[READ_ME][src/READ_ME][src/RELEASE_NOTES.WIDE][Ìá¤ë]
/*-
 *	@(#)READ_ME	8.10 (Berkeley) 4/13/94
 */
SENDMAIL RELEASE 8
This directory has the latest sendmail software from Berkeley. See doc/op/op.me for a summary of changes since 5.67.
Report any bugs to sendmail@CS.Berkeley.EDU.
The latest version of sendmail is kept on FTP.CS.Berkeley.EDU, directory /ucb/sendmail; check there for the latest revision.

MANUAL PAGES
RELATED DOCUMENTATION
RELATED RFCS
DATABASE ROUTINES
Host Name Services
USE WITH MH
MAKEFILES
DIRECTORY STRUCTURE


MANUAL PAGES
The sendmail manual pages use contemporary Berkeley troff macros. If your system does not process these manual pages, you can pick up the new macros in a BSD Net/2 FTP site (e.g. on FTP.UU.NET, the files /systems/unix/bsd-sources/share/tmac/me/strip.sed and /systems/unix/bsd-sources/share/tmac/*).
The strip.sed file is only used in installation.
After installation, edit tmac.doc and tmac.andoc to reflect the installation path of the tmac files. Those files contain pointers to /usr/share/tmac/, and those pointers are not changed by the `make install` process.
Rename the existing tmac.an to be tmac.an.old, and rename tmac.andoc to be tmac.an.
tmac.an will choose between tmac.an.old, your old macros, or tmac.doc, which are the new macros, so that both the new man pages and the existing man pages will be translated properly.
I'm also told that the groff distribution from MIT has a tmac.doc macro set that is compatible with these macros.

RELATED DOCUMENTATION
There are other files you should read. Rooted in this directory are:
CHANGES-R5-R8
Describes changes between Release 5 and Release 8 of sendmail. There are some things that may behave somewhat differently. For example, the rules governing when :include: files will be read have been tightened up for security reasons.
FAQ
Answers to Frequently Asked Questions.
KNOWNBUGS
Known bugs in the current release. I try to keep this up to date -- get the latest version from FTP.CS.Berkeley.EDU in /ucb/sendmail/KNOWNBUGS.
RELEASE_NOTES
A detailed description of the changes in each version. This is quite long, but informative.
src/READ_ME
Details on compiling and installing sendmail.
cf/README
Details on configuring sendmail.
doc/op/op.me
The sendmail Installation & Operations Guide. Be warned: if you are running this off on SunOS or some other system with an old version of -me, you need to add the following macro to the macros:
		.de sm
		\s-1\\$1\\s0\\$2
		..

	This sets a word in a smaller pointsize.

RELATED RFCS
There are several related RFCs that you may wish to read -- they are available via anonymous FTP to several sites, including nic.ddn.mil (directory rfc), ftp.nisc.sri.com (rfc), nis.nsf.net (RFC), nisc.jvnc.net (rfc), venera.isi.edu (in-notes), and wuarchive.wustl.edu (info/rfc). They can also be retrieved via electronic mail by sending
email to one of:
	mail-server@nisc.sri.com
		Put "send rfcNNN" in message body
	nis-info@nis.nsf.net
		Put "send RFCnnn.TXT-1" in message body
	sendrfc@jvnc.net
		Put "RFCnnn" as Subject: line
Important RFCs for electronic mail are:
	RFC821	SMTP protocol
	RFC822	Mail header format
	RFC974	MX routing
	RFC976	UUCP mail format
	RFC1123	Host requirements (modifies 821, 822, and 974)
	RFC1413	Identification server
	RFC1341	MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions
	RFC1344	Implications of MIME for Internet Mail Gateways
Other standards that may be of interest (but which are less directly relevant to sendmail) are:
	RFC987	Mapping between RFC822 and X.400
	RFC1049	Content-Type header field (extension to RFC822)
Warning to AIX users: this version of sendmail does not implement MB, MR, or MG DNS resource records, as defined as experiments in RFC883.

