168839Seric# Copyright (c) 1983, 1995 Eric P. Allman 248582Sbostic# Copyright (c) 1988 The Regents of the University of California. 333728Sbostic# All rights reserved. 433728Sbostic# 548582Sbostic# %sccs.include.redist.sh% 633728Sbostic# 7*69648Seric# @(#)READ_ME 8.89 (Berkeley) 05/24/95 833728Sbostic# 948582Sbostic 109881SericThis directory contains the source files for sendmail. 115369Seric 1260565SericFor detailed instructions, please read the document ../doc/op.me: 135369Seric 1460565Seric eqn ../doc/op.me | pic | ditroff -me 155369Seric 1668543Seric********************* 1768543Seric!! DO NOT USE MAKE !! to compile sendmail -- instead, use the 1868543Seric********************* "makesendmail" script located in the src 1968543Sericdirectory. It will find an appropriate Makefile, and create an 2068543Sericappropriate obj.* subdirectory so that multiplatform support 2168543Sericworks easily. 2268543Seric 2365366SericThe Makefile is for the new (4.4BSD) Berkeley make and uses syntax 2465366Sericthat is not recognized by older makes. It also has assumptions 2565366Sericabout the 4.4 file system layout built in. See below for details 2665366Sericabout other Makefiles. 2757418Seric 2868543SericIf you are porting to a new architecture for which there is no existing 2968543SericMakefile, you might start with Makefile.dist. This works on the old 3068543Serictraditional make, but isn't customized for any particular architecture. 3164501Seric 3268543Seric ************************************************** 3368543Seric ** Read below for more details of Makefiles. ** 3468543Seric ************************************************** 3557418Seric 3665000Seric************************************************************************** 3765000Seric** IMPORTANT: DO NOT USE OPTIMIZATION (``-O'') IF YOU ARE RUNNING ** 3865000Seric** GCC 2.4.x or 2.5.x. THERE IS A BUG IN THE GCC OPTIMIZER THAT ** 3965000Seric** CAUSES SENDMAIL COMPILES TO FAIL MISERABLY. ** 4065000Seric************************************************************************** 4164272Seric 4265000SericJim Wilson of Cygnus believes he has found the problem -- it will 4365000Sericprobably be fixed in GCC 2.5.6 -- but until this is verified, be 4465000Sericvery suspicious of gcc -O. 4564701Seric 4668575SericThis problem is reported to have been fixed in gcc 2.6. 4768575Seric 4865000Seric************************************************************************** 4965000Seric** IMPORTANT: Read the appropriate paragraphs in the section on ** 5065000Seric** ``Operating System and Compile Quirks''. ** 5165000Seric************************************************************************** 5264718Seric 5365000Seric 5465366Seric+-----------+ 5565366Seric| MAKEFILES | 5665366Seric+-----------+ 5765366Seric 5868543SericBy far, the easiest way to compile sendmail is to use the "makesendmail" 5968543Sericscript: 6068543Seric 6168543Seric sh makesendmail 6268543Seric 6368543SericThis uses the "uname" command to figure out what architecture you are 6468543Sericon and selects a proper Makefile accordingly. It also creates a 6568543Sericsubdirectory per object format, so that multiarchitecture support is 6668543Sericeasy. In general this should be all you need. However, if for some 6768543Sericreason this doesn't work (e.g., NeXT systems don't have the "uname" 6868543Sericcommand) you may have to set up your compile environment by hand. 6968543Seric 7065366SericThe "Makefile"s in these directories are from 4.4 BSD, and hence 7165366Sericreally only work properly if you are on a 4.4 system. In particular, 7265366Sericthey use new syntax that will not be recognized on old make programs, 7365366Sericand some of them do things like ``.include ../../Makefile.inc'' to 7465366Sericpick up some system defines. If you are getting sendmail separately, 7565366Sericthese files won't be included in the distribution, as they are 7665366Sericoutside of the sendmail tree. 7765366Seric 7865366SericInstead, you should use one of the other Makefiles, such as 7965366SericMakefile.SunOS for a SunOS system, and so forth. These should 8065366Sericwork with the version of make that is appropriate for that 8168543Sericsystem. All other Makefiles are in the "src/Makefiles" subdirectory. 8268543SericThey use the version of make that is native for that system. These 8368543Sericare the Makefiles that I use, and they have "Berkeley quirks" in them. 8468543SericI can't guarantee that they will work unmodified in your environment. 8568543SericIn particular, Many of them include -I/usr/sww/include/db and 8668543Seric-L/usr/sww/lib -- these are Berkeley's locations in the ``Software 8768543SericWarehouse'' for the new database libraries, described below. You don't 8868543Serichave to remove these definitions if you don't have these directories, 8968543Sericbut you may have to remove -DNEWDB from the DBMDEF definition. 9065366Seric 9165366SericPlease look for an appropriate Makefile before you start trying to 9265366Sericcompile with Makefile or Makefile.dist. 9365366Seric 9465366SericIf you want to port the new Berkeley make, you can get it from 9565366Sericftp.uu.net in the directory /systems/unix/bsd-sources/usr.bin/make. 9665366SericDiffs and instructions for building this version of make under 9765366SericSunOS 4.1.x are available on ftp.css.itd.umich.edu in 9865366Seric/pub/systems/sun/Net2-make.sun4.diff.Z. Diffs and instructions 9965366Sericfor building this version of make under IBM AIX 3.2.4 are available 10065366Sericon ftp.uni-stuttgart.de in /sw/src/patches/bsd-make-rus-patches. 10168543SericFor Ultrix, try ftp.vix.com:~ftp/pub/patches/pmake-for-ultrix.Z. 10265366SericPaul Southworth <pauls@umich.edu> published a description of porting 10365366Sericthis make in comp.unix.bsd. 10465366Seric 10565366SericThe complete text of the Makefile.inc that is in the parent of the 10665366Sericsendmail directory is: 10765366Seric 10865366Seric # @(#)Makefile.inc 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93 10965366Seric 11065366Seric BINDIR?= /usr/sbin 11165366Seric 11265366Seric 11364250Seric+----------------------+ 11464250Seric| DATABASE DEFINITIONS | 11564250Seric+----------------------+ 11664250Seric 11764250SericThere are several database formats that can be used for the alias files 11864250Sericand for general maps. When used for alias files they interact in an 11964250Sericattempt to be back compatible. 12064250Seric 12164250SericThe three options are NEWDB (the new Berkeley DB package), NDBM (the 12264250Sericolder DBM implementation -- the very old V7 implementation is no 12364250Sericlonger supported), and NIS (Network Information Services). Used alone 12464376Sericthese just include the support they indicate. [If you are using NEWDB, 12568543Sericget the latest version from FTP.CS.Berkeley.EDU in /ucb/4bsd/db.tar.Z 12668543Seric(or db.tar.gz). DO NOT use the version from the Net2 distribution! 