Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dirk Meyer
a275fee4c9 Update to popa3d-0.5.1
PR:		37873
Submitted by:	dominic_marks@btinternet.com
2002-05-09 01:33:01 +00:00
Dirk Meyer
486cf10a75 - Install manpage too.
Suggested by: lex@itv.kiev.ua
2002-04-06 07:15:18 +00:00
Akinori MUSHA
897d06aa97 Use ${ECHO_CMD} instead of ${ECHO} where you mean the echo command;
the ECHO macro is set to "echo" by default, but it is set to "true" if
make(1) is invoked with the -s option while ECHO_CMD is always set to
the echo command.
2002-01-29 11:48:57 +00:00
Dirk Meyer
59aa118e3a - Fix creation of chroot dir again, the packed did not created it. 2002-01-17 21:51:55 +00:00
Dirk Meyer
154e59864e - moved chroot dir from /var/empty to ${PREFIX}/empty
- create chroot dir by default
- bumped PORTREVISION
2002-01-13 10:39:01 +00:00
Dirk Meyer
12423e6cf0 - Update popa3d-0.5
- Cleanup POP_AFTERR_SMTP patches
- honor CFLAGS

- claim maintainership
 no response from previous maintainer since August 2001
2002-01-12 13:04:42 +00:00
Dirk Meyer
77b231c638 Added new functionality:
SMTP_RELAY aftersucessfull POP3 authentification.

Option:
	SMPT_AFTER_POP=yes

Documentation and popauth.m4 is included in this port.

PR:		29906
2001-09-16 09:43:13 +00:00
Jimmy Olgeni
1be0301128 Spaces->tabs in the mail category.
(I know, I look boring and pedant :o)
2001-02-05 15:11:27 +00:00
Satoshi Asami
7acef1cd7a Change PKGDIR from pkg/ to . Also fix places where ${PKGDIR} is
spelled out (many of which are ${PKGDIR}/MESSAGE -> ${PKGMESSAGE} type
fixes that shouldn't have been necessary) and the string "/pkg/"
appear.
2000-10-08 10:23:48 +00:00
Chris Piazza
28849e36e9 Update to use PORTNAME/PORTVERSION 2000-04-13 20:01:08 +00:00
Michael Haro
3acc3fb9e4 various port fixes
PR:		17180
Submitted by:	maintainer
2000-04-01 03:39:48 +00:00
Chris D. Faulhaber
f8dcccd9a1 Make port respect CFLAGS 2000-02-19 13:44:07 +00:00
Chris D. Faulhaber
dc2053998b popa3d is a POP3 server with the following goals:
1. Security (to the extent that is possible with POP3 at all, of course).
2. Reliability (again, as limited by the mailbox format and the protocol).
3. RFC compliance (slightly relaxed to work with real-world POP3 clients).
4. Performance (limited by the more important goals, above).

PR:		16652
Submitted by:	Sergey Samoyloff <techline@hotmail.ru>
2000-02-19 13:21:54 +00:00