# -*- python -*- # Copyright (C) 1998-2003 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License # as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 # of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. """Distributed default settings for significant Mailman config variables. """ # NEVER make site configuration changes to this file. ALWAYS make them in # mm_cfg.py instead, in the designated area. See the comments in that file # for details. import os def seconds(s): return s def minutes(m): return m * 60 def hours(h): return h * 60 * 60 def days(d): return d * 60 * 60 * 24 # Some convenient constants try: True, False except NameError: True = 1 False = 0 Yes = yes = On = on = True No = no = Off = off = False ##### # General system-wide defaults ##### # Should image logos be used? Set this to 0 to disable image logos from "our # sponsors" and just use textual links instead (this will also disable the # shortcut "favicon"). Otherwise, this should contain the URL base path to # the logo images (and must contain the trailing slash).. If you want to # disable Mailman's logo footer altogther, hack # Mailman/htmlformat.py:MailmanLogo(), which also contains the hardcoded links # and image names. IMAGE_LOGOS = '/icons/' # The name of the Mailman favicon SHORTCUT_ICON = 'mm-icon.png' # Don't change MAILMAN_URL, unless you want to point it at one of the mirrors. MAILMAN_URL = 'http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/index.html' #MAILMAN_URL = 'http://www.list.org/' #MAILMAN_URL = 'http://mailman.sf.net/' # Mailman needs to know about (at least) two fully-qualified domain names # (fqdn); 1) the hostname used in your urls, and 2) the hostname used in email # addresses for your domain. For example, if people visit your Mailman system # with "http://www.dom.ain/mailman" then your url fqdn is "www.dom.ain", and # if people send mail to your system via "yourlist@dom.ain" then your email # fqdn is "dom.ain". DEFAULT_URL_HOST controls the former, and # DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST controls the latter. Mailman also needs to know how to # map from one to the other (this is especially important if you're running # with virtual domains). You use "add_virtualhost(urlfqdn, emailfqdn)" to add # new mappings. # # If you don't need to change DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST and DEFAULT_URL_HOST in your # mm_cfg.py, then you're done; the default mapping is added automatically. If # however you change either variable in your mm_cfg.py, then be sure to also # include the following: # # add_virtualhost(DEFAULT_URL_HOST, DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST) # # because otherwise the default mappings won't be correct. DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST = '@MAILHOST@' DEFAULT_URL_HOST = '@URLHOST@' DEFAULT_URL_PATTERN = 'http://%s/mailman/' # DEFAULT_HOST_NAME has been replaced with DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST, however some # sites may have the former in their mm_cfg.py files. If so, we'll believe # that, otherwise we'll believe DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST. Same for DEFAULT_URL. DEFAULT_HOST_NAME = None DEFAULT_URL = None HOME_PAGE = 'index.html' MAILMAN_SITE_LIST = 'mailman' # Normally when a site administrator authenticates to a web page with the site # password, they get a cookie which authorizes them as the list admin. It # makes me nervous to hand out site auth cookies because if this cookie is # cracked or intercepted, the intruder will have access to every list on the # site. OTOH, it's dang handy to not have to re-authenticate to every list on # the site. Set this value to Yes to allow site admin cookies. ALLOW_SITE_ADMIN_COOKIES = No # Command that is used to convert text/html parts into plain text. This # should output results to standard output. %(filename)s will contain the # name of the temporary file that the program should operate on. HTML_TO_PLAIN_TEXT_COMMAND = '/usr/bin/lynx -dump %(filename)s' ##### # Virtual domains ##### # Set up your virtual host mappings here. This is primarily used for the # thru-the-web list creation, so its effects are currently fairly limited. # Use add_virtualhost() call to add new mappings. The keys are strings as # determined by Utils.get_domain(), the values are as appropriate for # DEFAULT_HOST_NAME. VIRTUAL_HOSTS = {} # When set to Yes, the listinfo and admin overviews of lists on the machine # will be confined to only those lists whose web_page_url configuration option # host is included within the URL by which the page is visited - only those # "on the virtual host". When set to No, all advertised (i.e. public) lists # are included in the overview. VIRTUAL_HOST_OVERVIEW = On # Helper function; use this in your mm_cfg.py files. If optional emailhost is # omitted it defaults to urlhost with the first name stripped off, e.g. # # add_virtualhost('www.dom.ain') # VIRTUAL_HOST['www.dom.ain'] # ==> 'dom.ain' # def add_virtualhost(urlhost, emailhost=None): DOT = '.' if emailhost is None: emailhost = DOT.join(urlhost.split(DOT)[1:]) VIRTUAL_HOSTS[urlhost.lower()] = emailhost.lower() # And set the default add_virtualhost(DEFAULT_URL_HOST, DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST) ##### # Spam avoidance defaults ##### # This variable contains a list of 2-tuple of the format (header, regex) which # the Mailman/Handlers/SpamDetect.py module uses to match against the current # message. If the regex matches the given header in the current message, then # it is flagged as spam. header is case-insensitive and should not include # the trailing colon. regex is always matched with re.IGNORECASE. # # Note that the more searching done, the slower the whole process gets. Spam # detection is run against all messages coming to either the list, or the # -owners address, unless the message is explicitly approved. KNOWN_SPAMMERS = [] ##### # Web UI defaults ##### # Almost all the colors used in Mailman's web interface are parameterized via # the following variables. This lets you easily change the color schemes for # your preferences without having to do major surgery on the source code. # Note that in general, the template colors are not included here since it is # easy enough to override the default template colors via site-wide, # vdomain-wide, or list-wide specializations. WEB_BG_COLOR = 'white' # Page background WEB_HEADER_COLOR = '#99ccff' # Major section headers WEB_SUBHEADER_COLOR = '#fff0d0' # Minor section headers WEB_ADMINITEM_COLOR = '#dddddd' # Option field background WEB_ADMINPW_COLOR = '#99cccc' # Password box color WEB_ERROR_COLOR = 'red' # Error message foreground WEB_LINK_COLOR = '' # If true, forces LINK= WEB_ALINK_COLOR = '' # If true, forces ALINK= WEB_VLINK_COLOR = '' # If true, forces VLINK= WEB_HIGHLIGHT_COLOR = '#dddddd' # If true, alternating rows # in listinfo & admin display ##### # Archive defaults ##### # The url template for the public archives. This will be used in several # places, including the List-Archive: header, links to the archive on the # list's listinfo page, and on the list's admin page. # # This should be a string with "%(listname)s" somewhere in it. Mailman will # interpolate the name of the list into this. You can also include a # "%(hostname)s" in the string, into which Mailman will interpolate # the host name (usually DEFAULT_URL_HOST). PUBLIC_ARCHIVE_URL = 'http://%(hostname)s/pipermail/%(listname)s' # Are archives on or off by default? DEFAULT_ARCHIVE = On # Are archives public or private by default? # 0=public, 1=private DEFAULT_ARCHIVE_PRIVATE = 0 # ARCHIVE_TO_MBOX #-1 - do not do any archiving # 0 - do not archive to mbox, use builtin mailman html archiving only # 1 - archive to mbox to use an external archiving mechanism only # 2 - archive to both mbox and builtin mailman html archiving - # use this to make both external archiving mechanism work and # mailman's builtin html archiving. the flat mail file can be # useful for searching, external archivers, etc. ARCHIVE_TO_MBOX = 2 # 0 - yearly # 1 - monthly # 2 - quarterly # 3 - weekly # 4 - daily DEFAULT_ARCHIVE_VOLUME_FREQUENCY = 1 DEFAULT_DIGEST_VOLUME_FREQUENCY = 1 # These variables control the use of an external archiver. Normally if # archiving is turned on (see ARCHIVE_TO_MBOX above and the list's archive* # attributes) the internal Pipermail archiver is used. This is the default if # both of these variables are set to No. When either is set, the value should # be a shell command string which will get passed to os.popen(). This string # can contain the following substitution strings: # # %(listname)s -- gets the internal name of the list # %(hostname)s -- gets the email hostname for the list # # being archived will be substituted for this. Please note that os.popen() is # used. # # Note that if you set one of these variables, you should set both of them # (they can be the same string). This will mean your external archiver will # be used regardless of whether public or private archives are selected. PUBLIC_EXTERNAL_ARCHIVER = No PRIVATE_EXTERNAL_ARCHIVER = No # A filter module that converts from multipart messages to "flat" messages # (i.e. containing a single payload). This is required for Pipermail, and you # may want to set it to 0 for external archivers. You can also replace it # with your own module as long as it contains a process() function that takes # a MailList object and a Message object. It should raise # Errors.DiscardMessage if it wants to throw the message away. Otherwise it # should modify the Message object as necessary. ARCHIVE_SCRUBBER = 'Mailman.Handlers.Scrubber' # This variable defines what happens to text/html subparts. They can be # stripped completely, escaped, or filtered through an external program. The # legal values are: # 0 - Strip out text/html parts completely, leaving a notice of the removal in # the message. If the outer part is text/html, the entire message is # discarded. # 1 - Remove any embedded text/html parts, leaving them as HTML-escaped # attachments which can be separately viewed. Outer text/html parts are # simply HTML-escaped. # 2 - Leave it inline, but HTML-escape it # 3 - Remove text/html as attachments but don't HTML-escape them. Note: this # is very dangerous because it essentially means anybody can send an HTML # email to your site containing evil JavaScript or web bugs, or other # nasty things, and folks viewing your archives will be susceptible. You # should only consider this option if you do heavy moderation of your list # postings. # # Note: given the current archiving code, it is not possible to leave # text/html parts inline and un-escaped. I wouldn't think it'd be a good idea # to do anyway. # # The value can also be a string, in which case it is the name of a command to # filter the HTML page through. The resulting output is left in an attachment # or as the entirety of the message when the outer part is text/html. The # format of the string must include a "%(filename)s" which will contain the # name of the temporary file that the program should operate on. It should # write the processed message to stdout. Set this to # HTML_TO_PLAIN_TEXT_COMMAND to specify an HTML to plain text conversion # program. ARCHIVE_HTML_SANITIZER = 1 # Set this to Yes to enable gzipping of the downloadable archive .txt file. # Note that this is /extremely/ inefficient, so an alternative is to just # collect the messages in the associated .txt file and run a cron job every # night to generate the txt.gz file. See cron/nightly_gzip for details. GZIP_ARCHIVE_TXT_FILES = No # This sets the default `clobber date' policy for the archiver. When a # message is to be archived either by Pipermail or an external archiver, # Mailman can modify the Date: header to be the date the message was received # instead of the Date: in the original message. This is useful if you # typically receive messages with outrageous dates. Set this to 0 to retain # the date of the original message, or to 1 to always clobber the date. Set # it to 2 to perform `smart overrides' on the date; when the date is outside # ARCHIVER_ALLOWABLE_SANE_DATE_SKEW (either too early or too late), then the # received date is substituted instead. ARCHIVER_CLOBBER_DATE_POLICY = 2 ARCHIVER_ALLOWABLE_SANE_DATE_SKEW = days(15) # Pipermail archives contain the raw email addresses of the posting authors. # Some view this as a goldmine for spam harvesters. Set this to Yes to # moderately obscure email addresses, but note that this breaks mailto: URLs # in the archives too. ARCHIVER_OBSCURES_EMAILADDRS = Yes # Pipermail assumes that messages bodies contain US-ASCII text. # Change this option to define a different character set to be used as # the default character set for the archive. The term "character set" # is used in MIME to refer to a method of converting a sequence of # octets into a sequence of characters. If you change the default # charset, you might need to add it to VERBATIM_ENCODING below. DEFAULT_CHARSET = None # Most character set encodings require special HTML entity characters to be # quoted, otherwise they won't look right in the Pipermail archives. However # some character