12768543SericHowever, if you are on BSD/386 or 386BSD-based systems, use the one 12868543Sericthat already exists on your system. You may need to #define OLD_NEWDB 12968543Seric1 to do this.] 13064250Seric 13165910Seric[NOTE WELL: it is CRITICAL that you remove ndbm.o from libdb.a and 13265910Sericndbm.h from the appropriate include directories if you want to get 13365910Sericndbm support. These files OVERRIDE calls to ndbm routines -- in 13465910Sericparticular, if you leave ndbm.h in, you can find yourself using 13565910Sericthe new db package even if you don't define NEWDB.] 13665910Seric 13764250SericIf NEWDB and NDBM are defined (but not NIS), then sendmail will read 13864250SericNDBM format alias files, but the next time a newaliases is run the 13964250Sericformat will be converted to NEWDB; that format will be used forever 14064250Sericmore. This is intended as a transition feature. [Note however that 14164250Sericthe NEWDB library also catches and maps NDBM calls; you will have to 14264250Sericback out this feature to get this to work. See ``Quirks'' section 14364250Sericbelow for details.] 14464250Seric 14564250SericIf all three are defined, sendmail operates as described above, and also 14664250Sericlooks for the file /var/yp/Makefile. If it exists, newaliases will 14764250Sericbuild BOTH the NEWDB and NDBM format alias files. However, it will 14864250Sericonly use the NEWDB file; the NDBM format file is used only by the 14964250SericNIS subsystem. 15064250Seric 15164250SericIf NDBM and NIS are defined (regardless of the definition of NEWDB 15264250Sericor the existance of /var/yp/Makefile), sendmail adds the special 15364250Serictokens "YP_LAST_MODIFIED" and "YP_MASTER_NAME", both of which are 15464250Sericrequired if the NDBM file is to be used as an NIS map. 15564250Seric 15668543SericThere is also preliminary support for NIS+ (-DNISPLUS), Hesiod 15768543Seric(-DHESIOD), and NetInfo (-DNETINFO). These have not been well 15868543Serictested. 15964250Seric 16068543SericAll of -DNEWDB, -DNDBM, -DNIS, -DNISPLUS, -DHESIOD, and -DNETINFO are 16168543Sericnormally defined in the DBMDEF line in the Makefile. 16264250Seric 16368543Seric 16464035Seric+---------------+ 16564035Seric| COMPILE FLAGS | 16664035Seric+---------------+ 16764035Seric 16860565SericWhereever possible, I try to make sendmail pull in the correct 16960584Sericcompilation options needed to compile on various environments based on 17060584Sericautomatically defined symbols. Some machines don't seem to have useful 17160584Sericsymbols availble, requiring the following compilation flags in the 17260584SericMakefile: 17360565Seric 17460565SericSOLARIS Define this if you are running Solaris 2.0 or higher. 17565000SericSOLARIS_2_3 Define this if you are running Solaris 2.3 or higher. 17665108SericSUNOS403 Define this if you are running SunOS 4.0.3. 17764077SericNeXT Define this if you are on a NeXT box. (This one may 17864072Seric be pre-defined for you.) There are other hacks you 17964072Seric have to make -- see below. 18060565Seric_AIX3 Define this if you are IBM AIX 3.x. 18163965SericRISCOS Define this if you are running RISC/os from MIPS. 18266335SericIRIX Define this if you are running IRIX from SGI. 18364501Seric_SCO_unix_ Define this if you are on SCO UNIX. 18465095Seric_SCO_unix_4_2 Define this if you are on SCO Open Server 3.2v4. 18568543SericDGUX Define this if you are on DG/UX 5.4.3 or later 18668543SericDGUX_5_4_2 Define this if you are on DG/UX systems prior to 5.4.3. 18768543SericNonStop_UX_BXX Define this if you are on a Tandem NonStop-UX release 18868543Seric Bxx system. 18968543SericIRIX64 Define this if you are on an IRIX64 system. 19060565Seric 19160584SericIf you are a system that sendmail has already been ported to, you 19260584Sericprobably won't have to touch these. But if you are porting, you may 19363962Serichave to tweak the following compilation flags in conf.h in order to 19463962Sericget it to compile and link properly: 19560565Seric 19665195SericSYSTEM5 Adjust for System V (not necessarily Release 4). 19764035SericSYS5SIGNALS Use System V signal semantics -- the signal handler 19864035Seric is automatically dropped when the signal is caught. 19964035Seric If this is not set, use POSIX/BSD semantics, where the 20064035Seric signal handler stays in force until an exec or an 20164035Seric explicit delete. Implied by SYSTEM5. 20264706SericSYS5SETPGRP Use System V setpgrp() semantics. Implied by SYSTEM5. 20364035SericHASFLOCK Set this if you prefer to use the flock(2) system call 20464035Seric rather than using fcntl-based locking. Fcntl locking 20564035Seric has some semantic gotchas, but many vendor systems 20664035Seric also interface it to lockd(8) to do NFS-style locking. 20764035Seric For this reason, this should not be set unless you 20864035Seric don't have an alternative. 20960565SericHASUNAME Set if you have the "uname" system call. Implied by 21060565Seric SYSTEM5. 21163962SericHASUNSETENV Define this if your system library has the "unsetenv" 21263962Seric subroutine. 21360565SericHASSETSID Define this if you have the setsid(2) system call. This 21460565Seric is implied if your system appears to be POSIX compliant. 21560565SericHASINITGROUPS Define this if you have the initgroups(3) routine. 21663753SericHASSETVBUF Define this if you have the setvbuf(3) library call. 21763753Seric If you don't, setlinebuf will be used instead. This 21863753Seric defaults on if your compiler defines __STDC__. 21963902SericHASSETREUID Define this if you have setreuid(2) ***AND*** root can 22063902Seric use setreuid to change to an arbitrary user. This second 22163902Seric condition is not satisfied on AIX 3.x. You may find that 22263902Seric your system has setresuid(2), (for example, on HP-UX) in 22363902Seric which case you will also have to #define setreuid(r, e) 22463902Seric to be the appropriate call. Some systems (such as Solaris) 22565000Seric have a compatibility routine that doesn't work properly, 22665000Seric but may have "saved user ids" properly implemented so you 22765000Seric can ``#define setreuid(r, e) seteuid(e)'' and have it work. 22863902Seric The important thing is that you have a call that will set 22965000Seric the effective uid independently of the real or saved uid 23065000Seric and be able to set the effective uid back again when done. 23165000Seric There's a test program in ../test/t_setreuid.c that will 23265000Seric try things on your system. Setting this improves the 23365000Seric security, since sendmail doesn't have to read .forward 23465000Seric and :include: files as root. There are certain attacks 23565000Seric that may be unpreventable without this call. 23669638SericUSESETEUID Define this to 1 if you have seteuid(2) if you have a seteuid 23769638Seric system call that will allow root to set only the effective 23869638Seric user id to an arbitrary value ***AND*** you have saved user 23969638Seric ids. This is preferable to HASSETREUID if these conditions 24069638Seric are fulfilled. These are the semantics of the to-be-released 24169638Seric revision of Posix.1. The test program ../test/t_seteuid.c 24269638Seric will try this out on your system. If you define both 24369638Seric HASSETREUID and USESETEUID, the former is ignored. 24465000SericHASLSTAT Define this if you have symbolic links (and thus the 24565000Seric lstat(2) system call). This improves security. Unlike 24665000Seric most other options, this one is on by default, so you 24765000Seric need to #undef it in conf.h if you don't have symbolic 24865000Seric links (these days everyone does). 24968543SericHASSETRLIMIT Define this to 1 if you have the setrlimit(2) syscall. 25068543Seric You can define it to 0 to force it off. It is assumed 25168543Seric if you are running a BSD-like system. 25268543SericHASULIMIT Define this if you have the ulimit(2) syscall (System V 25368543Seric style systems). HASSETRLIMIT overrides, as it is more 25468543Seric general. 25565206SericNEEDGETOPT Define this if you need a reimplementation of getopt(3). 25665206Seric On some systems, getopt does very odd things if called 25765206Seric to scan the arguments twice. This flag will ask sendmail 25865206Seric to compile in a local version of getopt that works 25965206Seric properly. 26065206SericNEEDSTRTOL Define this if your standard C library does not define 26165206Seric strtol(3). This will compile in a local version. 26265206SericNEEDVPRINTF Define this if your standard C library does not define 26365206Seric vprintf(3). Note that the resulting fake implementation 26465206Seric is not very elegant and may not even work on some 26565206Seric architectures. 26666792SericNEEDFSYNC Define this if your standard C library does not define 26766792Seric fsync(2). This will try to simulate the operation using 26866792Seric fcntl(2); if that is not available it does nothing, which 26966792Seric isn't great, but at least it compiles and runs. 27065211SericHASGETUSERSHELL Define this to 1 if you have getusershell(3) in your 27165211Seric standard C library. If this is not defined, or is defined 27265211Seric to be 0, sendmail will scan the /etc/shells file (no 27365211Seric NIS-style support, defaults to /bin/sh and /bin/csh if 27465211Seric that file does not exist) to get a list of unrestricted 27565211Seric user shells. This is used to determine whether users 27665211Seric are allowed to forward their mail to a program or a file. 27763937SericGIDSET_T The type of entries in a gidset passed as the second 27863937Seric argument to getgroups(2). Historically this has been an 27963937Seric int, so this is the default, but some systems (such as 28063937Seric IRIX) pass it as a gid_t, which is an unsigned short. 28163937Seric This will make a difference, so it is important to get 28263937Seric this right! However, it is only an issue if you have 28363937Seric group sets. 28463968SericSLEEP_T The type returned by the system sleep() function. 28563968Seric Defaults to "unsigned int". Don't worry about this 28663968Seric if you don't have compilation problems. 28763974SericARBPTR_T The type of an arbitrary pointer -- defaults to "void *". 28863974Seric If you are an very old compiler you may need to define 28963974Seric this to be "char *". 29060584SericLA_TYPE The type of load average your kernel supports. These 29166301Seric can be one of: 29269543Seric LA_ZERO (1) -- it always returns the load average as 29366301Seric "zero" (and does so on all architectures). 29469543Seric LA_INT (2) to read /dev/kmem for the symbol avenrun and 29569543Seric interpret as a long integer. 29669543Seric LA_FLOAT (3) same, but interpret the result as a floating 29769543Seric point number. 29869543Seric LA_SHORT (6) to interpret as a short integer. 29969543Seric LA_SUBR (4) if you have the getloadavg(3) routine in your 30069543Seric system library. 30169543Seric LA_MACH (5) to use MACH-style load averages (calls 30266301Seric processor_set_info()), 30369543Seric LA_PROCSTR (7) to read /proc/loadavg and interpret it 30466301Seric as a string representing a floating-point 30569543Seric number (Linux-style). 30669543Seric LA_READKSYM (8) is an implementation suitable for some 30769543Seric versions of SVr4 that uses the MIOC_READKSYM ioctl 30869543Seric call to read /dev/kmem. 30969543Seric LA_DGUX (9) is a special implementation for DG/UX that uses 31069543Seric the dg_sys_info system call. 31169543Seric LA_HPUX (10) is an HP-UX specific version that uses the 31269543Seric pstat_getdynamic system call. 31369543Seric LA_INT, LA_SHORT, LA_FLOAT, and LA_READKSYM have several 31469543Seric other parameters that they try to divine: the name of your 31569543Seric kernel, the name of the variable in the kernel to examine, 31669543Seric the number of bits of precision in a fixed point load average, 31769543Seric and so forth. 31866301Seric In desperation, use LA_ZERO. The actual code is in 31966301Seric conf.c -- it can be tweaked if you are brave. 32069543SericFSHIFT For LA_INT, LA_SHORT, and LA_READKSYM, this is the number 32169543Seric of bits of load average after the binary point -- i.e., 32269543Seric the number of bits to shift right in order to scale the 32369543Seric integer to get the true integer load average. Defaults to 8. 32469543Seric_PATH_UNIX The path to your kernel. Needed only for LA_INT, LA_SHORT, 32569543Seric and LA_FLOAT. Defaults to "/unix" on System V, "/vmunix" 32669543Seric everywhere else. 32769543SericLA_AVENRUN For LA_INT, LA_SHORT, and LA_FLOAT, the name of the kernel 32869543Seric variable that holds the load average. Defaults to "avenrun" 32969543Seric on System V, "_avenrun" everywhere else. 33065752SericSFS_TYPE Encodes how your kernel can locate the amount of free 33165752Seric space on a disk partition. This can be set to SFS_NONE 33265752Seric (0) if you have no way of getting this information, 33365752Seric SFS_USTAT (1) if you have the ustat(2) system call, 33465752Seric SFS_4ARGS (2) if you have a four-argument statfs(2) 33565752Seric system call (and the include file is <sys/statfs.h>), 33668543Seric SFS_VFS (3), SFS_MOUNT (4), SFS_STATFS (5) if you have 33768543Seric the two-argument statfs(2) system call with includes in 33868543Seric <sys/vfs.h>, <sys/mount.h>, or <sys/statfs.h> respectively, 33968543Seric or SFS_STATVFS (6) if you have the two-argument statvfs(2) 34068543Seric call. The default if nothing is defined is SFS_NONE. 34168543SericSFS_BAVAIL with SFS_4ARGS hou can also set SFS_BAVAIL to the field name 34268543Seric in the statfs structure that holds the useful information; 34368543Seric this defaults to f_bavail. 34468543SericSPT_TYPE Encodes how your system can display what a process is doing 34568543Seric on a ps(1) command (SPT stands for Set Process Title). Can 34668543Seric be set to: 34768543Seric SPT_NONE (0) -- Don't try to set the process title at all. 34868543Seric SPT_REUSEARGV (1) -- Pad out your argv with the information; 34968543Seric this is the default if none specified. 35068543Seric SPT_BUILTIN (2) -- The system library has setproctitle. 35168543Seric SPT_PSTAT (3) -- Use the PSTAT_SETCMD option to pstat(2) 35268543Seric to set the process title; this is used by HP-UX. 35368543Seric SPT_PSSTRINGS (4) -- Use the magic PS_STRINGS pointer (4.4BSD). 35468543SericSPT_PADCHAR Character used to pad the process title; if undefined, 35568543Seric the space character (0x20) is used. This is ignored if 35668543Seric SPT_TYPE != SPT_REUSEARGV 35763962SericERRLIST_PREDEFINED 35863962Seric If set, assumes that some header file defines sys_errlist. 35963962Seric This may be needed if you get type conflicts on this 36063962Seric variable -- otherwise don't worry about it. 36164562SericWAITUNION The wait(2) routine takes a "union wait" argument instead 36264562Seric of an integer argument. This is for compatibility with 36364562Seric old versions of BSD. 36465000SericSCANF You can set this to extend the F command to accept a 36565000Seric scanf string -- this gives you a primitive parser for 36665000Seric class definitions -- BUT it can make you vulnerable to 36765000Seric core dumps if the target file is poorly formed. 36865095SericSYSLOG_BUFSIZE You can define this to be the size of the buffer that 36965095Seric syslog accepts. If it is not defined, it assumes a 37065095Seric 1024-byte buffer. If the buffer is very small (under 37165095Seric 256 bytes) the log message format changes -- each 37265095Seric e-mail message will log many more messages, since it 37365095Seric will log each piece of information as a separate line 37465095Seric in syslog. 37566318SericBROKEN_RES_SEARCH 37666318Seric On Ultrix (and maybe other systems?) if you use the 37766318Seric res_search routine with an unknown host name, it returns 37866318Seric -1 but sets h_errno to 0 instead of HOST_NOT_FOUND. If 37966318Seric you set this, sendmail considers 0 to be the same as 38066318Seric HOST_NOT_FOUND. 38168543SericNAMELISTMASK If defined, values returned by nlist(3) are masked 38268543Seric against this value before use -- a common value is 38368543Seric 0x7fffffff to strip off the top bit. 38469543SericBSD4_4_SOCKADDR If defined, socket addresses have an sa_len field that 38569543Seric defines the length of this address. 38660565Seric 38764035Seric 38868543Seric 38964035Seric+-----------------------+ 39064035Seric| COMPILE-TIME FEATURES | 39164035Seric+-----------------------+ 39264035Seric 39360584SericThere are a bunch of features that you can decide to compile in, such 39460584Sericas selecting various database packages and special protocol support. 39560584SericSeveral are assumed based on other compilation flags -- if you want to 39660584Seric"un-assume" something, you probably need to edit conf.h. Compilation 39760584Sericflags that add support for special features include: 39860565Seric 39960565SericNDBM Include support for "new" DBM library for aliases and maps. 40064250Seric Normally defined in the Makefile. 40160565SericNEWDB Include support for Berkeley "db" package (hash & btree) 40264250Seric for aliases and maps. Normally defined in the Makefile. 40366843SericOLD_NEWDB If non-zero, the version of NEWDB you have is the old 40466843Seric one that does not include the "fd" call. This call was 40566843Seric added in version 1.5 of the Berkeley DB code. If you 40666843Seric use -DOLD_NEWDB=0 it forces you to use the new interface. 40760565SericNIS Define this to get NIS (YP) support for aliases and maps. 40864250Seric Normally defined in the Makefile. 40969543SericNISPLUS Define this to get NIS+ support for aliases and maps. 41069543Seric Normally defined in the Makefile. 41169543SericHESIOD Define this to get Hesiod support for aliases and maps. 41269543Seric Normally defined in the Makefile. 41369543SericNETINFO Define this to get NeXT NetInfo support for aliases and maps. 41469543Seric Normally defined in the Makefile. 41560565SericUSERDB Include support for the User Information Database. Implied 41664250Seric by NEWDB in conf.h. 41765000SericIDENTPROTO Define this as 1 to get IDENT (RFC 1413) protocol support. 41860565Seric This is assumed unless you are running on Ultrix or 41960565Seric HP-UX, both of which have a problem in the UDP 42065000Seric implementation. You can define it to be 0 to explicitly 42169543Seric turn off IDENT protocol support. If defined off, the code 42269543Seric is actually still compiled in, but it defaults off; you 42369543Seric can turn it on by setting the IDENT timeout to 30s in the 42469543Seric configuration file. 42569601SericIP_SRCROUTE Define this to 1 to get IP source routing information 42669601Seric displayed in the Received: header. This is assumed on 42769601Seric most systems, but some (e.g., Ultrix) apparently have a 42869601Seric broken version of getsockopt that doesn't properly 42969601Seric support the IP_OPTIONS call. You probably want this if 430*69648Seric your OS can cope with it. Symptoms of failure will be that 431*69648Seric it won't compile properly (that is, no support for fetching 432*69648Seric IP_OPTIONs), or it compiles but source-routed TCP connections 433*69648Seric either refuse to open or open and hang for no apparent reason. 434*69648Seric Ultrix and AIX are known to fail this way. 43560565SericLOG Set this to get syslog(3) support. Defined by default 43660584Seric in conf.h. You want this if at all possible. 43760565SericNETINET Set this to get TCP/IP support. Defined by default 43860584Seric in conf.h. You probably want this. 43960565SericNETISO Define this to get ISO networking support. 44060565SericSMTP Define this to get the SMTP code. Implied by NETINET 44160565Seric or NETISO. 44269543SericNAMED_BIND If non-zero, include DNS (name daemon) support, including 44360565Seric MX support. The specs you must use this if you run 44460565Seric SMTP. Defined by default in conf.h. 44560565SericQUEUE Define this to get queueing code. Implied by NETINET 44660584Seric or NETISO; required by SMTP. This gives you other good 44760584Seric stuff -- it should be on. 44860565SericDAEMON Define this to get general network support. Implied by 44960584Seric NETINET or NETISO. Defined by default in conf.h. You 45060584Seric almost certainly want it on. 45160565SericMATCHGECOS Permit fuzzy matching of user names against the full 45260565Seric name (GECOS) field in the /etc/passwd file. This should 45360565Seric probably be on, since you can disable it from the config 45460584Seric file if you want to. Defined by default in conf.h. 45569543SericMIME8TO7 If non-zero, include 8 to 7 bit MIME conversions. This 45669543Seric also controls advertisement of 8BITMIME in the ESMTP 45769543Seric startup dialogue. 45869543SericMIME7TO8 If non-zero, include 7 to 8 bit MIME conversions. Not yet 45969543Seric implemented. 46060565Seric 46164035Seric 46265000Seric+---------------------+ 46365000Seric| DNS/RESOLVER ISSUES | 46465000Seric+---------------------+ 46565000Seric 46665000SericMany systems have old versions of the resolver library. At a minimum, 46765000Sericyou should be running BIND 4.8.3; older versions may compile, but they 46865000Serichave known bugs that should give you pause. 46965000Seric 47065000SericCommon problems in old versions include "undefined" errors for 47165000Sericdn_skipname. 47265000Seric 47365000SericSome people have had a problem with BIND 4.9; it uses some routines 47465000Sericthat it expects to be externally defined such as strerror(). It may 47565000Serichelp to link with "-l44bsd" to solve this problem. 