How to configure and install mailx ================================== Quick start ----------- make make install No 'configure' step is necessary anymore. If 'make install' fails because no /usr/ucb/install program is present, try make install UCBINSTALL=/usr/bin/install Detailed description -------------------- Path names are configurable as Makefile variables: PREFIX The default Makefile puts BINDIR and MANDIR below this. BINDIR The mailx binary is installed there. MANDIR The mailx manual page is put in $(MANDIR)/man1. SYSCONFDIR nail.rc is installed in this directory unless it already exists. MAILSPOOL The directory where the mail files of users are stored under their respective names and in mbox format. If only POP3 is used to read mail, the value does not matter. SENDMAIL Path to the de-facto standard /usr/lib/sendmail interface normally offered by Unix MTAs. If only SMTP is used to send mail, the value does not matter. Note that if you want to use the '-r' option in mailx, the sendmail interface must support the '-r' option too. DESTDIR Prepended to BINDIR, MANDIR etc. at 'make install'. Mostly useful for package building. UCBINSTALL Path name to a BSD-style install, like /usr/ucb/install on SVR4 or GNU install. Mailx uses a simple shell script named 'makeconfig' to check for header files and library functions. It is automatically invoked by 'make all'. The script generates three files, 'config.h', 'LIBS', and 'config.log'. 'config.h' is included as usual, 'LIBS' contains options for the linker, and 'config.log' contains all test programs and test results. Neither of these files is changed by make once it exists until 'make mrproper' is run, so they can be edited by hand without much fear of losing them. Useful Makefile targets: all Initiates the build; just type 'make'. install Installs the binary and the manual page. If the systemwide configuration file is not present already, is is also installed. clean Removes object files. mrproper Removes object files and the configuration results. Makefile variables to control the build process: CFLAGS Flags for the C compiler, such as '-O'. CPPFLAGS Flags for the C preprocessor. Some versions of glibc on Linux need '-D_GNU_SOURCE' here, or wcwidth() will not be available and multibyte characters cannot be displayed correctly. INCLUDES A list of additional include file directories, as '-I/usr/local/include'. Use this to locate the include files for NSS, OpenSSL, or iconv(3), if they are not present in the standard include directories. Also, some versions of RedHat Linux need -I/usr/kerberos/include to compile with OpenSSL, or to compile with GSSAPI authentication included. LDFLAGS Flags for the linker. To compile with GSSAPI authentication included, some RedHat versions need -L/usr/kerberos/lib. Also use this to specify the NSS or OpenSSL library path. LIBS A list of additional libraries such as '-lfoo'. -lsocket, -lnsl, -lssl, -lcrypto, -liconv, and NSS libraries are automatically included by makeconfig and should not be put into this. As usual with Makefile variables, you can pass these values to make in the environment or on the command line. Thus if you want to avoid to edit the Makefile, you can create a shell script to invoke make, or set flags of general use (such as CFLAGS) in .profile. Note that passing flags on the command line does not override those specified in the Makefile itself with several commercial versions of make in combination with the recursive make calls that are executed at configuration time. Transition remarks concerning the old configure system ====================================================== * --prefix and other common configure options: Path names can be specified in the Makefile or as assignment arguments to make. * --with-openssl: No longer available. Mailx is always built with OpenSSL support if possible. If you really want to have a mailx binary without OpenSSL support, edit config.h after running 'make config.h'. * --enable-all-chars: No longer available at compile time. 'print-all-chars' can be set in mailx in those cases where use of this option was necessary. * --with-rcfile, --with-mailspool, --with-sendmail: These path names can be set in the Makefile or as arguments to make. * --with-csh: No longer used. Mailx now uses /bin/sh for executing commands if the SHELL variable is not set. * --with-more, --with-pg, --with-ed, --with-vi: No longer available. If the PAGER, EDITOR, or VISUAL variables are not set, the executable is looked up using $PATH. * --with-catname=NAME: Contact the author if you want usable message catalogue support. In short, if you were using -------- ./configure --prefix=/opt/nail --with-rcfile=/opt/nail/etc/nail.rc up to now, replace it by make PREFIX=/opt/mailx SYSCONFDIR=/opt/mailx/etc The DESTDIR variable for building packages is