sets must not quote these characters so that they can be # rendered properly in the browsers. The primary issue is multi-byte # encodings where the octet 0x26 does not always represent the & character. # This variable contains a list of such characters sets which are not # HTML-quoted in the archives. VERBATIM_ENCODING = ['iso-2022-jp'] ##### # Delivery defaults ##### # Final delivery module for outgoing mail. This handler is used for message # delivery to the list via the smtpd, and to an individual user. This value # must be a string naming a module in the Mailman.Handlers package. # # WARNING: Sendmail has security holes and should be avoided. In fact, you # must read the Mailman/Handlers/Sendmail.py file before it will work for # you. # #DELIVERY_MODULE = 'Sendmail' DELIVERY_MODULE = 'SMTPDirect' # MTA should name a module in Mailman/MTA which provides the MTA specific # functionality for creating and removing lists. Some MTAs like Exim can be # configured to automatically recognize new lists, in which case the MTA # variable should be set to None. Use 'Manual' to print new aliases to # standard out (or send an email to the site list owner) for manual twiddling # of an /etc/aliases style file. Use 'Postfix' if you are using the Postfix # MTA -- but then also see POSTFIX_STYLE_VIRTUAL_DOMAINS. MTA = 'Manual' # If you set MTA='Postfix', then you also want to set the following variable, # depending on whether you're using virtual domains in Postfix, and which # style of virtual domain you're using. Set this flag to false if you're not # using virtual domains in Postfix, or if you're using Sendmail-style virtual # domains (where all addresses are visible in all domains). If you're using # Postfix-style virtual domains, where aliases should only show up in the # virtual domain, set this variable to the list of host_name values to write # separate virtual entries for. I.e. if you run dom1.ain, dom2.ain, and # dom3.ain, but only dom2 and dom3 are virtual, set this variable to the list # ['dom2.ain', 'dom3.ain']. Matches are done against the host_name attribute # of the mailing lists. See README.POSTFIX for details. POSTFIX_STYLE_VIRTUAL_DOMAINS = [] # These variables describe the program to use for regenerating the aliases.db # and virtual-mailman.db files, respectively, from the associated plain text # files. The file being updated will be appended to this string (with a # separating space), so it must be appropriate for os.system(). POSTFIX_ALIAS_CMD = '/usr/sbin/postalias' POSTFIX_MAP_CMD = '/usr/sbin/postmap' # Ceiling on the number of recipients that can be specified in a single SMTP # transaction. Set to 0 to submit the entire recipient list in one # transaction. Only used with the SMTPDirect DELIVERY_MODULE. SMTP_MAX_RCPTS = 500 # Ceiling on the number of SMTP sessions to perform on a single socket # connection. Some MTAs have limits. Set this to 0 to do as many as we like # (i.e. your MTA has no limits). Set this to some number great than 0 and # Mailman will close the SMTP connection and re-open it after this number of # consecutive sessions. SMTP_MAX_SESSIONS_PER_CONNECTION = 0 # Maximum number of simultaneous subthreads that will be used for SMTP # delivery. After the recipients list is chunked according to SMTP_MAX_RCPTS, # each chunk is handed off to the smptd by a separate such thread. If your # Python interpreter was not built for threads, this feature is disabled. You # can explicitly disable it in all cases by setting MAX_DELIVERY_THREADS to # 0. This feature is only supported with the SMTPDirect DELIVERY_MODULE. # # NOTE: This is an experimental feature and limited testing shows that it may # in fact degrade performance, possibly due to Python's global interpreter # lock. Use with caution. MAX_DELIVERY_THREADS = 0 # SMTP host and port, when DELIVERY_MODULE is 'SMTPDirect'. Make sure the # host exists and is resolvable (i.e., if it's the default of "localhost" be # sure there's a localhost entry in your /etc/hosts file!) SMTPHOST = 'localhost' SMTPPORT = 0 # default from smtplib # Command for direct command pipe delivery to sendmail compatible program, # when DELIVERY_MODULE is 'Sendmail'. SENDMAIL_CMD = '/usr/lib/sendmail' # Set these variables if you need to authenticate to your NNTP server for # Usenet posting or reading. If no authentication is necessary, specify None # for both variables. NNTP_USERNAME = None NNTP_PASSWORD = None # Set this if you have an NNTP server you prefer gatewayed lists to use. DEFAULT_NNTP_HOST = '' # These variables controls how headers must be cleansed in order to be # accepted by your NNTP server. Some servers like INN reject messages # containing prohibited headers, or duplicate headers. The NNTP server may # reject the message for other reasons, but there's little that can be # programmatically done about that. See Mailman/Queue/NewsRunner.py # # First, these headers (case ignored) are removed from the original message. NNTP_REMOVE_HEADERS = ['nntp-posting-host', 'nntp-posting-date', 'x-trace', 'x-complaints-to', 'xref', 'date-received', 'posted', 'posting-version', 'relay-version', 'received'] # Next, these headers are left alone, unless there are duplicates in the # original message. Any second and subsequent headers are rewritten to the # second named header (case preserved). NNTP_REWRITE_DUPLICATE_HEADERS = [ ('to', 'X-Original-To'), ('cc', 'X-Original-Cc'), ('content-transfer-encoding', 'X-Original-Content-Transfer-Encoding'), ('mime-version', 'X-MIME-Version'), ] # All `normal' messages which are delivered to the entire list membership go # through this pipeline of handler modules. Lists themselves can override the # global pipeline by defining a `pipeline' attribute. GLOBAL_PIPELINE = [ # These are the modules that do tasks common to all delivery paths. 'SpamDetect', 'Approve', 'Replybot', 'Moderate', 'Hold', 'MimeDel', 'Emergency', 'Tagger', 'CalcRecips', 'AvoidDuplicates', 'Cleanse', 'CookHeaders', # And now we send the message to the digest mbox file, and to the arch and # news queues. Runners will provide further processing of the message, # specific to those delivery paths. 'ToDigest', 'ToArchive', 'ToUsenet', # Now we'll do a few extra things specific to the member delivery # (outgoing) path, finally leaving the message in the outgoing queue. 'AfterDelivery', 'Acknowledge', 'ToOutgoing', ] # This is the pipeline which messages sent to the -owner address go through OWNER_PIPELINE = [ 'SpamDetect', 'Replybot', 'OwnerRecips', 'ToOutgoing', ] # This defines syslog() format strings for the SMTPDirect delivery module (see # DELIVERY_MODULE above). Valid %()s string substitutions include: # # time -- the time in float seconds that it took to complete the smtp # hand-off of the message from Mailman to your smtpd. # # size -- the size of the entire message, in bytes # # #recips -- the number of actual recipients for this message. # # #refused -- the number of smtp refused recipients (use this only in # SMTP_LOG_REFUSED). # # listname -- the `internal' name of the mailing list for this posting # # msg_
-- the value of the delivered message's given header. If # the message had no such header, then "n/a" will be used. Note though # that if the message had multiple such headers, then it is undefined # which will be used. # # allmsg_
