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15 <h2>a messaging and collaboration platform for BBS and groupware applications</h2>
16 Copyright ©1987-2003 by the Citadel development team:<br>
19 <table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" align="center">
22 <td valign="top">Steven M. Bellovin<br>
24 <td valign="top"><i>author of public domain 'parsedate'
29 <td valign="top">Nathan Bryant<br>
31 <td valign="top"><i>build system, security, database
32 access, and others<br>
36 <td valign="top">Art Cancro<br>
38 <td valign="top"><i>overall system design and lead developer<br>
42 <td valign="top">Brian Costello<br>
44 <td valign="top"><i>cosmetics, additional commands<br>
48 <td valign="top">Michael Hampton<br>
50 <td valign="top"><i>client software development<br>
54 <td valign="top">Andru Luvisi<br>
56 <td valign="top"><i>troubleshooting and development assistance<br>
60 <td valign="top">Daniel Malament<br>
62 <td valign="top"><i>string compare function for IMAP
67 <td valign="top">Stu Mark<br>
69 <td valign="top"><i>additional client features, IGnet
74 <td valign="top">Ben Mehlman<br>
76 <td valign="top"><i>additional client features<br>
80 <td valign="top">Ari Samson<br>
82 <td valign="top"><i>assistance with project management<br>
86 <td valign="top">John Walker<br>
88 <td valign="top"><i>author of public domain base64 encoder/decoder<br>
92 <td valign="top">Steve Williams<br>
94 <td valign="top"><i>documentation<br>
98 <td valign="top">Ethan Young<br>
100 <td valign="top"><i>IGnet protocol design<br>
109 <div align="justify">The entire package is open source; you can redistribute
110 and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
111 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
112 License, or (at your option) any later version.<br>
114 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
115 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
116 or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
117 License for more details. </div>
119 <div align="justify"><br>
120 For more information, visit either of these locations on the
124 <li>The Citadel home page: <a
125 href="http://www.citadel.org">http://www.citadel.org</a></li>
126 <li>UNCENSORED! BBS, the home of Citadel: <a
127 href="http://uncensored.citadel.org">http://uncensored.citadel.org</a></li>
131 <hr width="100%" size="2">
132 <h2 align="center">Table of Contents</h2>
135 <li><a href="#GPL">License</a></li>
136 <li><a href="#Installation">Installation</a></li>
139 <li><a href="#Everything_in_its_place...">Everything in its place...</a></li>
140 <li><a href="#The_BBS_Login">The BBS Login</a></li>
141 <li><a href="#Bypassing_the_login:_prompt">Bypassing the login:
143 <li><a href="#Compiling_the_programs">Compiling the programs</a></li>
144 <li><a href="#Upgrading">Upgrading</a></li>
145 <li><a href="#The_citadel.rc_file">The citadel.rc file</a></li>
146 <li><a href="#Using_an_external_editor_for_message">Using an external
147 editor for message composition</a></li>
148 <li><a href="#Printing_messages">Printing messages</a></li>
149 <li><a href="#URL_viewing">URL viewing</a></li>
150 <li><a href="#Setup_and_login">Setup and login</a></li>
151 <li><a href="#Configuring_your_host_system_to_start">Configuring
152 your host system to start the service</a></li>
153 <li><a href="#Logging_in_for_the_first_time">Logging in for the
155 <li><a href="#Welcoming_new_users">Welcoming new users</a></li>
156 <li><a href="#Space_for_adding_your_own_client">Space for adding
157 your own client features (doors)</a></li>
158 <li><a href="#Troubleshooting_and_getting_help">Troubleshooting
159 and getting help</a><br>
163 <li><a href="#sysop">System Administration</a></li>
166 <li><a href="#Overview_">Overview</a></li>
167 <li><a href="#Aide_commands">Aide commands</a></li>
168 <li><a href="#Editing_rooms">Editing rooms</a></li>
169 <li><a href="#File_directories">File directories</a></li>
170 <li><a href="#Creating_and_editing_user_accounts">Creating and
171 editing user accounts</a></li>
172 <li><a href="#Deleting_and_moving_messages">Deleting and moving
174 <li><a href="#Customizing_the_help_files">Customizing the help
176 <li><a href="#Site_configuration">Site configuration</a><br>
180 <li> <a href="#Configuring_Citadel_for_Internet_e-mail">Configuring
181 Citadel for Internet e-mail</a></li>
184 <li><a href="#Introduction">Introduction</a></li>
185 <li><a href="#Basic_site_configuration">Basic site configuration</a></li>
186 <li><a href="#Enabling_the_Internet_mail_protocols">Enabling the
187 Internet mail protocols</a></li>
188 <li><a href="#Hosting_an_Internet_mailing_list">Hosting an Internet
191 <li><a href="#citmail">Using Citadel in conjunction with another
195 <li><a href="#Building_or_joining_a_Citadel_network">Building or joining
196 a Citadel network</a></li>
199 <li><a href="#Overview__">Overview</a></li>
200 <li><a href="#Conventions_and_etiquette_when">Conventions and etiquette
201 when connecting to the public Citadel network</a></li>
202 <li><a href="#Getting_ready_to_join_the_network">Getting ready to
203 join the network</a></li>
204 <li><a href="#Defining_neighbor_nodes">Defining neighbor nodes</a></li>
205 <li><a href="#Sharing_rooms">Sharing rooms</a></li>
206 <li><a href="#Sending_mail">Sending mail</a></li>
207 <li><a href="#Changing_the_polling_interval">Changing the polling
211 <li><a href="#Database_maintenance">Database maintenance</a></li>
214 <li><a href="#Introduction_">Introduction</a></li>
215 <li><a href="#Database_repair">Database repair</a></li>
216 <li><a href="#ImportingExporting_your_Citadel">Importing/Exporting
217 your Citadel database</a><br>
225 <hr width="100%" size="2"><br>
227 <h2 align="center"><a name="GPL"></a>GNU General Public License<br>
231 <p> Version 2, June 1991 </p>
233 <pre>Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <br>59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA<br><br>Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies<br>of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.<br></pre>
235 <h3 align="justify">Preamble</h3>
237 <div align="justify"> </div>
239 <p align="justify"> The licenses for most software are designed to take
240 away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General
241 Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change
242 free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users.
243 This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's
244 software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it.
245 (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library
246 General Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too.
249 <div align="justify"> </div>
251 <p align="justify"> When we speak of free software, we are referring to
252 freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make
253 sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software
254 (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code
255 or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces
256 of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things. </p>
258 <div align="justify"> </div>
260 <p align="justify"> To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions
261 that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender
262 the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities
263 for you if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
266 <div align="justify"> </div>
268 <p align="justify"> For example, if you distribute copies of such a program,
269 whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights
270 that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get
271 the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their
274 <div align="justify"> </div>
276 <p align="justify"> We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright
277 the software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission
278 to copy, distribute and/or modify the software. </p>
280 <div align="justify"> </div>
282 <p align="justify"> Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want
283 to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty
284 for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and
285 passed on, we want its recipients to know that what they have is not
286 the original, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect
287 on the original authors' reputations. </p>
289 <div align="justify"> </div>
291 <p align="justify"> Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by
292 software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free
293 program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program
294 proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must
295 be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all. </p>
297 <div align="justify"> </div>
299 <p align="justify"> The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution
300 and modification follow. </p>
302 <div align="justify"> </div>
304 <h3>TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION</h3>
306 <div align="justify"> </div>
308 <p align="justify"> <strong>0.</strong> This License applies to any program
309 or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder
310 saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License.
311 The "Program", below, refers to any such program or work, and a "work
312 based on the Program" means either the Program or any derivative work
313 under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or
314 a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated
315 into another language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation
316 in the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you". </p>
318 <p align="justify"> Activities other than copying, distribution and modification
319 are not covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act
320 of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
321 is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the Program
322 (independent of having been made by running the Program). Whether that
323 is true depends on what the Program does. </p>
325 <p align="justify"> <strong>1.</strong> You may copy and distribute verbatim
326 copies of the Program's source code as you receive it, in any medium,
327 provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy
328 an appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact
329 all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any
330 warranty; and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
331 along with the Program. </p>
333 <p align="justify"> You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring
334 a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange
337 <p align="justify"> <strong>2.</strong> You may modify your copy or copies
338 of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work based on the
339 Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the
340 terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
343 <p align="justify"> </p>
345 <div align="justify">
347 <li><strong>a)</strong> You must cause the modified files
348 to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and
349 the date of any change.
353 <li><strong>b)</strong> You must cause any work that
354 you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or
355 is derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed
356 as a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this
361 <li><strong>c)</strong> If the modified program normally
362 reads commands interactively when run, you must cause it, when
363 started running for such interactive use in the most ordinary way,
364 to print or display an announcement including an appropriate copyright
365 notice and a notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that
366 you provide a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program
367 under these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of
368 this License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but
369 does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
370 the Program is not required to print an announcement.) </li>
373 These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole.
374 If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
375 and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in themselves,
376 then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when
377 you distribute them as separate works. But when you distribute the
378 same sections as part of a whole which is a work based on the Program,
379 the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose
380 permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus
381 to each and every part regardless of who wrote it. </div>
383 <p align="justify"> Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights
384 or contest your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent
385 is to exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or collective
386 works based on the Program. </p>
388 <p align="justify"> In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based
389 on the Program with the Program (or with a work based on the Program)
390 on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other
391 work under the scope of this License. </p>
393 <p align="justify"> <strong>3.</strong> You may copy and distribute the
394 Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable
395 form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also
396 do one of the following: <!-- we use this doubled UL to get the sub-sections indented, -->
397 <!-- while making the bullets as unobvious as possible. --> </p>
399 <div align="justify">
401 <li><strong>a)</strong> Accompany it with the complete
402 corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be distributed
403 under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily
404 used for software interchange; or,
408 <li><strong>b)</strong> Accompany it with a written offer,
409 valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a
410 charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution,
411 a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code,
412 to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a
413 medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
417 <li><strong>c)</strong> Accompany it with the information
418 you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source
419 code. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution
420 and only if you received the program in object code or executable
421 form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.) </li>
424 The source code for a work means the preferred form of the
425 work for making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete
426 source code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus
427 any associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to control
428 compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a special
429 exception, the source code distributed need not include anything that
430 is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major
431 components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which
432 the executable runs, unless that component itself accompanies the executable.
435 <p align="justify"> If distribution of executable or object code is made
436 by offering access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent
437 access to copy the source code from the same place counts as distribution
438 of the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy
439 the source along with the object code. </p>
441 <p align="justify"> <strong>4.</strong> You may not copy, modify, sublicense,
442 or distribute the Program except as expressly provided under this License.
443 Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the
444 Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this
445 License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from
446 you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long
447 as such parties remain in full compliance. </p>
449 <p align="justify"> <strong>5.</strong> You are not required to accept
450 this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants
451 you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative
452 works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this
453 License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the Program (or any work
454 based on the Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to
455 do so, and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying
456 the Program or works based on it. </p>
458 <p align="justify"> <strong>6.</strong> Each time you redistribute the Program
459 (or any work based on the Program), the recipient automatically receives a
460 license from the original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program
461 subject to these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further
462 restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein.
463 You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to this
466 <p align="justify"> <strong>7.</strong> If, as a consequence of a court
467 judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason
468 (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether
469 by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions
470 of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License.
471 If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations
472 under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence
473 you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent
474 license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by
475 all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then
476 the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain
477 entirely from distribution of the Program. </p>
479 <p align="justify"> If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable
480 under any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended
481 to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other circumstances.
