File:  [ELWIX - Embedded LightWeight unIX -] / elwix / config / etc / default / Attic / lynx.cfg.sample
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Tue Jul 5 23:43:00 2011 UTC (13 years ago) by misho
Branches: misho
CVS tags: start, elwix2_7, elwix2_6, elwix2_3, elwix2_2, elwix2_1, elwix2_0, elwix1_9_mips, elwix1_9, elwix1_8, elwix1_7, elwix1_6, elwix1_5, elwix1_4, Patch1, ELWIX2_6, ELWIX2_5, ELWIX2_2p0, ELWIX2_1, ELWIX2_0, ELWIX1_9, ELWIX1_8, ELWIX1_7, ELWIX1_6, ELWIX1_5
ELWIX project

    1: # $LynxId: lynx.cfg,v 1.180 2009/06/07 17:02:21 tom Exp $
    2: # lynx.cfg file.
    3: # The default placement for this file is /usr/local/lib/lynx.cfg (Unix)
    4: #                                     or Lynx_Dir:lynx.cfg (VMS)
    5: #
    6: # $Format: "#PRCS LYNX_VERSION \"$ProjectVersion$\""$
    7: #PRCS LYNX_VERSION "2.8.7rel.1"
    8: #
    9: # $Format: "#PRCS LYNX_DATE \"$ProjectDate$\""$
   10: #PRCS LYNX_DATE "Sun, 05 Jul 2009 16:52:33 -0700"
   11: #
   12: # Definition pairs are of the form  VARIABLE:DEFINITION
   13: # NO spaces are allowed between the pair items.
   14: #
   15: #  If you do not have write access to /usr/local/lib you may change
   16: #  the default location of this file in the userdefs.h file and recompile,
   17: #  or specify its location on the command line with the "-cfg"
   18: #  command line option.
   19: #
   20: # Items may be commented out by putting a '#' as the FIRST char of the line
   21: # (Any line beginning with punctuation is ignored).  Leading blanks on each
   22: # line are ignored; trailing blanks may be significant depending on the option.
   23: 
   24: # An HTML'ized description of all settings (based on comments in this file,
   25: # with alphabetical table of settings and with table of settings by category)
   26: # is available at http://lynx.isc.org/release/lynx2-8-5/lynx_help/cattoc.html
   27: #
   28: ### The conversion is done via the scripts/cfg2html.pl script.
   29: ### Several directives beginning with '.' are used for this purpose.
   30: 
   31: 
   32: .h1 Auxiliary Facilities
   33: # These settings control the auxiliary navigating facilities of lynx, e.g.,
   34: # jumpfiles, bookmarks, default URLs.
   35: 
   36: 
   37: .h2 INCLUDE
   38: # Starting with Lynx 2.8.1, the lynx.cfg file has a crude "include"
   39: # facility.  This means that you can take advantage of the global lynx.cfg
   40: # while also supplying your own tweaks.
   41: #
   42: # You can use a command-line argument (-cfg /where/is/lynx.cfg) or an
   43: # environment variable (LYNX_CFG=/where/is/lynx.cfg).
   44: # For instance, put in your .profile or .login:
   45: #
   46: #   LYNX_CFG=~/lynx.cfg; export LYNX_CFG   # in .profile for sh/ksh/bash/etc.
   47: #   setenv LYNX_CFG ~/lynx.cfg             # in .login for [t]csh
   48: #
   49: # Then in ~/lynx.cfg:
   50: #
   51: #   INCLUDE:/usr/local/lib/lynx.cfg
   52: #           ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ or whatever is appropriate on your system
   53: # and now your own tweaks.
   54: #
   55: # Starting with Lynx 2.8.2, the INCLUDE facility is yet more powerful.  You can
   56: # suppress all but specific settings that will be read from included files.
   57: # This allows sysadmins to provide users the ability to customize lynx with
   58: # options that normally do not affect security, such as COLOR, VIEWER, KEYMAP.
   59: #
   60: # The syntax is
   61: #
   62: #   INCLUDE:filename for <space-separated-list-of-allowed-settings>
   63: #
   64: # sample:
   65: .ex
   66: #INCLUDE:~/lynx.cfg for COLOR VIEWER KEYMAP
   67: # only one space character should surround the word 'for'.  On Unix systems ':'
   68: # is also accepted as separator.  In that case, the example can be written as
   69: .ex
   70: #INCLUDE:~/lynx.cfg:COLOR VIEWER KEYMAP
   71: # In the example, only the settings COLOR, VIEWER and KEYMAP are accepted by
   72: # lynx.  Other settings are ignored.  Note:  INCLUDE is also treated as a
   73: # setting, so to allow an included file to include other files, put INCLUDE in
   74: # the list of allowed settings.
   75: #
   76: # If you allow an included file to include other files, and if a list of
   77: # allowed settings is specified for that file with the INCLUDE command, nested
   78: # files are only allowed to include the list of settings that is the set AND of
   79: # settings allowed for the included file and settings allowed by nested INCLUDE
   80: # commands.  In short, there is no security hole introduced by including a
   81: # user-defined configuration file if the original list of allowed settings is
   82: # secure.
   83: 
   84: 
   85: .h2 STARTFILE
   86: # STARTFILE is the default starting URL if none is specified
   87: #   on the command line or via a WWW_HOME environment variable;
   88: #   Lynx will refuse to start without a starting URL of some kind.
   89: # STARTFILE can be remote, e.g. http://www.w3.org/default.html ,
   90: #                or local, e.g. file://localhost/PATH_TO/FILENAME ,
   91: #           where PATH_TO is replaced with the complete path to FILENAME
   92: #           using Unix shell syntax and including the device on VMS.
   93: #
   94: # Normally we expect you will connect to a remote site, e.g., the Lynx starting
   95: # site:
   96: STARTFILE:http://lynx.isc.org/
   97: #
   98: # As an alternative, you may want to use a local URL.  A good choice for this is
   99: # the user's home directory:
  100: .ex
  101: #STARTFILE:file://localhost/~/
  102: #
  103: # Your choice of STARTFILE should reflect your site's needs, and be a URL that
  104: # you can connect to reliably.  Otherwise users will become confused and think
  105: # that they cannot run Lynx.
  106: 
  107: 
  108: .h2 HELPFILE
  109: # HELPFILE must be defined as a URL and must have a
  110: # complete path if local:
  111: # file://localhost/PATH_TO/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html
  112: #   Replace PATH_TO with the path to the lynx_help subdirectory
  113: #   for this distribution (use SHELL syntax including the device
  114: #   on VMS systems).
  115: # The default HELPFILE is:
  116: # http://lynx.isc.org/release/lynx2-8-6/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html
  117: #   This should be changed to the local path.
  118: # This definition will be overridden if the "LYNX_HELPFILE" environment
  119: # variable has been set.
  120: #
  121: #HELPFILE:http://lynx.isc.org/release/lynx2-8-6/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html
  122: .ex
  123: HELPFILE:file://localhost/usr/local/share/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html.gz
  124: 
  125: 
  126: .h2 DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE
  127: # DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE is the default file retrieved when the
  128: # user presses the 'I' key when viewing any document.
  129: # An index to your CWIS can be placed here or a document containing
  130: # pointers to lots of interesting places on the web.
  131: #
  132: #DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE:http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/MetaIndex.html
  133: DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE:http://lynx.isc.org/
  134: 
  135: 
  136: .h1 Interaction
  137: 
  138: .h2 GOTOBUFFER
  139: # Set GOTOBUFFER to TRUE if you want to have the previous goto URL,
  140: # if any, offered for reuse or editing when using the 'g'oto command.
  141: # The default is defined in userdefs.h.  If left FALSE, the circular
  142: # buffer of previously entered goto URLs can still be invoked via the
  143: # Up-Arrow or Down-Arrow keys after entering the 'g'oto command.
  144: #
  145: #GOTOBUFFER:FALSE
  146: 
  147: 
  148: .h2 JUMP_PROMPT
  149: # JUMP_PROMPT is the default statusline prompt for selecting a jumps file
  150: # shortcut.  (see below).
  151: # You can change the prompt here from that defined in userdefs.h.  Any
  152: # trailing white space will be trimmed, and a single space is added by Lynx
  153: # following the last non-white character.  You must set the default prompt
  154: # before setting the default jumps file (below).  If a default jumps file
  155: # was set via userdefs.h, and you change the prompt here, you must set the
  156: # default jumps file again (below) for the change to be implemented.
  157: #
  158: #JUMP_PROMPT:Jump to (use '?' for list):
  159: 
  160: 
  161: .h1 Auxiliary Facilities
  162: 
  163: .h2 JUMPFILE
  164: # JUMPFILE is the local file checked for short-cut names for URLs
  165: # when the user presses the 'j' (JUMP) key.  The user will be prompted
  166: # to enter a short-cut name for an URL, which Lynx will then follow
  167: # in a similar manner to 'g'oto; alternatively, s/he can enter '?'
  168: # to view the full JUMPFILE list of short-cuts with associated URLs.
  169: # There is an example jumps file in the samples subdirectory.
  170: # If not defined here or in userdefs.h, the JUMP command will invoke
  171: # the NO_JUMPFILE statusline message (see  LYMessages_en.h ).
  172: #
  173: # To allow '?' to work, include in the JUMPFILE
  174: # a short-cut to the JUMPFILE itself, e.g.
  175: # <dt>?<dd><a href="file://localhost/path/jumps.html">This Shortcut List</a>
  176: #
  177: # On VMS, use Unix SHELL syntax (including a lead slash) to define it.
  178: #
  179: # Alternate jumps files can be defined and mapped to keys here.  If the
  180: # keys have already been mapped, then those mappings will be replaced,
  181: # but you should leave at least one key mapped to the default jumps
  182: # file.  You optionally may include a statusline prompt string for the
  183: # mapping.  You must map upper and lowercase keys separately (beware of
  184: # mappings to keys which the user can further remap via the 'o'ptions
  185: # menu).  The format is:
  186: #
  187: #	JUMPFILE:path:key[:prompt]
  188: #
  189: # where path should begin with a '/' (i.e., not include file://localhost).
  190: # Any white space following a prompt string will be trimmed, and a single
  191: # space will be added by Lynx.
  192: #
  193: # In the following line, include the actual full local path to JUMPFILE,
  194: # but do not include 'file://localhost' in the line.
  195: #JUMPFILE:/FULL_LOCAL_PATH/jumps.html
  196: .ex
  197: #JUMPFILE:/Lynx_Dir/ips.html:i:IP or Interest group (? for list):
  198: 
  199: 
  200: .h2 JUMPBUFFER
  201: # Set JUMPBUFFER to TRUE if you want to have the previous jump target,
  202: # if any, offered for reuse or editing when using the 'J'ump command.
  203: # The default is defined in userdefs.h.  If left FALSE, the circular
  204: # buffer of previously entered targets (shortcuts) can still be invoked
  205: # via the Up-Arrow or Down-Arrow keys after entering the 'J'ump command.
  206: # If multiple jumps files are installed, the recalls of shortcuts will
  207: # be specific to each file.  If Lynx was built with PERMIT_GOTO_FROM_JUMP
  208: # defined, any random URLs used instead of shortcuts will be stored in the
  209: # goto URL buffer, not in the shortcuts buffer(s), and the single character
  210: # ':' can be used as a target to invoke the goto URL buffer (as if 'g'oto
  211: # followed by Up-Arrow had been entered).
  212: #
  213: #JUMPBUFFER:FALSE
  214: 
  215: 
  216: .h1 Internal Behavior
  217: 
  218: .h2 SAVE_SPACE
  219: # If SAVE_SPACE is defined, it will be used as a path prefix for the
  220: # suggested filename in "Save to Disk" operations from the 'p'rint or
  221: # 'd'ownload menus.  On VMS, you can use either VMS (e.g., "SYS$LOGIN:")
  222: # or Unix syntax (including '~' for the HOME directory).  On Unix, you
  223: # must use Unix syntax.  If the symbol is not defined, or is zero-length
  224: # (""), no prefix will be used, and only a filename for saving in the
  225: # current default directory will be suggested.
  226: # This definition will be overridden if a "LYNX_SAVE_SPACE" environment
  227: # variable has been set on Unix, or logical has been defined on VMS.
  228: #
  229: #SAVE_SPACE:~/foo/
  230: 
  231: 
  232: .h2 REUSE_TEMPFILES
  233: # Lynx uses temporary files for (among other purposes) the content of
  234: # various user interface pages.  REUSE_TEMPFILES changes the behavior
  235: # for some of these temp files, among them pages shown for HISTORY,
  236: # VLINKS, OPTIONS, INFO, PRINT, DOWNLOAD commands.
  237: # If set to TRUE, the same file can be used multiple times for the same
  238: # purpose.  If set to FALSE, a new filename is generated each time before
  239: # rewriting such a page.  With TRUE, repeated invocation of these commands
  240: # is less likely to push previous documents out of the cache of rendered
  241: # texts (see also DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE).  This is especially useful with
  242: # intermittent (dialup) network connections, when it is desirable to
  243: # continue browsing through the cached documents after disconnecting.
  244: # With the default setting of FALSE, there can be more than one incarnation
  245: # of e.g. the VLINKS page cached in memory (but still only the most recently
  246: # generated one is kept as a file), resulting in sometimes less surprising
  247: # behaviour when returning to such a page via HISTORY or PREV_DOC functions
  248: # (most users will not encounter and notice this difference).
  249: #
  250: #REUSE_TEMPFILES:FALSE
  251: 
  252: 
  253: .h2 LYNX_HOST_NAME
  254: # If LYNX_HOST_NAME is defined here or in userdefs.h, it will be
  255: # treated as an alias for the local host name in checks for URLs on
  256: # the local host (e.g., when the -localhost switch is set), and this
  257: # host name, "localhost", and HTHostName (the fully qualified domain
  258: # name of the system on which Lynx is running) will all be passed as
  259: # local.  A different definition here will override that in userdefs.h.
  260: #
  261: #LYNX_HOST_NAME:www.cc.ukans.edu
  262: 
  263: 
  264: .h2 LOCALHOST_ALIAS
  265: # localhost aliases
  266: # Any LOCALHOST_ALIAS definitions also will be accepted as local when
  267: # the -localhost switch is set.  These need not actually be local, i.e.,
  268: # in contrast to LYNX_HOST_NAME, you can define them to trusted hosts at
  269: # other Internet sites.
  270: #
  271: .ex 2
  272: #LOCALHOST_ALIAS:gopher.server.domain
  273: #LOCALHOST_ALIAS:news.server.domain
  274: 
  275: 
  276: .h2 LOCAL_DOMAIN
  277: # LOCAL_DOMAIN is used for a tail match with the ut_host element of
  278: # the utmp or utmpx structure on systems with utmp capabilities, to
  279: # determine if a user is local to your campus or organization when
  280: # handling -restrictions=inside_foo or outside_foo settings for ftp,
  281: # news, telnet/tn3270 and rlogin URLs.  An "inside" user is assumed
  282: # if your system does not have utmp capabilities.  CHANGE THIS here
  283: # if it was not changed in userdefs.h at compilation time.
  284: #
  285: #LOCAL_DOMAIN:ukans.edu
  286: 
  287: 
  288: .h1 Session support
  289: 
  290: .h2 AUTO_SESSION
  291: # If AUTO_SESSION is TRUE lynx will save/restore useful information about
  292: # your browsing history when closing/starting current lynx session if
  293: # no command-line session switches override this setting.
  294: # This setting is useful only if SESSION_FILE is defined here or in the user's
  295: # .lynxrc file.
  296: #
  297: #AUTO_SESSION:FALSE
  298: 
  299: .h2 SESSION_FILE
  300: # SESSION_FILE defines the file name where lynx will store user sessions.
  301: # This setting is used only when AUTO_SESSION is true.
  302: # Note: the default setting will store/resume each session in a different
  303: # folder under same file name (if that is allowed by operating system)
  304: # when lynx is invoked from different directories.
  305: # (The current working directory may be changed inside lynx)
  306: #
  307: # If you want to use the same session file wherever you invoke Lynx,
  308: # enter the full path below, eg '/home/<username>/.lynx_session'.
  309: #
  310: # If you do not want this feature, leave the setting commented.
  311: # Users can still customize SESSION_FILE and AUTO_SESSION via
  312: # their .lynxrc file.
  313: #
  314: #SESSION_FILE:lynx_session
  315: 
  316: .h2 SESSION_LIMIT
  317: # SESSION_LIMIT defines maximum number of:  searched strings, goto URLs,
  318: # visited links and history entries which will be saved in session file.  The
  319: # minimum allowed is 1, the maximum is 10000.
  320: #
  321: # For instance, if SESSION_LIMIT is 250, a per-session limit of 250 entries of
  322: # searched strings, goto URLs, visited links and history entries will be saved
  323: # in the session file.
  324: #
  325: # There is no fixed limit on the number of entries which can be restored;
  326: # It is limited only by available memory.
  327: #
  328: #SESSION_LIMIT:250
  329: 
  330: 
  331: .h1 Character sets
  332: 
  333: .h2 CHARACTER_SET
  334: # CHARACTER_SET defines the display character set, i.e., assumed to be
  335: # installed on the user's terminal.  It determines which characters or strings
  336: # will be used to represent 8-bit character entities within HTML.  New
  337: # character sets may be defined as explained in the README files of the
  338: # src/chrtrans directory in the Lynx source code distribution.  For Asian (CJK)
  339: # character sets, it also determines how Kanji code will be handled.  The
  340: # default is defined in userdefs.h and can be changed here or via the
  341: # 'o'ptions menu.  The 'o'ptions menu setting will be stored in the user's RC
  342: # file whenever those settings are saved, and thereafter will be used as the
  343: # default.  For Lynx a "character set" has two names:  a MIME name (for
  344: # recognizing properly labeled charset parameters in HTTP headers etc.), and a
  345: # human-readable string for the 'O'ptions Menu (so you may find info about
  346: # language or group of languages besides MIME name).  Not all 'human-readable'
  347: # names correspond to exactly one valid MIME charset (example is "Chinese");
  348: # in that case an appropriate valid (and more specific) MIME name should be
  349: # used where required.  Well-known synonyms are also processed in the code.
  350: #
  351: # Raw (CJK) mode
  352: #
  353: # Lynx normally translates characters from a document's charset to display
  354: # charset, using ASSUME_CHARSET value (see below) if the document's charset
  355: # is not specified explicitly.  Raw (CJK) mode is OFF for this case.
  356: # When the document charset is specified explicitly, that charset
  357: # overrides any assumption like ASSUME_CHARSET or raw (CJK) mode.
  358: #
  359: # For the Asian (CJK) display character sets, the corresponding charset is
  360: # assumed in documents, i.e., raw (CJK) mode is ON by default.  In raw CJK
  361: # mode, 8-bit characters are not reverse translated in relation to the entity
  362: # conversion arrays, i.e., they are assumed to be appropriate for the display
  363: # character set.  The mode should be toggled OFF when an Asian (CJK) display
  364: # character set is selected but the document is not CJK and its charset not
  365: # specified explicitly.
  366: #
  367: # Raw (CJK) mode may be toggled by user via '@' (LYK_RAW_TOGGLE) key,
  368: # the -raw command line switch or from the 'o'ptions menu.
  369: #
  370: # Raw (CJK) mode effectively changes the charset assumption about unlabeled
  371: # documents.  You can toggle raw mode ON if you believe the document has a
  372: # charset which does correspond to your Display Character Set.  On the other
  373: # hand, if you set ASSUME_CHARSET the same as Display Character Set you get raw
  374: # mode ON by default (but you get assume_charset=iso-8859-1 if you try raw mode
  375: # OFF after it).
  376: #
  377: # Note that "raw" does not mean that every byte will be passed to the screen.
  378: # HTML character entities may get expanded and translated, inappropriate
  379: # control characters filtered out, etc.  There is a "Transparent" pseudo
  380: # character set for more "rawness".
  381: #
  382: # Since Lynx now supports a wide range of platforms it may be useful to note
  383: # the cpXXX codepages used by IBM PC compatible computers, and windows-xxxx
  384: # used by native MS-Windows apps.  We also note that cpXXX pages rarely are
  385: # found on Internet, but are mostly for local needs on DOS.
  386: #
  387: # Recognized character sets include:
  388: #
  389: .nf
  390: #    string for 'O'ptions Menu          MIME name
  391: #    ===========================        =========
  392: #    7 bit approximations (US-ASCII)    us-ascii
  393: #    Western (ISO-8859-1)               iso-8859-1
  394: #    Western (ISO-8859-15)              iso-8859-15
  395: #    Western (cp850)                    cp850
  396: #    Western (windows-1252)             windows-1252
  397: #    IBM PC US codepage (cp437)         cp437
  398: #    DEC Multinational                  dec-mcs
  399: #    Macintosh (8 bit)                  macintosh
  400: #    NeXT character set                 next
  401: #    HP Roman8                          hp-roman8
  402: #    Chinese                            euc-cn
  403: #    Japanese (EUC-JP)                  euc-jp
  404: #    Japanese (Shift_JIS)               shift_jis
  405: #    Korean                             euc-kr
  406: #    Taipei (Big5)                      big5
  407: #    Vietnamese (VISCII)                viscii
  408: #    Eastern European (ISO-8859-2)      iso-8859-2
  409: #    Eastern European (cp852)           cp852
  410: #    Eastern European (windows-1250)    windows-1250
  411: #    Latin 3 (ISO-8859-3)               iso-8859-3
  412: #    Latin 4 (ISO-8859-4)               iso-8859-4
  413: #    Baltic Rim (ISO-8859-13)		iso-8859-13
  414: #    Baltic Rim (cp775)                 cp775
  415: #    Baltic Rim (windows-1257)          windows-1257
  416: #    Celtic (ISO-8859-14)		iso-8859-14
  417: #    Cyrillic (ISO-8859-5)              iso-8859-5
  418: #    Cyrillic (cp866)                   cp866
  419: #    Cyrillic (windows-1251)            windows-1251
  420: #    Cyrillic (KOI8-R)                  koi8-r
  421: #    Arabic (ISO-8859-6)                iso-8859-6
  422: #    Arabic (cp864)                     cp864
  423: #    Arabic (windows-1256)              windows-1256
  424: #    Greek (ISO-8859-7)                 iso-8859-7
  425: #    Greek (cp737)                      cp737
  426: #    Greek2 (cp869)                     cp869
  427: #    Greek (windows-1253)               windows-1253
  428: #    Hebrew (ISO-8859-8)                iso-8859-8
  429: #    Hebrew (cp862)                     cp862
  430: #    Hebrew (windows-1255)              windows-1255
  431: #    Turkish (ISO-8859-9)               iso-8859-9
  432: #    North European (ISO-8859-10)	iso-8859-10
  433: #    Ukrainian Cyrillic (cp866u)        cp866u
  434: #    Ukrainian Cyrillic (KOI8-U)        koi8-u
  435: #    UNICODE (UTF-8)                    utf-8
  436: #    RFC 1345 w/o Intro                 mnemonic+ascii+0
  437: #    RFC 1345 Mnemonic                  mnemonic
  438: #    Transparent                        x-transparent
  439: .fi
  440: #
  441: # The value should be the MIME name of a character set recognized by
  442: # Lynx (case insensitive).
