a9e8641da9
It is a small and lightweight Mail Transport Agent. It accepts mails from locally installed Mail User Agents (MUA) and delivers the mails either locally or to a remote destination. Remote delivery includes several features like TLS/SSL support, SMTP authentication and NULLCLIENT. Make dma conditional to new WITHOUT_DMA option and make it respect WITHOUT_MAIL Reviewed by: peter Discussed with: emaste, bz, peter
29 lines
1.1 KiB
Plaintext
29 lines
1.1 KiB
Plaintext
Installing DMA:
|
|
===============
|
|
|
|
On most systems (with a development environment installed) you should be able to compile DMA with:
|
|
make
|
|
|
|
Once it have compiled it successfully, you can install it with:
|
|
make install sendmail-link mailq-link install-spool-dirs install-etc
|
|
|
|
Troubleshooting:
|
|
----------------
|
|
On systems that do not default to a compatible "make" version, try using "gmake" or "pmake" instead of "make". Some known examples of this:
|
|
* Solaris 9
|
|
* Solaris 10
|
|
|
|
Check that you have the following commands installed:
|
|
* cc - gcc is known to work
|
|
* lex - flex is known to work
|
|
* yacc - bison is kjnown to work
|
|
* make - BSD make and GNU make is knwon to work
|
|
* sh - Need to be POSIX compliant, dash, bash known to work
|
|
* install - GNU and BSD versions known to work
|
|
* openssl - Add the header location to C_INCLUDE_PATH if you get errors about "err.h"
|
|
|
|
If you have all of these tools installed, set the CC, YACC, INSTALL, LEX and SH variable to point to the relevant location and command.
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
make CC=gcc YACC=bison LEX=/usr/bin/flex SH=/bin/bash INSTALL=/usr/bin/install
|