fix for broken drafts. Patch from Ryan O'Neill
[squirrelmail.git] / INSTALL
1 Installing SquirrelMail
2 =======================
3
4 Table of Contents:
5 1. (PHP4) Configure your webserver to work with PHP4
6 2. (IMAP) Setting up IMAP (not covered)
7 3. (INSTALL) Obtaining and installing SquirrelMail
8 4. (RUN) Running SquirrelMail
9 5. (CHARSETS) Russian Charsets
10
11
12
13
14 1. CONFIGURE YOUR WEBSERVER TO WORK WITH PHP4
15 ---------------------------------------------
16
17 If your webserver does not already have PHP4 you must configure it
18 to work with PHP4. SquirrelMail uses the standard suffix .php for
19 all PHP4 files. This is a quick and dirty guide to installing PHP4
20 to run as CGI under Apache. How you end up doing this is up to you
21 (your mileage may vary).
22
23 NOTE: The new plugin architecture required the use of some functions
24 which are not in all versions of PHP4. You will need at least
25 PHP4 beta2. If you need to upgrade please go ahead and install the
26 latest release version of PHP4.
27
28 a. Obtaining and compiling PHP4
29
30 Point your favorite webserver at http://www.php.net/version4/ and
31 download the source. Untar (tar xvfz filename-you-downloaded.tgz)
32 the source, cd into the directory and run configure. To make PHP4
33 work with SquirrelMail a commandline like this should do:
34
35 ./configure --enable-track-vars --enable-force-cgi-redirect --with-gettext
36
37 If you have a database like MySQL you might want to add something
38 like --with-mysql to get database functionality.
39
40 If you're going to use LDAP in the addressbook, you must compile PHP4
41 with --with-ldap (see the PHP4 docs for more information).
42
43 Run make to build the binary file. This will generate a binary file
44 called "php". Move this file into a CGI-directory.
45
46 You might also want to read the INSTALL file in the PHP-distribution
47 :-)
48
49 b. Changing php.ini
50
51 PHP defaults to look for php.ini (PHP's configuration file) in
52 /usr/local/lib. However, for security reasons, it is suggested
53 that the location of this file is changed to someplace else. This
54 can be done at configure time with the configuration directive
55 --with-config-file-path=PATH.
56
57 Edit the php.ini file and make sure session.use_cookies is 1. Also
58 be sure to change the session.save_path to someplace that can only
59 be read and written to by the webserver. session.save_path is the
60 location that PHP's session data will be written to.
61
62 Squirrelmail 1.2.x also requires register_globals to be enabled.
63
64 SECURITY WARNING - If a user has access to write PHP scripts on your
65 system and knows the location where PHP stores session data, he
66 could get a listing of the sessions being used and then read a given
67 session's data with his own PHP script. Caution should be used when
68 setting up permissions and locations of php.ini and the session data.
69
70 c. Setting up .php files to use PHP4
71
72 You need to create a .htaccess file in you SquirrelMail directory
73 that looks something like this:
74
75 AddType application/php4script .php
76 Action application/php4script /cgi-bin/php
77
78 You could also add these lines to your Apache configuration file.
79
80 d. Running into trouble
81
82 Setting up Apache with PHP4 can be a non-trivial task. Read the PHP4
83 and Apache documentation carefully if you run into trouble. If you
84 have an experienced system administrator around ask her/him to help
85 you.
86
87 2. SETTING UP IMAP
88 ------------------
89
90 This is not covered here :-/
91
92 3. OBTAINING AND INSTALLING SQUIRRELMAIL
93 ----------------------------------------
94
95 SquirrelMail is still under development. Therefore you should always
96 get the newest version around. Look at
97 http://www.squirrelmail.org/index.php3?page=5 to see what it
98 is. If you want to be bleeding edge you might want to consider using
99 the latest CVS version (with the latest and most fashionable of
100 bugs).
101
102 a. Download SquirrelMail
103
104 Get SquirrelMail from the address above if you do not have it or are
105 uncertain if you have the newest version. Untar (again tar xvfz
106 filename.tgz) SquirrelMail in a directory that is readable for your
107 webserver.
108
109 b. Setting up directories
110
111 SquirrelMail uses two directories to store user configuration and
112 attachments that are about to be sent. You might want to have these
113 directories outside of your web tree.
114
115 The data directory is used for storing user preferences, like
116 signature, name and theme. When unpacking the sources this directory
117 is created as data/ in your SquirrelMail directory. This directory
118 must be writable by the webserver. If your webserver is running as
119 the user "nobody" you can fix this by running:
120
121 $ chown -R nobody data
122 $ chgrp -R nobody data
123
124 Keep in mind that with different installations, the web server could
125 typically run as userid/groupid of nobody/nobody, nobody/nogroup,
126 apache/apache or www-data/www-data. The best way to find out is to read
127 the web server's configuration file.
128
129 There also needs to be a directory where attachments are stored
130 before they are sent. Since personal mail is stored in this
131 directory you might want to be a bit careful about how you set it
132 up. It should be owned by another user than the webserver is running
133 as (root might be a good choice) and the webserver should have write
134 and execute permissions on the directory, but should not have read
135 permissions. You could do this by running these commands (still
136 granted that the webserver is running as nobody/nobody)
137
138 $ cd /var/some/place
139 $ mkdir SomeDirectory
140 $ chgrp -R nobody SomeDirectory
141 $ chmod 730 SomeDirectory
142
143 If you trust all the users on you system not to read mail they are
144 not supposed to read change the last line to chmod 777 SomeDirectory
145 or simply use /tmp as you attachments directory.
146
147 If a user is aborting a mail but has uploaded some attachments to it
148 the files will be lying around in this directory forever if you do not
149 remove them. To fix this, it is recommended to create a cron job that
150 deletes everything in the attachment directory. Something similar
151 to the following will be good enough:
152
153 $ cd /var/attach/directory
154 $ rm -f *
155
156 However, this will delete attachments that are currently in use by people
157 sending email when the cron job runs. You can either (1) make sure that
158 the cron job runs at an obscure hour and hope that nobody gets upset, or
159 (2) you can run a modified version of the commands above. Check out the
160 man pages for other commands such as 'find' or 'tmpreaper'.
161
162 One sample script you could set up that would erase all attachments, but
163 wouldn't erase preferences, address books, or the like (just in case your
164 attachment directory is the same as your data directory) might look like
165 this:
166
167 $ rm `find /var/attach/directory -atime +2 | grep -v "\." | grep -v _`
168
169 Remember to be careful with whatever method you do use, and to test out
170 the command before it potentially wipes out everyone's preferences.
171
172 c. Setting up SquirrelMail
173
174 There are two ways to configure Squirrelmail. In the config/ directory,
175 there is a perl script called conf.pl that will aid you in the
176 configuration process. This is the recommended way of handling
177 the config.
178
179 You can also copy the config/config_default.php file to config/config.php
180 and edit that manually.
181
182 4. RUNNING SQUIRRELMAIL
183 -----------------------
184
185 Point your browser at the URL at which SquirrelMail is installed. A
186 possible example of this is:
187 http://www.yourdomain.com/squirrelmail
188
189 It should be pretty straight forward to use. Some more documentation
190 might show up one day or another.
191
192
193 5. RUSSIAN CHARSETS
194 -------------------
195
196 For information on how to make SquirrelMail work with Russian
197 Apache, see the README.russian_apache in the doc/ subdirectory.