  443: # Find RFC 1345 at http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/uri/rfc1345.txt .
  444: #
  445: #CHARACTER_SET:iso-8859-1
  446: 
  447: .h2 LOCALE_CHARSET
  448: # LOCALE_CHARSET overrides CHARACTER_SET if true, using the current locale to
  449: # lookup a MIME name that corresponds, and use that as the display charset.
  450: #
  451: # Note that while nl_langinfo(CODESET) itself is standardized, the return
  452: # values and their relationship to the locale value is not.  GNU libiconv
  453: # happens to give useful values, but other implementations are not guaranteed
  454: # to do this.
  455: #LOCALE_CHARSET:FALSE
  456: 
  457: 
  458: .h2 ASSUME_CHARSET
  459: # ASSUME_CHARSET changes the handling of documents which do not
  460: # explicitly specify a charset.  Normally Lynx assumes that 8-bit
  461: # characters in those documents are encoded according to iso-8859-1
  462: # (the official default for the HTTP protocol).  When ASSUME_CHARSET
  463: # is defined here or by an -assume_charset command line flag is in effect,
  464: # Lynx will treat documents as if they were encoded accordingly.
  465: # See above on how this interacts with "raw mode" and the Display
  466: # Character Set.
  467: # ASSUME_CHARSET can also be changed via the 'o'ptions menu but will
  468: # not be saved as permanent value in user's .lynxrc file to avoid more chaos.
  469: #
  470: #ASSUME_CHARSET:iso-8859-1
  471: 
  472: 
  473: .h2 ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE
  474: .h2 DISPLAY_CHARSET_CHOICE
  475: # It is possible to reduce the number of charset choices in the 'O'ptions menu
  476: # for "display charset" and "assumed document charset" fields via
  477: # DISPLAY_CHARSET_CHOICE and ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE settings correspondingly.
  478: # Each of these settings can be used several times to define the set of possible
  479: # choices for corresponding field. The syntax for the values is
  480: #
  481: #	string | prefix* | *
  482: #
  483: # where
  484: #
  485: #	'string' is either the MIME name of charset or it's full name (listed
  486: #		either in the left or in the right column of table of
  487: #		recognized charsets), case-insensitive - e.g.  'Koi8-R' or
  488: #		'Cyrillic (KOI8-R)' (both without quotes),
  489: #
  490: #	'prefix' is any string, and such value will select all charsets having
  491: #		the name with prefix matching given (case insensitive), i.e.,
  492: #		for the charsets listed in the table of recognized charsets,
  493: #
  494: .ex
  495: # ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:cyrillic*
  496: #		will be equal to specifying
  497: .ex 4
  498: # ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:cp866
  499: # ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:windows-1251
  500: # ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:koi8-r
  501: # ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:iso-8859-5
  502: #		or lines with full names of charsets.
  503: #
  504: #	literal string '*' (without quotes) will enable all charset choices
  505: #		in corresponding field.  This is useful for overriding site
  506: #		defaults in private pieces of lynx.cfg included via INCLUDE
  507: #		directive.
  508: #
  509: # Default values for both settings are '*', but any occurrence of settings
  510: # with values that denote any charsets will make only listed choices available
  511: # for corresponding field.
  512: #ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:*
  513: #DISPLAY_CHARSET_CHOICE:*
  514: 
  515: 
  516: .h2 ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET
  517: # ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET is like ASSUME_CHARSET but only applies to local
  518: # files.  If no setting is given here or by an -assume_local_charset
  519: # command line option, the value for ASSUME_CHARSET or -assume_charset
  520: # is used.  It works for both text/plain and text/html files.
  521: # This option will ignore "raw mode" toggling when local files are viewed
  522: # (it is "stronger" than "assume_charset" or the effective change
  523: # of the charset assumption caused by changing "raw mode"),
  524: # so only use when necessary.
  525: #
  526: #ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET:iso-8859-1
  527: 
  528: 
  529: .h2 PREPEND_CHARSET_TO_SOURCE
  530: # PREPEND_CHARSET_TO_SOURCE:TRUE tells Lynx to prepend a META CHARSET line
  531: # to text/html source files when they are retrieved for 'd'ownloading
  532: # or passed to 'p'rint functions, so HTTP headers will not be lost.
  533: # This is necessary for resolving charset for local html files,
  534: # while the assume_local_charset is just an assumption.
  535: # For the 'd'ownload option, a META CHARSET will be added only if the HTTP
  536: # charset is present.  The compilation default is TRUE.
  537: # It is generally desirable to have charset information for every local
  538: # html file, but META CHARSET string potentially could cause
  539: # compatibility problems with other browsers, see also PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE.
  540: # Note that the prepending is not done for -source dumps.
  541: #
  542: #PREPEND_CHARSET_TO_SOURCE:TRUE
  543: 
  544: 
  545: .h2 NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS
  546: # NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS:TRUE allows you to save 8-bit characters in bookmark titles
  547: # in the unicode format (NCR).  This may be useful if you need to switch
  548: # display charsets frequently.  This is the case when you use Lynx on different
  549: # platforms, e.g., on UNIX and from a remote PC, and want to keep the bookmarks
  550: # file persistent.
  551: # Another aspect is compatibility:  NCR is part of I18N and HTML4.0
  552: # specifications supported starting with Lynx 2.7.2, Netscape 4.0 and MSIE 4.0.
  553: # Older browser versions will fail so keep NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS:FALSE if you
  554: # plan to use them.
  555: #
  556: #NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS:FALSE
  557: 
  558: 
  559: .h2 FORCE_8BIT_TOUPPER
  560: # FORCE_8BIT_TOUPPER overrides locale settings and uses internal 8-bit
  561: # case-conversion mechanism for case-insensitive searches in non-ASCII display
  562: # character sets.  It is FALSE by default and should not be changed unless
  563: # you encounter problems with case-insensitive searches.
  564: #
  565: #FORCE_8BIT_TOUPPER:FALSE
  566: 
  567: 
  568: .h2 OUTGOING_MAIL_CHARSET
  569: # While Lynx supports different platforms and display character sets
  570: # we need to limit the charset in outgoing mail to reduce
  571: # trouble for remote recipients who may not recognize our charset.
  572: # You may try US-ASCII as the safest value (7 bit), any other MIME name,
  573: # or leave this field blank (default) to use the display character set.
  574: # Charset translations currently are implemented for mail "subjects= " only.
  575: #
  576: #OUTGOING_MAIL_CHARSET:
  577: 
  578: 
  579: .h2 ASSUME_UNREC_CHARSET
  580: # If Lynx encounters a charset parameter it doesn't recognize, it will
  581: # replace the value given by ASSUME_UNREC_CHARSET (or a corresponding
  582: # -assume_unrec_charset command line option) for it.  This can be used
  583: # to deal with charsets unknown to Lynx, if they are "sufficiently
  584: # similar" to one that Lynx does know about, by forcing the same
  585: # treatment.  There is no default, and you probably should leave this
  586: # undefined unless necessary.
  587: #
  588: #ASSUME_UNREC_CHARSET:iso-8859-1
  589: 
  590: .h2 PREFERRED_LANGUAGE
  591: # PREFERRED_LANGUAGE is the language in MIME notation (e.g., "en",
  592: # "fr") which will be indicated by Lynx in its Accept-Language headers
  593: # as the preferred language.  If available, the document will be
  594: # transmitted in that language.  Users can override this setting via
  595: # the 'o'ptions menu and save that preference in their RC file.
  596: # This may be a comma-separated list of languages in decreasing preference.
  597: #
  598: #PREFERRED_LANGUAGE:en
  599: 
  600: 
  601: .h2 PREFERRED_CHARSET
  602: # PREFERRED_CHARSET specifies the character set in MIME notation (e.g.,
  603: # "ISO-8859-2", "ISO-8859-5") which Lynx will indicate you prefer in
  604: # requests to http servers using an Accept-Charsets header.  Users can
  605: # change it via the 'o'ptions menu and save that preference in their RC file.
  606: # The value should NOT include "ISO-8859-1" or "US-ASCII",
  607: # since those values are always assumed by default.
  608: # If a file in that character set is available, the server will send it.
  609: # If no Accept-Charset header is present, the default is that any
  610: # character set is acceptable.  If an Accept-Charset header is present,
  611: # and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable
  612: # according to the Accept-Charset header, then the server SHOULD send
  613: # an error response with the 406 (not acceptable) status code, though
  614: # the sending of an unacceptable response is also allowed.  See RFC 2068
  615: # (http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/uri/rfc2068.txt).
  616: #
  617: #PREFERRED_CHARSET:
  618: 
  619: 
  620: .h2 CHARSETS_DIRECTORY
  621: # CHARSETS_DIRECTORY specifies the directory with the fonts (glyph data)
  622: # used by Lynx to switch the display-font to a font best suited for the
  623: # given document.  The font should be in a format understood by the
  624: # platforms TTY-display-font-switching API.  Currently supported on OS/2 only.
  625: #
  626: # Lynx expects the glyphs for the charset CHARSET with character cell
  627: # size HHHxWWW to be stored in a file HHHxWWW/CHARSET.fnt inside the directory
  628: # specified by CHARSETS_DIRECTORY.  E.g., the font for koi8-r sized 14x9
  629: # should be in the file 14x9/koi8-r.fnt.
  630: #
  631: #CHARSETS_DIRECTORY:
  632: 
  633: 
  634: .h2 CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES
  635: # CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES hints lynx on how to choose the best display font given
  636: # the document encoding.  This string is a sequence of chunks, each chunk
  637: # having the following form:
  638: #
  639: # IN_CHARSET1 IN_CHARSET2 ... IN_CHARSET5 :OUT_CHARSET
  640: #
  641: # For readability, one may insert arbitrary additional punctuation (anything
  642: # but : is ignored).  E.g., if lynx is able to switch only to display charsets
  643: # cp866, cp850, cp852, and cp862, then the following setting may be useful
  644: # (split for readability):
  645: #
  646: # CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES: koi8-r ISO-8859-5 windows-1251 cp866u KOI8-U :cp866,
  647: #	iso-8859-1 windows-1252 ISO-8859-15 :cp850,
  648: #	ISO-8859-2 windows-1250 :cp852,
  649: #	ISO-8859-8 windows-1255 :cp862
  650: #
  651: #CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES:
  652: 
  653: 
  654: .h1 Interaction
  655: 
  656: .h2 URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES
  657: .h2 URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES
  658: # URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES and URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES are strings which will be
  659: # prepended (together with a scheme://) and appended to the first element
  660: # of command line or 'g'oto arguments which are not complete URLs and
  661: # cannot be opened as a local file (file://localhost/string).  Both
  662: # can be comma-separated lists.  Each prefix must end with a dot, each
  663: # suffix must begin with a dot, and either may contain other dots (e.g.,
  664: # .com.jp).  The default lists are defined in userdefs.h and can be
  665: # replaced here.  Each prefix will be used with each suffix, in order,
  666: # until a valid Internet host is created, based on a successful DNS
  667: # lookup (e.g., foo will be tested as www.foo.com and then www.foo.edu
  668: # etc.).  The first element can include a :port and/or /path which will
  669: # be restored with the expanded host (e.g., wfbr:8002/dir/lynx will
  670: # become http://www.wfbr.edu:8002/dir/lynx).  The prefixes will not be
  671: # used if the first element ends in a dot (or has a dot before the
  672: # :port or /path), and similarly the suffixes will not be used if the
  673: # the first element begins with a dot (e.g., .nyu.edu will become
  674: # http://www.nyu.edu without testing www.nyu.com).  Lynx will try to
  675: # guess the scheme based on the first field of the expanded host name,
  676: # and use "http://" as the default (e.g., gopher.wfbr.edu or gopher.wfbr.
  677: # will be made gopher://gopher.wfbr.edu).
  678: #
  679: #URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES:www.
  680: #URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES:.com,.edu,.net,.org
  681: 
  682: 
  683: .h2 FORMS_OPTIONS
  684: # Toggle whether the Options Menu is key-based or form-based;
  685: # the key-based version is available only if specified at compile time.
  686: #FORMS_OPTIONS:TRUE
  687: 
  688: 
  689: .h2 PARTIAL
  690: # Display partial pages while downloading
  691: #PARTIAL:TRUE
  692: 
  693: 
  694: .h2 PARTIAL_THRES
  695: # Set the threshold # of lines Lynx must render before it
  696: # redraws the screen in PARTIAL mode.  Anything < 0 implies
  697: # use of the screen size.
  698: #PARTIAL_THRES:-1
  699: 
  700: 
  701: .h2 SHOW_KB_RATE
  702: # While getting large files, Lynx shows the approximate rate of transfer.
  703: # Set this to change the units shown.  "Kilobytes" denotes 1024 bytes:
  704: #	NONE to disable the display of transfer rate altogether.
  705: #	TRUE or KB for Kilobytes/second.
  706: #	FALSE or BYTES for bytes/second.
  707: #	KB,ETA to show Kilobytes/second with estimated completion time.
  708: #	BYTES,ETA to show BYTES/second with estimated completion time.
  709: # Note that the "ETA" values are available if USE_READPROGRESS was defined.
  710: #SHOW_KB_RATE:TRUE
  711: 
  712: .h2 SHOW_KB_NAME
  713: # Set the abbreviation for Kilobytes (1024).
  714: # Quoting from
  715: #	http://www.romulus2.com/articles/guides/misc/bitsbytes.shtml
  716: # In December 1998, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
  717: # approved a new IEC International Standard.  Instead of using the metric
  718: # prefixes for multiples in binary code, the new IEC standard invented specific
  719: # prefixes for binary multiples made up of only the first two letters of the
  720: # metric prefixes and adding the first two letters of the word "binary".  Thus,
  721: # for instance, instead of Kilobyte (KB) or Gigabyte (GB), the new terms would
  722: # be kibibyte (KiB) or gibibyte (GiB).
  723: #
  724: # If you prefer using the conventional (and more common) "KB", modify this
  725: # setting.
  726: #SHOW_KB_NAME:KiB
  727: 
  728: .h1 Timeouts
  729: 
  730: .h2 INFOSECS
  731: .h2 MESSAGESECS
  732: .h2 ALERTSECS
  733: .h2 NO_PAUSE
  734: # The following definitions set the number of seconds for
  735: # pauses following statusline messages that would otherwise be
  736: # replaced immediately, and are more important than the unpaused
  737: # progress messages.  Those set by INFOSECS are also basically
  738: # progress messages (e.g., that a prompted input has been canceled)
  739: # and should have the shortest pause.  Those set by MESSAGESECS are
  740: # informational (e.g., that a function is disabled) and should have
  741: # a pause of intermediate duration.  Those set by ALERTSECS typically
  742: # report a serious problem and should be paused long enough to read
  743: # whenever they appear (typically unexpectedly).  The default values
  744: # are defined in userdefs.h, and can be modified here should longer
  745: # pauses be desired for braille-based access to Lynx.
  746: #
  747: # SVr4-curses implementations support time delays in milliseconds,
  748: # hence the value may be given shorter, e.g., 0.5
  749: #
  750: # Use the NO_PAUSE option (like the command-line -nopause) to override
  751: # all of the delay times.
  752: #
  753: #INFOSECS:1
  754: #MESSAGESECS:2
  755: #ALERTSECS:3
  756: #NO_PAUSE:FALSE
  757: 
  758: .h2 DEBUGSECS
  759: # Set DEBUGSECS to a nonzero value to slow down progress messages
  760: # (see "-delay" option).
  761: #DEBUGSECS:0
  762: 
  763: .h2 REPLAYSECS
  764: # Set REPLAYSECS to a nonzero value to allow for slow replaying of
  765: # command scripts (see "-cmd_script" option).
  766: #REPLAYSECS:0
  767: 
  768: .h1 Appearance
  769: # These settings control the appearance of Lynx's screen and the way
  770: # Lynx renders some tags.
  771: 
  772: .h2 USE_SELECT_POPUPS
  773: # If USE_SELECT_POPUPS is set FALSE, Lynx will present a vertical list of
  774: # radio buttons for the OPTIONs in SELECT blocks which lack the MULTIPLE
  775: # attribute, instead of using a popup menu.  Note that if the MULTIPLE
  776: # attribute is present in the SELECT start tag, Lynx always will create a
  777: # vertical list of checkboxes for the OPTIONs.
  778: # The default defined here or in userdefs.h can be changed via the 'o'ptions
  779: # menu and saved in the RC file, and always can be toggled via the -popup
  780: # command line switch.
  781: #
  782: #USE_SELECT_POPUPS:TRUE
  783: 
  784: 
  785: .h2 SHOW_CURSOR
  786: # SHOW_CURSOR controls whether or not the cursor is hidden or appears
  787: # over the current link in documents or the current option in popups.
  788: # Showing the cursor is handy if you are a sighted user with a poor
  789: # terminal that can't do bold and reverse video at the same time or
  790: # at all.  It also can be useful to blind users, as an alternative
  791: # or supplement to setting LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED or
  792: # LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED.
  793: # The default defined here or in userdefs.h can be changed via the
  794: # 'o'ptions menu and saved in the RC file, and always can be toggled
  795: # via the -show_cursor command line switch.
  796: #
  797: #SHOW_CURSOR:FALSE
  798: 
  799: .h2 UNDERLINE_LINKS
  800: # UNDERLINE_LINKS controls whether links are underlined by default, or shown
  801: # in bold.  Normally this default is set from the configure script.
  802: #
  803: #UNDERLINE_LINKS:FALSE
  804: 
  805: .h2 BOLD_HEADERS
  806: # If BOLD_HEADERS is set to TRUE the HT_BOLD default style will be acted
  807: # upon for <H1> through <H6> headers.  The compilation default is FALSE
  808: # (only the indentation styles are acted upon, but see BOLD_H1, below).
  809: # On Unix, compilation with -DUNDERLINE_LINKS also will apply to the
  810: # HT_BOLD style for headers when BOLD_HEADERS is TRUE.
  811: #
  812: #BOLD_HEADERS:FALSE
  813: 
  814: 
  815: .h2 BOLD_H1
  816: # If BOLD_H1 is set to TRUE the HT_BOLD default style will be acted
  817: # upon for <H1> headers even if BOLD_HEADERS is FALSE.  The compilation
  818: # default is FALSE.  On Unix, compilation with -DUNDERLINE_LINKS also
  819: # will apply to the HT_BOLD style for headers when BOLD_H1 is TRUE.
  820: #
  821: #BOLD_H1:FALSE
  822: 
  823: 
  824: .h2 BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS
  825: # If BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS is set to TRUE the content of anchors without
  826: # an HREF attribute, (i.e., anchors with a NAME or ID attribute) will
  827: # have the HT_BOLD default style.  The compilation default is FALSE.
  828: # On Unix, compilation with -DUNDERLINE_LINKS also will apply to the
  829: # HT_BOLD style for NAME (ID) anchors when BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS is TRUE.
  830: #
  831: #BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS:FALSE
  832: 
  833: 
  834: .h1 Internal Behavior
  835: 
  836: .h2 DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE
  837: .h2 DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE
  838: # The DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE specifies the number of WWW documents to be
  839: # cached in memory at one time.
  840: #
  841: # This so-called cache size (actually, number) is defined in userdefs.h and
  842: # may be modified here and/or with the command line argument -cache=NUMBER
  843: # The minimum allowed value is 2, for the current document and at least one
  844: # to fetch, and there is no absolute maximum number of cached documents.
  845: # On Unix, and VMS not compiled with VAXC, whenever the number is exceeded
  846: # the least recently displayed document will be removed from memory.
  847: #
  848: # On VMS compiled with VAXC, the DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE specifies the
  849: # amount (bytes) of virtual memory that can be allocated and not yet be freed
  850: # before previous documents are removed from memory.  If the values for both
  851: # the DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE and DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE are exceeded, then
  852: # the least recently displayed documents will be freed until one or the other
  853: # value is no longer exceeded.  The default value is defined in userdefs.h.
  854: #
  855: # The Unix and VMS (but not VAXC) implementations use the C library malloc's
  856: # and calloc's for memory allocation, but procedures for taking the actual
  857: # amount of cache into account still need to be developed.  They use only
  858: # the DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE value, and that specifies the absolute maximum
  859: # number of documents to cache (rather than the maximum number only if
  860: # DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE has been exceeded, as with VAXC/VAX).
  861: #
  862: #DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE:10
  863: #DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE:512000
  864: 
  865: 
  866: .h2 SOURCE_CACHE
  867: # SOURCE_CACHE sets the source caching behavior for Lynx:
  868: # FILE causes Lynx to keep a temporary file for each cached document
  869: #   containing the HTML source of the document, which it uses to regenerate
  870: #   the document when certain settings are changed (for instance,
  871: #   historical vs. minimal vs. valid comment parsing) instead of reloading
  872: #   the source from the network.
  873: # MEMORY is like FILE, except the document source is kept in memory.  You
  874: #   may wish to adjust DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE and DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE
  875: #   accordingly.
  876: # NONE is the default; the document source is not cached, and is reloaded
  877: #   from the network when needed.
  878: #
  879: #SOURCE_CACHE:NONE
  880: 
  881: 
  882: .h2 SOURCE_CACHE_FOR_ABORTED
  883: # This setting controls what will happen with cached source for the document
  884: # being fetched from the net if fetching was aborted (either user pressed
  885: # 'z' or network went down). If set to KEEP, the source fetched so far will
  886: # be preserved (and used as cache), if set to DROP lynx will drop the
  887: # source cache for that document (i.e. only completely downloaded documents
  888: # will be cached in that case).
  889: #SOURCE_CACHE_FOR_ABORTED:DROP
  890: 
  891: .h2 ALWAYS_RESUBMIT_POSTS
  892: # If ALWAYS_RESUBMIT_POSTS is set TRUE, Lynx always will resubmit forms
  893: # with method POST, dumping any cache from a previous submission of the
  894: # form, including when the document returned by that form is sought with
  895: # the PREV_DOC command or via the history list.  Lynx always resubmits
  896: # forms with method POST when a submit button or a submitting text input
  897: # is activated, but normally retrieves the previously returned document
  898: # if it had links which you activated, and then go back with the PREV_DOC
  899: # command or via the history list.
  900: #
  901: # The default defined here or in userdefs.h can be toggled via
  902: # the -resubmit_forms command line switch.
  903: #
  904: #ALWAYS_RESUBMIT_POSTS:FALSE
  905: 
  906: .h2 TRIM_INPUT_FIELDS
  907: # If TRIM_INPUT_FIELDS is set TRUE, Lynx will trim trailing whitespace (e.g.,
  908: # space, tab, carriage return, line feed and form feed) from the text entered
  909: # into form text and textarea fields.  Older versions of Lynx do this trimming
  910: # unconditionally, but other browsers do not, which would yield different
  911: # behavior for CGI scripts.
  912: #TRIM_INPUT_FIELDS:FALSE
  913: 
  914: .h1 HTML Parsing
  915: 
  916: .h2 NO_ISMAP_IF_USEMAP
  917: # If NO_ISMAP_IF_USEMAP is set TRUE, Lynx will not include a link to the
  918: # server-side image map if both a server-side and client-side map for the
  919: # same image is indicated in the HTML markup.  The compilation default is
  920: # FALSE, such that a link with "[ISMAP]" as the link name, followed by a
  921: # hyphen, will be prepended to the ALT string or "[USEMAP]" pseudo-ALT for
  922: # accessing Lynx's text-based rendition of the client-side map (based on
  923: # the content of the associated MAP element).  If the "[ISMAP]" link is
  924: # activated, Lynx will send a 0,0 coordinate pair to the server, which
  925: # Lynx-friendly sites can map to a for-text-client document, homologous
  926: # to what is intended for the content of a FIG element.
  927: #
  928: # The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via
  929: # the "-ismap" command line switch.
  930: #
  931: #NO_ISMAP_IF_USEMAP:FALSE
  932: 
  933: 
  934: .h2 SEEK_FRAG_MAP_IN_CUR
  935: # If SEEK_FRAG_MAP_IN_CUR is set FALSE, then USEMAP attribute values
  936: # (in IMG or OBJECT tags) consisting of only a fragment (USEMAP="#foo")
  937: # will be resolved with respect to the current document's base, which
  938: # might not be the same as the current document's URL.
  939: # The compilation default is to use the current document's URL in all
  940: # cases (i.e., assume the MAP is present below, if it wasn't present
  941: # above the point in the HTML stream where the USEMAP attribute was
  942: # detected).  Lynx's present "single pass" rendering engine precludes
  943: # checking below before making the decision on how to resolve a USEMAP
  944: # reference consisting solely of a fragment.
  945: #
  946: #SEEK_FRAG_MAP_IN_CUR:TRUE
  947: 
  948: 
  949: .h2 SEEK_FRAG_AREA_IN_CUR
  950: # If SEEK_FRAG_AREA_IN_CUR is set FALSE, then HREF attribute values
  951: # in AREA tags consisting of only a fragment (HREF="#foo") will be
  952: # resolved with respect to the current document's base, which might
  953: # not be the same as the current document's URL.  The compilation
  954: # default is to use the current document's URL, as is done for the
  955: # HREF attribute values of Anchors and LINKs that consist solely of
  956: # a fragment.
  957: #
  958: #SEEK_FRAG_AREA_IN_CUR:TRUE
  959: 
  960: 
  961: .h1 CGI scripts
  962: # These settings control Lynx's ability to execute various types of scripts.
  963: 
  964: .h2 LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ALWAYS_ON
  965: .h2 LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE
  966: # Local execution links and scripts are by default completely disabled,
  967: # unless a change is made to the userdefs.h file to enable them or
  968: # the configure script is used with the corresponding options
  969: # (--enable-exec-links and --enable-exec-scripts).
  970: # See the Lynx source code distribution and the userdefs.h
  971: # file for more detail on enabling execution links and scripts.
  972: #
  973: # If you have enabled execution links or scripts the following
  974: # two variables control Lynx's action when an execution link
  975: # or script is encountered.
  976: #
  977: # If LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ALWAYS_ON is set to TRUE any execution
  978: # link or script will be executed no matter where it came from.
  979: # This is EXTREMELY dangerous.  Since Lynx can access files from
  980: # anywhere in the world, you may encounter links or scripts that
  981: # will cause damage or compromise the security of your system.
  982: #
  983: # If LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE is set to TRUE only
  984: # links or scripts that reside on the local machine and are
  985: # referenced with a URL beginning with "file://localhost/" or meet
  986: # TRUSTED_EXEC or ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rules (see below) will be
  987: # executed.  This is much less dangerous than enabling all execution
  988: # links, but can still be dangerous.
  989: #
  990: #LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE
  991: #LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE:FALSE
  992: 
  993: 
  994: .h2 TRUSTED_EXEC
  995: # If LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINK_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE is TRUE, and no TRUSTED_EXEC
  996: # rule is defined, it defaults to "file://localhost/" and any lynxexec
  997: # or lynxprog command will be permitted if it was referenced from within
  998: # a document whose URL begins with that string.  If you wish to restrict the
  999: # referencing URLs further, you can extend the string to include a trusted
 1000: # path.  You also can specify a trusted directory for http URLs, which will
 1001: # then be treated as if they were local rather than remote.  For example:
 1002: #
 1003: #	TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/trusted/
 1004: #	TRUSTED_EXEC:http://www.wfbr.edu/trusted/
 1005: #
 1006: # If you also wish to restrict the commands which can be executed, create
 1007: # a series of rules with the path (Unix) or command name (VMS) following
 1008: # the string, separated by a tab.  For example:
 1009: #
 1010: # Unix:
 1011: # ====
 1012: #	TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>/bin/cp
 1013: #	TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>/bin/rm
 1014: # VMS:
 1015: # ===
 1016: #	TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>copy
 1017: #	TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>delete
 1018: #
 1019: # Once you specify a TRUSTED_EXEC referencing string, the default is
 1020: # replaced, and all the referencing strings you desire must be specified
 1021: # as a series.  Similarly, if you associate a command with the referencing
 1022: # string, you must specify all of the allowable commands as a series of
 1023: # TRUSTED_EXEC rules for that string.  If you specify ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC
 1024: # rules below, you need not repeat them as TRUSTED_EXEC rules.
 1025: #
 1026: # If EXEC_LINKS and JUMPFILE have been defined, any lynxexec or lynxprog
 1027: # URLs in that file will be permitted, regardless of other settings.  If
 1028: # you also set LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE:TRUE and a single
 1029: # TRUSTED_EXEC rule that will always fail (e.g., "none"), then *ONLY* the
 1030: # lynxexec or lynxprog URLs in JUMPFILE (and any ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rules,
 1031: # see below) will be allowed.  Note, however, that if Lynx was compiled with
 1032: # CAN_ANONYMOUS_JUMP set to FALSE (default is TRUE), or -restrictions=jump
 1033: # is included with the -anonymous switch at run time, then users of an
 1034: # anonymous account will not be able to access the jumps file or enter
 1035: # 'j'ump shortcuts, and this selective execution feature will be overridden
 1036: # as well (i.e., they will only be able to access lynxexec or lynxprog
 1037: # URLs which meet any ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rules).
 1038: #
 1039: #TRUSTED_EXEC:none
 1040: 
 1041: 
 1042: .h2 ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC
 1043: # If EXEC_LINKS was defined, any lynxexec or lynxprog URL can be made
 1044: # always enabled by an ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rule for it.  This is useful for
 1045: # anonymous accounts in which you have disabled execution links generally,
 1046: # and may also have disabled jumps file links, but still want to allow
 1047: # execution of particular utility scripts or programs.  The format is
 1048: # like that for TRUSTED_EXEC.  For example:
 1049: #
 1050: # Unix:
 1051: # ====
 1052: #   ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>/usr/local/kinetic/bin/usertime
 1053: #   ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:http://www.more.net/<tab>/usr/local/kinetic/bin/who.sh
 1054: # VMS:
 1055: # ===
 1056: #   ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>usertime
 1057: #   ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:http://www.more.net/<tab>show users
 1058: #
 1059: # The default ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rule is "none".
 1060: #
 1061: #ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:none
 1062: 
 1063: 
 1064: .h2 TRUSTED_LYNXCGI
 1065: # Unix:
 1066: # =====
 1067: # TRUSTED_LYNXCGI rules define the permitted sources and/or paths for
 1068: # lynxcgi links (if LYNXCGI_LINKS is defined in userdefs.h).  The format
 1069: # is the same as for TRUSTED_EXEC rules (see above).  Example rules:
 1070: #
 1071: #	TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:file://localhost/
 1072: # 	TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:<tab>/usr/local/etc/httpd/cgi-bin/
 1073: # 	TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:file://localhost/<tab>/usr/local/www/cgi-bin/
 1074: #
 1075: # VMS:
 1076: # ====
 1077: # Do not define this.
 1078: #
 1079: # The default TRUSTED_LYNXCGI rule is "none".
 1080: #
 1081: #TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:none
 1082: 
 1083: 
 1084: .h2 LYNXCGI_ENVIRONMENT
 1085: # Unix:
 1086: # =====
 1087: # LYNXCGI_ENVIRONMENT adds the current value of the specified
 1088: # environment variable to the list of environment variables passed on to the
 1089: # lynxcgi script.  Useful variables are HOME, USER, etc...  If proxies
 1090: # are in use, and the script invokes another copy of lynx (or a program like
 1091: # wget) in a subsidiary role, it can be useful to add http_proxy and other
 1092: # *_proxy variables.
 1093: #
 1094: # VMS:
 1095: # ====
 1096: # Do not define this.
 1097: #
 1098: #LYNXCGI_ENVIRONMENT:
 1099: 
 1100: 
 1101: .h2 LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT
 1102: # Unix:
 1103: # =====
 1104: # LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT is the value of DOCUMENT_ROOT that will be passed
 1105: # to lynxcgi scripts.  If set and the URL has PATH_INFO data, then
 1106: # PATH_TRANSLATED will also be generated.  Examples:
 1107: #	LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT:/usr/local/etc/httpd/htdocs
 1108: #	LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT:/data/htdocs/
 1109: #
 1110: # VMS:
 1111: # ====
 1112: # Do not define this.
 1113: #
 1114: #LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT:
 1115: 
 1116: 
 1117: .h1 Cookies
 1118: 
 1119: .h2 FORCE_SSL_COOKIES_SECURE
 1120: # If FORCE_SSL_COOKIES_SECURE is set to TRUE, then SSL encrypted cookies
 1121: # received from https servers never will be sent unencrypted to http
 1122: # servers.  The compilation default is to impose this block only if the
 1123: # https server included a secure attribute for the cookie.  The normal
 1124: # default or that defined here can be toggled via the -force_secure
 1125: # command line switch.
 1126: #
 1127: #FORCE_SSL_COOKIES_SECURE:FALSE
 1128: 
 1129: 
 1130: .h1 Internal Behavior
 1131: 
 1132: .h2 MAIL_SYSTEM_ERROR_LOGGING
 1133: #  MAIL_SYSTEM_ERROR_LOGGING will send a message to the owner of
 1134: #  the information, or ALERTMAIL if there is no owner, every time
 1135: #  that a document cannot be accessed!
 1136: #
 1137: #  NOTE:  This can generate A LOT of mail, be warned.
 1138: #
 1139: #MAIL_SYSTEM_ERROR_LOGGING:FALSE
 1140: 
 1141: 
 1142: .h2 CHECKMAIL
 1143: # If CHECKMAIL is set to TRUE, the user will be informed (via a statusline
 1144: # message) about the existence of any unread mail at startup of Lynx, and
 1145: # will get statusline messages if subsequent new mail arrives.  If a jumps
 1146: # file with a lynxprog URL for invoking mail is available, or your html
 1147: # pages include an mail launch file URL, the user thereby can access mail
 1148: # and read the messages.  The checks and statusline reports will not be
 1149: # performed if Lynx has been invoked with the -restrictions=mail switch.
 1150: #
 1151: # VMS USERS !!!
 1152: # =============
 1153: # New mail is normally broadcast as it arrives, via "unsolicited screen
 1154: # broadcasts", which can be "wiped" from the Lynx display via the Ctrl-W
 1155: # command.  You may prefer to disable the broadcasts and use CHECKMAIL
 1156: # instead (e.g., in a public account which will be used by people who
 1157: # are ignorant about VMS).
 1158: #
 1159: #CHECKMAIL:FALSE
 1160: 
 1161: 
 1162: .h1 News-groups
 1163: 
 1164: .h2 NNTPSERVER
 1165: # To enable news reading ability via Lynx, the environment variable NNTPSERVER
 1166: # must be set so that it points to your site's NNTP server
 1167: # (see Lynx Users Guide on environment variables).
 1168: # Lynx respects RFC 1738 (http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/uri/rfc1738.txt)
 1169: # and does not accept a host field in news URLs (use nntp: instead of news: for
 1170: # the scheme if you wish to specify an NNTP host in a URL, as explained in the
 1171: # RFC).  If you have not set the variable externally, you can set it at run
 1172: # time via this configuration file.  It will not override an external setting.
 1173: # Note that on VMS it is set as a process logical rather than symbol, and will
 1174: # outlive the Lynx image.
 1175: # The news reading facility in Lynx is quite limited.  Lynx does not provide a
 1176: # full featured news reader with elaborate error checking and safety features.
 1177: #
 1178: #NNTPSERVER:news.server.dom
 1179: 
 1180: 
 1181: .h2 LIST_NEWS_NUMBERS
 1182: # If LIST_NEWS_NUMBERS is set TRUE, Lynx will use an ordered list and include
 1183: # the numbers of articles in news listings, instead of using an unordered
 1184: # list.  The default is defined in userdefs.h, and can be overridden here.
 1185: #
 1186: #LIST_NEWS_NUMBERS:FALSE
 1187: 
 1188: 
 1189: .h2 LIST_NEWS_DATES
 1190: # If LIST_NEWS_DATES is set TRUE, Lynx will include the dates of articles in
 1191: # news listings.  The dates always are included in the articles, themselves.
 1192: # The default is defined in userdefs.h, and can be overridden here.
 1193: #
 1194: #LIST_NEWS_DATES:FALSE
 1195: 
 1196: 
 1197: .h2 NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE
 1198: .h2 NEWS_MAX_CHUNK
 1199: # NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE and NEWS_MAX_CHUNK regulate the chunking of news article
 1200: # listings with inclusion of links for listing earlier and/or later articles.
 1201: # The defaults are defined in HTNews.c as 30 and 40, respectively.  If the
 1202: # news group contains more than NEWS_MAX_CHUNK articles, they will be listed
 1203: # in NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE chunks.  You can change the defaults here, and/or on
 1204: # the command line via -newschunksize=NUMBER and/or -newsmaxchunk=NUMBER
 1205: # switches.  Note that if the chunk size is increased, here or on the command
 1206: # line, to a value greater than the current maximum, the maximum will be
 1207: # increased to that number.  Conversely, if the maximum is set to a number
 1208: # less than the current chunk size, the chunk size will be reduced to that
 1209: # number.  Thus, you need use only one of the two switches on the command
 1210: # line, based on the direction of intended change relative to the compilation
 1211: # or configuration defaults.  The compilation defaults ensure that there will
 1212: # be at least 10 earlier articles before bothering to chunk and create a link
 1213: # for earlier articles.
 1214: #
 1215: #NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE:30
 1216: #NEWS_MAX_CHUNK:40
 1217: 
 1218: 
 1219: .h2 NEWS_POSTING
 1220: # Set NEWS_POSTING to FALSE if you do not want to support posting to
 1221: # news groups via Lynx.  If left TRUE, Lynx will use its news gateway to
 1222: # post new messages or followups to news groups, using the URL schemes
 1223: # described in the "Supported URLs" section of the online 'h'elp.  The
 1224: # posts will be attempted via the nntp server specified in the URL, or
 1225: # if none was specified, via the NNTPSERVER configuration or environment
 1226: # variable.  Links with these URLs for posting or sending followups are
 1227: # created by the news gateway when reading group listings or articles
 1228: # from nntp servers if the server indicates that it permits posting.
 1229: # The compilation default set in userdefs.h can be changed here.  If
 1230: # the default is TRUE, posting can still be disallowed via the
 1231: # -restrictions command line switch.
 1232: # The posting facility in Lynx is quite limited.  Lynx does not provide a
 1233: # full featured news poster with elaborate error checking and safety features.
 1234: #
 1235: #NEWS_POSTING:TRUE
 1236: 
 1237: 
 1238: .h2 LYNX_SIG_FILE
 1239: # LYNX_SIG_FILE defines the name of a file containing a signature which
 1240: # can be appended to email messages and news postings or followups.  The
 1241: # user will be prompted whether to append it.  It is sought in the home
 1242: # directory.  If it is in a subdirectory, begin it with a dot-slash
 1243: # (e.g., ./lynx/.lynxsig).  The definition is set in userdefs.h and can
 1244: # be changed here.
 1245: #
 1246: #LYNX_SIG_FILE:.lynxsig
 1247: 
 1248: .h1 Bibliographic Protocol (bibp scheme)
 1249: 
 1250: .h2 BIBP_GLOBAL_SERVER
 1251: # BIBP_GLOBAL_SERVER is the default global server for bibp: links, used
 1252: # when a local bibhost or document-specified citehost is unavailable.
 1253: # Set in userdefs.h and can be changed here.
 1254: #BIBP_GLOBAL_SERVER:http://usin.org/
 1255: 
 1256: .h2 BIBP_BIBHOST
 1257: # BIBP_BIBHOST is the URL at which local bibp service may be found, if
 1258: # it exists.   Defaults to http://bibhost/ for protocol conformance, but
 1259: # may be overridden here or via --bibhost parameter.
 1260: #BIBP_BIBHOST:http://bibhost/
 1261: 
 1262: .h1 Interaction
 1263: # These settings control interaction of the user with lynx.
 1264: 
 1265: .h2 SCROLLBAR
 1266: # If SCROLLBAR is set TRUE, Lynx will show scrollbar on windows.  With mouse
 1267: # enabled, the scrollbar strip outside the bar is clickable, and scrolls the
 1268: # window by pages.  The appearance of the scrollbar can be changed from
 1269: # LYNX_LSS file:  define attributes scroll.bar, scroll.back (for the bar, and
 1270: # for the strip along which the scrollbar moves).
 1271: #SCROLLBAR:FALSE
 1272: 
 1273: 
 1274: .h2 SCROLLBAR_ARROW
 1275: # If SCROLLBAR_ARROW is set TRUE, Lynx's scrollbar will have arrows at the
 1276: # ends.  With mouse enabled, the arrows are clickable, and scroll the window by
 1277: # 2 lines.  The appearance of the scrollbar arrows can be changed from LYNX_LSS
 1278: # file:  define attributes scroll.arrow, scroll.noarrow (for enabled-arrows,
 1279: # and disabled arrows).  An arrow is "disabled" if the bar is at this end of
 1280: # the strip.
 1281: #SCROLLBAR_ARROW:TRUE
 1282: 
 1283: 
 1284: .h2 USE_MOUSE
 1285: # If Lynx is configured with ncurses, PDcurses or slang & USE_MOUSE is TRUE,
 1286: # users can perform commands by left-clicking certain parts of the screen:
 1287: #   on a link = `g'oto + ACTIVATE (i.e., move highlight & follow the link);
 1288: #   on the top/bottom lines = PREV/NEXT_PAGE (i.e., go up/down 1 page);
 1289: #   on the top/bottom left corners = PREV/NEXT_DOC (i.e., go to the previous
 1290: #   document / undo goto previous document);
 1291: #   on the top/bottom right corners = HISTORY/VLINKS (i.e., call up the history
 1292: #   page or visited links page if on history page).
 1293: # NB if the mouse is defined in this way, it will not be available
 1294: # for copy/paste operations using the clipboard of a desktop manager:
 1295: # for flexibility instead, use the command-line switch  -use_mouse .
 1296: #
 1297: # ncurses and slang have built-in support for the xterm mouse protocol.  In
 1298: # addition, ncurses can be linked with the gpm mouse library, to automatically
 1299: # provide support for this interface in applications such as Lynx.  (Please
 1300: # read the ncurses faq to work around broken gpm configurations packaged by
 1301: # some distributors).  PDCurses implements mouse support for win32 console
 1302: # windows, as does slang.
 1303: #USE_MOUSE:FALSE
 1304: 
 1305: 
 1306: .h1 HTML Parsing
 1307: # These settings control the way Lynx parses invalid HTML
 1308: # and how it may resolve such issues.
 1309: 
 1310: .h2 COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS
 1311: # If COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS is set FALSE, Lynx will not collapse serial BR tags.
 1312: # If set TRUE, two or more concurrent BRs will be collapsed into a single
 1313: # line break.  Note that the valid way to insert extra blank lines in HTML
 1314: # is via a PRE block with only newlines in the block.
 1315: #
 1316: #COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS:TRUE
 1317: 
 1318: 
 1319: .h2 TAGSOUP
 1320: # If TAGSOUP is set, Lynx uses the "Tag Soup DTD" rather than "SortaSGML".
 1321: # The two approaches differ by the style of error detection and recovery.
 1322: # Tag Soup DTD allows for improperly nested tags; SortaSGML is stricter.
 1323: #TAGSOUP:FALSE
 1324: 
 1325: 
 1326: .h1 Cookies
 1327: 
 1328: .h2 SET_COOKIES
 1329: # If SET_COOKIES is set FALSE, Lynx will ignore Set-Cookie headers
 1330: # in http server replies.  Note that if a COOKIE_FILE is in use (see
 1331: # below) that contains cookies at startup, Lynx will still send those
 1332: # persistent cookies in requests as appropriate.  Setting SET_COOKIES
 1333: # to FALSE just prevents accepting any new cookies from servers.  To
 1334: # prevent all cookie processing (sending *and* receiving) in a session,
 1335: # make sure that PERSISTENT_COOKIES is not TRUE or that COOKIE_FILE does
 1336: # not point to a file with cookies, in addition to setting SET_COOKIES
 1337: # to FALSE.
 1338: # The default is defined in userdefs.h, and can be overridden here,
 1339: # and/or toggled via the -cookies command line switch.
 1340: #
 1341: #SET_COOKIES:TRUE
 1342: 
 1343: 
 1344: .h2 ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES
 1345: # If ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES is set TRUE, Lynx will accept cookies from all
 1346: # domains with no user interaction.  This is equivalent to automatically
 1347: # replying to all cookie 'Allow?' prompts with 'A'lways.  Note that it
 1348: # does not preempt validity checking, which has to be controlled separately
 1349: # (see below).