47665000Seric 47765095Seric!PLEASE! be sure to link with the same version of the resolver as 47865095Sericthe header files you used -- some people have used the 4.9 headers 47965095Sericand linked with BIND 4.8 or vice versa, and it doesn't work. 48065095SericUnfortunately, it doesn't fail in an obvious way -- things just 48165954Sericsubtly don't work. 48265000Seric 48365095Seric 48464035Seric+-------------------------------------+ 48564035Seric| OPERATING SYSTEM AND COMPILE QUIRKS | 48664035Seric+-------------------------------------+ 48764035Seric 48865095SericGCC 2.5.x problems *** IMPORTANT *** 48965095Seric Date: Mon, 29 Nov 93 19:08:44 PST 49065095Seric From: wilson@cygnus.com (Jim Wilson) 49165095Seric Message-Id: <9311300308.AA04608@cygnus.com> 49265095Seric To: kenner@vlsi1.ultra.nyu.edu 49365095Seric Subject: [cattelan@thebarn.com: gcc 2.5.4-2.5.5 -O bug] 49465095Seric Cc: cattelan@thebarn.com, rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu, sendmail@cs.berkeley.edu 49565095Seric 49665095Seric This fixes a problem that occurs when gcc 2.5.5 is used to compile 49765095Seric sendmail 8.6.4 with optimization on a sparc. 49865095Seric 49965095Seric Mon Nov 29 19:00:14 1993 Jim Wilson (wilson@sphagnum.cygnus.com) 50065095Seric 50165095Seric * reload.c (find_reloads_toplev): Replace obsolete reference to 50265095Seric BYTE_LOADS_*_EXTEND with LOAD_EXTEND_OP. 50365095Seric 50465095Seric *** clean-ss-931128/reload.c Sun Nov 14 16:20:01 1993 50565095Seric --- ss-931128/reload.c Mon Nov 29 18:52:55 1993 50665095Seric *************** find_reloads_toplev (x, opnum, type, ind 50765095Seric *** 3888,3894 **** 50865095Seric force a reload in that case. So we should not do anything here. */ 50965095Seric 51065095Seric else if (regno >= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER 51165095Seric ! #if defined(BYTE_LOADS_ZERO_EXTEND) || defined(BYTE_LOADS_SIGN_EXTEND) 51265095Seric && (GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (x)) 51365095Seric <= GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (SUBREG_REG (x)))) 51465095Seric #endif 51565095Seric --- 3888,3894 ---- 51665095Seric force a reload in that case. So we should not do anything here. */ 51765095Seric 51865095Seric else if (regno >= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER 51965095Seric ! #ifdef LOAD_EXTEND_OP 52065095Seric && (GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (x)) 52165095Seric <= GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (SUBREG_REG (x)))) 52265095Seric #endif 52365095Seric 52465095Seric 52564376SericSunOS 4.x (Solaris 1.x) 52664376Seric You may have to use -lresolv on SunOS. However, beware that 52764376Seric this links in a new version of gethostbyname that does not 52864376Seric understand NIS, so you must have all of your hosts in DNS. 52964035Seric 53064798Seric Some people have reported problems with the SunOS version of 53164798Seric -lresolv and/or in.named, and suggest that you get a newer 53264798Seric version. The symptoms are delays when you connect to the 53365000Seric SMTP server on a SunOS machine or having your domain added to 53465000Seric addresses inappropriately. There is a version of BIND 53564798Seric version 4.9 on gatekeeper.DEC.COM in pub/BSD/bind/4.9. 53664798Seric 53764400Seric There is substantial disagreement about whether you can make 53864400Seric this work with resolv+, which allows you to specify a search-path 53964400Seric of services. Some people report that it works fine, others 54064400Seric claim it doesn't work at all (including causing sendmail to 54164400Seric drop core when it tries to do multiple resolv+ lookups for a 54264400Seric single job). I haven't tried resolv+, as we use DNS exclusively. 54364400Seric 54464400Seric Should you want to try resolv+, it is on ftp.uu.net in 54564400Seric /networking/ip/dns. 54664400Seric 54768543Seric Apparently getservbyname() can fail under moderate to high 54868543Seric load under some circumstances. This will exhibit itself as 54968543Seric the message ``554 makeconnection: service "smtp" unknown''. 55068543Seric The problem has been traced to one or more blank lines in 55168543Seric /etc/services on the NIS server machine. Delete these 55268543Seric and it should work. This info is thanks to Brian Bartholomew 55368543Seric <bb@math.ufl.edu> of I-Kinetics, Inc. 55468543Seric 55564376SericSolaris 2.x (SunOS 5.x) 55664376Seric To compile for Solaris, be sure you use -DSOLARIS. 55764376Seric 55866329Seric To the best of my knowledge, Solaris does not have the 55966329Seric gethostbyname problem described above. However, it does 56066329Seric have another one: 56166329Seric 56264364Seric From a correspondent: 56364364Seric 56464364Seric For solaris 2.2, I have 56564364Seric 56664364Seric hosts: files dns 56764364Seric 56864364Seric in /etc/nsswitch.conf and /etc/hosts has to have the fully 56964364Seric qualified host name. I think "files" has to be before "dns" 57064364Seric in /etc/nsswitch.conf during bootup. 57164364Seric 57266329Seric From another correspondent: 57364376Seric 57466329Seric When running sendmail under Solaris, the gethostbyname() 57566329Seric hack in conf.c which should perform proper canonicalization 57666329Seric of host names could fail. Result: the host name is not 57766329Seric canonicalized despite the hack, and you'll have to define $j 57866329Seric and $m in sendmail.cf somewhere. 57966329Seric 58066329Seric The reason could be that /etc/nsswitch.conf is improperly 58166329Seric configured (at least from sendmail's point of view). For 58266329Seric example, the line 58366329Seric 58466329Seric hosts: files nisplus dns 58566329Seric 58666329Seric will make gethostbyname() look in /etc/hosts first, then ask 58766329Seric nisplus, then dns. However, if /etc/hosts does not contain 58866329Seric the full canonicalized hostname, then no amount of 58966329Seric gethostbyname()s will work. 59066329Seric 59166329Seric Solution (or rather, a workaround): Ask nisplus first, then 59266329Seric dns, then local files: 59366329Seric 59466329Seric hosts: nisplus dns [NOTFOUND=return] files 59566329Seric 59664385Seric The Solaris "syslog" function is apparently limited to something 59764385Seric about 90 characters because of a kernel limitation. If you have 59866023Seric source code, you can probably up this number. You can get patches 59966023Seric that fix this problem: the patch ids are: 60064385Seric 60166023Seric Solaris 2.1 100834 60266023Seric Solaris 2.2 100999 60366024Seric Solaris 2.3 101318 60466023Seric 60566023Seric Be sure you have the appropriate patch installed or you won't 60666023Seric see system logging. 60766023Seric 60869280SericUltrix 60969280Seric By default, the IDENT protocol is turned off on Ultrix. If you 61069280Seric are running Ultrix 4.4 or later, or if you have gotten a patch 61169280Seric the TCP problem for an earlier version of Ultrix, you can turn 61269280Seric IDENT on in the configuration file by setting the "ident" timeout 61369280Seric to 30 seconds. 61469280Seric 61564250SericOSF/1 61665000Seric If you are compiling on OSF/1 (DEC Alpha), you must use 61765616Seric -L/usr/shlib (otherwise it core dumps on startup). You may also 61865000Seric need -mld to get the nlist() function, although some versions 61965000Seric apparently don't need this. 62065000Seric 62165000Seric Also, the enclosed makefile removed /usr/sbin/smtpd; if you need 62265000Seric it, just create the link to the sendmail binary. 