484 <p align="justify"> It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to
485 infringe any patents or other property right claims or to contest validity
486 of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting
487 the integrity of the free software distribution system, which is implemented
488 by public license practices. Many people have made generous contributions
489 to the wide range of software distributed through that system in reliance
490 on consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor
491 to decide if he or she is willing to distribute software through any other
492 system and a licensee cannot impose that choice. </p>
494 <p align="justify"> This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what
495 is believed to be a consequence of the rest of this License. </p>
497 <p align="justify"> <strong>8.</strong> If the distribution and/or use of
498 the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted
499 interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the Program under this
500 License may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding
501 those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among countries
502 not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the limitation
503 as if written in the body of this License. </p>
505 <p align="justify"> <strong>9.</strong> The Free Software Foundation may
506 publish revised and/or new versions of the General Public License from
507 time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present
508 version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.
511 <p align="justify"> Each version is given a distinguishing version number.
512 If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies
513 to it and "any later version", you have the option of following the terms
514 and conditions either of that version or of any later version published
515 by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version
516 number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by
517 the Free Software Foundation. </p>
519 <p align="justify"> <strong>10.</strong> If you wish to incorporate parts
520 of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions
521 are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software
522 which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free
523 Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this. Our decision
524 will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives
525 of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software
528 <p align="justify"><strong>NO WARRANTY</strong></p>
530 <div align="justify"> </div>
532 <p align="justify"> <strong>11.</strong> BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED
533 FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT
534 PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING
535 THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS"
536 WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING,
537 BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
538 FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE
539 OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME
540 THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION. </p>
542 <p align="justify"> <strong>12.</strong> IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY
543 APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR
544 ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED
545 ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL
546 OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE
547 PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED
548 INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE
549 OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER
550 OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. </p>
552 <p align="justify"> </p>
554 <h3>END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS</h3>
557 <hr width="100%" size="2"><br>
560 <h2><a name="Installation"></a>Installation</h2>
563 <div align="justify">
566 <p>Citadel/UX is an advanced, multiuser, client/server, room-based BBS program.
567 It is designed to handle the needs of both small dialup systems and
568 large-scale Internet-connected systems. It was originally developed on
569 an Altos system running Xenix, and has been installed and tested on various
570 Unix and Unix-like platforms. The author's current development environment
571 (and BBS) is an ordinary Linux system. The current distribution includes:
575 <li>The Citadel/UX server (this is the back end that does all
577 <li>A text-based client program designed with the traditional
578 Citadel "look and feel" (room prompts, dot commands, and the like)
580 <li>Setup programs </li>
581 <li>A set of utilities for system administration and maintenance
583 <li>Documentation </li>
587 <p>Some knowledge of the Unix system is necessary to install and manage the
588 system. It is mandatory that the sysop have "root" access to the operating
589 system. The following are required to install Citadel/UX: </p>
592 <li>A Unix operating system (Linux, BSD, Solaris, Tru64, HP/UX)
594 <li>C compiler (such as gcc or egcs) and "make" </li>
595 <li>POSIX threads (the "pthreads" library) </li>
597 <li><a href="http://www.sleepycat.com">Berkeley DB</a> v4.1
598 or newer (GDBM also works, but its use is officially depracated. If
599 you are building a new system, do <i>not</i> use GDBM. If you have an
600 existing system which uses GDBM, you should migrate it to Berkeley DB
601 as soon as possible.) </li>
602 <li>Enough disk space to hold all of the programs and data </li>
606 <p>If you are running Citadel/UX on a Linux system, it is STRONGLY recommended
607 that you run it on a recent distribution (such as <a
608 href="http://www.redhat.com">Red Hat</a> 7.3 or newer). A new-ish distribution
609 will have most or all of the prerequisite tools and libraries already
610 integrated for you.</p>
612 <h3>Now available:</h3>
615 <li>"WebCit", a gateway program to allow full access to Citadel
616 via the World Wide Web. Interactive access through any Web browser.
618 <li>Access to Citadel via <i>any</i> standards-compliant e-mail
619 program, thanks to Citadel's built-in SMTP, POP, and IMAP services.
620 You can use Netscape/Mozilla, Evolution, Eudora, Pine, or even Microsoft
621 VirusSpreader (better known as "Outlook") with Citadel. </li>
625 <h3>Coming soon:</h3>
628 <li>Newer and better GUI-based clients. </li>
632 <h3><a name="Everything_in_its_place..."></a>Everything in its place...</h3>
634 <p>Hopefully you've unpacked the distribution archive into its own directory.
635 This is the directory in which all Citadel files are located and in
636 which all activity will take place. Several subdirectories have already
637 been created during the unpacking process, and others may be created
638 by the software if needed. Make sure you have Berkeley DB installed on
639 your system, and that you have all the development libraries and headers
640 in place so that you can compile against them. If you don't, you can
641 get the latest Berkeley DB at <a href="http://www.sleepycat.com">http://www.sleepycat.com</a>.
642 If your operating system uses a separate library to support POSIX threads
643 (pthreads), make sure that library is installed as well. This is almost
644 never the case with Linux, but some commercial Unix flavors might need
647 <h3><a name="The_BBS_Login"></a></h3>
649 <h3>The BBS Login</h3>
651 <p>As with many Unix programs, Citadel wants to run under its own user ID.
652 Unlike other programs, however, this user ID will do double-duty as a
653 public login for your system if you are running a BBS. This account is
654 typically called "bbs" or "citadel" or something to that effect. You will
655 tell Citadel what the user-id of that account is, and when someone logs
656 in under that account, Citadel will prompt for a user name.</p>
658 <p>The Citadel user should have a unique uid. The home directory should be
659 the one your Citadel installation resides in (in this example we will
660 use /usr/local/citadel) and the shell should be either "citadel" in that
661 directory, or a script that will start up citadel (you may wish to set
662 up an external text editor; see below). Example:</p>
664 <pre>bbs::100:1:BBS Login:/usr/local/citadel:/usr/local/citadel/citadel<br></pre>
666 <p>When you run setup later, you will be required to tell it what the Citadel
667 user's numeric user ID is, so it knows what user to run as. If you create
668 an account called <tt>bbs</tt>, <tt>guest</tt>, or <tt>citadel</tt>, the
669 setup program will automatically pick up the user ID by default.</p>
671 <p>For all other users in /etc/passwd, Citadel will automatically set up
672 an account using the full name (or 'gecos' in Unixspeak) of the user. It'll
673 also ignore any password you supply, because it uses the user's password
674 on the host system. This allows a 'single sign on' type of environment.
675 Note that this does have to be enabled at compile time -- it's the configure
676 option called <tt>--enable-autologin</tt>. Keep in mind that these users
677 can use *either* their Citadel login name or their login name on the host
678 computer, and their password on the host computer.</p>
680 <h3><a name="Bypassing_the_login:_prompt"></a></h3>
682 <h3>Bypassing the <tt>login:</tt> prompt</h3>
684 <p>If you normally log in to your host system using some method other than
685 telnet (such as ssh), you might want the telnet service to go straight
686 to the Citadel BBS, instead of displaying the <tt>login:</tt> prompt first.
687 You can do this by having telnetd start citadel directly instead of
688 <tt>/bin/login</tt>. This is actually very simple to implement; all you
689 need to do is make a simple change to your <tt>inetd</tt> or <tt>xinetd</tt>
690 configuration. Here are some configuration examples.</p>
692 <p>An example for <tt>inetd</tt> (put the following line in <tt>/etc/inetd.conf</tt>,
693 replacing any existing telnet configuration line already there):</p>
695 <pre>telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd -L /usr/local/citadel/citadel<br></pre>
697 <p>An example for <tt>xinetd</tt> (if you have a file called <tt>/etc/xinetd.d/telnet</tt>
698 then simply replace that file with this one):</p>
700 <pre>service telnet<br>{<br> flags = REUSE<br> socket_type = stream<br> wait = no<br> user = root<br> server = /usr/sbin/in.telnetd<br> server_args = -L /usr/local/citadel/citadel<br> log_on_failure += USERID<br> disable = no<br>}<br></pre>
702 <p>Please make sure you know what you're doing before you install this! If
703 you are going to put Citadel somewhere other than <tt>/usr/local/citadel</tt>
704 then change the directory name accordingly. If you know of any other
705 local peculiarities which need to be observed, edit the above configuration
706 accordingly as well. And, of course, if you're working remotely, make
707 sure you can successfully log in using SSH before you start changing your
708 telnet configuration, otherwise you could lock yourself out of your system
709 (ask any networking specialist about the dangers of "working inline" --
710 then pull up a chair and get a fresh cup of coffee, because you're going
711 to hear some war stories).</p>
713 <h3><a name="Compiling_the_programs"></a>Compiling the programs</h3>
715 <p>You can easily compile the Citadel system with the following commands:</p>
717 <pre>./configure<br>make<br>make install<br></pre>
719 <p>The 'configure' script will generate a Makefile from the Makefile.in,
720 and it will also write the file "sysdep.h" to your Citadel directory. Please
721 do not edit sysdep.h or Makefile.in yourself. The configure script will
722 figure out your system dependencies and set everything correctly.</p>
724 <p>Mac OS X 10.1 and later are now supported. (Sorry, 10.0 cannot be supported,
725 now or in the future.) You need to install the Developer Tools CD, which
726 you can purchase or download for free from <a
727 href="http://developer.apple.com">http://developer.apple.com</a>. Then run
728 configure like this:</p>
730 <pre>env CC=/usr/bin/cc ./configure (options - see below)<br></pre>
732 <p>By default, the Citadel system will install in <tt>/usr/local/citadel</tt>.
733 If you wish to place it in a different directory, you can instead do:</p>
735 <pre>./configure --prefix=/export/home/citadel (or whatever)<br></pre>
737 <p>If you've got Berkeley DB installed in a non-standard location, you can
738 help the configure script find it by doing something like this:</p>
740 <pre>./configure --with-db=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB-4.1<br></pre>
742 <p>The configure script prefers Berkeley DB if it is available, but will fall
743 back to GDBM if it has to.</p>
745 <p>File permissions are always a bother to work with. You don't want Citadel
746 to crash because someone couldn't access a file, but you also don't want
747 shell users peeking into the binaries to do things like reading others'
748 mail, finding private rooms, etc. The Citadel server needs to be started
749 as root in order to bind to privileged ports, but as soon as its initialization
750 is finished, it changes its user ID to your BBS user ID in order to avoid
753 <h3><a name="Upgrading"></a></h3>
757 <p>Any existing Citadel installation which is at version 5.50 or newer may
758 be upgraded in place without the need to discard your existing data files.</p>
760 <p>Upgrading to a new version uses the same build procedure as compiling
761 the program for a fresh install, except that you want to do <tt>make install-exec</tt>
762 instead of <tt>make install</tt>. This will overwrite the programs but
763 not your data. <b>Be sure to shut down citserver during this process!</b>
764 If Citadel is running while you upgrade, you may face data corruption issues.<br>
767 <p>After doing <tt>make install-exec</tt>, you should run <tt>setup</tt>
768 again to bring your data files up to date. Please see the setup section
769 below for more information on this.</p>
771 <h3><a name="The_citadel.rc_file"></a>The <tt>citadel.rc</tt> file</h3>
773 <p>The text-based client included with Citadel is suitable for BBS applications.