 1350: # The default is defined in userdefs.h and can be overridden here, or
 1351: # in the .lynxrc file via an o(ptions) screen setting.  It may also be
 1352: # toggled via the -accept_all_cookies command line switch.
 1353: #
 1354: #ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES:FALSE
 1355: 
 1356: 
 1357: .h2 COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS
 1358: .h2 COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS
 1359: # COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS and COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS are comma-delimited lists
 1360: # of domains from which Lynx should automatically accept or reject cookies
 1361: # without asking for confirmation.  If the same domain is specified in both
 1362: # lists, rejection will take precedence.
 1363: # Note that in order to match cookies, domains have to be spelled out exactly
 1364: # in the form in which they would appear on the Cookie Jar page (case is
 1365: # insignificant).  They are not wildcards.  Domains that apply to more than
 1366: # one host have a leading '.', but have to match *the cookie's* domain
 1367: # exactly.
 1368: #
 1369: #COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS:
 1370: #COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS:
 1371: 
 1372: 
 1373: .h2 COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS
 1374: .h2 COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAINS
 1375: .h2 COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS
 1376: # COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS, COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAINS, and
 1377: # COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS are comma-delimited lists of domains.
 1378: # They control the degree of validity checking that is applied to cookies
 1379: # for the specified domains.
 1380: # Note that in order to match cookies, domains have to be spelled out exactly
 1381: # in the form in which they would appear on the Cookie Jar page (case is
 1382: # insignificant).  They are not wildcards.  Domains that apply to more than
 1383: # one host have a leading '.', but have to match *the cookie's* domain
 1384: # exactly.
 1385: # If a domain is set to strict checking, strict conformance to RFC2109 will
 1386: # be applied.  A domain with loose checking will be allowed to set cookies
 1387: # with an invalid path or domain attribute.  All domains will default to
 1388: # asking the user for confirmation in case of an invalid path or domain.
 1389: # Cookie validity checking takes place as a separate step before the
 1390: # final decision to accept or reject (see previous options), therefore
 1391: # a cookie that passes validity checking may still be automatically
 1392: # rejected or cause another prompt.
 1393: #
 1394: #COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS:
 1395: #COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAINS:
 1396: #COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS:
 1397: 
 1398: .h2 MAX_COOKIES_DOMAIN
 1399: .h2 MAX_COOKIES_GLOBAL
 1400: .h2 MAX_COOKIES_BUFFER
 1401: # MAX_COOKIES_DOMAIN,
 1402: # MAX_COOKIES_GLOBAL and
 1403: # MAX_COOKIES_BUFFER are limits on the total number of cookies for each domain,
 1404: # globally, and the per-cookie buffer size.  These limits are by default large
 1405: # enough for reasonable usage; if they are very high, some sites may present
 1406: # undue performance waste.
 1407: #
 1408: #MAX_COOKIES_DOMAIN:50
 1409: #MAX_COOKIES_GLOBAL:500
 1410: #MAX_COOKIES_BUFFER:4096
 1411: 
 1412: .h2 PERSISTENT_COOKIES
 1413: # PERSISTENT_COOKIES indicates that cookies should be read at startup from
 1414: # the COOKIE_FILE, and saved at exit for storage between Lynx sessions.
 1415: # It is not used if Lynx was compiled without USE_PERSISTENT_COOKIES.
 1416: # The default is FALSE, so that the feature needs to be enabled here
 1417: # explicitly if you want it.
 1418: #
 1419: #PERSISTENT_COOKIES:FALSE
 1420: 
 1421: 
 1422: .h2 COOKIE_FILE
 1423: # COOKIE_FILE is the default file from which persistent cookies are read
 1424: # at startup (if the file exists), if Lynx was compiled with
 1425: # USE_PERSISTENT_COOKIES and the PERSISTENT_COOKIES option is enabled.
 1426: # The cookie file can also be specified in .lynxrc or on the command line.
 1427: #
 1428: #COOKIE_FILE:~/.lynx_cookies
 1429: 
 1430: 
 1431: .h2 COOKIE_SAVE_FILE
 1432: # COOKIE_SAVE_FILE is the default file in which persistent cookies are
 1433: # stored at exit, if Lynx was compiled with USE_PERSISTENT_COOKIES and the
 1434: # PERSISTENT_COOKIES option is enabled.  The cookie save file can also be
 1435: # specified on the command line.
 1436: #
 1437: # With an interactive Lynx session, COOKIE_SAVE_FILE will default to
 1438: # COOKIE_FILE if it is not set.  With a non-interactive Lynx session (e.g.,
 1439: # -dump), cookies will only be saved to file if COOKIE_SAVE_FILE is set.
 1440: #
 1441: #COOKIE_SAVE_FILE:~/.lynx_cookies
 1442: 
 1443: 
 1444: .h1 Mail-related
 1445: 
 1446: .h2 SYSTEM_MAIL
 1447: .h2 SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS
 1448: # VMS:
 1449: # ===
 1450: # The mail command and qualifiers are defined in userdefs.h.  Lynx
 1451: # will spawn a subprocess to send replies and error messages.  The
 1452: # command, and qualifiers (if any), can be re-defined here.  If
 1453: # you use PMDF then headers will we passed via a header file.
 1454: # If you use "generic" VMS MAIL, the subject will be passed on the
 1455: # command line via a /subject="SUBJECT" qualifier, and inclusion
 1456: # of other relevant headers may not be possible.
 1457: # If your mailer uses another syntax, some hacking of the mailform()
 1458: # mailmsg() and reply_by_mail() functions in LYMail.c, and send_file_to_mail()
 1459: # function in LYPrint.c, may be required.
 1460: #
 1461: .ex 2
 1462: #SYSTEM_MAIL:PMDF SEND
 1463: #SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:/headers
 1464: #
 1465: .ex 2
 1466: #SYSTEM_MAIL:MAIL
 1467: #SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:
 1468: #
 1469: # Unix:
 1470: #======
 1471: # The mail path and flags normally are defined for sendmail (or submit
 1472: # with MMDF) in userdefs.h.  You can change them here, but should first
 1473: # read the zillions of CERT advisories about security problems with Unix
 1474: # mailers.
 1475: #
 1476: .ex 2
 1477: #SYSTEM_MAIL:/usr/mmdf/bin/submit
 1478: #SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:-mlruxto,cc\*
 1479: #
 1480: .ex 2
 1481: #SYSTEM_MAIL:/usr/sbin/sendmail
 1482: #SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:-t -oi
 1483: #
 1484: .ex 2
 1485: #SYSTEM_MAIL:/usr/lib/sendmail
 1486: #SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:-t -oi
 1487: 
 1488: # Win32:
 1489: #=======
 1490: # Please read sendmail.txt in the LYNX_W32.ZIP distribution
 1491: #
 1492: #SYSTEM_MAIL:sendmail -f me@my.host -h my.host -r my.smtp.mailer -m SMTP
 1493: 
 1494: 
 1495: .h2 MAIL_ADRS
 1496: # VMS ONLY:
 1497: # ========
 1498: # MAIL_ADRS is defined in userdefs.h and normally is structured for PMDF's
 1499: # IN%"INTERNET_ADDRESS" scheme.  The %s is replaced with the address given
 1500: # by the user.  If you are using a different Internet mail transport, change
 1501: # the IN appropriately (e.g., to SMTP, MX, or WINS).
 1502: #
 1503: #MAIL_ADRS:"IN%%""%s"""
 1504: 
 1505: 
 1506: .h2 USE_FIXED_RECORDS
 1507: # VMS ONLY:
 1508: # ========
 1509: # If USE_FIXED_RECORDS is set to TRUE here or in userdefs.h, Lynx will
 1510: # convert 'd'ownloaded binary files to FIXED 512 record format before saving
 1511: # them to disk or acting on a DOWNLOADER option.  If set to FALSE, the
 1512: # headers of such files will indicate that they are Stream_LF with Implied
 1513: # Carriage Control, which is incorrect, and can cause downloading software
 1514: # to get confused and unhappy.  If you do set it FALSE, you can use the
 1515: # FIXED512.COM command file, which is included in this distribution, to do
 1516: # the conversion externally.
 1517: #
 1518: #USE_FIXED_RECORDS:TRUE
 1519: 
 1520: 
 1521: .h1 Keyboard Input
 1522: # These settings control the way Lynx interprets user input.
 1523: 
 1524: 
 1525: .h2 VI_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON
 1526: .h2 EMACS_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON
 1527: # Vi or Emacs movement keys, i.e. familiar hjkl or ^N^P^F^B .
 1528: # These are defaults, which can be changed in the Options Menu or .lynxrc .
 1529: #VI_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE
 1530: #EMACS_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE
 1531: 
 1532: 
 1533: .h2 DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE
 1534: # DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE may be set to NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS
 1535: #                                or LINKS_ARE_NOT_NUMBERED (the same)
 1536: #                                or LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED
 1537: #                                or LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED
 1538: #                                or FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED
 1539: # to specify whether numbers (e.g. [10]) appear next to all links,
 1540: # allowing immediate access by entering the number on the keyboard,
 1541: # or numbers on the numeric key-pad work like arrows;
 1542: # the "FIELDS" options cause form fields also to be numbered.
 1543: # This may be overridden by the keypad_mode setting in .lynxrc,
 1544: # and can also be changed via the Options Menu.
 1545: #
 1546: #DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE:NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS
 1547: 
 1548: 
 1549: .h2 NUMBER_LINKS_ON_LEFT
 1550: .h2 NUMBER_FIELDS_ON_LEFT
 1551: # Denotes the position for link- and field-numbers (whether it is on the left
 1552: # or right of the anchor).  These are subject to DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE, which
 1553: # determines whether numbers are shown.
 1554: #NUMBER_LINKS_ON_LEFT:TRUE
 1555: #NUMBER_FIELDS_ON_LEFT:TRUE
 1556: 
 1557: .h2 DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE_IS_NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS
 1558: # Obsolete form of DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE,
 1559: # numbers work like arrows or numbered links.
 1560: # Set to TRUE, indicates numbers act as arrows,
 1561: # and set to FALSE indicates numbers refer to numbered links on the page.
 1562: # LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED cannot be set by this option because
 1563: # it allows only two values (true and false).
 1564: #
 1565: #DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE_IS_NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS:TRUE
 1566: 
 1567: 
 1568: .h2 CASE_SENSITIVE_ALWAYS_ON
 1569: # The default search type.
 1570: # This is a default that can be overridden by the user!
 1571: #
 1572: #CASE_SENSITIVE_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE
 1573: 
 1574: 
 1575: .h1 Auxiliary Facilities
 1576: 
 1577: .h2 DEFAULT_BOOKMARK_FILE
 1578: # DEFAULT_BOOKMARK_FILE is the filename used for storing personal bookmarks.
 1579: # It will be prepended by the user's home directory.
 1580: # NOTE that a file ending in .html or other suffix mapped to text/html
 1581: # should be used to ensure its treatment as HTML.  The built-in default
 1582: # is lynx_bookmarks.html.  On both Unix and VMS, if a subdirectory off of
 1583: # the HOME directory is desired, the path should begin with "./" (e.g.,
 1584: # ./BM/lynx_bookmarks.html), but the subdirectory must already exist.
 1585: # Lynx will create the bookmark file, if it does not already exist, on
 1586: # the first ADD_BOOKMARK attempt if the HOME directory is indicated
 1587: # (i.e., if the definition is just filename.html without any slashes),
 1588: # but requires a pre-existing subdirectory to create the file there.
 1589: # The user can re-define the default bookmark file, as well as a set
 1590: # of sub-bookmark files if multiple bookmark file support is enabled
 1591: # (see below), via the 'o'ptions menu, and can save those definitions
 1592: # in the .lynxrc file.
 1593: #
 1594: #DEFAULT_BOOKMARK_FILE:lynx_bookmarks.html
 1595: 
 1596: 
 1597: .h2 MULTI_BOOKMARK_SUPPORT
 1598: # If MULTI_BOOKMARK_SUPPORT is set TRUE, and BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS (see
 1599: # below) is FALSE, and sub-bookmarks exist, all bookmark operations will
 1600: # first prompt the user to select an active sub-bookmark file or the
 1601: # default bookmark file.  FALSE is the default so that one (the default)
 1602: # bookmark file will be available initially.  The definition here will
 1603: # override that in userdefs.h.  The user can turn on multiple bookmark
 1604: # support via the 'o'ptions menu, and can save that choice as the startup
 1605: # default via the .lynxrc file.  When on, the setting can be STANDARD or
 1606: # ADVANCED.  If SUPPORT is set to the latter, and the user mode also is
 1607: # ADVANCED, the VIEW_BOOKMARK command will invoke a statusline prompt at
 1608: # which the user can enter the letter token (A - Z) of the desired bookmark,
 1609: # or '=' to get a menu of available bookmark files.  The menu always is
 1610: # presented in NOVICE or INTERMEDIATE mode, or if the SUPPORT is set to
 1611: # STANDARD.  No prompting or menu display occurs if only one (the startup
 1612: # default) bookmark file has been defined (define additional ones via the
 1613: # 'o'ptions menu).  The startup default, however set, can be overridden on
 1614: # the command line via the -restrictions=multibook or the -anonymous or
 1615: # -validate switches.
 1616: #
 1617: #MULTI_BOOKMARK_SUPPORT:FALSE
 1618: 
 1619: 
 1620: .h2 BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS
 1621: # If BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS is set TRUE, multiple bookmark support will
 1622: # be forced off, and cannot to toggled on via the 'o'ptions menu.  The
 1623: # compilation setting is normally FALSE, and can be overridden here.
 1624: # It can also be set via the -restrictions=multibook or the -anonymous
 1625: # or -validate command line switches.
 1626: #
 1627: #BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS:FALSE
 1628: 
 1629: 
 1630: .h1 Interaction
 1631: 
 1632: .h2 DEFAULT_USER_MODE
 1633: # DEFAULT_USER_MODE sets the default user mode for Lynx users.
 1634: # NOVICE shows a three line help message at the bottom of the screen.
 1635: # INTERMEDIATE shows normal amount of help (one line).
 1636: # ADVANCED help is replaced by the URL of the current link.
 1637: #
 1638: #DEFAULT_USER_MODE:NOVICE
 1639: 
 1640: 
 1641: .h1 External Programs
 1642: 
 1643: .h2 DEFAULT_EDITOR
 1644: # If DEFAULT_EDITOR is defined, users may edit local documents with it
 1645: # & it will also be used for sending mail messages.
 1646: # If no editor is defined here or by the user,
 1647: # the user will not be able to edit local documents
 1648: # and a primitive line-oriented mail-input mode will be used.
 1649: #
 1650: # For sysadmins: do not define a default editor
 1651: # unless you know EVERY user will know how to use it;
 1652: # users can easily define their own editor in the Options Menu.
 1653: #
 1654: #DEFAULT_EDITOR:
 1655: 
 1656: 
 1657: .h2 SYSTEM_EDITOR
 1658: # SYSTEM_EDITOR behaves the same as DEFAULT_EDITOR,
 1659: # except that it can't be changed by users.
 1660: #
 1661: #SYSTEM_EDITOR:
 1662: 
 1663: .h3 POSITIONABLE_EDITOR
 1664: # If POSITIONABLE_EDITOR is defined once or multiple times and if the same
 1665: # editor is used as editor in lynx, lynx will use its features, i.e., adding an
 1666: # option to set the initial line-position, when editing files and textarea.
 1667: # The commented editors below are already known; there is no need to uncomment
 1668: # them.
 1669: #
 1670: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:emacs
 1671: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jed
 1672: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jmacs
 1673: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:joe
 1674: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jove
 1675: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jpico
 1676: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jstar
 1677: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:nano
 1678: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:pico
 1679: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:rjoe
 1680: #POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:vi
 1681: 
 1682: .h1 Proxy
 1683: 
 1684: .h2 HTTP_PROXY
 1685: .h2 HTTPS_PROXY
 1686: .h2 FTP_PROXY
 1687: .h2 GOPHER_PROXY
 1688: .h2 NEWSPOST_PROXY
 1689: .h2 NEWSREPLY_PROXY
 1690: .h2 NEWS_PROXY
 1691: .h2 NNTP_PROXY
 1692: .h2 SNEWSPOST_PROXY
 1693: .h2 SNEWSREPLY_PROXY
 1694: .h2 SNEWS_PROXY
 1695: .h2 WAIS_PROXY
 1696: .h2 FINGER_PROXY
 1697: .h2 CSO_PROXY
 1698: # Lynx version 2.2 and beyond supports the use of proxy servers that can act as
 1699: # firewall gateways and caching servers.  They are preferable to the older
 1700: # gateway servers.  Each protocol used by Lynx can be mapped separately using
 1701: # PROTOCOL_proxy environment variables (see Lynx Users Guide).  If you have not set
 1702: # them externally, you can set them at run time via this configuration file.
 1703: # They will not override external settings.  The no_proxy variable can be used
 1704: # to inhibit proxying to selected regions of the Web (see below).  Note that on
 1705: # VMS these proxy variables are set as process logicals rather than symbols, to
 1706: # preserve lowercasing, and will outlive the Lynx image.
 1707: #
 1708: .ex 15
 1709: #http_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1710: #https_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1711: #ftp_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1712: #gopher_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1713: #news_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1714: #newspost_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1715: #newsreply_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1716: #snews_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1717: #snewspost_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1718: #snewsreply_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1719: #nntp_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1720: #wais_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1721: #finger_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1722: #cso_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/
 1723: #no_proxy:host.domain.dom
 1724: 
 1725: 
 1726: .h2 NO_PROXY
 1727: # The no_proxy variable can be a comma-separated list of strings defining
 1728: # no-proxy zones in the DNS domain name space.  If a tail substring of the
 1729: # domain-path for a host matches one of these strings, transactions with that
 1730: # node will not be proxied.
 1731: .ex
 1732: #no_proxy:domain.path1,path2
 1733: #
 1734: # A single asterisk as an entry will override all proxy variables and no
 1735: # transactions will be proxied.
 1736: .ex
 1737: #no_proxy:*
 1738: # This is the only allowed use of * in no_proxy.
 1739: #
 1740: # Warning:  Note that setting 'il' as an entry in this list will block proxying
 1741: # for the .mil domain as well as the .il domain.  If the entry is '.il' this
 1742: # will not happen.
 1743: 
 1744: 
 1745: .h1 External Programs
 1746: 
 1747: .h2 PRINTER
 1748: .h2 DOWNLOADER
 1749: .h2 UPLOADER
 1750: # PRINTER, DOWNLOADER & UPLOADER DEFINITIONS:
 1751: # Lynx has 4 pre-defined print options & 1 pre-defined download option,
 1752: # which are called up on-screen when `p' or `d' are entered;
 1753: # any number of options can be added by the user, as explained below.
 1754: # Uploaders can be defined only for UNIX with DIRED_SUPPORT:
 1755: # see the Makefile in the top directory & the header of src/LYUpload.c .
 1756: #
 1757: # For `p' pre-defined options are: `Save to local file', `E-mail the file',
 1758: # `Print to screen' and `Print to local printer attached to vt100'.
 1759: # `Print to screen' allows file transfers in the absence of alternatives
 1760: # and is often the only option allowed here for anonymous users;
 1761: # the 3rd & 4th options are not pre-defined for DOS/WINDOWS versions of Lynx.
 1762: # For `d' the pre-defined option is: `Download to local file'.
 1763: #
 1764: # To define your own print or download option use the following formats:
 1765: #
 1766: # PRINTER:<name>:<command>:<option>:<lines/page>[:<environment>]
 1767: #
 1768: # DOWNLOADER:<name>:<command>:<option>[:<environment>]
 1769: #
 1770: # <name>       is what you will see on the print/download screen.
 1771: #
 1772: # <command>    is the command your system will execute:
 1773: #              the 1st %s in the command will be replaced
 1774: #              by the temporary filename used by Lynx;
 1775: #              a 2nd %s will be replaced by a filename of your choice,
 1776: #              for which Lynx will prompt, offering a suggestion.
 1777: #              On Unix, which has pipes, you may use a '|' as the first
 1778: #              character of the command, and Lynx will open a pipe to
 1779: #              the command.
 1780: #              If the command format of your printer/downloader requires
 1781: #              a different layout, you will need to use a script
 1782: #              (see the last 2 download examples below).
 1783: #
 1784: # <option>     TRUE : the printer/downloader will always be ENABLED,
 1785: #              except that downloading is disabled when -validate is used;
 1786: #              FALSE : both will be DISABLED for anonymous users
 1787: #              and printing will be disabled when -noprint is used.
 1788: #
 1789: # <lines/page> (printers: optional) the number of lines/page (default 66):
 1790: #              used to compute the approximate output size
 1791: #              and prompt if the document is > 4 printer pages;
 1792: #              it uses current screen length for the computation
 1793: #              when `Print to screen' is selected.
 1794: #
 1795: # [:<environment>]
 1796: #              optional, if XWINDOWS then printer/downloader will be
 1797: #              enabled if DISPLAY environment variable IS defined and
 1798: #              disabled otherwise, if environment is NON_XWINDOWS
 1799: #              then printer/downloader will be enabled if DISPLAY
 1800: #              environment variable IS NOT defined and disabled otherwise,
 1801: #              for anything else or if environment is not specified
 1802: #              printer/downloader is always enabled.
 1803: #
 1804: # You must put the whole definition on one line;
 1805: # if you use a colon, precede it with a backslash.
 1806: #
 1807: # `Printer' can be any file-handling program you find useful,
 1808: # even if it does not physically print anything.
 1809: #
 1810: # Usually, down/up-loading involves the use of (e.g.) Ckermit or ZModem
 1811: # to transfer files to a user's local machine over a serial link,
 1812: # but download options do not have to be download-protocol programs.
 1813: #
 1814: # Printer examples:
 1815: .ex 3
 1816: #PRINTER:Computer Center printer:lpr -Pccprt %s:FALSE
 1817: #PRINTER:Office printer:lpr -POffprt %s:TRUE
 1818: #PRINTER:VMS printer:print /queue=cc$print %s:FALSE:58
 1819: # If you have a very busy VMS print queue
 1820: # and Lynx deletes the temporary files before they have been queued,
 1821: # use the VMSPrint.com included in the distribution:
 1822: .ex
 1823: #PRINTER:Busy VMS printer:@Lynx_Dir\:VMSPrint sys$print %s:FALSE:58
 1824: # To specify a print option at run-time:
 1825: # NBB if you have ANONYMOUS users, DO NOT allow this option!
