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INN.CONF(5)		  InterNetNews Documentation		   INN.CONF(5)

NAME
       inn.conf	- Configuration	data for InterNetNews programs

DESCRIPTION
       inn.conf	in pathetc is the primary general configuration	file for all
       InterNetNews programs.  Settings	which control the general operation of
       various programs, as well as the	paths to all portions of the news
       installation, are found here.  The INNCONF environment variable,	if
       set, specifies an alternate path	to inn.conf.

       This file is intended to	be fairly static.  Any changes made to it will
       generally not affect any	running	programs until they restart.  Unlike
       nearly every other configuration	file, inn.conf cannot be reloaded
       dynamically using ctlinnd(8); innd(8) must be stopped and restarted for
       relevant	changes	to inn.conf to take effect ("ctlinnd xexec innd" is
       the fastest way to do this.)

       Blank lines and lines starting with a number sign ("#") are ignored.
       All other lines specify parameters, and should be of the	following
       form:

	   <name>: <value>

       (Any amount of whitespace can be	put after the colon and	is optional.)
       If the value contains embedded whitespace or any	of the characters
       "[]<>{}"\:;", it	must be	enclosed in double quotes ("").	 A backslash
       ("\") can be used to escape quotes and backslashes inside double
       quotes.	<name> is case-sensitive; "server" is not the same as "Server"
       or "SERVER".  (inn.conf parameters are generally	all in lowercase.)

       If <name> occurs	more than once in the file, the	first value is used.
       Some parameters specified in the	file may be overridden by environment
       variables.  Most	parameters have	default	values if not specified	in
       inn.conf; those defaults	are noted in the description of	each
       parameter.

       Many parameters take a boolean value.  For all such parameters, the
       value may be specified as "true", "yes",	or "on"	to turn	it on and may
       be any of "false", "no",	or "off" to turn it off.  The case of these
       values is significant.

       This documentation is extremely long and	organized as a reference
       manual rather than as a tutorial.  If this is your first	exposure to
       INN and these parameters, it would be better to start by	reading	other
       man pages and referring to this one only	when an	inn.conf parameter is
       explicitly mentioned.  Those parameters which need to be	changed	when
       setting up a new	server are discussed in	INSTALL.

PARAMETERS
   General Settings
       These parameters	are used by a wide variety of different	components of
       INN.

       domain
	   This	 should	 be  the domain	name of	the local host.	 It should not
	   have	a leading period, and it should	not be a  full	host  address.
	   It  is  used	only if	a fully	qualified domain name cannot be	found.
	   INN first tries to retrieve it from	the  INN_HOSTNAME  environment
	   variable if set, then from gethostname(3) and getaddrinfo(3)	calls.
	   The	check  is  very	 simple;  if the retrieved hostname contains a
	   period,  then  it  is  assumed  to  have  the  full	domain	 name.
	   Otherwise,  a  dot followed with the	value of domain	is appended to
	   the retrieved hostname.  The	default	value is unset.

	   You are encouraged to declare your fully qualified domain  name  in
	   /etc/hostname,  or  in the INN_HOSTNAME environment variable	if you
	   can't.

	   The intent is to obtain a hostname guaranteed to be	unique,	 so  a
	   value    like   "localhost.localdomain"   for   the	 hostname   or
	   "localdomain" for the domain	parameter should be avoided.  Ideally,
	   a domain affiliated with the	 administrators	 of  the  news	server
	   should be used.

	   This	 parameter  is	not  meant to be used to affect	the right-hand
	   side	of autogenerated Message-IDs; you have to directly use	domain
	   in readers.conf(5) instead, for backwards-compatible	reasons.  (The
	   name	 of this parameter in readers.conf will	likely be changed in a
	   future major	release	to disambiguate	its use.)

       innflags
	   The flags to	pass to	innd on	startup.  See innd(8) for  details  on
	   the possible	flags.	The default value is unset.

	   Note	 that  these  flags  are  only	used when innd is started from
	   rc.news or nntpsend.

       mailcmd
	   The path to the program to be used for mailing reports  and	errors
	   to  the  news administrator.	 The default is	pathbin/innmail.  This
	   should not normally need to be changed.

       mta The command to use when sending a mail (e.g.	 mailing  postings  to
	   moderators,	gatewaying  news  to  mail,  sending statistics	to the
	   TOP1000  project,  mailing  errors  and   reports   to   the	  news
	   administrator).   Some  programs  use innmail(1) which in turn runs
	   the command in the mta parameter.  The message, with	 its  headers,
	   will	 be  piped  into  this	mta program.  Depending	on the calling
	   program, additional header fields may be  added  when  appropriate,
	   like	To, Subject or Auto-Submitted header fields.

	   The	string	%s,  if	 present,  will	 be  replaced  by the expected
	   recipient(s)	like the e-mail	address	 of  the  moderator  or	 of  a
	   remote  list.   It's	 strongly  recommended for this	command	to end
	   with	%s on the command line rather than, when not present, use  the
	   addresses  in the To	and Cc header fields of	the message, since the
	   latter approach allows the news server to be	abused as a  mechanism
	   to  send  mail to arbitrary addresses and will result in unexpected
	   behaviour.  There is	no default value for this parameter;  it  must
	   be  set  in	inn.conf  or  a	fatal error message will be logged via
	   syslog.

	   For most systems, "/usr/lib/sendmail	-oi -oem %s" (adjusted for the
	   correct path	to sendmail, and between  double  quotes)  is  a  good
	   choice.

	   To improve deliverability of	sent mails, especially moderated group
	   submissions,	 you  are  encouraged  to  install  a modern and full-
	   featured MTA	like Postfix instead of	a frugal MTA like  Nullmailer.
	   You'll  then	 be  able  to  configure  bounces and benefit from DSN
	   (Delivery Status Notifications).  Useful flags to add, if your  mta
	   program  supports  them,  are "-N failure" (to only return a	DSN on
	   failure, not	delay),	"-F 'Newsmaster'" (to set the full name	of the
	   notification),  "-fnewsmaster@server.com"  (to  set	the   envelope
	   sender  address),  and  "-opnobodyreturn" (a	privacy	option to only
	   return headers in the DSN).	Feel free to add any other options you
	   think appropriate.

       pathhost
	   What	to put into the	Path header field to represent the local site.
	   This	path identity is added to the Path header field	 body  of  all
	   articles  that  pass	 through  the system, including	locally	posted
	   articles, and is also used when processing  some  control  messages
	   and	when naming the	server in status reports.  There is no default
	   value; this parameter must be set  in  inn.conf  or	INN  will  not
	   start.   A good value to use	is the fully qualified hostname	of the
	   system.

	   The main purpose of the path	identity is to avoid being proposed by
	   your	peers articles that already  contain  your  path  identity  in
	   their Path header fields.

	   In case you are running several internal news servers, you may want
	   to  also  set pathcluster so	as to define the primary path identity
	   to advertise	to your	peers for their	use in	correctly  identifying
	   your	 news  servers	and  adding  the  right	 path  diagnostic (see
	   Section 3.2.1 of RFC	5537 for more details about path diagnostics).

       runasgroup
	   The group under which the news server will  run.   The  default  is
	   "news"  (or	the  group specified at	configure time)	and should not
	   normally need to be changed.

       runasuser
	   The user under which	the news server	 will  run.   The  default  is
	   "news"  (or	the  user  specified at	configure time)	and should not
	   normally need to be changed.

       server
	   The name of the default NNTP	server.	 If nnrpdposthost is  not  set
	   and	UNIX domain sockets are	not supported, nnrpd tries to hand off
	   locally-posted articles through  an	INET  domain  socket  to  this
	   server.

	   actsync,  getlist,  inews,  and  nntpget also use this value	as the
	   default server to connect to.  In the latter	cases,	the  value  of
	   the	NNTPSERVER environment variable, if it exists, overrides this.
	   The default value is	unset.	You may	want to	set it to  "localhost"
	   or  the fully qualified domain name of your local news server or of
	   a remote news server.

	   rnews uses this value as a fallback when nnrpdposthost is not  set,
	   and there's no localhost server.

       syntaxchecks
	   A  list of values controlling the level of checks performed by innd
	   and nnrpd.  For instance:

	       syntaxchecks: [ no-laxmid ]

	   The last occurrence of a given value	takes precedence, that	is  to
	   say if "no-laxmid laxmid" is	listed,	laxmid takes precedence.

	   Only	one check can currently	be enabled/disabled:

	   laxmid / no-laxmid
	       When  laxmid  is	 set,  Message-IDs containing ".." in the left
	       part are	accepted, as well as Message-IDs with two  "@".	  Some
	       non-compliant  news posters generate such syntactically invalid
	       Message-IDs, especially in binary newsgroups.  The  default  is
	       no-laxmid,  that	 is  to	 say INN strictly follows the standard
	       regarding syntax	checks (it will	neither	accept these  articles
	       nor propagate them to remote peers).

   Feed	Configuration
       These  parameters  govern  incoming  and	 outgoing  feeds: what size of
       articles	are accepted, what filtering and verification is performed  on
       them,  whether  articles	 in groups not carried by the server are still
       stored and propagated, and other	similar	settings.

       artcutoff
	   Articles older than this number of days are dropped.	  The  default
	   value  is 10, which means that an incoming article will be rejected
	   if its posting date is farther in the past than ten days.

	   In order to disable that check on date, you can set this  parameter
	   to 0.

	   The	number	on the "/remember/" line in expire.ctl should probably
	   be one more than that number	in order to take into account articles
	   whose posting date is one day into the future.

       bindaddress
	   Which IP address innd(8) should bind	itself to.  This  must	be  in
	   dotted-quad	format (nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn).  If set to "all" or not set,
	   innd	defaults to listening on all interfaces.   The	value  of  the
	   INND_BIND_ADDRESS  environment  variable,  if  set,	overrides this
	   setting.  The default value is unset.