available as before. If you intend to build mailx packages, a look at 'mailx.spec' might be helpful - even if you don't use RPM, the process is likely to be similar. Why autoconf/automake are no longer used ======================================== Autoconf and automake are systems of considerable complexity which one must know well to make real use of them. The autoconf/automake scripts for mailx were supplied by a contributor in 2000 and were out of date as of 2004; they wouldn't work with recent versions of automake, in particular. But I'm not very interested in learning automake myself, and I'm absolutely not interested in keeping such knowledge up-to-date with new automake versions. Furthermore, I've made some horrible hacks for the autoconf/automake scripts in previous versions (such as --with-rcfile) because once one doesn't like some particular behavior of them, working around can be difficult. Such hacks are unnecessary now. The new build system needs approximately the same number of lines as just the maintainer-supplied portions of the old autoconf/automake system did. Since it is written in standard languages (shell and make), any Unix developer can read and understand it; to make adjustments to it, no special versions of third-party tools are needed. Every serious developer should understand the advantage (except perhaps some GNU addicts who have learned and installed all versions of automake anyway). For the user who just wants to build mailx, the new system is not more complicated than the old one; transition mostly involves passing path names to make instead of passing them to configure. (It's not even an argument that the user needs to know the names of Makefile variables; --prefix didn't work as designed by the GNU folks with the old system anyway.) In short, everything is better now. Building S/MIME and SSL/TLS support using Mozilla NSS ===================================================== It is possible to build encryption support using Mozilla NSS instead of OpenSSL. Doing so has both advantages and disadvantages: - With NSS, mailx can use the same key and certificate databases as the Mozilla applications (Mozilla Suite, Firefox, Thunderbird). This makes it possible to install and configure certificates at one central location. Note that running mailx and Mozilla at the same time from one certificate directory may result in 'Bad database' errors in mailx if Mozilla modifies the configuration files (mailx never modifies them). If you encounter such problems, create a copy of the .db files for exclusive use with mailx. - OpenSSL offers more transparent control over certificates. While it is possible to modify the NSS databases using command line utilities (see ), it is certainly easier to use PEM files along with descriptions in OpenSSL if direct control is desired (e.g. for batch use). - NSS supports S/MIME in both versions 2 and 3, OpenSSL currently only supports version 2. - Building OpenSSL is much easier than building NSS for use with non-Mozilla applications like mailx. To build using NSS, you need both the NSS and the NSPR libraries/include files from the Mozilla project. If you are using a Linux distribution, chances are that you can install appropriate RPMs from your vendor, e.g. mozilla-nss-1.7.3 mozilla-nss-devel-1.7.3 mozilla-nspr-devel-1.7.3 mozilla-nspr-1.7.3 for Fedora Core Release 3. Note that you can install these without installing the RPM for the Mozilla main application. Thus it is no problem if you prefer to use a more recent Mozilla installation in /opt or so. NSS and NSPR are not updated as often as the Mozilla end-user applications in recent times (but you should watch for possible future security fixes regardless, of course.) If you have these RPMs installed, you can uncomment the marked lines in either the Makefile or in mailx.spec. Mailx should then build cleanly with NSS support included, and that's all. On recent Solaris versions, NSS and NSPR are available in the packages SUNWmoznss, SUNWmoznss-devel, SUNWmoznspr, and SUNWmoznspr-devel. If these packages are installed, the following make variables activate NSS support: INCLUDES=-I/usr/sfw/include/mozilla/nspr -I/usr/sfw/include/mozilla/nss LDFLAGS=-L/usr/sfw/lib/mozilla -R/usr/sfw/lib/mozilla If you want to use NSS without RPMS, you can get binary or source .tar.gz archives from the Mozilla project pages: Or you can use the files from a Mozilla application build directory if you are building Mozilla Suite, Firefox, Thunderbird etc. from source. Just set the INCLUDES and LDFLAGS variables appropriately. If both NSS and OpenSSL are available, NSS is used. This is just because NSS is normally not found without special action, and thus the build process simply assumes that you want to build NSS if it manages to build the test executable. Gunnar Ritter 3/4/06