 1826: .ex
 1827: #PRINTER:Specify at run-time:echo -n "Enter a print command\: "; read word; sh -c "$word %s":FALSE
 1828: # To pass to a sophisticated file viewer: -k suppresses invocation
 1829: # of hex display mode if 8-bit or control characters are present;
 1830: # +s invokes secure mode (see ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/davis/most):
 1831: .ex
 1832: #PRINTER:Use Most to view:most -k +s %s:TRUE:23
 1833: #
 1834: # Downloader examples:
 1835: # in Kermit, -s %s is the filename sent, -a %s the filename on arrival
 1836: # (if they are given in reverse order here, the command will fail):
 1837: .ex
 1838: #DOWNLOADER:Use Kermit to download to the terminal:kermit -i -s %s -a %s:TRUE
 1839: # NB don't use -k with Most, so that binaries will invoke hexadecimal mode:
 1840: .ex
 1841: #DOWNLOADER:Use Most to view:most +s %s:TRUE
 1842: # The following example gives wrong filenames
 1843: # (`sz' doesn't support a suggested filename parameter):
 1844: .ex
 1845: #DOWNLOADER:Use Zmodem to download to the local terminal:sz %s:TRUE
 1846: # The following example returns correct filenames
 1847: # by using a script to make a subdirectory in /tmp,
 1848: # but may conflict with very strong security or permissions restrictions:
 1849: .ex
 1850: #DOWNLOADER:Use Zmodem to download to the local terminal:set %s %s;td=/tmp/Lsz$$;mkdir $td;ln -s $1 $td/"$2";sz $td/"$2";rm -r $td:TRUE
 1851: .ex 2
 1852: #UPLOADER:Use Kermit to upload from your computer: kermit -i -r -a %s:TRUE
 1853: #UPLOADER:Use Zmodem to upload from your computer: rz %s:TRUE
 1854: #
 1855: # Note for OS/390: /* S/390 -- gil -- 1464 */
 1856: # The following is strongly recommended to undo ASCII->EBCDIC conversion.
 1857: .ex
 1858: #DOWNLOADER:Save OS/390 binary file: iconv -f IBM-1047 -t ISO8859-1 %s >%s:FALSE
 1859: 
 1860: 
 1861: .h1 Interaction
 1862: 
 1863: .h2 NO_DOT_FILES
 1864: # If NO_DOT_FILES is TRUE (normal default via userdefs.h), the user will not
 1865: # be allowed to specify files beginning with a dot in reply to output filename
 1866: # prompts, and files beginning with a dot (e.g., file://localhost/path/.lynxrc)
 1867: # will not be included in the directory browser's listings.  If set FALSE, you
 1868: # can force it to be treated as TRUE via -restrictions=dotfiles.  If set FALSE
 1869: # and not forced TRUE, the user can regulate it via the 'o'ptions menu (and
 1870: # may save the preference in the RC file).
 1871: #
 1872: #NO_DOT_FILES:TRUE
 1873: 
 1874: 
 1875: .h1 Internal Behavior
 1876: 
 1877: .h2 NO_FROM_HEADER
 1878: # If NO_FROM_HEADER is set FALSE, From headers will be sent in transmissions
 1879: # to http or https servers if the personal_mail_address has been defined via
 1880: # the 'o'ptions menu.  The compilation default is TRUE (no From header is
 1881: # sent) and the default can be changed here.  The default can be toggled at
 1882: # run time via the -from switch.  Note that transmissions of From headers
 1883: # have become widely considered to create an invasion of privacy risk.
 1884: #
 1885: #NO_FROM_HEADER:TRUE
 1886: 
 1887: 
 1888: .h2 NO_REFERER_HEADER
 1889: # If NO_REFERER_HEADER is TRUE, Referer headers never will be sent in
 1890: # transmissions to servers.  Lynx normally sends the URL of the document
 1891: # from which the link was derived, but not for startfile URLs, 'g'oto
 1892: # URLs, 'j'ump shortcuts, bookmark file links, history list links, or
 1893: # URLs that include the content from form submissions with method GET.
 1894: # If left FALSE here, it can be set TRUE at run time via the -noreferer
 1895: # switch.
 1896: #
 1897: #NO_REFERER_HEADER:FALSE
 1898: 
 1899: 
 1900: .h1 Internal Behavior
 1901: 
 1902: .h2 NO_FILE_REFERER
 1903: # If NO_FILE_REFERER is TRUE, Referer headers never will be sent in
 1904: # transmissions to servers for links or actions derived from documents
 1905: # or forms with file URLs.  This ensures that paths associated with
 1906: # the local file system are never indicated to servers, even if
 1907: # NO_REFERER_HEADER is FALSE.  If set to FALSE here, it can still be
 1908: # set TRUE at run time via the -nofilereferer switch.
 1909: #
 1910: #NO_FILE_REFERER:TRUE
 1911: 
 1912: 
 1913: .h2 REFERER_WITH_QUERY
 1914: # REFERER_WITH_QUERY controls what happens when the URL in a Referer
 1915: # header to be sent would contain a query part in the form of a '?'
 1916: # character followed by one or more attribute=value pairs.  Query parts
 1917: # often contain sensitive or personal information resulting from filling
 1918: # out forms, or other info that allows tracking of a user's browsing path
 1919: # through a site, an thus should not be put in a Referer header (which may
 1920: # get sent to an unrelated third-party site).  On the other hand, some
 1921: # sites (improperly) rely on browsers sending Referer headers, even when
 1922: # the user is coming from a page whose URL has a query part.
 1923: #
 1924: # If REFERER_WITH_QUERY is SEND, full Referer headers will be sent
 1925: # including the query part (unless sending of Referer is disabled in
 1926: # general, see NO_REFERER_HEADER above).  If REFERER_WITH_QUERY is
 1927: # PARTIAL, the Referer header will contain a partial URL, with the query
 1928: # part stripped off.  This is not strictly correct, but should satisfy
 1929: # those sites that check only whether the user arrived at a page from an
 1930: # "outside" link.  If REFERER_WITH_QUERY is set to DROP (or anything else
 1931: # unrecognized), the default, no Referer header is sent at all in this
 1932: # situation.
 1933: #
 1934: #REFERER_WITH_QUERY:DROP
 1935: 
 1936: 
 1937: .h1 Appearance
 1938: 
 1939: .h2 VERBOSE_IMAGES
 1940: # VERBOSE_IMAGES controls whether Lynx replaces [LINK], [INLINE] and [IMAGE]
 1941: # (for images without ALT) with filenames of these images.
 1942: # This can be useful in determining what images are important
 1943: # and which are mere decorations, e.g. button.gif, line.gif,
 1944: # provided the author uses meaningful names.
 1945: #
 1946: # The definition here will override the setting in userdefs.h.
 1947: #
 1948: #VERBOSE_IMAGES:TRUE
 1949: 
 1950: 
 1951: .h2 MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES
 1952: # If MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES is TRUE, all images will be given links
 1953: # which can be ACTIVATEd.  For inlines, the ALT or pseudo-ALT ("[INLINE]")
 1954: # strings will be links for the resolved SRC rather than just text.
 1955: # For ISMAP or other graphic links, ALT or pseudo-ALT ("[ISMAP]" or "[LINK]")
 1956: # will have '-' and a link labeled "[IMAGE]" for the resolved SRC appended.
 1957: # See also VERBOSE_IMAGES flag.
 1958: #
 1959: # The definition here will override that in userdefs.h
 1960: # and can be toggled via an "-image_links" command-line switch.
 1961: # The user can also use the LYK_IMAGE_TOGGLE key (default `*')
 1962: # or `Show Images' in the Form-based Options Menu.
 1963: #
 1964: #MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES:FALSE
 1965: 
 1966: .h2 MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES
 1967: # If MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES is FALSE, inline images which don't specify
 1968: # an ALT string will not have "[INLINE]" inserted as a pseudo-ALT,
 1969: # i.e. they'll be treated as having ALT="".
 1970: # Otherwise (if TRUE), pseudo-ALTs will be created for inlines,
 1971: # so that they can be used as links to the SRCs.
 1972: # See also VERBOSE_IMAGES flag.
 1973: #
 1974: # The definition here will override that in userdefs.h
 1975: # and can be toggled via a "-pseudo_inlines" command-line switch.
 1976: # The user can also use the LYK_INLINE_TOGGLE key (default `[')
 1977: # or `Show Images' in the Form-based Options Menu.
 1978: #
 1979: #MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES:TRUE
 1980: 
 1981: 
 1982: .h2 SUBSTITUTE_UNDERSCORES
 1983: # If SUBSTITUTE_UNDERSCORES is TRUE, the _underline_ format will be used
 1984: # for emphasis tags in dumps.
 1985: #
 1986: # The default defined here will override that in userdefs.h, and the user
 1987: # can toggle the default via a "-underscore" command line switch.
 1988: #
 1989: #SUBSTITUTE_UNDERSCORES:FALSE
 1990: 
 1991: 
 1992: .h1 Interaction
 1993: 
 1994: .h2 QUIT_DEFAULT_YES
 1995: # If QUIT_DEFAULT_YES is TRUE then when the QUIT command is entered, any
 1996: # response other than n or N will confirm.  It should be FALSE if you
 1997: # prefer the more conservative action of requiring an explicit Y or y to
 1998: # confirm.  The default defined here will override that in userdefs.h.
 1999: #
 2000: #QUIT_DEFAULT_YES:TRUE
 2001: 
 2002: 
 2003: .h1 HTML Parsing
 2004: 
 2005: .h2 HISTORICAL_COMMENTS
 2006: # If HISTORICAL_COMMENTS is TRUE, Lynx will revert to the "Historical"
 2007: # behavior of treating any '>' as a terminator for comments, instead of
 2008: # seeking a valid '-->' terminator (note that white space can be present
 2009: # between the '--' and '>' in valid terminators).  The compilation default
 2010: # is FALSE.
 2011: #
 2012: # The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via a
 2013: # "-historical" command line switch, and via the LYK_HISTORICAL command key.
 2014: #
 2015: #HISTORICAL_COMMENTS:FALSE
 2016: 
 2017: 
 2018: .h2 MINIMAL_COMMENTS
 2019: # If MINIMAL_COMMENTS is TRUE, Lynx will not use Valid comment parsing
 2020: # of '--' pairs as serial comments within an overall comment element,
 2021: # and instead will seek only a '-->' terminator for the overall comment
 2022: # element.  This emulates the Netscape v2.0 comment parsing bug, and
 2023: # will help Lynx cope with the use of dashes as "decorations", which
 2024: # consequently has become common in so-called "Enhanced for Netscape"
 2025: # pages.  Note that setting Historical comments on will override the
 2026: # Minimal or Valid setting.
 2027: #
 2028: # The compilation default for MINIMAL_COMMENTS is FALSE, but we'll
 2029: # set it TRUE here, until Netscape gets its comment parsing right,
 2030: # and "decorative" dashes cease to be so common.
 2031: #
 2032: # The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via a
 2033: # "-minimal" command line switch, and via the LYK_MINIMAL command key.
 2034: #
 2035: MINIMAL_COMMENTS:TRUE
 2036: 
 2037: 
 2038: .h2 SOFT_DQUOTES
 2039: # If SOFT_DQUOTES is TRUE, Lynx will emulate the invalid behavior of
 2040: # treating '>' as a co-terminator of a double-quoted attribute value
 2041: # and the tag which contains it, as was done in old versions of Netscape
 2042: # and Mosaic.  The compilation default is FALSE.
 2043: #
 2044: # The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via
 2045: # a "-soft_dquotes" command line switch.
 2046: #
 2047: #SOFT_DQUOTES:FALSE
 2048: 
 2049: 
 2050: .h2 STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS
 2051: # If STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS is TRUE, Lynx emulates the invalid behavior of many
 2052: # browsers to strip a leading "../" segment from relative URLs in HTML
 2053: # documents with a http or https base URL, if this would otherwise lead to
 2054: # an absolute URLs with those characters still in it.  Such URLs are normally
 2055: # erroneous and not what is intended by page authors.  Lynx will issue
 2056: # a warning message when this occurs.
 2057: #
 2058: # If STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS is FALSE, Lynx will use those URLs for requests
 2059: # without taking any special actions or issuing Warnings, in most cases
 2060: # this will result in an error response from the server.
 2061: #
 2062: # Note that Lynx never tries to fix similar URLs for protocols other than
 2063: # http and https, since they are less common and may actually be valid in
 2064: # some cases.
 2065: #
 2066: #STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS:TRUE
 2067: 
 2068: 
 2069: .h1 Appearance
 2070: 
 2071: .h2 ENABLE_SCROLLBACK
 2072: # If ENABLE_SCROLLBACK is TRUE, Lynx will clear the entire screen before
 2073: # displaying each new screenful of text.  Though less efficient for normal
 2074: # use, this allows programs that maintain a buffer of previously-displayed
 2075: # text to recognize the continuity of what has been displayed, so that
 2076: # previous screenfuls can be reviewed by whatever method the program uses
 2077: # to scroll back through previous text.  For example, the PC comm program
 2078: # QModem has a key that can be pressed to scroll back; if ENABLE_SCROLLBACK
 2079: # is TRUE, pressing the scrollback key will access previous screenfuls which
 2080: # will have been stored on the local PC and will therefore be displayed
 2081: # instantaneously, instead of needing to be retransmitted by Lynx at the
 2082: # speed of the comm connection (but Lynx will not know about the change,
 2083: # so you must restore the last screen before resuming with Lynx commands).
 2084: #
 2085: # The compilation default is FALSE (if REVERSE_CLEAR_SCREEN_PROBLEM was not
 2086: # defined in the Unix Makefile to invoke this behavior as a workaround for
 2087: # some poor curses implementations).
 2088: #
 2089: # The default compilation or configuration setting can be toggled via an
 2090: # "-enable_scrollback" command line switch.
 2091: #
 2092: #ENABLE_SCROLLBACK:FALSE
 2093: 
 2094: 
 2095: .h2 SCAN_FOR_BURIED_NEWS_REFS
 2096: # If SCAN_FOR_BURIED_NEWS_REFS is set to TRUE, Lynx will scan the bodies
 2097: # of news articles for buried article and URL references and convert them
 2098: # to links.  The compilation default is TRUE, but some email addresses
 2099: # enclosed in angle brackets ("<user@address>") might be converted to false
 2100: # news links, and uuencoded messages might be corrupted.  The conversion is
 2101: # not done when the display is toggled to source or when 'd'ownloading, so
 2102: # uuencoded articles can be saved intact regardless of these settings.
 2103: #
 2104: # The default setting can be toggled via a "-buried_news" command line
 2105: # switch.
 2106: #
 2107: #SCAN_FOR_BURIED_NEWS_REFS:TRUE
 2108: 
 2109: 
 2110: .h2 PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE
 2111: # If PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE is set to FALSE, Lynx will not prepend a
 2112: # Request URL comment and BASE element to text/html source files when
 2113: # they are retrieved for 'd'ownloading or passed to 'p'rint functions.
 2114: # The compilation default is TRUE.  Note that this prepending is not
 2115: # done for -source dumps, unless the -base switch also was included on
 2116: # the command line, and the latter switch overrides the setting of the
 2117: # PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE configuration variable.
 2118: #
 2119: #PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE:TRUE
 2120: 
 2121: 
 2122: # MIME types and viewers!
 2123: #
 2124: # file extensions may be assigned to MIME types using
 2125: # the SUFFIX: definition.
 2126: #
 2127: # NOTE: It is normally preferable to define new extension mappings in
 2128: #       EXTENSION_MAP files (see below) instead of here:  Definitions
 2129: #       here are overridden by those in EXTENSION_MAP files and even by
 2130: #       some built-in defaults in src/HTInit.c.  On the other hand,
 2131: #       definitions here allow some more fields that are not possible
 2132: #       in those files.
 2133: #
 2134: #       Extension mappings have an effect mostly for ftp and local files,
 2135: #       they are NOT used to determine the type of content for URLs with
 2136: #       the http protocol.  This is because HTTP servers already specify
 2137: #       the MIME type in the Content-Type header.  [It may still be
 2138: #       necessary to set up an appropriate suffix for some MIME types,
 2139: #       even if they are accessed only via the HTTP protocol, if the viewer
 2140: #       (see below) for those MIME types requires a certain suffix for the
 2141: #       temporary file passed to it.]
 2142: 
 2143: 
 2144: .h1 External Programs
 2145: 
 2146: .h2 GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP
 2147: .h2 PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP
 2148: # The global and personal EXTENSION_MAP files allow you to assign extensions
 2149: # to MIME types which will override any of the suffix maps in this (lynx.cfg)
 2150: # configuration file, or in src/HTInit.c.  See the example mime.types file
 2151: # in the samples subdirectory.
 2152: #
 2153: # Unix:
 2154: # ====
 2155: #GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP:/usr/local/lib/mosaic/mime.types
 2156: # VMS:
 2157: # ===
 2158: #GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP:Lynx_Dir:mime.types
 2159: #
 2160: #	Unix (sought in user's home directory):
 2161: #PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP:.mime.types
 2162: #	VMS (sought in user's sys$login directory):
 2163: #PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP:mime.types
 2164: 
 2165: 
 2166: .h2 SUFFIX_ORDER
 2167: # With SUFFIX_ORDER the precedence of suffix mappings can be changed.
 2168: # Two kinds of settings are recognized:
 2169: #
 2170: #    PRECEDENCE_OTHER or PRECEDENCE_HERE
 2171: #      Suffix mappings can come from four sources: (1) SUFFIX rules
 2172: #      given here - see below, (2) builtin defaults (HTInit.c), and the
 2173: #      (3) GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP and (4) PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP files.
 2174: #      The order of precedence is normally as listed: (1) has the
 2175: #      *lowest*, (4) has the *highest* precedence if there are conflicts.
 2176: #      In other words, SUFFIX mappings here are overridden by conflicting
 2177: #      ones elsewhere.  This default ordering is called PRECEDENCE_OTHER.
 2178: #      With PRECEDENCE_HERE, the order becomes (2) (3) (4) (1), i.e.
 2179: #      mappings here override others made elsewhere.
 2180: #
 2181: #    NO_BUILTIN
 2182: #      This disables all builtin default rules.  In other words, (2) in the
 2183: #      list above is skipped.  Some recognition for compressed files (".gz",
 2184: #      ".Z") is still hardwired.   A mapping for some basic types, at least
 2185: #      for text/html is probably necessary to get a usable configuration,
 2186: #      it can be given in a SUFFIX rule below or an extension map file.
 2187: # Both kinds of settings can be combined, separated by comma as in
 2188: #        SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_HERE,NO_BUILTIN
 2189: # Note: Using PRECEDENCE_HERE has only an effect on SUFFIX rules that follow.
 2190: # Moreover, if GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP or PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP directives
 2191: # are used, they should come *before* a SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_HERE.
 2192: #
 2193: #SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_OTHER
 2194: 
 2195: 
 2196: .h2 SUFFIX
 2197: # The SUFFIX definition takes the form of:
 2198: #
 2199: #    SUFFIX:<file extension>:<mime type>:<encoding>:<quality>:<description>
 2200: #
 2201: # All fields after <mime type> are optional (including the separators
 2202: # if no more fields follow).
 2203: #
 2204: #     <file extension> trailing end of file name.  This need not strictly
 2205: #                      be a file extension as understood by the OS, a dot
 2206: #                      has to be given explicitly if it is indented, for
 2207: #                      some uses one could even match full filenames here.
 2208: #                      In addition, two forms are special: "*.*" and "*"
 2209: #                      refer to the defaults for otherwise unmatched files
 2210: #                      (the first for filenames with a dot somewhere in
 2211: #                      the name, the second without), these are currently
 2212: #                      mapped to text/plain in the (HTInit.c) builtin code.
 2213: #                      Lynx compares the file-extensions ignoring case.
 2214: #
 2215: #     <mime type> a MIME content type.  It can also contain a charset
 2216: #                 parameter, see example below.  This should be given in
 2217: #                 all lowercase, use <description> for more fancy labels.
 2218: #                 It can be left empty if an HTTP style encoding is given.
 2219: #
 2220: # Fields in addition to the usual ones are
 2221: #
 2222: #     <encoding>  either a mail style trivial encoding (7bit, 8bit, binary)
 2223: #                 which could be used on some systems to determine how to
 2224: #                 open local files (currently it isn't), and is used to
 2225: #                 determine transfer mode for some FTP URLs; or a HTTP style
 2226: #                 content encoding (gzip (equivalent to x-gzip), compress)
 2227: #
 2228: #     <quality> a floating point quality factor, usually between 0.0 and 1.0
 2229: #               currently unused in most situations.
 2230: #
 2231: #     <description> text that can appear in FTP directory listings, and in
 2232: #                   local directory listings (see LIST_FORMAT, code %t)
 2233: #
 2234: # For instance the following definition maps the
 2235: # extension ".gif" to the mime type "image/gif"
 2236: .ex
 2237: #    SUFFIX:.gif:image/gif
 2238: #
 2239: # The following can be used if you have a convention to label
 2240: # HTML files in some character set that differs from your local
 2241: # default (see also ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET) with a different
 2242: # extension, here ".html-u8".  It also demonstrates use of the
 2243: # description field, note extra separators for omitted fields:
 2244: .ex
 2245: #    SUFFIX:.html-u8:text/html;charset=utf-8:::UTF-8 HTML
 2246: #
 2247: # The following shows how a suffix can indicate a combination
 2248: # of MIME type and compression method. (The ending ".ps.gz" should
 2249: # already be recognized by default; the form below could be used on
 2250: # systems that don't allow more than one dot in filenames.)
 2251: .ex
 2252: #    SUFFIX:.ps_gz:application/postscript:gzip::gzip'd Postscript
 2253: #
 2254: # The following is meant to match a full filename (but can match
 2255: # any file ending in "core", so be careful):
 2256: .ex
 2257: #    SUFFIX:core:application/x-core-file
 2258: #
 2259: # file suffixes are case INsensitive!
 2260: #
 2261: # The suffix definitions listed here in the default lynx.cfg file are
 2262: # similar to those normally established via src/HTInit.c.  You can change
 2263: # the defaults by editing that file or disable them, or via the global or
 2264: # personal mime.types files at run time (except for the additional fields).
 2265: # Assignments made here are overridden by entries in those files
 2266: # unless preceded with a SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_HERE.
