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Diffstat (limited to 'lynx.cfg')
-rw-r--r-- | lynx.cfg | 3865 |
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diff --git a/lynx.cfg b/lynx.cfg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..61afe8b --- /dev/null +++ b/lynx.cfg @@ -0,0 +1,3865 @@ +# $LynxId: lynx.cfg,v 1.330 2023/01/02 23:50:09 tom Exp $ +# lynx.cfg file. +# The default placement for this file is /usr/local/lib/lynx.cfg (Unix) +# or Lynx_Dir:lynx.cfg (VMS) +# +# $Format: "#PRCS LYNX_VERSION \"$ProjectVersion$\""$ +#PRCS LYNX_VERSION "2.9.0dev.12" +# +# $Format: "#PRCS LYNX_DATE \"$ProjectDate$\""$ +#PRCS LYNX_DATE "Mon, 02 Jan 2023 18:47:08 -0500" +# +# Definition pairs (configuration settings) are of the form +# VARIABLE:DEFINITION +# NO spaces are allowed around the colon ":" between the pair items. +# +# If you do not have write access to /usr/local/lib you may change +# the default location of this file in the userdefs.h file and recompile, +# or specify its location on the command line with the "-cfg" +# command line option. +# +# Items may be commented out by putting a '#' as the FIRST char of the line +# (Any line beginning with punctuation is ignored). Leading blanks on each +# line are ignored; trailing blanks may be significant depending on the option. + +# In most cases, a definition can be overridden by another later in the +# file, or in an including configuration file. You can see the effect of +# definitions (and redefinitions) in the trace file Lynx.log by using the +# "-trace" and "-trace-mask" options, e.g., +# lynx -trace -trace-mask=8 + +# As a documentation aid, the default values for each setting are shown +# commented-out. By convention, these default value comments have no space +# after the "#", e.g., +# #HTTP_PROTOCOL:1.0 + +# An HTML'ized description of all settings (based on comments in this file, +# with alphabetical table of settings and with table of settings by category) +# is available at https://lynx.invisible-island.net/release/breakout/lynx_help/cattoc.html +# +### The conversion is done via the scripts/cfg2html.pl script. +### Several directives beginning with '.' are used for this purpose. + +.h1 Auxiliary Facilities +# These settings control the auxiliary navigating facilities of lynx, e.g., +# jumpfiles, bookmarks, default URLs. + +.h2 INCLUDE +# Starting with Lynx 2.8.1, the lynx.cfg file has a crude "include" +# facility. This means that you can take advantage of the global lynx.cfg +# while also supplying your own tweaks. +# +# You can use a command-line argument (-cfg /where/is/lynx.cfg) or an +# environment variable (LYNX_CFG=/where/is/lynx.cfg). +# For instance, put in your .profile or .login: +# +# LYNX_CFG=~/lynx.cfg; export LYNX_CFG # in .profile for sh/ksh/bash/etc. +# setenv LYNX_CFG ~/lynx.cfg # in .login for [t]csh +# +# Then in ~/lynx.cfg: +# +# INCLUDE:/usr/local/lib/lynx.cfg +# ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ or whatever is appropriate on your system +# and now your own tweaks. If you omit the directory name, e.g., +# +# INCLUDE:lynx.cfg +# +# then lynx first checks if it is in any of the directories listed in the +# environment variable LYNX_CFG_PATH, then tries the directory of the default +# config-file. +# +# You can also suppress all but specific settings that will be read from +# included files. This allows sysadmins to provide users the ability to +# customize lynx with options that normally do not affect security, such as +# COLOR, VIEWER, KEYMAP. +# +# The syntax is +# +# INCLUDE:filename for <space-separated-list-of-allowed-settings> +# +# sample: +.ex +#INCLUDE:~/lynx.cfg for COLOR VIEWER KEYMAP +# only one space character should surround the word 'for'. On Unix systems ':' +# is also accepted as separator. In that case, the example can be written as +.ex +#INCLUDE:~/lynx.cfg:COLOR VIEWER KEYMAP +# In the example, only the settings COLOR, VIEWER and KEYMAP are accepted by +# lynx. Other settings are ignored. Note: INCLUDE is also treated as a +# setting, so to allow an included file to include other files, put INCLUDE in +# the list of allowed settings. +# +# If you allow an included file to include other files, and if a list of +# allowed settings is specified for that file with the INCLUDE command, nested +# files are only allowed to include the list of settings that is the set AND of +# settings allowed for the included file and settings allowed by nested INCLUDE +# commands. In short, there is no security hole introduced by including a +# user-defined configuration file if the original list of allowed settings is +# secure. + +.h2 STARTFILE +# STARTFILE is the default starting URL if none is specified +# on the command line or via a WWW_HOME environment variable; +# Lynx will refuse to start without a starting URL of some kind. +# STARTFILE can be remote, e.g. http://www.w3.org/default.html , +# or local, e.g. file://localhost/PATH_TO/FILENAME , +# where PATH_TO is replaced with the complete path to FILENAME +# using Unix shell syntax and including the device on VMS. +# +# Normally we expect you will connect to a remote site, e.g., the Lynx starting +# site: +STARTFILE:https://lynx.invisible-island.net/ +# +# As an alternative, you may want to use a local URL. A good choice for this is +# the user's home directory: +.ex +#STARTFILE:file://localhost/~/ +# +# Your choice of STARTFILE should reflect your site's needs, and be a URL that +# you can connect to reliably. Otherwise users will become confused and think +# that they cannot run Lynx. + +.h2 HELPFILE +# HELPFILE must be defined as a URL and must have a +# complete path if local: +# file://localhost/PATH_TO/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html +# Replace PATH_TO with the path to the lynx_help subdirectory +# for this distribution (use SHELL syntax including the device +# on VMS systems). +# The default HELPFILE is: +.url https://lynx.invisible-island.net/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html +# This should be changed to the local path. +# This definition will be overridden if the "LYNX_HELPFILE" environment +# variable has been set. +# +HELPFILE:https://lynx.invisible-island.net/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html +.ex +#HELPFILE:file://localhost/PATH_TO/lynx_help/lynx_help_main.html + +.h2 DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE +# DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE is the default file retrieved when the +# user presses the 'I' key when viewing any document. +# An index to your CWIS can be placed here or a document containing +# pointers to lots of interesting places on the web. +# +DEFAULT_INDEX_FILE:http://scout.wisc.edu/ + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 GOTOBUFFER +# Set GOTOBUFFER to TRUE if you want to have the previous goto URL, +# if any, offered for reuse or editing when using the 'g'oto command. +# The default is defined in userdefs.h. If left FALSE, the circular +# buffer of previously entered goto URLs can still be invoked via the +# Up-Arrow or Down-Arrow keys after entering the 'g'oto command. +# +#GOTOBUFFER:FALSE + +.h2 JUMP_PROMPT +# JUMP_PROMPT is the default statusline prompt for selecting a jumps file +# shortcut. (see below). +# You can change the prompt here from that defined in userdefs.h. Any +# trailing white space will be trimmed, and a single space is added by Lynx +# following the last non-white character. You must set the default prompt +# before setting the default jumps file (below). If a default jumps file +# was set via userdefs.h, and you change the prompt here, you must set the +# default jumps file again (below) for the change to be implemented. +# +#JUMP_PROMPT:Jump to (use '?' for list): + +.h1 Auxiliary Facilities + +.h2 JUMPFILE +# JUMPFILE is the local file checked for short-cut names for URLs when +# the user presses the 'j' (JUMP) key. The file contains an HTML +# definition list (DL). The definition titles (DT) are used as +# short-cut name; the definition data (DD) are URLs. +# +# There is an example jumps file in the samples subdirectory. +# +# After pressing 'j', the user will be prompted to enter a short-cut +# name for an URL, which Lynx will then follow in a similar manner to +# 'g'oto; alternatively, s/he can enter '?' to view the full JUMPFILE +# list of short-cuts with associated URLs. +# +# If the URL contains one or more "%s" markers, Lynx will prompt the user +# for text to fill in for each marker. If no text is given, the jump is +# cancelled. +# +# If not defined here or in userdefs.h, the JUMP command will invoke the +# NO_JUMPFILE statusline message (see LYMessages_en.h ). +# +# To allow '?' to work, include in the JUMPFILE +# a short-cut to the JUMPFILE itself, e.g. +# <dt>?<dd><a href="file://localhost/path/jumps.html">This Shortcut List</a> +# +# On VMS, use Unix SHELL syntax (including a lead slash) to define it. +# +# Alternate jumps files can be defined and mapped to keys here. If the +# keys have already been mapped, then those mappings will be replaced, +# but you should leave at least one key mapped to the default jumps +# file. You optionally may include a statusline prompt string for the +# mapping. You must map upper and lowercase keys separately (beware of +# mappings to keys which the user can further remap via the 'o'ptions +# menu). The format is: +# +# JUMPFILE:path:key[:prompt] +# +# where path should begin with a '/' (i.e., not include file://localhost). +# Any white space following a prompt string will be trimmed, and a single +# space will be added by Lynx. +# +# In the following line, include the actual full local path to JUMPFILE, +# but do not include 'file://localhost' in the line. +#JUMPFILE:/FULL_LOCAL_PATH/jumps.html +.ex +#JUMPFILE:/Lynx_Dir/ips.html:i:IP or Interest group (? for list): + +.h2 JUMPBUFFER +# Set JUMPBUFFER to TRUE if you want to have the previous jump target, +# if any, offered for reuse or editing when using the 'J'ump command. +# The default is defined in userdefs.h. If left FALSE, the circular +# buffer of previously entered targets (shortcuts) can still be invoked +# via the Up-Arrow or Down-Arrow keys after entering the 'J'ump command. +# If multiple jumps files are installed, the recalls of shortcuts will +# be specific to each file. If Lynx was built with PERMIT_GOTO_FROM_JUMP +# defined, any random URLs used instead of shortcuts will be stored in the +# goto URL buffer, not in the shortcuts buffer(s), and the single character +# ':' can be used as a target to invoke the goto URL buffer (as if 'g'oto +# followed by Up-Arrow had been entered). +# +#JUMPBUFFER:FALSE + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 SAVE_SPACE +# If SAVE_SPACE is defined, it will be used as a path prefix for the +# suggested filename in "Save to Disk" operations from the 'p'rint or +# 'd'ownload menus. On VMS, you can use either VMS (e.g., "SYS$LOGIN:") +# or Unix syntax (including '~' for the HOME directory). On Unix, you +# must use Unix syntax. If the symbol is not defined, or is zero-length +# (""), no prefix will be used, and only a filename for saving in the +# current default directory will be suggested. +# This definition will be overridden if a "LYNX_SAVE_SPACE" environment +# variable has been set on Unix, or logical has been defined on VMS. +# +#SAVE_SPACE:~/foo/ + +.h2 REUSE_TEMPFILES +# Lynx uses temporary files for (among other purposes) the content of +# various user interface pages. REUSE_TEMPFILES changes the behavior +# for some of these temp files, among them pages shown for HISTORY, +# VLINKS, OPTIONS, INFO, PRINT, DOWNLOAD commands. +# If set to TRUE, the same file can be used multiple times for the same +# purpose. If set to FALSE, a new filename is generated each time before +# rewriting such a page. With TRUE, repeated invocation of these commands +# is less likely to push previous documents out of the cache of rendered +# texts (see also DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE). This is especially useful with +# intermittent (dialup) network connections, when it is desirable to +# continue browsing through the cached documents after disconnecting. +# With the default setting of FALSE, there can be more than one incarnation +# of e.g. the VLINKS page cached in memory (but still only the most recently +# generated one is kept as a file), resulting in sometimes less surprising +# behaviour when returning to such a page via HISTORY or PREV_DOC functions +# (most users will not encounter and notice this difference). +# +#REUSE_TEMPFILES:FALSE + +.h2 LYNX_HOST_NAME +# If LYNX_HOST_NAME is defined here or in userdefs.h, it will be +# treated as an alias for the local host name in checks for URLs on +# the local host (e.g., when the -localhost switch is set), and this +# host name, "localhost", and HTHostName (the fully qualified domain +# name of the system on which Lynx is running) will all be passed as +# local. A different definition here will override that in userdefs.h. +# +#LYNX_HOST_NAME:www.cc.ukans.edu + +.h2 LOCALHOST_ALIAS +# localhost aliases +# Any LOCALHOST_ALIAS definitions also will be accepted as local when +# the -localhost switch is set. These need not actually be local, i.e., +# in contrast to LYNX_HOST_NAME, you can define them to trusted hosts at +# other Internet sites. +# +.ex 2 +#LOCALHOST_ALIAS:gopher.server.domain +#LOCALHOST_ALIAS:news.server.domain + +.h2 LOCAL_DOMAIN +# LOCAL_DOMAIN is used for a tail match with the ut_host element of +# the utmp or utmpx structure on systems with utmp capabilities, to +# determine if a user is local to your campus or organization when +# handling -restrictions=inside_foo or outside_foo settings for ftp, +# news, telnet/tn3270 and rlogin URLs. An "inside" user is assumed +# if your system does not have utmp capabilities. CHANGE THIS here +# if it was not changed in userdefs.h at compilation time. +# +#LOCAL_DOMAIN:ukans.edu + +.h1 Session support + +.h2 AUTO_SESSION +# If AUTO_SESSION is TRUE lynx will save/restore useful information about +# your browsing history when closing/starting current lynx session if +# no command-line session switches override this setting. +# This setting is useful only if SESSION_FILE is defined here or in the user's +# .lynxrc file. +# +#AUTO_SESSION:FALSE + +.h2 SESSION_FILE +# SESSION_FILE defines the file name where lynx will store user sessions. +# This setting is used only when AUTO_SESSION is true. +# Note: the default setting will store/resume each session in a different +# folder under same file name (if that is allowed by operating system) +# when lynx is invoked from different directories. +# (The current working directory may be changed inside lynx) +# +# If you want to use the same session file wherever you invoke Lynx, +# enter the full path below, eg '/home/<username>/.lynx_session'. +# +# If you do not want this feature, leave the setting commented. +# Users can still customize SESSION_FILE and AUTO_SESSION via +# their .lynxrc file. +# +#SESSION_FILE:lynx_session + +.h2 SESSION_LIMIT +# SESSION_LIMIT defines maximum number of: searched strings, goto URLs, +# visited links and history entries which will be saved in session file. The +# minimum allowed is 1, the maximum is 10000. +# +# For instance, if SESSION_LIMIT is 250, a per-session limit of 250 entries of +# searched strings, goto URLs, visited links and history entries will be saved +# in the session file. +# +# There is no fixed limit on the number of entries which can be restored; +# It is limited only by available memory. +# +#SESSION_LIMIT:250 + +.h1 Character Sets + +.h2 CHARACTER_SET +# CHARACTER_SET defines the display character set, i.e., assumed to be +# installed on the user's terminal. It determines which characters or strings +# will be used to represent 8-bit character entities within HTML. New +# character sets may be defined as explained in the README files of the +# src/chrtrans directory in the Lynx source code distribution. For Asian (CJK) +# character sets, it also determines how Kanji code will be handled. The +# default is defined in userdefs.h and can be changed here or via the +# 'o'ptions menu. The 'o'ptions menu setting will be stored in the user's RC +# file whenever those settings are saved, and thereafter will be used as the +# default. For Lynx a "character set" has two names: a MIME name (for +# recognizing properly labeled charset parameters in HTTP headers etc.), and a +# human-readable string for the 'O'ptions Menu (so you may find info about +# language or group of languages besides MIME name). Not all 'human-readable' +# names correspond to exactly one valid MIME charset (example is "Chinese"); +# in that case an appropriate valid (and more specific) MIME name should be +# used where required. Well-known synonyms are also processed in the code. +# +# Raw (CJK) mode +# +# Lynx normally translates characters from a document's charset to display +# charset, using ASSUME_CHARSET value (see below) if the document's charset +# is not specified explicitly. Raw (CJK) mode is OFF for this case. +# When the document charset is specified explicitly, that charset +# overrides any assumption like ASSUME_CHARSET or raw (CJK) mode. +# +# For the Asian (CJK) display character sets, the corresponding charset is +# assumed in documents, i.e., raw (CJK) mode is ON by default. In raw CJK +# mode, 8-bit characters are not reverse translated in relation to the entity +# conversion arrays, i.e., they are assumed to be appropriate for the display +# character set. The mode should be toggled OFF when an Asian (CJK) display +# character set is selected but the document is not CJK and its charset not +# specified explicitly. +# +# Raw (CJK) mode may be toggled by user via '@' (LYK_RAW_TOGGLE) key, +# the -raw command line switch or from the 'o'ptions menu. +# +# Raw (CJK) mode effectively changes the charset assumption about unlabeled +# documents. You can toggle raw mode ON if you believe the document has a +# charset which does correspond to your Display Character Set. On the other +# hand, if you set ASSUME_CHARSET the same as Display Character Set you get raw +# mode ON by default (but you get assume_charset=iso-8859-1 if you try raw mode +# OFF after it). +# +# Note that "raw" does not mean that every byte will be passed to the screen. +# HTML character entities may get expanded and translated, inappropriate +# control characters filtered out, etc. There is a "Transparent" pseudo +# character set for more "rawness". +# +# Since Lynx now supports a wide range of platforms it may be useful to note +# the cpXXX codepages used by IBM PC compatible computers, and windows-xxxx +# used by native MS-Windows apps. We also note that cpXXX pages rarely are +# found on Internet, but are mostly for local needs on DOS. +# +# Recognized character sets include: +# +.nf +# string for 'O'ptions Menu MIME name +# =========================== ========= +# 7 bit approximations (US-ASCII) us-ascii +# Western (ISO-8859-1) iso-8859-1 +# Western (ISO-8859-15) iso-8859-15 +# Western (cp850) cp850 +# Western (windows-1252) windows-1252 +# IBM PC US codepage (cp437) cp437 +# DEC Multinational dec-mcs +# Macintosh (8 bit) macintosh +# NeXT character set next +# HP Roman8 hp-roman8 +# Chinese euc-cn +# Japanese (EUC-JP) euc-jp +# Japanese (Shift_JIS) shift_jis +# Korean euc-kr +# Taipei (Big5) big5 +# Vietnamese (VISCII) viscii +# Eastern European (ISO-8859-2) iso-8859-2 +# Eastern European (cp852) cp852 +# Eastern European (windows-1250) windows-1250 +# Latin 3 (ISO-8859-3) iso-8859-3 +# Latin 4 (ISO-8859-4) iso-8859-4 +# Baltic Rim (ISO-8859-13) iso-8859-13 +# Baltic Rim (cp775) cp775 +# Baltic Rim (windows-1257) windows-1257 +# Celtic (ISO-8859-14) iso-8859-14 +# Cyrillic (ISO-8859-5) iso-8859-5 +# Cyrillic (cp866) cp866 +# Cyrillic (windows-1251) windows-1251 +# Cyrillic (KOI8-R) koi8-r +# Arabic (ISO-8859-6) iso-8859-6 +# Arabic (cp864) cp864 +# Arabic (windows-1256) windows-1256 +# Greek (ISO-8859-7) iso-8859-7 +# Greek (cp737) cp737 +# Greek2 (cp869) cp869 +# Greek (windows-1253) windows-1253 +# Hebrew (ISO-8859-8) iso-8859-8 +# Hebrew (cp862) cp862 +# Hebrew (windows-1255) windows-1255 +# Turkish (ISO-8859-9) iso-8859-9 +# North European (ISO-8859-10) iso-8859-10 +# Ukrainian Cyrillic (cp866u) cp866u +# Ukrainian Cyrillic (KOI8-U) koi8-u +# UNICODE (UTF-8) utf-8 +# RFC 1345 w/o Intro mnemonic+ascii+0 +# RFC 1345 Mnemonic mnemonic +# Transparent x-transparent +.fi +# +# The value should be the MIME name of a character set recognized by +# Lynx (case insensitive). +# Find RFC 1345 at +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1345 +# +#CHARACTER_SET:iso-8859-1 + +.h2 LOCALE_CHARSET +# LOCALE_CHARSET overrides CHARACTER_SET if true, using the current locale to +# lookup a MIME name that corresponds, and use that as the display charset. +# +# It also modifies the default value for ASSUME_CHARSET; it does not override +# that setting. +# +# Note that while nl_langinfo(CODESET) itself is standardized, the return +# values and their relationship to the locale value is not. GNU libiconv +# happens to give useful values, but other implementations are not guaranteed +# to do this. +#LOCALE_CHARSET:FALSE + +.h2 HTML5_CHARSETS +# HTML5_CHARSETS is an alternative to ASSUME_CHARSET and ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET. +# Those assume by default that the character set of an HTML document is (as is +# standard in HTML4) ISO-8859-1, in the absence of locale information. +# +# HTML5 introduces a "compatibility" (sic) feature which assumes that the +# default is Windows 1252. In the same way, it equates ISO-8859-4 and Windows +# 1254. Finally, it also makes recommendations which selectively reinterpret +# the locale encoding. +# +# This option currently implements only the equating of ISO-8859-1 and Windows +# 1252. +# +#HTML5_CHARSETS:FALSE + +.h2 ASSUME_CHARSET +# ASSUME_CHARSET changes the handling of documents which do not +# explicitly specify a charset. Normally Lynx assumes that 8-bit +# characters in those documents are encoded according to iso-8859-1 +# (the official default for the HTTP protocol). When ASSUME_CHARSET +# is defined here or by an -assume_charset command line flag is in effect, +# Lynx will treat documents as if they were encoded accordingly. +# See above on how this interacts with "raw mode" and the Display +# Character Set. +# ASSUME_CHARSET can also be changed via the 'o'ptions menu but will +# not be saved as permanent value in user's .lynxrc file to avoid more chaos. +# +#ASSUME_CHARSET:iso-8859-1 + +.h2 ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE +.h2 DISPLAY_CHARSET_CHOICE +# It is possible to reduce the number of charset choices in the 'O'ptions menu +# for "display charset" and "assumed document charset" fields via +# DISPLAY_CHARSET_CHOICE and ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE settings correspondingly. +# Each of these settings can be used several times to define the set of possible +# choices for corresponding field. The syntax for the values is +# +# string | prefix* | * +# +# where +# +# 'string' is either the MIME name of charset or it's full name (listed +# either in the left or in the right column of table of +# recognized charsets), case-insensitive - e.g. 