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-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