Usage: build <make-options> <target-platform>

<target-platform> may be one of the following:
    ult   Works on DECStations with Ultrix 4.1 or 4.2
    nxt   Works on NeXT 68030's and 68040's running Next Mach 2.0     
    sun   Works on SPARCs running SunOS 4.1
    ptx   Works on Sequent Symmetry running Dynix/PTX
    a32   Works on IBM RS/6000 running AIX 3.2
    ...   Others are available, see doc/pine-ports
  clean   Clean up object files and such.
          Also, a good way to rebuild Pine/Pico from scratch.

See the document doc/pine-ports for a list of other platforms that
Pine has been ported to and for details about these and other ports.

<make-options> are generally not needed. They are flags (anything
beginning with -) and are passed to make. "-n" is probably the most
useful, as it tells make to just print out what it is going to do and
not actually do it.

To build Pine and Pico the command "build xxx" should work where xxx
is one of the targets. For example "build ult" to build Pine for Ultrix.


The executables built by this are:

 pine   The Pine mailer. Once compiled this should work just fine on
        your system with no other files than this binary, and no
        modifications to your system. Optionally you may create two
        configuration files, /usr/local/lib/pine.conf and 
        /usr/local/lib/pine.info. See the documentation for details.
 
 pico   The standalone editor similar to the Pine message composer.
        This is a very simple straight forward text editor.
 
 imapd  The IMAP daemon. If you want to run Pine in client/server mode,
        this is the daemon to run on the server. Installing this
        requires system privileges and modifications to /etc/services.
        See doc/tech-notes for more details.
 
 mtest  The test IMAP client, an absolutely minimal mail client, useful
        for debugging.

In general you should be able to just copy the Pine and Pico binaries
to the place you keep your other local binaries. /usr/local/bin is a
likely place.
  