 2267: #
 2268: .ex 29
 2269: #SUFFIX:.ps:application/postscript
 2270: #SUFFIX:.eps:application/postscript
 2271: #SUFFIX:.ai:application/postscript
 2272: #SUFFIX:.rtf:application/rtf
 2273: #SUFFIX:.snd:audio/basic
 2274: #SUFFIX:.gif:image/gif
 2275: #SUFFIX:.rgb:image/x-rgb
 2276: #SUFFIX:.png:image/png
 2277: #SUFFIX:.xbm:image/x-xbitmap
 2278: #SUFFIX:.tiff:image/tiff
 2279: #SUFFIX:.jpg:image/jpeg
 2280: #SUFFIX:.jpeg:image/jpeg
 2281: #SUFFIX:.mpg:video/mpeg
 2282: #SUFFIX:.mpeg:video/mpeg
 2283: #SUFFIX:.mov:video/quicktime
 2284: #SUFFIX:.hqx:application/mac-binhex40
 2285: #SUFFIX:.bin:application/octet-stream
 2286: #SUFFIX:.exe:application/octet-stream
 2287: #SUFFIX:.tar:application/x-tar
 2288: #SUFFIX:.tgz:application/x-tar:gzip
 2289: #SUFFIX:.Z::compress
 2290: #SUFFIX:.gz::gzip
 2291: #SUFFIX:.bz2:application/x-bzip2
 2292: #SUFFIX:.zip:application/zip
 2293: #SUFFIX:.lzh:application/x-lzh
 2294: #SUFFIX:.lha:application/x-lha
 2295: #SUFFIX:.dms:application/x-dms
 2296: #SUFFIX:.html:text/html
 2297: #SUFFIX:.txt:text/plain
 2298: 
 2299: 
 2300: .h2 XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND
 2301: # VMS:
 2302: # ====
 2303: # XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND will be used as a default in src/HTInit.c
 2304: # for viewing image content types when the DECW$DISPLAY logical
 2305: # is set.  Make it the foreign command for your system's X image
 2306: # viewer (commonly, "xv").  It can be anything that will handle GIF,
 2307: # TIFF and other popular image formats.  Freeware ports of xv for
 2308: # VMS are available in the ftp://ftp.wku.edu/vms/unsupported and
 2309: # http://www.openvms.digital.com/cd/XV310A/ subdirectories.  You
 2310: # must also have a "%s" for the filename.  The default is defined
 2311: # in userdefs.h and can be overridden here, or via the global or
 2312: # personal mailcap files (see below).
 2313: #
 2314: # Make this empty (but not commented out) if you don't have such a viewer or
 2315: # want to disable the built-in default viewer mappings for image types.
 2316: #
 2317: #XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND:xv %s
 2318: 
 2319: # Unix:
 2320: # =====
 2321: # XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND will be used as a default in src/HTInit.c for
 2322: # viewing image content types when the DISPLAY environment variable
 2323: # is set.  Make it the full path and name of the xli (also know as
 2324: # xloadimage or xview) command, or other image viewer.  It can be
 2325: # anything that will handle GIF, TIFF and other popular image formats
 2326: # (xli does).  The freeware distribution of xli is available in the
 2327: # ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib subdirectory.  The shareware, xv, also is
 2328: # suitable.  You must also have a "%s" for the filename; "&" for
 2329: # background is optional.  The default is defined in userdefs.h and can be
 2330: # overridden here, or via the global or personal mailcap files (see below).
 2331: # Make this empty (but not commented out) if you don't have such a
 2332: # viewer or don't want to disable the built-in default viewer
 2333: # mappings for image types.
 2334: # Note that open is used as the default for NeXT, instead of the
 2335: # XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND definition.
 2336: # If you use xli, you may want to add the -quiet flag.
 2337: #
 2338: #XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND:xli %s &
 2339: 
 2340: .h2 VIEWER
 2341: # MIME types may be assigned to external viewers using
 2342: # the VIEWER definition.
 2343: #
 2344: # NOTE: if you do not define a viewer to a new MIME type
 2345: #       that you assigned above then it will be saved to
 2346: #       disk by default.
 2347: #       It is normally preferable to define new viewers in
 2348: #       MAILCAP files (see below) instead of here:  Definitions
 2349: #       here are overridden by those in MAILCAP files and even
 2350: #       by some built-in defaults in src/HTInit.c.
 2351: #
 2352: # The VIEWER definition takes the form of:
 2353: #    VIEWER:<mime type>:<viewer command>[:<environment>]
 2354: #      where -mime type is the MIME content type of the file
 2355: #	     -viewer command is a system command that can be
 2356: #             used to display the file where %s is replaced
 2357: #             within the command with the physical filename
 2358: #             (e.g., "ghostview %s" becomes "ghostview /tmp/temppsfile")
 2359: #            -environment is optional.  The only valid keywords
 2360: #             are currently XWINDOWS and NON_XWINDOWS.  If the XWINDOWS
 2361: #             environment is specified then the viewer will only be
 2362: #             defined when the user has the environment variable DISPLAY
 2363: #             (DECW$DISPLAY on VMS) defined.  If the NON_XWINDOWS environment
 2364: #             is specified the specified viewer will only be defined when the
 2365: #             user DOES NOT have the environment variable DISPLAY defined.
 2366: #  examples:
 2367: #		VIEWER:image/gif:xli %s:XWINDOWS
 2368: #               VIEWER:image/gif:ascii-view %s:NON_XWINDOWS
 2369: #               VIEWER:application/start-elm:elm
 2370: #
 2371: # You must put the whole definition on one line.
 2372: #
 2373: # If you must use a colon in the viewer command, precede it with a backslash!
 2374: #
 2375: # The MIME_type:viewer:XWINDOWS definitions listed here in the lynx.cfg
 2376: # file are among those established via src/HTInit.c.  For the image types,
 2377: # HTInit.c uses the XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND definition in userdefs.h or above
 2378: # (open is used for NeXT).  You can change any of these defaults via the
 2379: # global or personal mailcap files.  Assignments made here will be overridden
 2380: # by entries in those files.
 2381: #
 2382: .ex 7
 2383: #VIEWER:application/postscript:ghostview %s&:XWINDOWS
 2384: #VIEWER:image/gif:xli %s&:XWINDOWS
 2385: #VIEWER:image/x-xbm:xli %s&:XWINDOWS
 2386: #VIEWER:image/png:xli %s&:XWINDOWS
 2387: #VIEWER:image/tiff:xli %s&:XWINDOWS
 2388: #VIEWER:image/jpeg:xli %s&:XWINDOWS
 2389: #VIEWER:video/mpeg:mpeg_play %s &:XWINDOWS
 2390: 
 2391: 
 2392: .h2 GLOBAL_MAILCAP
 2393: .h2 PERSONAL_MAILCAP
 2394: # The global and personal MAILCAP files allow you to specify external
 2395: # viewers to be spawned when Lynx encounters different MIME types, which
 2396: # will override any of the suffix maps in this (lynx.cfg) configuration
 2397: # file, or in src/HTInit.c.  See http://www.internic.net/rfc/rfc1524.txt
 2398: # and the example mailcap file in the samples subdirectory.
 2399: #
 2400: # Unix:
 2401: # ====
 2402: #GLOBAL_MAILCAP:/usr/local/lib/mosaic/mailcap
 2403: # VMS:
 2404: # ===
 2405: #GLOBAL_MAILCAP:Lynx_Dir:mailcap
 2406: #
 2407: # 	Sought in user's home (Unix) or sys$login (VMS) directory.
 2408: #PERSONAL_MAILCAP:.mailcap
 2409: 
 2410: .h2 PREFERRED_MEDIA_TYPES
 2411: # When doing a GET, lynx lists the MIME types which it knows how to present
 2412: # (the "Accept:" string).  Depending on your system configuration, the
 2413: # mime.types or other data given by the GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP may include many
 2414: # entries that lynx really does not handle.  Use this option to select one
 2415: # of the built-in subsets of the MIME types that lynx could list in the
 2416: # Accept.
 2417: #
 2418: # Values for this option are keywords:
 2419: #	INTERNAL	lynx's built-in types for internal conversions
 2420: #	CONFIGFILE	adds lynx.cfg
 2421: #	USER		adds PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP settings
 2422: #	SYSTEM		adds GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP  settings
 2423: #	ALL		adds lynx's built-in types for external conversions
 2424: #
 2425: #PREFERRED_MEDIA_TYPES:internal
 2426: 
 2427: .h2 PREFERRED_ENCODING
 2428: # When doing a GET, lynx tells what types of compressed data it can decompress
 2429: # (the "Accept-Encoding:" string).  This is determined by compiled-in support
 2430: # for decompression or external decompression programs.
 2431: #
 2432: # Values for this option are keywords:
 2433: #	NONE		Do not request compressed data
 2434: #	GZIP		For gzip
 2435: #	COMPRESS	For compress
 2436: #	BZIP2		For bzip2
 2437: #	ALL		All of the above.
 2438: #PREFERRED_ENCODING:all
 2439: 
 2440: 
 2441: 
 2442: .h1 Keyboard Input
 2443: 
 2444: .h2 KEYBOARD_LAYOUT
 2445: # If your terminal (or terminal emulator, or operating system) does not
 2446: # support 8-bit input (at all or in easy way), you can use Lynx to
 2447: # generate 8-bit characters from 7-bit ones output by terminal.
 2448: #
 2449: # Currently available keyboard layouts:
 2450: #	ROT13'd keyboard layout
 2451: #	JCUKEN Cyrillic, for AT 101-key kbd
 2452: #	YAWERTY Cyrillic, for DEC LK201 kbd
 2453: #
 2454: # This feature is ifdef'd with EXP_KEYBOARD_LAYOUT.
 2455: #KEYBOARD_LAYOUT:JCUKEN Cyrillic, for AT 101-key kbd
 2456: 
 2457: 
 2458: .h2 KEYMAP
 2459: # Key remapping definitions!
 2460: #
 2461: # You may redefine the keymapping of any function in Lynx by
 2462: # using the KEYMAP option.  The basic form of KEYMAP is:
 2463: #  KEYMAP:<KEYSTROKE>:<LYNX FUNCTION>
 2464: # (See below for an extended format.)
 2465: #
 2466: # You must map upper and lowercase keys separately.
 2467: #
 2468: # A representative list of functions mapped to their default keys is
 2469: # provided below.  All of the mappings are commented out by default
 2470: # since they just repeat the default mappings, except for TOGGLE_HELP
 2471: # (see below).  See LYKeymap.c for the complete key mapping.  Use the
 2472: # 'K'eymap command when running Lynx for a list of the _current_ keymappings.
 2473: #
 2474: # (However, in contrast to the output of 'K' command,
 2475: # 'H'elp (lynx_help/*.html and lynx_help/keystrokes/*.html files) shows
 2476: # the default mapping unless you change that files manually,
 2477: # so you are responsible for possible deviations
 2478: # when you are changing any KEYMAP below).
 2479: .nf
 2480: #
 2481: # Keystrokes for special keys are represented by the following codes:
 2482: #         Up Arrow: 0x100
 2483: #       Down Arrow: 0x101
 2484: #      Right Arrow: 0x102
 2485: #       Left Arrow: 0x103
 2486: #        Page Down: 0x104
 2487: #          Page Up: 0x105
 2488: #      Keypad Home: 0x106 (see also 0x10A)
 2489: #       Keypad End: 0x107 (see also 0x10B)
 2490: #   Function key 1: 0x108
 2491: # vt100   Help Key: 0x108
 2492: # vt100     Do Key: 0x109
 2493: # vt100   Find Key: 0x10A (The key with label "Home" may be treated as Find)
 2494: # vt100 Select Key: 0x10B (The key with label "End" may be treated as Select)
 2495: #       Insert Key: 0x10C
 2496: # Remove (Del) Key: 0x10D
 2497: #      ignored key  0x10E (reserved for internal use, DO_NOTHING)
 2498: # Back (Shift) Tab: 0x10F
 2499: #    reserved code  0x11D (reserved for internal use with -use_mouse)
 2500: #    reserved code  0x290 (reserved for internal use with -use_mouse)
 2501: #
 2502: .fi
 2503: # Other codes not listed above may be available for additional keys,
 2504: # depending on operating system and libraries used to compile Lynx.
 2505: # On some systems, if compiled with recent versions of slang or ncurses
 2506: # (if macro USE_KEYMAPS was in effect during compilation), an additional
 2507: # level of key mapping is supported via an external ".lynx-keymaps" file.
 2508: # This file, if found in the home directory at startup, will always be
 2509: # used under those conditions; see lynx-keymaps distributed in the samples
 2510: # subdirectory for further explanation.  Note that mapping via
 2511: # .lynx-keymaps, if applicable, is a step that logically comes before the
 2512: # mappings done here: KEYMAP maps the result of that step (which still
 2513: # represents a key) to a function (which represents an action that Lynx
 2514: # should perform).
 2515: #
 2516: .nf
 2517: #KEYMAP:0x5C:SOURCE		# Toggle source viewing mode (show HTML source)
 2518: #KEYMAP:^R:RELOAD		# Reload the current document and redisplay
 2519: #KEYMAP:^U:NEXT_DOC		# Undo PREV_DOC)
 2520: #KEYMAP:q:QUIT			# Ask the user to quit
 2521: #KEYMAP:Q:ABORT			# Quit without verification
 2522: #KEYMAP:0x20:NEXT_PAGE		# Move down to next page
 2523: #KEYMAP:-:PREV_PAGE		# Move up to previous page
 2524: #KEYMAP:^P:UP_TWO		# Move display up two lines
 2525: #KEYMAP:0x10C:UP_TWO		# Function key Insert - Move display up two lines
 2526: #KEYMAP:^N:DOWN_TWO		# Move display down two lines
 2527: #KEYMAP:0x10D:DOWN_TWO		# Function key Remove - Move display down two lines
 2528: #KEYMAP:(:UP_HALF		# Move display up half a page
 2529: #KEYMAP:):DOWN_HALF		# Move display down half a page
 2530: #KEYMAP:^W:REFRESH		# Refresh the screen
 2531: #KEYMAP:^A:HOME			# Go to top of current document
 2532: #KEYMAP:0x106:HOME		# Keypad Home - Go to top of current document
 2533: #KEYMAP:0x10A:HOME		# Function key Find - Go to top of current document
 2534: #KEYMAP:^E:END			# Go to bottom of current document
 2535: #KEYMAP:0x107:END		# Keypad End - Go to bottom of current document
 2536: #KEYMAP:0x10B:END		# Function key Select - Go to bottom of current document
 2537: #KEYMAP:0x100:PREV_LINK		# Move to the previous link or page
 2538: #KEYMAP:0x101:NEXT_LINK		# Move to the next link or page
 2539: #KEYMAP:0x10F:FASTBACKW_LINK 	# Back Tab - Move to previous link or text area
 2540: #KEYMAP:^I:FASTFORW_LINK	# Tab key - Move always to next link or text area
 2541: #KEYMAP:^:FIRST_LINK		# Move to the first link on line
 2542: #KEYMAP:$:LAST_LINK		# Move to the last link on line
 2543: #KEYMAP:<:UP_LINK		# Move to the link above
 2544: #KEYMAP:>:DOWN_LINK		# Move to the link below
 2545: #KEYMAP:0x7F:HISTORY		# Show the history list
 2546: #KEYMAP:0x08:HISTORY		# Show the history list
 2547: #KEYMAP:0x103:PREV_DOC		# Return to the previous document in history stack
 2548: #KEYMAP:0x102:ACTIVATE		# Select the current link
 2549: #KEYMAP:0x109:ACTIVATE		# Function key Do - Select the current link
 2550: #KEYMAP:g:GOTO			# Goto a random URL
 2551: #KEYMAP:G:ECGOTO		# Edit the current document's URL and go to it
 2552: #KEYMAP:H:HELP			# Show default help screen
 2553: #KEYMAP:0x108:DWIMHELP		# Function key Help - Show a help screen
 2554: #KEYMAP:i:INDEX			# Show default index
 2555: #*** Edit FORM_LINK_* messages in LYMessages_en.h if you change NOCACHE ***
 2556: #KEYMAP:x:NOCACHE		# Force submission of form or link with no-cache
 2557: #*** Do not change INTERRUPT from 'z' & 'Z' ***
 2558: #KEYMAP:z:INTERRUPT		# Interrupt network transmission
 2559: #KEYMAP:m:MAIN_MENU		# Return to the main menu
 2560: #KEYMAP:o:OPTIONS		# Show the options menu
 2561: #KEYMAP:i:INDEX_SEARCH		# Search a server based index
 2562: #KEYMAP:/:WHEREIS		# Find a string within the current document
 2563: #KEYMAP:n:NEXT			# Find next occurrence of string within document
 2564: #KEYMAP:c:COMMENT		# Comment to the author of the current document
 2565: #KEYMAP:C:CHDIR			# Change current directory
 2566: #KEYMAP:e:EDIT			# Edit current document or form's textarea (call: ^Ve)
 2567: #KEYMAP:E:ELGOTO		# Edit the current link's URL or ACTION and go to it
 2568: #KEYMAP:=:INFO			# Show info about current document
 2569: #KEYMAP:p:PRINT			# Show print options
 2570: #KEYMAP:a:ADD_BOOKMARK		# Add current document to bookmark list
 2571: #KEYMAP:v:VIEW_BOOKMARK		# View the bookmark list
 2572: #KEYMAP:V:VLINKS		# List links visited during the current Lynx session
 2573: #KEYMAP:!:SHELL			# Spawn default shell
 2574: #KEYMAP:d:DOWNLOAD		# Download current link
 2575: #KEYMAP:j:JUMP			# Jump to a predefined target
 2576: #KEYMAP:k:KEYMAP		# Display the current key map
 2577: #KEYMAP:l:LIST			# List the references (links) in the current document
 2578: #KEYMAP:#:TOOLBAR		# Go to the Toolbar or Banner in the current document
 2579: #KEYMAP:^T:TRACE_TOGGLE		# Toggle detailed tracing for debugging
 2580: #KEYMAP:;:TRACE_LOG		# View trace log if available for the current session
 2581: #KEYMAP:*:IMAGE_TOGGLE		# Toggle inclusion of links for all images
 2582: #KEYMAP:[:INLINE_TOGGLE		# Toggle pseudo-ALTs for inlines with no ALT string
 2583: #KEYMAP:]:HEAD			# Send a HEAD request for current document or link
 2584: #*** Must be compiled with USE_EXTERNALS to enable EXTERN_LINK, EXTERN_PAGE ***
 2585: #KEYMAP:,:EXTERN_PAGE		# Run external program with current page
 2586: #KEYMAP:.:EXTERN_LINK		# Run external program with current link
 2587: #*** Escaping from text input fields with ^V is independent from this: ***
 2588: #KEYMAP:^V:SWITCH_DTD		# Toggle between SortaSGML and TagSoup HTML parsing
 2589: #KEYMAP:0x00:DO_NOTHING		# Does nothing (ignore this key)
 2590: #KEYMAP:0x10E:DO_NOTHING	# Does nothing (ignore this key)
 2591: #KEYMAP:{:SHIFT_LEFT		# shift the screen left
 2592: #KEYMAP:}:SHIFT_RIGHT		# shift the screen right
 2593: #KEYMAP:|:LINEWRAP_TOGGLE	# toggle linewrap on/off, for shift-commands
 2594: #KEYMAP:~:NESTED_TABLES		# toggle nested-tables parsing on/off
 2595: #
 2596: .fi
 2597: # In addition to the bindings available by default, the following functions
 2598: # are not directly mapped to any keys by default, although some of them may
 2599: # be mapped in specific line-editor bindings (effective while in text input
 2600: # fields):
 2601: .nf
 2602: #
 2603: #KEYMAP:???:RIGHT_LINK		# Move to the link to the right
 2604: #KEYMAP:???:LEFT_LINK		# Move to the link to the left
 2605: #KEYMAP:???:LPOS_PREV_LINK	# Like PREV_LINK, last column pos if form input
 2606: #KEYMAP:???:LPOS_NEXT_LINK	# Like NEXT_LINK, last column pos if form input
 2607: #*** Only useful in form text fields , need PASS or prefixing with ^V: ***
 2608: #KEYMAP:???:DWIMHELP		# Display help page that may depend on context
 2609: #KEYMAP:???:DWIMEDIT		# Use external editor for context-dependent purpose
 2610: #*** Only useful in a form textarea, need PASS or prefixing with ^V: ***
 2611: #KEYMAP:???:EDITTEXTAREA	# use external editor to edit a form textarea
 2612: #KEYMAP:???:GROWTEXTAREA	# Add some blank lines to bottom of textarea
 2613: #KEYMAP:???:INSERTFILE		# Insert file into a textarea (just above cursor)
 2614: #*** Only useful with dired support and OK_INSTALL: ***
 2615: #KEYMAP:???:INSTALL		# install (i.e. copy) local files to new location
 2616: .fi
 2617: #
 2618: # If TOGGLE_HELP is mapped, in novice mode the second help menu line
 2619: # can be toggled among NOVICE_LINE_TWO_A, _B, and _C, as defined in
 2620: # LYMessages_en.h  Otherwise, it will be NOVICE_LINE_TWO.
 2621: #
 2622: #KEYMAP:O:TOGGLE_HELP		# Show other commands in the novice help menu
 2623: #
 2624: # KEYMAP lines can have one or two additional fields.  The extended format is
 2625: #  KEYMAP:<KEYSTROKE>:[<MAIN LYNX FUNCTION>]:<OTHER BINDING>[:<SELECT>]
 2626: #
 2627: # If the additional field OTHER BINDING specifies DIRED, then the function is
 2628: # mapped in the override table used only in DIRED mode.  This is only valid
 2629: # if lynx was compiled with dired support and OK_OVERRIDE defined.  A
 2630: # MAIN LYNX FUNCTION must be given (it should of course be one that makes
 2631: # sense in Dired mode), and SELECT is meaningless.  Default built-in override
 2632: # mappings are
 2633: #
 2634: #KEYMAP:^U:NEXT_DOC:DIRED	# Undo going back to the previous document
 2635: #KEYMAP:.:TAG_LINK:DIRED	# Tag a file or directory for later action
 2636: #KEYMAP:c:CREATE:DIRED		# Create a new file or directory
 2637: #KEYMAP:C:CHDIR:DIRED		# change current directory
 2638: #KEYMAP:f:DIRED_MENU:DIRED	# Display a menu of file operations
 2639: #KEYMAP:m:MODIFY:DIRED		# Modify name or location of a file or directory
 2640: #KEYMAP:r:REMOVE:DIRED		# Remove files or directories
 2641: #KEYMAP:t:TAG_LINK:DIRED	# Tag a file or directory for later action
 2642: #KEYMAP:u:UPLOAD:DIRED		# Show menu of "Upload Options"
 2643: #
 2644: # If the OTHER BINDING field does not specify DIRED, then it is taken as a
 2645: # line-editor action.  It is possible to keep the MAIN LYNX FUNCTION field
 2646: # empty in that case, for changing only the line-editing behavior.