	   This	parameter has no effect	 when  systemd	socket	activation  is
	   used.

       bindaddress6
	   Like	 bindaddress  but  for	IPv6  sockets.	 If  only  one	of the
	   bindaddress and bindaddress6	parameters  is	used,  then  only  the
	   socket  for	the  corresponding address family is created.  If both
	   parameters are used then two	sockets	are created.   If  neither  of
	   them	 is  used, the list of sockets to listen on will be determined
	   by the system library getaddrinfo(3)	function.  The	value  of  the
	   INND_BIND_ADDRESS6  environment  variable,  if  set,	overrides this
	   setting.  The default value is unset.

	   Note	that you will generally	need to	put double quotes ("")	around
	   this	value if you set it, since IPv6	addresses contain colons.

	   This	 parameter  has	 no  effect  when systemd socket activation is
	   used.

       docancels
	   This	parameter is intended  for  sites  concerned  about  abuse  of
	   cancels,  or	 that  wish  to	 enforce  a  mechanism to authenticate
	   cancels.  This parameter does not  change  how  NoCeM  notices  are
	   processed  by  perl-nocem(8),  and  only applies to cancel articles
	   (with a Control  header  field)  and	 supersede  requests  (with  a
	   Supersedes header field).

	   Unless  rejected  by	 the use of a filter hook, innd	always accepts
	   and propagates cancel articles and  supersede  requests.   However,
	   actually  processing	such articles on the local news	server depends
	   on this parameter which can take the	following values:

	   "require-auth"
	       Only  articles  originally   protected	by   the   Cancel-Lock
	       authentication	mechanism   can	  be   withdrawn  by  a	 valid
	       authenticated cancel article or a valid authenticated supersede
	       request.	 Withdrawals of	articles not originally	 protected  by
	       Cancel-Lock will	not be executed.

	       This  is	 the  default  value if	innd knows how to authenticate
	       cancels (that is	to say	if  INN	 was  built  with  Cancel-Lock
	       support).  Otherwise, the behaviour will	be the same as "none".

	   "auth"
	       Withdrawals of articles not originally protected	by the Cancel-
	       Lock   authentication   mechanism   will	 always	 be  executed.
	       However,	if the original	article	is  protected,	only  a	 valid
	       authenticated cancel article or a valid authenticated supersede
	       request will permit withdrawing it.  (If	INN was	not built with
	       Cancel-Lock   support,	such   protected   articles  won't  be
	       withdrawn.)

	   "none"
	       Neither	cancel	articles  nor  supersede  requests   will   be
	       processed; no articles will be withdrawn.

	       This  is	 the  default  value  if  innd	does  not  know	how to
	       authenticate cancels (that is to	say if INN was not built  with
	       Cancel-Lock  support)  as  it has no means to ensure that these
	       withdrawal requests are legitimate.

	   "all"
	       innd will process all cancel articles and  supersede  requests,
	       even  if	 unauthenticated,  forged  or with bad authentication.
	       You should be sure of what you are doing	 if  you  choose  that
	       value  as  any article can be withdrawn (even by	someone	who is
	       not the author of the article).

       dontrejectfiltered
	   Normally innd(8) rejects incoming articles when directed to	do  so
	   by  any  enabled  article  filters (Perl or Python).	 However, this
	   parameter  causes  such  articles  not  to  be  rejected;   instead
	   filtering  can  be applied on outbound articles.  If	this parameter
	   is set, all articles	will be	accepted on  the  local	 machine,  but
	   articles  rejected  by  the	filter	will  not  be fed to any peers
	   specified in	newsfeeds with the "Af"	flag.  The  default  value  is
	   false.

	   If  this  parameter	is  set,  you may also use the filtered	key of
	   storage method entries in storage.conf to store  filtered  articles
	   in dedicated	storage	classes.

       hiscachesize
	   If  set  to	a  value  other	 than  0,  a hash of recently received
	   Message-IDs is kept in memory to speed history lookups.  The	 value
	   is  the  amount of memory to	devote to the cache in kilobytes.  The
	   cache is only used for incoming feeds and a small  cache  can  hold
	   quite  a few	Message-IDs, so	large values aren't necessarily	useful
	   unless you have incoming feeds that are badly  delayed.   innreport
	   can	provide	 useful	 statistics  regarding	the use	of the history
	   cache, especially when it misses.  A	good value for a  system  with
	   more	 than one incoming feed	is 256;	systems	with only one incoming
	   feed	should probably	set this to 0.	The default value is 256.

       ignorenewsgroups
	   Whether newsgroup creation control messages (newgroup and  rmgroup)
	   should  be  fed  as	if  they were posted to	the newsgroup they are
	   creating or deleting	rather than to the newsgroups  listed  in  the
	   Newsgroups  header  field.  If this parameter is set, the newsgroup
	   affected by the control message will	be extracted from the  Control
	   header  field  and  the  article  will  be fed as if	its Newsgroups
	   header field	contained solely that newsgroup.  This is  useful  for
	   routing   control  messages	to  peers  when	 they  are  posted  to
	   irrelevant newsgroups that shouldn't	be matched against the	peer's
	   desired  newsgroups	in newsfeeds.  This is a boolean value and the
	   default is false.

       immediatecancel
	   When	using the timecaf storage method, article cancels are normally
	   just	cached to be cancelled,	not cancelled immediately.  If this is
	   set to true,	they will instead by cancelled as soon as  the	cancel
	   is processed.  This is a boolean value and the default is false.

	   This	setting	is ignored unless the timecaf storage method is	used.

       linecountfuzz
	   If  set to something	other than 0, the line count of	the article is
	   checked against the Lines header field  body	 of  the  article  (if
	   present)  and  the article is rejected if the values	differ by more
	   than	this amount.  A	reasonable setting is 5, which is the standard
	   maximum  signature  length  plus  one  (some	  injection   software
	   calculates  the  Lines  header  field before	adding the signature).
	   The default value is	0, which tells INN  not	 to  check  the	 Lines
	   header field	of incoming articles.

       maxartsize
	   The	maximum	 size  of  article  (headers  and  body)  that will be
	   accepted by the server, in bytes.  A	value of 0 allows any size  of
	   article,  but  note	that  innd  will  crash	 if  system  memory is
	   exceeded.  The default value	is 1000000 (approximately 1 MB).  This
	   is checked against the article in wire format (CRLF at the  end  of
	   each	 line,	leading	 periods  protected,  and  with	 the  trailing
	   "\r\n.\r\n" at the end).  See also localmaxartsize.

       maxconnections
	   The maximum	number	of  incoming  NNTP  connections	 innd(8)  will
	   accept.  The	default	value is 50.

       pathalias
	   If  set,  this value	is prepended as	a path identity	immediately to
	   the right of	pathhost in the	Path header  field  body  of  accepted
	   articles  if	 it  doesn't  already appear in	the Path header	field.
	   The default value is	unset.

	   The main purpose of this parameter is when there is some other path
	   identity that you want to add to the	Path  header  field  of	 every
	   article  passing through your news server(s)	for some reason, maybe
	   because you used to have some other	path  identity	and  you  have
	   peers  that	are  configured	 to  not  send	you articles that have
	   already passed through that entity,	and  you  can't	 get  them  to
	   update to your current path identity	for some reason.

       pathcluster
	   If  set,  this  value is appended as	a path identity	immediately to
	   the left of pathhost	in the Path  header  field  body  of  accepted
	   articles if it isn't	already	present	as the leftmost	element	of the
	   Path	header field body.  The	default	value is unset.

	   The	main purpose of	this parameter is to set the name that you are
	   using to identify yourself to peers (i.e. the  path	identity  they
	   should  expect  to  see  from  you) in the cases where that doesn't
	   match the main path identity	pathhost for this news	server.	  (The
	   most	 common	case where that	happens	is when	you have multiple news
	   servers that	you want to present as a "united front"	to the outside
	   world and identify as the same virtual server, but you  still  want
	   distinct  path identities so	those servers can internally feed each
	   other.  Also, even without internal feeds, pathcluster could	be set
	   to an organization name  if	the  organization  has	multiple  news
	   servers.)

       pgpverify
	   Whether  to	enable PGP verification	of control messages other than
	   cancel.  This is a boolean value and	the default  in	 the  inn.conf
	   sample  file	is based on whether configure found pgp, pgpv, pgpgpg,
	   gpgv, gpgv1,	gpgv2, gpg, gpg1 or gpg2.  Note	that if	the  parameter
	   is not present in the configuration file, it	defaults to false.

       port
	   What	 TCP port innd(8) should listen	on.  The default value is 119,
	   the standard	NNTP port.

       remembertrash
	   By default, innd(8) records rejected	articles in history  so	 that,
	   if  offered	the same article again,	it can be refused before it is
	   sent.  If you wish to disable this behavior,	 set  this  to	false.
	   This	 can  cause  a substantial increase in the amount of bandwidth
	   consumed by incoming	news if	you have several peers	and  reject  a
	   lot	of  articles,  so  be careful with it.	Even if	this is	set to
	   true, INN won't log some rejected articles to  history  if  there's
	   reason  to  believe	the  article might be accepted if offered by a
	   different peer, so there is usually no reason to set	this to	 false
	   (although  doing  so	 can  decrease	the size of the	history	file).
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is true.

       sourceaddress
	   Which local IP address to bind to for outgoing NNTP	sockets	 (used
	   by  innxmit(8)  among other programs, as well as innfeed(8) as long
	   as not overridden by	bindaddress in innfeed.conf(5)).  This must be
	   in dotted-quad format (nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn).   If  set  to  "all",  the
	   operating  system  will  choose  the	source IP address for outgoing
	   connections.	 The default value is unset.

       sourceaddress6
	   Like	sourceaddress but  for	IPv6  sockets.	 Note  that  you  will
	   generally  need  to put double quotes ("") around this value	if you
	   set it, since IPv6 addresses	contain	colons.

       verifygroups
	   Set this to true to	reject	incoming  articles  which  contain  an
	   unknown newsgroup in	the whole list of newsgroups to	which they are
	   posted.  In case wanttrash is set to	true, such articles will still
	   be rejected.	 This is a boolean value, and the default is false.

       wanttrash
	   Set	this  to  true	if you want to file articles posted to unknown
	   newsgroups (newsgroups not in the  active  file)  into  the	"junk"
	   newsgroup rather than rejecting them.  This is sometimes useful for
	   a  transit  news server that	needs to propagate articles (according
	   to the setting of "Aj"  in  the  newsfeeds  feed  pattern)  in  all
	   newsgroups  regardless  if  they're	carried	 locally.   This  is a
	   boolean value and the default is false.

	   The logtrash	parameter specifies whether such  articles  should  be
	   logged as posted to unwanted	newsgroups in the news log file.

       wipcheck
	   If  INN  is	offered	 an  article by	a peer on one channel, it will
	   return deferral responses (code 436)	to all other  offers  of  that
	   article  for	this many seconds.  (After this	long, if the peer that
	   offered the article still hasn't sent it, it	will be	accepted  from
	   other  channels.)  The default value	is 5 and probably doesn't need
	   to be changed.

       wipexpire
	   How long, in	seconds, to keep track of message  IDs	offered	 on  a
	   channel before expiring articles that still haven't been sent.  The
	   default value is 10 and probably doesn't need to be changed.

   History Settings
       The following parameter affect the history database.

       hismethod
	   Which  history storage method to use.  The only currently supported
	   value is "hisv6".  There is no default value; this  parameter  must
	   be set.

	   "hisv6"
	       Stores  history	data  in the INN history v6 format: history(5)
	       text file and a number of dbz database files; this  may	be  in
	       true history v6 format, or tagged hash format, depending	on the
	       build  options.	Separation of these two	is a project which has
	       not yet been undertaken.

   Article Storage
       These parameters	affect how articles are	stored on disk.

       cnfscheckfudgesize
	   If set to a value other than	0, the claimed	size  of  articles  in
	   CNFS	cycbuffs is checked against maxartsize plus this value,	and if
	   larger, the CNFS cycbuff is considered corrupt.  This can be	useful
	   as  a  sanity check after a system crash, but be careful using this
	   parameter if	you have changed  maxartsize  recently.	  The  default
	   value is 0.

       enableoverview
	   Whether  to write out overview data for articles.  If set to	false,
	   INN will run	much faster, but reading news from the system will  be
	   impossible  (the  server  will  be for news transit only).  If this
	   option is set to true, ovmethod  must  also	be  set.   This	 is  a
	   boolean value and the default is true.

       extraoverviewadvertised
	   Besides  the	 seven	standard  overview  fields (which are in order
	   "Subject", "From", "Date", "Message-ID", "References", ":bytes" and
	   ":lines") and the eighth "Xref:full"	field required by INN in order
	   to handle crossposts, it is possible	to add	other  fields  in  the
	   overview  database.	 This  parameter expects a list	of such	header
	   field names.	 Overview data for these additional header fields will
	   be generated	for each new article at	 the  time  of	arrival.   For
	   instance, if	you specify:

	       extraoverviewadvertised:	[ Path Newsgroups ]

	   it	 implies   that	  nnrpd	  will	 advertise   "Path:full"   and
	   "Newsgroups:full" as	the ninth and tenth fields in response to LIST
	   OVERVIEW.FMT	and that these two header field	bodies will be	stored
	   in  the overview database for each new article.  It may be a	useful
	   configuration to have as some news readers do article scoring  with
	   rules  based	 on  these  two	 header	 fields.   Having  them	in the
	   overview  database  permits	being  faster  at  scoring  for	 these
	   readers,  without  having  to  separately  request them, but	on the
	   other hand these additional fields are  also	 present  in  overview
	   requests  of	 all  the  other  readers,  which slightly slows their
	   reading.

	   The default value is	 an  empty  list  (no  additional  fields  are
	   stored).   Owing  to	optimizations when innd	parses the articles it
	   receives, it	is possible that all the values	in the	list  are  not
	   recognized  by innd as standard header field	names.	In such	cases,
	   innd	will log an error in news.err at startup and the  unrecognized
	   fields  will	 be  discarded.	  Moreover, the	deprecated "Bytes" and
	   "Lines" header fields, already present  in  the  standard  overview
	   fields as metadata items, cannot be added.

	   You should advertise	only fields for	which the overview database is
	   consistent,	that  is  to  say it records the content or absence of
	   these fields	for all	articles, including those already existing  in
	   the	news  spool.   Consequently,  if you decide to add or remove a
	   field  from	your  overview	database,  you	should	either	modify
	   extraoverviewadvertised  and	 rebuild  your	overview database with
	   makehistory(8) after	 removing  all	existing  overview  files,  or
	   implement a transition period by first using	extraoverviewhidden as
	   described below.

	   Use	 of   a	  transition  period  can  accommodate	most  overview
	   reconfigurations, but certain drastic changes may still  require  a
	   complete overview rebuild.

	   If for instance you want to store the content of the	Injection-Info
	   header  field  body in addition to the fields already stored	above,
	   you should use:

	       extraoverviewadvertised:	[ Path Newsgroups ]
	       extraoverviewhidden:	[ Injection-Info ]

	   This	way, "Injection-Info:full" will	not be advertised by nnrpd but
	   will	be stored for each  new	 article.   Once  you  know  that  all
	   articles in your overview database record the content or absence of
	   that	 new field (if expire.ctl(5) is	parameterized so that all your
	   articles expire within 30 days, you can assume the database	is  in
	   such	a state	after 30 days -- however, note that time to expiration
	   can	be  unpredictable with CNFS and	you then have to use "cnfsstat
	   -a" for checking on when buffers have rolled	over), you should put:

	       extraoverviewadvertised:	[ Path Newsgroups Injection-Info ]
	       extraoverviewhidden:	[ ]

	   The "Injection-Info"	value must be added at the  end	 of  the  list
	   because  order  matters and fields mentioned	in extraoverviewhidden
	   are generated after	those  mentioned  in  extraoverviewadvertised.
	   nnrpd  will	now advertise "Injection-Info:full" in response	to the
	   LIST	OVERVIEW.FMT command ("full" indicates that the	 header	 field
	   name	appears	followed by its	value).

	   Now suppose you want	to remove the content of the Newsgroups	header
	   field  from	the overview.  As order	matters, the overview database
	   will	no longer be consistent	for the	Injection-Info	header	field.
	   Therefore, you need to specify:

	       extraoverviewadvertised:	[ Path ]
	       extraoverviewhidden:	[ Injection-Info ]

	   And	once  overview	data  is accurate for all articles, you	should
	   use:

	       extraoverviewadvertised:	[ Path Injection-Info ]
	       extraoverviewhidden:	[ ]

	   Note	that you have to restart nnrpd if it runs as a daemon whenever
	   you change the value	of extraoverviewadvertised;  a	mere  "ctlinnd
	   xexec innd" is not enough.

       extraoverviewhidden
	   This	   parameter	should	  be	used   in   conjunction	  with
	   extraoverviewadvertised (see	above for more details).  It expects a
	   list	of header field	names.	Overview data for these	header	fields
	   will	 be generated for each new article at the time of arrival but,
	   contrary to the fields mentioned in extraoverviewadvertised,	 nnrpd
	   will	 not  advertise	 them  in  response  to	 the LIST OVERVIEW.FMT
	   command.  It	also implies that nnrpd	will not look in the  overview
	   database  for  fields  mentioned  in	 extraoverviewhidden  when  it
	   handles HDR,	XHDR and XPAT requests as the overview database	is not
	   considered consistent yet for these	fields;	 nnrpd	will  have  to
	   parse  the  headers	of  the	 requested articles in the news	spool,
	   which is slower than	directly querying the overview database.

	   The default value is	 an  empty  list  (no  additional  fields  are
	   stored).   Owing  to	optimizations when innd	parses the articles it
	   receives, it	is possible that all the values	in the	list  are  not
	   recognized  by innd as standard header field	names.	In such	cases,
	   innd	will log an error in news.err at startup and the  unrecognized
	   fields  will	 be  discarded.	  Moreover, the	deprecated "Bytes" and
	   "Lines" header fields, already present  in  the  standard  overview
	   fields as metadata items, cannot be added.

       groupbaseexpiry
	   Whether to enable newsgroup-based expiry.  If set to	false, article
	   expiry is done based	on storage class of storing method.  If	set to
	   true	 (and  overview	 information  is available), expiry is done by
	   newsgroup name.  This affects the format of expire.ctl.  This is  a
	   boolean value and the default is true.

       mergetogroups
	   Whether   to	  file	 all   postings	  to   "to.*"  groups  in  the
	   pseudonewsgroup "to".  If this is set to true, the  newsgroup  "to"
	   must	 exist	in  the	 active	 file or INN will not start.  (See the
	   discussion of "to."	groups in  innd(8)  under  CONTROL  MESSAGES.)
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is false.

       nfswriter
	   For	servers	 writing articles, determine whether the article spool
	   is on NFS storage.  If set, INN attempts to flush articles  to  the
	   spool in a more timely manner, rather than relying on the operating
	   system  to  flush  things  such  as	the CNFS article bitmaps.  You
	   should only set this	parameter if  you  are	attempting  to	use  a
	   shared  NFS	spool  on a machine acting as a	single writer within a
	   cluster.  This is a boolean value and the default is	false.

       overcachesize
	   How many cache slots	to reserve for open overview files.  If	INN is
	   writing overview files (see enableoverview),	 ovmethod  is  set  to
	   "tradindexed",  and	this  is set to	a value	other than 0, INN will
	   keep	around and open	that many recently written-to  overview	 files
	   in case more	articles come in for those newsgroups.	Every overview
	   cache  slot consumes	two file descriptors, so be careful not	to set
	   this	value too high.	 You may  be  able  to	use  the  "ulimit  -n"
	   command to see how many open	file descriptors your operating	system
	   allows.   innd(8)  also  uses  an  open  file  descriptor  for each
	   incoming feed and outgoing channel or batch file, and  if  it  runs
	   out	of  open  file descriptors, it may throttle and	stop accepting
	   new news.  The default value	is 128 (which is  probably  still  too
	   low if you have a large number of file descriptors available).

