Laura wrote: > I interpreted this to mean local sysadmins at the site where you are > running nmh, i.e. somebody at Chalmers University, not you people. If > you want to hear from people, I think you need to be a whole lot more > welcoming.
How about this, in nmh(7) and the output from install-mh(1): BUGS Send bug reports, questions, suggestions, and patches to nmh- [email protected]. That mailing list is relatively quiet, so user questions are encouraged. Users are also encouraged to subscribe. If problems are encountered with an nmh program, they should be reported to the local maintainers of nmh, if any, or to the mailing list noted above. When doing this, the name of the program should be reported, along with the version information for the program. To find out what version of an nmh program is being run, invoke the program with the -version switch. This prints the version of nmh, the host it was compiled on, and the date the program was linked. New releases and other information of potential interest are announced at http://www.nongnu.org/nmh/ . > This is one place where I would like a link to documentation, at some > master site, (so you can read it even if the docs never made it to > where they are supposed to be for your distro.) Unfortunately, there isn't such a site. If the man pages didn't get installed, that's a packaging problem. Modern nmh should be easier for packagers to deal with than older versions. Ralph wrote: % Is it worth having an mh man page (or did it used to be MH?) that either % explains the transition, or is simply another name for nmh(7). Looks like mh 6.8.5 docs had an MH page, I'll add it as an alias for nmh(7). Most of the BUGS section of the nmh man page came directly from it. David _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers
