THE EXIM MAIL TRANSFER AGENT VERSION 4
--------------------------------------
-Copyright (c) 1995 - 2005 University of Cambridge.
+Copyright (c) 1995 - 2018 University of Cambridge.
+SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution.
There is a book about Exim by Philip Hazel called "The Exim SMTP Mail Server",
The current edition covers release 4.10 and a few later extensions.
The O'Reilly book about Exim ("Exim The Mail Transfer Agent" by Philip Hazel)
-covers Exim 3, which is now deprecated. Exim 4 has a large number of changes
+covers Exim 3, which is now obsolete. Exim 4 has a large number of changes
from Exim 3, though the basic structure and philosophy remains the same. The
older book may be helpful for the background, but a lot of the detail has
changed, so it is likely to be confusing to newcomers.
-There is a web site at http://www.exim.org; this contains details of the
+There is a website at https://www.exim.org; this contains details of the
mailing list exim-users@exim.org.
A copy of the Exim FAQ should be available from the same source that you used
install, and run Exim. For straightforward installations on operating systems
to which Exim has already been ported, the building process is as follows:
-. Ensure that the top-level Exim directory (e.g. exim-4.40) is the current
+. Ensure that the top-level Exim directory (e.g. exim-4.80) is the current
directory (containing the files and directories listed above).
. Edit the file called src/EDITME and put the result in a new file called
Local/Makefile-<ostype>
Local/Makefile-<archtype>
Local/Makefile-<ostype>-<archtype>
+ Local/Makefile-<buildname>
OS/Makefile-Base
Of the Local/* files, only Local/Makefile is required to exist; the rest are