 2647: # If alternative line edit styles are compiled in, and modifying a key's
 2648: # line-editor binding on a per style basis is possible, then SELECT can be
 2649: # used to specify which styles are affected.  By default, or if SELECT is
 2650: # 0, all line edit styles are affected.  If SELECT is a positive integer
 2651: # number, only the binding for the numbered style is changed (numbering
 2652: # is in the order in which styles are shown in the Options Menu, starting
 2653: # with 1 for the Default style).  If SELECT is negative (-n), all styles
 2654: # except n are affected.
 2655: .nf
 2656: #
 2657: #  NOP		# Do Nothing
 2658: #  ABORT	# Input cancelled
 2659: #
 2660: #  BOL		# Go to begin of line
 2661: #  EOL		# Go to end   of line
 2662: #  FORW		# Cursor forwards
 2663: #  FORW_RL	# Cursor forwards or right link
 2664: #  BACK		# Cursor backwards
 2665: #  FORWW	# Word forward
 2666: #  BACKW	# Word back
 2667: #  BACK_LL	# Cursor backwards or left link
 2668: #
 2669: #  DELN		# Delete next/curr char
 2670: #  DELP		# Delete prev      char
 2671: #  DELNW	# Delete next word
 2672: #  DELPW	# Delete prev word
 2673: #  DELBL	# Delete back to BOL
 2674: #  DELEL	# Delete thru EOL
 2675: #  ERASE	# Erase the line
 2676: #  LOWER	# Lower case the line
 2677: #  UPPER	# Upper case the line
 2678: #
 2679: #  LKCMD	# In fields: Invoke key command prompt (default for ^V)
 2680: #  PASS		# In fields: handle as non-lineedit key; in prompts: ignore
 2681: #
 2682: .fi
 2683: # Modify following key (prefixing only works within line-editing, edit actions
 2684: # of some resulting prefixed keys are built-in, see Line Editor help pages)
 2685: #  SETM1	# Set modifier 1 flag (default for ^X - key prefix)
 2686: #  SETM2	# Set modifier 2 flag (another key prefix - same effect)
 2687: #
 2688: # May not always be compiled in:
 2689: .nf
 2690: #
 2691: #  TPOS		# Transpose characters
 2692: #  SETMARK	# emacs-like set-mark-command
 2693: #  XPMARK	# emacs-like exchange-point-and-mark
 2694: #  KILLREG	# emacs-like kill-region
 2695: #  YANK		# emacs-like yank
 2696: #  SWMAP	# Switch input keymap
 2697: #  PASTE	# ClipBoard to Lynx - Windows Extension
 2698: #
 2699: .fi
 2700: # May work differently from expected if not bound to their expected keys:
 2701: .nf
 2702: #
 2703: #  CHAR		# Insert printable char (default for all ASCII printable)
 2704: #  ENTER	# Input complete, return char/lynxkeycode (for RETURN/ENTER)
 2705: #  TAB		# Input complete, return TAB (for ASCII TAB char ^I)
 2706: #
 2707: .fi
 2708: # Internal use, probably not useful for binding, listed for completeness:
 2709: .nf
 2710: #
 2711: #  UNMOD	# Fall back to no-modifier command
 2712: #  AIX		# Hex 97
 2713: #  C1CHAR	# Insert C1 char if printable
 2714: #
 2715: .fi
 2716: # If OTHER BINDING specifies PASS, then if the key is pressed in a text input
 2717: # field it is passed by the built-in line-editor to normal KEYMAP handling,
 2718: # i.e. this flag acts like an implied ^V escape (always overrides line-editor
 2719: # behavior of the key).  For example,
 2720: #KEYMAP:0x10C:UP_TWO:PASS # Function key Insert - Move display up two lines
 2721: #
 2722: # Other examples (repeating built-in bindings)
 2723: #KEYMAP:^V::LKCMD	# set (only) line-edit action for ^V
 2724: #KEYMAP:^V:SWITCH_DTD:LKCMD # set main lynxaction and line-edit action for ^V
 2725: #KEYMAP:^U::ERASE:1	# set line-edit binding for ^U, for default style
 2726: #KEYMAP:^[::SETM2:3	# use escape key as modifier - works only sometimes
 2727: 
 2728: 
 2729: .h1 External Programs
 2730: # These settings control the ability of Lynx to invoke various programs for
 2731: # the user.
 2732: 
 2733: .h2 CSWING_PATH
 2734: # VMS ONLY:
 2735: #==========
 2736: # On VMS, CSwing (an XTree emulation for VTxxx terminals) is intended for
 2737: # use as the Directory/File Manager (sources, objects, or executables are
 2738: # available from ftp://narnia.memst.edu/).  CSWING_PATH should be defined
 2739: # here or in userdefs.h to your foreign command for CSwing, with any
 2740: # regulatory switches you want included.  If not defined, or defined as
 2741: # a zero-length string ("") or "none" (case-insensitive), the support
 2742: # will be disabled.  It will also be disabled if the -nobrowse or
 2743: # -selective switches are used, or if the file_url restriction is set.
 2744: #
 2745: # When enabled, the DIRED_MENU command (normally 'f' or 'F') will invoke
 2746: # CSwing, normally with the current default directory as an argument to
 2747: # position the user on that node of the directory tree.  However, if the
 2748: # current document is a local directory listing, or a local file and not
 2749: # one of the temporary menu or list files, the associated directory will
 2750: # be passed as an argument, to position the user on that node of the tree.
 2751: #
 2752: #CSWING_PATH:swing
 2753: 
 2754: 
 2755: .h1 Internal Behavior
 2756: 
 2757: .h2 AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS
 2758: # AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS determines when local file directory listings are
 2759: # automatically regenerated (by re-reading the actual directory from disk).
 2760: # Set the value to 0 to avoid automatic regeneration in most cases.  This is
 2761: # useful for browsing large directories that take some time to read and format.
 2762: # An update can still always be forced with the RELOAD key, and specific DIRED
 2763: # actions may cause a refresh anyway.  Set the value to 1 to force regeneration
 2764: # after commands that usually change the directory or some files and would make
 2765: # the displayed info stale, like EDIT and REMOVE.  Set it to 2 (the default) or
 2766: # greater to force regeneration even after leaving the displayed directory
 2767: # listing by some action that usually causes no change, like GOTO or entering a
 2768: # file with the ACTIVATE key.  This option is only honored in DIRED mode (i.e.
 2769: # when lynx is compiled with DIRED_SUPPORT and it is not disabled with a
 2770: # -restriction).  Local directories displayed without DIRED normally act as if
 2771: # AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS:0 was in effect.
 2772: #
 2773: #AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS:2
 2774: 
 2775: 
 2776: .h1 Appearance
 2777: 
 2778: .h2 LIST_FORMAT
 2779: # LIST_FORMAT defines the display for local files when Lynx has been
 2780: # compiled with LONG_LIST defined in the Makefile.  The default is set
 2781: # in userdefs.h, normally to "ls -l" format, and can be changed here
 2782: # by uncommenting the indicated lines, or adding a definition with a
 2783: # modified parameter list.
 2784: #
 2785: # This feature is not available for VMS.
 2786: #
 2787: # The percent items in the list are interpreted as follows:
 2788: .nf
 2789: #
 2790: #	%p	Unix-style permission bits
 2791: #	%l	link count
 2792: #	%o	owner of file
 2793: #	%g	group of file
 2794: #	%d	date of last modification
 2795: #	%a	anchor pointing to file or directory
 2796: #	%A	as above but don't show symbolic links
 2797: #	%t	type of file (description derived from MIME type)
 2798: #	%T	MIME type as known by Lynx (from mime.types or default)
 2799: #	%k	size of file in Kilobytes
 2800: #	%K	as above but omit size for directories
 2801: #	%s	size of file in bytes
 2802: #
 2803: .fi
 2804: # Anything between the percent and the letter is passed on to sprintf.
 2805: # A double percent yields a literal percent on output.  Other characters
 2806: # are passed through literally.
 2807: #
 2808: # If you want only the filename:
 2809: #
 2810: .ex
 2811: #LIST_FORMAT:    %a
 2812: #
 2813: # If you want a brief output:
 2814: #
 2815: .ex
 2816: #LIST_FORMAT:   %4K %-12.12d %a
 2817: #
 2818: # If you want the Unix "ls -l" format:
 2819: #
 2820: .ex
 2821: #LIST_FORMAT:    %p %4l %-8.8o %-8.8g %7s %-12.12d %a
 2822: 
 2823: 
 2824: .h1 External Programs
 2825: 
 2826: .h2 DIRED_MENU
 2827: # Unix ONLY:
 2828: #===========
 2829: # DIRED_MENU items are used to compose the F)ull menu list in DIRED mode
 2830: # The behavior of the default configuration given here is much the same
 2831: # as it was when this menu was hard-coded but these items can now be adjusted
 2832: # to suit local needs.  In particular, many of the LYNXDIRED actions can be
 2833: # replaced with lynxexec, lynxprog and lynxcgi script references.
 2834: #
 2835: # NOTE that defining even one DIRED_MENU line overrides all the built-in
 2836: # definitions, so a complete set must then be defined here.
 2837: #
 2838: # Each line consists of the following fields:
 2839: .nf
 2840: #
 2841: #	DIRED_MENU:type:suffix:link text:extra text:action
 2842: #
 2843: #	type: TAG:   list only when one or more files are tagged
 2844: #	      FILE:  list only when the current selection is a regular file
 2845: #	      DIR:   list only when the current selection is a directory
 2846: #	      LINK:  list only when the current selection is a symbolic link
 2847: #
 2848: #	suffix:  list only if the current selection ends in this pattern
 2849: #
 2850: #	link text:  the displayed text of the link
 2851: #
 2852: #	extra text:  the text displayed following the link
 2853: #
 2854: #	action:  the URL to be followed upon selection
 2855: #
 2856: #	link text and action are scanned for % sequences that are expanded
 2857: #	at display time as follows:
 2858: #
 2859: #		%p  path of current selection
 2860: #		%f  filename (last component) of current selection
 2861: #		%t  tagged list (full paths)
 2862: #		%l  list of tagged file names
 2863: #		%d  the current directory
 2864: #
 2865: .fi
 2866: #DIRED_MENU:::New File:(in current directory):LYNXDIRED://NEW_FILE%d
 2867: #DIRED_MENU:::New Directory:(in current directory):LYNXDIRED://NEW_FOLDER%d
 2868: 
 2869: # Following depends on OK_INSTALL
 2870: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Install:selected file to new location:LYNXDIRED://INSTALL_SRC%p
 2871: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Install:selected directory to new location:LYNXDIRED://INSTALL_SRC%p
 2872: 
 2873: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Modify File Name:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_NAME%p
 2874: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Modify Directory Name:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_NAME%p
 2875: #DIRED_MENU:LINK::Modify Name:(of selected symbolic link):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_NAME%p
 2876: 
 2877: # Following depends on OK_PERMIT
 2878: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Modify File Permissions:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://PERMIT_SRC%p
 2879: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Modify Directory Permissions:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://PERMIT_SRC%p
 2880: 
 2881: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Change Location:(of selected file):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_LOCATION%p
 2882: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Change Location:(of selected directory):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_LOCATION%p
 2883: #DIRED_MENU:LINK::Change Location:(of selected symbolic link):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_LOCATION%p
 2884: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Remove File:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_SINGLE%p
 2885: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Remove Directory:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_SINGLE%p
 2886: #DIRED_MENU:LINK::Remove Symbolic Link:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_SINGLE%p
 2887: 
 2888: # Following depends on OK_UUDECODE and !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2889: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::UUDecode:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UUDECODE%p
 2890: 
 2891: # Following depends on OK_TAR and !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2892: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tar.Z:Expand:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR_Z%p
 2893: 
 2894: # Following depend on OK_TAR and OK_GZIP and !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2895: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tar.gz:Expand:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR_GZ%p
 2896: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tgz:Expand:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR_GZ%p
 2897: 
 2898: # Following depends on !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2899: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.Z:Uncompress:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://DECOMPRESS%p
 2900: 
 2901: # Following depends on OK_GZIP and !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2902: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.gz:Uncompress:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNGZIP%p
 2903: 
 2904: # Following depends on OK_ZIP and !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2905: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.zip:Uncompress:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNZIP%p
 2906: 
 2907: # Following depends on OK_TAR and !ARCHIVE_ONLY
 2908: #DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tar:UnTar:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR%p
 2909: 
 2910: # Following depends on OK_TAR
 2911: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Tar:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://TAR%p
 2912: 
 2913: # Following depends on OK_TAR and OK_GZIP
 2914: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Tar and compress:(using GNU gzip):LYNXDIRED://TAR_GZ%p
 2915: 
 2916: # Following depends on OK_ZIP
 2917: #DIRED_MENU:DIR::Package and compress:(using zip):LYNXDIRED://ZIP%p
 2918: 
 2919: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Compress:(using Unix compress):LYNXDIRED://COMPRESS%p
 2920: 
 2921: # Following depends on OK_GZIP
 2922: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Compress:(using gzip):LYNXDIRED://GZIP%p
 2923: 
 2924: # Following depends on OK_ZIP
 2925: #DIRED_MENU:FILE::Compress:(using zip):LYNXDIRED://ZIP%p
 2926: 
 2927: #DIRED_MENU:TAG::Move all tagged items to another location.::LYNXDIRED://MOVE_TAGGED%d
 2928: 
 2929: # Following depends on OK_INSTALL
 2930: #DIRED_MENU:TAG::Install tagged files into another directory.::LYNXDIRED://INSTALL_SRC%00
 2931: 
 2932: #DIRED_MENU:TAG::Remove all tagged files and directories.::LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_TAGGED
 2933: #DIRED_MENU:TAG::Untag all tagged items.::LYNXDIRED://CLEAR_TAGGED
 2934: 
 2935: 
 2936: .h1 Internal Behavior
 2937: 
 2938: .h2 NONRESTARTING_SIGWINCH
 2939: # Some systems only:
 2940: #===================
 2941: # Lynx tries to detect window size changes with a signal handler for
 2942: # SIGWINCH if supported.  If NONRESTARTING_SIGWINCH is set to TRUE,
 2943: # and the sigaction interface is available on the system, the handler
 2944: # is installed as 'non-restarting'.  On some systems (depending on the
 2945: # library used for handling keyboard input, e.g. ncurses), this allows
 2946: # more immediate notification of window size change events.  If the value
 2947: # is set to FALSE, the signal() interface is used; this normally makes
 2948: # the handler 'restarting', with the effect that lynx can react to size
 2949: # changes only after some key is pressed.  The value can also be set to
 2950: # XWINDOWS; this is equivalent to TRUE when the user has the environment
 2951: # variable DISPLAY defined *at program start*, and equivalent to FALSE
 2952: # otherwise.  The non-restarting behavior can also be changed to TRUE
 2953: # or FALSE with the -nonrestarting_sigwinch switch, which overrides the
 2954: # value in this file.
 2955: #
 2956: # Note that Lynx never re-parses document text purely as a result of a
 2957: # window size change, so text lines may appear truncated after narrowing
 2958: # the window, until the document is reloaded with ^R or a similar key
 2959: # or until a different text is loaded.
 2960: #
 2961: # The default is FALSE since there is a possibility that non-restarting
 2962: # interrupts may be mis-interpreted as fatal input errors in some
 2963: # configurations (leading to an abrupt program exit), and since this
 2964: # option is useful mostly only for users running Lynx under xterm or a
 2965: # similar X terminal emulator.  On systems where the preconditions don't
 2966: # apply this option is ignored.
 2967: #
 2968: #NONRESTARTING_SIGWINCH:FALSE
 2969: 
 2970: 
 2971: .h2 NO_FORCED_CORE_DUMP
 2972: # Unix ONLY:
 2973: #===========
 2974: # If NO_FORCED_CORE_DUMP is set to TRUE, Lynx will not force
 2975: # core dumps via abort() calls on fatal errors or assert()
 2976: # calls to check potentially fatal errors.  The compilation
 2977: # default normally is FALSE, and can be changed here.  The
 2978: # compilation or configuration default can be toggled via
 2979: # the -core command line switch.
 2980: # Note that this setting cannot be used to prevent core dumps
 2981: # with certainty.  If this is important, means provided by the
 2982: # operating system or kernel should be used.
 2983: #
 2984: #NO_FORCED_CORE_DUMP:FALSE
 2985: 
 2986: 
 2987: .h1 Appearance
 2988: 
 2989: .h2 COLOR
 2990: # COLORS (only available if compiled with SVr4 curses or slang)
 2991: #
 2992: # The line must be of the form:
 2993: #
 2994: # COLOR:Integer:Foreground:Background
 2995: .nf
 2996: #
 2997: # The Integer value is interpreted as follows:
 2998: #   0 - normal                      - normal text
 2999: #   1 - bold                        - hyperlinks, see also BOLD_* options above
 3000: #   2 - reverse                     - statusline
 3001: #   3 - bold + reverse              (not used)
 3002: #   4 - underline                   - text emphasis (EM, I, B tags etc.)
 3003: #   5 - bold + underline            - hyperlinks within text emphasis
 3004: #   6 - reverse + underline         - currently selected hyperlink
 3005: #   7 - reverse + underline + bold  - WHEREIS search hits
 3006: #
 3007: # Each Foreground and Background value must be one of:
 3008: #   black         red            green         brown
 3009: #   blue          magenta        cyan          lightgray
 3010: #   gray          brightred      brightgreen   yellow
 3011: #   brightblue    brightmagenta  brightcyan    white
 3012: .fi
 3013: # or (if you have configured using --enable-default-colors with ncurses or
 3014: # slang), "default" may be used for foreground and background.
 3015: #
 3016: # Note that in most cases a white background is really "lightgray", since
 3017: # terminals generally do not implement bright backgrounds.
 3018: #
 3019: # Uncomment and change any of the compilation defaults.
 3020: #
 3021: #COLOR:0:black:white
 3022: #COLOR:1:blue:white
 3023: #COLOR:2:yellow:blue
 3024: #COLOR:3:green:white
 3025: #COLOR:4:magenta:white
 3026: #COLOR:5:blue:white
 3027: #COLOR:6:red:white
 3028: COLOR:6:brightred:black
 3029: #COLOR:7:magenta:cyan
 3030: 
 3031: 
 3032: .h2 COLOR_STYLE
 3033: # Also known as "lss" (lynx style-sheet), the color-style file assigns color
 3034: # combination to tags and combinations of tags.  Normally a non-empty value
 3035: # is compiled into lynx, and the user can override that using the -lss
 3036: # command-line option.  The configure script allows one to compile in an
 3037: # empty string.  If lynx finds no value for this setting, it simulates the
 3038: # non-color-style assignments using the COLOR settings.
 3039: #
 3040: # If neither the command-line "-lss" or this COLOR_STYLE setting are given,
 3041: # lynx tries the environment variables "LYNX_LSS" and "lynx_lss".  If neither
 3042: # is set, lynx uses the compiled-in value (which as noted, may be empty).
 3043: #
 3044: #COLOR_STYLE: lynx.lss
 3045: 
 3046: .h2 NESTED_TABLES
 3047: # This is an experimental feature for improving table layout.
 3048: # It is enabled by default when the COLOR_STYLE configuration is used,
 3049: # and false otherwise.
 3050: #
 3051: #NESTED_TABLES: true
 3052: 
 3053: 
 3054: .h2 ASSUMED_COLOR
 3055: # If built with a library that recognizes default colors (usually ncurses or
 3056: # slang), and if the corresponding option is compiled into lynx, lynx
 3057: # initializes it to assume the corresponding foreground and background colors.
 3058: # Default colors are those that the terminal (emulator) itself is initialized
 3059: # to.  For instance, you might have an xterm running with black text on a white
 3060: # background, and want lynx to display colored text on the white background,
 3061: # but leave the possibility of using the same configuration to draw colored
 3062: # text on a different xterm, this time using its background set to black.
 3063: #
 3064: # If built with conventional SVr3/SVr4 curses, tells lynx to use color pair 0
 3065: # when the given colors match this setting.  That gives a similar effect,
 3066: # though not as flexible.  You will get the best results by setting the
 3067: # terminal's default colors to match the prevailing text and background colors
 3068: # that you have setup with lynx, and then alter the ASSUMED_COLOR setting to
 3069: # match that.  If you do not alter the ASSUMED_COLOR setting, curses assumes
 3070: # color pair 0's background is black, which implies that its foreground (text)
 3071: # is white.
 3072: #
 3073: # The first value given is the foreground, the second is the background.
 3074: #ASSUMED_COLOR:default:default
 3075: 
 3076: .h2 DEFAULT_COLORS
 3077: # If built with a library that recognizes default colors (usually ncurses or
 3078: # slang), and if the corresponding option is compiled into lynx, lynx
 3079: # initializes it to assume the corresponding foreground and background colors.
 3080: # Default colors are those that the terminal (emulator) itself is initialized
 3081: # to.
 3082: #
 3083: # Use this feature to disable the default-colors feature at runtime.
 3084: # This is useful for constructing scripts which use the non-color-style
 3085: # scheme, e.g., the oldlynx script.
 3086: #
 3087: # This should precede ASSUMED_COLOR settings.
 3088: #DEFAULT_COLORS:true
 3089: 
 3090: 
 3091: .h1 External Programs
 3092: 
 3093: .h2 EXTERNAL
 3094: # External application support.  This feature allows Lynx to pass a given
 3095: # URL to an external program.  It was written for three reasons.
 3096: #
 3097: # 1) To overcome the deficiency	of Lynx_386 not supporting ftp and news.
 3098: #    External programs can be used instead by passing the URL.
 3099: #
 3100: # 2) To allow for background	transfers in multitasking systems.
 3101: #    I use wget for http and ftp transfers via the external command.
 3102: #
 3103: # 3) To allow for new URLs to be used through Lynx.
 3104: #	  URLs can be made up such as mymail: to spawn desired applications
 3105: #	  via the external command.
 3106: #
 3107: # Restrictions can be imposed using -restrictions=externals at the Lynx command
 3108: # line.  This will disallow all EXTERNAL lines in lynx.cfg that have FALSE in
 3109: # the 3rd field (not counting the name of the setting).  TRUE lines will still
 3110: # function.
 3111: #
 3112: # The lynx.cfg line is as follows:
 3113: #
 3114: # EXTERNAL:<url>:<command> %s:<norestriction>:<allow_for_activate>[:environment]
 3115: #
 3116: # <url> Any given URL.  This can be normal ones like ftp or http or it
 3117: # can be one made up like mymail.
 3118: #
 3119: # <command> The command to run with %s being the URL that will be passed.