774 Much of its command set and other behavior is configurable through a Run
775 Control (RC) file. The standard client looks for this file in the following
779 <li><tt>$HOME/.citadelrc</tt></li>
780 <li><tt>/usr/local/lib/citadel.rc</tt></li>
781 <li><i>your-Citadel-directory</i><tt>/citadel.rc</tt></li>
784 The next couple of sections deal with client-side configuration.
786 <h3><a name="Using_an_external_editor_for_message"></a>Using an external editor
787 for message composition</h3>
789 <p>Citadel/UX has a built-in message editor. However, you can also use your
790 favorite text editor to write messages. To do this you simply put a line
791 in your citadel.rc file like this:</p>
793 <pre>editor=/usr/bin/vi<br></pre>
795 <p>The above example would make Citadel call the vi editor when using the
796 <tt><b>.E</b>nter <b>E</b>ditor</tt> command. You can also make it the
797 default editor for the <tt><b>E</b>nter</tt> command by editing the <tt>citadel.rc</tt>
798 file. <b>But be warned:</b> external editors on public systems can be
799 a security hole, because they usually provide users with the ability to
800 drop into a shell on the host system, or save files using names other than
801 the name of the temporary file they are editing. If you intend to use an
802 external editor on a public BBS, make sure you use one that has been hardened
803 for such a purpose -- one which has had the 'shell' and 'save as' commands
804 disabled, as well as any other functions which a destructive user could
805 use to gain unauthorized access to your host system.</p>
807 <h3><a name="Printing_messages"></a>Printing messages</h3>
809 <p>Citadel/UX can send messages to a printer, or just about anywhere else
810 in your system. The variable <tt>PRINTCMD</tt> in <tt>citadel.rc</tt>
811 specifies what command you use to print. Text is sent to the standard input
812 (stdin) of the print command.</p>
814 <p>So if you did this:</p>
816 <pre>printcmd="nl|pr|lpr -Plocal"<br></pre>
818 <p>...that would add line numbers, then paginate, then print on the printer
819 named "local". There's tons of stuff you can do with this feature. For
820 example, you could use a command like <tt>cat <<$HOME/archive</tt>
821 to save copies of important messages in a textfile. Again, this is probably
822 something you don't want to configure for a public BBS host -- most system
823 administrators don't want remote users sending arbitrary things to local
826 <h3><a name="URL_viewing"></a>URL viewing</h3>
828 <p>This is one more feature which is appropriate for local users. While reading
829 a message that has Internet URL's in it, you can select the <tt><b>U</b>RL-view</tt>
830 command, and it will perform some pre-defined action (usually, this is
831 to open up the URL in a web browser). For example:</p>
833 <pre>urlcmd=netscape -remote "openURL(%s)"<br></pre>
835 <p>In the above example, it would open up the URL in an open <a
836 href="http://www.netscape.com/download">Netscape</a> window.</p>
838 <h3><a name="Setup_and_login"></a></h3>
840 <h3>Setup and login</h3>
842 <p>Before logging in for the first time, you must run the setup program.
843 To begin this procedure, enter the following commands:</p>
845 <pre>cd /usr/local/citadel<br>./setup<br></pre>
847 <p>The setup program will guide you through a simple configuration procedure.
848 It will ask you what directory to place your data files in -- the default
849 is the current directory, which is usually the sensible thing to select.
850 If you want to run more than one instance of Citadel on the same host,
851 however, you can specify a different directory here -- just remember to
852 specify the directory name again when you start up the server later on.</p>
854 <p><tt>setup</tt> will then shut down the Citadel service if it is found to
857 <p>You will then be prompted for the name of the system administrator. This
858 is not merely a cosmetic option -- when you log in to your system a little
859 while from now, you'll log in with this name, and it will automatically
860 assign your account the highest access level.</p>
862 <p>Next, you will be prompted for the User ID of the Citadel account on your
863 host system. If you have an account called <tt>bbs</tt>, <tt>guest</tt>,
864 or <tt>citadel</tt>, that account's UID will be the default. If you
865 are upgrading or reconfiguring an existing system, the existing value
866 will be preserved.</p>
868 <p>Then you will be prompted for a server port number. This is the TCP port
869 which Citadel clients use to connect to your Citadel server. In almost
870 all cases, you want to use the default -- port 504, which is the official
871 port number assigned by the IANA for Citadel implementations.</p>
873 <p>The Citadel service will then be started, and you will see the following
876 <pre>Setup is finished. You may now log in.<br></pre>
878 <p>Setup is now complete, on most systems, anyway. Please see below to find
879 out if you need to do anything else:</p>
881 <h3><a name="Configuring_your_host_system_to_start"></a>Configuring your host
882 system to start the service</h3>
884 <p><b>Please note:</b> this topic involves modifications made to <tt>/etc/services</tt>
885 and <tt>/etc/inittab</tt> in order to configure your host system to automatically
886 start the Citadel service. <tt>setup</tt> will automatically perform these
887 steps if it can, and if you allow it to -- just answer 'Yes' when prompted,
888 and everything will be taken care of for you. If you answer 'No' -- or
889 if your system is a little bit odd (for example, BSD systems don't have
890 <tt>/etc/inittab</tt>) -- read this section and do what you need to in order
891 to get things configured.</p>
893 <p>Before you can use Citadel, you must define the "citadel" service to your
894 system. This is accomplished by adding a line to your /etc/services file
895 that looks something like this:</p>
897 <pre>citadel 504/tcp # Citadel/UX Server<br></pre>
899 <p>504 is the port number officially designated by the IANA for use by Citadel.
900 There should not be any need to use a different port number, unless you
901 are running multiple Citadels on the same computer and therefore need a
902 different port for each one.</p>
904 <p>The next step is to arrange for the server to start. The <tt>citserver</tt>
905 program is the main Citadel server. Before we cover the recommended method
906 of starting the server, let's examine its usage options:</p>
908 <pre>citserver [-hHomeDir] [-xDebugLevel] [-tTraceFile] [-d] [-f]<br></pre>
910 <p>The options are as follows:</p>
912 <p><tt>-hHomeDir</tt> - the directory your BBS data files live in. This should,
913 of course, be a directory that you've run the <tt>setup</tt> program against
914 to set up some data files. If a directory is not specified, the directory
915 name which was specified in the <tt>Makefile</tt> will be used.</p>
917 <p><tt>-xDebugLevel</tt> - Set the verbosity of trace messages printed. The
918 available debugging levels are: </p>
921 <li>1 - Internal errors (failed thread creation, malloc problems,
923 <li>2 - Network errors (broken sockets, failed socket creation)
925 <li>3 - Begin and end of sessions, startup/shutdown of server </li>
926 <li>5 - Server commands being sent from clients </li>
927 <li>7 - Entry and exit of various functions </li>
928 <li>8 - Entry and exit of critical sections </li>
929 <li>9 - Various debugging checkpoints (insanely verbose) </li>
933 <p><tt>-tTraceFile</tt> - Tell the server where to send its debug/trace output.
934 Normally it is sent to stdout.</p>
936 <p><tt>-d</tt> - Run as a daemon; i.e. in the background. This switch would
937 be necessary if you were starting the Citadel server, for example, from
938 an rc.local script (which is not recommended, because this won't allow
939 the server to automatically restart when it is shut down).</p>
941 <p><tt>-f</tt> - Defragment all the databases upon startup. This isn't normally
942 necessary due to the nature of the data stored in Citadel, but the option
943 is provided in case you need it. (Note that this only applies to GDBM
944 installations; if you are using Berkeley DB it has no effect.)</p>
946 <p>The preferred method of starting the Citadel server is to place an entry
947 in your /etc/inittab file. This will conveniently bring the server up
948 when your system is up, and terminate it gracefully when your system is
949 shutting down. The exact syntax for your system may vary, but here's an
950 entry that could be used on a Linux system:</p>
952 <pre>cit:2345:respawn:/usr/local/citadel/citserver -h/usr/local/citadel -t/dev/tty9 -x3<br></pre>
954 <p>In this example, we've chosen debugging level 3, and have the trace stuff
955 output to one of the virtual consoles. It's important to remember to turn
956 off any getty that is set up on that virtual console, if you do this.
957 After making this change, the command <tt>init q</tt> works on most systems
958 to tell init to re-read the file. If in doubt, just reboot the computer.</p>
960 <h3><a name="Logging_in_for_the_first_time"></a>Logging in for the first time</h3>
962 <p>At this point, your system is ready to run. Run the <tt>citadel</tt> program
963 from the shell and log in as a new user. NOTE: the first user account
964 to be created will automatically be set to access level 6 (Aide). This
965 overcomes some obvious logistical problems - normally, Aide access is given
966 by another Aide, but since there aren't any on your system yet, this isn't
969 <h3><a name="Welcoming_new_users"></a>Welcoming new users</h3>
971 <p>Sometimes you might decide that you want a welcome message (or several
972 different messages) automatically mailed to new users upon their first
973 login. Now there is a way to do this. If you create a room called <tt>New
974 User Greetings</tt>, and it is a <i>private</i> room (invitation-only probably
975 makes the most sense), any messages you enter into that room will automatically
976 be delivered to all new users upon registration.</p>
978 <p>You can put anything you want there: a welcome message, system policies,
979 special information, etc. You can also put as many messages there as you
980 want to (although it really doesn't make sense to clutter new users' mailboxes
981 with lots of junk).</p>
983 <p>Don't worry about wasting disk space, either. Citadel has a single-instance
984 message store, so all the new users are actually looking at the same copy
985 of the message on disk.</p>
987 <h3><a name="Space_for_adding_your_own_client"></a>Space for adding your own
988 client features (doors)</h3>
990 <p><b>Please take note!</b> This function really represents the "old" way
991 of doing things, and it doesn't fit in well with the client/server paradigm.
992 Please consider it "deprecated" because it may be removed someday.</p>
994 <p>The "doorway" feature is just a generic way to add features to the system.
995 I called it "Doorway" to make it resemble the doors on non-Unix boards,
996 but as we all know, us Unix types don't have to write special code to access
997 the modem. :-) Anyway, when a user hits the <tt><b>*</b></tt> (doorway)
998 command, Citadel does...</p>
1000 <pre>USERNAME=(username); export USERNAME<br>./subsystem (user-number) (screen-width) (access level)<br></pre>
1002 <p>...so you can put whatever you want in there. I suggest putting in a menu
1003 program to allow the users to pick one of a number of programs, etc. Do
1004 be aware that door programs will only be available when the client and server
1005 programs are running on the <i>same</i> computer, and when the user is running
1006 the text-mode client. Because of these restrictions, Door programs are being
1007 utilized less and less every day.</p>
1009 <h3><a name="Troubleshooting_and_getting_help"></a>Troubleshooting and getting
1012 <p>That's just about all the information you need to install the system.
1013 But if you get stuck, you can visit UNCENSORED! BBS and report a problem or
1014 ask for help. But if you intend to report a problem getting the Citadel server
1015 to run, <i>please</i> double-check the following things first: </p>
1018 <li>Did you do <tt>./configure && make && make install</tt>
1020 <li>Did you run setup? </li>
1021 <li>Did you start the server? </li>
1025 <p>To report a problem, you can log on to UNCENSORED! or any other BBS on
1026 the Citadel network which carries the <tt>Citadel/UX></tt> room. Please
1027 DO NOT e-mail the developers directly. Post a request for help on the
1028 BBS, with all of the following information: </p>
1031 <li>The exact nature of your difficulty </li>
1032 <li>A transcript of the error message(s) if possible </li>
1033 <li>The version of Citadel you are running </li>
1034 <li>The version of Berkeley DB present on your system </li>
1035 <li>Which operating system you are running, and what version </li>
1036 <li>If you are running a Linux system, we need to know which distribution,
1037 and the version of the kernel, libc, and pthreads you are using (it would
1038 help to post the output of a <tt>ldd ./citserver</tt> command). </li>
1043 <div align="center">
1044 <hr width="100%" size="2">
1045 <h2><a name="sysop"></a>System Administration</h2>
1048 <div align="justify">
1049 <h3><a name="Overview_"></a>Overview</h3>
1051 <p>Citadel/UX, when installed properly, will do most of its maintenance by
1052 itself. It is intended to be run unattended for extended periods of
1053 time, and most installations do just that without any software failures.</p>
1055 <p>The system has seven access levels. Most users are at the bottom and have
1056 no special privileges. Aides are selected people who have special access within
1057 the Citadel program. Room Aides only have this access in a certain room.
1058 Preferred users can be selected by Aides for access to preferred only rooms.
1059 A sysop is anyone who has access to the various sysop utilities - these
1060 are in their own executable files, which should have their permissions set
1061 to allow only sysops to run them. You should either create a sysops group
1062 in /etc/group, or use some other existing group for this purpose.</p>
1064 <p>Aides have access to EVERY room on the system, public and private (all
1065 types). They also have access to commands starting with <tt>.<b>A</b>ide</tt>
1066 in addition to being able to delete and move messages. The system room,
1067 <tt>Aide></tt>, is accessible only by those users designated as Aides.</p>
1069 <h3><a name="Aide_commands"></a>Aide commands</h3>
1071 <p>Aides have the following commands available to them that are not available
1072 to normal users. They are:</p>
1077 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>K</b>ill this room </tt></td>
1078 <td> Deletes the current room from the system. </td>
1081 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>E</b>dit this room </tt></td>
1082 <td> Allows editing of the properties of the current room.