- Same as msg_
above, but if there are multiple # such headers in the message, they will all be printed, separated by # comma-space. # # sender -- the "sender" of the messages, which will be the From: or # envelope-sender as determeined by the USE_ENVELOPE_SENDER variable # below. # # The format of the entries is a 2-tuple with the first element naming the # file in logs/ to print the message to, and the second being a format string # appropriate for Python's %-style string interpolation. The file name is # arbitrary; qfiles/ will be created automatically if it does not # exist. # The format of the message printed for every delivered message, regardless of # whether the delivery was successful or not. Set to None to disable the # printing of this log message. SMTP_LOG_EVERY_MESSAGE = ( 'smtp', '%(msg_message-id)s smtp for %(#recips)d recips, completed in %(time).3f seconds') # This will only be printed if there were no immediate smtp failures. # Mutually exclusive with SMTP_LOG_REFUSED. SMTP_LOG_SUCCESS = ( 'post', 'post to %(listname)s from %(sender)s, size=%(size)d, message-id=%(msg_message-id)s, success') # This will only be printed if there were any addresses which encountered an # immediate smtp failure. Mutually exclusive with SMTP_LOG_SUCCESS. SMTP_LOG_REFUSED = ( 'post', 'post to %(listname)s from %(sender)s, size=%(size)d, message-id=%(msg_message-id)s, %(#refused)d failures') # This will be logged for each specific recipient failure. Additional %()s # keys are: # # recipient -- the failing recipient address # failcode -- the smtp failure code # failmsg -- the actual smtp message, if available SMTP_LOG_EACH_FAILURE = ( 'smtp-failure', 'delivery to %(recipient)s failed with code %(failcode)d: %(failmsg)s') # These variables control the format and frequency of VERP-like delivery for # better bounce detection. VERP is Variable Envelope Return Path, defined # here: # # http://cr.yp.to/proto/verp.txt # # This involves encoding the address of the recipient as we (Mailman) know it # into the envelope sender address (i.e. the SMTP `MAIL FROM:' address). # Thus, no matter what kind of forwarding the recipient has in place, should # it eventually bounce, we will receive an unambiguous notice of the bouncing # address. # # However, we're technically only "VERP-like" because we're doing the envelope # sender encoding in Mailman, not in the MTA. We do require cooperation from # the MTA, so you must be sure your MTA can be configured for extended address # semantics. # # The first variable describes how to encode VERP envelopes. It must contain # these three string interpolations: # # %(bounces)s -- the list-bounces mailbox will be set here # %(mailbox)s -- the recipient's mailbox will be set here # %(host)s -- the recipient's host name will be set here # # This example uses the default below. # # FQDN list address is: mylist@dom.ain # Recipient is: aperson@a.nother.dom # # The envelope sender will be mylist-bounces+aperson=a.nother.dom@dom.ain # # Note that your MTA /must/ be configured to deliver such an addressed message # to mylist-bounces! VERP_FORMAT = '%(bounces)s+%(mailbox)s=%(host)s' # The second describes a regular expression to unambiguously decode such an # address, which will be placed in the To: header of the bounce message by the # bouncing MTA. Getting this right is critical -- and tricky. Learn your # Python regular expressions. It must define exactly three named groups, # bounces, mailbox and host, with the same definition as above. It will be # compiled case-insensitively. VERP_REGEXP = r'^(?P[^+]+?)\+(?P[^=]+)=(?P[^@]+)@.*$' # A perfect opportunity for doing VERP is the password reminders, which are # already addressed individually to each recipient. Set this to Yes to enable # VERPs on all password reminders. VERP_PASSWORD_REMINDERS = No # Another good opportunity is when regular delivery is personalized. Here # again, we're already incurring the performance hit for addressing each # individual recipient. Set this to Yes to enable VERPs on all personalized # regular deliveries (personalized digests aren't supported yet). VERP_PERSONALIZED_DELIVERIES = No # And finally, we can VERP normal, non-personalized deliveries. However, # because it can be a significant performance hit, we allow you to decide how # often to VERP regular deliveries. This is the interval, in number of # messages, to do a VERP recipient address. The same variable controls both # regular and digest deliveries. Set to 0 to disable occasional VERPs, set to # 1 to VERP every delivery, or to some number > 1 for only occasional VERPs. VERP_DELIVERY_INTERVAL = 0 # For nicer confirmation emails, use a VERP-like format which encodes the # confirmation cookie in the reply address. This lets us put a more user # friendly Subject: on the message, but requires cooperation from the MTA. # Format is like VERP_FORMAT above, but with the following substitutions: # # %(confirm)s -- the list-confirm mailbox will be set here # %(cookie)s -- the confirmation cookie will be set here VERP_CONFIRM_FORMAT = '%(addr)s+%(cookie)s' # This is analogous to VERP_REGEXP, but for splitting apart the # VERP_CONFIRM_FORMAT. VERP_CONFIRM_REGEXP = r'^(?P[^+]+?)\+(?P[^@]+)@.