'Koi8-R' or +# 'Cyrillic (KOI8-R)' (both without quotes), +# +# 'prefix' is any string, and such value will select all charsets having +# the name with prefix matching given (case insensitive), i.e., +# for the charsets listed in the table of recognized charsets, +# +.ex +# ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:cyrillic* +# will be equal to specifying +.ex 4 +# ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:cp866 +# ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:windows-1251 +# ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:koi8-r +# ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:iso-8859-5 +# or lines with full names of charsets. +# +# literal string '*' (without quotes) will enable all charset choices +# in corresponding field. This is useful for overriding site +# defaults in private pieces of lynx.cfg included via INCLUDE +# directive. +# +# Default values for both settings are '*', but any occurrence of settings +# with values that denote any charsets will make only listed choices available +# for corresponding field. +#ASSUMED_DOC_CHARSET_CHOICE:* +#DISPLAY_CHARSET_CHOICE:* + +.h2 ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET +# ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET is like ASSUME_CHARSET but only applies to local +# files. If no setting is given here or by an -assume_local_charset +# command line option, the value for ASSUME_CHARSET or -assume_charset +# is used. It works for both text/plain and text/html files. +# This option will ignore "raw mode" toggling when local files are viewed +# (it is "stronger" than "assume_charset" or the effective change +# of the charset assumption caused by changing "raw mode"), +# so only use when necessary. +# +#ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET:iso-8859-1 + +.h2 PREPEND_CHARSET_TO_SOURCE +# PREPEND_CHARSET_TO_SOURCE:TRUE tells Lynx to prepend a META CHARSET line +# to text/html source files when they are retrieved for 'd'ownloading +# or passed to 'p'rint functions, so HTTP headers will not be lost. +# This is necessary for resolving charset for local html files, +# while the assume_local_charset is just an assumption. +# For the 'd'ownload option, a META CHARSET will be added only if the HTTP +# charset is present. The compilation default is TRUE. +# It is generally desirable to have charset information for every local +# html file, but META CHARSET string potentially could cause +# compatibility problems with other browsers, see also PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE. +# Note that the prepending is not done for -source dumps. +# +#PREPEND_CHARSET_TO_SOURCE:TRUE + +.h2 NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS +# NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS:TRUE allows you to save 8-bit characters in bookmark titles +# in the unicode format (NCR). This may be useful if you need to switch +# display charsets frequently. This is the case when you use Lynx on different +# platforms, e.g., on UNIX and from a remote PC, and want to keep the bookmarks +# file persistent. +# Another aspect is compatibility: NCR is part of I18N and HTML4.0 +# specifications supported starting with Lynx 2.7.2, Netscape 4.0 and MSIE 4.0. +# Older browser versions will fail so keep NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS:FALSE if you +# plan to use them. +# +#NCR_IN_BOOKMARKS:FALSE + +.h2 FORCE_8BIT_TOUPPER +# FORCE_8BIT_TOUPPER overrides locale settings and uses internal 8-bit +# case-conversion mechanism for case-insensitive searches in non-ASCII display +# character sets. It is FALSE by default and should not be changed unless +# you encounter problems with case-insensitive searches. +# +#FORCE_8BIT_TOUPPER:FALSE + +.h2 OUTGOING_MAIL_CHARSET +# While Lynx supports different platforms and display character sets +# we need to limit the charset in outgoing mail to reduce +# trouble for remote recipients who may not recognize our charset. +# You may try US-ASCII as the safest value (7 bit), any other MIME name, +# or leave this field blank (default) to use the display character set. +# Charset translations currently are implemented for mail "subjects= " only. +# +#OUTGOING_MAIL_CHARSET: + +.h2 ASSUME_UNREC_CHARSET +# If Lynx encounters a charset parameter it doesn't recognize, it will +# replace the value given by ASSUME_UNREC_CHARSET (or a corresponding +# -assume_unrec_charset command line option) for it. This can be used +# to deal with charsets unknown to Lynx, if they are "sufficiently +# similar" to one that Lynx does know about, by forcing the same +# treatment. There is no default, and you probably should leave this +# undefined unless necessary. +# +#ASSUME_UNREC_CHARSET:iso-8859-1 + +.h2 PREFERRED_LANGUAGE +# PREFERRED_LANGUAGE is the language in MIME notation (e.g., "en", +# "fr") which will be indicated by Lynx in its Accept-Language headers +# as the preferred language. If available, the document will be +# transmitted in that language. Users can override this setting via +# the 'o'ptions menu and save that preference in their RC file. +# This may be a comma-separated list of languages in decreasing preference. +# +#PREFERRED_LANGUAGE:en + +.h2 PREFERRED_CHARSET +# PREFERRED_CHARSET specifies the character set in MIME notation (e.g., +# "ISO-8859-2", "ISO-8859-5") which Lynx will indicate you prefer in +# requests to http servers using an Accept-Charsets header. Users can +# change it via the 'o'ptions menu and save that preference in their RC file. +# The value should NOT include "ISO-8859-1" or "US-ASCII", +# since those values are always assumed by default. +# If a file in that character set is available, the server will send it. +# If no Accept-Charset header is present, the default is that any +# character set is acceptable. If an Accept-Charset header is present, +# and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable +# according to the Accept-Charset header, then the server SHOULD send +# an error response with the 406 (not acceptable) status code, though +# the sending of an unacceptable response is also allowed. See RFC 2068 +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2068 +# +#PREFERRED_CHARSET: + +.h2 CHARSETS_DIRECTORY +# CHARSETS_DIRECTORY specifies the directory with the fonts (glyph data) +# used by Lynx to switch the display-font to a font best suited for the +# given document. The font should be in a format understood by the +# platforms TTY-display-font-switching API. Currently supported on OS/2 only. +# +# Lynx expects the glyphs for the charset CHARSET with character cell +# size HHHxWWW to be stored in a file HHHxWWW/CHARSET.fnt inside the directory +# specified by CHARSETS_DIRECTORY. E.g., the font for koi8-r sized 14x9 +# should be in the file 14x9/koi8-r.fnt. +# +#CHARSETS_DIRECTORY: + +.h2 CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES +# CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES hints lynx on how to choose the best display font given +# the document encoding. This string is a sequence of chunks, each chunk +# having the following form: +# +# IN_CHARSET1 IN_CHARSET2 ... IN_CHARSET5 :OUT_CHARSET +# +# For readability, one may insert arbitrary additional punctuation (anything +# but : is ignored). E.g., if lynx is able to switch only to display charsets +# cp866, cp850, cp852, and cp862, then the following setting may be useful +# (split for readability): +# +# CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES: koi8-r ISO-8859-5 windows-1251 cp866u KOI8-U :cp866, +# iso-8859-1 windows-1252 ISO-8859-15 :cp850, +# ISO-8859-2 windows-1250 :cp852, +# ISO-8859-8 windows-1255 :cp862 +# +#CHARSET_SWITCH_RULES: + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES +.h2 URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES +# URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES and URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES are strings which will be +# prepended (together with a scheme://) and appended to the first element +# of command line or 'g'oto arguments which are not complete URLs and +# cannot be opened as a local file (file://localhost/string). Both +# can be comma-separated lists. Each prefix must end with a dot, each +# suffix must begin with a dot, and either may contain other dots (e.g., +# .com.jp). The default lists are defined in userdefs.h and can be +# replaced here. Each prefix will be used with each suffix, in order, +# until a valid Internet host is created, based on a successful DNS +# lookup (e.g., foo will be tested as www.foo.com and then www.foo.edu +# etc.). The first element can include a :port and/or /path which will +# be restored with the expanded host (e.g., wfbr:8002/dir/lynx will +# become http://www.wfbr.edu:8002/dir/lynx). The prefixes will not be +# used if the first element ends in a dot (or has a dot before the +# :port or /path), and similarly the suffixes will not be used if the +# the first element begins with a dot (e.g., .nyu.edu will become +# http://www.nyu.edu without testing www.nyu.com). Lynx will try to +# guess the scheme based on the first field of the expanded host name, +# and use "http://" as the default (e.g., gopher.wfbr.edu or gopher.wfbr. +# will be made gopher://gopher.wfbr.edu). +# +#URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES:www. +#URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES:.com,.edu,.net,.org + +.h2 FORMS_OPTIONS +# Toggle whether the Options Menu is key-based or form-based; +# the key-based version is available only if specified at compile time. +#FORMS_OPTIONS:TRUE + +.h2 PARTIAL +# Display partial pages while downloading +#PARTIAL:TRUE + +.h2 PARTIAL_THRES +# Set the threshold # of lines Lynx must render before it +# redraws the screen in PARTIAL mode. Anything < 0 implies +# use of the screen size. +#PARTIAL_THRES:-1 + +.h2 SHOW_KB_RATE +# While getting large files, Lynx shows the approximate rate of transfer. +# Set this to change the units shown. "Kilobytes" denotes 1024 bytes: +# NONE to disable the display of transfer rate altogether. +# TRUE or KB for Kilobytes/second. +# FALSE or BYTES for bytes/second. +# KB,ETA to show Kilobytes/second with estimated completion time. +# BYTES,ETA to show BYTES/second with estimated completion time. +# KB2,ETA to show Kilobytes/second with estimated completion time using 2-digits. +# BYTES2,ETA to show BYTES/second with estimated completion time using 2-digits. +# Note that the "ETA" values are available if USE_READPROGRESS was defined. +#SHOW_KB_RATE:TRUE + +.h2 SHOW_KB_NAME +# Set the abbreviation for Kilobytes (1024). +# Quoting from +.url http://www.romulus2.com/articles/guides/misc/bitsbytes.shtml +# In December 1998, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) +# approved a new IEC International Standard. Instead of using the metric +# prefixes for multiples in binary code, the new IEC standard invented specific +# prefixes for binary multiples made up of only the first two letters of the +# metric prefixes and adding the first two letters of the word "binary". Thus, +# for instance, instead of Kilobyte (KB) or Gigabyte (GB), the new terms would +# be kibibyte (KiB) or gibibyte (GiB). +# +# If you prefer using the conventional (and more common) "KB", modify this +# setting. +#SHOW_KB_NAME:KiB + +.h1 Timeouts + +.h2 INFOSECS +.h2 MESSAGESECS +.h2 ALERTSECS +.h2 NO_PAUSE +# The following definitions set the number of seconds for +# pauses following statusline messages that would otherwise be +# replaced immediately, and are more important than the unpaused +# progress messages. Those set by INFOSECS are also basically +# progress messages (e.g., that a prompted input has been canceled) +# and should have the shortest pause. Those set by MESSAGESECS are +# informational (e.g., that a function is disabled) and should have +# a pause of intermediate duration. Those set by ALERTSECS typically +# report a serious problem and should be paused long enough to read +# whenever they appear (typically unexpectedly). The default values +# are defined in userdefs.h, and can be modified here should longer +# pauses be desired for braille-based access to Lynx. +# +# SVr4-curses implementations support time delays in milliseconds, +# hence the value may be given shorter, e.g., 0.5 +# +# Use the NO_PAUSE option (like the command-line -nopause) to override +# all of the delay times. +# +#INFOSECS:1 +#MESSAGESECS:2 +#ALERTSECS:3 +#NO_PAUSE:FALSE + +.h2 DEBUGSECS +# Set DEBUGSECS to a nonzero value to slow down progress messages +# (see "-delay" option). +#DEBUGSECS:0 + +.h2 REPLAYSECS +# Set REPLAYSECS to a nonzero value to allow for slow replaying of +# command scripts (see "-cmd_script" option). +#REPLAYSECS:0 + +.h1 Appearance +# These settings control the appearance of Lynx's screen and the way +# Lynx renders some tags. + +.h2 USE_SELECT_POPUPS +# If USE_SELECT_POPUPS is set FALSE, Lynx will present a vertical list of +# radio buttons for the OPTIONs in SELECT blocks which lack the MULTIPLE +# attribute, instead of using a popup menu. Note that if the MULTIPLE +# attribute is present in the SELECT start tag, Lynx always will create a +# vertical list of checkboxes for the OPTIONs. +# The default defined here or in userdefs.h can be changed via the 'o'ptions +# menu and saved in the RC file, and always can be toggled via the -popup +# command line switch. +# +#USE_SELECT_POPUPS:TRUE + +.h2 SHOW_CURSOR +# SHOW_CURSOR controls whether or not the cursor is hidden or appears +# over the current link in documents or the current option in popups. +# Showing the cursor is handy if you are a sighted user with a poor +# terminal that can't do bold and reverse video at the same time or +# at all. It also can be useful to blind users, as an alternative +# or supplement to setting LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED or +# LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED. +# The default defined here or in userdefs.h can be changed via the +# 'o'ptions menu and saved in the RC file, and always can be toggled +# via the -show_cursor command line switch. +# +#SHOW_CURSOR:FALSE + +.h2 UNDERLINE_LINKS +# UNDERLINE_LINKS controls whether links are underlined by default, or shown +# in bold. Normally this default is set from the configure script. +# +#UNDERLINE_LINKS:FALSE + +.h2 BOLD_HEADERS +# If BOLD_HEADERS is set to TRUE the HT_BOLD default style will be acted +# upon for <H1> through <H6> headers. The compilation default is FALSE +# (only the indentation styles are acted upon, but see BOLD_H1, below). +# On Unix, compilation with -DUNDERLINE_LINKS also will apply to the +# HT_BOLD style for headers when BOLD_HEADERS is TRUE. +# +#BOLD_HEADERS:FALSE + +.h2 BOLD_H1 +# If BOLD_H1 is set to TRUE the HT_BOLD default style will be acted +# upon for <H1> headers even if BOLD_HEADERS is FALSE. The compilation +# default is FALSE. On Unix, compilation with -DUNDERLINE_LINKS also +# will apply to the HT_BOLD style for headers when BOLD_H1 is TRUE. +# +#BOLD_H1:FALSE + +.h2 BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS +# If BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS is set to TRUE the content of anchors without +# an HREF attribute, (i.e., anchors with a NAME or ID attribute) will +# have the HT_BOLD default style. The compilation default is FALSE. +# On Unix, compilation with -DUNDERLINE_LINKS also will apply to the +# HT_BOLD style for NAME (ID) anchors when BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS is TRUE. +# +#BOLD_NAME_ANCHORS:FALSE + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE +.h2 DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE +# The DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE specifies the number of WWW documents to be +# cached in memory at one time. +# +# This so-called cache size (actually, number) is defined in userdefs.h and +# may be modified here and/or with the command line argument -cache=NUMBER +# The minimum allowed value is 2, for the current document and at least one +# to fetch, and there is no absolute maximum number of cached documents. +# On Unix, and VMS not compiled with VAXC, whenever the number is exceeded +# the least recently displayed document will be removed from memory. +# +# On VMS compiled with VAXC, the DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE specifies the +# amount (bytes) of virtual memory that can be allocated and not yet be freed +# before previous documents are removed from memory. If the values for both +# the DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE and DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE are exceeded, then +# the least recently displayed documents will be freed until one or the other +# value is no longer exceeded. The default value is defined in userdefs.h. +# +# The Unix and VMS (but not VAXC) implementations use the C library malloc's +# and calloc's for memory allocation, but procedures for taking the actual +# amount of cache into account still need to be developed. They use only +# the DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE value, and that specifies the absolute maximum +# number of documents to cache (rather than the maximum number only if +# DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE has been exceeded, as with VAXC/VAX). +# +#DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE:10 +#DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE:512000 + +.h2 SOURCE_CACHE +# SOURCE_CACHE sets the source caching behavior for Lynx: +# +# FILE causes Lynx to keep a temporary file for each cached document +# containing the HTML source of the document, which it uses to regenerate +# the document when certain settings are changed (for instance, +# historical vs. minimal vs. valid comment parsing) instead of reloading +# the source from the network. +# +# MEMORY is like FILE, except the document source is kept in memory. You +# may wish to adjust DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE and DEFAULT_VIRTUAL_MEMORY_SIZE +# accordingly. +# +# NONE is the default; the document source is not cached, and is reloaded +# from the network when needed. +# +#SOURCE_CACHE:NONE + +.h2 SOURCE_CACHE_FOR_ABORTED +# This setting controls what will happen with cached source for the document +# being fetched from the net if fetching was aborted (either user pressed +# 'z' or network went down). If set to KEEP, the source fetched so far will +# be preserved (and used as cache), if set to DROP lynx will drop the +# source cache for that document (i.e. only completely downloaded documents +# will be cached in that case). +#SOURCE_CACHE_FOR_ABORTED:DROP + +.h2 ALWAYS_RESUBMIT_POSTS +# If ALWAYS_RESUBMIT_POSTS is set TRUE, Lynx always will resubmit forms +# with method POST, dumping any cache from a previous submission of the +# form, including when the document returned by that form is sought with +# the PREV_DOC command or via the history list. Lynx always resubmits +# forms with method POST when a submit button or a submitting text input +# is activated, but normally retrieves the previously returned document +# if it had links which you activated, and then go back with the PREV_DOC +# command or via the history list. +# +# The default defined here or in userdefs.h can be toggled via +# the -resubmit_forms command line switch. +# +#ALWAYS_RESUBMIT_POSTS:FALSE + +.h2 TRIM_INPUT_FIELDS +# If TRIM_INPUT_FIELDS is set TRUE, Lynx will trim trailing whitespace (e.g., +# space, tab, carriage return, line feed and form feed) from the text entered +# into form text and textarea fields. Older versions of Lynx do this trimming +# unconditionally, but other browsers do not, which would yield different +# behavior for CGI scripts. +#TRIM_INPUT_FIELDS:FALSE + +.h1 HTML Parsing + +.h2 NO_ISMAP_IF_USEMAP +# If NO_ISMAP_IF_USEMAP is set TRUE, Lynx will not include a link to the +# server-side image map if both a server-side and client-side map for the +# same image is indicated in the HTML markup. The compilation default is +# FALSE, such that a link with "[ISMAP]" as the link