62357977Seric 62466335SericIRIX 62566335Seric The header files on SGI IRIX are completely prototyped, and as 62666335Seric a result you can sometimes get some warning messages during 62766335Seric compilation. These can be ignored. There are two errors in 62866335Seric deliver only if you are using gcc, both of the form ``warning: 62966335Seric passing arg N of `execve' from incompatible pointer type''. 63066335Seric Also, if you compile with -DNIS, you will get a complaint 63166335Seric about a declaration of struct dom_binding in a prototype 63266335Seric when compiling map.c; this is not important because the 63366335Seric function being prototyped is not used in that file. 63466335Seric 63568543Seric In order to compile sendmail you will have had to install 63668543Seric the developers' option in order to get the necessary include 63768543Seric files. 63868543Seric 63964250SericNeXT 64064250Seric If you are compiling on NeXT, you will have to create an empty 64164250Seric file "unistd.h" and create a file "dirent.h" containing: 64263753Seric 64364250Seric #include <sys/dir.h> 64464250Seric #define dirent direct 64564035Seric 64664250Seric (The Makefile.NeXT should try to do both of these for you.) 64764077Seric 64864364Seric Apparently, there is a bug in getservbyname on Nextstep 3.0 64964364Seric that causes it to fail under some circumstances with the 65064364Seric message "SYSERR: service "smtp" unknown" logged. You should 65164364Seric be able to work around this by including the line: 65264364Seric 65364670Seric OOPort=25 65464364Seric 65564364Seric in your .cf file. 65664364Seric 65764376Seric You may have to use -DNeXT. 65864376Seric 65965000SericBSDI (BSD/386) 1.0, NetBSD 0.9, FreeBSD 1.0 66065000Seric The "m4" from BSDI won't handle the config files properly. 66165000Seric I haven't had a chance to test this myself. 66257943Seric 66365000Seric The M4 shipped in FreeBSD and NetBSD 0.9 don't handle the config 66465000Seric files properly. One must use either GNU m4 1.1 or the PD-M4 66565000Seric recently posted in comp.os.386bsd.bugs (and maybe others). 66665000Seric NetBSD-current includes the PD-M4 (as stated in the NetBSD file 66765000Seric CHANGES). 66865000Seric 66965000Seric FreeBSD 1.0 RELEASE has uname(2) now. Use -DUSEUNAME in order to 67065000Seric use it (look into Makefile.FreeBSD). NetBSD-current may have 67165000Seric it too but it has not been verified. 67265000Seric 67365000Seric You cannot port the latest version of the Berkeley db library 67465000Seric and use it with sendmail without recompiling the world. This 67565000Seric is because C library routines use the older version which have 67665000Seric incompatible header files -- the result is that it can't read 67765000Seric other system files, such as /etc/passwd, unless you use the 67865000Seric new db format throughout your system. You should normally just 67965000Seric use the version of db supplied in your release. You may need 68066843Seric to use -DOLD_NEWDB=1 to make this work -- this turns off some 68165000Seric new interface calls (for file locking) that are not in older 68265000Seric versions of db. You'll get compile errors if you need this 68365000Seric flag and don't have it set. 68465000Seric 68564364Seric4.3BSD 68664364Seric If you are running a "virgin" version of 4.3BSD, you'll have 68764364Seric a very old resolver and be missing some header files. The 68864364Seric header files are simple -- create empty versions and everything 68964364Seric will work fine. For the resolver you should really port a new 69064364Seric version (4.8.3 or later) of the resolver; 4.9 is available on 69164364Seric gatekeeper.DEC.COM in pub/BSD/bind/4.9. If you are really 69264364Seric determined to continue to use your old, buggy version (or as 69364364Seric a shortcut to get sendmail working -- I'm sure you have the 69464364Seric best intentions to port a modern version of BIND), you can 69564364Seric copy ../contrib/oldbind.compat.c into src and add 69664364Seric oldbind.compat.o to OBJADD in the Makefile. 69764364Seric 69864718SericA/UX 69964718Seric Date: Tue, 12 Oct 1993 18:28:28 -0400 (EDT) 70064718Seric From: "Eric C. Hagberg" <hagberg@med.cornell.edu> 70164718Seric Subject: Fix for A/UX ndbm 70264718Seric 70364718Seric I guess this isn't really a sendmail bug, however, it is something 70464718Seric that A/UX users should be aware of when compiling sendmail 8.6. 70564718Seric 70664718Seric Apparently, the calls that sendmail is using to the ndbm routines 70764718Seric in A/UX 3.0.x contain calls to "broken" routines, in that the 70864718Seric aliases database will break when it gets "just a little big" 70964718Seric (sorry I don't have exact numbers here, but it broke somewhere 71064718Seric around 20-25 aliases for me.), making all aliases non-functional 71164718Seric after exceeding this point. 71264718Seric 71364718Seric What I did was to get the gnu-dbm-1.6 package, compile it, and 71464718Seric then re-compile sendmail with "-lgdbm", "-DNDBM", and using the 71564718Seric ndbm.h header file that comes with the gnu-package. This makes 71664718Seric things behave properly. 71764718Seric 71864718Seric I suppose porting the New Berkeley db package is another route, 71964718Seric however, I made a quick attempt at it, and found it difficult 72064718Seric (not easy at least); the gnu-dbm package "configured" and 72164718Seric compiled easily. 72264718Seric 72368543SericSCO Unix 72468543Seric From: Thomas Essebier <tom@stallion.oz.au> 72568543Seric Organisation: Stallion Technologies Pty Ltd. 72668543Seric 72768543Seric It will probably help those who are trying to configure sendmail 8.6.9 72868543Seric to know that if they are on SCO, they had better set 72968543Seric OI-dnsrch 73068543Seric or they will core dump as soon as they try to use the resolver. 73168543Seric ie. although SCO has _res.dnsrch defined, and is kinda BIND 4.8.3, it 73268543Seric does not inititialise it, nor does it understand 'search' in 73368543Seric /etc/named.boot. 73468543Seric - sigh - 73568543Seric 73664718SericDG/UX 73768543Seric Doug Anderson <dlander@afterlife.ncsc.mil> has successfully run 73868543Seric V8 on the DG/UX 5.4.2 and 5.4R3.x platforms under heavy usage. 73968543Seric Originally, the DG /bin/mail program wasn't compatible with 74068543Seric the V8 sendmail, since the DG /bin/mail requires the environment 74168543Seric variable "_FORCE_MAIL_LOCAL_=yes" be set. Version 8.7 now includes 74268543Seric this in the environment before invoking the local mailer. Some 74368543Seric have used procmail to avoid this problem in the past. It works 74468543Seric but some have experienced file locking problems with their DG/UX 74568543Seric ports of procmail. 