1083 This is explained in greater detail below. </td>
1086 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>W</b>ho knows room </tt></td>
1087 <td> For private rooms with access controls, or mailbox rooms,
1088 this command displays a list of users who have access to the current room.
1092 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide edit <b>U</b>ser </tt></td>
1093 <td> Allows editing of the properties of any user account on
1097 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>V</b>alidate new users
1099 <td> For public access systems, this command reviews all new
1100 user registrations and allows you to set each new user's access level (or
1101 simply delete the accounts). </td>
1104 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide enter <b>I</b>nfo file </tt></td>
1105 <td> Each room may contain a short textual description of its
1106 purpose, which is displayed to users upon entering the room for the first
1107 time (or in the room banner, for users of the Web client). This command
1108 allows you to enter or edit that description. </td>
1111 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>R</b>oom <b>I</b>nvite
1113 <td> Access control command to grant any specific user access
1114 to a private room. </td>
1117 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>R</b>oom <b>K</b>ick out
1119 <td> Access control command to revoke any specifc user's access
1120 to the current room. This works regardless of whether the room is public
1124 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>F</b>ile <b>D</b>elete
1126 <td> If the current room has an associated file directory, this
1127 command may be used to delete files from it. </td>
1130 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>F</b>ile <b>S</b>end over
1132 <td> If the current room has an associated file directory, this
1133 command may be used to transmit a copy of any file in that directory to
1134 another node on a Citadel network. </td>
1137 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>F</b>ile <b>M</b>ove </tt></td>
1138 <td> If the current room has an associated file directory, this
1139 command may be used to move any file in that directory to another room.
1140 The target room must also have an associated file directory. </td>
1143 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>M</b>essage edit </tt></td>
1144 <td> This command allows editing of any of the various system
1145 banners and messages which are displayed to users. Type the name of the
1146 banner or message you wish to edit. </td>
1149 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>P</b>ost </tt></td>
1150 <td> This is the functional equivalent of the <tt><b>E</b>nter
1151 message</tt> command available to all users, except that it allows you
1152 to post using any user name. </td>
1155 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration
1156 <b>G</b>eneral </tt></td>
1157 <td> This command allows configuration of a large number of
1158 global settings for your Citadel system. These settings will be explained
1159 in greater detail below. </td>
1162 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration
1163 <b>I</b>nternet </tt></td>
1164 <td> This command allows configuration of settings which affect
1165 how your Citadel system sends and receives messages on the Internet. </td>
1168 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration
1169 check <b>M</b>essage base </tt></td>
1170 <td> Perform a consistency check on your message store. This
1171 is a very time-consuming operation which should not be performed unless
1172 you have reason to believe there is trouble with your database. </td>
1175 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration
1176 <b>N</b>etwork </tt></td>
1177 <td> Configure networking (e-mail, room sharing, etc.) with
1178 other Citadel nodes. </td>
1181 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration
1182 network <b>F</b>ilter list </tt></td>
1183 <td> If you are on a large public or semi-public network of
1184 Citadel nodes and you find content from certain systems or individuals
1185 objectionable, you can use this command to define a rule set to automatically
1186 reject those messages when they arrive on your system. </td>
1189 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>T</b>erminate server <b>N</b>ow
1191 <td> Immediately shut down the Citadel service, disconnecting
1192 any users who are logged in. Please keep in mind that it will start right
1193 back up again if you are running the service from <tt>/etc/inittab</tt>,
1194 so in practice this command will probably not get much use. </td>
1197 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>T</b>erminate server <b>S</b>cheduled
1199 <td> Shut down the Citadel service the next time there are zero
1200 users connected. This allows you to automatically wait until all users
1201 are logged out. </td>
1204 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide mailing <b>L</b>ist recipients
1206 <td> Any room may be made into a mailing list. Enter this command
1207 to open an editor window containing the list of Internet e-mail addresses
1208 to which every message posted in the room will be sent. </td>
1211 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide mailing list <b>D</b>igest
1212 recipients </tt></td>
1213 <td> Similar to the regular mailing list command, except the
1214 messages will be sent out in 'digest' form -- recipients will see messages
1215 from the address of the room itself rather than the address of the author
1216 of each message, and a digest may contain more than one message. Each room
1217 may have any combination of List and Digest recipients. </td>
1220 <td width="30%"><tt> .<b>A</b>ide <b>N</b>etwork room sharing
1222 <td> Configures the sharing of the current room's contents with
1223 other Citadel nodes. Messages posted in this room on any Citadel system
1224 will automatically be replicated to other Citadel systems carrying the
1231 <h3><a name="Editing_rooms"></a>Editing rooms</h3>
1233 <p>This command allows any aide to change the parameters of a room. Go to
1234 the room you wish to edit and enter the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>E</b>dit
1235 room</tt> command. A series of prompts will be displayed. The existing
1236 parameters will be displayed in brackets; simply press return if you want
1237 to leave any or all of them unchanged.</p>
1239 <pre> <br>Room name [IG's Fun Room]:<br></pre>
1241 <p>...the name of the room.</p>
1243 <pre>Private room [Yes]? <br></pre>
1245 <p>...enter Yes if you wish to restrict access to the room, or no if the room
1246 is to be accessible by all users. Note that Citadel doesn't bother users
1247 about access to rooms every time they need to access the room. Once a user
1248 gains access to a private room, it then behaves like a public room to them.
1249 The following four questions will only be asked if you selected Private...</p>
1251 <pre>Accessible by guessing room name [No]?<br></pre>
1253 <p>...if you enter Yes, the room will not show up in users' <tt><b>K</b>nown
1254 rooms</tt> listing, but if they <tt><b>.G</b>oto</tt> the room (typing
1255 the room's full name), they will gain access to the room.</p>
1257 <pre>Accessible by entering a password [No]?<br>Room password [mypasswd]: <br></pre>
1259 <p>...this adds an additional layer of security to the room, prompting users
1260 for a password before they can gain access to the room.</p>
1262 <p>If you did not select guessname or passworded, then the only way users
1263 can access the room is if an Aide explicitly invites them to the room using
1264 the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>R</b>oom <b>I</b>nvite user</tt> command.</p>
1266 <pre>Cause current users to forget room [No] ? No<br></pre>
1268 <p>Enter Yes if you wish to kick out anyone who currently has access to the
1271 <pre>Preferred users only [No]? No<br></pre>
1273 <p>Enter Yes if you wish to restrict the room to only users who have level
1274 5 (Preferred User) status (and Aides too, of course). You should make
1275 the room public if you intend to do this, otherwise the two restrictions
1276 will be COMBINED.</p>
1278 <pre>Read-only room [No]? No<br></pre>
1280 <p>If you set a room to Read-Only, then normal users will not be allowed to
1281 post messages in it. Messages may only be posted by Aides, and by utility
1282 programs such as the networker and the "aidepost" utility. This is useful
1283 in situations where a room is used exclusively for important announcements,
1284 or if you've set up a room to receive an Internet mailing list and posting
1285 wouldn't make sense. Other uses will, of course, become apparent as
1286 the need arises.</p>
1288 <p>Now for a few other attributes...</p>
1290 <pre>Directory room [Yes]? Yes<br></pre>
1292 <p>...enter Yes if you wish to associate a directory with this room. This
1293 can be used as a small file repository for files relevant to the topic
1294 of the room. If you enter Yes, you will also be prompted with the following
1297 <pre>Directory name [mydirname]: <br></pre>
1299 <p>...the name of the subdirectory to put this room's files in. The name
1300 of the directory created will be <tt><i><your BBS directory></i>/files/<i><room
1301 dir name></i></tt>.</p>
1303 <pre>Uploading allowed [Yes]? Yes<br></pre>
1305 <p>...enter Yes if users are allowed to upload to this room.</p>
1307 <pre>Downloading allowed [Yes]? Yes<br></pre>
1309 <p>...enter Yes if users are allowed to download from this room.</p>
1311 <pre>Visible directory [Yes]? Yes<br></pre>
1313 <p>...enter Yes if users can read the directory of this room.</p>
1315 <pre>Network shared room [No]? No<br></pre>
1317 <p>...you can share a room over a network without setting this flag, and
1318 vice versa, but what this flag does is twofold: </p>
1321 <li>It prevents people with no network access from entering messages
1323 <li>Messages are displayed with the name of their originating system
1324 in the header. </li>
1328 <pre>Permanent room [No]? No<br></pre>
1330 <p>Citadel contains an 'auto purger' which is capable of removing rooms which
1331 have not been posted in for a pre-defined period of time (by default
1332 this is set to two weeks). If you wish to keep this from happening to
1333 a particular room, you can set this option. (Keep in mind that <tt>Lobby></tt>,
1334 <tt>Aide></tt>, any private mailbox rooms, any network shared rooms,
1335 and any rooms with a file directory are automatically permanent.)</p>
1337 <pre>Anonymous messages [No]? No<br>Ask users whether to make messages anonymous [No]? No<br></pre>
1339 <p>...you can have rooms in which all messages are automatically anonymous,
1340 and you can have rooms in which users are prompted whether to make a
1341 message anonymous when they enter it. The real identity of the author
1342 of each message is still revealed to the Room Aide for this room, as well
1343 as any system-wide Aides.</p>
1345 <pre>Room aide [Joe Responsible]: <br></pre>
1347 <p>...on larger systems, it helps to designate a person to be responsible
1348 for a room. Room Aides have access to a restricted set of Aide commands,
1349 ONLY when they are in the room in which they have this privilege. They
1350 can edit the room, delete the room, delete and move messages, and invite
1351 or kick out users (if it is a private room), but they cannot perform aide
1352 commands that are not room-related (such as changing users access levels).</p>
1354 <pre>Listing order [64]: <br></pre>
1356 <p>This is just a simple way to try to control the order rooms are listed
1357 in when users call up a <tt><b>K</b>nown Rooms</tt> listing. Rooms with
1358 a lower listing order are displayed prior to rooms with a higher listing
1359 order. It has no other effect. For users who list rooms in floor order,
1360 the display will sort first by floor, then by listing order.</p>
1362 <pre>Message expire policy (? for list) [0]:<br></pre>
1364 <p>This provides you with the opportunity to select how long each message
1365 will remain in a room before automatically being deleted. Press <tt><b>?</b></tt>
1366 for a list of options. You can choose to keep messages around forever
1367 (or until they are manually deleted), until they become a certain number
1368 of days old, or until a certain number of additional messages are posted
1369 in the room, at which time the oldest ones will scroll out.</p>
1371 <p>You will notice that you can also fall back to the default expire policy
1372 for the floor upon which the room resides. This is the default setting.
1373 You can change the floor's default with the <tt><b>;A</b>ide <b>E</b>dit
1374 floor</tt> command. The default setting for the floor default, in turn,
1375 is the system default setting, which can be changed using the <tt><b>.A</b>ide
1376 <b>S</b>ystem configuration <b>G</b>eneral</tt> command.</p>
1378 <pre>Save changes (y/n)? Yes<br></pre>
1380 <p>...this gives you an opportunity to back out, if you feel you really messed
1381 things up while editing.</p>
1383 <h3><a name="File_directories"></a>File directories</h3>
1385 <p>If you have created any directory rooms, you can attach file descriptions
1386 to the filenames through a special file called <tt>filedir</tt>. Each line
1387 contains the name of a file in the directory, followed by a space and
1388 then a description of the file, such as:</p>
1390 <pre>myfile.txt This is a description of my file.<br>phluff A phile phull of phluff!<br></pre>
1392 <p>...this would create file descriptions for the files <tt>myfile.txt</tt>
1393 and <tt>phluff</tt> which would be displayed along with the directory.