name, followed by a +# hyphen, will be prepended to the ALT string or "[USEMAP]" pseudo-ALT for +# accessing Lynx's text-based rendition of the client-side map (based on +# the content of the associated MAP element). If the "[ISMAP]" link is +# activated, Lynx will send a 0,0 coordinate pair to the server, which +# Lynx-friendly sites can map to a for-text-client document, homologous +# to what is intended for the content of a FIG element. +# +# The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via +# the "-ismap" command line switch. +# +#NO_ISMAP_IF_USEMAP:FALSE + +.h2 SEEK_FRAG_MAP_IN_CUR +# If SEEK_FRAG_MAP_IN_CUR is set FALSE, then USEMAP attribute values +# (in IMG or OBJECT tags) consisting of only a fragment (USEMAP="#foo") +# will be resolved with respect to the current document's base, which +# might not be the same as the current document's URL. +# The compilation default is to use the current document's URL in all +# cases (i.e., assume the MAP is present below, if it wasn't present +# above the point in the HTML stream where the USEMAP attribute was +# detected). Lynx's present "single pass" rendering engine precludes +# checking below before making the decision on how to resolve a USEMAP +# reference consisting solely of a fragment. +# +#SEEK_FRAG_MAP_IN_CUR:TRUE + +.h2 SEEK_FRAG_AREA_IN_CUR +# If SEEK_FRAG_AREA_IN_CUR is set FALSE, then HREF attribute values +# in AREA tags consisting of only a fragment (HREF="#foo") will be +# resolved with respect to the current document's base, which might +# not be the same as the current document's URL. The compilation +# default is to use the current document's URL, as is done for the +# HREF attribute values of Anchors and LINKs that consist solely of +# a fragment. +# +#SEEK_FRAG_AREA_IN_CUR:TRUE + +.h1 CGI scripts +# These settings control Lynx's ability to execute various types of scripts. + +.h2 LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ALWAYS_ON +.h2 LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE +# Local execution links and scripts are by default completely disabled, +# unless a change is made to the userdefs.h file to enable them or +# the configure script is used with the corresponding options +# (-enable-exec-links and -enable-exec-scripts). +# See the Lynx source code distribution and the userdefs.h +# file for more detail on enabling execution links and scripts. +# +# If you have enabled execution links or scripts the following +# two variables control Lynx's action when an execution link +# or script is encountered. +# +# If LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ALWAYS_ON is set to TRUE any execution +# link or script will be executed no matter where it came from. +# This is EXTREMELY dangerous. Since Lynx can access files from +# anywhere in the world, you may encounter links or scripts that +# will cause damage or compromise the security of your system. +# +# If LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE is set to TRUE only +# links or scripts that reside on the local machine and are +# referenced with a URL beginning with "file://localhost/" or meet +# TRUSTED_EXEC or ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rules (see below) will be +# executed. This is much less dangerous than enabling all execution +# links, but can still be dangerous. +# +#LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE +#LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE:FALSE + +.h2 TRUSTED_EXEC +# If LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINK_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE is TRUE, and no TRUSTED_EXEC +# rule is defined, it defaults to "file://localhost/" and any lynxexec +# or lynxprog command will be permitted if it was referenced from within +# a document whose URL begins with that string. If you wish to restrict the +# referencing URLs further, you can extend the string to include a trusted +# path. You also can specify a trusted directory for http URLs, which will +# then be treated as if they were local rather than remote. For example: +# +# TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/trusted/ +# TRUSTED_EXEC:http://www.wfbr.edu/trusted/ +# +# If you also wish to restrict the commands which can be executed, create +# a series of rules with the path (Unix) or command name (VMS) following +# the string, separated by a tab. For example: +# +# Unix: +# ==== +# TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>/bin/cp +# TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>/bin/rm +# VMS: +# === +# TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>copy +# TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>delete +# +# Once you specify a TRUSTED_EXEC referencing string, the default is +# replaced, and all the referencing strings you desire must be specified +# as a series. Similarly, if you associate a command with the referencing +# string, you must specify all of the allowable commands as a series of +# TRUSTED_EXEC rules for that string. If you specify ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC +# rules below, you need not repeat them as TRUSTED_EXEC rules. +# +# If EXEC_LINKS and JUMPFILE have been defined, any lynxexec or lynxprog +# URLs in that file will be permitted, regardless of other settings. If +# you also set LOCAL_EXECUTION_LINKS_ON_BUT_NOT_REMOTE:TRUE and a single +# TRUSTED_EXEC rule that will always fail (e.g., "none"), then *ONLY* the +# lynxexec or lynxprog URLs in JUMPFILE (and any ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rules, +# see below) will be allowed. Note, however, that if Lynx was compiled with +# CAN_ANONYMOUS_JUMP set to FALSE (default is TRUE), or -restrictions=jump +# is included with the -anonymous switch at run time, then users of an +# anonymous account will not be able to access the jumps file or enter +# 'j'ump shortcuts, and this selective execution feature will be overridden +# as well (i.e., they will only be able to access lynxexec or lynxprog +# URLs which meet any ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rules). +# +#TRUSTED_EXEC:none + +.h2 ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC +# If EXEC_LINKS was defined, any lynxexec or lynxprog URL can be made +# always enabled by an ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rule for it. This is useful for +# anonymous accounts in which you have disabled execution links generally, +# and may also have disabled jumps file links, but still want to allow +# execution of particular utility scripts or programs. The format is +# like that for TRUSTED_EXEC. For example: +# +# Unix: +# ==== +# ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>/usr/local/kinetic/bin/usertime +# ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:http://www.more.net/<tab>/usr/local/kinetic/bin/who.sh +# VMS: +# === +# ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:file://localhost/<tab>usertime +# ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:http://www.more.net/<tab>show users +# +# The default ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC rule is "none". +# +#ALWAYS_TRUSTED_EXEC:none + +.h2 TRUSTED_LYNXCGI +# Unix: +# ===== +# TRUSTED_LYNXCGI rules define the permitted sources and/or paths for +# lynxcgi links (if LYNXCGI_LINKS is defined in userdefs.h). The format +# is the same as for TRUSTED_EXEC rules (see above). Example rules: +# +# TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:file://localhost/ +# TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:<tab>/usr/local/etc/httpd/cgi-bin/ +# TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:file://localhost/<tab>/usr/local/www/cgi-bin/ +# +# VMS: +# ==== +# Do not define this. +# +# The default TRUSTED_LYNXCGI rule is "none". +# +#TRUSTED_LYNXCGI:none + +.h2 LYNXCGI_ENVIRONMENT +# Unix: +# ===== +# LYNXCGI_ENVIRONMENT adds the current value of the specified +# environment variable to the list of environment variables passed on to the +# lynxcgi script. Useful variables are HOME, USER, etc... If proxies +# are in use, and the script invokes another copy of lynx (or a program like +# wget) in a subsidiary role, it can be useful to add http_proxy and other +# *_proxy variables. +# +# VMS: +# ==== +# Do not define this. +# +#LYNXCGI_ENVIRONMENT: + +.h2 LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT +# Unix: +# ===== +# LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT is the value of DOCUMENT_ROOT that will be passed +# to lynxcgi scripts. If set and the URL has PATH_INFO data, then +# PATH_TRANSLATED will also be generated. Examples: +# LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT:/usr/local/etc/httpd/htdocs +# LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT:/data/htdocs/ +# +# VMS: +# ==== +# Do not define this. +# +#LYNXCGI_DOCUMENT_ROOT: + +.h1 Cookies + +.h2 FORCE_SSL_COOKIES_SECURE +# If FORCE_SSL_COOKIES_SECURE is set to TRUE, then SSL encrypted cookies +# received from https servers never will be sent unencrypted to http +# servers. The compilation default is to impose this block only if the +# https server included a secure attribute for the cookie. The normal +# default or that defined here can be toggled via the -force_secure +# command line switch. +# +#FORCE_SSL_COOKIES_SECURE:FALSE + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 MAIL_SYSTEM_ERROR_LOGGING +# MAIL_SYSTEM_ERROR_LOGGING will send a message to the owner of +# the information, or ALERTMAIL if there is no owner, every time +# that a document cannot be accessed! +# +# NOTE: This can generate A LOT of mail, be warned. +# +#MAIL_SYSTEM_ERROR_LOGGING:FALSE + +.h2 CHECKMAIL +# If CHECKMAIL is set to TRUE, the user will be informed (via a statusline +# message) about the existence of any unread mail at startup of Lynx, and +# will get statusline messages if subsequent new mail arrives. If a jumps +# file with a lynxprog URL for invoking mail is available, or your html +# pages include an mail launch file URL, the user thereby can access mail +# and read the messages. The checks and statusline reports will not be +# performed if Lynx has been invoked with the -restrictions=mail switch. +# +# VMS USERS !!! +# ============= +# New mail is normally broadcast as it arrives, via "unsolicited screen +# broadcasts", which can be "wiped" from the Lynx display via the Ctrl-W +# command. You may prefer to disable the broadcasts and use CHECKMAIL +# instead (e.g., in a public account which will be used by people who +# are ignorant about VMS). +# +#CHECKMAIL:FALSE + +.h1 News-groups + +.h2 NNTPSERVER +# To enable news reading ability via Lynx, the environment variable NNTPSERVER +# must be set so that it points to your site's NNTP server +# (see Lynx Users Guide on environment variables). +# Lynx respects RFC 1738 +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1738 +# and does not accept a host field in news URLs (use nntp: instead of news: for +# the scheme if you wish to specify an NNTP host in a URL, as explained in the +# RFC). If you have not set the variable externally, you can set it at run +# time via this configuration file. It will not override an external setting. +# Note that on VMS it is set as a process logical rather than symbol, and will +# outlive the Lynx image. +# The news reading facility in Lynx is quite limited. Lynx does not provide a +# full featured news reader with elaborate error checking and safety features. +# +#NNTPSERVER:news.server.dom + +.h2 LIST_NEWS_NUMBERS +# If LIST_NEWS_NUMBERS is set TRUE, Lynx will use an ordered list and include +# the numbers of articles in news listings, instead of using an unordered +# list. The default is defined in userdefs.h, and can be overridden here. +# +#LIST_NEWS_NUMBERS:FALSE + +.h2 LIST_NEWS_DATES +# If LIST_NEWS_DATES is set TRUE, Lynx will include the dates of articles in +# news listings. The dates always are included in the articles, themselves. +# The default is defined in userdefs.h, and can be overridden here. +# +#LIST_NEWS_DATES:FALSE + +.h2 NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE +.h2 NEWS_MAX_CHUNK +# NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE and NEWS_MAX_CHUNK regulate the chunking of news article +# listings with inclusion of links for listing earlier and/or later articles. +# The defaults are defined in HTNews.c as 30 and 40, respectively. If the +# news group contains more than NEWS_MAX_CHUNK articles, they will be listed +# in NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE chunks. You can change the defaults here, and/or on +# the command line via -newschunksize=NUMBER and/or -newsmaxchunk=NUMBER +# switches. Note that if the chunk size is increased, here or on the command +# line, to a value greater than the current maximum, the maximum will be +# increased to that number. Conversely, if the maximum is set to a number +# less than the current chunk size, the chunk size will be reduced to that +# number. Thus, you need use only one of the two switches on the command +# line, based on the direction of intended change relative to the compilation +# or configuration defaults. The compilation defaults ensure that there will +# be at least 10 earlier articles before bothering to chunk and create a link +# for earlier articles. +# +#NEWS_CHUNK_SIZE:30 +#NEWS_MAX_CHUNK:40 + +.h2 NEWS_POSTING +# Set NEWS_POSTING to FALSE if you do not want to support posting to +# news groups via Lynx. If left TRUE, Lynx will use its news gateway to +# post new messages or followups to news groups, using the URL schemes +# described in the "Supported URLs" section of the online 'h'elp. The +# posts will be attempted via the nntp server specified in the URL, or +# if none was specified, via the NNTPSERVER configuration or environment +# variable. Links with these URLs for posting or sending followups are +# created by the news gateway when reading group listings or articles +# from nntp servers if the server indicates that it permits posting. +# The compilation default set in userdefs.h can be changed here. If +# the default is TRUE, posting can still be disallowed via the +# -restrictions command line switch. +# The posting facility in Lynx is quite limited. Lynx does not provide a +# full featured news poster with elaborate error checking and safety features. +# +#NEWS_POSTING:TRUE + +.h2 LYNX_SIG_FILE +# LYNX_SIG_FILE defines the name of a file containing a signature which +# can be appended to email messages and news postings or followups. The +# user will be prompted whether to append it. It is sought in the home +# directory. If it is in a subdirectory, begin it with a dot-slash +# (e.g., ./lynx/.lynxsig). The definition is set in userdefs.h and can +# be changed here. +# +#LYNX_SIG_FILE:.lynxsig + +.h1 Bibliographic Protocol (bibp scheme) + +.h2 BIBP_GLOBAL_SERVER +# BIBP_GLOBAL_SERVER is the default global server for bibp: links, used +# when a local bibhost or document-specified citehost is unavailable. +# Set in userdefs.h and can be changed here. +#BIBP_GLOBAL_SERVER:http://usin.org/ + +.h2 BIBP_BIBHOST +# BIBP_BIBHOST is the URL at which local bibp service may be found, if +# it exists. Defaults to http://bibhost/ for protocol conformance, but +# may be overridden here or via -bibhost parameter. +#BIBP_BIBHOST:http://bibhost/ + +.h1 Interaction +# These settings control interaction of the user with lynx. + +.h2 SCROLLBAR +# If SCROLLBAR is set TRUE, Lynx will show scrollbar on windows. With mouse +# enabled, the scrollbar strip outside the bar is clickable, and scrolls the +# window by pages. The appearance of the scrollbar can be changed from +# LYNX_LSS file: define attributes scroll.bar, scroll.back (for the bar, and +# for the strip along which the scrollbar moves). +#SCROLLBAR:FALSE + +.h2 SCROLLBAR_ARROW +# If SCROLLBAR_ARROW is set TRUE, Lynx's scrollbar will have arrows at the +# ends. With mouse enabled, the arrows are clickable, and scroll the window by +# 2 lines. The appearance of the scrollbar arrows can be changed from LYNX_LSS +# file: define attributes scroll.arrow, scroll.noarrow (for enabled-arrows, +# and disabled arrows). An arrow is "disabled" if the bar is at this end of +# the strip. +#SCROLLBAR_ARROW:TRUE + +.h2 USE_MOUSE +# If Lynx is configured with ncurses, PDcurses or slang & USE_MOUSE is TRUE, +# users can perform commands by left-clicking certain parts of the screen: +# on a link = `g'oto + ACTIVATE (i.e., move highlight & follow the link); +# on the top/bottom lines = PREV/NEXT_PAGE (i.e., go up/down 1 page); +# on the top/bottom left corners = PREV/NEXT_DOC (i.e., go to the previous +# document / undo goto previous document); +# on the top/bottom right corners = HISTORY/VLINKS (i.e., call up the history +# page or visited links page if on history page). +# NB if the mouse is defined in this way, it will not be available +# for copy/paste operations using the clipboard of a desktop manager: +# for flexibility instead, use the command-line switch -use_mouse . +# +# ncurses and slang have built-in support for the xterm mouse protocol. In +# addition, ncurses can be linked with the gpm mouse library, to automatically +# provide support for this interface in applications such as Lynx. (Please +# read the ncurses faq to work around broken gpm configurations packaged by +# some distributors). PDCurses implements mouse support for win32 console +# windows, as does slang. +#USE_MOUSE:FALSE + +.h1 HTML Parsing +# These settings control the way Lynx parses invalid HTML +# and how it may resolve such issues. + +.h2 COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS +# If COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS is set FALSE, Lynx will not collapse serial BR tags. +# If set TRUE, two or more concurrent BRs will be collapsed into a single +# line break. Note that the valid way to insert extra blank lines in HTML +# is via a PRE block with only newlines in the block. +# +#COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS:TRUE + +.h2 TRIM_BLANK_LINES +# If TRIM_BLANK_LINES is set FALSE, Lynx will not trim trailing blank lines +# from the document. Also, Lynx will not collapse BR-tags onto the previous +# line when it happens to be empty. +#TRIM_BLANK_LINES:TRUE + +.h2 TAGSOUP +# If TAGSOUP is set, Lynx uses the "Tag Soup DTD" rather than "SortaSGML". +# The two approaches differ by the style of error detection and recovery. +# Tag Soup DTD allows for improperly nested tags; SortaSGML is stricter. +#TAGSOUP:FALSE + +.h1 Cookies + +.h2 COOKIE_VERSION +# Select the RFC cookie version using the RFC number. Most users will not +# need to change this, but because RFC 6265 makes incompatible changes versus +# the older RFCs, it is interesting to compare behavior. +# +# For reference: +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265 +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2965 +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2109 +#COOKIE_VERSION:RFC-6265 + +.h2 SET_COOKIES +# If SET_COOKIES is set FALSE, Lynx will ignore Set-Cookie headers +# in http server replies. Note that if a COOKIE_FILE is in use (see +# below) that contains cookies at startup, Lynx will still send those +# persistent cookies in requests as appropriate. Setting SET_COOKIES +# to FALSE just prevents accepting any new cookies from servers. To +# prevent all cookie processing (sending *and* receiving) in a session, +# make sure that PERSISTENT_COOKIES is not TRUE or that COOKIE_FILE does +# not point to a file with cookies, in addition to setting SET_COOKIES +# to FALSE. +# The default is defined in userdefs.h, and can be overridden here, +# and/or toggled via the -cookies command line switch. +# +#SET_COOKIES:TRUE + +.h2 ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES +# If ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES is set TRUE, Lynx will accept cookies from all +# domains with no user interaction. This is equivalent to automatically +# replying to all cookie 'Allow?' prompts with 'A'lways. Note that it +# does not preempt validity checking, which has to be controlled separately +# (see below). +# The default is defined in userdefs.h and can be overridden here, or +# in the .lynxrc file via an o(ptions) screen setting. It may also be +# toggled via the -accept_all_cookies command line switch. +# +#ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES:FALSE + +.h2 COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS +.h2 COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS +# COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS and COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS are comma-delimited lists +# of domains from which Lynx should automatically accept or reject cookies +# without asking for confirmation. If the same domain is specified in both +# lists, rejection will take precedence. +# Note that in order to match cookies, domains have to be spelled out exactly +# in the form in which they would appear on the Cookie Jar page (case is +# insignificant). They are not wildcards. Domains that apply to more than +# one host have a leading '.', but have to match *the cookie's* domain +# exactly. +# +#COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS: +#COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS: + +.h2 COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS +.h2 COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAINS +.h2 COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS +# COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS, COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAINS, and +# COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS are comma-delimited lists of domains. +# They control