	   Please  have	 a  look  at  the  documentation  of  the rlimitnofile
	   parameter,  as  increasing  the  default  value  may	 lead  to   an
	   exhaustion of usable	file descriptors.

	   This	setting	is ignored unless ovmethod is set to "tradindexed".

       ovgrouppat
	   If  set,  restricts	the  overview  data  stored by INN to only the
	   newsgroups  matching	 this	comma-separated	  list	 of   uwildmat
	   expressions.	  Newsgroups  not  matching  this  setting  may	not be
	   readable, and if groupbaseexpiry is set to  true  and  the  storage
	   method   for	  these	  newsgroups   does   not   have   self-expire
	   functionality, storing overview data	will  fail.   The  default  is
	   unset.

       ovflushcount
	   How	many articles received between flushing	their overview data to
	   disk.  This parameter is only used  for  the	 buffindexed  overview
	   storage   method,  and  defaults  to	 50.   (Flushing  to  disk  is
	   parameterized  differently  for  other   methods:   txn_nosync   in
	   ovdb.conf,  transrowlimit  and transtimelimit in ovsqlite.conf, and
	   always after	each article arrival for tradindexed.)

	   See icdsynccount (related to	flushes	 of  the  active  and  history
	   files)  for	more  information  about this trade-off	between	faster
	   speed and more data loss if innd crashes.

       ovmethod
	   Which overview storage method to use.  Currently  supported	values
	   are	"buffindexed", "ovdb", "ovsqlite" and "tradindexed".  There is
	   no default value; this parameter must be set	if  enableoverview  is
	   true	(the default).

	   "buffindexed"
	       It   stores   overview	data   and   index   information  into
	       preconfigured large files like  CNFS.   Fast  at	 writing,  the
	       "buffindexed"  overview storage method can keep up with a large
	       feed more easily	 and  never  consumes  additional  disk	 space
	       beyond  that  allocated to these	buffers.  The downside is that
	       these buffers are hard to recover in  case  of  corruption  and
	       somewhat	 slower	 for  readers  and  the	expiry process.	 Also,
	       overview	data is	limited	to 8 KB	per article, which may lead to
	       the lack	of integration of  a  few  articles  with  headers  of
	       unusual	 length	  into	 the   overview	  database.   See  the
	       buffindexed.conf(5) man page for	more details, and notably  how
	       to create the buffers.

	   "ovdb"
	       It  stores  overview  information  into a Berkeley DB database,
	       whose development pace has  stalled  these  last	 years.	  This
	       method  is  fast	 and  very  robust,  but may require more disk
	       space, unless compression is enabled.  Overview data is fetched
	       one article at a	time, which makes this	method	a  bit	slower
	       than "ovsqlite" for readers.  See the ovdb(5) man page for more
	       details.

	   "ovsqlite"
	       It  stores  overview information	into an	SQLite database, known
	       for its long-term  stability  and  compatibility.   Robust  and
	       faster  than  "ovdb"  at	reading	ranges of overview data	(since
	       overview	data is	transferred  in	 128-kilobyte  chunks  between
	       ovsqlite-server and nnrpd) but somewhat slower at writing, this
	       method  may  require  more  disk	 space,	 unless	compression is
	       enabled.	 See the ovsqlite(5) man page for more details.

	   "tradindexed"
	       It uses two files per newsgroup,	one  containing	 the  overview
	       data  and one containing	the index.  Fast for readers, but slow
	       to write	to because  it	has  to	 update	 two  files  for  each
	       incoming	article.  Its main advantage is	to be the best tested,
	       the  most  reliable and the method with the best	recovery tools
	       (tdx-util).

       storeonxref
	   If set to true, articles will be  stored  based  on	the  newsgroup
	   names  in  the Xref header field body rather	than in	the Newsgroups
	   header field	body.  This affects what the patterns in  storage.conf
	   apply  to.	The primary interesting	effect of setting this to true
	   is to enable	filing of  all	control	 messages  according  to  what
	   storage  class  the	control	 pseudogroups are filed	in rather than
	   according to	the newsgroups the control  messages  are  posted  to.
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is true.

	   If  the  tradspool article storage method is	used, storeonxref must
	   be true.

       useoverchan
	   Whether to innd(8) should create overview data  internally  through
	   libinnstorage(3).   If  set to false, innd creates overview data by
	   itself.  If set to true, innd does  not  create;  instead  overview
	   data	 must  be  created by overchan(8) from an appropriate entry in
	   newsfeeds.  Setting to true may be useful, if innd cannot  keep  up
	   with	 incoming feed and the bottleneck is creation of overview data
	   within innd.	 This is a boolean value and the default is false.

       wireformat
	   Only	used with the tradspool	storage	method,	this says  whether  to
	   write  articles in wire format.  Wire format	means storing articles
	   with	"\r\n" at the end  of  each  line  and	with  periods  at  the
	   beginning of	lines doubled, the article format required by the NNTP
	   protocol.   Articles	stored in this format are suitable for sending
	   directly to a network connection without requiring conversion,  and
	   therefore  setting this to true can make the	server more efficient.
	   The primary reason not to set this is  if  you  have	 old  existing
	   software  that looks	around in the spool and	doesn't	understand how
	   to read wire	format.	 Storage methods other than  tradspool	always
	   store  articles  in	wire  format.  This is a boolean value and the
	   default is true.

       xrefslave
	   Whether to act as  the  slave  of  another  server.	 If  set,  INN
	   attempts  to	 duplicate exactly the article numbering of the	server
	   feeding it by looking at the	Xref header  field  body  of  incoming
	   articles  and assigning the same article numbers to articles	as was
	   noted in the	Xref header field body from the	upstream server.   The
	   result  is  that  clients  should be	able to	point at either	server
	   interchangeably (using some load balancing scheme, for example) and
	   see	the  same  internal  article  numbering.   Servers  with  this
	   parameter  set  should  generally  only have	one upstream feed, and
	   should  always  have	 nnrpdposthost	set  to	 hand  locally	posted
	   articles  off to the	master server.	The upstream should be careful
	   to always feed articles in order (innfeed(8)	can have problems with
	   this	in the event of	a backlog).  This is a boolean value  and  the
	   default is false.

   Reading
       These  parameters affect	the behavior of	INN for	readers.  Most of them
       are used	by nnrpd(8).  There are	some special sets of settings that are
       broken out separately after the initial alphabetized list.

       allownewnews
	   Whether to allow use	of  the	 NEWNEWS  command  by  clients.	  This
	   command used	to put a heavy load on the server in older versions of
	   INN,	 but  is  now  reasonably  efficient,  at  least  if  only one
	   newsgroup is	specified by the client.  This is a boolean value  and
	   the	 default  is  true.   If  you  use  the	 access	 parameter  in
	   readers.conf,  be  sure  to	read  about  the  way	it   overrides
	   allownewnews.

       articlemmap
	   Whether  to	attempt	to mmap() articles.  Setting this to true will
	   give	better performance on most  systems,  but  some	 systems  have
	   problems  with  mmap().   If	this is	set to false, articles will be
	   read	into memory before being sent to readers.  This	is  a  boolean
	   value and the default is true.

       clienttimeout
	   How	long  (in  seconds)  a client connection can be	idle before it
	   exits.  When	setting	this parameter,	be aware that some newsreaders
	   use the same	connection for reading and posting and don't deal well
	   with	the connection timing out while	a post is being	composed.   If
	   the	system	isn't  having  a  problem  with	 too  many  long-lived
	   connections,	it may be a good idea to increase this value  to  3600
	   (an hour).  The default value is 1800 (thirty minutes).

       initialtimeout
	   How	long (in seconds) nnrpd	will wait for the first	command	from a
	   reader connection  before  dropping	the  connection.   This	 is  a
	   defensive  timeout  intended	 to protect the	news server from badly
	   behaved reader  clients  that  open	and  abandon  a	 multitude  of
	   connections	without	 every	closing	them.  The default value is 10
	   (ten	seconds), which	may need  to  be  increased  if	 many  clients
	   connect via slow network links.

       msgidcachesize
	   How	many  cache  slots to reserve for message-IDs to storage token
	   translations.  When serving	overview  data	to  clients  (NEWNEWS,
	   OVER, etc.),	nnrpd(8) can cache the storage token associated	with a
	   message-ID  and save	the cost of looking it up in the history file;
	   for some configurations, setting this parameter can save more  than
	   90%	of  the	 wall  clock time for a	session.  The default value is
	   64000.

       nfsreader
	   For servers reading articles, determine whether the	article	 spool
	   is  on NFS storage.	If set,	INN will attempt to force articles and
	   overviews to	be read	directly from the NFS spool rather  than  from
	   cached  copies.   You  should  only	set  this parameter if you are
	   attempting to use a shared NFS spool	 on  a	machine	 acting	 as  a
	   reader  within  a cluster.  This is a boolean value and the default
	   is false.

       nfsreaderdelay
	   If nfsreader	is set,	INN will use the value	of  nfsreaderdelay  to
	   delay  the  apparent	 arrival  time	of articles to clients by this
	   amount.  Note that only answers to GROUP and	NEWNEWS	 commands  are
	   affected.   This  value  should  be	tuned  based  on the NFS cache
	   timeouts locally.  The default is 60, that is to say	one minute.

       nnrpdcheckart
	   Whether nnrpd should	check  the  existence  of  an  article	before
	   listing  it	as  present  in	 response  to  an  NNTP	 command (HDR,
	   LISTGROUP, NEWNEWS, OVER, XPAT).  The primary use of	 this  setting
	   is to prevent nnrpd from returning information about	articles which
	   are	no  longer present on the server but which still have overview
	   data	 available.   Checking	the  existence	of   articles	before
	   returning  overview	information  slows down	the overview commands,
	   but reduces the number of "article is missing" errors seen  by  the
	   client.  This is a boolean value and	the default is true.