 3120: # In Linux I use "wget -q %s &" (no quotes) to spawn a copy of wget for
 3121: # downloading http and ftp files in the background.  In Win95 I use
 3122: # "start ncftp %s" to spawn ncftp in a new window.
 3123: #
 3124: # <norestriction> This complements the -restrictions=externals feature to allow
 3125: # for certain externals to be enabled while restricting others.  TRUE means
 3126: # a command will still function while Lynx is restricted.  WB
 3127: #
 3128: # <allow_for_activate> Setting this to TRUE allows the use of this command not
 3129: # only when EXTERN key is pressed, but also when ACTIVATE command is invoked
 3130: # (i.e., activating the link with the given prefix will be equivalent to
 3131: # pressing EXTERN key on it).  If this component of the line is absent, then
 3132: # FALSE is assumed.
 3133: #
 3134: # [:environment] Optional, if XWINDOWS then command is allowed only if
 3135: # $DISPLAY environment variable is set, else if NON_XWINDOWS then command
 3136: # is allowed only if $DISPLAY environment variable is not set, if absent or
 3137: # anything else command is always allowed.
 3138: #
 3139: # For invoking the command use the EXTERN_LINK or EXTERN_PAGE key.  By default
 3140: # EXTERN_LINK is mapped to '.', and EXTERN_PAGE to ',' (if the feature is
 3141: # enabled), see the KEYMAP section above.
 3142: #
 3143: #EXTERNAL:ftp:wget %s &:TRUE
 3144: 
 3145: 
 3146: .h1 Internal Behavior
 3147: 
 3148: .h2 RULE
 3149: .h2 RULESFILE
 3150: # CERN-style rules, EXPERIMENTAL  -  URL-specific rules
 3151: #
 3152: # A CERN-style rules file can be given with RULESFILE.  Use the system's
 3153: # native format for filenames, on Unix '~' is also recognized.  If a filename
 3154: # is given, the file must exist.
 3155: #
 3156: # Single CERN-style rules can be specified with RULES.
 3157: #
 3158: # Both options can be repeated, rules accumulate in the order
 3159: # given, they will be applied in first-to-last order.  See cernrules.txt
 3160: # in the samples subdirectory for further explanation.
 3161: #
 3162: # Examples:
 3163: .ex 5
 3164: #	RULESFILE:/etc/lynx/cernrules
 3165: #	RULE:Fail	gopher:*		     # reject by scheme
 3166: #	RULE:Pass	finger://*@localhost/	     # allow this,
 3167: #	RULE:Fail	finger:*		     # but not others
 3168: #	RULE:Redirect	http://old.server/*	http://new.server/*
 3169: 
 3170: 
 3171: .h1 Appearance
 3172: 
 3173: .h2 PRETTYSRC
 3174: # Enable pretty source view
 3175: #PRETTYSRC:FALSE
 3176: 
 3177: .h2 PRETTYSRC_SPEC
 3178: # Pretty source view settings. These settings are in effect when -prettysrc
 3179: # is specified.
 3180: # The following lexical elements (lexemes) are recognized:
 3181: # comment, tag, attribute, attribute value, generalized angle brackets (
 3182: # '<' '>' '</' ), entity, hyperlink destination, entire file, bad sequence,
 3183: # bad tag, bad attribute, sgml special.
 3184: #  The following group of option tells which styles will surround each
 3185: # lexeme. The syntax of option in this group is:
 3186: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:<LEXEMENAME>:<TAGSPEC>:<TAGSPEC>
 3187: # The first <TAGSPEC> specifies what tags will precede lexemes of that class
 3188: # in the internal html markup. The second - what will be placed (internally)
 3189: # after it.
 3190: # TAGSPEC has the following syntax:
 3191: # <TAGSPEC>:= [ (<TAGOPEN> | <TAGCLOSE>) <SPACE>+ ]*
 3192: # <TAGOPEN>:= tagname[.classname]
 3193: # <TAGCLOSE>:= !tagname
 3194: #
 3195: # The following table gives correspondence between lexeme and lexeme name
 3196: .nf
 3197: # Lexeme                   LEXEMENAME  FURTHER EXPLANATION
 3198: # =========================================================
 3199: # comment                  COMM
 3200: # tag                      TAG         recognized tag name only
 3201: # attribute                ATTRIB
 3202: # attribute value          ATTRVAL
 3203: # generalized brackets     ABRACKET    <  >  </
 3204: # entity                   ENTITY
 3205: # hyperlink destination    HREF
 3206: # entire file              ENTIRE
 3207: # bad sequence             BADSEQ      bad entity or invalid construct at text
 3208: #                                      level.
 3209: # bad tag                  BADTAG      Unrecognized construct in generalized
 3210: #                                      brackets.
 3211: # bad attribute            BADATTR     The name of the attribute unknown to lynx
 3212: #                                      of the tag known to lynx. (i.e.,
 3213: #                                      attributes of unknown tags will have
 3214: #                                      markup of  ATTRIB)
 3215: # sgml special             SGMLSPECIAL doctype, sgmlelt, sgmlele,
 3216: #                                      sgmlattlist, marked section, identifier
 3217: .fi
 3218: #
 3219: # Notes:
 3220: #
 3221: # 1) The markup for HTML_ENTIRE will be emitted only once - it will surround
 3222: #    entire file source.
 3223: #
 3224: # 2) The tagnames specified by TAGSPEC should be valid html tag names.
 3225: #
 3226: # 3) If the tag/class combination given by TAGOPEN is not assigned a color
 3227: #    style in lss file (for lynx compiled with lss support), that tag/class
 3228: #    combination will be emitted anyway during internal html markup. Such
 3229: #    combinations will be also reported to the trace log.
 3230: #
 3231: # 4) Lexeme 'tag' means tag name only
 3232: #
 3233: # 5) Angle brackets of html specials won't be surrounded by markup for ABRACKET
 3234: #
 3235: .ex
 3236: # PRETTYSRC_SPEC:COMM:B I:!I !B
 3237: #           HTML comments will be surrounded by <b><i> and </i></b> in the
 3238: #           internal html markup
 3239: .ex
 3240: # PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRVAL: span.attrval : !span
 3241: #           Values of the attributes will be surrounded by the
 3242: #           <SPAN class=attrval> </SPAN>
 3243: .ex
 3244: # PRETTYSRC_SPEC:HREF::
 3245: #           No special html markup will surround hyperlink destinations (
 3246: #           this means that only default color style for hrefs will be applied
 3247: #           to them)
 3248: #
 3249: # For lynx compiled with lss support, the following settings are the default:
 3250: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:COMM:span.htmlsrc_comment:!span
 3251: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:TAG:span.htmlsrc_tag:!span
 3252: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRIB:span.htmlsrc_attrib:!span
 3253: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRVAL:span.htmlsrc_attrval:!span
 3254: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ABRACKET:span.htmlsrc_abracket:!span
 3255: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTITY:span.htmlsrc_entity:!span
 3256: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:HREF:span.htmlsrc_href:!span
 3257: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTIRE:span.htmlsrc_entire:!span
 3258: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADSEQ:span.htmlsrc_badseq:!span
 3259: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADTAG:span.htmlsrc_badtag:!span
 3260: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADATTR:span.htmlsrc_badattr:!span
 3261: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:SGMLSPECIAL:span.htmlsrc_sgmlspecial:!span
 3262: # the styles corresponding to them are present in sample .lss file.
 3263: # For lynx compiled without lss support, the following settings are the default:
 3264: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:COMM:b:!b
 3265: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:TAG:b:!b
 3266: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRIB:b:!b
 3267: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRVAL::
 3268: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ABRACKET:b:!b
 3269: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTITY:b:!b
 3270: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:HREF::
 3271: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTIRE::
 3272: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADSEQ:b:!b
 3273: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADTAG::
 3274: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADATTR::
 3275: #PRETTYSRC_SPEC:SGMLSPECIAL:b:!b
 3276: 
 3277: 
 3278: .h2 HTMLSRC_ATTRNAME_XFORM
 3279: .h2 HTMLSRC_TAGNAME_XFORM
 3280: # Options HTMLSRC_TAGNAME_XFORM and HTMLSRC_ATTRNAME_XFORM control the way the
 3281: # names of tags and names of attributes are transformed correspondingly.
 3282: # Possible values: 0 - lowercase, 1 - leave as is, 2 - uppercase.
 3283: #HTMLSRC_TAGNAME_XFORM:2
 3284: #HTMLSRC_ATTRNAME_XFORM:2
 3285: 
 3286: 
 3287: .h2 PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING
 3288: # PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING - pretty source view setting
 3289: # If "keypad mode" in 'O'ptions screen is "Links are numbered" or
 3290: # "Links and form fields are numbered", and PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING is
 3291: # TRUE, then links won't be numbered in psrc view and will be numbered
 3292: # otherwise. Set this setting to TRUE if you prefer numbered links, but wish
 3293: # to get valid HTML source when printing or mailing when in psrc view.
 3294: # Default is FALSE.
 3295: #PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING:FALSE
 3296: 
 3297: 
 3298: .h1 HTML Parsing
 3299: 
 3300: .h2 FORCE_EMPTY_HREFLESS_A
 3301: # FORCE_EMPTY_HREFLESS_A - HTML parsing
 3302: # This option mirrors command-line option with the same name.  Default is
 3303: # FALSE.  If true, then any 'A' element without HREF will be closed
 3304: # immediately.  This is useful when viewing documentation produced by broken
 3305: # translator that doesn't emit balanced A elements.  If lynx was compiled with
 3306: # color styles, setting this option to TRUE will make lynx screen much more
 3307: # reasonable (otherwise all text will probably have color corresponding to the
 3308: # A element).
 3309: #
 3310: #FORCE_EMPTY_HREFLESS_A:FALSE
 3311: 
 3312: .h2 HIDDEN_LINK_MARKER
 3313: # HIDDEN_LINK_MARKER - HTML parsing
 3314: # This option defines the string that will be used as title of hidden link (a
 3315: # link that otherwise will have no label associated with it).  Using an empty
 3316: # string as the value will cause lynx to behave in the old way - hidden links
 3317: # will be handled according to other settings (mostly the parameter of
 3318: # --hiddenlinks command-line switch).  If the value is non-empty string, hidden
 3319: # link becomes non-hidden so it won't be handled as hidden link, e.g., listed
 3320: # among hidden links on 'l'isting page.
 3321: #
 3322: #HIDDEN_LINK_MARKER:
 3323: 
 3324: .h2 XHTML_PARSING
 3325: # XHTML_PARSING - HTML parsing
 3326: # When true, tells lynx that it can ignore certain tags which have no content
 3327: # in an XHTML 1.0 document.  For example
 3328: #	<p />
 3329: #	<a />
 3330: # When the option is false, lynx will not treat the tag as an ending.
 3331: #XHTML_PARSING:FALSE
 3332: 
 3333: .h1 Appearance
 3334: 
 3335: .h2 JUSTIFY
 3336: # JUSTIFY - Appearance
 3337: # This option mirrors command-line option with same name.  Default is TRUE.  If
 3338: # true, most of text (except headers and like this) will be justified.  This
 3339: # has no influence on CJK text rendering.
 3340: #
 3341: # This option is only available if Lynx was compiled with EXP_JUSTIFY_ELTS.
 3342: #
 3343: #JUSTIFY:FALSE
 3344: 
 3345: .h2 JUSTIFY_MAX_VOID_PERCENT
 3346: # JUSTIFY_MAX_VOID_PERCENT - Appearance
 3347: # This option controls the maximum allowed value for ratio (in percents) of
 3348: # 'the number of spaces to spread across the line to justify it' to
 3349: # 'max line size for current style and nesting' when justification is allowed.
 3350: # When that ratio exceeds the value specified, that particular line won't be
 3351: # justified. I.e. the value 28 for this setting will mean maximum value for
 3352: # that ratio is 0.28.
 3353: #
 3354: #JUSTIFY_MAX_VOID_PERCENT:35
 3355: 
 3356: 
 3357: .h1 Interaction
 3358: 
 3359: .h2 TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION
 3360: # If TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION is set to TRUE, and lynx was compiled with
 3361: # TEXTFIELDS_MAY_NEED_ACTIVATION defined, then text input form fields need
 3362: # to be activated (by pressing the Enter key or similar) before the user
 3363: # can enter or modify input.  By default, input fields become automatically
 3364: # activated when selected.  Requiring explicit activation can be desired for
 3365: # users who use alphanumeric keys for navigation (or other keys that have
 3366: # special meaning in the line editor - ' ', 'b', INS, DEL, etc), and don't
 3367: # want to 'get stuck' in form fields.  Instead of setting the option here,
 3368: # explicit activation can also be requested with the -tna command line
 3369: # option.
 3370: #
 3371: #TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION:FALSE
 3372: 
 3373: .h2 LEFTARROW_IN_TEXTFIELD_PROMPT
 3374: # LEFTARROW_IN_TEXTFIELD_PROMPT
 3375: # This option controls what happens when a Left Arrow key is pressed while
 3376: # in the first position of an active text input field.  By default, Lynx
 3377: # asks for confirmation ("Do you want to go back to the previous document?")
 3378: # only if the contents of the fields have been changed since entering it.
 3379: # If set to TRUE, the confirmation prompt is always issued.
 3380: #
 3381: #LEFTARROW_IN_TEXTFIELD_PROMPT:FALSE
 3382: 
 3383: 
 3384: .h1 Timeouts
 3385: 
 3386: .h2 CONNECT_TIMEOUT
 3387: # Specifies (in seconds) connect timeout. Default value is rather huge.
 3388: #CONNECT_TIMEOUT:18000
 3389: 
 3390: .h2 READ_TIMEOUT
 3391: # Specifies (in seconds) read-timeout. Default value is rather huge.
 3392: #READ_TIMEOUT:18000
 3393: 
 3394: 
 3395: .h1 Internal Behavior
 3396: # These settings control internal lynx behavior - the way it interacts with the
 3397: # operating system and Internet.  Modifying these settings will not change
 3398: # the rendition of documents that you browse with lynx, but can change various
 3399: # delays and resource utilization.
 3400: 
 3401: .h2 FTP_PASSIVE
 3402: # Set FTP_PASSIVE to TRUE if you want to use passive mode ftp transfers.
 3403: # You might have to do this if you're behind a restrictive firewall.
 3404: #FTP_PASSIVE:TRUE
 3405: 
 3406: .h2 ENABLE_LYNXRC
 3407: # The forms-based O'ptions menu shows a (!) marker beside items which are not
 3408: # saved to ~/.lynxrc -- the reason for disabling some of these items is that
 3409: # they are likely to cause confusion if they are read from the .lynxrc file for
 3410: # each session.  However, they can be enabled or disabled using the
 3411: # ENABLE_LYNXRC settings.  The default (compiled-in) settings are shown below.
 3412: # The second column is the name by which a setting is saved to .lynxrc (which
 3413: # is chosen where possible to correspond with lynx.cfg).  Use "OFF" to disable
 3414: # writing a setting, "ON" to enable it.  Settings are read from .lynxrc after
 3415: # the corresponding data from lynx.cfg, so they override lynx.cfg, which is
 3416: # probably what users expect.
 3417: #
 3418: # Note that a few settings (Cookies and Show images) are comprised of more than
 3419: # one lynx.cfg setting.
 3420: .nf
 3421: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:accept_all_cookies:ON
 3422: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:assume_charset:OFF
 3423: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:auto_session:OFF
 3424: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:bookmark_file:ON
 3425: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:case_sensitive_searching:ON
 3426: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:character_set:ON
 3427: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:cookie_accept_domains:ON
 3428: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:cookie_file:ON
 3429: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:cookie_loose_invalid_domains:ON
 3430: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:cookie_query_invalid_domains:ON
 3431: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:cookie_reject_domains:ON
 3432: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:cookie_strict_invalid_domains:ON
 3433: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:dir_list_style:ON
 3434: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:display:OFF
 3435: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:emacs_keys:ON
 3436: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:file_editor:ON
 3437: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:file_sorting_method:ON
 3438: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:force_cookie_prompt:OFF
 3439: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:force_ssl_prompt:OFF
 3440: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:ftp_passive:OFF
 3441: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:kblayout:ON
 3442: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:keypad_mode:ON
 3443: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:lineedit_mode:ON
 3444: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:locale_charset:ON
 3445: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:make_links_for_all_images:OFF
 3446: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:make_pseudo_alts_for_inlines:OFF
 3447: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:multi_bookmark:ON
 3448: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:no_pause:OFF
 3449: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:personal_mail_address:ON
 3450: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:preferred_charset:ON
 3451: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:preferred_encoding:OFF
 3452: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:preferred_language:ON
 3453: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:preferred_media_types:OFF
 3454: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:raw_mode:OFF
 3455: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:run_all_execution_links:ON
 3456: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:run_execution_links_on_local_files:ON
 3457: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:scrollbar:OFF
 3458: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:select_popups:ON
 3459: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:send_useragent:OFF
 3460: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:session_file:OFF
 3461: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:set_cookies:OFF
 3462: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:show_color:ON
 3463: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:show_cursor:ON
 3464: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:show_dotfiles:ON
 3465: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:show_kb_rate:OFF
 3466: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:sub_bookmarks:ON
 3467: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:tagsoup:OFF
 3468: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:underline_links:OFF
 3469: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:user_mode:ON
 3470: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:useragent:OFF
 3471: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:verbose_images:ON
 3472: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:vi_keys:ON
 3473: #ENABLE_LYNXRC:visited_links:ON
 3474: .fi
 3475: 
 3476: .h1 External Programs
 3477: # Any of the compiled-in pathnames of external programs can be overridden
 3478: # by specifying the corresponding xxx_PATH variable.  If the variable is
 3479: # given as an empty string, lynx will not use the program.  For a few cases,
 3480: # there are internal functions (such as mkdir) which can be used instead.
 3481: #BZIP2_PATH:
 3482: #CHMOD_PATH:
 3483: #COMPRESS_PATH:
 3484: #COPY_PATH:
 3485: #GZIP_PATH:
 3486: #INFLATE_PATH:
 3487: #INSTALL_PATH:
 3488: #MKDIR_PATH:
 3489: #MV_PATH:
 3490: #RLOGIN_PATH:
 3491: #RMDIR_PATH:
 3492: #RM_PATH:
 3493: #SETFONT_PATH:
 3494: #TAR_PATH:
 3495: #TELNET_PATH:
 3496: #TN3270_PATH:
 3497: #TOUCH_PATH:
 3498: #UNCOMPRESS_PATH:
 3499: #UNZIP_PATH:
 3500: #UUDECODE_PATH:
 3501: #ZCAT_PATH:
 3502: #ZIP_PATH:
 3503: 
 3504: .h1 Interaction
 3505: 
 3506: .h2 FORCE_SSL_PROMPT
 3507: # If FORCE_SSL_PROMPT is set to "yes", then questionable conditions, such as
 3508: # self-signed certificates will be ignored.  If set to "no", these will be
 3509: # reported, but not attempted.  The default "prompt" permits the user to make
 3510: # this choice on a case-by-case basis.
 3511: #
 3512: #FORCE_SSL_PROMPT:PROMPT
 3513: 
 3514: .h2 FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT
 3515: # If FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT is set to "yes", then questionable conditions, such as
 3516: # cookies with invalid syntax will be ignored.  If set to "no", these will be
 3517: # reported, but not attempted.  The default "prompt" permits the user to make
 3518: # this choice on a case-by-case basis.
 3519: #
 3520: #FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT:PROMPT
 3521: 
 3522: .h2 SSL_CERT_FILE
 3523: # Set SSL_CERT_FILE to the file that contains all valid CA certificates lynx
 3524: # should accept, in case the $SSL_CERT_FILE environment variable is not set,
 3525: # e.g.,
 3526: #
 3527: #SSL_CERT_FILE:/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
 3528: #SSL_CERT_FILE:NULL
 3529: 
 3530: .h1 Appearance
 3531: 
 3532: .h2 SCREEN_SIZE
 3533: # For win32, allow the console window to be resized to the given values.  This
 3534: # requires PDCurses 2.5.  The values given are width,height.
 3535: #SCREEN_SIZE:80,24
 3536: 
 3537: .h2 NO_MARGINS
 3538: # Disable left/right margins in the default style sheet.
 3539: # This is the same as the command-line "-nomargins" option.
 3540: #NO_MARGINS:FALSE
 3541: 
 3542: .h2 NO_TITLE
 3543: # Disable title and blank line from top of page.
 3544: # This is the same as the command-line "-notitle" option.
 3545: #NO_TITLE:FALSE
 3546: 
 3547: .h1 External Programs
 3548: 
 3549: .h2 SYSLOG_REQUESTED_URLS
 3550: # Log the requested URLs using the syslog interface.
 3551: #SYSLOG_REQUESTED_URLS:TRUE
 3552: 
 3553: .h2 SYSLOG_TEXT
 3554: # Add the given text to calls made to syslog, to distinguish Lynx from other
 3555: # applications which use that interface.
 3556: #SYSLOG_TEXT:
 3557: 
 3558: .h1 Internal Behavior
 3559: .h2 BROKEN_FTP_RETR
 3560: # Some ftp servers are known to have a broken implementation of RETR.  If asked
 3561: # to retrieve a directory, they get confused and fails subsequent commands such
 3562: # as CWD and LIST.  Workaround: reconnect after a failed RETR, which is slow.
 3563: #
 3564: # Each BROKEN_FTP_RETR gives a string match for the reported FTP server version
 3565: #BROKEN_FTP_RETR:ProFTPD 1.2.5
 3566: #BROKEN_FTP_RETR:spftp/
 3567: 
 3568: .h2 BROKEN_FTP_EPSV
 3569: # Some ftp servers are known to have a broken implementation of EPSV.  The
 3570: # server will hang for a long time when we attempt to connect after issuing
 3571: # this command.   Workaround: do not use EPSV, just use PASV.
 3572: #
 3573: # Each BROKEN_FTP_EPSV gives a string match for the reported FTP server version
 3574: #BROKEN_FTP_EPSV:(Version wu-2.6.2-12)
 3575: 
 3576: .h1 Appearance
 3577: .h2 FTP_FORMAT
 3578: # FTP_FORMAT defines the display for remote files.
 3579: # It uses the same "%" codes as LIST_FORMAT.
 3580: #FTP_FORMAT:%d  %-16.16t %a  %K
 3581: 
 3582: .h1 Internal Behavior
 3583: 
 3584: .h2 STATUS_BUFFER_SIZE
 3585: # STATUS_BUFFER_SIZE controls the size of the buffer used for the LYNXMESSAGES
 3586: # special url.
 3587: #
 3588: # The default size (if not overridden in userdefs.h) is 40.
 3589: #STATUS_BUFFER_SIZE:40

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