74664718Seric 74765820SericApollo DomainOS 74865820Seric If you are compiling on Apollo, you will have to create an empty 74965820Seric file "unistd.h" and create a file "dirent.h" containing: 75065820Seric 75165820Seric #include <sys/dir.h> 75265820Seric #define dirent direct 75365820Seric 75465820Seric (The Makefile.DomainOS will attempt to do both of these for you.) 75565820Seric 75665910SericHP-UX 8.00 75765910Seric Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 13:25:45 +0200 75865910Seric From: Kimmo Suominen <Kimmo.Suominen@lut.fi> 75965910Seric Subject: 8.6.5 w/ HP-UX 8.00 on s300 76065910Seric 76165910Seric Just compiled and fought with sendmail 8.6.5 on a HP9000/360 (ie. a 76265910Seric series 300 machine) running HP-UX 8.00. 76365910Seric 76465910Seric I was getting segmentation fault when delivering to a local user. 76565910Seric With debugging I saw it was faulting when doing _free@libc... *sigh* 76665910Seric It seems the new implementation of malloc on s300 is buggy as of 8.0, 76765910Seric so I tried out the one in -lmalloc (malloc(3X)). With that it seems 76865910Seric to work just dandy. 76965910Seric 77065910Seric When linking, you will get the following error: 77165910Seric 77265910Seric ld: multiply defined symbol _freespace in file /usr/lib/libmalloc.a 77365910Seric 77465910Seric but you can just ignore it. You might want to add this info to the 77565910Seric README file for the future... 77665910Seric 77765910SericLinux 77865910Seric Something broke between versions 0.99.13 and 0.99.14 of Linux: 77965910Seric the flock() system call gives errors. If you are running .14, 78065910Seric you must not use flock. You can do this with -DHASFLOCK=0. 78165910Seric 78268487Seric Around the inclusion of bind-4.9.3 & linux libc-4.6.20, the 78368487Seric initialization of the _res structure changed. If /etc/hosts.conf 78468487Seric was configured as "hosts, bind" the resolver code could return 78568487Seric "Name server failure" errors. This is supposedly fixed in 78668487Seric later versions of libc (>= 4.6.29?), and later versions of 78768487Seric sendmail (> 8.6.10) try to work around the problem. 78868487Seric 78968487Seric Some older versions (< 4.6.20?) of the libc/include files conflict 79068487Seric with sendmail's version of cdefs.h. Deleting sendmail's version 79168487Seric on those systems should be non-harmful, and new versions don't care. 79268487Seric 79365910SericAIX 79465910Seric This version of sendmail does not support MB, MG, and MR resource 79565910Seric records, which are supported by AIX sendmail. 79665910Seric 79766335SericRISC/os 79866335Seric RISC/os from MIPS is a merged AT&T/Berkeley system. When you 79966335Seric compile on that platform you will get duplicate definitions 80066335Seric on many files. You can ignore these. 80166335Seric 80265195SericSystem V Release 4 Based Systems 80365195Seric There is a single Makefile that is intended for all SVR4-based 80465195Seric systems (called Makefile.SVR4). It defines __svr4__, which is 80565195Seric predefined by some compilers. If your compiler already defines 80665195Seric this compile variable, you can delete the definition from the 80765195Seric Makefile. 80865195Seric 80965195Seric It's been tested on Dell Issue 2.2. 81065195Seric 81165095SericDELL SVR4 81265095Seric Date: Mon, 06 Dec 1993 10:42:29 EST 81365095Seric From: "Kimmo Suominen" <kim@grendel.lut.fi> 81465095Seric Message-ID: <2d0352f9.lento29@lento29.UUCP> 81565095Seric To: eric@cs.berkeley.edu 81665166Seric Cc: sendmail@cs.berkeley.edu 81765095Seric Subject: Notes for DELL SVR4 81865095Seric 81965095Seric Eric, 82065095Seric 82165095Seric Here are some notes for compiling Sendmail 8.6.4 on DELL SVR4. I ran 82265095Seric across these things when helping out some people who contacted me by 82365095Seric e-mail. 82465095Seric 82565095Seric 1) Use gcc 2.4.5 (or later?). Dell distributes gcc 2.1 with their 82665095Seric Issue 2.2 Unix. It is too old, and gives you problems with 82765095Seric clock.c, because sigset_t won't get defined in <sys/signal.h>. 82865095Seric This is due to a problematic protection rule in there, and is 82965095Seric fixed with gcc 2.4.5. 83065095Seric 83165095Seric 2) If you don't use the new Berkeley DB (-DNEWDB), then you need 83265095Seric to add "-lc -lucb" to the libraries to link with. This is because 83365095Seric the -ldbm distributed by Dell needs the bcopy, bcmp and bzero 83465095Seric functions. It is important that you specify both libraries in 83565095Seric the given order to be sure you only get the BSTRING functions 83665095Seric from the UCB library (and not the signal routines etc.). 83765095Seric 83865095Seric 3) Don't leave out "-lelf" even if compiling with "-lc -lucb". 83965095Seric The UCB library also has another copy of the nlist routines, 84065095Seric but we do want the ones from "-lelf". 84165095Seric 84265095Seric If anyone needs a compiled gcc 2.4.5 and/or a ported DB library, they 84365095Seric can use anonymous ftp to fetch them from lut.fi in the /kim directory. 84465095Seric They are copies of what I use on grendel.lut.fi, and offering them 84565095Seric does not imply that I would also support them. I have sent the DB 84665095Seric port for SVR4 back to Keith Bostic for inclusion in the official 84765095Seric distribution, but I haven't heard anything from him as of today. 84865095Seric 84965095Seric - gcc-2.4.5-svr4.tar.gz (gcc 2.4.5 and the corresponding libg++) 85065095Seric - db-1.72.tar.gz (with source, objects and a installed copy) 85165095Seric 85265095Seric Cheers 85365095Seric + Kim 85465095Seric -- 85565095Seric * Kimmo.Suominen@lut.fi * SysVr4 enthusiast at GRENDEL.LUT.FI * 85665095Seric * KIM@FINFILES.BITNET * Postmaster and Hostmaster at LUT.FI * 85765095Seric * + 358 200 865 718 * Unix area moderator at NIC.FUNET.FI * 85865095Seric 85968543SericConvexOS 10.1 and below 86068543Seric In order to use the name server, you must create the file 86168543Seric /etc/use_nameserver. If this file does not exist, the call 86268543Seric to res_init() will fail and you will have absolutely no 86368543Seric access to DNS, including MX records. 86465095Seric 86568543SericAmdahl UTS 2.1.5 86668543Seric In order to get UTS to work, you will have to port BIND 4.9. 86768543Seric The vendor's BIND is reported to be ``totally inadequate.'' 86868543Seric See sendmail/contrib/AmdahlUTS.patch for the patches necessary 86968543Seric to get BIND 4.9 compiled for UTS. 87068543Seric 87168543SericUnixWare 2.0 87268543Seric According to Alexander Kolbasov <sasha@unitech.gamma.ru>, 87368543Seric the m4 on UnixWare 2.0 (still in Beta) will core dump on the 87468543Seric config files. GNU m4 and the m4 from UnixWare 1.x both work. 87568543Seric 87664718SericNon-DNS based sites 87764718Seric This version of sendmail always tries to connect to the Domain 87864718Seric Name System (DNS) to resolve names, regardless of the setting 87964718Seric of the `I' option. On most systems that are not running DNS, 88064718Seric this will fail quickly and sendmail will continue, but on some 88164718Seric systems it has a long timeout. If you have this problem, you 88264718Seric will have to recompile without NAMED_BIND. Some people have 88364718Seric claimed that they have successfully used "OI+USEVC" to force 88464718Seric sendmail to use a virtual circuit -- this will always time out 88564718Seric quickly, but also tells sendmail that a failed connection 88664718Seric should requeue the message (probably not what you intended). 