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authorEduardo Chappa <chappa@washington.edu>2014-06-20 23:23:19 -0600
committerEduardo Chappa <chappa@washington.edu>2014-06-20 23:23:19 -0600
commit121a42f3d82c1b98c384857960d14b2057a95c41 (patch)
tree3dbd271cc59b33cee35acd5a3dd55a997c7848bc /pith/pine.hlp
parent60b67de2ba4be4d2bfeeeea685869e9a5a7363c0 (diff)
downloadalpine-121a42f3d82c1b98c384857960d14b2057a95c41.tar.xz
* new version 2.19.9992
* Alpine would not parse options from the command line, such as -patterns-filters2, correctly. * Add /usr/local/include as a path to find include and libs files for openssl in FreeBSD. * Management certificate screen now prints, in addition to the e-mail address of the owner of the certificates, the dates of validity and the MD5 hash of such certificates. * crash when processing message/rfc822 attachments that are encoded in base64. * Openssl: if /usr/local/ssl exists, assume that this is the intended place where ssl libraries, include files and certificates are located. Typically, distributions do not use this directory, so its existence indicates that Openssl has been specially installed there, so it is probably a preferred place to get the system Openssl files. * Postponed messages whose content-type is text/html, text/enriched and text/richtext are sent with that content-type, even though, after resuming composition, Alpine had changed its type to text/plain. * HTML: <BR>, <BR />, and <BR/&> are considered the same inline tag; the same is valid for the <HR> tag.
Diffstat (limited to 'pith/pine.hlp')
-rw-r--r--pith/pine.hlp56
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/pith/pine.hlp b/pith/pine.hlp
index 90be0132..cb0a6d63 100644
--- a/pith/pine.hlp
+++ b/pith/pine.hlp
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@ with help text for the config screen and the composer that didn't have any
reasonable place to be called from.
Dummy change to get revision in pine.hlp
============= h_revision =================
-Alpine Commit 64 2014-05-31 21:36:57
+Alpine Commit 65 2014-06-20 23:23:15
============= h_news =================
<HTML>
<HEAD>
@@ -205,6 +205,10 @@ Additions include:
<LI> S/MIME: Forwarding a message will include the signed part as part
of the text and not as a multipart message, just as the reply
command does.
+ <LI> HTML: Style tag in body of html message causes Alpine to not write
+ its content until a new &lt;/style&gt;
+ <LI> HTML: &lt;BR&gt;, &lt;BR /&gt;, and &lt;BR/&gt; are considered
+ the same inline tag; the same is valid for the &lt;HR&gt; tag.
<LI> Add support to selective expunge through a subcommand of the
select-apply commands. Read more in the <A
HREF="h_index_cmd_expunge">help</A> for the expunge command.
@@ -296,6 +300,10 @@ Bugs that have been addressed include:
an index was based on scores that needed information from a remote
addressbook in the same server as the folder opened. Reported by
Peter Koellner.
+ <LI> Crash in message/rfc822 attachments encoded in base64.
+ <LI> Postponed messages whose content-type is text/html, text/enriched and
+ text/richtext are sent with that content-type, even though, after
+ resuming composition, Alpine had changed its type to text/plain.
<LI> Alpine cannot handle correctly some characters in the Windows-1256
character set, which might lead to a crash or a corruption in the
screen. Work was done to contain the bug. A more complete fix will
@@ -35154,8 +35162,20 @@ and private information about your key, with the <B>B</B> and
UNIX Alpine only.
<P>
-This screen allows you to manage your public certificates. Available commands and
-a short description of what they do follows.
+This screen allows you to manage your public certificates.
+<P>
+The format of this screen is as follows. There are five fields: The
+leftmost field is normally empty, but it could contain the letter
+&quot;D&quot; to indicate that that certificate has been marked for
+deletion. The next field is the e-mail address of the owner of the
+certificate, shown in its entirety. The third field is the first day of
+validity for that certificate; the fourth field in the last day that that
+certificate is valid, and the fifth field is what can be displayed of the
+MD5 hash of the certificate. You can use any of the last three fields to
+distinguish between two certificates for the same owner.
+<P>
+Available commands in this screen and a short description of what they
+do follows.
<UL>
<LI> <B>I</B> Imports a public certificate to this collection.
<LI> <B>V</B> View information about a certificate such as the name of the person the
@@ -35189,8 +35209,20 @@ All commands provide feedback to let you know about their success or failure.
UNIX Alpine only.
<P>
-This screen allows you to manage your private key. Available commands and
-a short description of what they do follows.
+This screen allows you to manage your private key.
+<P>
+The format of this screen is as follows. There are five fields: The
+leftmost field is normally empty, but it could contain the letter
+&quot;D&quot; to indicate that that certificate has been marked for
+deletion. The next field is the e-mail address of the owner of the
+certificate, shown in its entirety. The third field is the first day of
+validity for that certificate; the fourth field in the last day that that
+certificate is valid, and the fifth field is what can be displayed of the
+MD5 hash of the public certificate corresponding to this private key. You
+can use any of the last three fields to distinguish between two
+certificates for the same owner.
+<P>
+Available commands and a short description of what they do follows.
<UL>
<LI> <B>I</B> Imports a new public key to this collection.
<LI> <B>V</B> View information about the public certificate corresponding to this
@@ -35225,7 +35257,19 @@ All commands provide feedback to let you know about their success or failure.
UNIX Alpine only.
<P>
This screen allows you to manage your collection of certificates that you
-trust. Available commands and a short description of what they do follows.
+trust.
+<P>
+The format of this screen is as follows. There are five fields: The
+leftmost field is normally empty, but it could contain the letter
+&quot;D&quot; to indicate that that certificate has been marked for
+deletion. The next field is the e-mail address of the owner of the
+certificate, shown in its entirety. The third field is the first day of
+validity for that certificate; the fourth field in the last day that that
+certificate is valid, and the fifth field is what can be displayed of the
+MD5 hash of the certificate. You can use any of the last three fields to
+distinguish between two certificates for the same owner.
+<P>
+Available commands and a short description of what they do follows.
<UL>
<LI> <B>I</B> Imports a trusted certificate to this collection. This is
done by reading the certificate and validating it. Once a certificate