freebsd-ports/mail/exim-monitor/files/patch-src::EDITME
2005-10-02 16:49:21 +00:00

55 lines
2.1 KiB
Text

--- src/EDITME.orig Mon Aug 27 14:35:47 2001
+++ src/EDITME Mon Aug 27 14:37:31 2001
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@
# /usr/local/sbin. The installation script will try to create this directory,
# and any superior directories, if they do not exist.
-BIN_DIRECTORY=/usr/exim/bin
+BIN_DIRECTORY=XX_PREFIX_XX/sbin
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@
# directories if they don't exist. It will also install a default run time
# configuration if this file does not exist.
-CONFIGURE_FILE=/usr/exim/configure
+CONFIGURE_FILE=XX_PREFIX_XX/etc/exim/configure
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -126,14 +126,14 @@
# owner of a local mailbox.) Specifying these values as root is very strongly
# discouraged. These values are compiled into the binary.
-EXIM_USER=
+EXIM_USER=mailnull
# If the setting of EXIM_USER is numeric (e.g. EXIM_USER=42), there must
# also be a setting of EXIM_GROUP. If, on the other hand, you use a name
# for EXIM_USER (e.g. EXIM_USER=exim), you don't need to set EXIM_GROUP unless
# you want to use a group other than the default group for the given user.
-# EXIM_GROUP=
+EXIM_GROUP=mail
# Many sites define a user called "exim", with an appropriate default group,
# and use
@@ -371,7 +373,7 @@
# %s. This will be replaced by one of the strings "main", "panic", or "reject"
# to form the final file names. Some installations may want something like this:
-# LOG_FILE_PATH=/var/log/exim_%slog
+LOG_FILE_PATH=/var/log/exim/%slog
# which results in files with names /var/log/exim_mainlog, etc. The directory
# in which the log files are placed must exist; Exim does not try to create
@@ -695,7 +705,7 @@
# (process id) to a file so that it can easily be identified. The path of the
# file can be specified here. Some installations may want something like this:
-# PID_FILE_PATH=/var/lock/exim.pid
+PID_FILE_PATH=/var/run/exim.pid
# If PID_FILE_PATH is not defined, Exim writes a file in its spool directory
# using the name "exim-daemon.pid".