	   You	 may  also  want  to  see  the	groupexactcount	 parameter  in
	   readers.conf(5) which  controls  the	 computing  of	the  estimated
	   article  count  returned  in	 NNTP  commands	 (GROUP,  LIST COUNTS,
	   LISTGROUP).

       nnrpdflags
	   When	nnrpd(8) is spawned from innd(8), these	flags  are  passed  as
	   arguments  to  the  nnrpd  process.	 This  setting does not	affect
	   instances of	nnrpd that are started in daemon  mode,	 or  instances
	   that	 are  started via another listener process such	as inetd(8) or
	   xinetd(8).  Shell quoting and  metacharacters  are  not  supported.
	   This	is a string value and the default is unset.

       nnrpdloadlimit
	   If  set  to	a  value  other	 than  0, connections to nnrpd will be
	   refused if the system load average is higher	than this value.   The
	   default value is 16.

       noreader
	   Normally,  innd(8)  will  fork  a copy of nnrpd(8) for all incoming
	   connections from  hosts  not	 listed	 in  incoming.conf.   If  this
	   parameter  is  set  to  true,  those	 connections  will  instead be
	   rejected with a 502 error code.  This should	be set to true	for  a
	   transit-only	 server	 that  doesn't support readers,	or if nnrpd is
	   running in daemon mode or being started out of inetd.   This	 is  a
	   boolean value and the default is false.

       readerswhenstopped
	   Whether to allow readers to connect even if the server is paused or
	   throttled.	This  is  only	applicable if nnrpd(8) is spawned from
	   innd(8) rather than run out of inetd	or in daemon mode.  This is  a
	   boolean value and the default is false.

       readertrack
	   Whether to enable the tracking system for client behavior.  Tracked
	   information	is  recorded  to pathlog/tracklogs/log-ID, where ID is
	   determined  by  nnrpd's  PID	 and  launch  time.    Currently   the
	   information	recorded includes initial connection and posting; only
	   information about clients listed in nnrpd.track  is	recorded.   In
	   addition,	every	 posted	   article    will    be    saved   in
	   pathlog/trackposts/track.message-id,	 where	 message-id   is   the
	   message ID of the post.  This is a boolean value and	the default is
	   false.

       tradindexedmmap
	   Whether  to	attempt	 to  mmap()  tradindexed  overviews  articles.
	   Setting this	to true	will give better performance on	most  systems,
	   but	some  systems  have  problems  with mmap().  If	this is	set to
	   false, overviews will be read into  memory  before  being  sent  to
	   readers.  This is a boolean value and the default is	true.

       INN   has   optional   support	for   generating  keyword  information
       automatically from article body text and	putting	 that  information  in
       overview	for the	use of clients that know to look for it	(HDR, OVER and
       XPAT  commands).	  The following	parameters control that	feature, which
       should be considered experimental.  Its very simple  text  tokenization
       works   only  on	 plain-text  ASCII  articles,  and  totally  lacks  of
       understanding of	anything other	than  English.	 Articles  encoded  in
       Base64  or Quoted-Printable, having a MIME structure, or	farther	afield
       from English will have garbage in the generated Keywords	header field.

       This feature may	be too slow if you're taking a substantial  feed,  and
       probably	 will not be useful for	the average news reader; enabling this
       is not recommended unless you have  some	 specific  intention  to  take
       advantage of it.

       keywords
	   Whether  the	keyword	generation support should be enabled.  This is
	   a boolean value and the default is false.

	   If an article already contains a Keywords header field, no  keyword
	   generation  is  done	and the	original Keywords header field is kept
	   untouched.

	   In order to use this	feature, the regex library should be available
	   and INN configured with the --enable-keywords flag.	Otherwise,  no
	   keywords  will  be generated, even though this boolean value	is set
	   to true.  You also have to add the Keywords header field  into  the
	   overview with extraoverviewadvertised or extraoverviewhidden.

       keyartlimit
	   Articles  larger  than  this	 value in bytes	will not have keywords
	   generated for them (since it	would take too long to	do  so).   The
	   default value is 100000 (approximately 100 KB).

       keylimit
	   Maximum  number  of bytes allocated for keyword data.  If there are
	   more	keywords than will fit into this many bytes when separated  by
	   commas, the rest are	discarded.  The	default	value is 512.

       keymaxwords
	   Maximum  number  of keywords	that will be generated for an article.
	   (The	keyword	generation code	will attempt to	discard	"noise"	 words
	   in  English,	 so  the  number of keywords actually written into the
	   overview will usually be smaller than  this	even  if  the  maximum
	   number of keywords is found.)  The default value is 250.

   Posting
       These  parameters  are  only  used  by  nnrpd(8),  inews(1),  and other
       programs	that accept or generate	postings.  There are some special sets
       of  settings  that  are	broken	out  separately	 after	 the   initial
       alphabetized list.

       addinjectiondate
	   Whether  to	add an Injection-Date header field to all local	posts.
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is true.

	   Note	that no	Injection-Date header fields will be  added  to	 local
	   posts  already containing both a Message-ID header field and	a Date
	   header field.  This is done in conformance with standards, to  help
	   minimize  the possibility of	a loop in e-mail gatewaying and	ensure
	   that	a newly	injected article is not	treated	 as  a	new,  separate
	   article  in	case  of  multiple  injection  of  the same article to
	   different injecting agents.

       addinjectionpostingaccount
	   Whether to add a posting-account attribute  to  the	Injection-Info
	   header  field  body to all local posts giving the username assigned
	   to the user at connection time or after authentication.  This is  a
	   boolean  value  and	the  default  is false.	 There is no intrinsic
	   support for obfuscating the value.  That has	 to  be	 done  with  a
	   user-written	Perl filter, if	desired.

       addinjectionpostinghost
	   Whether  to	add  a	posting-host  attribute	 to the	Injection-Info
	   header field	body to	all local posts	giving an FQDN (when known, by
	   reverse lookup of the client	IP address)  and  IP  address  of  the
	   system  from	 which the post	was received.  This is a boolean value
	   and the default is true.  Note that INN either does	not  add  this
	   attribute  or  adds	the  name  (when  known) and IP	address	of the
	   client.  There is no	intrinsic support for obfuscating the name  of
	   the	client.	  That has to be done with a user-written Perl filter,
	   if desired.

	   When	this parameter is set to true, an FQDN	(obtained  by  reverse
	   lookup  of  the  client  IP	address	or, if unknown,	the IP address
	   itself) of the client is also added to the Path header field	 body,
	   after the "!.POSTED"	diagnostic.

       checkincludedtext
	   Whether to check local postings for the ratio of new	to quoted text
	   and	reject	them  if  that	ratio  is under	50%.  Included text is
	   recognized by looking for lines beginning with ">",	"|",  or  ":".
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is false.

       complaints
	   The value of	the mail-complaints-to attribute of the	Injection-Info
	   header  field  added	 to  all  local	 posts.	  The  default	is the
	   newsmaster's	e-mail	address.   (If	the  newsmaster,  selected  at
	   configure time and defaulting to "usenet", doesn't contain "@", the
	   address  will  consist  of the newsmaster, an "@", and the value of
	   fromhost.)

       fromhost
	   Contains a domain used to construct e-mail addresses.  The  address
	   of  the  local news administrator will be given as <user>@fromhost,
	   where <user>	is the newsmaster user set at compile  time  ("usenet"
	   by  default).   This	 setting  will	also be	used by	mailpost(8) to
	   fully qualify addresses and by  inews(1)  to	 generate  the	Sender
	   header  field (and the From header field if missing).  The value of
	   the FROMHOST	environment variable, if set, overrides	this  setting.
	   The default is the fully qualified domain name of the local host.

       localmaxartsize
	   The	maximum	 article  size (in bytes) for locally posted articles.
	   Articles larger than	this will be rejected.	A value	 of  0	allows
	   any	size  of  article,  but	note that nnrpd	and innd will crash if
	   system memory is exceeded.  See also	maxartsize, which  applies  to
	   all	articles including those posted	locally.  The default value is
	   1000000 (approximately 1 MB).

       moderatormailer
	   The address to which	to send	submissions for	moderated groups.   It
	   is  only  used  if  the  moderators	file  doesn't exist, or	if the
	   moderated group to which an article is posted is not	matched	by any
	   entry in that file, and takes the same form	as  an	entry  in  the
	   moderators  file.  In most cases, "%s@moderators.isc.org" is	a good
	   value for this parameter  (%s  is  expanded	into  a	 form  of  the
	   newsgroup  name).   See  moderators(5)  for	more details about the
	   syntax.  The	default	is unset.  If this parameter isn't set and  an
	   article  is	posted	to  a  moderated  group	 that  does not	have a
	   matching entry in the moderators file, the posting will be rejected
	   with	an error.

       nnrpdauthsender
	   Whether  to	generate  a  Sender  header  field  based  on	reader
	   authentication.   If	 this  parameter is set, a Sender header field
	   will	be added to local posts	containing the	identity  assigned  by
	   readers.conf.   If  the  assigned identity does not include an "@",
	   the reader's	hostname is used.  If this parameter  is  set  but  no
	   identity  is	assigned, the Sender header field will be removed from
	   all posts even if the poster	includes one.  This is a boolean value
	   and the default is false.

       nnrpdposthost
	   If set, nnrpd(8) and	rnews(1) will pass all locally posted articles
	   to the specified host rather	than trying to	inject	them  locally.
	   See	also nnrpdpostport.  This should always	be set if xrefslave is
	   true.  The default value is unset.

       nnrpdpostport
	   The	port  on  the  remote  server  to  connect  to	to  post  when
	   nnrpdposthost is used.  The default value is	119.

       organization
	   What	 to  put  in  the Organization header field body if it is left
	   blank by the	poster.	 The value  of	the  ORGANIZATION  environment
	   variable,  if  set,	overrides this setting.	 The default is	unset,
	   which tells INN not to insert an Organization header	field.

       spoolfirst
	   If true, nnrpd(8) will spool	new articles rather than attempting to
	   send	them to	innd(8).  If false, nnrpd will spool articles only  if
	   it  receives	an error trying	to send	them to	innd.  Setting this to
	   true	can be useful if nnrpd must respond as fast as possible	to the
	   client; however, when set, articles	will  not  appear  to  readers
	   until they are given	to innd.  nnrpd	won't do this; "rnews -U" must
	   be  run  periodically  to  take the spooled articles	and post them.
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is false.

       strippostcc
	   Whether to strip To,	Cc, and	Bcc header fields  out	of  all	 local
	   posts  via  nnrpd(8).   The	primary	 purpose of this setting is to
	   prevent abuse of the	news server by posting to  a  moderated	 group
	   and	including  To or Cc header fields in the post so that the news
	   server will send the	 article  to  arbitrary	 addresses.   INN  now
	   protects  against this abuse	in other ways provided mta is set to a
	   command that	includes %s and	honors it, so  this  is	 generally  no
	   longer needed.  This	is a boolean value and the default is false.

       nnrpd(8)	 has  support  for  controlling	 high-volume  posters  via  an
       exponential  backoff  algorithm,	 as  configured	  by   the   following
       parameters.

       Exponential  posting backoff works as follows: news clients are indexed
       by IP address (or username, see backoffauth below).  Each time  a  post
       is  received  from  an IP address, the time of posting is stored	(along
       with the	previous sleep time, see below).  After	a configurable	number
       of posts	in a configurable period of time, nnrpd(8) will	begin to sleep
       for  increasing	periods	 of  time  before  actually  posting  anything
       (posting	 backoff  is  therefore	 activated).   Posts  will  still   be
       accepted, but at	an increasingly	reduced	rate.

       After  backoff  has  been  activated,  the  length  of time to sleep is
       computed	based on the difference	in time	between	the last  posting  and
       the  current posting.  If this difference is less than backoffpostfast,
       the new sleep time will be 1 + (previous	sleep time  *  backoffk).   If
       this   difference   is  less  than  backoffpostslow  but	 greater  than
       backoffpostfast,	then the new sleep time	will equal the previous	 sleep
       time.   If  this	 difference  is	 greater than backoffpostslow, the new
       sleep time is zero and posting backoff is deactivated for this  poster.
       (Note  that  this  does	not mean posting backoff cannot	be reactivated
       later in	the session.)

       Exponential posting backoff will	not be enabled unless backoffdb	is set
       and backoffpostfast and backoffpostslow are set to something other than
       their default values.

       Here are	the parameters that control exponential	posting	backoff:

       backoffauth
	   Whether to index posting backoffs by	user rather than by source  IP
	   address.   You must be using	authentication in nnrpd(8) for a value
	   of true to have any meaning.	 This  is  a  boolean  value  and  the
	   default is false.

       backoffdb
	   The	path  to  a  directory,	 writeable by the news user, that will
	   contain the	backoff	 database.   There  is	no  default  for  this
	   parameter;  you  must  provide  a  path to a	creatable or writeable
	   directory to	enable exponential backoff.

       backoffk
	   The amount to multiply the previous sleep time by if	 the  user  is
	   still posting too quickly.  A value of 2 will double	the sleep time
	   for each excessive post.  The default value is 1.

       backoffpostfast
	   Postings  from  the	same  identity	that  arrive in	less than this
	   amount of time (in seconds) will trigger increasing sleep  time  in
	   the backoff algorithm.  The default value is	0.

       backoffpostslow
	   Postings  from  the	same identity that arrive in greater than this
	   amount of time (in  seconds)	 will  reset  the  backoff  algorithm.
	   Another  way	 to  look  at this constant is to realize that posters
	   will	be allowed to generate at most 86400/backoffpostslow posts per
	   day.	 The default value is 1.

       backofftrigger
	   This	many postings are allowed  before  the	backoff	 algorithm  is
	   triggered.  The default value is 10000.

   TLS/SSL Support for Reading and Posting
       Here are	the parameters used by nnrpd(8)	to provide TLS/SSL support.

       The parameters related to certificates are:

       tlscafile
	   The	 path	to   a	file  containing  certificate  authority  root
	   certificates, used to present a trust chain to a TLS	client.	  This
	   parameter is	only used if nnrpd is built with TLS/SSL support.  The
	   default value is an empty string.

       tlscapath
	   The	path  to  a  directory	containing  certificate	authority root
	   certificates.  Each file in the directory  should  contain  one  CA
	   certificate,	and the	name of	the file should	be the CA subject name
	   hash	 value.	  See  the OpenSSL documentation for more information.
	   This	parameter is only used if nnrpd	is built with TLS/SSL support.
	   The default value is	pathetc.

       tlscertfile
	   The path to a file containing the server certificate	to present  to
	   TLS	clients.   This	 parameter is only used	if nnrpd is built with
	   TLS/SSL support.  The default value is pathetc/cert.pem.

	   If you want to use a	complete certificate chain, you	 can  directly
	   put it in tlscertfile (like Apache's	SSLCertificateFile directive).
	   Alternately,	 you  can  put a single	certificate in tlscertfile and
	   use tlscafile for additional	certificates needed  to	 complete  the
	   chain, like a separate authority root certificate.

	   More	 concretely,  when using Let's Encrypt certificates, Certbot's
	   files can be	installed as follows:

	       tlscapath:      /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com
	       tlscertfile:    /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com/fullchain.pem
	       tlskeyfile:     /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com/privkey.pem

	   or:

	       tlscapath:      /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com
	       tlscafile:      /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com/chain.pem
	       tlscertfile:    /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com/cert.pem
	       tlskeyfile:     /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com/privkey.pem

	   Make	sure that the permission rights	are properly set so  that  the
	   news	 user  or  the news group can read these directories and files
	   (typically, he should access	 /etc/letsencrypt/live/news.server.com
	   and	/etc/letsencrypt/archive/news.server.com  where	 the real keys
	   are located,	and the	private	key should not be world-readable).

	   If  you  prefer  to	point  to  files  outside  the	directory   of
	   Let's Encrypt, you may add a	post-renewal hook for Let's Encrypt to
	   copy	 the  generated	 files	to another location, and give them the
	   expected rights.

       tlskeyfile
	   The path to a file containing the encryption	 key  for  the	server
	   certificate	named  in  tlscertfile.	  This	may  be	 the  same  as
	   tlscertfile if, when	you created the	certificate, you put  the  key
	   in  the  same file (if, for example,	you gave the same file name to
	   both	 the  -out  and	 -keyout  options  to  "openssl	 req").	  This
	   parameter is	only used if nnrpd is built with TLS/SSL support.  The
	   default value is pathetc/key.pem.

	   This	 file  must  only  be  readable	by the news user or nnrpd will
	   refuse to use it.

       Finally,	here are the parameters	that can be used to tighten the	 level
       of security provided by TLS/SSL in case new attacks exploitable in NNTP
       on the TLS protocol or some supported cipher suite are discovered:

       tlsciphers
	   The	string	describing  the	cipher suites OpenSSL will support for
	   TLS 1.2 and below.  See OpenSSL's ciphers(1)	command	 documentation
	   for	details.   The	default	is unset, which	uses OpenSSL's default
	   cipher suite	list.

       tlsciphers13
	   The string describing the cipher suites OpenSSL  will  support  for
	   TLS 1.3.    See  OpenSSL's  ciphers(1)  command  documentation  for
	   details.  The default is unset, which uses OpenSSL's	default	cipher
	   suite list.

