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+Mailman - The GNU Mailing List Management System
+Copyright (C) 1998,1999,2000,2001,2002 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+ This is GNU Mailman, a mailing list management system distributed
+ under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). The name
+ of this software is spelled "Mailman" with a leading capital `M'
+ but with a lower case second `m'. Any other spelling is
+ incorrect.
+
+ Mailman is written primarily in Python, a free object-oriented
+ scripting language. There is some ANSI C code for security
+ purposes.
+
+ Mailman was originally developed by John Viega. Subsequent
+ development (through version 1.0b3) was by Ken Manheimer. Further
+ work towards the 1.0 final release was a group effort, with the
+ core contributors being: Barry Warsaw, Ken Manheimer, Scott
+ Cotton, Harald Meland, and John Viega. Version 1.0 and beyond
+ have been primarily maintained by Barry Warsaw with contributions
+ from many; see the ACKNOWLEDGMENTS file for details. Jeremy
+ Hylton helped considerably with the Pipermail code in Mailman 2.0.
+
+ The Mailman home page is
+
+ http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman
+
+ with mirrors at
+
+ http://www.list.org
+ http://mailman.sf.net
+
+ Mailman 2.1 requires Python 2.1.3 or greater, which can be
+ downloaded from
+
+ http://www.python.org
+
+ It is recommended that you use Python 2.1.3 or Python 2.2.1, the
+ latest releases as of this writing. Mailman 2.1 is not compatible
+ with Python 2.0 or any earlier version.
+
+ You will also need an ANSI C compiler to build both Python and
+ Mailman; gcc (the GNU C compiler) works just fine. Mailman
+ currently works only on GNU/Linux and other Unix-like operating
+ systems (e.g. Solaris, *BSD, MacOSX, etc.). It does not run on
+ Windows, although web and mail clients on any platform should be
+ able to interact with Mailman just fine.
+
+ See the INSTALL file for installation instructions. If you are
+ upgrading from a previous version of Mailman, you need to read the
+ UPGRADING file for important information.
+
+
+FEATURES
+
+ Read the NEWS file for a list of changes since version 0.9. Read
+ the TODO file for our (extensive) wish list. You can see Mailman
+ 2.1 in action at
+
+ http://mail.python.org/mailman-21/listinfo
+
+ Mailman has most of the standard features you'd expect in a
+ mailing list manager, and more:
+
+ - Web based list administration for nearly all tasks. Web based
+ subscriptions and user configuration management. A customizable
+ "home page" for each mailing list.
+
+ - Privacy features such as moderation, open and closed list
+ subscription policies, private membership rosters, and
+ sender-based filters.
+
+ - Automatic web based archiving built-in with support for private
+ and public archives, and hooks for external archivers.
+
+ - Per-user configuration optional digest delivery for either
+ MIME-compliant or RFC 1153 style "plain text" digests.
+
+ - Integrated mail/Usenet gateways.
+
+ - Integrated auto-replies.
+
+ - Majordomo-style email based commands.
+
+ - Integrated bounce detection within an extensible framework.
+
+ - Integrated spam detection, and MIME-based content filtering.
+
+ - An extensible mail delivery pipeline.
+
+ - Support for virtual domains.
+
+
+REQUIREMENTS
+
+ The default mail delivery mechanism uses a direct SMTP connection
+ to whatever mail transport agent you have running on port 25. You
+ can thus use Mailman with any such MTA, however with certain MTAs
+ (e.g. Exim and Postfix), Mailman will support thru-the-web
+ creation and removal of mailing lists.
+
+ Mailman works with any web server that supports CGI/1.1. The HTML
+ it generates is quite pedestrian and stingy on the graphics so it
+ should be friendly to most web browsers and network connections.
+ It is regularly tested with IE 5.5, Netscape 4.7x, and Mozilla on
+ Windows and Netscape 4.7x and Mozilla on Linux (and occasionally
+ Lynx on Linux and Netscape and Mozilla on MacOS too!).