1394 It should also be noted that when users upload files to your system, they
1395 will be prompted for file descriptions, which will be added to the <tt>filedir</tt>
1396 file. If one does not exist, it will be created.</p>
1398 <h3><a name="Creating_and_editing_user_accounts"></a>Creating and editing
1401 <p>Anyone with Aide level access may use the <tt><b>.A</b>ide edit <b>U</b>ser</tt>
1402 command to create and/or edit user accounts. There are several parameters
1403 which can be set here.</p>
1405 <p>To create a user:</p>
1407 <pre>Lobby> . Aide edit User <br>User name: New User Name<br>No such user.<br>Do you want to create this user? Yes<br></pre>
1409 <p>At this point, the new user account has been created, and the command will
1410 continue as if you were editing an existing account. Therefore the remainder
1411 of this procedure is the same for creating and editing:</p>
1413 <pre>Lobby> . Aide edit User <br>User name: person of significance<br>User #70 - Person of Significance PW: <br> <br><br>, <br> <br> <br><br>Current access level: 4 (Network User)<br></pre>
1415 <p>The blank lines are the user's 'registration' information -- personal
1416 information such as full name, address, telephone number, etc. This information
1417 will comprise the user's vCard in both their user profile and in the Global
1420 <pre>Change password [No]: No<br></pre>
1422 <p>...answer Yes to set or change the password for this account.</p>
1424 <pre>Access level [4]: <br></pre>
1426 <p>...this allows you to set or change the access level for this account.
1427 The access levels available are as follows: </p>
1430 <li>0 - Deleted. (This immediately deletes the account.) </li>
1431 <li>1 - New, unvalidated user </li>
1432 <li>2 - Problem user (severely restricts account - use for probationary
1434 <li>3 - User with no network privileges. Same access as a normal
1435 user except cannot post messages in rooms shared on a network. </li>
1436 <li>4 - Normal user </li>
1437 <li>5 - Preferred user (access is granted to privileged rooms) </li>
1438 <li>6 - Aide (administrative access to the whole system) </li>
1442 <pre>Permission to send/receive Internet mail [ No]? No<br></pre>
1444 <p>If your system is configured to only allow Internet mail privileges to
1445 certain users, this is where you can grant or revoke that privilege.</p>
1447 <pre>Ask user to register again [Yes]: Yes<br></pre>
1449 <p>If you answer Yes to this question, the user will be presented with a
1450 'registration' screen or set of prompts, the next time they log in using
1451 a Citadel client. This will prompt them for their full name, address, telephone
1454 <pre>Times called [0]: <br>Messages posted [0]: <br></pre>
1456 <p>These statistics are available for informational purposes only, so there
1457 is normally no need to change them.</p>
1459 <pre>Set last call to now [No]: No<br>Purge time (in days, 0 for system default [0]: <br></pre>
1461 <p>Citadel contains an auto-purger which is capable of automatically deleting
1462 accounts which have not been accessed in a predefined period of time.
1463 If you choose to perform this operation, you can 'touch' the account of
1464 a wayward user by setting their 'last call' time to 'now'. You can also
1465 adjust, on a per-user basis, the amount of time which must pass before
1466 their account is purged by the system. This time is set in days. You
1467 can also specify 0 days to indicate that you wish to use the system default
1470 <h3><a name="Deleting_and_moving_messages"></a>Deleting and moving messages</h3>
1472 <p>Aides and Room Aides have the ability to delete and move messages. After
1473 each message, the normal prompt appears:</p>
1475 <pre>(8) <B>ack <A>gain <Q>uote <R>eply <N>ext <S>top m<Y> next <?>help -><br></pre>
1477 <p>Entering <tt><b>D</b>elete</tt> will delete the message. A <tt>(y/n)</tt>
1478 prompt will appear to confirm that you really want to delete the message.
1479 Entering <tt><b>M</b>ove</tt> will prompt for a room to which the message
1480 should be moved.</p>
1482 <h3><a name="Customizing_the_help_files"></a>Customizing the help files</h3>
1484 <p>The subdirectory called <tt>help</tt> contains your system's help files.
1485 There's nothing hard-coded into the system that dictates what files should
1486 be there. Whenever a user types the command <tt><b>.H</b>elp</tt> followed
1487 by the name of a help file, it displays the contents of that help file.</p>
1489 <p>The help files that come with the system, of course, are enough to guide
1490 a user through its operation. But you can add, change, or remove help
1491 files to suit whatever is appropriate for your system.</p>
1493 <p>There are several strings that you can put in help files that will be automatically
1494 substituted with other strings. They are:</p>
1496 <pre> <br> ^nodename = The node name of your system on a Citadel/UX network<br> ^humannode = Human-readable node name (also your node name on C86Net)<br> ^fqdn = Your system's fully-qualified domain name<br> ^username = The name of the user reading the help file<br> ^usernum = The user number of the user reading the help file<br> ^sysadm = The name of the system administraor (i.e., you)<br> ^variantname = The name of the BBS software you're running<br> ^bbsdir = The directory on the host system in which you have<br> installed the Citadel system.<br></pre>
1498 <p>So, for example, you could create a help file which looked like:</p>
1500 <pre> "Lots of help, of course, is available right here on ^humannode. Of<br>course, if you still have trouble, you could always bug ^sysadm about it!"<br></pre>
1502 <h3><a name="Site_configuration"></a>Site configuration</h3>
1504 <p>Once your Citadel server is up and running, the first thing you'll want
1505 to do is customize and tune it. This can be done from the text-based client
1506 with the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration <b>G</b>eneral</tt>
1507 command, or from WebCit (if you have it installed) by clicking 'Advanced
1508 Options' followed by 'Edit site-wide configuration.' Either method will
1509 offer the same configuration options. This document shows the text mode
1510 client being used.</p>
1512 <p>The first set of options deal with the identification of your system.</p>
1514 <pre>Lobby> . Aide System configuration General<br>Node name [uncnsrd]: <br>Fully qualified domain name [uncensored.citadel.org]: <br>Human readable node name [Uncensored]: <br>Modem dialup number [US 914 999 9999]: <br>Geographic location of this system [Mount Kisco, NY]: <br>Name of system administrator [IGnatius T Foobar]: <br>Paginator prompt [<jinkies
1515 !="" more="" text="" on="" the="" next="" screen="">]: <br></jinkies></pre>
1517 <p>'Node name' refers to the short, unqualified node name by which your system
1518 is known on a Citadel network. Generally it will be the same as the unqualified
1519 host name of your computer; this is, in fact, the default setting.</p>
1521 <p>Then enter the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of your system. If you
1522 are not on the Internet, you can simply set it to the same as your unqualified
1523 host name. Otherwise you should set this value to the host name by which
1524 your system is most commonly known.</p>
1526 <p>The field called 'Human-readable node name' (also known as the 'node title'
1527 or 'organization name' in other software) is used solely for display purposes.
1528 Set it to the actual name of your system as you want it to appear in banners,
1531 <p>If you have a modem or bank of modems answering data calls for your system,
1532 enter it in the field marked 'Modem dialup number.' Otherwise you may
1535 <p>'Geographic location of this system' is another display field. Enter a
1536 city and state, or city and country. </p>
1538 <p>'Name of system administrator' is important! Any user who logs on with
1539 the name you enter here will automatically be granted Aide privileges.
1540 This is one of two ways for the system administrator to grant himself/herself
1541 Aide access to the system when initially setting it up. (The other is simply
1542 to have the first account created on a new installation.)</p>
1544 <p>The next set of options are your system's security settings. Before delving
1545 into the actual options, we should review the various access levels available
1546 on the system. Citadel has seven access levels:</p>
1549 <li>0 (Deleted). A user whose access level is set to 0 will automatically
1550 be deleted by the system. </li>
1551 <li>1 (New User). Users at this level may only read messages.
1552 Entering messages is prohibited, except in the <tt>Mail></tt> room,
1553 where a message to 'sysop' may be entered. </li>
1554 <li>2 (Problem User). Also known as 'Twit.' </li>
1555 <li>3 (Local User). May enter messages, except in rooms shared
1556 on a Citadel network. </li>
1557 <li>4 (Network User). May enter messages in every accessible room.
1559 <li>5 (Preferred User). Use of this level is up to the whim of
1560 the system administrator. </li>
1561 <li>6 (Aide). Access is granted to the administrative functions
1562 of the system. (This access level may also be granted to a user only for
1563 a specific room, please see 'Room Aide' for more information.) </li>
1567 <pre>Require registration for new users [No]: No<br>Disable self-service user account creation [No]: No<br>Initial access level for new users [4]:<br>Access level required to create rooms [4]: <br>Automatically give room aide privs to a user who creates a private room [No]: No<br><br>Automatically move problem user messages to twit room [Yes]: Yes<br>Name of twit room [Trashcan]: <br>Restrict Internet mail to only those with that privilege [No]: No<br>Allow Aides to Zap (forget) rooms [Yes]: Yes<br>Allow system Aides access to user mailboxes [Yes]: Yes<br>Log all pages [No]: No<br></pre>
1569 <p>'Registration' refers to the process of a user entering various personal
1570 contact information (real name, address, telephone number, etc.) into
1571 the system. When enabled, this information is stored as a vCard object
1572 on the system in two places: the user's <tt>My Citadel Config></tt> room,
1573 and in the <tt>Global Address Book></tt> room. (Note: the latter should
1574 be made private on publicly-accessible systems, for obvious reasons.)</p>
1576 <p>If you answer Yes to 'Require registration for new users' then each new
1577 user, upon creating a new account, will immediately be entered into the
1578 registration process. On the other hand, if you answer Yes to 'Disable
1579 self-service user account creation' then new users will not be able to log
1580 in at all -- all accounts must be created by an Aide.</p>
1582 <p>'Initial access level for new users' should be set to 1 (New User) if you
1583 would like to review each new user's registration info before granting
1584 them higher access. This would be done periodically with the <tt><b>.A</b>ide
1585 <b>V</b>alidate new users</tt> command. If you do not require registration,
1586 you should set the initial access level to 4 (Network User).</p>
1588 <p>Given the above options, it then becomes clear that there are generally
1589 two ways you can set up your Citadel system, depending on its purpose:</p>
1592 <li><b>A public access BBS or message board</b> - since you do not
1593 know who might want to log in, self-service account creation needs to
1594 stay enabled. If you want to be strict about users identifying themselves,
1595 then you should also require users to register (just remember to post
1596 a privacy policy if you're going to collect personal information) -- then
1597 set the initial access level to 1 (New User), so new users cannot post messages
1598 until after you've validated them. For a more lax environment, you can
1599 remove the registration requirement and grant new accounts level 4 (Normal
1600 User) access on the first visit. </li>
1601 <li><b>A private email/groupware system for your organization</b>
1602 - in this case, disable self-service account creation; you don't want
1603 strangers welcoming themselves to your system. You'll probably also want
1604 to disable registration, because you or some other site administrator
1605 will be entering users' contact info when you create their accounts.
1606 Since this is also how you assign their Internet e-mail addresses, it's
1607 probably a good idea to do it yourself instead of expecting them to do it.