	   Note	that a separate	cipher suite configuration parameter is	needed
	   for TLS 1.3 because TLS 1.3 cipher suites are not  compatible  with
	   TLS 1.2,  and  vice-versa.	In  order to avoid issues where	legacy
	   TLS 1.2 cipher suite	configuration  configured  in  the  tlsciphers
	   parameter  would  inadvertently  disable all	TLS 1.3	cipher suites,
	   the inn.conf	configuration has been separated out.

       tlscompression
	   Whether to enable or	disable	TLS/SSL-level compression support,  if
	   the	negotiated  protocol  supports	it (notably, TLS 1.3 no	longer
	   supports it).  This is a boolean and	the default is false, that  is
	   to  say  compression	 is disabled, so as to follow the best current
	   practices for a secure use of TLS  in  application  protocols  (see
	   RFC 8143 for	NNTP).

	   Note	 that enabling TLS/SSL-level compression will be possible only
	   if the OpenSSL library INN  has  been  built	 with,	supports  that
	   feature.

       tlseccurve
	   The	name of	the elliptic curve to use for ephemeral	key exchanges.
	   To see the list  of	curves	supported  by  OpenSSL,	 use  "openssl
	   ecparam -list_curves".

	   The	default	 is  unset,  which means an appropriate	curve is auto-
	   selected (if	your OpenSSL version is	at  least  1.0.2  or  you  are
	   using LibreSSL) or the NIST P-256 curve is used.

	   This	 option	 is  only  effective  if your OpenSSL version has ECDH
	   support.

       tlspreferserverciphers
	   Whether to let the client or	the server decide the preferred	cipher
	   suite, signature algorithm or elliptic curve	to use for an incoming
	   connection.	This is	a boolean and the default is true, that	is  to
	   say the server will choose following	its own	preferences.

       tlsprotocols
	   The	list of	TLS/SSL	protocol versions to support.  Valid protocols
	   are SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2 and TLSv1.3.  The default
	   value is to only allow secure TLS protocols:

	       tlsprotocols: [ TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3 ]

	   Note	that the listed	protocols will be enabled only if the  OpenSSL
	   library  INN	 has  been built with, supports	them.  In case OpenSSL
	   supports  protocols	more  recent  than  TLSv1.3,  they   will   be
	   automatically  enabled (which anyway	is fine	regarding security, as
	   newer protocols are supposed	to be more secure).

	   "SSLv2" was formally	deprecated by RFC 6176	in  2011,  "SSLv3"  by
	   RFC 7568 in 2015, "TLSv1.0" and "TLSv1.1" by	RFC 8996 in 2021.

   Monitoring
       These  parameters control the behavior of innwatch(8), the program that
       monitors	INN and	informs	the news administrator if anything goes	 wrong
       with it.

       doinnwatch
	   Whether  to	start  innwatch(8)  from  rc.news.   This is a boolean
	   value, and the default is true.

       innwatchbatchspace
	   Free	space in pathoutgoing,	in  inndf(8)  output  units  (normally
	   kilobytes),	at  which  innd(8)  will  be throttled by innwatch(8),
	   assuming a default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is 4000.

       innwatchlibspace
	   Free	 space	in  pathdb,  in	 inndf(8)   output   units   (normally
	   kilobytes),	at  which  innd(8)  will  be throttled by innwatch(8),
	   assuming a default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is 25000.

       innwatchloload
	   Load	average	times 100  at  which  innd(8)  will  be	 restarted  by
	   innwatch(8)	(undoing  a  previous  pause  or throttle), assuming a
	   default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is 1000 (that is,  a  load
	   average of 10.00).

       innwatchhiload
	   Load	 average  times	 100  at  which	 innd(8)  will be throttled by
	   innwatch(8),	assuming a default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is
	   2000	(that is, a load average of 20.00).

       innwatchpauseload
	   Load	 average  times	 100  at  which	 innd(8)  will	be  paused  by
	   innwatch(8),	assuming a default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is
	   1500	(that is, a load average of 15.00).

       innwatchsleeptime
	   How	long (in seconds) innwatch(8) will sleep between each check of
	   INN.	 The default value is 600.

       innwatchspoolnodes
	   Free	inodes in patharticles at which	innd(8)	will be	 throttled  by
	   innwatch(8),	assuming a default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is
	   200.

       innwatchspoolspace
	   Free	 space	in  patharticles  and pathoverview, in inndf(8)	output
	   units (normally kilobytes), at which	innd(8)	will be	 throttled  by
	   innwatch(8),	assuming a default innwatch.ctl.  The default value is
	   25000.

   Logging
       These parameters	control	what information INN logs.

       docnfsstat
	   Whether  to	start  cnfsstat(8)  when innd(8) is started.  cnfsstat
	   will	log the	status of all CNFS cycbuffs to syslog  on  a  periodic
	   basis  (frequency  is  the default for "cnfsstat -l", currently 600
	   seconds).  This is a	boolean	value and the default is false.

       htmlstatus
	   Whether innd	should write the status	report	as  HTML  file	or  in
	   plain text.	The HTML status	file goes to pathhttp/inn_status.html,
	   while  the plain text status	file is	written	to pathlog/inn.status.
	   This	is a boolean value and the default is  true  (an  HTML	status
	   file	is written).  Also see the status parameter.

       incominglogfrequency
	   How	many articles to process on an incoming	channel	before logging
	   the activity.  The default value is 200.

       logartsize
	   Whether the size of accepted	articles (in bytes) should be  written
	   to  the  article log	file.  This is useful for flow rate statistics
	   and is recommended.	This is	a boolean value	 and  the  default  is
	   true.

       logcancelcomm
	   Set	this to	true to	log "ctlinnd cancel" commands to syslog.  This
	   is a	boolean	value and the default is false.

       logcycles
	   How many old	logs scanlogs(8) keeps.	 scanlogs(8) is	generally  run
	   by  news.daily(8)  and  will	archive	compressed copies of this many
	   days	worth of old logs.  The	default	value is 3.

       logipaddr
	   Whether the verified	name of	the  remote  feeding  host  should  be
	   logged  to  the  article  log for incoming articles rather than the
	   last	entry in the Path header field body.  The only reason to  ever
	   set this to false is	due to some interactions with newsfeeds	flags;
	   see newsfeeds(5) for	more information.  This	is a boolean value and
	   the default is true.

       logsitename
	   Whether  the	 names of the sites to which accepted articles will be
	   sent	should be put into the article log file.  This is  useful  for
	   debugging  and statistics.  This is a boolean value and the default
	   is true.

       logstatus
	   Whether innd	should write a shortened version of its	status	report
	   to  syslog  every  status seconds.  This is a boolean value and the
	   default is true.  If	set to true, see the status parameter for more
	   details on how to enable status reporting.

       logtrash
	   Whether innd	should add a line in  the  news	 log  file  to	report
	   unwanted  newsgroups	(that is to say	newsgroups not locally carried
	   by the news server).	 This is a boolean value and  the  default  is
	   true.  It may be useful to set it to	false when wanttrash is	set to
	   true.

       nnrpdoverstats
	   Whether  nnrpd  overview  statistics	 should	 be logged via syslog.
	   This	can be useful for measuring overview performance.  This	 is  a
	   boolean value and the default is true.

       nntplinklog
	   Whether to put the storage API token	for accepted articles (used by
	   nntplink)  in  the  article	log.   This is a boolean value and the
	   default is false.

       stathist
	   Where   to	write	history	  statistics   for    analysis	  with
	   contrib/stathist;  this  can	be modified with ctlinnd(8) while innd
	   is running.	Logging	does not occur unless a	 path  is  given,  and
	   there is no default value.

       status
	   How	frequently  (in	 seconds)  innd(8)  should  write out a	status
	   report.  The	 report	 is  written  to  pathhttp/inn_status.html  or
	   pathlog/inn.status  depending  on the value of htmlstatus.  If this
	   is set to 0 or "false", status reporting is disabled.  The  default
	   value is 600	(that is to say	reports	are written every 10 minutes).

       timer
	   How	frequently  (in	 seconds)  innd(8)  should  report performance
	   timings to syslog.  If this is set  to  0,  performance  timing  is
	   disabled.   Enabling	 this  is highly recommended, and innreport(8)
	   can	produce	 a  nice  summary  of  the  timings.   If  set	to  0,
	   performance	timings	 in nnrpd(8) are also disabled,	although nnrpd
	   always reports statistics on	exit and therefore any non-zero	 value
	   is  equivalent  for	it.   The default value	is 600 (that is	to say
	   performance timings are reported every 10 minutes).

   System Tuning
       The  following  parameters  can	be  modified  to  tune	the  low-level
       operation of INN.  In general, you shouldn't need to modify any of them
       except possibly rlimitnofile unless the server is having	difficulty.

       badiocount
	   How	many read or write failures until a channel is put to sleep or
	   closed.  The	default	value is 5.

       blockbackoff
	   Each	time an	attempted write	returns	EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK, innd(8)
	   will	wait for an increasing number  of  seconds  before  trying  it
	   again.   This  is  the  multiplier  for  the	sleep time.  If	you're
	   having trouble with channel feeds not keeping up, it	may be good to
	   change this value to	2 or 3,	since then when	the channel fills  INN
	   will	 try  again  in	 a  couple  of seconds rather than waiting two
	   minutes.  The default value is 120.

       chaninacttime
	   The time (in	seconds) to wait between noticing  inactive  channels.
	   The default value is	600.

       chanretrytime
	   How	many  seconds  to wait before a	channel	restarts.  The default
	   value is 300.

       datamovethreshold
	   The threshold for deciding whether to move already-read data	to the
	   top of buffer or extend the buffer.	The buffer described  here  is
	   used	 for  reading  NNTP  data.   Increasing	this value may improve
	   performance,	but  it	 should	 not  be  increased  on	 Systems  with
	   insufficient	 memory.   Permitted  values are between 0 and 1048576
	   (out	of range values	are treated as 1048576)	and the	default	 value
	   is 16384.

       icdsynccount
	   How	many  article  writes  between updating	the active and history
	   files.  The default value is	10.

