From montanaro at users.sourceforge.net Wed May 14 03:46:18 2008 From: montanaro at users.sourceforge.net (montanaro at users.sourceforge.net) Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 18:46:18 -0700 Subject: [Spambayes-checkins] SF.net SVN: spambayes: [3177] trunk/spambayes/spambayes/Options.py Message-ID: Revision: 3177 http://spambayes.svn.sourceforge.net/spambayes/?rev=3177&view=rev Author: montanaro Date: 2008-05-13 18:46:17 -0700 (Tue, 13 May 2008) Log Message: ----------- Hopefully improve the help for remote_servers and listen_ports. Modified Paths: -------------- trunk/spambayes/spambayes/Options.py Modified: trunk/spambayes/spambayes/Options.py =================================================================== --- trunk/spambayes/spambayes/Options.py 2008-04-18 02:46:37 UTC (rev 3176) +++ trunk/spambayes/spambayes/Options.py 2008-05-14 01:46:17 UTC (rev 3177) @@ -842,28 +842,33 @@ # you must specify the same number of ports in pop3proxy_ports. "pop3proxy" : ( ("remote_servers", _("Remote Servers"), (), - _("""The SpamBayes POP3 proxy intercepts incoming email and classifies - it before sending it on to your email client. You need to specify - which POP3 server(s) you wish it to intercept - a POP3 server - address typically looks like "pop3.myisp.net". If you use more than - one server, simply separate their names with commas. You can get - these server names from your existing email configuration, or from - your ISP or system administrator. If you are using Web-based email, - you can't use the SpamBayes POP3 proxy (sorry!). In your email - client's configuration, where you would normally put your POP3 server - address, you should now put the address of the machine running - SpamBayes."""), + _("""\ + The SpamBayes POP3 proxy intercepts incoming email and classifies it + before sending it on to your email client. You need to specify which + POP3 server(s) and port(s) you wish it to connect to - a POP3 server + address typically looks like 'pop3.myisp.net:110' where + 'pop3.myisp.net' is the name of the computer where the POP3 server runs + and '110' is the port on which the POP3 server listens. The other port + you might find is '995', which is used for secure POP3. If you use + more than one server, simply separate their names with commas. For + example: 'pop3.myisp.net:110,pop.gmail.com:995'. You can get + these server names and port numbers from your existing email + configuration, or from your ISP or system administrator. If you are + using Web-based email, you can't use the SpamBayes POP3 proxy (sorry!). + In your email client's configuration, where you would normally put your + POP3 server address, you should now put the address of the machine + running SpamBayes. +"""), SERVER, DO_NOT_RESTORE), ("listen_ports", _("SpamBayes Ports"), (), - _("""Each POP3 server that is being monitored must be assigned to a - 'port' in the SpamBayes POP3 proxy. This port must be different for - each monitored server, and there must be a port for - each monitored server. Again, you need to configure your email - client to use this port. If there are multiple servers, you must - specify the same number of ports as servers, separated by commas. - If you don't know what to use here, and you only have one server, - try 110, or if that doesn't work, try 8110."""), + _("""\ + Each monitored POP3 server must be assigned to a different port in the + SpamBayes POP3 proxy. You need to configure your email client to + connect to this port instead of the actual remote POP3 server. If you + don't know what port to use, try 8110 and go up from there. If you + have two servers, your list of listen ports might then be '8110,8111'. +"""), SERVER, DO_NOT_RESTORE), ("allow_remote_connections", _("Allowed remote POP3 connections"), "localhost", This was sent by the SourceForge.net collaborative development platform, the world's largest Open Source development site.