88764718Seric A future release of sendmail will correct this problem. 88864718Seric 88964250SericBoth NEWDB and NDBM 89064250Seric If you use both -DNDBM and -DNEWDB, you must delete the module 89164250Seric ndbm.o from libdb.a and delete the file "ndbm.h" from the files 89264250Seric that get installed (that is, use the OLD ndbm.h, not the new 89364250Seric ndbm.h). This compatibility module maps ndbm calls into DB 89464250Seric calls, and breaks things rather badly. 89558709Seric 89664559SericGNU getopt 89764559Seric I'm told that GNU getopt has a problem in that it gets confused 89864559Seric by the double call. Use the version in conf.c instead. 89964250Seric 90066350SericBIND 4.9.2 and Ultrix 90168543Seric If you are running on Ultrix, be sure you read conf/Info.Ultrix 90268543Seric in the BIND distribution very carefully -- there is information 90368543Seric in there that you need to know in order to avoid errors of the 90468543Seric form: 90564559Seric 90666350Seric /lib/libc.a(gethostent.o): sethostent: multiply defined 90766350Seric /lib/libc.a(gethostent.o): endhostent: multiply defined 90866350Seric /lib/libc.a(gethostent.o): gethostbyname: multiply defined 90966350Seric /lib/libc.a(gethostent.o): gethostbyaddr: multiply defined 91066350Seric 91166350Seric during the link stage. 91266350Seric 91368890Sericstrtoul 91468890Seric Some compilers (notably gcc) claim to be ANSI C but do not 91568890Seric include the ANSI-required routine "strtoul". If your compiler 91668890Seric has this problem, you will get an error in srvrsmtp.c on the 91768890Seric code: 91866350Seric 91968890Seric # ifdef defined(__STDC__) && !defined(BROKEN_ANSI_LIBRARY) 92068890Seric e->e_msgsize = strtoul(vp, (char **) NULL, 10); 92168890Seric # else 92268890Seric e->e_msgsize = strtol(vp, (char **) NULL, 10); 92368890Seric # endif 92468890Seric 92568890Seric You can use -DBROKEN_ANSI_LIBRARY to get around this problem. 92668890Seric 92768890Seric 92864820Seric+--------------+ 92964820Seric| MANUAL PAGES | 93064820Seric+--------------+ 93164820Seric 93264820SericThe manual pages have been written against the -mandoc macros 93364820Sericinstead of the -man macros. The latest version of groff has them 93464820Sericincluded. You can also get a copy from FTP.UU.NET in directory 93564820Seric/systems/unix/bsd-sources/share/tmac. 93664820Seric 93764820Seric 93865151Seric+-----------------+ 93965151Seric| DEBUGGING HOOKS | 94065151Seric+-----------------+ 94165151Seric 94265151SericAs of 8.6.5, sendmail daemons will catch a SIGUSR1 signal and log 94365151Sericsome debugging output (logged at LOG_DEBUG severity). The 94465151Sericinformation dumped is: 94565151Seric 94665151Seric * The value of the $j macro. 94765151Seric * A warning if $j is not in the set $=w. 94865151Seric * A list of the open file descriptors. 94965151Seric * The contents of the connection cache. 95065151Seric * If ruleset 89 is defined, it is evaluated and the results printed. 95165151Seric 95265151SericThis allows you to get information regarding the runtime state of the 95365151Sericdaemon on the fly. This should not be done too frequently, since 95465151Sericthe process of rewriting may lose memory which will not be recovered. 95565151SericAlso, ruleset 89 may call non-reentrant routines, so there is a small 95665151Sericnon-zero probability that this will cause other problems. It is 95765151Sericreally only for debugging serious problems. 95865151Seric 95965151SericA typical formulation of ruleset 89 would be: 96065151Seric 96165151Seric R$* $@ $>0 some test address 96265151Seric 96365151Seric 96464035Seric+-----------------------------+ 96564035Seric| DESCRIPTION OF SOURCE FILES | 96664035Seric+-----------------------------+ 96764035Seric 9689881SericThe following list describes the files in this directory: 9695369Seric 97057418SericMakefile The makefile used here; this version only works with 97157418Seric the new Berkeley make. 97257418SericMakefile.dist A trimmed down version of the makefile that works with 97357418Seric the old make. 9745369SericREAD_ME This file. 97560565SericTRACEFLAGS My own personal list of the trace flags -- not guaranteed 97660565Seric to be particularly up to date. 9775369Sericalias.c Does name aliasing in all forms. 9789881Sericarpadate.c A subroutine which creates ARPANET standard dates. 9799881Sericclock.c Routines to implement real-time oriented functions 9809881Seric in sendmail -- e.g., timeouts. 9815369Sericcollect.c The routine that actually reads the mail into a temp 9825369Seric file. It also does a certain amount of parsing of 9835369Seric the header, etc. 9845369Sericconf.c The configuration file. This contains information 9855369Seric that is presumed to be quite static and non- 9865369Seric controversial, or code compiled in for efficiency 9875369Seric reasons. Most of the configuration is in sendmail.cf. 9889881Sericconf.h Configuration that must be known everywhere. 9895369Sericconvtime.c A routine to sanely process times. 9909881Sericdaemon.c Routines to implement daemon mode. This version is 9919881Seric specifically for Berkeley 4.1 IPC. 9925369Sericdeliver.c Routines to deliver mail. 99360565Sericdomain.c Routines that interface with DNS (the Domain Name 99460565Seric System). 9955369Sericerr.c Routines to print error messages. 9969881Sericenvelope.c Routines to manipulate the envelope structure. 9975369Sericheaders.c Routines to process message headers. 9985369Sericmacro.c The macro expander. This is used internally to 9995369Seric insert information from the configuration file. 10005369Sericmain.c The main routine to sendmail. This file also 10015369Seric contains some miscellaneous routines. 100260565Sericmap.c Support for database maps. 100360565Sericmci.c Routines that handle mail connection information caching. 10049881Sericparseaddr.c The routines which do address parsing. 10055369Sericqueue.c Routines to implement message queueing. 10065369Sericreadcf.c The routine that reads the configuration file and 10075369Seric translates it to internal form. 10089881Sericrecipient.c Routines that manipulate the recipient list. 10095369Sericsavemail.c Routines which save the letter on processing errors. 10105369Sericsendmail.h Main header file for sendmail. 10115369Sericsrvrsmtp.c Routines to implement server SMTP. 10125369Sericstab.c Routines to manage the symbol table. 10135369Sericstats.c Routines to collect and post the statistics. 10145369Sericsysexits.c List of error messages associated with error codes 10155369Seric in sysexits.h. 10169881Serictrace.c The trace package. These routines allow setting and 10179881Seric testing of trace flags with a high granularity. 101860565Sericudb.c The user database interface module. 10195369Sericusersmtp.c Routines to implement user SMTP. 10205369Sericutil.c Some general purpose routines used by sendmail. 102160565Sericversion.c The version number and information about this 102260565Seric version of sendmail. Theoretically, this gets 102360565Seric modified on every change. 10245369Seric 10255369SericEric Allman 10265369Seric 1027*69648Seric(Version 8.89, last update 05/24/95 07:55:40) 1028