1612 <p>'Access level required to create rooms' is up to you. You might wish to
1613 restrict the creation of new rooms only to Aides, or you might wish to allow
1614 anyone to create a room. The latter is one of the Citadel culture's most
1615 long-standing traditions; the former may be appropriate if users are abusing
1618 <p>You have the ability to 'Automatically give room aide privs to a user who
1619 creates a private room.' If you answer Yes, then any user who creates a
1620 guess-name, passworded, or invitation-only room will automatically become
1621 the room aide, and will have access to a subset of the <tt><b>.A</b>ide</tt>
1622 command set while in that room. If you would rather grant this permission
1623 manually, answer No.</p>
1625 <p>Another tradition in the Citadel culture is to refrain from deleting
1626 problem users, but instead to 'twit' them (reduce their access level to 2
1627 [Problem User]). You can then 'Automatically move problem user messages
1628 to twit room' (answer Yes, then specify 'Name of twit room' and remember
1629 to create that room). If you employ this logic, any user with level 2 (Problem
1630 User) access will continue to have access to the same set of rooms, but all
1631 messages posted will automatically be routed to the Trashcan (or whatever
1632 you call your twit room).</p>
1634 <p>If you have Internet mail configured, you have the option of restricting
1635 its use on a user-by-user basis. If you wish to do this, answer Yes to
1636 'Restrict Internet mail to only those with that privilege.' Obviously this
1637 makes no sense for an internal e-mail system, but for a public BBS it might
1640 <p>Normally, Aides have access to every room, public or private, except for
1641 user mailboxes. They are also forbidden from <tt><b>Z</b>ap</tt>ping rooms,
1642 because the review of content is considered one of their roles. If you
1643 wish to change these policies, the next two options allow you to. You
1644 may 'Allow Aides to Zap (forget) rooms', in which case they may use the
1645 <tt><b>Z</b>ap</tt> command just like any other user. Furthermore, if
1646 you 'Allow system Aides access to user mailboxes', then they may <tt><b>.G</b>oto</tt>
1647 any private mailbox belonging to any user, using a special room name format.</p>
1649 <p>If your local security and/or privacy policy dictates that you keep a
1650 log of all pages (instant messages) that go through the system, then answer
1651 Yes to 'Log all pages'. If you answer Yes, you will be prompted for the
1652 name of a room to which all pages will be logged. If you answer No, then
1653 only the sender and recipient of each individual message will receive a copy.</p>
1655 <p>The next set of options deals with the tuning of your system. It is usually
1656 safe to leave these untouched.</p>
1658 <pre>Server connection idle timeout (in seconds) [900]: <br>Maximum concurrent sessions [20]: <br>Maximum message length [2147483647]: <br>Minimum number of worker threads [5]: <br>Maximum number of worker threads [256]: <br></pre>
1660 <p>The 'Server connection idle timeout' is for the connection between client
1661 and server software. It is <b>not</b> an idle timer for the user interface.
1662 900 seconds (15 minutes) is the default and a sane setting.</p>
1664 <p>'Maximum concurrent sessions' is the highest number of user sessions you
1665 wish to allow on your system at any given time. Citadel can scale to
1666 hundreds of concurrent users, but if you have limited hardware or (more
1667 likely) limited bandwidth, you might wish to set a maximum. You can also
1668 set it to zero for no limit.</p>
1670 <p>'Maximum message length' is just that. This could be a good way to prevent
1671 enormous multimedia files from finding their way into your message base.
1672 This maximum is enforced in all protocols and is also advertised by the
1675 <p>The minimum and maximum number of worker threads can be tuned to your
1676 liking. Citadel will attempt to keep one worker thread running per session,
1677 within these constraints. You should be aware that due to the use of the
1678 worker thread model, Citadel can handle a large number of concurrent sessions
1679 with a much smaller thread pool. If you don't know the programming theory
1680 behind multithreaded servers, you should leave these parameters alone.</p>
1682 <p>The next set of options affect how Citadel behaves on a network.</p>
1684 <pre>How often to run network jobs (in seconds) [3600]: <br>SMTP server port (-1 to disable) [25]: <br>POP3 server port (-1 to disable) [110]:<br>IMAP server port (-1 to disable) [143]:<br></pre>
1686 <p>'How often to run network jobs' refers to the sharing of content on a
1687 Citadel network. If your system is on a Citadel network, this configuration
1688 item dictates how often the Citadel server will contact other Citadel servers
1689 to send and receive messages. In reality, this will happen more frequently
1690 than you specify, because other Citadel servers will be contacting yours
1691 at regular intervals as well.</p>
1693 <p>Then you can specify TCP port numbers for the SMTP, POP3, and IMAP services.
1694 For a system being used primarily for Internet e-mail, these are essential,
1695 so you'll want to specify the standard port numbers: 25, 110, and 143.
1696 If Citadel is running alongside some other mail system, though, then you
1697 might want to choose other, unused port numbers, or enter -1 for any protocol
1698 to disable it entirely.</p>
1700 <p>The final set of options configures system-wide defaults for the auto-purger:</p>
1702 <pre>Default user purge time (days) [120]: <br>Default room purge time (days) [30]: <br>System default message expire policy (? for list) [2]: <br>Keep how many messages online? [150]:<br></pre>
1704 <p>Any user who does not log in for the period specified in 'Default user
1705 purge time' will be deleted the next time a purge is run. This setting
1706 may be modified on a per-user basis.</p>
1708 <p>'Default room purge time' behaves the same way, and may also be modified
1709 on a per-room basis.</p>
1711 <p>'System default message expire policy' defines the way in which old messages
1712 are expired (purged) off the system. You can specify any of:</p>
1715 <li>Purge by age (specify in days) </li>
1716 <li>Purge by message count in the room (specify number of messages)
1718 <li>Do not purge at all </li>
1722 <p>Again, this setting may be overridden on a per-floor basis, and the floor
1723 setting may be overridden on a per-room basis.</p>
1725 <pre>Save this configuration? No<br></pre>
1727 <p>When you're done, enter 'Yes' to confirm the changes, or 'No' to discard
1731 <hr width="100%" size="2">
1732 <h2 align="center"><a name="Configuring_Citadel_for_Internet_e-mail"></a>Configuring
1733 Citadel for Internet e-mail</h2>
1735 <div align="justify">
1736 <h3><a name="Introduction"></a>Introduction</h3>
1737 As you know by now, Citadel is a completely self-contained, full-featured
1738 Internet e-mail system. When you run Citadel you do not need any other
1739 mail software on your host system. This eliminates the need for tedious
1740 mucking about with sendmail, qmail, postfix, Cyrus, the UW IMAP server,
1741 or any of countless other needlessly complex programs that lead some people
1742 to the false assumption that Unix systems are difficult to administer.<br>
1744 Some of the many features supported by Citadel are:<br>
1747 <li>Built-in SMTP and ESMTP service, for delivering and receiving
1748 e-mail on the Internet</li>
1749 <li>Built-in POP3 service, for remote fetching of messages</li>
1750 <li>Built-in IMAP service, for access to mail using any standard mail
1752 <li>Web mail (implemented using the "WebCit" middleware, which is
1753 installed separately)</li>
1754 <li>Support for mailing lists, in both "individual message" and "digest"
1756 <li>Multiple/virtual domain support</li>
1757 <li>Any user may have multiple Internet e-mail addresses, in multiple
1759 <li>Global address book (Users with addresses in a domain may be spread
1760 out across many servers on a Citadel network)</li>
1761 <li>Easy-to-configure integration with <a
1762 href="http://www.spamassassin.org/">SpamAssassin</a> can block spam <i>before</i>
1763 it enters the mail system</li>
1766 This section of the documentation will demonstrate how to configure
1770 <h3><a name="Basic_site_configuration"></a>Basic site configuration</h3>
1772 <p>Basic configuration of your Citadel system for Internet e-mail begins with
1773 the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration <b>I</b>nternet</tt> command:</p>
1775 <pre>Lobby> <b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration <b>I</b>nternet<br><br>### Host or domain Record type<br>--- -------------------------------------------------- --------------------<br> 1<br><A>dd <D>elete <S>ave <Q>uit -><br></pre>
1777 <p>This is a "clean" setup. For a simple, standalone e-mail system you simply
1778 have to enter the <tt><b>A</b>dd</tt> command:</p>
1780 <pre><A>dd <D>elete <S>ave <Q>uit -> <b>A</b>dd<br><br>Enter host name: schmeep.splorph.com<br> (1) localhost (Alias for this computer)<br> (2) gateway domain (Domain for all Citadel systems)<br> (3) smart-host (Forward all outbound mail to this host)<br> (4) directory (Consult the Global Address Book)<br> (5) SpamAssassin (Address of SpamAssassin server)<br><br>Which one [1]:<br></pre>
1782 <p><b>localhost:</b> Basically what you're doing here is telling Citadel
1783 what any aliases for your machine are. If your machine were <tt>schmeep.splorph.com</tt>
1784 and you also had a DNS entry set up for <tt>blah.com</tt>, you might want
1785 to enter '1' and enter <tt>blah.com</tt> as your alias, so that e-mail
1786 sent to that address won't bounce.</p>
1788 <p><i>Important tip:</i> if your system is known by one name and <i>only</i>
1789 one domain, you might not even need to do this at all. You will recall
1790 that you entered your system's fully qualified domain name earlier when you
1791 went through the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration <b>G</b>eneral</tt>
1792 command. The domain name you entered there is automatically considered
1793 by Citadel to be a 'localhost' entry in your Internet mail configuration.
1794 It does not hurt to enter it in both locations, though.</p>
1796 <p><b>gateway domain:</b> this is a simple way of mapping various Citadel
1797 hosts in an Internet domain. For example, if you enter <tt>bar.com</tt>
1798 as a gateway domain, then mail to users at <tt>foo.bar.com</tt> will be forwarded
1799 to the host called <tt>foo</tt> on a Citadel network, mail to users at <tt>kunst.bar.com</tt>
1800 will be delivered to the Citadel server called <tt>kunst</tt>, etc. This
1801 feature has limited usefulness; if you are operating a network of Citadel
1802 servers, it is more likely that you will use the 'directory' feature, explained
1805 <p><b>smart-host:</b> Normally, Citadel sends outbound Internet e-mail directly
1806 to its destination. This may not be appropriate for some sites; you may
1807 require (due to local convention, security policy, or whatever) that all
1808 outbound mail be sent to an SMTP relay or forwarder. To configure this
1809 functionality, simply enter the domain name or IP address of your relay
1810 as a 'smart-host' entry.</p>
1812 <p><b>directory:</b> a domain for which you are participating in directory
1813 services across any number of Citadel nodes. For example, if users who
1814 have addresses in the domain <tt>citadel.org</tt> are spread out across multiple
1815 Citadel servers on your network, then enter <tt>citadel.org</tt> as a 'directory'
1816 entry. <i>For this to work, all Citadel servers participating in directory
1817 service <b>must</b> carry and share the <tt>Global Address Book></tt>
1820 <p><b>spamassassin:</b> if you are running a <a
1821 href="http://www.spamassassin.org">SpamAssassin</a> service anywhere on your
1822 <b>local</b> network, enter its name or IP address as a 'spamassassin' entry.
1823 This may be (and, in fact, will usually be) <tt>127.0.0.1</tt> to specify
1824 that the service is running on the same host computer as the Citadel server.</p>
1826 <p>Please install SpamAssassin as per its own documentation. You will want
1827 to run SpamAssassin in client/server mode, where a <tt>spamd</tt> daemon
1828 is always running on your computer. Citadel does not utilize the <tt>spamc</tt>
1829 client; instead, it implements SpamAssassin's protocol on its own.</p>
1831 <p>Connecting to a SpamAssassin service across a wide area network is strongly
1832 discouraged. In order to determine whether an incoming e-mail is spam,
1833 Citadel must feed the <i>entire message</i> to the SpamAssassin service.
1834 Doing this over a wide area network would consume time and bandwidth, which
1835 would affect performance.</p>
1837 <p>Citadel invokes the SpamAssassin service when incoming messages are arriving
1838 via SMTP. Before a message is accepted, it is submitted to SpamAssassin.