	   This	is a trade-off between faster speed and	more data loss if innd
	   crashes (or the system crashes, or loses power, etc.).  The	higher
	   this	 parameter  is,	 the  less  frequent  syncs  are  done.	 It is
	   essentially the frequency of	checkpoints:  the  maximum  number  of
	   articles  that  may be orphaned in case of a	crash as they wouldn't
	   have	been recorded in  the  history	file.	Besides,  the  missing
	   updates  to	the active file	would cause other problems later, such
	   as duplicate	article	numbers	and corresponding errors when  storing
	   new	articles.   (If	 innd has crashed, you can fix these errors by
	   rebuilding the history file and overview with makehistory(8).   The
	   active   file  will	be  automatically  be  renumbered  after  that
	   operation.)

       keepmmappedthreshold
	   When	 using	buffindexed,  retrieving  overview  data   (that   is,
	   responding  to  OVER	 or running expireover)	causes mmapping	of all
	   overview data blocks	which  include	requested  overview  data  for
	   newsgroup.	But  for  high	volume newsgroups like control.cancel,
	   this	may cause too much mmapping at once leading to system resource
	   problems.  To avoid this, if	 the  amount  to  be  mmapped  exceeds
	   keepmmappedthreshold	 (in KB), buffindexed mmap's just one overview
	   block (8 KB).  This parameter is specific to	 buffindexed  overview
	   storage method.  The	default	value is 1024 (1 MB).

       maxcmdreadsize
	   If set to anything other than 0, maximum buffer size	(in bytes) for
	   reading  NNTP command will have this	value.	It should not be large
	   on systems which are	slow to	process	and store  articles,  as  that
	   would  lead	to  innd(8)  spending  a long time on each channel and
	   keeping other  channels  waiting.   The  default  value  is	BUFSIZ
	   defined   in	 stdio.h  (usually  between  1024  and	8192  in  most
	   environments, see setbuf(3)).

       maxforks
	   How many times to attempt a fork(2) before giving up.  The  default
	   value is 10.

       maxlisten
	   How	many  incoming	connections can	queue up in the	listen backlog
	   for innd, nnrpd  and	 two  overview	storage	 methods  ("ovdb"  and
	   "ovsqlite").	 The default value is 128 and should be	raised in case
	   you notice that some	connection requests get	dropped.

       nicekids
	   If  set  to	anything  other	than 0,	all child processes of innd(8)
	   will	have this nice(2) value.  This is usually  used	 to  give  all
	   child  processes of innd(8) a lower priority	(higher	nice value) so
	   that	innd(8)	can get	the lion's share of the	CPU when it needs  it.
	   The default value is	4.

       nicenewnews
	   If  set  to	anything  greater  than	0, all nnrpd(8)	processes that
	   receive and process a NEWNEWS command will  nice(2)	themselves  to
	   this	 value	(giving	other nnrpd processes a	higher priority).  The
	   default value is 0.	Note that this value will be ignored if	set to
	   a lower value than nicennrpd	(or nicekids if	 nnrpd(8)  is  spawned
	   from	innd(8)).

       nicennrpd
	   If  set  to	anything  greater  than	0, all nnrpd(8)	processes will
	   nice(2) themselves to this value.  This gives other news  processes
	   a  higher  priority	and can	help overchan(8) keep up with incoming
	   news	(if that's the object, be sure overchan(8) isn't also set to a
	   lower priority via nicekids).  The default value is 0,  which  will
	   cause  nnrpd(8)  processes spawned from innd(8) to use the value of
	   nicekids, while nnrpd(8) run	 as  a	daemon	will  use  the	system
	   default  priority.	Note  that for nnrpd(8)	processes spawned from
	   innd(8), this value will be ignored if set to a  value  lower  than
	   nicekids.

       pauseretrytime
	   Wait	for this many seconds before noticing inactive channels.  Wait
	   for	this  many  seconds  before  innd processes articles when it's
	   paused or the number	of channel write failures exceeds  badiocount.
	   The default value is	300.

       peertimeout
	   How	long  (in seconds) an innd(8) incoming channel may be inactive
	   before innd closes it.  The default value is	3600 (an hour).

       rlimitnofile
	   The maximum number of file descriptors that innd(8)	or  innfeed(8)
	   can	have  open at once.  If	innd(8)	or innfeed(8) attempts to open
	   more	file descriptors than this value, it is	possible  the  program
	   may	 throttle   or	 otherwise   malfunction   or  suffer  reduced
	   functionality.  The number of open file descriptors is roughly  the
	   maximum  number  of incoming	feeds and outgoing batches for innd(8)
	   added to the	number of outgoing streams for innfeed(8) and, if  you
	   are	using  the  tradindexed	 overview  method,  the	 value	of the
	   overcachesize parameter.  If	rlimitnofile  is  set  to  a  negative
	   value, the default limit of the operating system will be used; this
	   will	 normally  be  adequate	on systems other than Solaris.	Nearly
	   all operating systems have some hard	 maximum  limit	 beyond	 which
	   this	 value	cannot	be raised, usually either 256, 1024, or	65536.
	   The default value of	this parameter is "-1".

	   Setting  this  parameter  to	 256  on  Solaris  systems  is	highly
	   recommended	for  32-bit  Solaris  versions	or 32-bit applications
	   running on 64-bit Solaris, as well as 64-bit	Solaris	versions prior
	   to 11.0.  See the  Solaris  documentation  about  file  descriptors
	   <https://support.oracle.com/knowledge/Sun%20Microsystems/1005979_1.html>
	   for more details.

	   Note	 for expert users building INN from sources: if	you need using
	   more	 than  "FD_SETSIZE"  file  descriptors	(as  defined  in   the
	   sys/select.h	 system	 header,  usually defaulting to	1024), you can
	   increase this value for instance to 4096 by rebuilding INN with the
	   "-DLARGE_FD_SETSIZE=4096" option given to the compiler.

   Paths Names
       patharchive
	   Where   to	store	archived   news.    The	  default   value   is
	   pathspool/archive.

       patharticles
	   The path to where the news articles are stored (for storage methods
	   other than CNFS).  The default value	is pathspool/articles.

       pathbin
	   The path to the news	binaries.  The default value is	pathnews/bin.

       pathcontrol
	   The	path  to the files that	handle control messages.  The code for
	   handling each separate type of control message is located here.  Be
	   very	careful	what you put in	this directory with a name  ending  in
	   ".pl",  as  it  can	potentially  be	 a  severe security risk.  The
	   default value is pathbin/control.

       pathdb
	   The path to the database files  used	 and  updated  by  the	server
	   (currently,	active,	 active.times,	history	 and  its indices, and
	   newsgroups).	 The default value is pathnews/db.

       pathetc
	   The path to the news	configuration files.   The  default  value  is
	   pathnews/etc.

       pathfilter
	   The	path  to  the  Perl  and Python	filters.  The default value is
	   pathbin/filter.

       pathhttp
	   Where any HTML files	(such as periodic status reports) are  placed.
	   If  the  news  reports should be available in real-time on the web,
	   the files in	this directory should be served	by a web server.   The
	   default value is the	value of pathnews/http.

       pathincoming
	   Location  where incoming batched news is stored.  The default value
	   is pathspool/incoming.

       pathlog
	   Where the news  log	files  are  written.   The  default  value  is
	   pathnews/log.

       pathnews
	   The	home  directory	 of  the news user and usually the root	of the
	   news	hierarchy.  There is no	default; this parameter	must be	set in
	   inn.conf or INN will	refuse to start.

       pathoutgoing
	   Default location for	outgoing feed files.   The  default  value  is
	   pathspool/outgoing.

       pathoverview
	   The	 path	to   news   overview  files.   The  default  value  is
	   pathspool/overview.

       pathrun
	   The path to files required while the	server is running and run-time
	   state information.  This includes lock files	and  the  sockets  for
	   communicating with innd(8).	This directory and the control sockets
	   in  it  should  be protected	from unprivileged users	other than the
	   news	user.  The default value is pathnews/run.

       pathspool
	   The root of the news	spool hierarchy.  This used mostly to set  the
	   defaults  for  other	 parameters,  and to determine the path	to the
	   backlog  directory  for   innfeed(8).    The	  default   value   is
	   pathnews/spool.

       pathtmp
	   Where  INN puts temporary files.  For security reasons, this	is not
	   the same as the system temporary files directory (INN creates a lot
	   of temporary	files with  predictable	 names	and  does  not	go  to
	   particularly	 great	lengths	to protect against symlink attacks and
	   the like; this is safe provided that	normal users can't write  into
	   its	temporary  directory).	 The default value is set at configure
	   time	and defaults to	pathnews/tmp.

EXAMPLE
       Here is a very minimalist example that only sets	those parameters  that
       are required.

	   mta:		       "/usr/lib/sendmail -oi -oem %s"
	   ovmethod:	       tradindexed
	   pathhost:	       news.example.com
	   pathnews:	       /usr/local/news
	   hismethod:	       hisv6

       For  a  more comprehensive example, see the sample inn.conf distributed
       with INN	and installed as a starting point;  it	contains  all  of  the
       default values for reference.

HISTORY
       Written	by  Rich  $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for	InterNetNews and since
       modified, updated, and reorganized by innumerable other people.

SEE ALSO
       inews(1),  innd(8),  innwatch(8),  libinn_dbz(3),   libinn_uwildmat(3),
       makehistory(8), nnrpd(8), rnews(1).

       Nearly  every  program  in INN uses this	file to	one degree or another.
       The above are just the major and	most frequently	mentioned ones.

INN 2.8.0			  2024-09-30			   INN.CONF(5)

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