${WRKSRC}/Local + cp ${FILESDIR}/eximon.conf ${WRKSRC}/Local + -(cd ${WRKSRC}; make) + +.include <bsd.port.mk> diff --git a/mail/exim/distinfo b/mail/exim/distinfo new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..5348e72f4559 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/distinfo @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +MD5 (exim-0.53.tar.gz) = 7da8888862849fed6610dc6376f09557 +MD5 (exim-texinfo-0.52.gz) = 13d8717da854dba08365074c931adf25 diff --git a/mail/exim/files/Makefile b/mail/exim/files/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f0432c722bf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/files/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,210 @@ +################################################## +# The Exim mail transport agent # +################################################## + +# This is the template for Exim's main build-time configuration file. It +# contains settings that are independent of any operating system. It should +# be edited and then saved to a file called Local/Makefile before first running +# the make command. + +# Things that depend on the operating system have default settings in files +# called OS/Makefile-<osname>. These can be overridden by creating files +# called Local/Makefile-<osname>, though it is hoped that this will rarely +# be necessary. + + +# The binary directory: This variable defines where the exim binary will be +# installed by "make install" or "exim_install". It is also used internally +# by exim when it needs to re-invoke itself, either to send an error message, +# or to recover root privilege. Exim's utility binaries and scripts are also +# installed in this directory. There is no default for this variable built into +# the source files; it must be set in one of the local configuration files. + +BIN_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/bin + + +# The info directory: This variable defines where the exim info files will be +# installed by "make install" or "exim_install". + +INFO_DIRECTORY=/usr/local/info + + +# The runtime configuration file: This variable defines where Exim's runtime +# configuration file is. There is no default built into the source files, so +# there must be a setting in one of the local configuration files. The +# location of all other runtime files and directories can be changed in the +# runtime configuration file. + +CONFIGURE_FILE=/usr/local/etc/exim.conf + + +# The size of the delivery buffer: This specifies the size of buffer which is +# used when copying a message from the spool to a destination. The default +# value built into the source is 8192. + +# DELIVER_BUFFER_SIZE=8192 + + +# Included directors: These variables determine which individual director +# drivers are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that +# are wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the +# value "yes". The actions of each director are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a director in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +DIRECTOR_ALIASFILE=yes +DIRECTOR_FORWARDFILE=yes +DIRECTOR_LOCALUSER=yes +DIRECTOR_SMARTUSER=yes + + +# The mode of the database directory: Exim creates a directory called "db" +# in its spool directory, to hold its databases of hints. This variable +# determines the mode of the created directory. The default value in the +# source is 0750. + +# DB_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Database locking: When trying to obtain a lock on one of its database files, +# there is a limit to the number of retries (default 10) and a time between +# retries (default 5 seconds). These can be altered here. + +# DB_LOCK_RETRIES=10 +# DB_LOCK_SLEEP=5 + + +# Database file mode: The mode of files created in the "db" directory defaults +# to 0640 in the source, and can be changed here. + +# DB_MODE=0640 + + +# Running Exim not as root: A uid and gid for Exim can be specified here. These +# are compiled into the binary, but can be changed by settings in the runtime +# configuration file. The default in the code is -1, which means "unset" - +# i.e. run as root unless specified otherwise at run time. Specifying 0 at +# run time has the effect of unsetting any configured values. + +# The settings here must be numeric; the run time file allows names to +# be used. When this uid and gid are set, the Exim binary still has to be +# setuid root if local deliveries are to be performed or a listener on port +# 25 is to be run, but it gives up its privilege when possible. There is a +# trade-off between security and efficiency, controlled by the runtime +# "security" setting, which controls how privilege is released (setuid vs +# seteuid). The default value of -1 here means "unset". + +# EXIM_GID=-1 +# EXIM_UID=-1 + + +# Compiling the Exim monitor: If you want to compile the Exim monitor, +# a program that requires an X11 display, then EXIM_MONITOR should be +# set to the value "eximon.bin". Comment out this setting to disable +# compilation of the binary file that is run by the eximon script. The +# locations of various X11 directories for libraries and include files +# are defaulted in the OS/Makefile-Default file, and can be overridden +# in local OS-specific make files. + +EXIM_MONITOR=eximon.bin + + +# The mode of the input directory: The input directory is where messages are +# kept while awaiting delivery. Exim creates it if necessary, using a mode +# which can be defined here (default 0750). + +# INPUT_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Exim log directory and files: Exim creates a directory called "log" inside +# its spool directory. The mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed here. +# The log files themselves are created with a default mode of 0640, but that +# can also be changed here. + +# LOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 +# LOG_MODE=0640 + + +# Per-message logs: While a message is in the process of being delivered, +# comments on its progress are written to a message log, for the benefit of +# human administrators. These logs are held in a directory called "msglog" +# in the spool directory. Its mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed here. +# The message log directory is also used for storing files that are used by +# transports for returning data to a message's sender (see the "return_output" +# option for transports). + +# MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# Included routers: These variables determine which individual router drivers +# are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that are +# wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the value +# "yes". The actions of each router are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a router in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +ROUTER_DOMAINLIST=yes +ROUTER_LOOKUPHOST=yes +ROUTER_QUERYPROGRAM=yes + + +# The spool directory: This directory is where all the data for messages in +# transit is kept. There is no default in the source, so its location must be +# defined in a local configuration file. Exim creates it if it does not exist, +# using the mode required for the sub-directory that it is trying to create at +# the time. If a non-root uid and gid have been defined for Exim (either in +# this configuration file, or by the runtime configuration options), then this +# directory and all sub-directories and their files will be created with their +# owners and groups set to Exim's uid and gid. + +# Many installations will want something like this +SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/var/spool/exim + +# Others may prefer to keep all Exim things under one directory +# SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/usr/exim/spool + + +# If Exim creates the spool directory, it is given this mode, defaulting in the +# source to 0750. + +# SPOOL_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750 + + +# The mode of files on the input spool which hold the contents of message can +# be changed here. The default is 0600. If you have defined a uid and gid for +# Exim and want information from the spool to be available to anyone who is a +# member of the Exim group, change the value to 0640. This is particularly +# relevant if you are going to run the Exim monitor. + +# SPOOL_MODE=0600 + + +# If STDERR_FILE is defined then the -df command line option causes Exim to +# redirect stderr to the named file. This is useful for catching debugging +# output when starting Exim via inetd. + +# STDERR_FILE= + + +# Included transports: These variables determine which individual transport +# drivers are included in the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those that +# are wanted must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the +# value "yes". The actions of each transport are described in a separate chapter +# in the manual. Including a transport in the binary does not cause it to +# be used automatically. It has also to be specified in the runtime +# configuration file. + +TRANSPORT_APPENDFILE=yes +TRANSPORT_PIPE=yes +TRANSPORT_SMTP=yes + +# The Debug transport is special, and should be included only when low-level +# debugging is being performed. In conjunction with the "debug_transport" +# configuration option, it permits the subversion of all mail deliveries to +# a given file. + +# TRANSPORT_DEBUG= + +# End of EDITME diff --git a/mail/exim/files/eximon.conf b/mail/exim/files/eximon.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..350c7524a36a --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/files/eximon.conf @@ -0,0 +1,149 @@ +################################################## +# The Exim Monitor # +################################################## + +# This is the template for the Exim monitor's main build-time configuration +# file. It contains settings that are independent of any operating system. It +# should be edited and then saved to a file called Local/eximon.conf before +# running the make command to build the monitor, if any settings are required. +# Local/eximon.conf can be empty if no changes are needed. The examples given +# here (commented out) are the default settings. + + +################################################################## +# Set these variables as appropriate for your system # +################################################################## + +# The qualifying name for your domain. The only use made of this is for +# testing that certain addresses are the same when displaying the +# log tail, and for shortening sender addresses in the queue display. + +# QUALIFY_DOMAIN= + +# The initial depth for the main display window, in pixels. The minimum +# is 160, which is enough to hold the stripcharts but not the other +# display sub-windows. + +# START_DEPTH=700 + +# The title for eximon's main display window. It is possible to have +# host name of the machine you are running on substituted into the +# title string. If you include the string ${fullhostname} then the +# complete name is used. If you include ${hostname} then the full +# host name will have the string contained in the DOMAIN variable +# stripped from its right-hand end before being substituted. Any other +# shell or environment variables may also be included. + +# If you use any substitutions, remember to ensure that the $ and {} +# characters are escaped from the shell, e.g. by using single quotes. + +# WINDOW_TITLE='${hostname} eximon' + +# The domain that you want to be stripped from the machine's full hostname +# when forming the short host name for the eximon window title, as +# described above. + +# DOMAIN= + +# Parameters for the rolling display of the tail of the exim log file. +# The width and depth are measured in pixels; LOG_BUFFER specifies the +# amount of store to set aside for holding the log tail, which is displayed +# in a scrolling window. When this store is full, the earlier 50% of it +# is discarded - this is much more efficient that throwing it away line +# by line. The number given can be followed by the letter K to indicate +# that the value is in kilobytes. A minimum value of 1K is enforced. + +# LOG_DEPTH=300 +# LOG_WIDTH=950 +# LOG_BUFFER=20K + +# The font which is used in the log tail display. This is defined in +# the normal X manner. It must be a "character cell" font, because this +# is required by the text widget. + +# LOG_FONT=-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-14-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1 + +# Parameters for the display of message that are on the exim queue. +# The width and depth are measured in pixels. + +# QUEUE_DEPTH=200 +# QUEUE_WIDTH=950 + +# The font which is used in the queue display. + +# QUEUE_FONT=$LOG_FONT + +# When a message has more than one undelivered address, they are listed +# one below the other. A limit can be placed on the number of addresses +# displayed for any one message. If there are more, then "..." is used +# to indicate this. + +# QUEUE_MAX_ADDRESSES=10 + +# The display of the contents of the queue is updated every QUEUE_INTERVAL +# seconds by default (there is a button to request update). + +# QUEUE_INTERVAL=300 + +# The stripcharts are updated every STRIPCHART_INTERVAL seconds. + +# STRIPCHART_INTERVAL=60 + +# The following variable contains a specification of which stripcharts +# you want eximon to display based on log entries. The string consists of +# pairs of strings, delimited by slash characters. The first string in each +# pair is a regular expression that matches some distinguishing feature in a +# exim log entry. + +# Entries that match the expression will be counted and displayed in a +# stripchart whose title is given by the second string. The string may +# be continued over several input lines, provided that it is split +# after a slash, and an additional slash (optionally preceded by white +# space) is included at the start of the continuation line. + +# The regular expression syntax supported by eximon is as follows: + +# A regular expression is zero or more branches, separated by `|'. It +# matches anything that matches one of the branches. A branch is zero or +# more pieces, concatenated. It matches a match for the first, followed by +# a match for the second, etc. A piece is an atom possibly followed by +# `*', `+', or `?'. +# +# An atom followed by `*' matches a sequence of 0 or more matches of the atom. +# An atom followed by `+' matches a sequence of 1 or more matches of the atom. +# An atom followed by `?' matches a match of the atom, or the null string. +# +# An atom is a regular expression in parentheses (matching a match for the +# regular expression), a range (see below), `.' (matching any single +# character), `^' (matching the null string at the beginning of the input +# string), `$' (matching the null string at the end of the input string), +# a `\' followed by a single character (matching that character), or a +# single character with no other significance (matching that character). +# +# A range is a sequence of characters enclosed in `[]'. It normally +# matches any single character from the sequence. If the sequence begins +# with `^', it matches any single character not from the rest of the +# sequence. If two characters in the sequence are separated by `-', this +# is shorthand for the full list of ASCII characters between them (e.g. +# `[0-9]' matches any decimal digit). To include a literal `]' in the +# sequence, make it the first character (following a possible `^'). To +# include a literal `-', make it the first or last character. + +# A stripchart showing the count of messages in the queue is always +# displayed on the left of eximon's window. Stripcharts configured +# by this parameter are displayed to its right, in the order defined +# here. + +# LOG_STRIPCHARTS='/ <= /in/ +# / => /out/ +# /D=/local/ +# /T=smtp/smtp/' + +# The following variable may be set to the name of a disc partition. If +# it is, a stripchart showing the percentage fullness of the partition +# will be displayed as the second stripchart. This can be used to keep +# a display of a mail spool partition on the screen. + +# SIZE_STRIPCHART=/var/mail + +# End of exim_monitor/EDITME diff --git a/mail/exim/files/patch-aa b/mail/exim/files/patch-aa new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..1f37cb44967e --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/files/patch-aa @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ +diff -udr ../exim-0.52.ORG/scripts/exim_install ./scripts/exim_install +--- ../exim-0.52.ORG/scripts/exim_install Mon Jun 10 12:04:44 1996 ++++ ./scripts/exim_install Sun Jun 23 10:42:40 1996 +@@ -63,6 +63,20 @@ + fi + fi + ++# If info directory doesn't exist, try to create it ++ ++if [ ! -d ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ]; then ++ echo mkdir -p ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ ${real} mkdir -p ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ++ echo $com "" ++ echo $com "**** Exim installation ${ver}failed ****" ++ exit 1 ++ else ++ echo $com ${INFO_DIRECTORY} created ++ fi ++fi ++ + # If no arguments, install everything + + if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then +@@ -127,6 +141,18 @@ + echo $com ${name} is not newer than ${BIN_DIRECTORY}/${name} + fi + done ++ ++echo $com "" ++echo $com Installation directory is ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++echo $com "" ++ ++if [ -f ../doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 ]; then ++ makeinfo --output ../doc/exim.info ../doc/exim-texinfo-0.52 ++ for info in ../doc/exim.info*; do ++ echo ${CP} ${info} ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ++ ${real} ${CP} ${info} ${INFO_DIRECTORY} ; gzip -9n ${INFO_DIRECTORY}/${info} ++ done ++fi + + # If there is no configuration file, install the default, + # building the lib directory if necessary. diff --git a/mail/exim/pkg-comment b/mail/exim/pkg-comment new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..e8677d2b4577 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/pkg-comment @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +High performance MTA for Unix systems on the Internet. diff --git a/mail/exim/pkg-descr b/mail/exim/pkg-descr new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..ffc90bf0c43f --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/pkg-descr @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +Exim is a mail transfer agent for Unix systems connected to the Internet. + + . Exim is intended for use as an Internet mailer, and therefore handles + addresses in RFC 822 domain format only. + + . The only external transport currently implemented is an SMTP transport + over a TCP/IP network (using sockets). A pipe transport is available, + and this could be used to send messages to some other transport mechanism. + + . Exim is very configurable, and its management is very powerful. It can + be configured to be "fussy" about certain hosts or domains, and + can easily serve multiple domains. + + . Its requeuing and retry algorithms are very powerful. + diff --git a/mail/exim/pkg-plist b/mail/exim/pkg-plist new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..636fe3ce67f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/mail/exim/pkg-plist @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +bin/exim +bin/eximon +bin/eximon.bin +bin/exim_dumpdb +bin/exim_fixdb +bin/exim_tidydb +bin/exinext +bin/exiwhat +bin/exim_dbmbuild +bin/exicyclog +bin/exigrep +bin/eximstats +etc/exim.conf +info/exim.info +info/exim.info-1 +info/exim.info-2 +info/exim.info-3 +info/exim.info-4 +info/exim.info-5 +info/exim.info-6 +info/exim.info-7 +info/exim.info-8 |