1839 If SpamAssassin determines that the message is spam, the Citadel SMTP
1840 service <i>rejects the message,</i> causing a delivery failure on the sending
1841 host. This is superior to software which files away spam in a separate
1842 folder, because delivery failures will cause some spammers to assume the
1843 address is invalid and remove it from their mailing lists.</p>
1845 <p>Now select <tt><b>S</b>ave</tt> and you are just about ready for Internet
1848 <h3><a name="Enabling_the_Internet_mail_protocols"></a>Enabling the Internet
1851 <p>As previously mentioned, Citadel contains its own SMTP, POP3, and IMAP
1852 services. Enabling them is simple.</p>
1854 <p>Check for the existance of a current MTA (sendmail, qmail, etc.) by connecting
1855 to port 25 on your host. If you see something similar to the following
1856 you're running an MTA already and you'll need to shut it down:</p>
1858 <pre>smw @ pixel % telnet localhost 25<br>Trying 127.0.0.1...<br>Connected to localhost.<br>Escape character is '^]'.<br>220 pixel.citadel.org ESMTP Sendmail 8.9.3/8.9.3; Wed, 15 Mar 2000 19:00:53 -0500<br></pre>
1860 <p>In the above example, we see that the host already has Sendmail listening
1861 on port 25. Before Citadel can use port 25, Sendmail must be shut off.
1862 Please consult the documentation for your operating system for instructions
1863 on how to do this. (On a Red Hat Linux system, for example, you can run the
1864 <tt>ntsysv</tt> utility, un-checking <tt>sendmail</tt> to disable it at the
1865 next reboot; then, run <tt>service sendmail stop</tt> to shut off the currently
1866 running service.)</p>
1868 <p>If you get a 'connection refused' message when you telnet to port 25 there's
1869 nothing running and you should be able to continue. You might also want
1870 to turn off POP (try the above test substituting 110 for 25) and IMAP (port
1871 143) and use Citadel's POP and IMAP services.</p>
1873 <p>Citadel will look for an existing pop/smtp server on startup. If they
1874 don't exist (and you've configured them properly) then Citadel should enable
1875 them at startup. You can check your logs to be sure, or you can start the
1876 server from a shell and watch it load. It might look something like this:</p>
1877 <font size="-2"> </font>
1878 <pre><font size="-2">smw @ pixel % ./citserver<br><br>Multithreaded message server for Citadel/UX<br>Copyright (C) 1987-2000 by the Citadel/UX development team.<br>Citadel/UX is open source, covered by the GNU General Public License, and<br>you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain<br>conditions. There is absolutely no warranty for this software. Please<br>read the 'COPYING.txt' file for details.<br><br>Loading citadel.config<br>Opening databases<br>This is GDBM version 1.8.0, as of May 19, 1999.<br>Checking floor reference counts<br>Creating base rooms (if necessary)<br>Registered a new service (TCP port 504)<br>Registered a new service (TCP port 0)<br>Initializing loadable modules<br>Registered server command CHAT (Begin real-time chat)<br>Registered server command PEXP (Poll for express messages)<br>Registered server command GEXP (Get express messages)<br>Registered server command SEXP (Send an express message)<br>Registered server command DEXP (Disable express messages)<br>Registered a new session function (type 0)<br>Registered a new x-msg function (priority 0)<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br>Registered a new session function (type 1)<br>Registered a new message function (type 201)<br>Registered a new message function (type 202)<br>Registered server command REGI (Enter registration info)<br>Registered server command GREG (Get registration info)<br>Registered a new user function (type 100)<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br>Server-hosted upgrade level is 5.62<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br>Registered server command EXPI (Expire old system objects)<br>Registered server command FSCK (Check message ref counts)<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br><b>citserver: Can't bind: Address already in use<br>ERROR: could not bind to TCP port 25.</b><br>Registered a new service (TCP port 0)<br>Registered a new session function (type 50)<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br><b>citserver: Can't bind: Address already in use<br>ERROR: could not bind to TCP port 110.</b><br>Registered a new session function (type 0)<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br>Registered a new message function (type 202)Loaded module: $Id$<br>Registered server command RWHO (Display who is online)<br>Registered server command HCHG (Masquerade hostname)<br>Registered server command RCHG (Masquerade roomname)<br>Registered server command UCHG (Masquerade username)<br>Registered server command STEL (Enter/exit stealth mode)<br>Loaded module: $Id$<br>Changing uid to 513<br>Starting housekeeper thread<br></font></pre>
1880 <p>The lines emphasized in boldface in the above log output tell you that
1881 Citadel "can't bind" to various ports. The error 'address already in use'
1882 generally means that something else is already running on the requested
1883 port. Make SURE you've followed the above steps to remove sendmail/pop and
1884 start your Citadel server again.</p>
1886 <h3><a name="citmail"></a>Using Citadel in conjunction with another MTA</h3>
1888 <p>Occationally it is not practical to remove a non-Citadel MTA on your host
1889 system. For example, you might have multiple groups of users, some of
1890 which are using Citadel and some of which are using a legacy Unix mail
1891 spool. This type of configuration is discouraged, but a tool is provided
1894 <p>The tool is called <tt>citmail</tt> and it is, quite simply, a local MDA
1895 (Mail Delivery Agent) which you can configure into your MTA for final delivery
1896 of incoming messages to Citadel users. A full discussion of the finer
1897 points of complex Sendmail configurations is beyond the scope of this document;
1898 however, you might want to visit <a
1899 href="http://pixel.citadel.org/citadel/docs/">Pixel BBS</a> where some useful
1900 HOWTO documents are provided.</p>
1902 <p>For outbound mail, you can either allow Citadel to perform deliveries directly
1903 (this won't affect your other mail system because outbound mail doesn't tie
1904 up port 25) or enter <tt>127.0.0.1</tt> as your smart-host, which will tell
1905 Citadel to forward all of its outbound mail to your other mail system.</p>
1907 <h3><a name="Hosting_an_Internet_mailing_list"></a>Hosting an Internet mailing
1910 <p>Citadel has built in mailing list service (known in the 'net vernacular
1911 as "listserv") functionality. You can turn any room into a mailing
1912 list. Users can then choose how they participate -- by logging on to
1913 your Citadel server directly, or by having the room's contents mailed to them
1914 somewhere else. Configuring this is easy.</p>
1916 <p>Citadel supports two modes of mailing list delivery: </p>
1919 <li>"List mode" -- each individual message is delivered as a single
1920 e-mail to each list mode recipient. The "From:" header will display
1921 the address of the message's original author.</li>
1922 <li>"Digest mode" -- groups of one or more messages are delivered to
1923 digest mode recipients. The number of messages in the group depends
1924 on how many new messages arrived since the last batch was delivered. The
1925 "From:" header will display the address of the room itself, which allows
1926 replies to be posted back to the room.</li>
1929 A room may have any combination of list mode and digest mode recipients.
1931 <p>As alluded to above, every room on your Citadel system has an Internet
1932 e-mail address of its own. Messages sent to that address will be posted
1933 in the room (and sent back out to mailing list recipients, as well as to
1934 any other Citadels you share the room with). The address format is
1935 <tt>room_</tt> plus the name of the room, with any spaces replaced by underscores,
1936 followed by <tt>@</tt> and your hostname. For example, if your system is
1937 known as <tt>phlargmalb.orc.org</tt> on the Internet, and you have a room
1938 called <tt>Bubblegum Collectors</tt>, you can post to that room from anywhere
1939 on the Internet simply by sending an e-mail to <tt>room_bubblegum_collectors@phlargmalb.orc.org</tt>.
1940 When the message arrives, it's automatically posted in that room.</p>
1942 <p>To manually edit the list of "list mode" recipients, simply enter the <tt><b>.A</b>ide
1943 mailing <b>L</b>ist management</tt> command. Your text editor will open
1944 up and you will be able to create or edit a list of recipients, one per line.
1945 Lines beginning with a hash (<tt>#</tt>) are comments.</p>
1947 <p>To manually edit the list of "digest mode" recipients, enter the <tt><b>.A</b>ide
1948 mailing list <b>D</b>igest recipients</tt> command. As with the previous
1949 command, the text editor will open up and you can edit the list of digest
1950 mode recipients, one per line.</p>
1952 <p>Citadel also has a facility which allows users to subscribe or unsubscribe
1953 to mailing lists using a web browser. In order to do this, WebCit must also
1954 be running on your server in addition to Citadel. WebCit is obtained and
1955 installed separately from the rest of the Citadel system.</p>
1957 <p>In order to prevent "just anyone" from subscribing to any room on your
1958 system, there is a setting in the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>E</b>dit room</tt>
1961 <pre>CitaNews} . Aide Edit this room<br>Room name [CitaNews]:<br><br><i>(lots of other stuff omitted for brevity...)</i><br><br>Self-service list subscribe/unsubscribe [No]: Yes<br></pre>
1963 <p>When you answer "Yes" to self-service list subscribe/unsubscribe, you are
1964 enabling that feature. Now, all you have to do is tell the world about the
1965 web page they need to visit. It looks like this:</p>
1967 <center><tt>http://foobar.baz.org:2000/listsub</tt></center>
1969 <p>In this example, the server is called <tt>foobar.baz.org</tt> and WebCit
1970 is running on port 2000. Edit appropriately.</p>
1972 <p>Citadel offers a subscribe/unsubscribe facility that is more intuitive
1973 than other listservs. With most systems, sending commands to the listserv
1974 requires that you e-mail it commands in a special format. It's easy to get
1975 it wrong. Citadel simply uses your web browser. You select the list you
1976 want to subscribe or unsubscribe (hint: it's the list of rooms you've enabled
1977 self-service for), select whether you want list mode or digest mode, and
1978 enter your e-mail address. For security purposes, a confirmation message
1979 is sent to the address you enter. But you don't have to reply to the message
1980 in a weird format, either: the confirmation contains another URL which you
1981 simply click on (or paste into your browser if you can't click on URL's
1982 in your e-mail software) and the confirmation is automatically completed.</p>
1984 <hr width="100%" size="2">
1986 <h2><a name="Building_or_joining_a_Citadel_network"></a>Building or joining
1987 a Citadel network</h2>
1990 <h3><a name="Overview__"></a>Overview</h3>
1992 <p>If you are running Citadel as a BBS or other forum type of application,
1993 one way to 'keep the conversation going' is to share rooms with other Citadel
1994 systems. In a shared room, a message posted to the room is automatically
1995 propagated to every system on the network. It's kind of like a UseNet newsgroup,
1996 but without the spam.</p>
1998 <p>If you are using Citadel as the e-mail and groupware platform for a large
1999 organization, you can use its networking features to build a large network
2000 of Citadel servers which share content (think of rooms as public folders),
2001 redistribute e-mail throughout the organization, and integrate the global
2002 address book. It might make sense, for example, in a large corporation
2003 to give each department or location its own Citadel server. Thanks
2004 to Citadel's global address book features, you could still have all of the
2005 users share a single e-mail domain.</p>
2007 <p>Obviously, the first thing you have to do is find another Citadel to share
2008 rooms with, and make arrangements with them. The following Citadels are
2009 a good place to start:</p>
2012 <li>UNCENSORED! - <a href="http://uncensored.citadel.org">uncensored.citadel.org</a>
2014 <li>The Dog Pound II - <a href="http://dogpound2.citadel.org">dogpound2.citadel.org</a>
2016 <li>PixelBBS - <a href="http://pixel.citadel.org">pixel.citadel.org</a>
2021 <p>You don't have to be a part of the citadel.org domain to participate in
2022 the public Citadel network, but the DNS service is provided free of charge
2023 by the Citadel community if you wish to do this.</p>
2025 <h3><a name="Conventions_and_etiquette_when"></a>Conventions and etiquette
2026 when connecting to the public Citadel network</h3>
2028 <p>Before we get into the technical nitty gritty, there are two points of
2029 etiquette to keep in mind. The first thing to keep in mind is that the
2030 operator of any particular Citadel may not be willing to share some of his/her
2031 rooms. Some sites are proud to offer exclusive content in certain areas.
2032 Chances are, if a room is already being shared on the network, it's available
2033 for anyone to share; if not, it can't hurt to ask -- but take care not to
2034 demand it of them. Ask if you may share the room instead of telling them
2035 that you wish to share the room. When looking at a <tt><b>K</b></tt>nown
2036 rooms list, network rooms are the ones ending in parentheses instead of angle
2037 brackets. For example, <tt>Gateway)</tt> would be a network room, <tt>Lobby></tt>
2040 <p>The other point of etiquette to remember is that you should be making
2041 the arrangements in advance, and then set it up. It is extremely rude to
2042 simply begin networking with another Citadel, or unilaterally start sharing
2043 a new room, without first obtaining permission from its operator. Always
2044 ask first. Most Citadel operators are more than happy to network with you.
2045 Also, if later on you decide to take your system down, please take the time
2046 to notify the operators of any other Citadels you network with, so they can
2047 unconfigure their end.</p>
2049 <h3><a name="Getting_ready_to_join_the_network"></a>Getting ready to join
2052 <p>Ok, first things first. On a Citadel room sharing network, the first
2053 thing you need to know is your own system's node name. Presumably you set
2054 this up during installation, but if you want to change it you can do so using
2055 the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ysconfig <b>G</b>eneral</tt> command:</p>
2057 <pre>Lobby> . Aide System configuration General<br>Node name [uncnsrd]:<br>Fully qualified domain name [uncensored.citadel.org]:<br>Human readable node name [Uncensored]:<br></pre>
2059 <p>The "node name" is important, it's how the network identifies messages
2060 coming from your system. The "human readable node name" is simply a label;
2061 it shows up in messages coming from your system. "Fully qualified domain
2062 name" is your DNS name; it's used for routing messages on the Internet.
2063 In the above example, the node name is "uncnsrd".</p>
2065 <h3><a name="Defining_neighbor_nodes"></a>Defining neighbor nodes</h3>
2067 <p>The next thing you need to do is configure your neighbor node(s). You
2068 need to do this for each node you network with. Let's say you wanted to
2069 talk to a Citadel system called "frobozz". Use the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ysconfig
2070 <b>N</b>etwork</tt> command:</p>
2072 <pre>Lobby> . Aide System configuration Network<br>### Node Secret Host or IP Port#<br>--- ---------------- ---------------- -------------------------------- -----<br><A>dd <D>elete <S>ave <Q>uit -> Add<br><br>Enter node name : frobozz<br>Enter shared secret: frotz<br>Enter host or IP : frobozz.magick.org<br>Enter port number : [504]: 504<br><br>### Node Secret Host or IP Port#<br>--- ---------------- ---------------- -------------------------------- -----<br> 1 frobozz frotz frobozz.magick.org 504<br><A>dd <D>elete <S>ave <Q>uit -> Save<br><br>Lobby><br></pre>
2074 <p>As you can see in the above example, you have to enter the Citadel node
2075 name, the DNS name or IP address of the server, and the port number the
2076 Citadel service is running on. The "shared secret" is a password to allow
2077 the two Citadel nodes to connect to each other to exchange network data.
2078 The password must be <i>identical</i> on both ends of the connection --
2079 when the operator of the other Citadel node sets up the connection with
2080 your system, he/she must use the same password.</p>
2082 <h3><a name="Sharing_rooms"></a>Sharing rooms</h3>
2084 <p>Now you're ready to share rooms. You have to do this for each room you
2085 want to share, and you have to do it from BOTH ENDS -- again, when you
2086 share a room with another Citadel, they must share it with you as well.
2087 Let's say you have a room called "Quiche Recipes>" and you want to share
2088 it with the node you set up above. First, edit the room and flag it as a
2091 <pre>Quiche Recipes> . Aide Edit this room<br>Room name [Quiche Recipes]:<br>Private room [No]: No<br>Preferred users only [No]: No<br>Read-only room [No]: No<br>Directory room [No]: No<br>Permanent room [No]: No<br>Network shared room [No]: Yes<br>Automatically make all messages anonymous [No]: No<br>Ask users whether to make messages anonymous [No]: No<br>Listing order [64]:<br>Room aide (or 'none') [none]:<br>Message expire policy (? for list) [0]:<br>Save changes (y/n)? Yes<br>Ok<br><br>Quiche Recipes)<br></pre>
2093 <p>Notice how the prompt changed? It was > before, but it's ) now. That
2094 means it's a network room. Now you can tell Citadel that you want to share
2095 the room with frobozz. Enter this command:</p>
2097 <pre>Quiche Recipes) . Aide Network room sharing<br></pre>
2099 <p>Your text editor will pop up (you <i>did</i> configure Citadel to use
2100 your favorite text editor, right?) with a screen that looks like this:</p>
2102 <pre># Configuration for room: Quiche Recipes<br># Nodes with which we share this room<br># Specify one per line.<br></pre>
2104 <p>All you have to do is enter the name of the other Citadel node (i.e. "frobozz"
2105 in our example) on a line by itself. As usual, lines starting with a "#"
2106 are comments. Just go to the end of the file, type "frobozz" (without
2107 the quotes), save the file... and you're done!</p>
2109 <p>At this point, you just sit back and enjoy. Your Citadel and the other
2110 one will begin polling each other at regular intervals (once per hour by
2111 default) and sharing messages.</p>
2113 <h3><a name="Sending_mail"></a>Sending mail</h3>
2115 <p>You can send mail to any user on any node of your Citadel network. It
2116 may take a little while for your system to learn the entire node list, though,
2117 as this is done by watching incoming messages on the network and learning
2118 which nodes are out there.</p>
2120 <p>To send a private message, just enter <tt>user @ host</tt> as the recipient:</p>
2122 <pre>Mail> Enter message <br>Enter recipient: Some other user @ frobozz<br> Feb 11 2003 11:36pm from I. M. Me to Some other user @ frobozz<br>type message here...<br><br>Entry command (? for options) -><br></pre>
2124 <h3><a name="Changing_the_polling_interval"></a>Changing the polling interval</h3>
2126 <p>As previously mentioned, Citadel will poll other Citadel nodes for messages
2127 once per hour. If this is not an acceptable interval, you can change it
2128 using the <tt><b>.A</b>ide <b>S</b>ystem configuration <b>G</b>eneral</tt>
2129 command. Enter this command and look for the option:</p>
2131 <pre>How often to run network jobs (in seconds) [3600]:<br></pre>
2133 <p>Change it to whatever you like. For example, 15 minutes is 900 seconds.
2134 So if you changed the default value to 900, network polling would occur
2135 every 15 minutes.</p>
2138 <h2 align="center"><a name="Database_maintenance"></a>Database maintenance</h2>
2140 <h3><a name="Introduction_"></a>Introduction</h3>
2141 The data store used by Citadel is reliable and self-maintaining. It
2142 requires very little maintenance. This is primarily due to its use
2143 of the <a href="http://www.sleepycat.com">Berkeley DB</a> record manager.
2144 It is robust, high-performance, and transactional.<br>
2146 A few small data files are kept in your main Citadel directory, but the
2147 databases are in the <tt>data/</tt> subdirectory. The files with names
2148 that begin with "cdb" are the databases themselves; the files with names that
2149 begin with "log" are the journals. Journal files will come and go as
2150 you use your system; when the database engine has determined that a particular
2151 log file is no longer needed, the file will automatically be deleted. Nevertheless,
2152 you should always ensure that there is ample disk space for the files to
2155 There is no need to shut down Citadel during backups. The data store
2156 may be backed up "hot." The makers of Berkeley DB suggest that you should
2157 back up the data files <i>first</i> and the log files <i>second</i>. This
2158 is the only method that will guarantee that a database which is being changed
2159 while you back it up will still be usable when you restore it from the tape
2163 <h3><a name="Database_repair"></a>Database repair</h3>
2164 Although Citadel's data store is quite reliable, database corruption can
2165 occur in rare instances. External factors such as an operating system
2166 crash or an unexpected loss of power might leave the database in an unknown
2167 state. A utility is provided which may be able to repair your database
2168 if this occurs. If you find that your Citadel server is not running,
2169 and reading the logs shows that it is crashing because of an inability to
2170 validate a database, follow these steps:<br>
2173 <li>Edit <tt>/etc/inittab</tt> and switch the Citadel service from "respawn"
2174 to "off." Type <tt>init q</tt> to make this setting permanent.</li>
2175 <li><b>Make a backup of your data.</b> Either write it out to tape
2176 or copy it to another directory, or a tarball.<br>
2178 <li><tt>cd</tt> to your Citadel directory and type <tt>./database_cleanup.sh</tt></li>
2179 <li>Edit <tt>/etc/inittab</tt> and switch the Citadel service from "off"
2180 to "respawn". Type <tt>init q</tt> to activate your changes.</li>
2183 If this procedure does not work, you must restore from your most recent
2187 <h3><a name="ImportingExporting_your_Citadel"></a>Importing/Exporting your
2188 Citadel database<br>
2191 <p>Citadel/UX now contains an importer/exporter module, affectionaly known
2192 as the "Art Vandelay" module (a not-so-obscure Seinfeld reference). It
2193 allows you to export the entire contents of your Citadel databases to a
2194 flat file, which may then be imported on another system. (This procedure
2195 is also known as "dump and load" to some database gurus.)</p>
2197 <p>Why would you want to do this? Here are some scenarios: </p>
2200 <li>You are moving a Citadel installation to another computer, which uses
2201 a different CPU. Since Citadel stores data in an architecture-dependent
2202 format, the data files wouldn't work on the new computer as-is. </li>
2203 <li>Your computer crashed, lost power, etc. and you suspect that your
2204 databases have become corrupted. </li>
2205 <li>You want to switch to a different back-end data store. (For example,
2206 from GDBM to Berkeley DB) </li>
2210 <p>So ... how do we work this magic? Follow these steps <i>exactly</i> as
2211 documented and you should be able to do it all with very little trouble.</p>
2214 <li>This should be obvious, but it's still worth mentioning: MAKE SURE
2215 YOU TAKE A BACKUP OF EVERYTHING BEFORE YOU START THIS!! You're performing
2216 a major operation here. Don't risk it. </li>
2217 <li>First, get all the users logged off from your system. Disconnect
2218 it from the network if possible. You don't want anyone logging in while
2219 you're doing this. </li>
2220 <li>Log on as root, or some other user that has read/write access to
2221 all relevant files. </li>
2222 <li>Go to the directory that Citadel is installed in. For example, issue
2223 a command like <tt>cd /usr/local/citadel</tt> </li>
2224 <li>Export the databases with the following command:<br>
2226 <tt>./sendcommand "ARTV export" >exported.dat</tt><br>
2228 This command may run for a while. On a very large system it could take
2229 an hour or more. Please be patient! </li>
2230 <li>When the export completes, check to make sure that <tt>exported.dat</tt>
2231 exists and has some data in it. (Type "ls -l exported.dat") </li>
2232 <li>Shut down the Citadel server. If you have a line in <tt>/etc/inittab</tt>
2233 that reads like this:<br>
2235 <tt>c1:2345:respawn:/usr/local/citadel/citserver -h/usr/local/citadel</tt>
2237 ...then you should change the <tt>respawn</tt> to <tt>off</tt> and then
2238 type <tt>/sbin/init q</tt> to make the changes take effect. </li>
2239 <li>Now it's time to delete your current binary databases. Type:<br>
2241 <tt>rm -f citadel.config citadel.control data/*</tt> </li>
2242 <li>If you're moving Citadel to another computer, you should move the
2243 <i>entire</i> directory over at this time. <tt>exported.dat</tt> only
2244 contains the information that was in the binary databases. Information which
2245 was stored in portable formats doesn't need to be exported/imported, so you
2246 must bring it all over in its current form. </li>
2247 <li>Now get Citadel running on the new computer (or whatever). Run <tt>setup</tt>
2248 and turn the service back on (from <tt>/etc/inittab</tt>) but DO NOT log
2250 <li>As root, run the import command:<br>
2252 <tt>./sendcommand "ARTV import" <exported.dat</tt><br>
2254 This will import your databases. Again, it may run for a long time.
2256 <li>Restart the Citadel server. You can do this any way you like. From
2257 the command line, you can do it with a command like:<br>
2259 <tt>./sendcommand "DOWN"</tt> <br>
2261 <li>Now you're finished. Log in and test everything. You may delete
2262 exported.dat at this time, or you might want to save it somewhere as a sort
2263 of pseudo-backup. </li>