the degree of validity checking that is applied to cookies +# for the specified domains. +# Note that in order to match cookies, domains have to be spelled out exactly +# in the form in which they would appear on the Cookie Jar page (case is +# insignificant). They are not wildcards. Domains that apply to more than +# one host have a leading '.', but have to match *the cookie's* domain +# exactly. +# If a domain is set to strict checking, strict conformance to RFC 2109 will +# be applied. A domain with loose checking will be allowed to set cookies +# with an invalid path or domain attribute. All domains will default to +# asking the user for confirmation in case of an invalid path or domain. +# Cookie validity checking takes place as a separate step before the +# final decision to accept or reject (see previous options), therefore +# a cookie that passes validity checking may still be automatically +# rejected or cause another prompt. +# +#COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS: +#COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAINS: +#COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS: + +.h2 MAX_COOKIES_DOMAIN +.h2 MAX_COOKIES_GLOBAL +.h2 MAX_COOKIES_BUFFER +# MAX_COOKIES_DOMAIN, +# MAX_COOKIES_GLOBAL and +# MAX_COOKIES_BUFFER are limits on the total number of cookies for each domain, +# globally, and the per-cookie buffer size. These limits are by default large +# enough for reasonable usage; if they are very high, some sites may present +# undue performance waste. +# +#MAX_COOKIES_DOMAIN:50 +#MAX_COOKIES_GLOBAL:500 +#MAX_COOKIES_BUFFER:4096 + +.h2 PERSISTENT_COOKIES +# PERSISTENT_COOKIES indicates that cookies should be read at startup from +# the COOKIE_FILE, and saved at exit for storage between Lynx sessions. +# It is not used if Lynx was compiled without USE_PERSISTENT_COOKIES. +# The default is FALSE, so that the feature needs to be enabled here +# explicitly if you want it. +# +#PERSISTENT_COOKIES:FALSE + +.h2 COOKIE_FILE +# COOKIE_FILE is the default file from which persistent cookies are read +# at startup (if the file exists), if Lynx was compiled with +# USE_PERSISTENT_COOKIES and the PERSISTENT_COOKIES option is enabled. +# The cookie file can also be specified in .lynxrc or on the command line. +# +#COOKIE_FILE:~/.lynx_cookies + +.h2 COOKIE_SAVE_FILE +# COOKIE_SAVE_FILE is the default file in which persistent cookies are +# stored at exit, if Lynx was compiled with USE_PERSISTENT_COOKIES and the +# PERSISTENT_COOKIES option is enabled. The cookie save file can also be +# specified on the command line. +# +# With an interactive Lynx session, COOKIE_SAVE_FILE will default to +# COOKIE_FILE if it is not set. With a non-interactive Lynx session (e.g., +# -dump), cookies will only be saved to file if COOKIE_SAVE_FILE is set. +# +#COOKIE_SAVE_FILE:~/.lynx_cookies + +.h1 Mail-related + +.h2 SYSTEM_MAIL +.h2 SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS +# VMS: +# === +# The mail command and qualifiers are defined in userdefs.h. Lynx +# will spawn a subprocess to send replies and error messages. The +# command, and qualifiers (if any), can be re-defined here. If +# you use PMDF then headers will we passed via a header file. +# If you use "generic" VMS MAIL, the subject will be passed on the +# command line via a /subject="SUBJECT" qualifier, and inclusion +# of other relevant headers may not be possible. +# If your mailer uses another syntax, some hacking of the mailform() +# mailmsg() and reply_by_mail() functions in LYMail.c, and send_file_to_mail() +# function in LYPrint.c, may be required. +# +.ex 2 +#SYSTEM_MAIL:PMDF SEND +#SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:/headers +# +.ex 2 +#SYSTEM_MAIL:MAIL +#SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS: +# +# Unix: +#====== +# The mail path and flags normally are defined for sendmail (or submit +# with MMDF) in userdefs.h. You can change them here, but should first +# read the zillions of CERT advisories about security problems with Unix +# mailers. +# +.ex 2 +#SYSTEM_MAIL:/usr/mmdf/bin/submit +#SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:-mlruxto,cc\* +# +.ex 2 +#SYSTEM_MAIL:/usr/sbin/sendmail +#SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:-t -oi +# +.ex 2 +#SYSTEM_MAIL:/usr/lib/sendmail +#SYSTEM_MAIL_FLAGS:-t -oi +# +# Win32: +#======= +# The Win32 port assumes that the mailer cannot read via a pipe. That is, it +# must read all information from files. The "sendmail" utility in the 2.8.1 +# release is able to work with that assumption. There is no way to tell the +# Win32 port of Lynx to send its information to the sendmail utility via a +# pipe. +# +# Please read sendmail.txt in the LYNX_W32.ZIP distribution +.url https://invisible-island.net/archives/lynx/tarballs/lynx2.8.1_w32.zip +.url https://invisible-mirror.net/archives/lynx/tarballs/lynx2.8.1_w32.zip +# +# As an alternative, the newer "sendmail for windows" may be useful: +.url http://glob.com.au/sendmail/ +# +# See also BLAT_MAIL and ALT_BLAT_MAIL flags. +# +#SYSTEM_MAIL:sendmail -f me@my.host -h my.host -r my.smtp.mailer -m SMTP + +.h2 MAIL_ADRS +# VMS ONLY: +# ======== +# MAIL_ADRS is defined in userdefs.h and normally is structured for PMDF's +# IN%"INTERNET_ADDRESS" scheme. The %s is replaced with the address given +# by the user. If you are using a different Internet mail transport, change +# the IN appropriately (e.g., to SMTP, MX, or WINS). +# +#MAIL_ADRS:"IN%%""%s""" + +.h2 USE_FIXED_RECORDS +# VMS ONLY: +# ======== +# If USE_FIXED_RECORDS is set to TRUE here or in userdefs.h, Lynx will +# convert 'd'ownloaded binary files to FIXED 512 record format before saving +# them to disk or acting on a DOWNLOADER option. If set to FALSE, the +# headers of such files will indicate that they are Stream_LF with Implied +# Carriage Control, which is incorrect, and can cause downloading software +# to get confused and unhappy. If you do set it FALSE, you can use the +# FIXED512.COM command file, which is included in this distribution, to do +# the conversion externally. +# +#USE_FIXED_RECORDS:TRUE + +.h1 Keyboard Input +# These settings control the way Lynx interprets user input. + +.h2 VI_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON +.h2 EMACS_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON +# Vi or Emacs movement keys, i.e. familiar hjkl or ^N^P^F^B . +# These are defaults, which can be changed in the Options Menu or .lynxrc . +#VI_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE +#EMACS_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE + +.h2 DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE +# DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE may be set to NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS +# or LINKS_ARE_NOT_NUMBERED (the same) +# or LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED +# or LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED +# or FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED +# to specify whether numbers (e.g. [10]) appear next to all links, +# allowing immediate access by entering the number on the keyboard, +# or numbers on the numeric key-pad work like arrows; +# the "FIELDS" options cause form fields also to be numbered. +# This may be overridden by the keypad_mode setting in .lynxrc, +# and can also be changed via the Options Menu. +# +#DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE:NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS + +.h2 NUMBER_LINKS_ON_LEFT +.h2 NUMBER_FIELDS_ON_LEFT +# Denotes the position for link- and field-numbers (whether it is on the left +# or right of the anchor). These are subject to DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE, which +# determines whether numbers are shown. +#NUMBER_LINKS_ON_LEFT:TRUE +#NUMBER_FIELDS_ON_LEFT:TRUE + +.h2 DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE_IS_NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS +# Obsolete form of DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE, +# numbers work like arrows or numbered links. +# Set to TRUE, indicates numbers act as arrows, +# and set to FALSE indicates numbers refer to numbered links on the page. +# LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED cannot be set by this option because +# it allows only two values (true and false). +# +#DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE_IS_NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS:TRUE + +.h2 CASE_SENSITIVE_ALWAYS_ON +# The default search type. +# This is a default that can be overridden by the user! +# +#CASE_SENSITIVE_ALWAYS_ON:FALSE + +.h1 Auxiliary Facilities + +.h2 DEFAULT_BOOKMARK_FILE +# DEFAULT_BOOKMARK_FILE is the filename used for storing personal bookmarks. +# It will be prepended by the user's home directory. +# NOTE that a file ending in .html or other suffix mapped to text/html +# should be used to ensure its treatment as HTML. The built-in default +# is lynx_bookmarks.html. On both Unix and VMS, if a subdirectory off of +# the HOME directory is desired, the path should begin with "./" (e.g., +# ./BM/lynx_bookmarks.html), but the subdirectory must already exist. +# Lynx will create the bookmark file, if it does not already exist, on +# the first ADD_BOOKMARK attempt if the HOME directory is indicated +# (i.e., if the definition is just filename.html without any slashes), +# but requires a pre-existing subdirectory to create the file there. +# The user can re-define the default bookmark file, as well as a set +# of sub-bookmark files if multiple bookmark file support is enabled +# (see below), via the 'o'ptions menu, and can save those definitions +# in the .lynxrc file. +# +#DEFAULT_BOOKMARK_FILE:lynx_bookmarks.html + +.h2 MULTI_BOOKMARK_SUPPORT +# If MULTI_BOOKMARK_SUPPORT is set TRUE, and BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS (see +# below) is FALSE, and sub-bookmarks exist, all bookmark operations will +# first prompt the user to select an active sub-bookmark file or the +# default bookmark file. FALSE is the default so that one (the default) +# bookmark file will be available initially. The definition here will +# override that in userdefs.h. The user can turn on multiple bookmark +# support via the 'o'ptions menu, and can save that choice as the startup +# default via the .lynxrc file. When on, the setting can be STANDARD or +# ADVANCED. If SUPPORT is set to the latter, and the user mode also is +# ADVANCED, the VIEW_BOOKMARK command will invoke a statusline prompt at +# which the user can enter the letter token (A - Z) of the desired bookmark, +# or '=' to get a menu of available bookmark files. The menu always is +# presented in NOVICE or INTERMEDIATE mode, or if the SUPPORT is set to +# STANDARD. No prompting or menu display occurs if only one (the startup +# default) bookmark file has been defined (define additional ones via the +# 'o'ptions menu). The startup default, however set, can be overridden on +# the command line via the -restrictions=multibook or the -anonymous or +# -validate switches. +# +#MULTI_BOOKMARK_SUPPORT:FALSE + +.h2 BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS +# If BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS is set TRUE, multiple bookmark support will +# be forced off, and cannot to toggled on via the 'o'ptions menu. The +# compilation setting is normally FALSE, and can be overridden here. +# It can also be set via the -restrictions=multibook or the -anonymous +# or -validate command line switches. +# +#BLOCK_MULTI_BOOKMARKS:FALSE + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 DEFAULT_USER_MODE +# DEFAULT_USER_MODE sets the default user mode for Lynx users. +# NOVICE shows a three line help message at the bottom of the screen. +# INTERMEDIATE shows normal amount of help (one line). +# ADVANCED help is replaced by the URL of the current link. +# +#DEFAULT_USER_MODE:NOVICE + +.h1 External Programs + +.h2 DEFAULT_EDITOR +# If DEFAULT_EDITOR is defined, users may edit local documents with it +# & it will also be used for sending mail messages. +# If no editor is defined here or by the user, +# the user will not be able to edit local documents +# and a primitive line-oriented mail-input mode will be used. +# +# For sysadmins: do not define a default editor +# unless you know EVERY user will know how to use it; +# users can easily define their own editor in the Options Menu. +# +#DEFAULT_EDITOR: + +.h2 SYSTEM_EDITOR +# SYSTEM_EDITOR behaves the same as DEFAULT_EDITOR, +# except that it can't be changed by users. +# +#SYSTEM_EDITOR: + +.h3 POSITIONABLE_EDITOR +# If POSITIONABLE_EDITOR is defined once or multiple times and if the same +# editor is used as editor in lynx, lynx will use its features, i.e., adding an +# option to set the initial line-position, when editing files and textarea. +# The commented editors below are already known; there is no need to uncomment +# them. +# +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:emacs +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jed +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jmacs +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:joe +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jove +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jpico +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:jstar +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:nano +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:pico +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:rjoe +#POSITIONABLE_EDITOR:vi + +.h1 Proxy + +.h2 HTTP_PROXY +.h2 HTTPS_PROXY +.h2 FTP_PROXY +.h2 GOPHER_PROXY +.h2 NEWSPOST_PROXY +.h2 NEWSREPLY_PROXY +.h2 NEWS_PROXY +.h2 NNTP_PROXY +.h2 SNEWSPOST_PROXY +.h2 SNEWSREPLY_PROXY +.h2 SNEWS_PROXY +.h2 WAIS_PROXY +.h2 FINGER_PROXY +.h2 CSO_PROXY +# Lynx version 2.2 and beyond supports the use of proxy servers that can act as +# firewall gateways and caching servers. They are preferable to the older +# gateway servers. Each protocol used by Lynx can be mapped separately using +# PROTOCOL_proxy environment variables (see Lynx Users Guide). If you have not set +# them externally, you can set them at run time via this configuration file. +# They will not override external settings. The no_proxy variable can be used +# to inhibit proxying to selected regions of the Web (see below). Note that on +# VMS these proxy variables are set as process logicals rather than symbols, to +# preserve lowercasing, and will outlive the Lynx image. +# +.ex 15 +#http_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#https_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#ftp_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#gopher_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#news_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#newspost_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#newsreply_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#snews_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#snewspost_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#snewsreply_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#nntp_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#wais_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#finger_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#cso_proxy:http://some.server.dom:port/ +#no_proxy:host.domain.dom + +.h2 NO_PROXY +# The no_proxy variable can be a comma-separated list of strings defining +# no-proxy zones in the DNS domain name space. If a tail substring of the +# domain-path for a host matches one of these strings, transactions with that +# node will not be proxied. +.ex +#no_proxy:domain.path1,path2 +# +# A single asterisk as an entry will override all proxy variables and no +# transactions will be proxied. +.ex +#no_proxy:* +# This is the only allowed use of * in no_proxy. +# +# Warning: Note that setting 'il' as an entry in this list will block proxying +# for the .mil domain as well as the .il domain. If the entry is '.il' this +# will not happen. + +.h1 External Programs + +.h2 PRINTER +.h2 DOWNLOADER +.h2 UPLOADER +# PRINTER, DOWNLOADER & UPLOADER DEFINITIONS: +# Lynx has 4 pre-defined print options & 1 pre-defined download option, +# which are called up on-screen when `p' or `d' are entered; +# any number of options can be added by the user, as explained below. +# Uploaders can be defined only for UNIX with DIRED_SUPPORT: +# see the Makefile in the top directory & the header of src/LYUpload.c . +# +# For `p' pre-defined options are: `Save to local file', `E-mail the file', +# `Print to screen' and `Print to local printer attached to vt100'. +# `Print to screen' allows file transfers in the absence of alternatives +# and is often the only option allowed here for anonymous users; +# the 3rd & 4th options are not pre-defined for DOS/WINDOWS versions of Lynx. +# For `d' the pre-defined option is: `Download to local file'. +# +# To define your own print or download option use the following formats: +# +# PRINTER:<name>:<command>:<option>:<lines/page>[:<environment>] +# +# DOWNLOADER:<name>:<command>:<option>[:<environment>] +# +# <name> is what you will see on the print/download screen. +# +# <command> is the command your system will execute: +# the 1st %s in the command will be replaced +# by the temporary filename used by Lynx; +# a 2nd %s will be replaced by a filename of your choice, +# for which Lynx will prompt, offering a suggestion. +# On Unix, which has pipes, you may use a '|' as the first +# character of the command, and Lynx will open a pipe to +# the command. +# If the command format of your printer/downloader requires +# a different layout, you will need to use a script +# (see the last 2 download examples below). +# +# <option> TRUE : the printer/downloader will always be ENABLED, +# except that downloading is disabled when -validate is used; +# FALSE : both will be DISABLED for anonymous users +# and printing will be disabled when -noprint is used. +# +# <lines/page> (printers: optional) the number of lines/page (default 66): +# used to compute the approximate output size +# and prompt if the document is > 4 printer pages; +# it uses current screen length for the computation +# when `Print to screen' is selected. +# +# [:<environment>] +# optional, if XWINDOWS then printer/downloader will be +# enabled if DISPLAY environment variable IS defined and +# disabled otherwise, if environment is NON_XWINDOWS +# then printer/downloader will be enabled if DISPLAY +# environment variable IS NOT defined and disabled otherwise, +# for anything else or if environment is not specified +# printer/downloader is always enabled. +# +# You must put the whole definition on one line; +# if you use a colon, precede it with a backslash. +# +# `Printer' can be any file-handling program you find useful, +# even if it does not physically print anything. +# +# Usually, down/up-loading involves the use of (e.g.) Ckermit or ZModem +# to transfer files to a user's local machine over a serial link, +# but download options do not have to be download-protocol programs. +# +# Printer examples: +.ex 3 +#PRINTER:Computer Center printer:lpr -Pccprt %s:FALSE +#PRINTER:Office printer:lpr -POffprt %s:TRUE +#PRINTER:VMS printer:print /queue=cc$print %s:FALSE:58 +# If you have a very busy VMS print queue +# and Lynx deletes the temporary files before they have been queued, +# use the VMSPrint.com included in the distribution: +.ex +#PRINTER:Busy VMS printer:@Lynx_Dir\:VMSPrint sys$print %s:FALSE:58 +# To specify a print option at run-time: +# NBB if you have ANONYMOUS users, DO NOT allow this option! +.ex +#PRINTER:Specify at run-time:echo -n "Enter a print command\: "; read word; sh -c "$word %s":FALSE +# To pass to a sophisticated file viewer: -k suppresses invocation +# of hex display mode if 8-bit or control characters are present; +# +s invokes secure mode (see ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/davis/most): +.ex +#PRINTER:Use Most to view:most -k +s %s:TRUE:23 +# +# Downloader examples: +# in Kermit, -s %s is the filename sent, -a %s the filename on arrival +# (if they are given in reverse order here, the command will fail): +.ex +#DOWNLOADER:Use Kermit to download to the terminal:kermit -i -s %s -a %s:TRUE +# NB don't use -k with Most, so that binaries will invoke hexadecimal mode: +.ex +#DOWNLOADER:Use Most to view:most +s %s:TRUE +# The following example gives wrong filenames +# (`sz' doesn't support a suggested filename parameter): +.ex +#DOWNLOADER:Use Zmodem to download to the local terminal:sz %s:TRUE +# The following example returns correct filenames +# by using a script to make a subdirectory in /tmp, +# but may conflict with very strong security or permissions restrictions: +.ex +#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 +.ex 2 +#UPLOADER:Use Kermit to upload from your computer: kermit -i -r -a %s:TRUE +#UPLOADER:Use Zmodem to upload from your computer: rz %s:TRUE +# +# Note for OS/390: /* S/390 -- gil -- 1464 */ +# The following is strongly recommended to undo ASCII->EBCDIC conversion. +.ex +#DOWNLOADER:Save OS/390 binary file: iconv -f IBM-1047 -t ISO8859-1 %s >%s:FALSE + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 NO_DOT_FILES +# If NO_DOT_FILES is TRUE (normal default via userdefs.h), the user will not +# be allowed to specify files beginning with a dot in reply to output filename +# prompts, and files beginning with a dot (e.g., file://localhost/path/.lynxrc) +# will not be included in the directory browser's listings. If set FALSE, you +# can force it to be treated as TRUE via -restrictions=dotfiles. If set FALSE +# and not forced TRUE, the user can regulate it via the 'o'ptions menu (and +# may