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2001-11-01Move pkg/ files into package's toplevel directoryzuntum3-2/+2
2001-09-27Mechanical changes to 375 files to change dependency patterns of the formjlam1-2/+2
foo-* to foo-[0-9]*. This is to cause the dependencies to match only the packages whose base package name is "foo", and not those named "foo-bar". A concrete example is p5-Net-* matching p5-Net-DNS as well as p5-Net. Also change dependency examples in Packages.txt to reflect this.
2001-08-13Create symlink from /var/qmail to ${PREFIX}/qmail, so we can list files in ↵zuntum2-4/+195
PLIST. Yes, it isn't very clear idea, but better than empty PLIST and a bunch of @unexec rm -rf's in it.
2001-08-13When cleaning up ${QMAILDIR}/bin, remove only binaries that belong to qmail ↵zuntum1-2/+3
package, as support packages may install files there. In preparation for qmail-conf pkg.
2001-08-13Initial import of qmail-1.03 -- SECURE, reliable, efficient, simple, and ↵zuntum7-0/+204
FAST MTA for UNIX systems qmail checks for qmail users' existance at compile time, so this package must be built as root (it tries to add necessary users and groups), thus NO_PACKAGE and IS_INTERACTIVE are set. PLIST file is left empty intentionally, because qmail installs itself to /var/qmail, outside ${PREFIX}. The qmail program is a secure, reliable, efficient simple message transfer agent. It is meant to be a replacement for the entire sendmail-binmail system that most UNIX hosts use. Although qmail holds security and reliability as its top two priorities, it is also fast. On a Pentium under BSD/OS, qmail can easily handle 200000 separate messages per day that are injected and must then be delivered to local mailboxes! Security and reliability are qmail's two strengths, however. The qmail package ensures a message, once accepted, will never be lost. An optional new mailbox format, maildir, even lets users safely read their mail over NFS, while still accepting new mail deliveries. The following features are supported: host and user masquerading, full host hiding, virtual domains, null clients, list-owner rewriting, relay control, double-bounce recording, arbitrary RFC 822 address lists, cross-host mailing-list loop detection, per-recipient checkpointing, downed host backoffs, independent message retry schedules, a drop-in sendmail replacement, and more! The package is still being worked on.