Mutt-1.5.22
Introduction to Mutt
The Mutt package contains a Mail
User Agent. This is useful for reading, writing, replying to,
saving, and deleting your email.
This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-7.5
platform.
Package Information
Mutt Dependencies
Optional
GnuPG-2.0.22, OpenSSL-1.0.1f
or GnuTLS-3.2.11, an MTA (that provides
a sendmail command),
Aspell-0.60.6.1, MIT
Kerberos V5-1.12.1, Cyrus
SASL-2.1.26, S-Lang-2.2.4, libidn-1.28,
texlive-20130530 Berkeley
DB-6.0.20 or QDBM or Tokyo Cabinet,
and GDB-7.7
Optional (To Regenerate HTML Documentation)
libxslt-1.1.28 and either Lynx-2.8.8, w3m-0.5.3 or ELinks
Optional (To Generate PDF Manual)
docbook-dsssl-1.79
User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/mutt
Installation of Mutt
Note
This version of Mutt is a
development release. The BLFS staff has determined that it
provides a stable program and fixes two issues in the current
stable version of Mutt: a
segmentation fault that occurs under certain conditions and a
compilation problem when building with recent versions of
GCC. To find the current stable
release, please refer to the Mutt home page.
Mutt requires a group named
mail
. You can add this group, if it
does not exist, with this command:
groupadd -g 34 mail
If you did not install an MTA, you need to
modify the ownership of /var/mail
with this command:
chgrp -v mail /var/mail
Install Mutt by running the
following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc \
--with-docdir=/usr/share/doc/mutt-1.5.22 \
--enable-pop --enable-imap \
--enable-hcache --without-qdbm \
--without-tokyocabinet \
--with-gdbm --without-bdb &&
make
To generate the PDF manual with texlive-20130530, run the following command:
make -C doc manual.pdf
This package does not come with a test suite.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
If you generated the PDF manual, install it and the source TeX file
by issuing the following command as the root
user:
install -v -m644 doc/manual.{pdf,tex} \
/usr/share/doc/mutt-1.5.22
Command Explanations
--enable-pop
: This switch
enables POP3 support.
--enable-imap
: This switch
enables IMAP support.
--enable-hcache
: This
switch enables header caching.
--without-qdbm
: This switch
disables QDBM as the header cache
backend.
--without-tokyocabinet
:
This switch disables Tokyo Cabinet
as the header cache backend.
--with-gdbm
: This switch
enables GDBM as the header cache
backend.
--without-bdb
: This switch
disables Berkeley DB as the header
cache backend.
--enable-smtp
: This switch enables SMTP
relay support.
--with-ssl
: This parameter adds SSL/TLS
support from OpenSSL-1.0.1f in POP3/IMAP/SMTP if they are
enabled.
--with-sasl
: This parameter adds
authentication support from Cyrus
SASL-2.1.26 in POP3/IMAP/SMTP if they are enabled. Depending on
the server configuration, this may not be needed for POP3 or IMAP.
However, it is needed for SMTP authentication.
--with-slang
: Use S-Lang instead of Ncurses.
Configuring Mutt
Config Files
/etc/Muttrc
, ~/.muttrc
, /etc/mime.types
, ~/.mime.types
Configuration Information
No changes in these files are necessary to begin using
Mutt. When you are ready to make
changes, the man page for muttrc
is
a good starting place.
In order to utilize GnuPG, use
the following command:
cat /usr/share/doc/mutt-1.5.22/samples/gpg.rc >> ~/.muttrc
Contents
Installed Programs:
flea, mutt, mutt_dotlock, muttbug,
pgpewrap, pgpring, and smime_keys
Installed Libraries:
None
Installed Directories:
/usr/share/doc/mutt-1.5.22
Short Descriptions
flea
|
is a bug submitter for Mutt.
|
mutt
|
is a Mail User Agent (MUA) which enables you to read,
write and delete your email.
|
mutt_dotlock
|
implements the mail spool file lock.
|
muttbug
|
is a script that executes flea.
|
pgpewrap
|
prepares a command line for the GnuPG-2.0.22 utilities.
|
pgpring
|
is a key ring dumper for PGP. It is not needed for
GnuPG-2.0.22.
|
smime_keys
|
manages a keystore for S/MIME certificates.
|
Last updated on 2014-02-25 03:54:44 -0800