DATABASE ROUTINES
IF YOU WANT TO RUN THE NEW BERKELEY DB SOFTWARE: **** DO NOT **** use the version that was on the Net2 tape -- it has a number of nefarious bugs that were bad enough when I got them; you shouldn't have to go through the same thing. Instead, get a new version via public FTP from ftp.CS.Berkeley.EDU, file ucb/4bsd/db.tar.Z. This software is highly recommended; it gets rid of several stupid limits, it's much faster, and the interface is nicer to animals and plants. You will also probably find that you have to add -I/where/you/put/db/include to the sendmail makefile to get db.h to work properly.
Be sure you remove ndbm.h and ndbm.o from the db distribution. These will cause problems with sendmail because sendmail already understands about NEWDB and NDBM coexisting.

Host Name Services
If you compile with NAMED_BIND (the default) sendmail will use DNS (the Domain Name System) for most host name lookups. If you do not have DNS running at your site you may have to turn this off to cause sendmail to use NIS and/or the /etc/hosts file. In particular, on SunOS you have to choose to use DNS (which you should do if you are attached to the Internet, otherwise you lose MX records, which are required) or NIS -- there is no way to try both.
If you are using NIS and /etc/hosts, it is critical that you list the long (fully qualified) name first in the /etc/hosts file used to build the NIS database. For example, the line should read
	128.32.149.68   mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU mastodon

**** NOT ****

	128.32.149.68   mastodon mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU
If you use the wrong order, sendmail will conclude that your canonical name is the short version and use that in messages. The name "mastodon" doesn't mean much outside of Berkeley, and so this creates incorrect and unreplyable messages.

USE WITH MH
This version of sendmail notices and reports certain kinds of SMTP protocol violations that were ignored by older versions. If you are running MH you may wish to install the patch in contrib/mh.patch that will prevent these warning reports. This patch also works with the old version of sendmail, so it's safe to go ahead and install it.

MAKEFILES
The Makefiles in this release use the new Berkeley "make" that is available in BSD Net/2 and 4.4BSD. If you are using this version of make, you may notice one or two places where the Makefile includes "../../Makefile.inc". This file is not included with the sendmail distribution because it's not part of sendmail. However, it is, in toto:
	#	@(#)Makefile.inc	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93

	BINDIR?=	/usr/sbin
The other directories should all have Makefile.dist files that work on the old make, albeit without all the niceties included.
You can also get a new Berkeley make from the Net2 release (available on many public FTP archives). This version should also interpret old Makefiles, so you could drop it in as your default make.
For more details, see src/READ_ME.

DIRECTORY STRUCTURE The structure of this directory tree is:
cf
Source for Berkeley configuration files. These are different than what you've seen before. They are a fairly dramatic rewrite, requiring the new sendmail (since they use new features).

contrib
Some contributed tools to help with sendmail. THESE ARE NOT SUPPORTED by Berkeley -- contact the original authors if you have problems. (This directory is not on the 4.4BSD tape.)

doc
Documentation. If you are getting source, read op.me -- it's long, but worth it.

mailstats
Statistics printing program. It has the pathname of sendmail.st compiled in, so if you've changed that, beware. This isn't all that useful.
makemap
A program that creates the keyed maps used by the $( ... $) construct in sendmail. It is primitive but effective. It takes a very simple input format, so you will probably expect to preprocess must human-convenient formats using sed scripts before this program will like them. But it should be functionally complete.
praliases
A program to print the DBM version of the aliases file. It hasn't been converted to understand the new Berkeley DB format (which we are using).
rmail
Source for rmail(8). This is used as a delivery agent for for UUCP, and could presumably be used by other non-socket oriented mailers. Older versions of rmail are probably deficient.
src
Source for the sendmail program itself.
test
Some test scripts (currently only for compilation aids).