+
+ You will need root access on the machine hosting your Mailman
+ installation in order to complete some of the configuration
+ steps. See the INSTALL file for details.
+
+ Mailman's web and email user interface should be compatible with
+ just about any mail reader or web browser, although a mail reader
+ that is MIME aware will be a big help. You do not need Java,
+ JavaScript, or any other fancy plugins.
+
+
+CREATE YOUR FIRST LIST
+
+ These instructions assume that you've installed and configured
+ Mailman according to the instructions in the INSTALL file. To
+ create and test your first list, try the following:
+
+ - First, initialize the site administrator's password by cd'ing to
+ the install directory (by default /usr/local/mailman) and typing
+
+ % bin/mmsitepass
+ New site password: [yourpassword]
+ Again to confirm password: [yourpassword]
+ Password changed.
+
+ - Visit the url
+
+ http://my.dom.ain/mailman/create
+
+ Fill out the form as described in the on-screen instructions, and
+ in the "List creator's password" field, type the password you
+ entered above. Type your own email address for the "Initial
+ list owner address", and select "Yes" to notify the list
+ administrator.
+
+ - Hit "Create List"
+
+ - Check your email for a message from Mailman informing you that
+ your new mailing list was created.
+
+ - NOTE: If you are using an MTA other than Exim or Postfix
+ (e.g. Sendmail or qmail), then you'll need to do the extra step
+ of installing the mailing list aliases manually. Follow the
+ instructions in an email message that you should have received
+ (you'll need to know how to do this for your particular MTA, see
+ the README for your MTA for more information).
+
+ - Now visit the list's admin page (either by following the link on
+ the web page or entering the link from the email Mailman just
+ sent you). Typically the url will be something like
+
+ http://my.dom.ain/mailman/admin/mysitelist
+
+ Type in the list's password and click on "Let me in..."
+
+ - Click on "Membership Management" and then on "Mass Subscription".
+
+ - Enter your email address in the big text field, and click on
+ "Submit Your Changes"
+
+ - Now go to your email and send a message to yourlist@my.dom.ain.
+ Within a minute or two you should see your message reflected
+ back to you via Mailman.
+
+ Congratulations! You've just set up and tested your first Mailman
+ mailing list. If you had any problems along the way, please see
+ the section below on FOR MORE INFORMATION.
+
+
+FOR MORE INFORMATION
+
+ The online documentation can be found in
+
+ file:admin/www/index.html
+
+ in the directory in which you unpacked Mailman.
+
+ Chris Kolar has made a list owner-oriented manual available from
+ the following URL
+
+ http://www.imsa.edu/~ckolar/mailman/
+
+ There are also several mailing lists that can be used as resources
+ to help you get going with Mailman.
+
+ Mailman-Users
+ An list for users of Mailman, for posting questions or
+ problems related to installation, use, etc. We'll try to keep
+ the deep technical discussions off this list.
+
+ http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users
+
+ Listowners
+ This mailing list with a non-technical focus, specifically for
+ discussions from the perspective of listowners and moderators
+ who do not have "shell access" to the mailing list server
+ where the Mailman software runs.
+
+ http://listowner.org
+
+ Mailman-Announce
+ A read-only list for release announcements an other important
+ news.
+
+ http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-announce
+
+ Mailman-Developers
+ A list for those of you interested in helping develop
+ Mailman's future direction. This list will contain in-depth
+ technical discussions.
+
+ http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-developers
+
+ Mailman-I18N
+ A list for the discussion of the Mailman internationalization
+ effort. Mailman 2.1 will be fully multi-lingual.
+
+ http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-i18n
+
+ Mailman-Checkins
+ A read-only list which is an adjunct to the public anonymous
+ CVS repository. You can stay on the bleeding edge of Mailman
+ development by subscribing to this list.
+
+ http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-checkins
+
+ The Mailman project is coordinated on SourceForge at
+
+ http://sf.net/projects/mailman
+
+ You should use SourceForge to report bugs and to upload patches.
+
+
+
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