save the preference in the RC file). +# +#NO_DOT_FILES:TRUE + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 NO_FROM_HEADER +# If NO_FROM_HEADER is set FALSE, From headers will be sent in transmissions +# to http or https servers if the personal_mail_address has been defined via +# the 'o'ptions menu. The compilation default is TRUE (no From header is +# sent) and the default can be changed here. The default can be toggled at +# run time via the -from switch. Note that transmissions of From headers +# have become widely considered to create an invasion of privacy risk. +# +#NO_FROM_HEADER:TRUE + +.h2 NO_REFERER_HEADER +# If NO_REFERER_HEADER is TRUE, Referer headers never will be sent in +# transmissions to servers. Lynx normally sends the URL of the document +# from which the link was derived, but not for startfile URLs, 'g'oto +# URLs, 'j'ump shortcuts, bookmark file links, history list links, or +# URLs that include the content from form submissions with method GET. +# If left FALSE here, it can be set TRUE at run time via the -noreferer +# switch. +# +#NO_REFERER_HEADER:FALSE + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 NO_FILE_REFERER +# If NO_FILE_REFERER is TRUE, Referer headers never will be sent in +# transmissions to servers for links or actions derived from documents +# or forms with file URLs. This ensures that paths associated with +# the local file system are never indicated to servers, even if +# NO_REFERER_HEADER is FALSE. If set to FALSE here, it can still be +# set TRUE at run time via the -nofilereferer switch. +# +#NO_FILE_REFERER:TRUE + +.h2 REFERER_WITH_QUERY +# REFERER_WITH_QUERY controls what happens when the URL in a Referer +# header to be sent would contain a query part in the form of a '?' +# character followed by one or more attribute=value pairs. Query parts +# often contain sensitive or personal information resulting from filling +# out forms, or other info that allows tracking of a user's browsing path +# through a site, an thus should not be put in a Referer header (which may +# get sent to an unrelated third-party site). On the other hand, some +# sites (improperly) rely on browsers sending Referer headers, even when +# the user is coming from a page whose URL has a query part. +# +# If REFERER_WITH_QUERY is SEND, full Referer headers will be sent +# including the query part (unless sending of Referer is disabled in +# general, see NO_REFERER_HEADER above). If REFERER_WITH_QUERY is +# PARTIAL, the Referer header will contain a partial URL, with the query +# part stripped off. This is not strictly correct, but should satisfy +# those sites that check only whether the user arrived at a page from an +# "outside" link. If REFERER_WITH_QUERY is set to DROP (or anything else +# unrecognized), the default, no Referer header is sent at all in this +# situation. +# +#REFERER_WITH_QUERY:DROP + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 VERBOSE_IMAGES +# VERBOSE_IMAGES controls whether Lynx replaces [LINK], [INLINE] and [IMAGE] +# (for images without ALT) with filenames of these images. +# This can be useful in determining what images are important +# and which are mere decorations, e.g. button.gif, line.gif, +# provided the author uses meaningful names. +# +# The definition here will override the setting in userdefs.h. +# +#VERBOSE_IMAGES:TRUE + +.h2 MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES +# If MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES is TRUE, all images will be given links +# which can be ACTIVATEd. For inlines, the ALT or pseudo-ALT ("[INLINE]") +# strings will be links for the resolved SRC rather than just text. +# For ISMAP or other graphic links, ALT or pseudo-ALT ("[ISMAP]" or "[LINK]") +# will have '-' and a link labeled "[IMAGE]" for the resolved SRC appended. +# See also VERBOSE_IMAGES flag. +# +# The definition here will override that in userdefs.h +# and can be toggled via an "-image_links" command-line switch. +# The user can also use the LYK_IMAGE_TOGGLE key (default `*') +# or `Show Images' in the Form-based Options Menu. +# +#MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES:FALSE + +.h2 MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES +# If MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES is FALSE, inline images which don't specify +# an ALT string will not have "[INLINE]" inserted as a pseudo-ALT, +# i.e. they'll be treated as having ALT="". +# Otherwise (if TRUE), pseudo-ALTs will be created for inlines, +# so that they can be used as links to the SRCs. +# See also VERBOSE_IMAGES flag. +# +# The definition here will override that in userdefs.h +# and can be toggled via a "-pseudo_inlines" command-line switch. +# The user can also use the LYK_INLINE_TOGGLE key (default `[') +# or `Show Images' in the Form-based Options Menu. +# +#MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES:TRUE + +.h2 SUBSTITUTE_UNDERSCORES +# If SUBSTITUTE_UNDERSCORES is TRUE, the _underline_ format will be used +# for emphasis tags in dumps. +# +# The default defined here will override that in userdefs.h, and the user +# can toggle the default via a "-underscore" command line switch. +# +#SUBSTITUTE_UNDERSCORES:FALSE + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 QUIT_DEFAULT_YES +# If QUIT_DEFAULT_YES is TRUE then when the QUIT command is entered, any +# response other than n or N will confirm. It should be FALSE if you +# prefer the more conservative action of requiring an explicit Y or y to +# confirm. The default defined here will override that in userdefs.h. +# +#QUIT_DEFAULT_YES:TRUE + +.h1 HTML Parsing + +.h2 HISTORICAL_COMMENTS +# If HISTORICAL_COMMENTS is TRUE, Lynx will revert to the "Historical" +# behavior of treating any '>' as a terminator for comments, instead of +# seeking a valid '-->' terminator (note that white space can be present +# between the '--' and '>' in valid terminators). The compilation default +# is FALSE. +# +# The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via a +# "-historical" command line switch, and via the LYK_HISTORICAL command key. +# +#HISTORICAL_COMMENTS:FALSE + +.h2 MINIMAL_COMMENTS +# If MINIMAL_COMMENTS is TRUE, Lynx will not use Valid comment parsing +# of '--' pairs as serial comments within an overall comment element, +# and instead will seek only a '-->' terminator for the overall comment +# element. This emulates the Netscape v2.0 comment parsing bug, and +# will help Lynx cope with the use of dashes as "decorations", which +# consequently has become common in so-called "Enhanced for Netscape" +# pages. Note that setting Historical comments on will override the +# Minimal or Valid setting. +# +# The compilation default for MINIMAL_COMMENTS is FALSE, but we'll +# set it TRUE here, until Netscape gets its comment parsing right, +# and "decorative" dashes cease to be so common. +# +# The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via a +# "-minimal" command line switch, and via the LYK_MINIMAL command key. +# +MINIMAL_COMMENTS:TRUE + +.h2 SOFT_DQUOTES +# If SOFT_DQUOTES is TRUE, Lynx will emulate the invalid behavior of +# treating '>' as a co-terminator of a double-quoted attribute value +# and the tag which contains it, as was done in old versions of Netscape +# and Mosaic. The compilation default is FALSE. +# +# The compilation default, or default defined here, can be toggled via +# a "-soft_dquotes" command line switch. +# +#SOFT_DQUOTES:FALSE + +.h2 STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS +# If STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS is TRUE, Lynx emulates the invalid behavior of many +# browsers to strip a leading "../" segment from relative URLs in HTML +# documents with a http or https base URL, if this would otherwise lead to +# an absolute URLs with those characters still in it. Such URLs are normally +# erroneous and not what is intended by page authors. Lynx will issue +# a warning message when this occurs. +# +# If STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS is FALSE, Lynx will use those URLs for requests +# without taking any special actions or issuing Warnings, in most cases +# this will result in an error response from the server. +# +# Note that Lynx never tries to fix similar URLs for protocols other than +# http and https, since they are less common and may actually be valid in +# some cases. +# +#STRIP_DOTDOT_URLS:TRUE + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 ENABLE_SCROLLBACK +# If ENABLE_SCROLLBACK is TRUE, Lynx will clear the entire screen before +# displaying each new screenful of text. Though less efficient for normal +# use, this allows programs that maintain a buffer of previously-displayed +# text to recognize the continuity of what has been displayed, so that +# previous screenfuls can be reviewed by whatever method the program uses +# to scroll back through previous text. For example, the PC comm program +# QModem has a key that can be pressed to scroll back; if ENABLE_SCROLLBACK +# is TRUE, pressing the scrollback key will access previous screenfuls which +# will have been stored on the local PC and will therefore be displayed +# instantaneously, instead of needing to be retransmitted by Lynx at the +# speed of the comm connection (but Lynx will not know about the change, +# so you must restore the last screen before resuming with Lynx commands). +# +# The default compilation or configuration setting can be toggled via an +# "-enable_scrollback" command line switch. +# +#ENABLE_SCROLLBACK:FALSE + +.h2 SCAN_FOR_BURIED_NEWS_REFS +# If SCAN_FOR_BURIED_NEWS_REFS is set to TRUE, Lynx will scan the bodies +# of news articles for buried article and URL references and convert them +# to links. The compilation default is TRUE, but some email addresses +# enclosed in angle brackets ("<user@address>") might be converted to false +# news links, and uuencoded messages might be corrupted. The conversion is +# not done when the display is toggled to source or when 'd'ownloading, so +# uuencoded articles can be saved intact regardless of these settings. +# +# The default setting can be toggled via a "-buried_news" command line +# switch. +# +#SCAN_FOR_BURIED_NEWS_REFS:TRUE + +.h2 PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE +# If PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE is set to FALSE, Lynx will not prepend a +# Request URL comment and BASE element to text/html source files when +# they are retrieved for 'd'ownloading or passed to 'p'rint functions. +# The compilation default is TRUE. Note that this prepending is not +# done for -source dumps, unless the -base switch also was included on +# the command line, and the latter switch overrides the setting of the +# PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE configuration variable. +# +#PREPEND_BASE_TO_SOURCE:TRUE + +.h1 External Programs +# MIME types and viewers! +# +# file extensions may be assigned to MIME types using +# the SUFFIX: definition. +# +# NOTE: It is normally preferable to define new extension mappings in +# EXTENSION_MAP files (see below) instead of here: Definitions +# here are overridden by those in EXTENSION_MAP files and even by +# some built-in defaults in src/HTInit.c. On the other hand, +# definitions here allow some more fields that are not possible +# in those files. +# +# Extension mappings have an effect mostly for ftp and local files, +# they are NOT used to determine the type of content for URLs with +# the http protocol. This is because HTTP servers already specify +# the MIME type in the Content-Type header. [It may still be +# necessary to set up an appropriate suffix for some MIME types, +# even if they are accessed only via the HTTP protocol, if the viewer +# (see below) for those MIME types requires a certain suffix for the +# temporary file passed to it.] + +.h2 GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP +.h2 PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP +# The global and personal EXTENSION_MAP files allow you to assign extensions +# to MIME types which will override any of the suffix maps in this (lynx.cfg) +# configuration file, or in src/HTInit.c. See the example mime.types file +# in the samples subdirectory. +# +# Unix: +# ==== +#GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP:/usr/local/lib/mosaic/mime.types +# VMS: +# === +#GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP:Lynx_Dir:mime.types +# +# Unix (sought in user's home directory): +#PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP:.mime.types +# VMS (sought in user's sys$login directory): +#PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP:mime.types + +.h2 SUFFIX_ORDER +# With SUFFIX_ORDER the precedence of suffix mappings can be changed. +# Two kinds of settings are recognized: +# +# PRECEDENCE_OTHER or PRECEDENCE_HERE +# Suffix mappings can come from four sources: (1) SUFFIX rules +# given here - see below, (2) built-in defaults (HTInit.c), and the +# (3) GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP and (4) PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP files. +# The order of precedence is normally as listed: (1) has the +# *lowest*, (4) has the *highest* precedence if there are conflicts. +# In other words, SUFFIX mappings here are overridden by conflicting +# ones elsewhere. This default ordering is called PRECEDENCE_OTHER. +# With PRECEDENCE_HERE, the order becomes (2) (3) (4) (1), i.e. +# mappings here override others made elsewhere. +# +# NO_BUILTIN +# This disables all built-in default rules. In other words, (2) in the +# list above is skipped. Some recognition for compressed files (".gz", +# ".Z") is still hardwired. A mapping for some basic types, at least +# for text/html is probably necessary to get a usable configuration, +# it can be given in a SUFFIX rule below or an extension map file. +# Both kinds of settings can be combined, separated by comma as in +# SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_HERE,NO_BUILTIN +# Note: Using PRECEDENCE_HERE has only an effect on SUFFIX rules that follow. +# Moreover, if GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP or PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP directives +# are used, they should come *before* a SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_HERE. +# +#SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_OTHER + +.h2 SUFFIX +# The SUFFIX definition takes the form of: +# +# SUFFIX:<file extension>:<mime type>:<encoding>:<quality>:<description> +# +# All fields after <mime type> are optional (including the separators +# if no more fields follow). +# +# <file extension> trailing end of file name. This need not strictly +# be a file extension as understood by the OS, a dot +# has to be given explicitly if it is indented, for +# some uses one could even match full filenames here. +# In addition, two forms are special: "*.*" and "*" +# refer to the defaults for otherwise unmatched files +# (the first for filenames with a dot somewhere in +# the name, the second without), these are currently +# mapped to text/plain in the (HTInit.c) built-in code. +# Lynx compares the file-extensions ignoring case. +# +# <mime type> a MIME content type. It can also contain a charset +# parameter, see example below. This should be given in +# all lowercase, use <description> for more fancy labels. +# It can be left empty if an HTTP style encoding is given. +# +# Fields in addition to the usual ones are +# +# <encoding> either a mail style trivial encoding (7bit, 8bit, binary) +# which could be used on some systems to determine how to +# open local files (currently it isn't), and is used to +# determine transfer mode for some FTP URLs; or a HTTP style +# content encoding (gzip (equivalent to x-gzip), compress) +# +# <quality> a floating point quality factor, usually between 0.0 and 1.0 +# currently unused in most situations. +# +# <description> text that can appear in FTP directory listings, and in +# local directory listings (see LIST_FORMAT, code %t) +# +# For instance the following definition maps the +# extension ".gif" to the mime type "image/gif" +.ex +# SUFFIX:.gif:image/gif +# +# The following can be used if you have a convention to label +# HTML files in some character set that differs from your local +# default (see also ASSUME_LOCAL_CHARSET) with a different +# extension, here ".html-u8". It also demonstrates use of the +# description field, note extra separators for omitted fields: +.ex +# SUFFIX:.html-u8:text/html;charset=utf-8:::UTF-8 HTML +# +# The following shows how a suffix can indicate a combination +# of MIME type and compression method. (The ending ".ps.gz" should +# already be recognized by default; the form below could be used on +# systems that don't allow more than one dot in filenames.) +.ex +# SUFFIX:.ps_gz:application/postscript:gzip::gzip'd Postscript +# +# The following is meant to match a full filename (but can match +# any file ending in "core", so be careful): +.ex +# SUFFIX:core:application/x-core-file +# +# file suffixes are case INsensitive! +# +# The suffix definitions listed here in the default lynx.cfg file are +# similar to those normally established via src/HTInit.c. You can change +# the defaults by editing that file or disable them, or via the global or +# personal mime.types files at run time (except for the additional fields). +# Assignments made here are overridden by entries in those files +# unless preceded with a SUFFIX_ORDER:PRECEDENCE_HERE. +# +.ex 29 +#SUFFIX:.ps:application/postscript +#SUFFIX:.eps:application/postscript +#SUFFIX:.ai:application/postscript +#SUFFIX:.rtf:application/rtf +#SUFFIX:.snd:audio/basic +#SUFFIX:.gif:image/gif +#SUFFIX:.rgb:image/x-rgb +#SUFFIX:.png:image/png +#SUFFIX:.xbm:image/x-xbitmap +#SUFFIX:.tiff:image/tiff +#SUFFIX:.jpg:image/jpeg +#SUFFIX:.jpeg:image/jpeg +#SUFFIX:.mpg:video/mpeg +#SUFFIX:.mpeg:video/mpeg +#SUFFIX:.mov:video/quicktime +#SUFFIX:.hqx:application/mac-binhex40 +#SUFFIX:.bin:application/octet-stream +#SUFFIX:.exe:application/octet-stream +#SUFFIX:.tar:application/x-tar +#SUFFIX:.tgz:application/x-tar:gzip +#SUFFIX:.Z::compress +#SUFFIX:.gz::gzip +#SUFFIX:.bz2:application/x-bzip2 +#SUFFIX:.zip:application/zip +#SUFFIX:.lzh:application/x-lzh +#SUFFIX:.lha:application/x-lha +#SUFFIX:.dms:application/x-dms +#SUFFIX:.html:text/html +#SUFFIX:.txt:text/plain + +.h2 XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND +# VMS: +# ==== +# XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND will be used as a default in src/HTInit.c +# for viewing image content types when the DECW$DISPLAY logical +# is set. Make it the foreign command for your system's X image +# viewer (commonly, "xv"). It can be anything that will handle GIF, +# TIFF and other popular image formats. Freeware ports of xv for +# VMS were available in the ftp://ftp.wku.edu/vms/unsupported and +# http://www.openvms.digital.com/cd/XV310A/ subdirectories. You +# must also have a "%s" for the filename. The default is defined +# in userdefs.h and can be overridden here, or via the global or +# personal mailcap files (see below). +# +# Make this empty (but not commented out) if you don't have such a viewer or +# want to disable the built-in default viewer mappings for image types. +# +#XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND:xv %s +# +# Unix: +# ===== +# XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND will be used as a default in src/HTInit.c for +# viewing image content types when the DISPLAY environment variable +# is set. Make it the full path and name of the xli (also know as +# xloadimage or xview) command, or other image viewer. It can be +# anything that will handle GIF, TIFF and other popular image formats +# (xli does). The freeware distribution of xli is available in the +# ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib subdirectory. The shareware, xv, also is +# suitable. You must also have a "%s" for the filename; "&" for +# background is optional. The default is defined in userdefs.h and can be +# overridden here, or via the global or personal mailcap files (see below). +# Make this empty (but not commented out) if you don't have such a +# viewer or don't want to disable the built-in default viewer +# mappings for image types. +# Note that open is used as the default for NeXT, instead of the +# XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND definition. +# If you use xli, you may want to add the -quiet flag. +# +#XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND:xli %s & + +.h2 VIEWER +# MIME types may be assigned to external viewers using +# the VIEWER definition. +# +# NOTE: if you do not define a viewer to a new MIME type +# that you assigned above then it will be saved to +# disk by default. +# It is normally preferable to define new viewers in +# MAILCAP files (see below) instead of here: Definitions +# here are overridden by those in MAILCAP files and even +# by some built-in defaults in src/HTInit.c. +# +# The VIEWER definition takes the form of: +# VIEWER:<mime type>:<viewer command>[:<environment>] +# where -mime type is the MIME content type of the file +# -viewer command is a system command that can be +# used to display the file where %s is replaced +# within the command with the physical filename +# (e.g., "ghostview %s" becomes "ghostview /tmp/temppsfile") +# -environment is optional. The only valid keywords +# are currently XWINDOWS and NON_XWINDOWS. If the XWINDOWS +# environment is specified then the viewer will only be +# defined when the user has the environment variable DISPLAY +# (DECW$DISPLAY on VMS) defined. If the NON_XWINDOWS environment +# is specified the specified viewer will only be defined when the +# user