*$' # Set this to Yes to enable VERP-like (more user friendly) confirmations VERP_CONFIRMATIONS = No # This is the maximum number of automatic responses sent to an address because # of -request messages or posting hold messages. This limit prevents response # loops between Mailman and misconfigured remote email robots. Mailman # already inhibits automatic replies to any message labeled with a header # "Precendence: bulk|list|junk". This is a fallback safety valve so it should # be set fairly high. Set to 0 for no limit (probably useful only for # debugging). MAX_AUTORESPONSES_PER_DAY = 10 ##### # Qrunner defaults ##### # Which queues should the qrunner master watchdog spawn? This is a list of # 2-tuples containing the name of the qrunner class (which must live in a # module of the same name within the Mailman.Queue package), and the number of # parallel processes to fork for each qrunner. If more than one process is # used, each will take an equal subdivision of the hash space. # BAW: Eventually we may support weighted hash spaces. # BAW: Although not enforced, the # of slices must be a power of 2 QRUNNERS = [ ('ArchRunner', 1), # messages for the archiver ('BounceRunner', 1), # for processing the qfile/bounces directory ('CommandRunner', 1), # commands and bounces from the outside world ('IncomingRunner', 1), # posts from the outside world ('NewsRunner', 1), # outgoing messages to the nntpd ('OutgoingRunner', 1), # outgoing messages to the smtpd ('VirginRunner', 1), # internally crafted (virgin birth) messages ('RetryRunner', 1), # retry temporarily failed deliveries ] # Set this to Yes to use the `Maildir' delivery option. If you change this # you will need to re-run bin/genaliases for MTAs that don't use list # auto-detection. # # WARNING: If you want to use Maildir delivery, you /must/ start Mailman's # qrunner as root, or you will get permission problems. # # NOTE: Maildir delivery is experimental for Mailman 2.1. USE_MAILDIR = No # NOTE: If you set USE_MAILDIR = Yes, add the following line to your mm_cfg.py # file (uncommented of course!) # QRUNNERS.append(('MaildirRunner', 1)) # After processing every file in the qrunner's slice, how long should the # runner sleep for before checking the queue directory again for new files? # This can be a fraction of a second, or zero to check immediately # (essentially busy-loop as fast as possible). QRUNNER_SLEEP_TIME = seconds(1) # When a message that is unparsable (by the email package) is received, what # should we do with it? The most common cause of unparsable messages is # broken MIME encapsulation, and the most common cause of that is viruses like # Nimda. Set this variable to No to discard such messages, or to Yes to store # them in qfiles/bad subdirectory. QRUNNER_SAVE_BAD_MESSAGES = Yes # This flag causes Mailman to fsync() its data files after writing and # flushing its contents. While this ensures the data is written to disk, # avoiding data loss, it may be a performance killer. Note that this flag # affects both message pickles and MailList config.pck files. SYNC_AFTER_WRITE = No ##### # General defaults ##### # The default language for this server. Whenever we can't figure out the list # context or user context, we'll fall back to using this language. See # LC_DESCRIPTIONS below for legal values. DEFAULT_SERVER_LANGUAGE = 'en' # When allowing only members to post to a mailing list, how is the sender of # the message determined? If this variable is set to Yes, then first the # message's envelope sender is used, with a fallback to the sender if there is # no envelope sender. Set this variable to No to always use the sender. # # The envelope sender is set by the SMTP delivery and is thus less easily # spoofed than the sender, which is typically just taken from the From: header # and thus easily spoofed by the end-user. However, sometimes the envelope # sender isn't set correctly and this will manifest itself by postings being # held for approval even if they appear to come from a list member. If you # are having this problem, set this variable to No, but understand that some # spoofed messages may get through. USE_ENVELOPE_SENDER = No # Membership tests for posting purposes are usually performed by looking at a # set of headers, passing the test if any of their values match a member of # the list. Headers are checked in the order given in this variable. The # value None means use the From_ (envelope sender) header. Field names are # case insensitive. SENDER_HEADERS = ('from', None, 'reply-to', 'sender') # How many members to display at a time on the admin cgi to unsubscribe them # or change their options? DEFAULT_ADMIN_MEMBER_CHUNKSIZE = 30 # how many bytes of a held message post should be displayed in the admindb web # page? Use a negative number to indicate the entire message, regardless of # size (though this will slow down rendering those pages). ADMINDB_PAGE_TEXT_LIMIT = 4096 # Set this variable to Yes to allow list owners to delete their own mailing # lists. You may not want to give them this power, in which case, setting # this variable to No instead requires list removal to be done by the site # administrator, via the command line script bin/rmlist. OWNERS_CAN_DELETE_THEIR_OWN_LISTS = No # Set this variable to Yes to allow list owners to set the "personalized" # flags on their mailing lists. Turning these on tells Mailman to send # separate email messages to each user instead of batching them together for # delivery to the MTA. This gives each member a more personalized message, # but can have a heavy impact on the performance of your system. OWNERS_CAN_ENABLE_PERSONALIZATION = No # Should held messages be saved on disk as Python pickles or as plain text? # The former is more efficient since we don't need to go through the # parse/generate roundtrip each time, but the latter might be preferred if you # want to edit the held message on disk. HOLD_MESSAGES_AS_PICKLES = Yes # These define the available types of external message metadata formats, and # the one to use by default. MARSHAL format uses Python's built-in marshal # module. BSDDB_NATIVE uses the bsddb module compiled into Python, which # links with whatever version of Berkeley db you've got on your system (in # Python 2.0 this is included by default if configure can find it). ASCII # format is a dumb repr()-based format with "key = value" Python assignments. # It is human readable and editable (as Python source code) and is appropriate # for execfile() food. # # Note! Make sure your queues are empty before you change this. METAFMT_MARSHAL = 1 METAFMT_BSDDB_NATIVE = 2 METAFMT_ASCII = 3 METADATA_FORMAT = METAFMT_MARSHAL # This variable controls the order in which list-specific category options are # presented in the admin cgi page. ADMIN_CATEGORIES = [ # First column 'general', 'passwords', 'language', 'members', 'nondigest', 'digest', # Second column 'privacy', 'bounce', 'archive', 'gateway', 'autoreply', 'contentfilter', 'topics', ] # See "Bitfield for user options" below; make this a sum of those options, to # make all new members of lists start with those options flagged. We assume # by default that people don't want to receive two copies of posts. Note # however that the member moderation flag's initial value is controlled by the # list's config variable default_member_moderation. DEFAULT_NEW_MEMBER_OPTIONS = 256 ##### # List defaults. NOTE: Changing these values does NOT change the # configuration of an existing list. It only defines the default for new # lists you subsequently create. ##### # Should a list, by default be advertised? What is the default maximum number # of explicit recipients allowed? What is the default maximum message size # allowed? DEFAULT_LIST_ADVERTISED = Yes DEFAULT_MAX_NUM_RECIPIENTS = 10 DEFAULT_MAX_MESSAGE_SIZE = 40 # KB # These format strings will be expanded w.r.t. the dictionary for the # mailing list instance. DEFAULT_SUBJECT_PREFIX = "[%(real_name)s] " DEFAULT_MSG_HEADER = "" DEFAULT_MSG_FOOTER = """_______________________________________________ %(real_name)s mailing list %(real_name)s@%(host_name)s %(web_page_url)slistinfo%(cgiext)s/%(_internal_name)s """ # Mail command processor will ignore mail command lines after designated max. DEFAULT_MAIL_COMMANDS_MAX_LINES = 25 # Is the list owner notified of admin requests immediately by mail, as well as # by daily pending-request reminder? DEFAULT_ADMIN_IMMED_NOTIFY = Yes # Is the list owner notified of subscribes/unsubscribes? DEFAULT_ADMIN_NOTIFY_MCHANGES = No # Should list members, by default, have their posts be moderated? DEFAULT_DEFAULT_MEMBER_MODERATION = No # Should non-member posts which are auto-discarded also be forwarded to the # moderators? DEFAULT_FORWARD_AUTO_DISCARDS = Yes # What shold happen to non-member posts which are do not match explicit # non-member actions? # 0 = Accept # 1 = Hold # 2 = Reject # 3 = Discard DEFAULT_GENERIC_NONMEMBER_ACTION = 1 # Bounce if 'To:', 'Cc:', or 'Resent-To:' fields don't explicitly name list? # This is an anti-spam measure DEFAULT_REQUIRE_EXPLICIT_DESTINATION = Yes # Alternate names acceptable as explicit destinations for this list. DEFAULT_ACCEPTABLE_ALIASES =""" """ # For mailing lists that have only other mailing lists for members: DEFAULT_UMBRELLA_LIST = No # For umbrella lists, the suffix for the account part of address for # administrative notices (subscription confirmations, password reminders): DEFAULT_UMBRELLA_MEMBER_ADMIN_SUFFIX = "-owner" # This variable controls whether monthly password reminders are sent. DEFAULT_SEND_REMINDERS = Yes # Send welcome messages to new users? DEFAULT_SEND_WELCOME_MSG = Yes # Send goodbye messages to unsubscribed members? DEFAULT_SEND_GOODBYE_MSG = Yes # Wipe sender information, and make it look like the list-admin # address sends all messages DEFAULT_ANONYMOUS_LIST = No # {header-name: regexp} spam filtering - we include some for example sake. DEFAULT_BOUNCE_MATCHING_HEADERS = """ # Lines that *start* with a '#' are comments. to: friend@public.com message-id: relay.comanche.denmark.eu from: list@listme.com from: .*@uplinkpro.com """ # Mailman can be configured to "munge" Reply-To: headers for any passing # messages. One the one hand, there are a lot of good reasons not to munge # Reply-To: but on the other, people really seem to want this feature. See # the help for reply_goes_to_list in the web UI for links discussing the # issue. # 0 - Reply-To: not munged # 1 - Reply-To: set back to the list # 2 - Reply-To: set to an explicit value (reply_to_address) DEFAULT_REPLY_GOES_TO_LIST = 0 # Mailman can be configured to strip any existing Reply-To: header, or simply # extend any existing Reply-To: with one based on the above setting. DEFAULT_FIRST_STRIP_REPLY_TO = No # SUBSCRIBE POLICY # 0 - open list (only when ALLOW_OPEN_SUBSCRIBE is set to 1) ** # 1 - confirmation required for subscribes # 2 - admin approval required for subscribes # 3 - both confirmation and admin approval required # # ** please do not choose option 0 if you are not allowing open # subscribes (next variable) DEFAULT_SUBSCRIBE_POLICY = 1 # Does this site allow completely unchecked subscriptions? ALLOW_OPEN_SUBSCRIBE = No # The default policy for unsubscriptions. 0 (unmoderated unsubscribes) is # highly recommended! # 0 - unmoderated unsubscribes # 1 - unsubscribes require approval DEFAULT_UNSUBSCRIBE_POLICY = 0 # Private_roster == 0: anyone can see, 1: members only, 2: admin only. DEFAULT_PRIVATE_ROSTER = 1 # When exposing members, make them unrecognizable as email addrs, so # web-spiders can't pick up addrs for spam purposes. DEFAULT_OBSCURE_ADDRESSES = Yes # RFC 2369 defines List-* headers which are added to every message sent # through to the mailing list membership. These are a very useful aid to end # users and should always be added. However, not all MUAs are compliant and # if a list's membership has many such users, they may clamor for these # headers to be suppressed. By setting this variable to Yes, list owners will # be given the option to suppress these headers. By setting it to No, list # owners will not be given the option to suppress these headers (although some # header suppression may still take place, i.e. for announce-only lists, or # lists with no archives). ALLOW_RFC2369_OVERRIDES = Yes # Defaults for content filtering on mailing lists. DEFAULT_FILTER_CONTENT is # a flag which if set to true, turns on content filtering. DEFAULT_FILTER_CONTENT = No # DEFAULT_FILTER_MIME_TYPES is a list of MIME types to be removed. This is a # list of strings of the format "maintype/subtype" or simply "maintype". # E.g. "text/html" strips all html attachments while "image" strips all image # types regardless of subtype (jpeg, gif, etc.). DEFAULT_FILTER_MIME_TYPES = [] # DEFAULT_PASS_MIME_TYPES is a list of MIME types to be passed through. Format is the same as DEFAULT_FILTER_MIME_TYPES DEFAULT_PASS_MIME_TYPES = ['multipart/mixed', 'multipart/alternative', 'text/plain'] # Whether text/html should be converted to text/plain after content filtering # is performed. Conversion is done according to HTML_TO_PLAIN_TEXT_COMMAND DEFAULT_CONVERT_HTML_TO_PLAINTEXT = Yes # Default action to take on filtered messages. # 0 = Discard, 1 = Reject, 2 = Forward, 3 = Preserve DEFAULT_FILTER_ACTION = 0 # Whether to allow list owners to preserve content filtered messages to a # special queue on the disk. OWNERS_CAN_PRESERVE_FILTERED_MESSAGES = Yes # Check for administrivia in messages sent to the main list? DEFAULT_ADMINISTRIVIA = Yes ##### # Digestification defaults. Same caveat applies here as with list defaults. ##### # Will list be available in non-digested form? DEFAULT_NONDIGESTABLE = Yes # Will list be available in digested form? DEFAULT_DIGESTABLE = Yes DEFAULT_DIGEST_HEADER = "" DEFAULT_DIGEST_FOOTER = DEFAULT_MSG_FOOTER DEFAULT_DIGEST_IS_DEFAULT = No DEFAULT_MIME_IS_DEFAULT_DIGEST = No DEFAULT_DIGEST_SIZE_THRESHHOLD = 30 # KB DEFAULT_DIGEST_SEND_PERIODIC = Yes # Headers which should be kept in both RFC 1153 (plain) and MIME digests. RFC # 1153 also specifies these headers in this exact order, so order matters. MIME_DIGEST_KEEP_HEADERS = [ 'Date', 'From', 'To', 'Cc', 'Subject', 'Message-ID', 'Keywords', # I believe we should also keep these headers though. 