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- News Leafsite mini-HOWTO
- Florian Kuehnert, sutok@gmx.de
- v0.3, 4 January 1998
-
- This HOWTO will help you to configure a small leafsite for Usenet News
- using the free software package Leafnode. For any questions, sugges¡
- tions and comments, please write to Florian Kuehnert (sutok@gmx.de).
- Please send any bugs you found in this document to me as well. (C)
- 1998 by Florian Kuehnert.
-
- 1. Why to use Leafnode?
-
- In normal cases if you want to read news offline on your local
- computer you have to install a news server software like INN or CNews.
- Also you are in the need for an nntp or uucp connection to your
- newsfeed. In fact that such packages contain much more features than
- you need, you run better by installing Leafnode.
-
- Leafnode is much simpler to use and very small but there are some
- disadvantages: Leafnode is slow and loses news in about any error
- situation. That's why you shouldn't use it for a big news server,
- nevertheless, it┤s appropriate for private users who don┤t want spend
- much time configuring INN.
-
- 2. Where to get Leafnode?
-
- Leafnode is available at ftp://ftp.troll.no/pub/freebies/
- <ftp://ftp.troll.no/pub/freebies/> and has been developed by Arnt
- Gulbrandsen, an employee of Troll Tech AS. The recent version is 1.4
- and in some distributions (for example Debian), Leafnode is included.
- However, be sure to use at least version 1.4 as several critical bugs
- were fixed.
-
- 3. How do I install it?
-
- A small installation help comes with the package, but let's do it
- together :-) -- If Leafnode >=1.4 is shipped with your distribution,
- it would be the wisest to use the pre-compiled version and leave out
- the steps 1 to 4.
-
- 1.) Be sure that there is no other news server running on your
- computer. When you type
- $ telnet localhost nntp
- you should get an error message. If you get a connection get back to
- the prompt of your shell, you should uninstall INN, CNews or whatever
- you're running now and comment out the nntp-line in your
- /etc/inetd.conf.
-
- 2.) Make sure that there is a user called "news", check in
- /etc/password for the name. If there isn't, create one (either typing
- $ adduser news
- or using a tool shipped with your distribution).
-
- 3.) Unpack the sources:
- $ tar xfz leafnode-1.4.tar.gz
- and change into the source directory
- $ cd leafnode-1.4
-
- 4.) Compile the program and install it
- $ make; make install
- 5.) Edit /usr/lib/leafnode/config (it may be on any other place like
- /etc/leafnode when you use a pre-compiled version of your Linux
- distribution). The line "server =" should point to the news server of
- your ISP.
-
- 6.) Edit /etc/nntpserver. It should include your local hostname
- (localhost or whatever your computer name is, the command hostname
- should help you). If in some startup file like /etc/profile or
- /.bash_profile the environment variable is defined, you should adjust
- to your computer┤s name as well.
-
- 7.) Edit the /etc/inetd.conf: Make sure that there is no line
- beginning with "nntp". If there is such a line, comment it out putting
- a "#" before it. Then add the following line:
- nntp stream tcp nowait news /usr/sbin/tcpd
- /usr/local/sbin/leafnode
- When someone (for example you :-) connects to your computer on the
- NNTP port, leafnode is started as server process.
-
- 8.) Go online and run the program "fetch" as root or news. The first
- time fetch is started, it will download a list of your ISP's
- newsgroups. This may take some time depending on the speed on your
- connection and the number of groups your ISP has in its active-File.
-
- 9.) Start your favorite newsreader (slrn, (r)tin and knews are not a
- bad start) and subscribe to all your groups you read. Be careful not
- just to subscribe these groups, but also to enter them, even when
- they're empty.
-
- 10.) Start fetch again to download all the news of the groups want to
- get.
-
- 4. How do I maintain leafnode?
-
- Now you have got a working news system up and running, but there are
- still some things to do. You may edit the file
- /usr/lib/leafnode/config to set the expire dates of your groups. This
- number means, when old messages should be deleted. The standard time
- of 20 days is much often too long if you read some groups with much
- traffic, 4 days or a week are in most cases a good time for your
- system. You may change the value for all groups ("expire = n" to hold
- all groups n days), but you tell leafnode to change this time for some
- separate groups writing
- groupexpire foo.bar n
- to set the expire time for the group foo.bar to n days.
-
- This setting alone won't make leafnode deleting old messages, a
- separate program is responsible for this: texpire. It may be started
- as a cron job or by command line. If your computer is up all the time,
- you may want to add the following line to news' crontab file (to edit
- it, log in as news and type "crontab -e" or as type root "crontab -u
- news -e"):
- 0 19 * * * /usr/local/sbin/texpire
- This line causes the cron daemon to star texpire every day at 19:00.
- Check the crontab manual page for further adjustment. If your computer
- is not regularly switched on, you may start texpire just from time to
- time, when you notice that fetch gets slower. It works fine as with
- the "cron-method".
-
- 5. How does it work?
-
- Leafnode is a "real" NNTP server, which means that you can also login
- from a different computer (via Internet, the local network etc.).
- Every time you enter a group in your newsreader, your reader sends the
- information to leafnode and requests it. If the group does not exist,
- leafnode will create an empty file /var/spool/news/interesting.groups,
- named like the group. When you run fetch the next time, it will fetch
- the messages of the group. If a newsgroup has not been visited for a
- certain time, leafnode will stop to fetch its articles and delete its
- name in /var/spool/news/interesting.groups. So if you just subscribed
- to a high traffic newsgroup by accident, you may delete its file there
- by hand for that you won't have to download all the postings there for
- the next week.
-
- A week is not enough for you? You want to go on holiday for three
- weeks and still get news? Unfortunately, there is no option in
- leafnode to change it. But you can edit the file leafnode.h and
- recompile it. The #defined constants are TIMEOUT_LONG and
- TIMEOUT_SHORT, just set the time in seconds up. Another, simpler
- solution is to define a cron-job that does "touch
- /var/spool/news/interesting.groups/*" every night.
-
- If you want to get a list of all avaible groups, look into the file
- /usr/lib/leafnode/groupinfo, where you will find a short description
- on the group.
-
- If you want to re-read the list of newsgroups from your newsfeed (for
- example when you want to read a new group), just delete the file
- /var/spool/news/active.read. Fetch will create it the next time and
- get the new list. Fetch will also re-read the grouplist from time to
- time, so you don't have to do it by hand.
-
- 6. What newsreader should I use?
-
- There is not *the* newsreader for Linux, like there is not *the*
- editor. My favourite newsreader is emacs in gnus mode which is the
- most configurable reader for Linux. Many people are using slrn and tin
- on a terminal, many people use knews under X. There are also trn, nn
- and a lot more reader, so just try what you like. The only reader you
- shouldn't use is Netscape, it is big, feature-less, unstable, and it
- creates sometimes broken postings. However, it is your personal
- decision.
-
- Anyway, knews is no bad idea for your first experiences as it is very
- user-friendly and easy to understand.
-
- 7. Where do I get more information?
-
- Some documentation is provided with the Leafnode package (read the
- files INSTALL and README, the sources are also quite interesting). If
- you want to know more about "professional" and "big" news servers,
- check the INN FAQ (they are provided with the INN package). To get
- information about your newsreader, type man "name of your newsreader"
- or check for other files in /usr/doc.
-
- If you have any questions concerning the news system, just ask in an
- appropriate newsgroup (look in the news.software.ALL hierarchy).
-
- If you have any question, comments or corrections concerning this
- HOWTO, just write to me (sutok@gmx.de).
-
- 8. Thanks
-
- I would like to thank Michael Schulz (michaels@home.on-luebeck.de) for
- his help concerning some language problems and Cornelius Krasel
- (krasel@wpxx02.toxi.uni-wuerzburg.de) for his "touch *"-trick.
-
-