DOES NOT have the environment variable DISPLAY defined. +# examples: +# VIEWER:image/gif:xli %s:XWINDOWS +# VIEWER:image/gif:ascii-view %s:NON_XWINDOWS +# VIEWER:application/start-elm:elm +# +# You must put the whole definition on one line. +# +# If you must use a colon in the viewer command, precede it with a backslash! +# +# The MIME_type:viewer:XWINDOWS definitions listed here in the lynx.cfg +# file are among those established via src/HTInit.c. For the image types, +# HTInit.c uses the XLOADIMAGE_COMMAND definition in userdefs.h or above +# (open is used for NeXT). You can change any of these defaults via the +# global or personal mailcap files. Assignments made here will be overridden +# by entries in those files. +# +.ex 7 +#VIEWER:application/postscript:ghostview %s&:XWINDOWS +#VIEWER:image/gif:xli %s&:XWINDOWS +#VIEWER:image/x-xbm:xli %s&:XWINDOWS +#VIEWER:image/png:xli %s&:XWINDOWS +#VIEWER:image/tiff:xli %s&:XWINDOWS +#VIEWER:image/jpeg:xli %s&:XWINDOWS +#VIEWER:video/mpeg:mpeg_play %s &:XWINDOWS + +.h2 GLOBAL_MAILCAP +.h2 PERSONAL_MAILCAP +# The global and personal MAILCAP files allow you to specify external +# viewers to be spawned when Lynx encounters different MIME types, which +# will override any of the suffix maps in this (lynx.cfg) configuration +# file, or in src/HTInit.c. See +.url http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1524 +# and the example mailcap file in the samples subdirectory. +# +# Unix: +# ==== +#GLOBAL_MAILCAP:/usr/local/lib/mosaic/mailcap +# VMS: +# === +#GLOBAL_MAILCAP:Lynx_Dir:mailcap +# +# Sought in user's home (Unix) or sys$login (VMS) directory. +#PERSONAL_MAILCAP:.mailcap + +.h2 PREFERRED_MEDIA_TYPES +# When doing a GET, lynx lists the MIME types which it knows how to present +# (the "Accept:" string). Depending on your system configuration, the +# mime.types or other data given by the GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP may include many +# entries that lynx really does not handle. Use this option to select one +# of the built-in subsets of the MIME types that lynx could list in the +# Accept. +# +# Values for this option are keywords: +# INTERNAL lynx's built-in types for internal conversions +# CONFIGFILE adds lynx.cfg +# USER adds PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP settings +# SYSTEM adds GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP settings +# ALL adds lynx's built-in types for external conversions +# +#PREFERRED_MEDIA_TYPES:internal + +.h2 PREFERRED_ENCODING +# When doing a GET, lynx tells what types of compressed data it can decompress +# (the "Accept-Encoding:" string). This is determined by compiled-in support +# for decompression or external decompression programs. +# +# Values for this option are keywords: +# NONE Do not request compressed data +# GZIP For gzip +# COMPRESS For compress +# BZIP2 For bzip2 +# BROTLI For brotli +# ALL All of the above. +#PREFERRED_ENCODING:all + +.h2 PREFERRED_CONTENT_TYPE +# When doing a GET, lynx expects the server to provide a Content-Type, i.e., +# the MIME name which tells it how to present data. When that is missing +# lynx uses this value. +#PREFERRED_CONTENT_TYPE: text/plain + +.h1 Keyboard Input + +.h2 KEYBOARD_LAYOUT +# If your terminal (or terminal emulator, or operating system) does not +# support 8-bit input (at all or in easy way), you can use Lynx to +# generate 8-bit characters from 7-bit ones output by terminal. +# +# Currently available keyboard layouts: +# ROT13'd keyboard layout +# JCUKEN Cyrillic, for AT 101-key kbd +# YAWERTY Cyrillic, for DEC LK201 kbd +# +# This feature is ifdef'd with EXP_KEYBOARD_LAYOUT. +#KEYBOARD_LAYOUT:JCUKEN Cyrillic, for AT 101-key kbd + +.h2 KEYMAP +# Key remapping definitions! +# +# You may redefine the keymapping of any function in Lynx by +# using the KEYMAP option. The basic form of KEYMAP is: +# KEYMAP:<KEYSTROKE>:<LYNX FUNCTION> +# (See below for an extended format.) +# +# You must map upper and lowercase keys separately. +# +# A representative list of functions mapped to their default keys is +# provided below. All of the mappings are commented out by default +# since they just repeat the default mappings, except for TOGGLE_HELP +# (see below). See LYKeymap.c for the complete key mapping. Use the +# 'K'eymap command when running Lynx for a list of the _current_ keymappings. +# +# You can disable any of the default key-mappings by mapping the key to +# "UNMAPPED". +# +# (However, in contrast to the output of 'K' command, +# 'H'elp (lynx_help/*.html and lynx_help/keystrokes/*.html files) shows +# the default mapping unless you change that files manually, +# so you are responsible for possible deviations +# when you are changing any KEYMAP below). +# +# Lynx accepts special keys either by name, or by lynx-specific codes. These +# names and codes are listed below, with a brief description: +.nf +# UPARROW: 0x100 (Up Arrow) +# DNARROW: 0x101 (Down Arrow) +# RTARROW: 0x102 (Right Arrow) +# LTARROW: 0x103 (Left Arrow) +# PGDOWN: 0x104 (Page Down) +# PGUP: 0x105 (Page Up) +# HOME: 0x106 (Keypad Home) +# END: 0x107 (Keypad End) +# F1: 0x108 (VT220 Function-key 1, also Help Key) +# DO_KEY: 0x109 (VT220 Function key 16, also "Do" Key) +# FIND_KEY: 0x10A (VT220 key with label "Home" may be treated as Find) +# SELECT_KEY: 0x10B (VT220 key with label "End" may be treated as Select) +# INSERT_KEY: 0x10C (VT220 Insert Key) +# REMOVE_KEY: 0x10D (VT220 Remove (DEL) Key) +# DO_NOTHING: 0x10E (reserved for internal use, DO_NOTHING) +# BACKTAB_KEY: 0x10F (Back Tab, e.g., using Shift) +# F2: 0x110 (VT220 Function-key 2) +# F3: 0x111 (VT220 Function-key 3) +# F4: 0x112 (VT220 Function-key 4) +# F5: 0x113 (VT220 Function-key 5) +# F6: 0x114 (VT220 Function-key 6) +# F7: 0x115 (VT220 Function-key 7) +# F8: 0x116 (VT220 Function-key 8) +# F9: 0x117 (VT220 Function-key 9) +# F10: 0x118 (VT220 Function-key 10) +# F11: 0x119 (VT220 Function-key 11) +# F12: 0x11A (VT220 Function-key 12) +# MOUSE: 0x11D (reserved for internal use with -use_mouse) +.fi +# Other codes not listed above may be available for additional keys, +# depending on operating system and libraries used to compile Lynx. +# On Unix-like systems, if compiled with slang or ncurses, an additional +# level of key mapping is supported via an external ".lynx-keymaps" file. +# This file, if found in the home directory at startup, will always be +# used under those conditions; see lynx-keymaps distributed in the samples +# subdirectory for further explanation. Note that mapping via +# .lynx-keymaps, if applicable, is a step that logically comes before the +# mappings done here: KEYMAP maps the result of that step (which still +# represents a key) to a function (which represents an action that Lynx +# should perform). +.nf +# +#KEYMAP:0x5C:SOURCE # Toggle source viewing mode (show HTML source) +#KEYMAP:^R:RELOAD # Reload the current document and redisplay +#KEYMAP:^U:NEXT_DOC # Undo PREV_DOC) +#KEYMAP:q:QUIT # Ask the user to quit +#KEYMAP:Q:ABORT # Quit without verification +#KEYMAP:0x20:NEXT_PAGE # Move down to next page +#KEYMAP:-:PREV_PAGE # Move up to previous page +#KEYMAP:^P:UP_TWO # Move display up two lines +#KEYMAP:INSERT_KEY:UP_TWO # Function key Insert - Move display up two lines +#KEYMAP:^N:DOWN_TWO # Move display down two lines +#KEYMAP:REMOVE_KEY:DOWN_TWO # Function key Remove - Move display down two lines +#KEYMAP:(:UP_HALF # Move display up half a page +#KEYMAP:):DOWN_HALF # Move display down half a page +#KEYMAP:^W:REFRESH # Refresh the screen +#KEYMAP:^A:HOME # Go to top of current document +#KEYMAP:HOME:HOME # Keypad Home - Go to top of current document +#KEYMAP:FIND_KEY:HOME # Function key Find - Go to top of current document +#KEYMAP:^E:END # Go to bottom of current document +#KEYMAP:END:END # Keypad End - Go to bottom of current document +#KEYMAP:SELECT_KEY:END # Function key Select - Go to bottom of current document +#KEYMAP:UPARROW:PREV_LINK # Move to the previous link or page +#KEYMAP:DNARROW:NEXT_LINK # Move to the next link or page +#KEYMAP:BACKTAB_KEY:FASTBACKW_LINK # Back Tab - Move to previous link or text area +#KEYMAP:^I:FASTFORW_LINK # Tab key - Move always to next link or text area +#KEYMAP:^:FIRST_LINK # Move to the first link on line +#KEYMAP:$:LAST_LINK # Move to the last link on line +#KEYMAP:<:UP_LINK # Move to the link above +#KEYMAP:>:DOWN_LINK # Move to the link below +#KEYMAP:0x7F:HISTORY # Show the history list +#KEYMAP:0x08:HISTORY # Show the history list +#KEYMAP:LTARROW:PREV_DOC # Return to the previous document in history stack +#KEYMAP:RTARROW:ACTIVATE # Select the current link +#KEYMAP:DO_KEY:ACTIVATE # Function key Do - Select the current link +#KEYMAP:g:GOTO # Goto a random URL +#KEYMAP:G:ECGOTO # Edit the current document's URL and go to it +#KEYMAP:H:HELP # Show default help screen +#KEYMAP:F1:DWIMHELP # Function key Help - Show a help screen +#KEYMAP:i:INDEX # Show default index +#*** Edit FORM_LINK_* messages in LYMessages_en.h if you change NOCACHE *** +#KEYMAP:x:NOCACHE # Force submission of form or link with no-cache +#*** Do not change INTERRUPT from 'z' & 'Z' *** +#KEYMAP:z:INTERRUPT # Interrupt network transmission +#KEYMAP:m:MAIN_MENU # Return to the main menu +#KEYMAP:o:OPTIONS # Show the options menu +#KEYMAP:i:INDEX_SEARCH # Search a server based index +#KEYMAP:/:WHEREIS # Find a string within the current document +#KEYMAP:n:NEXT # Find next occurrence of string within document +#KEYMAP:c:COMMENT # Comment to the author of the current document +#KEYMAP:C:CHDIR # Change current directory +#KEYMAP:e:EDIT # Edit current document or form's textarea (call: ^Ve) +#KEYMAP:E:ELGOTO # Edit the current link's URL or ACTION and go to it +#KEYMAP:=:INFO # Show info about current document +#KEYMAP:p:PRINT # Show print options +#KEYMAP:a:ADD_BOOKMARK # Add current document to bookmark list +#KEYMAP:v:VIEW_BOOKMARK # View the bookmark list +#KEYMAP:V:VLINKS # List links visited during the current Lynx session +#KEYMAP:!:SHELL # Spawn default shell +#KEYMAP:d:DOWNLOAD # Download current link +#KEYMAP:j:JUMP # Jump to a predefined target +#KEYMAP:k:KEYMAP # Display the current key map +#KEYMAP:l:LIST # List the references (links) in the current document +#KEYMAP:#:TOOLBAR # Go to the Toolbar or Banner in the current document +#KEYMAP:^T:TRACE_TOGGLE # Toggle detailed tracing for debugging +#KEYMAP:;:TRACE_LOG # View trace log if available for the current session +#KEYMAP:*:IMAGE_TOGGLE # Toggle inclusion of links for all images +#KEYMAP:[:INLINE_TOGGLE # Toggle pseudo-ALTs for inlines with no ALT string +#KEYMAP:]:HEAD # Send a HEAD request for current document or link +#*** Must be compiled with USE_EXTERNALS to enable EXTERN_LINK, EXTERN_PAGE *** +#KEYMAP:,:EXTERN_PAGE # Run external program with current page +#KEYMAP:.:EXTERN_LINK # Run external program with current link +#*** Escaping from text input fields with ^V is independent from this: *** +#KEYMAP:^V:SWITCH_DTD # Toggle between SortaSGML and TagSoup HTML parsing +#KEYMAP:0x00:DO_NOTHING # Does nothing (ignore this key) +#KEYMAP:DO_NOTHING:DO_NOTHING # Does nothing (ignore this key) +#KEYMAP:{:SHIFT_LEFT # shift the screen left +#KEYMAP:}:SHIFT_RIGHT # shift the screen right +#KEYMAP:|:LINEWRAP_TOGGLE # toggle linewrap on/off, for shift-commands +#KEYMAP:~:NESTED_TABLES # toggle nested-tables parsing on/off +.fi +# In addition to the bindings available by default, the following functions +# are not directly mapped to any keys by default, although some of them may +# be mapped in specific line-editor bindings (effective while in text input +# fields): +.nf +# +#KEYMAP:???:RIGHT_LINK # Move to the link to the right +#KEYMAP:???:LEFT_LINK # Move to the link to the left +#KEYMAP:???:LPOS_PREV_LINK # Like PREV_LINK, last column pos if form input +#KEYMAP:???:LPOS_NEXT_LINK # Like NEXT_LINK, last column pos if form input +#*** Only useful in form text fields , need PASS or prefixing with ^V: *** +#KEYMAP:???:DWIMHELP # Display help page that may depend on context +#KEYMAP:???:DWIMEDIT # Use external editor for context-dependent purpose +#*** Only useful in a form textarea, need PASS or prefixing with ^V: *** +#KEYMAP:???:EDITTEXTAREA # use external editor to edit a form textarea +#KEYMAP:???:GROWTEXTAREA # Add some blank lines to bottom of textarea +#KEYMAP:???:INSERTFILE # Insert file into a textarea (just above cursor) +#*** Only useful with dired support and OK_INSTALL: *** +#KEYMAP:???:INSTALL # install (i.e. copy) local files to new location +.fi +# +# If TOGGLE_HELP is mapped, in novice mode the second help menu line +# can be toggled among NOVICE_LINE_TWO_A, _B, and _C, as defined in +# LYMessages_en.h Otherwise, it will be NOVICE_LINE_TWO. +# +#KEYMAP:O:TOGGLE_HELP # Show other commands in the novice help menu +# +# KEYMAP lines can have one or two additional fields. The extended format is +# KEYMAP:<KEYSTROKE>:[<MAIN LYNX FUNCTION>]:<OTHER BINDING>[:<SELECT>] +# +# If the additional field OTHER BINDING specifies DIRED, then the function is +# mapped in the override table used only in DIRED mode. This is only valid +# if lynx was compiled with dired support and OK_OVERRIDE defined. A +# MAIN LYNX FUNCTION must be given (it should of course be one that makes +# sense in Dired mode), and SELECT is meaningless. Default built-in override +# mappings are +# +#KEYMAP:^U:NEXT_DOC:DIRED # Undo going back to the previous document +#KEYMAP:.:TAG_LINK:DIRED # Tag a file or directory for later action +#KEYMAP:c:CREATE:DIRED # Create a new file or directory +#KEYMAP:C:CHDIR:DIRED # change current directory +#KEYMAP:f:DIRED_MENU:DIRED # Display a menu of file operations +#KEYMAP:m:MODIFY:DIRED # Modify name or location of a file or directory +#KEYMAP:r:REMOVE:DIRED # Remove files or directories +#KEYMAP:t:TAG_LINK:DIRED # Tag a file or directory for later action +#KEYMAP:u:UPLOAD:DIRED # Show menu of "Upload Options" +# +# If the OTHER BINDING field does not specify DIRED, then it is taken as a +# line-editor action. It is possible to keep the MAIN LYNX FUNCTION field +# empty in that case, for changing only the line-editing behavior. +# If alternative line edit styles are compiled in, and modifying a key's +# line-editor binding on a per style basis is possible, then SELECT can be +# used to specify which styles are affected. By default, or if SELECT is +# 0, all line edit styles are affected. If SELECT is a positive integer +# number, only the binding for the numbered style is changed (numbering +# is in the order in which styles are shown in the Options Menu, starting +# with 1 for the Default style). If SELECT is negative (-n), all styles +# except n are affected. +.nf +# +# NOP # Do Nothing +# ABORT # Input cancelled +# +# BOL # Go to begin of line +# EOL # Go to end of line +# FORW # Cursor forwards +# FORW_RL # Cursor forwards or right link +# BACK # Cursor backwards +# FORWW # Word forward +# BACKW # Word back +# BACK_LL # Cursor backwards or left link +# +# DELN # Delete next/curr char +# DELP # Delete prev char +# DELNW # Delete next word +# DELPW # Delete prev word +# DELBL # Delete back to BOL +# DELEL # Delete through EOL +# ERASE # Erase the line +# LOWER # Lower case the line +# UPPER # Upper case the line +# +# LKCMD # In fields: Invoke key command prompt (default for ^V) +# PASS # In fields: handle as non-lineedit key; in prompts: ignore +# +.fi +# Modify following key (prefixing only works within line-editing, edit actions +# of some resulting prefixed keys are built-in, see Line Editor help pages) +# SETM1 # Set modifier 1 flag (default for ^X - key prefix) +# SETM2 # Set modifier 2 flag (another key prefix - same effect) +# +# May not always be compiled in: +.nf +# +# TPOS # Transpose characters +# SETMARK # emacs-like set-mark-command +# XPMARK # emacs-like exchange-point-and-mark +# KILLREG # emacs-like kill-region +# YANK # emacs-like yank +# SWMAP # Switch input keymap +# PASTE # ClipBoard to Lynx - Windows Extension +# +.fi +# May work differently from expected if not bound to their expected keys: +.nf +# +# CHAR # Insert printable char (default for all ASCII printable) +# ENTER # Input complete, return char/lynxkeycode (for RETURN/ENTER) +# TAB # Input complete, return TAB (for ASCII TAB char ^I) +# +.fi +# Internal use, probably not useful for binding, listed for completeness: +.nf +# +# UNMOD # Fall back to no-modifier command +# AIX # Hex 97 +# C1CHAR # Insert C1 char if printable +# +.fi +# If OTHER BINDING specifies PASS, then if the key is pressed in a text input +# field it is passed by the built-in line-editor to normal KEYMAP handling, +# i.e. this flag acts like an implied ^V escape (always overrides line-editor +# behavior of the key). For example, +#KEYMAP:INSERT_KEY:UP_TWO:PASS # Function key Insert - Move display up two lines +# +# Other examples (repeating built-in bindings) +#KEYMAP:^V::LKCMD # set (only) line-edit action for ^V +#KEYMAP:^V:SWITCH_DTD:LKCMD # set main lynxaction and line-edit action for ^V +#KEYMAP:^U::ERASE:1 # set line-edit binding for ^U, for default style +#KEYMAP:^[::SETM2:3 # use escape key as modifier - works only sometimes + +.h1 External Programs +# These settings control the ability of Lynx to invoke various programs for +# the user. + +.h2 CSWING_PATH +# VMS ONLY: +#========== +# On VMS, CSwing (an XTree emulation for VTxxx terminals) is intended for +# use as the Directory/File Manager (sources, objects, or executables were +# available from ftp://narnia.memst.edu/). CSWING_PATH should be defined +# here or in userdefs.h to your foreign command for CSwing, with any +# regulatory switches you want included. If not defined, or defined as +# a zero-length string ("") or "none" (case-insensitive), the support +# will be disabled. It will also be disabled if the -nobrowse or +# -selective switches are used, or if the file_url restriction is set. +# +# When enabled, the DIRED_MENU command (normally 'f' or 'F') will invoke +# CSwing, normally with the current default directory as an argument to +# position the user on that node of the directory tree. However, if the +# current document is a local directory listing, or a local file and not +# one of the temporary menu or list files, the associated directory will +# be passed as an argument, to position the user on that node of the tree. +# +#CSWING_PATH:swing + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS +# AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS determines when local file directory listings are +# automatically regenerated (by re-reading the actual directory from disk). +# Set the value to 0 to avoid automatic regeneration in most cases. This is +# useful for browsing large directories that take some time to read and format. +# An update can still always be forced with the RELOAD key, and specific DIRED +# actions may cause a refresh anyway. Set the value to 1 to force regeneration +# after commands that usually change the directory or some files and would make +# the displayed info stale, like EDIT and REMOVE. Set it to 2 (the default) or +# greater to force regeneration even after leaving the displayed directory +# listing by some action that usually causes no change, like GOTO or entering a +# file with the ACTIVATE key. This option is only honored in DIRED mode (i.e. +# when lynx is compiled with DIRED_SUPPORT and it is not disabled with a +# -restriction). Local directories displayed without DIRED normally act as if +# AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS:0 was in effect. +# +#AUTO_UNCACHE_DIRLISTS:2 + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 LIST_FORMAT +# LIST_FORMAT defines the display for local files when Lynx has been +# compiled with LONG_LIST defined in the Makefile. The default is set +# in userdefs.h, normally to "ls -l" format, and can be changed here +# by uncommenting the indicated lines, or adding a definition with a +# modified parameter list. +# +# This feature is not available for VMS. +# +# The percent items in the list are interpreted as follows: +.nf +# +# %p Unix-style permission bits +# %l link count +# %o owner of file +# %g group of file +# %d date of last modification +# %a anchor pointing to file or directory +# %A as above but don't show symbolic links +# %t type of file (description derived from MIME type) +# %T MIME type as known by Lynx (from mime.types or default) +# %k size of file in Kilobytes +# %K as above but omit size for directories +# %s size of file in bytes +# +.fi +# Anything between the percent and the letter is passed on to sprintf. +# A double percent yields a literal percent on output. Other characters +# are passed through literally. +# +# If you want only the filename: +# +.ex +#LIST_FORMAT: %a +# +# If you want a brief output: +# +.ex +#LIST_FORMAT: %4K %-12.12d %a +# +# If you want the Unix "ls -l" format: +# +.ex +#LIST_FORMAT: %p %4l %-8.8o %-8.8g %7s %-12.12d %a + +.h1 External Programs + +.h2 DIRED_MENU +# Unix ONLY: +#=========== +# DIRED_MENU items are used to compose the F)ull menu list in DIRED mode +# The behavior of the default configuration given here is much the same +# as it was when this menu was hard-coded but these items can now be adjusted +# to suit local needs. In particular, many of the LYNXDIRED actions can be +# replaced with lynxexec, lynxprog and lynxcgi script references. +# +# NOTE that defining even one DIRED_MENU line overrides all the built-in +# definitions, so a complete set must then be defined here. +# +# Each line consists of the following fields: +.nf +# +# DIRED_MENU:type:suffix:link text:extra text:action +# +# type: TAG: list only when one or more files are tagged +# FILE: list only when the current selection is a regular file +# DIR: list only when the current selection is a directory +# LINK: list only when the current selection is a symbolic link +# +# suffix: list only if the current selection ends in this pattern +# +# link text: the displayed text of the link +# +# extra text: the text displayed following the link +# +# action: the URL to be followed upon selection +# +# link text and action are scanned for % sequences that are expanded +# at display time as follows: +# +# %p path of current selection +# %f filename (last component) of current selection +# %t tagged list (full paths) +# %l list of tagged file names +# %d the current directory +# +.fi +#DIRED_MENU:::New File:(in current directory):LYNXDIRED://NEW_FILE%d +#DIRED_MENU:::New Directory:(in current directory):LYNXDIRED://NEW_FOLDER%d +# +# Following depends on OK_INSTALL +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Install:selected file to new location:LYNXDIRED://INSTALL_SRC%p +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Install:selected directory to new location:LYNXDIRED://INSTALL_SRC%p +# +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Modify File Name:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_NAME%p +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Modify Directory Name:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_NAME%p +#DIRED_MENU:LINK::Modify Name:(of selected symbolic link):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_NAME%p +# +# Following depends on OK_PERMIT +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Modify File Permissions:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://PERMIT_SRC%p +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Modify Directory Permissions:(of current selection):LYNXDIRED://PERMIT_SRC%p +# +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Change Location:(of selected file):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_LOCATION%p +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Change Location:(of selected directory):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_LOCATION%p +#DIRED_MENU:LINK::Change Location:(of selected symbolic link):LYNXDIRED://MODIFY_LOCATION%p +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Remove File:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_SINGLE%p +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Remove Directory:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_SINGLE%p +#DIRED_MENU:LINK::Remove Symbolic Link:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_SINGLE%p +# +# Following depends on OK_UUDECODE and !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::UUDecode:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UUDECODE%p +# +# Following depends on OK_TAR and !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tar.Z:Expand:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR_Z%p +# +# Following depend on OK_TAR and OK_GZIP and !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tar.gz:Expand:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR_GZ%p +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tgz:Expand:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR_GZ%p +# +# Following depends on !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.Z:Uncompress:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://DECOMPRESS%p +# +# Following depends on OK_GZIP and !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.gz:Uncompress:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNGZIP%p +# +# Following depends on OK_ZIP and !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.zip:Uncompress:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNZIP%p +# +# Following depends on OK_TAR and !ARCHIVE_ONLY +#DIRED_MENU:FILE:.tar:UnTar:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://UNTAR%p +# +# Following depends on OK_TAR +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Tar:(current selection):LYNXDIRED://TAR%p +# +# Following depends on OK_TAR and OK_GZIP +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Tar and compress:(using GNU gzip):LYNXDIRED://TAR_GZ%p +# +# Following depends on OK_ZIP +#DIRED_MENU:DIR::Package and compress:(using zip):LYNXDIRED://ZIP%p +# +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Compress:(using Unix compress):LYNXDIRED://COMPRESS%p +# +# Following depends on OK_GZIP +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Compress:(using gzip):LYNXDIRED://GZIP%p +# +# Following depends on OK_ZIP +#DIRED_MENU:FILE::Compress:(using zip):LYNXDIRED://ZIP%p +# +#DIRED_MENU:TAG::Move all tagged items to another location.::LYNXDIRED://MOVE_TAGGED%d +# +# Following depends on OK_INSTALL +#DIRED_MENU:TAG::Install tagged files into another directory.::LYNXDIRED://INSTALL_SRC%00 +# +#DIRED_MENU:TAG::Remove all tagged files and directories.::LYNXDIRED://REMOVE_TAGGED +#DIRED_MENU:TAG::Untag all tagged items.::LYNXDIRED://CLEAR_TAGGED + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 NONRESTARTING_SIGWINCH +# Some systems only: +#=================== +# Lynx tries to detect window size changes with a signal handler for +# SIGWINCH if supported. If NONRESTARTING_SIGWINCH is set to TRUE, +# and the sigaction interface is available on the system, the handler +# is installed as 'non-restarting'. On some systems (depending on the +# library used for handling keyboard input, e.g. ncurses), this allows +# more immediate notification of window size change events. If the value +# is set to FALSE, the signal() interface is used; this normally makes +# the handler 'restarting', with the effect that lynx can react to size +# changes only after some key is pressed. The value can also be set to +# XWINDOWS; this is equivalent to TRUE when the user has the environment +# variable DISPLAY defined *at program start*, and equivalent to FALSE +# otherwise. The non-restarting behavior can also be changed to TRUE +# or FALSE with the -nonrestarting_sigwinch switch, which overrides the +# value in this file. +# +# Note that Lynx never re-parses document text purely as a result of a +# window size change, so text lines may appear truncated after narrowing +# the window, until the document is reloaded with ^R or a similar key +# or until a different text is loaded. +# +# The default is FALSE since there is a possibility that non-restarting +# interrupts may be mis-interpreted as fatal input errors in some +# configurations (leading to an abrupt program exit), and since this +# option is useful mostly only for users running Lynx under xterm or a +# similar X terminal emulator. On systems where the preconditions don't +# apply this option is ignored. +# +#NONRESTARTING_SIGWINCH:FALSE + +.h2 NO_FORCED_CORE_DUMP +# Unix ONLY: +#=========== +# If NO_FORCED_CORE_DUMP is set to TRUE, Lynx will not force +# core dumps via abort() calls on fatal errors or assert() +# calls to check potentially fatal errors. The compilation +# default normally is FALSE, and can be changed here. The +# compilation or configuration default can be toggled via +# the -core command line switch. +# Note that this setting cannot be used to prevent core dumps +# with certainty. If this is important, means provided by the +# operating system or kernel should be used. +# +#NO_FORCED_CORE_DUMP:FALSE + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 COLOR +# COLORS are only available if compiled with SVr4 curses or slang. This is +# the old color configuration. The COLOR_STYLE configuration is compiled-in +# and can simulate this if the ".lss" filename is empty. +# +# The line must be of the form: +# +# COLOR:Integer:Foreground:Background +.nf +# +# The Integer value is interpreted as follows: +# 0 - normal - normal text +# 1 - bold - hyperlinks, see also BOLD_* options above +# 2 - reverse - statusline +# 3 - bold + reverse (not used) +# 4 - underline - text emphasis (EM, I, B tags etc.) +# 5 - bold + underline - hyperlinks within text emphasis +# 6 - reverse + underline - currently selected hyperlink +# 7 - reverse + underline + bold - WHEREIS search hits +# +# Each Foreground and Background value must be one of: +# black red green brown +# blue magenta cyan lightgray +# gray brightred brightgreen yellow +# brightblue brightmagenta brightcyan white +.fi +# or (if you have configured using -enable-default-colors with ncurses or +# slang), "default" may be used for foreground and background. +# +# Note that in most cases a white background is really "lightgray", since +# terminals generally do not implement bright backgrounds. +# +# Uncomment and change any of the compilation defaults. +# +#COLOR:0:black:white +#COLOR:1:blue:white +#COLOR:2:yellow:blue +#COLOR:3:green:white +#COLOR:4:magenta:white +#COLOR:5:blue:white +#COLOR:6:red:white +COLOR:6:brightred:black +#COLOR:7:magenta:cyan + +.h2 COLOR_STYLE +# Also known as "lss" (lynx style-sheet), the color-style file assigns color +# combination to tags and combinations of tags. Normally a non-empty value +# is compiled into lynx, and the user can override that using the -lss +# command-line option. The configure script allows one to compile in an +# empty string. If lynx finds no value for this setting, it simulates the +# non-color-style assignments using the COLOR settings. +# +# If neither the command-line "-lss" or this COLOR_STYLE setting are given, +# lynx tries the environment variables "LYNX_LSS" and "lynx_lss". If neither +# is set, lynx uses the first compiled-in value (which as noted, may be empty). +# +# At startup, lynx remembers the name of the color-style file which was used, +# and together with each file specified, provides those as choices in the +# O)ptions menu. +# +#COLOR_STYLE: lynx.lss +#COLOR_STYLE: blue-background.lss +#COLOR_STYLE: bright-blue.lss +#COLOR_STYLE: midnight.lss +#COLOR_STYLE: mild-colors.lss +#COLOR_STYLE: opaque.lss + +.h2 NESTED_TABLES +# This is an experimental feature for improving table layout. +# It is enabled by default when the COLOR_STYLE configuration is used, +# and false otherwise. +# +#NESTED_TABLES: true + +.h2 NO_TABLE_CENTER +# Normally table cells are centered on the table grid. +# Set this option to true to disable centering. +# The -center command-line option toggles this setting between true/false. +#NO_TABLE_CENTER: false + +.h2 ASSUMED_COLOR +# If built with a library that recognizes default colors (usually ncurses or +# slang), and if the corresponding option is compiled into lynx, lynx +# initializes it to assume the corresponding foreground and background colors. +# Default colors are those that the terminal (emulator) itself is initialized +# to. For instance, you might have an xterm running with black text on a white +# background, and want lynx to display colored text on the white background, +# but leave the possibility of using the same configuration to draw colored +# text on a different xterm, this time using its background set to black. +# +# If built with conventional SVr3/SVr4 curses, tells lynx to use color pair 0 +# when the given colors match this setting. That gives a similar effect, +# though not as flexible. You will get the best results by setting the +# terminal's default colors to match the prevailing text and background colors +# that you have setup with lynx, and then alter the ASSUMED_COLOR setting to +# match that. If you do not alter the ASSUMED_COLOR setting, curses assumes +# color pair 0's background is black, which implies that its foreground (text) +# is white. +# +# The first value given is the foreground, the second is the background. +#ASSUMED_COLOR:default:default + +.h2 DEFAULT_COLORS +# If built with a library that recognizes default colors (usually ncurses or +# slang), and if the corresponding option is compiled into lynx, lynx +# initializes it to assume the corresponding foreground and background colors. +# Default colors are those that the terminal (emulator) itself is initialized +# to. +# +# Use this feature to disable the default-colors feature at runtime. +# This is useful for constructing scripts which use the non-color-style +# scheme, e.g., the oldlynx script. +# +# This should precede ASSUMED_COLOR settings. +#DEFAULT_COLORS:true + +.h1 External Programs + +.h2 EXTERNAL +# External application support. This feature allows Lynx to pass a given +# URL to an external program. It was written for three reasons. +# +# 1) To overcome the deficiency of Lynx_386 not supporting ftp and news. +# External programs can be used instead by passing the URL. +# +# 2) To allow for background transfers in multitasking systems. +# I use wget for http and ftp transfers via the external command. +# +# 3) To allow for new URLs to be used through Lynx. +# URLs can be made up such as mymail: to spawn desired applications +# via the external command. +# +# Restrictions can be imposed using -restrictions=externals at the Lynx command +# line. This will disallow all EXTERNAL lines in lynx.cfg that have FALSE in +# the 3rd field (not counting the name of the setting). TRUE lines will still +# function. +# +# The lynx.cfg line is as follows: +# +# EXTERNAL:<url>:<command> %s:<norestriction>:<allow_for_activate>[:environment] +# +# <url> Any given URL. This can be normal ones like ftp or http or it +# can be one made up like mymail. +# +# <command> The command to run with %s being the URL that will be passed. +# In Linux I use "wget -q %s &" (no quotes) to spawn a copy of wget for +# downloading http and ftp files in the background. In Win95 I use +# "start ncftp %s" to spawn ncftp in a new window. +# +# <norestriction> This complements the -restrictions=externals feature to allow +# for certain externals to be enabled while restricting others. TRUE means +# a command will still function while Lynx is restricted. WB +# +# <allow_for_activate> Setting this to TRUE allows the use of this command not +# only when EXTERN key is pressed, but also when ACTIVATE command is invoked +# (i.e., activating the link with the given prefix will be equivalent to +# pressing EXTERN key on it). If this component of the line is absent, then +# FALSE is assumed. +# +# [:environment] Optional, if XWINDOWS then command is allowed only if +# $DISPLAY environment variable is set, else if NON_XWINDOWS then command +# is allowed only if $DISPLAY environment variable is not set, if absent or +# anything else command is always allowed. +# +# For invoking the command use the EXTERN_LINK or EXTERN_PAGE key. By default +# EXTERN_LINK is mapped to '.', and EXTERN_PAGE to ',' (if the feature is +# enabled), see the KEYMAP section above. +# +#EXTERNAL:ftp:wget %s &:TRUE + +.h2 EXTERNAL_MENU +# Like EXTERNAL, but allows customizing the menu name. +# Here is the syntax: +.ex 1 +# EXTERNAL_MENU:<url>:<menu>:<command> %s:<norestriction>:<allow_for_activate>[:environment] + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 RULE +.h2 RULESFILE +# CERN-style rules, EXPERIMENTAL - URL-specific rules +# +# A CERN-style rules file can be given with RULESFILE. Use the system's +# native format for filenames, on Unix '~' is also recognized. If a filename +# is given, the file must exist. +# +# Single CERN-style rules can be specified with RULES. +# +# Both options can be repeated, rules accumulate in the order +# given, they will be applied in first-to-last order. See cernrules.txt +# in the samples subdirectory for further explanation. +# +# Examples: +.ex 5 +# RULESFILE:/etc/lynx/cernrules +# RULE:Fail gopher:* # reject by scheme +# RULE:Pass finger://*@localhost/ # allow this, +# RULE:Fail finger:* # but not others +# RULE:Redirect http://old.server/* http://new.server/* + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 PRETTYSRC +# Enable pretty source view +#PRETTYSRC:FALSE + +.h2 PRETTYSRC_SPEC +# Pretty source view settings. These settings are in effect when -prettysrc +# is specified. +# The following lexical elements (lexemes) are recognized: +# comment, tag, attribute, attribute value, generalized angle brackets ( +# '<' '>' '</' ), entity, hyperlink destination, entire file, bad sequence, +# bad tag, bad attribute, sgml special. +# The following group of option tells which styles will surround each +# lexeme. The syntax of option in this group is: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:<LEXEMENAME>:<TAGSPEC>:<TAGSPEC> +# The first <TAGSPEC> specifies what tags will precede lexemes of that class +# in the internal html markup. The second - what will be placed (internally) +# after it. +# TAGSPEC has the following syntax: +# <TAGSPEC>:= [ (<TAGOPEN> | <TAGCLOSE>) <SPACE>+ ]* +# <TAGOPEN>:= tagname[.classname] +# <TAGCLOSE>:= !tagname +# +# The following table gives correspondence between lexeme and lexeme name +.nf +# Lexeme LEXEMENAME FURTHER EXPLANATION +# ========================================================= +# comment COMM +# tag TAG recognized tag name only +# attribute ATTRIB +# attribute value ATTRVAL +# generalized brackets ABRACKET < > </ +# entity ENTITY +# hyperlink destination HREF +# entire file ENTIRE +# bad sequence BADSEQ bad entity or invalid construct at text +# level. +# bad tag BADTAG Unrecognized construct in generalized +# brackets. +# bad attribute BADATTR The name of the attribute unknown to lynx +# of the tag known to lynx. (i.e., +# attributes of unknown tags will have +# markup of ATTRIB) +# sgml special SGMLSPECIAL doctype, sgmlelt, sgmlele, +# sgmlattlist, marked section, identifier +.fi +# +# Notes: +# +# 1) The markup for HTML_ENTIRE will be emitted only once - it will surround +# entire file source. +# +# 2) The tagnames specified by TAGSPEC should be valid html tag names. +# +# 3) If the tag/class combination given by TAGOPEN is not assigned a color +# style in lss file (for lynx compiled with lss support), that tag/class +# combination will be emitted anyway during internal html markup. Such +# combinations will be also reported to the trace log. +# +# 4) Lexeme 'tag' means tag name only +# +# 5) Angle brackets of html specials won't be surrounded by markup for ABRACKET +# +.ex +# PRETTYSRC_SPEC:COMM:B I:!I !B +# HTML comments will be surrounded by <b><i> and </i></b> in the +# internal html markup +.ex +# PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRVAL: span.attrval : !span +# Values of the attributes will be surrounded by the +# <SPAN class=attrval> </SPAN> +.ex +# PRETTYSRC_SPEC:HREF:: +# No special html markup will surround hyperlink destinations ( +# this means that only default color style for hrefs will be applied +# to them) +# +# For lynx compiled with lss support, the following settings are the default: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:COMM:span.htmlsrc_comment:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:TAG:span.htmlsrc_tag:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRIB:span.htmlsrc_attrib:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRVAL:span.htmlsrc_attrval:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ABRACKET:span.htmlsrc_abracket:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTITY:span.htmlsrc_entity:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:HREF:span.htmlsrc_href:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTIRE:span.htmlsrc_entire:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADSEQ:span.htmlsrc_badseq:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADTAG:span.htmlsrc_badtag:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADATTR:span.htmlsrc_badattr:!span +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:SGMLSPECIAL:span.htmlsrc_sgmlspecial:!span +# the styles corresponding to them are present in sample .lss file. +# For lynx compiled without lss support, the following settings are the default: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:COMM:b:!b +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:TAG:b:!b +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRIB:b:!b +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ATTRVAL:: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ABRACKET:b:!b +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTITY:b:!b +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:HREF:: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:ENTIRE:: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADSEQ:b:!b +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADTAG:: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:BADATTR:: +#PRETTYSRC_SPEC:SGMLSPECIAL:b:!b + +.h2 HTMLSRC_ATTRNAME_XFORM +.h2 HTMLSRC_TAGNAME_XFORM +# Options HTMLSRC_TAGNAME_XFORM and HTMLSRC_ATTRNAME_XFORM control the way the +# names of tags and names of attributes are transformed correspondingly. +# Possible values: 0 - lowercase, 1 - leave as is, 2 - uppercase. +#HTMLSRC_TAGNAME_XFORM:2 +#HTMLSRC_ATTRNAME_XFORM:2 + +.h2 PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING +# PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING - pretty source view setting +# If "keypad mode" in 'O'ptions screen is "Links are numbered" or +# "Links and form fields are numbered", and PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING is +# TRUE, then links won't be numbered in psrc view and will be numbered +# otherwise. Set this setting to TRUE if you prefer numbered links, but wish +# to get valid HTML source when printing or mailing when in psrc view. +# Default is FALSE. +#PRETTYSRC_VIEW_NO_ANCHOR_NUMBERING:FALSE + +.h1 HTML Parsing + +.h2 FORCE_EMPTY_HREFLESS_A +# FORCE_EMPTY_HREFLESS_A - HTML parsing +# This option mirrors command-line option with the same name. Default is +# FALSE. If true, then any 'A' element without HREF will be closed +# immediately. This is useful when viewing documentation produced by broken +# translator that doesn't emit balanced A elements. If lynx was compiled with +# color