CONTENTS: bind cnews deliver dip elm mailx netcfg ppp rdist smailcfg tin bind: BIND-4.9.3-beta9 bind: bind: The named daemon and support utilities such as dig, dnsquery, host, bind: nslookup, nsquery, and nstest. Documentation on setting up a name bind: server can be found in /usr/doc/bind-4.9.3-BETA9. bind: bind: bind: bind: bind: bind: cnews: 20 Feb 1993 Performance Release of C News cnews: cnews: Controls the spooling and transmission of Usenet news. cnews: Cnews is typically used with UUCP - for NNTP connections INN might cnews: be a better choice. cnews: cnews: cnews: cnews: cnews: cnews: deliver: A small and simple program that delivers electronic mail once it deliver: has arrived at a given machine. Although designed for Xenix, it deliver: works well on many platforms, including (of course) Linux. Deliver deliver: allows great flexibility in the handling of local mail delivery. deliver: All files used to control deliver are shell scripts. Thus, anything deliver: that can be called by a shell script can be used to control mail deliver: delivery. Deliver can also be used in conjunction with Smail. It deliver: is included by default with Slackware's sendmail package, too. deliver: deliver: deliver: dip: DIP - dialup IP connection handler 3.3.7n dip: dip: Uri Blumenthal's version of Fred N. van Kempen's DIP utility. DIP dip: handles the connections needed for dialup IP links, like SLIP or dip: CSLIP. It can handle both incoming and outgoing connections, using dip: password security for incoming connections. dip: dip: dip: dip: dip: elm: Menu-driven user mail program. (v. 2.4pl23) elm: elm: Elm is an interactive screen-oriented mailer program originally elm: written by Dave Taylor, and continued by the Elm Development Group. elm: elm: elm: elm: elm: elm: elm: mailx: BSD mailx 5.5. mailx: mailx: Mail is a intelligent mail processing system, which has a command mailx: syntax reminiscent of ed with lines replaced by messages. It's small; mailx: it's the standard; it's a good thing to install if you're going to use mailx: mail. mailx: mailx: mailx: mailx: mailx: netcfg: 'netconfig' is a script to help configure TCP/IP and mail on your netcfg: machine. It will ask you a series of questions about your network and netcfg: use your answers to automatically configure rc.M, rc.inet1, networks, netcfg: resolv, hosts, smail, and elm.rc. You may run the script again at any netcfg: time to reconfigure your machine. If you install the 'netconfig' netcfg: script, it will be executed for you before you leave 'setup'. netcfg: netcfg: netcfg: netcfg: netcfg: ppp: PPP for Linux, version 2.1.2b ppp: ppp: PPP for Linux -- Michael Callahan's ppp.c kernel driver and the pppd ppp: daemon (ported by Al Longyear). PPP support is included in most of ppp: the precompiled kernels in Slackware. ppp: ppp: ppp: ppp: ppp: ppp: rdist: Remote file distribution program. rdist: rdist: Rdist is a program to maintain identical copies of files over multiple rdist: hosts. It preserves the owner, group, mode, and mtime of files if rdist: possible and can update programs that are executing. rdist: rdist: rdist: rdist: rdist: rdist: smailcfg: Configuration files for sendmail. smailcfg: smailcfg: These files are used to create sendmail.cf configuration files. The smailcfg: m4 macro processor (on the D series of disks) is also required in smailcfg: order to make use of these files. smailcfg: smailcfg: These files and the documentation in /usr/src/sendmail should make it smailcfg: possible to support virtually any mail configuration. NOTE: you smailcfg: probably won't need this package if you're planning to use one of the smailcfg: sendmail.cf samples included in the sendmail package. smailcfg: tin: The 'tin' news reader. (1.2pl2) tin: tin: Tin is a full-screen easy to use Netnews reader. It can read news tin: locally (i.e. /usr/spool/news) or remotely (rtin or tin -r option) tin: via a NNTP (Network News Transport Protocol) server. It will tin: automatically utilize nov (news overview) style index files if tin: available locally or via the nntp xover command. Tin was written by tin: Iain Lea. tin: tin: tin: