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PCELM.RC
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Text File
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1992-01-04
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8KB
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209 lines
# PCElm RUNTIME CONFIGURATION (PCElm.RC)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------#
#
# * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
#
# This file (PCELM.RC) must be configured to your specific site.
#
#
# DO NOT USE THIS FILE AS-IS. YOU M U S T EDIT
#
# THIS FILE TO REFLECT Y O U R INSTALLATION
#
# BEFORE USING PCELM.
#
#
#
# Following are configuration requirements followed by examples.
#
# Lines beginning with # or ; are comments. Empty lines are disregarded.
#------------------------------------------
# host <space> this_host_name
# this is the hostname to be used for the hamradio mode. It usually
# is your callsign followed by .ampr.org, as in "dg5kx.ampr.org"
host dg5kx.ampr.org
#------------------------------------------
# uucphost <space> this_uucp_host_name
# this is the hostname to be used for uucp mode. Note: traditional
# uucp hostnames need to be unique, so know what you are doing here.
# This is usually either your hostname followed by .uucp as in
# "dg5kx.uucp" or a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) as in
# "dg5kx.rmi.de".
uucphost dg5kx.uucp
#------------------------------------------
# user <space> this_user_name
# also MAILBOX from environment
# This is the name of your mailbox. It usually is your username (login)
# at this system. (Note that this puts an 8 character length restriction
# on your username, as MessDOS can't handle more characters).
# If this entry is commented out, the value of the environment variable
# 'mailbox' is used.
user marvin
#------------------------------------------
# fullname <space> your_full_name for mail headers
# also NAME from environment
# Your real life name belongs here. This is so that pother people can see
# who you really are, even if your username is 'gandalf' or 'blackadder'.
# If this entry is commented out, the value of the environment variable
# 'name' is used.
fullname "Martin W Freiss"
#------------------------------------------
# reply <space> address An optional reply address if not to this machine,
# useful for a pc on a network with a smart mailer.
# Use this if you want replies to your messages to go to another machine
# or if you are on a network where headers are mangled so bad people
# can't reply to you otherwise. Only works for hamradio.
reply freiss.pad@sni.de
#------------------------------------------
# zone <space> timezone
# The timezone you are living in. Should be 3 characters, not more, not less.
# There is an ISO standard for time zone names if memory serves me correctly,
# but the ISO number escapes me.
zone MEZ
#------------------------------------------
# maxlet <space> max messages in mbox at once
# The maximum number of messages that may be in a mailbox at once.
# Decrease this number if you are short on memory. PCElm startup will slow
# down considerably if you have a huge mailbox; on the other hand I doubt
# anybody can find his way around 300 messages in a single mailbox.
maxlet 300
#------------------------------------------
# edit <space> name_of_editor_for_mail_entry
# also EDITOR from environment
# The filename of your favorite editor goes here, This should be a small
# editor capable of producing true ASCII files (if possible with no
# Control-Z at the end, though PCElm tries to zap Cntrl-Z's if it sees them).
# What I'm trying to convey here is that Word for Windows ((C) Microsoft)
# is not the sort of thing you want to put here.
# If this entry is commented out, the value of the environment variable
# 'editor' is used.
edit builtin+
#------------------------------------------
# smtp <space> path to mailboxes
# also MAILDIR from environment
# This is where you put the directory where your mailboxes reside. All
# mailboxes, i.e. both the hamradio and uucp mailboxes should be in one
# directory.
# If this entry is commented out, the value of the environment variable
# 'maildir' is used.
smtp c:/spool/mail
#------------------------------------------
# queuedir <space> path to mail queue
# This is where you put the directory where outgoing mail gets queued up.
# Typically, this is called /spool/mqueue or something like that.
queuedir c:/spool/mqueue
#------------------------------------------
# video <space> 0 || 1 for direct video write
# Put a 1 here if you want direct writes into video ram, which is fast
# but tends to confuse CGAs and not-so-very-compatible PCs. A 0 will
# do all video updates through the BIOS, which is considerably slower.
video 1
#------------------------------------------
# SOH for uucp
# This is a sequence of words that tell PCElm that a new message begins.
# Uh.. message delimiter is the word I was looking for. Usually "From ",
# but may be "Control-A" if you are using MMDF or anything at all if
# you are using weird mailers.
# "From " (note the blank) or "Received" usually work.
SOH-UUCP mmdf
#------------------------------------------
# SOH for amateur radio
# See above, but for ham radio.
SOH-ham "From "
#------------------------------------------
# Extension for amateur radio
# The file extension your mailbox file has goes here. A mailbox is
# construed from your username with the extension defined here appended to
# it. Note that even if your mailbox has no extension, you still need
# to define the dot "." as extension ! The dot is mandatory.
ham-ext ".txt"
#------------------------------------------
# Extension for UUCP
# See above, but for uucp.
# UUPC usually has no extension, so we just define the dot as extension.
uucp-ext "."
#------------------------------------------
# Startmode for PCElm. If Startmode is "uucp", PCElm will start in
# uucp mode; anything else will cause PCElm to start in hamradio mode.
START ham
#------------------------------------------
# Define various colours for display:
# The numbers below are hexadecimal numbers defining a foreground and
# background colour for various scenarios. The routine determining the
# colours is quite simpleminded, so please don't use spaces here.
#
# If you are confused as to what to enter here, either leave it alone
# or consult an IBM PC programming manual as to how these numbers are
# arrived at.
#
# The color codes are as follows:
#
# Background | Foreground
# ---------------------------------
# 0 0 0 1 | 1 1 1 1 ---> 0x1f ---> Bright white on blue
# ---------------------------------
# B R G B | I R G B
# L E R L | N E R L
# I D E U | T D E U
# N E E | E E E
# K N | N N
#
# This will definitely get more comfortable to configure in a later version
# of PCElm.
#
# Values are: normal screen, bold, more prompt, default at exit, selection bar
COLORS 1f,4f,2f,07,6f
#------------------------------------------
#
# Format of uucp command
# Supported macros are:
# $ filename containing message header and body
# % name of receiver
#
# PCElm constructs the workfiles and messagefiles that KA9Q NET and NOS
# needs by itself, but execs an exterior mailer in uucp mode so that
# headers peculiar to your particular implementation of uucp (or whatever)
# can be written. The exterior mailer is usually called rmail.exe or
# mail.exe. The macros $ and % are expanded _once_, they may not occur
# multiple times in this line.
# For my version of UUPC, the following line works.
uucpcall "rmail -f $ %"
#------------------------------------------
# Name of sequence file.
# This is the file where the numbers for message id's are stored.
# It is located in the mail spool directory.
sequence sequence.seq
#------------------------------------------
# Name of print device.
# This is where mail gets printed with the 'P' command.
print lpt1
#------------------------------------------
# Headerlines to weed out
weedout "From: Message-Id: X-Mailer: Status: X-Status: Subject: To: X-Organization: Reply-To: Received: From\32"
#------------------------------------------
# The END
#------------------------------------------