small improvements of INSTALL

release archives
This commit is contained in:
lars 2005-03-22 23:48:21 +00:00
parent b66041d04d
commit 48f82d7cd6
5 changed files with 66 additions and 47 deletions

Binary file not shown.

Binary file not shown.

View file

@ -1,28 +1,36 @@
1. Copy ezmlm-web.cgi to some publically readable directory. It does not
The following notes will guide you through the installation of ezmlm-web:
0. IMPORTANT: you need the perl module Mail::Ezmlm and others to use
ezmlm-web! The file README contains the list of necessary modules.
1. Get ezmlm-web and extract the archive:
tar xzf ezmlm-web-2.2.tar.gz
2. Copy ezmlm-web.cgi to some publically readable directory. It does not
have to be in a path accessible to your web server, but any user with a
mailing list must be able to run it (Check the read and execute rights
on both the file and directory). We put our copy in
/usr/local/bin ...
on both the file and directory). We put our copy in "/usr/local/bin".
3. Edit the ezmlmwebrc file and alter the variables at the top to suit
your particular system. In particular, you will probably have to change
the $ENV{'PATH'} variable. Be particularly careful about what you set
as the path. Too much is a security risk and too little will cause the
script to malfunction. Version 2.0 requires that the following programs
be accessible in your path; mv, rm
At the top of ezmlm-web.gi you can will probably have to change the
$ENV{'PATH'} variable. Be careful about what you set as the path. Too
much is a security risk and too little will cause the script to
malfunction. Version 2.0 requires that the following programs be
accessible in your path: mv, rm
Also be careful about the $LIST_DIR variable. This script assumes that
all users store their mailing lists in the same sub directory of the
home directory (eg ~/lists). You can override this for an individual
user by recompiling the C wrapper to call ezmlm-web.cgi with a -d
option.
3. Edit the ezmlmwebrc file and alter the variables to suit your
particular system.
Be careful about the $LIST_DIR variable. This script assumes that all
users store their mailing lists in the same sub directory of the home
directory (eg ~/lists). You can override this for an individual user
by recompiling the C wrapper to call ezmlm-web.cgi with a -d option.
Other configurable options are documented in the ezmlmwebrc file
itself. I have tried to keep the amount of information that you need to
supply to a minimum and also make reasonable guesses about default
values.
finally, copy the ezmlmwebrc file and the "lang" directory to one of
Finally, copy the ezmlmwebrc file and the "lang" directory to one of
the following places:
- /etc/ezmlm
- the home directory of the user that runs ezmlm-web.cgi

View file

@ -1,28 +1,36 @@
1. Copy ezmlm-web.cgi to some publically readable directory. It does not
The following notes will guide you through the installation of ezmlm-web:
0. IMPORTANT: you need the perl module Mail::Ezmlm and others to use
ezmlm-web! The file README contains the list of necessary modules.
1. Get ezmlm-web and extract the archive:
tar xzf ezmlm-web-2.2.tar.gz
2. Copy ezmlm-web.cgi to some publically readable directory. It does not
have to be in a path accessible to your web server, but any user with a
mailing list must be able to run it (Check the read and execute rights
on both the file and directory). We put our copy in
/usr/local/bin ...
on both the file and directory). We put our copy in "/usr/local/bin".
3. Edit the ezmlmwebrc file and alter the variables at the top to suit
your particular system. In particular, you will probably have to change
the $ENV{'PATH'} variable. Be particularly careful about what you set
as the path. Too much is a security risk and too little will cause the
script to malfunction. Version 2.0 requires that the following programs
be accessible in your path; mv, rm
At the top of ezmlm-web.gi you can will probably have to change the
$ENV{'PATH'} variable. Be careful about what you set as the path. Too
much is a security risk and too little will cause the script to
malfunction. Version 2.0 requires that the following programs be
accessible in your path: mv, rm
Also be careful about the $LIST_DIR variable. This script assumes that
all users store their mailing lists in the same sub directory of the
home directory (eg ~/lists). You can override this for an individual
user by recompiling the C wrapper to call ezmlm-web.cgi with a -d
option.
3. Edit the ezmlmwebrc file and alter the variables to suit your
particular system.
Be careful about the $LIST_DIR variable. This script assumes that all
users store their mailing lists in the same sub directory of the home
directory (eg ~/lists). You can override this for an individual user
by recompiling the C wrapper to call ezmlm-web.cgi with a -d option.
Other configurable options are documented in the ezmlmwebrc file
itself. I have tried to keep the amount of information that you need to
supply to a minimum and also make reasonable guesses about default
values.
finally, copy the ezmlmwebrc file and the "lang" directory to one of
Finally, copy the ezmlmwebrc file and the "lang" directory to one of
the following places:
- /etc/ezmlm
- the home directory of the user that runs ezmlm-web.cgi

View file

@ -2,9 +2,12 @@ $Id: TODO,v 1.3 2000/09/25 19:58:02 guy Exp $
TODO - ezmlm-web 2.2
- More Documentation
- Some nice install method. But then I use FreeBSD and ported it
so that might just count as my nice install method :)
- mention in INSTALL, that a missing webusers-file deactivates access control
- webusers is not mentioned in INSTALL
- change ./lang/ to /usr/local/share/ezmlm-web/lang
- more documentation
- some nice install method
- Option for a css-stylesheet
- migrate header and footer in ezmlmwebrc to css
- improve css-design
- move unknown.gif to systemausfall.org