'In-Reply-To', 'References', 'Content-Type', 'MIME-Version', 'Content-Transfer-Encoding', 'Precedence', 'Reply-To', # Mailman 2.0 adds these headers 'Message', ] PLAIN_DIGEST_KEEP_HEADERS = [ 'Message', 'Date', 'From', 'Subject', 'To', 'Cc', 'Message-ID', 'Keywords', 'Content-Type', ] ##### # Bounce processing defaults. Same caveat applies here as with list defaults. ##### # Should we do any bounced mail response at all? DEFAULT_BOUNCE_PROCESSING = Yes # Bounce processing works like this: when a bounce from a member is received, # we look up the `bounce info' for this member. If there is no bounce info, # this is the first bounce we've received from this member. In that case, we # record today's date, and initialize the bounce score (see below for initial # value). # # If there is existing bounce info for this member, we look at the last bounce # receive date. If this date is farther away from today than the `bounce # expiration interval', we throw away all the old data and initialize the # bounce score as if this were the first bounce from the member. # # Otherwise, we increment the bounce score. If we can determine whether the # bounce was soft or hard (i.e. transient or fatal), then we use a score value # of 0.5 for soft bounces and 1.0 for hard bounces. Note that we only score # one bounce per day. If the bounce score is then greater than the `bounce # threshold' we disable the member's address. # # After disabling the address, we can send warning messages to the member, # providing a confirmation cookie/url for them to use to re-enable their # delivery. After a configurable period of time, we'll delete the address. # When we delete the address due to bouncing, we'll send one last message to # the member. # Bounce scores greater than this value get disabled. DEFAULT_BOUNCE_SCORE_THRESHOLD = 5.0 # Bounce information older than this interval is considered stale, and is # discarded. DEFAULT_BOUNCE_INFO_STALE_AFTER = days(7) # The number of notifications to send to the disabled/removed member before we # remove them from the list. A value of 0 means we remove the address # immediately (with one last notification). Note that the first one is sent # upon change of status to disabled. DEFAULT_BOUNCE_YOU_ARE_DISABLED_WARNINGS = 3 # The interval of time between disabled warnings. DEFAULT_BOUNCE_YOU_ARE_DISABLED_WARNINGS_INTERVAL = days(7) # Does the list owner get messages to the -bounces (and -admin) address that # failed to match by the bounce detector? DEFAULT_BOUNCE_UNRECOGNIZED_GOES_TO_LIST_OWNER = Yes # Notifications on bounce actions. The first specifies whether the list owner # should get a notification when a member is disabled due to bouncing, while # the second specifies whether the owner should get one when the member is # removed due to bouncing. DEFAULT_BOUNCE_NOTIFY_OWNER_ON_DISABLE = Yes DEFAULT_BOUNCE_NOTIFY_OWNER_ON_REMOVAL = Yes ##### # General time limits ##### # How long should subscriptions requests await confirmation before being # dropped? PENDING_REQUEST_LIFE = days(3) # How long should messages which have delivery failures continue to be # retried? After this period of time, a message that has failed recipients # will be dequeued and those recipients will never receive the message. DELIVERY_RETRY_PERIOD = days(5) # How long should we wait before we retry a temporary delivery failure? DELIVERY_RETRY_WAIT = hours(1) ##### # Lock management defaults ##### # These variables control certain aspects of lock acquisition and retention. # They should be tuned as appropriate for your environment. All variables are # specified in units of floating point seconds. YOU MAY NEED TO TUNE THESE # VARIABLES DEPENDING ON THE SIZE OF YOUR LISTS, THE PERFORMANCE OF YOUR # HARDWARE, NETWORK AND GENERAL MAIL HANDLING CAPABILITIES, ETC. # Set this to On to turn on MailList object lock debugging messages, which # will be written to logs/locks. If you think you're having lock problems, or # just want to tune the locks for your system, turn on lock debugging. LIST_LOCK_DEBUGGING = Off # This variable specifies how long the lock will be retained for a specific # operation on a mailing list. Watch your logs/lock file and if you see a lot # of lock breakages, you might need to bump this up. However if you set this # too high, a faulty script (or incorrect use of bin/withlist) can prevent the # list from being used until the lifetime expires. This is probably one of # the most crucial tuning variables in the system. LIST_LOCK_LIFETIME = hours(5) # This variable specifies how long an attempt will be made to acquire a list # lock by the incoming qrunner process. If the lock acquisition times out, # the message will be re-queued for later delivery. LIST_LOCK_TIMEOUT = seconds(10) # Set this to On to turn on lock debugging messages for the pending requests # database, which will be written to logs/locks. If you think you're having # lock problems, or just want to tune the locks for your system, turn on lock # debugging. PENDINGDB_LOCK_DEBUGGING = Off # This variable specifies how long an attempt will be made to acquire a # pendingdb lock by the incoming qrunner process. If the lock acquisition # times out, the message will be re-queued for later delivery. PENDINGDB_LOCK_TIMEOUT = seconds(30) # The pendingdb is shared among all lists, and handles all list # (un)subscriptions, admin approvals and otherwise held messages, so it is # potentially locked a lot more often than single lists. Mailman deals with # this by re-trying any attempts to alter the pendingdb that failed because of # locking errors. This variable indicates how many attempt should be made # before abandoning all hope. PENDINGDB_LOCK_ATTEMPTS = 10 ##### # Nothing below here is user configurable. Most of these values are in this # file for internal system convenience. Don't change any of them or override # any of them in your mm_cfg.py file! ##### # These directories are used to find various important files in the Mailman # installation. PREFIX and EXEC_PREFIX are set by configure and should point # to the installation directory of the Mailman package. PYTHON = '@PYTHON@' PREFIX = '@prefix@' EXEC_PREFIX = '@exec_prefix@' VAR_PREFIX = '@VAR_PREFIX@' # Work around a bogus autoconf 2.12 bug if EXEC_PREFIX == '${prefix}': EXEC_PREFIX = PREFIX # CGI extension, change using configure script CGIEXT = '@CGIEXT@' # Group id that group-owns the Mailman installation MAILMAN_USER = '@MAILMAN_USER@' MAILMAN_GROUP = '@MAILMAN_GROUP@' # Enumeration for Mailman cgi widget types Toggle = 1 Radio = 2 String = 3 Text = 4 Email = 5 EmailList = 6 Host = 7 Number = 8 FileUpload = 9 Select = 10 Topics = 11 Checkbox = 12 # An "extended email list". Contents must be an email address or a ^-prefixed # regular expression. Used in the sender moderation text boxes. EmailListEx = 13 # Held message disposition actions, for use between admindb.py and # ListAdmin.py. DEFER = 0 APPROVE = 1 REJECT = 2 DISCARD = 3 SUBSCRIBE = 4 UNSUBSCRIBE = 5 ACCEPT = 6 HOLD = 7 # Standard text field width TEXTFIELDWIDTH = 40 # Bitfield for user options. See DEFAULT_NEW_MEMBER_OPTIONS above to set # defaults for all new lists. Digests = 0 # handled by other mechanism, doesn't need a flag. DisableDelivery = 1 # Obsolete; use set/getDeliveryStatus() DontReceiveOwnPosts = 2 # Non-digesters only AcknowledgePosts = 4 DisableMime = 8 # Digesters only ConcealSubscription = 16 SuppressPasswordReminder = 32 ReceiveNonmatchingTopics = 64 Moderate = 128 DontReceiveDuplicates = 256 # A mapping between short option tags and their flag OPTINFO = {'hide' : ConcealSubscription, 'nomail' : DisableDelivery, 'ack' : AcknowledgePosts, 'notmetoo': DontReceiveOwnPosts, 'digest' : 0, 'plain' : DisableMime, 'nodupes' : DontReceiveDuplicates } # Authentication contexts. # # Mailman defines the following roles: # - User, a normal user who has no permissions except to change their personal # option settings # - List creator, someone who can create and delete lists, but cannot # (necessarily) configure the list. # - List moderator, someone who can tend to pending requests such as # subscription requests, or held messages # - List administrator, someone who has total control over a list, can # configure it, modify user options for members of the list, subscribe and # unsubscribe members, etc. # - Site administrator, someone who has total control over the entire site and # can do any of the tasks mentioned above. This person usually also has # command line access. UnAuthorized = 0 AuthUser = 1 # Joe Shmoe User AuthCreator = 2 # List Creator / Destroyer AuthListAdmin = 3 # List Administrator (total control over list) AuthListModerator = 4 # List Moderator (can only handle held requests) AuthSiteAdmin = 5 # Site Administrator (total control over everything) # Useful directories LIST_DATA_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'lists') LOG_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'logs') LOCK_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'locks') DATA_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'data') SPAM_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'spam') WRAPPER_DIR = os.path.join(EXEC_PREFIX, 'mail') BIN_DIR = os.path.join(PREFIX, 'bin') SCRIPTS_DIR = os.path.join(PREFIX, 'scripts') TEMPLATE_DIR = os.path.join(PREFIX, 'templates') MESSAGES_DIR = os.path.join(PREFIX, 'messages') PUBLIC_ARCHIVE_FILE_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'archives', 'public') PRIVATE_ARCHIVE_FILE_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'archives', 'private') # Directories used by the qrunner subsystem QUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(VAR_PREFIX, 'qfiles') INQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'in') OUTQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'out') CMDQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'commands') BOUNCEQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'bounces') NEWSQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'news') ARCHQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'archive') SHUNTQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'shunt') VIRGINQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'virgin') BADQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'bad') RETRYQUEUE_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'retry') MAILDIR_DIR = os.path.join(QUEUE_DIR, 'maildir') # Other useful files PIDFILE = os.path.join(DATA_DIR, 'master-qrunner.pid') SITE_PW_FILE = os.path.join(DATA_DIR, 'adm.pw') LISTCREATOR_PW_FILE = os.path.join(DATA_DIR, 'creator.pw') # Import a bunch of version numbers from Version import * # Vgg: Language descriptions and charsets dictionary, any new supported # language must have a corresponding entry here. Key is the name of the # directories that hold the localized texts. Data are tuples with first # element being the description, as described in the catalogs, and second # element is the language charset. I have chosen code from /usr/share/locale # in my GNU/Linux. :-) def _(s): return s LC_DESCRIPTIONS = {} def add_language(code, description, charset): LC_DESCRIPTIONS[code] = (description, charset) add_language('big5', _('Traditional Chinese'), 'big5') add_language('ca', _('Catalan'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('cs', _('Czech'), 'iso-8859-2') add_language('da', _('Danish'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('de', _('German'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('en', _('English (USA)'), 'us-ascii') add_language('es', _('Spanish (Spain)'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('et', _('Estonian'), 'iso-8859-15') add_language('eu', _('Euskara'), 'iso-8859-15') # Basque add_language('fi', _('Finnish'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('fr', _('French'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('gb', _('Simplified Chinese'), 'gb2312') #add_language('hr', _('Croatian'), 'iso-8859-2') add_language('hu', _('Hungarian'), 'iso-8859-2') add_language('it', _('Italian'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('ja', _('Japanese'), 'euc-jp') add_language('ko', _('Korean'), 'euc-kr') add_language('lt', _('Lithuanian'), 'iso-8859-13') add_language('nl', _('Dutch'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('no', _('Norwegian'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('pl', _('Polish'), 'iso-8859-2') add_language('pt', _('Portuguese'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('pt_BR', _('Portuguese (Brazil)'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('ro', _('Romanian'), 'utf-8') add_language('ru', _('Russian'), 'koi8-r') add_language('sr', _('Serbian'), 'utf-8') add_language('sl', _('Slovenian'), 'iso-8859-2') add_language('sv', _('Swedish'), 'iso-8859-1') add_language('uk', _('Ukrainian'), 'utf-8') del _