styles, setting this option to TRUE will make lynx screen much more +# reasonable (otherwise all text will probably have color corresponding to the +# A element). +# +#FORCE_EMPTY_HREFLESS_A:FALSE + +.h2 HIDDEN_LINK_MARKER +# HIDDEN_LINK_MARKER - HTML parsing +# This option defines the string that will be used as title of hidden link (a +# link that otherwise will have no label associated with it). Using an empty +# string as the value will cause lynx to behave in the old way - hidden links +# will be handled according to other settings (mostly the parameter of +# -hiddenlinks command-line switch). If the value is non-empty string, hidden +# link becomes non-hidden so it won't be handled as hidden link, e.g., listed +# among hidden links on 'l'isting page. +# +#HIDDEN_LINK_MARKER: + +.h2 XHTML_PARSING +# XHTML_PARSING - HTML parsing +# When true, tells lynx that it can ignore certain tags which have no content +# in an XHTML 1.0 document. For example +# <p /> +# <a /> +# When the option is false, lynx will not treat the tag as an ending. +#XHTML_PARSING:FALSE + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 JUSTIFY +# JUSTIFY - Appearance +# This option mirrors command-line option with same name. Default is TRUE. If +# true, most of text (except headers and like this) will be justified. This +# has no influence on CJK text rendering. +# +# This option is only available if Lynx was compiled with USE_JUSTIFY_ELTS. +# +#JUSTIFY:FALSE + +.h2 JUSTIFY_MAX_VOID_PERCENT +# JUSTIFY_MAX_VOID_PERCENT - Appearance +# This option controls the maximum allowed value for ratio (in percents) of +# 'the number of spaces to spread across the line to justify it' to +# 'max line size for current style and nesting' when justification is allowed. +# When that ratio exceeds the value specified, that particular line won't be +# justified. I.e. the value 28 for this setting will mean maximum value for +# that ratio is 0.28. +# +#JUSTIFY_MAX_VOID_PERCENT:35 + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION +# If TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION is set to TRUE, and lynx was compiled with +# TEXTFIELDS_MAY_NEED_ACTIVATION defined, then text input form fields need +# to be activated (by pressing the Enter key or similar) before the user +# can enter or modify input. By default, input fields become automatically +# activated when selected. Requiring explicit activation can be desired for +# users who use alphanumeric keys for navigation (or other keys that have +# special meaning in the line editor - ' ', 'b', INS, DEL, etc), and don't +# want to 'get stuck' in form fields. Instead of setting the option here, +# explicit activation can also be requested with the -tna command line +# option. +# +#TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION:FALSE + +.h2 LEFTARROW_IN_TEXTFIELD_PROMPT +# LEFTARROW_IN_TEXTFIELD_PROMPT +# This option controls what happens when a Left Arrow key is pressed while +# in the first position of an active text input field. By default, Lynx +# asks for confirmation ("Do you want to go back to the previous document?") +# only if the contents of the fields have been changed since entering it. +# If set to TRUE, the confirmation prompt is always issued. +# +#LEFTARROW_IN_TEXTFIELD_PROMPT:FALSE + +.h1 Timeouts + +.h2 CONNECT_TIMEOUT +# Specifies (in seconds) connect timeout. Default value is rather huge. +#CONNECT_TIMEOUT:18000 + +.h2 READ_TIMEOUT +# Specifies (in seconds) read-timeout. Default value is rather huge. +#READ_TIMEOUT:18000 + +.h1 Internal Behavior +# These settings control internal lynx behavior - the way it interacts with the +# operating system and Internet. Modifying these settings will not change +# the rendition of documents that you browse with lynx, but can change various +# delays and resource utilization. + +.h2 FTP_PASSIVE +# Set FTP_PASSIVE to TRUE if you want to use passive mode ftp transfers. +# You might have to do this if you're behind a restrictive firewall. +#FTP_PASSIVE:TRUE + +.h2 ENABLE_LYNXRC +# The forms-based O'ptions menu shows a (!) marker beside items which are not +# saved to ~/.lynxrc -- the reason for disabling some of these items is that +# they are likely to cause confusion if they are read from the .lynxrc file for +# each session. However, they can be enabled or disabled using the +# ENABLE_LYNXRC settings. The default (compiled-in) settings are shown below. +# The second column is the name by which a setting is saved to .lynxrc (which +# is chosen where possible to correspond with lynx.cfg). Use "OFF" to disable +# writing a setting, "ON" to enable it. Settings are read from .lynxrc after +# the corresponding data from lynx.cfg, so they override lynx.cfg, which is +# probably what users expect. +# +# Note that a few settings (Cookies and Show images) are comprised of more than +# one lynx.cfg setting. +.nf +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:ACCEPT_ALL_COOKIES:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:ASSUME_CHARSET:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:AUTO_SESSION:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:BOOKMARK_FILE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:CASE_SENSITIVE_SEARCHING:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:CHARACTER_SET:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COLLAPSE_BR_TAGS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COOKIE_ACCEPT_DOMAINS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COOKIE_FILE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COOKIE_LOOSE_INVALID_DOMAINS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COOKIE_QUERY_INVALID_DOMAINS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COOKIE_REJECT_DOMAINS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:COOKIE_STRICT_INVALID_DOMAIN:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:DIR_LIST_STYLE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:DISPLAY:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:EMACS_KEYS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:FILE_EDITOR:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:FILE_SORTING_METHOD:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:FORCE_SSL_PROMPT:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:FTP_PASSIVE:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:HTML5_CHARSETS:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:HTTP_PROTOCOL:1.0 +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:IDNA_MODE:TR46 +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:KBLAYOUT:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:KEYPAD_MODE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:LINEEDIT_MODE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:LOCALE_CHARSET:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:MAKE_PSEUDO_ALTS_FOR_INLINES:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:MULTI_BOOKMARK:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:NO_PAUSE:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:PERSONAL_MAIL_ADDRESS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:PREFERRED_CHARSET:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:PREFERRED_ENCODING:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:PREFERRED_LANGUAGE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:PREFERRED_MEDIA_TYPES:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:RAW_MODE:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:RUN_ALL_EXECUTION_LINKS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:RUN_EXECUTION_LINKS_LOCAL:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SCROLLBAR:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SELECT_POPUPS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SEND_USERAGENT:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SESSION_FILE:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SET_COOKIES:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SHOW_CURSOR:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SHOW_KB_RATE:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:SUB_BOOKMARKS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:TAGSOUP:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:UNDERLINE_LINKS:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:USER_MODE:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:USERAGENT:OFF +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:VERBOSE_IMAGES:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:VI_KEYS:ON +#ENABLE_LYNXRC:VISITED_LINKS:ON +.fi + +.h1 External Programs +# Any of the compiled-in pathnames of external programs can be overridden +# by specifying the corresponding xxx_PATH variable. If the variable is +# given as an empty string, lynx will not use the program. For a few cases, +# there are internal functions which can be used instead. + +.h2 BZIP2_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode and web connections to compress a file +# to ".bz2", e.g., the Unix command "bzip2". + +.h2 CHMOD_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to change file protection, e.g., the +# Unix command "chmod". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 COMPRESS_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode and web connections to compress a file +# to ".Z", e.g., the Unix command "compress". + +.h2 COPY_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to copy a file, e.g., the +# Unix command "cp". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 GZIP_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode and web connections to compress a file +# to ".gz", e.g., the Unix command "gzip". + +.h2 INFLATE_PATH +# This is the path used for web connections to compress a file using "inflate" +# compression. + +.h2 INSTALL_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to install files, e.g., the +# Unix command "install". + +.h2 MKDIR_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to create a directory, e.g., the +# Unix command "mkdir". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 MV_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to move a file, e.g., the +# Unix command "mv". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 RLOGIN_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to login remotely, e.g., the +# Unix command "rlogin". + +.h2 RMDIR_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to remove a directory, e.g., the +# Unix command "rmdir". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 RM_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to remove a file, e.g., the +# Unix command "rm". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 SETFONT_PATH +# This is the path used for a command which can be used to load a console font +# for the experimental font-switch feature, e.g., the program "setfont". + +.h2 TAR_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to create a tar archive from one or more +# files. + +.h2 TELNET_PATH +# This is the path for a program which can be used to make a "telnet" connection +# to a remote host. + +.h2 TN3270_PATH +# This is the path for a program which can be used to make an "IBM 3270" +# connection to a remote host. + +.h2 TOUCH_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to update the modification time of a +# file to the current time,, e.g., the Unix command "touch". +# +# Setting this to an empty string will let lynx use a built-in version. + +.h2 UNCOMPRESS_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode and web connections to decompress a file +# with ".Z" suffix, e.g., the Unix command "uncompress". + +.h2 UNZIP_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to extract files from a zip-archive the +# program "unzip". + +.h2 UUDECODE_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to extract files from uuencoded files +# e.g., the program "uudecode". + +.h2 ZCAT_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to decompress files, writing the result +# to a pipe as part of a shell command, e.g., the program "zcat". + +.h2 ZIP_PATH +# This is the path used for DIRED mode to create a zip-archive from one or more +# files, e.g., the program "unzip". + +.h1 Interaction + +.h2 FORCE_SSL_PROMPT +# If FORCE_SSL_PROMPT is set to "yes", then questionable conditions, such as +# self-signed certificates will be ignored. If set to "no", these will be +# reported, but not attempted. The default "prompt" permits the user to make +# this choice on a case-by-case basis. +# +#FORCE_SSL_PROMPT:PROMPT + +.h2 FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT +# If FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT is set to "yes", then questionable conditions, such as +# cookies with invalid syntax will be ignored. If set to "no", these will be +# reported, but not attempted. The default "prompt" permits the user to make +# this choice on a case-by-case basis. +# +#FORCE_COOKIE_PROMPT:PROMPT + +.h2 SSL_CERT_FILE +# Set SSL_CERT_FILE to the file that contains all valid CA certificates lynx +# should accept, in case the $SSL_CERT_FILE environment variable is not set, +# e.g., +# +#SSL_CERT_FILE:/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt +#SSL_CERT_FILE:NULL + +.h2 SSL_CLIENT_CERT_FILE +# Set SSL_CLIENT_CERT_FILE to the file that contains a client certificate +# (in PEM format) in case the $SSL_CLIENT_CERT_FILE environment variable is +# not set, e.g., +# +#SSL_CLIENT_CERT_FILE:/home/qux/certs/cert.crt +#SSL_CLIENT_CERT_FILE:NULL + +.h2 SSL_CLIENT_KEY_FILE +# Set SSL_CLIENT_KEY_FILE to the file that contains a client certificate +# key (in PEM format), in case the $SSL_CLIENT_KEY_FILE environment variable +# is not set, e.g., +# +#SSL_CLIENT_KEY_FILE:/home/qux/certs/cert.key +#SSL_CLIENT_KEY_FILE:NULL + +.h1 Appearance + +.h2 SCREEN_SIZE +# For win32, allow the console window to be resized to the given values. This +# requires PDCurses 2.5. The values given are width,height. +#SCREEN_SIZE:80,24 + +.h2 NO_MARGINS +# Disable left/right margins in the default style sheet. +# This is the same as the command-line "-nomargins" option. +#NO_MARGINS:FALSE + +.h2 NO_TITLE +# Disable title and blank line from top of page. +# This is the same as the command-line "-notitle" option. +#NO_TITLE:FALSE + +.h2 UPDATE_TERM_TITLE +# Enables updating the title in terminal emulators. +# If your terminal emulator supports that escape code, +# you can set this to TRUE. +# This is the same as the command-line "-update_term_title" option. +#UPDATE_TERM_TITLE:FALSE + +.h1 External Programs + +.h2 SYSLOG_REQUESTED_URLS +# Log the requested URLs using the syslog interface. +#SYSLOG_REQUESTED_URLS:TRUE + +.h2 SYSLOG_TEXT +# Add the given text to calls made to syslog, to distinguish Lynx from other +# applications which use that interface. +#SYSLOG_TEXT: + +.h1 Internal Behavior +.h2 BROKEN_FTP_RETR +# Some ftp servers are known to have a broken implementation of RETR. If asked +# to retrieve a directory, they get confused and fails subsequent commands such +# as CWD and LIST. Workaround: reconnect after a failed RETR, which is slow. +# +# Each BROKEN_FTP_RETR gives a string match for the reported FTP server version +#BROKEN_FTP_RETR:ProFTPD 1.2.5 +#BROKEN_FTP_RETR:spftp/ + +.h2 BROKEN_FTP_EPSV +# Some ftp servers are known to have a broken implementation of EPSV. The +# server will hang for a long time when we attempt to connect after issuing +# this command. Workaround: do not use EPSV, just use PASV. +# +# Each BROKEN_FTP_EPSV gives a string match for the reported FTP server version +#BROKEN_FTP_EPSV:(Version wu-2.6.2-12) + +.h1 Appearance +.h2 FTP_FORMAT +# FTP_FORMAT defines the display for remote files. +# It uses the same "%" codes as LIST_FORMAT. +#FTP_FORMAT:%d %-16.16t %a %K + +.h1 Internal Behavior + +.h2 STATUS_BUFFER_SIZE +# STATUS_BUFFER_SIZE controls the size of the buffer used for the LYNXMESSAGES +# special url. +# +# The default size is 40. +#STATUS_BUFFER_SIZE:40 + +.h2 MAX_URI_SIZE +# MAX_URI_SIZE controls the size of the buffer used for parsing URIs, e.g., the +# HREF value in an anchor. +# +# The default size is 8192. +#MAX_URI_SIZE:8192 + +.h1 Appearance +.h2 UNIQUE_URLS +# UNIQUE_URLS can be set to tell Lynx to check for duplicate link numbers in +# the page and corresponding lists, and reusing the original link number. +# This can be set via command-line "-unique-urls". +#UNIQUE_URLS:FALSE + +.h1 Character Sets +.h2 MESSAGE_LANGUAGE +# MESSAGE_LANGUAGE can be set to set the LANG environment variable explicitly. +# This is mainly useful in non-Unix environments, e.g., Windows, since normally +# LC_ALL is set, overriding LANG (as well as the more apt LC_MESSAGES variable). +#MESSAGE_LANGUAGE: + +.h2 CONV_JISX0201KANA +# If CONV_JISX0201KANA is set, Lynx will convert JIS X0201 Kana to JIS X0208 +# Kana, i.e., convert half-width kana to full-width. +#CONV_JISX0201KANA:TRUE + +.h1 External Programs +.h2 WAIT_VIEWER_TERMINATION +# The WAIT_VIEWER_TERMINATION is used in the Windows environment to tell Lynx +# to wait until a viewer has terminated. +#WAIT_VIEWER_TERMINATION:FALSE + +.h1 Mail-related +.h2 BLAT_MAIL +# BLAT_MAIL is used in the Win32 port. It tells Lynx whether to use the +# "blat" mailer, or the "sendmail" utility. Normally the "blat" mailer is +# used for Win32, because the sendmail look-alikes have fewer features. +# This feature can also be set/reset via the command-line "-noblat" option. +# +# Blat is available from +.url http://www.blat.net +# +# See also ALT_BLAT_MAIL and SYSTEM_MAIL flags. +#BLAT_MAIL:TRUE + +.h2 ALT_BLAT_MAIL +# BLAT_MAIL is used in the Win32 port. It tells Lynx whether to use the +# "blat" mailer, or the "blatj" utility. This feature can also be set/reset +# via the command-line "-altblat" option. +# +# Some users prefer blatj, which can handle Japanese characters. It is +# available from +.url http://www.piedey.co.jp/blatj/ +# (caution - the page is in Japanese). +# +# See also BLAT_MAIL and SYSTEM_MAIL flags. +#ALT_BLAT_MAIL:FALSE + +.h1 Internal Behavior +.h2 TRACK_INTERNAL_LINKS +# With `internal links' (links within a document to a location within the same +# document) enabled, Lynx will distinguish between, for example, `<A +# HREF="foo#frag">' and `<A HREF="#frag">' within a document whose URL is +# `foo'. It may handle such links differently, although practical differences +# would appear only if the document containing them resulted from a POST +# request or had a no-cache flag set. This feature attempts to interpret +# URL-references as suggested by RFC 2396, and to prevent mistaken +# resubmissions of form content with the POST method. An alternate opinion +# asserts that the feature could actually result in inappropriate resubmission +# of form content. +#TRACK_INTERNAL_LINKS:FALSE + +.h1 HTML Parsing + +.h2 DONT_WRAP_PRE +# Inhibit wrapping of text when -dump'ing and -crawl'ing, mark +# wrapped lines of <pre> in interactive session. +#DONT_WRAP_PRE:FALSE + +.h2 FORCE_HTML +# When true, this forces the first document specified on the command-line +# to be interpreted as HTML. +#FORCE_HTML:FALSE + +.h2 HIDDENLINKS +# Control the display of hidden links, using one of the following names: +# +# MERGE +# hidden links show up as bracketed numbers and are numbered +# together with other links in the sequence of their occurrence +# in the document. +# +# LISTONLY +# hidden links are shown only on L)ist screens and listings +# generated by -dump or from the P)rint menu, but appear +# separately at the end of those lists. This is the default +# behavior. +# +# IGNORE +# hidden links do not appear even in listings. +# +#HIDDENLINKS:LISTONLY + +.h1 Appearance +.h2 SHORT_URL +# If true, show very long URLs in the status line with "..." to represent the +# portion which cannot be displayed. The beginning and end of the URL are +# displayed, rather than suppressing the end. +#SHORT_URL:FALSE + +.h1 Dump/Crawl +.h2 LISTONLY +# For -dump, show only the list of links. +#LISTONLY:FALSE + +.h2 LIST_INLINE +# For -dump, show the links inline with the text. +#LIST_INLINE:FALSE + +.h2 LOCALHOST +# When true, this disables URLs that point to remote hosts. +#LOCALHOST:FALSE + +.h2 WITH_BACKSPACES +# Emit backspaces in output if -dump'ing or -crawl'ing (like 'man' does). +#WITH_BACKSPACES:FALSE + +.h1 Internal Behavior +.h2 HTTP_PROTOCOL +# Normally Lynx negotiates HTTP/1.0, because it does not support chunked +# transfer (a requirement for all HTTP/1.1 clients), although it supports +# several other features of HTTP/1.1. You may encounter a server which does +# not support HTTP/1.0 which can be used by switching to the later protocol. +#HTTP_PROTOCOL:1.0 + +.h2 GUESS_SCHEME +# When true, Lynx may fill in a missing "scheme" for URIs which you provide. +# This is different from URL_DOMAIN_PREFIXES and URL_DOMAIN_SUFFIXES. +# +# If no "scheme" (such as "http:", "ftp:") is given in a URI, Lynx first checks +# if there is a corresponding local file which can be accessed directly. +# Failing that, Lynx may inspect the URI to see if it begins with a prefix +# which implies a scheme. +# +# Lynx uses these schemes for the corresponding prefixes: +# +# cso: +# "cso." +# "ns." +# "ph." +# ftp: +# "ftp." +# gopher: +# "gopher." +# http: +# "www". +# news: +# "news." +# nntp: +# "nntp." +# wais: +# "wais." +# +# The default value FALSE disables this guess, telling Lynx to just assume that +# "http:" was intended. +#GUESS_SCHEME:FALSE + +.h2 REDIRECTION_LIMIT +# HTTP 1.0 suggested a redirection-limit of 5; lynx doubled that. Some users +# believe they can improve their experience with a higher limit. +#REDIRECTION_LIMIT:10 + +.h1 Appearance +.h2 LIST_DECODED +# For -dump, show URL-encoded links decoded. +#LIST_DECODED:TRUE |