================================================================================ = = = = = = = = = = = = = Thunderbird Read Me = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ================================================================================ Thunderbird is subject to the terms detailed in the license agreement accompanying it. This Read Me file contains information about system requirements and installation instructions for the OS/2 build of Thunderbird. For more info on Thunderbird, see http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird/. For more info on the OS/2 port see http://www.mozilla.org/ports/os2. To submit bugs or other feedback check out Bugzilla at https://bugzilla.mozilla.org for links to known bugs, bug-writing guidelines, and more. You can also get help with Bugzilla by pointing your IRC client to #mozillazine at irc.mozilla.org, OS/2 specific problems are discussed in #warpzilla and in the newsgroup netscape.public.mozilla.os2 on news.mozilla.org and other newsservers. ================================================================================ Getting Thunderbird ================================================================================ Official Milestone builds of Thunderbird are published on the release page at http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird/releases/ OS/2 releases are not created by Mozilla.org staff and may appear on the page http://www.mozilla.org/ports/os2 before the releases page. Be sure to read the Thunderbird release notes linked on the releases page for information on known problems and installation issues with Thunderbird. ================================================================================ System Requirements on OS/2 ================================================================================ - This release requires updated C runtime DLLs (libc-0.5.1) from http://www.innotek.de/products/gccos2/download/gccos2download_e.html in order to run. By default the installation routine places them in \OS2\DLL on your bootdrive, but you can put them in the same directory as Thunderbird's executable, or somewhere else in your LIBPATH. - Minimum hardware requirements + Pentium class processor + 64 MiB RAM plus 64 MiB free swap space + 35 MiB free harddisk space for installation plus storage space for disk cache - Recommended hardware for acceptable performance + 500 MHz processor + 256 MiB RAM plus 64 MiB free swap space NOTE: Thunderbird's performance and stability increases the more physical RAM is available. Especially for long sessions 512 MiB of memory is recommended. + Graphics card and driver capable of displaying more than 256 colors - Software requirements + Installation on a file system supporting long file names (i.e. HPFS or JFS but not FAT) + OS/2 Warp 4 with Fixpack 15 or later + MPTS version 5.3 + TCP/IP version 4.1 + INETVER: SOCKETS.SYS=5.3007, AFOS2.SYS=5.3001, AFINET.SYS=5.3006 NOTE: Do not attempt to use MPTS & TCP/IP versions below these INETVER levels. Although Thunderbird may seem to start and run normally with older stacks, some features Thunderbird needs are not implemented correctly in older MPTS versions, which may result in crashes and data loss. + Convenience Pack 2 or eComStation 1.0 or later meet these requirements out of the box. ================================================================================ Installation Instructions ================================================================================ For all platforms, unpack into a clean (new) directory. Installing on top of previously released builds may cause problems with Thunderbird. Note: These instructions do not tell you how to build Thunderbird. For info on building the Thunderbird source, see http://www.mozilla.org/build/ OS/2 Installation Instructions ------------------------------ On OS/2, Thunderbird does not have an installation program. To install it, download the .zip file and follow these steps: 1. Click the "Zip" link on the site you're downloading Thunderbird from to download the ZIP package to your machine. This file is typically called thunderbird-*-os2.zip where the "*" is replaced by the Thunderbird version. 2. Navigate to where you downloaded the file and unpack it using your favorite unzip tool. 3. Keep in mind that the unzip process creates a directory "thunderbird" below the location you point it to, i.e. unzip thunderbird-1.0-os2.zip -d c:\thunderbird-1.0 will unpack Thunderbird into c:\thunderbird-1.0\thunderbird. 4. Make sure that you are _not_ unpacking over an old installation. This is known to cause problems. 5. To start Thunderbird, navigate to the directory you extracted Thunderbird to, make sure that the C library DLLs are copied to the installation directory or installed in the LIBPATH, and then double-click the Thunderbird.exe object. Running multiple versions concurrently -------------------------------------- Because various members of the Mozilla family (i.e. Mozilla, Firefox, Thunderbird, IBM Web Browser) may use different, incompatible versions of the same DLL, some extra steps may be required to run them concurrently. One workaround is the LIBPATHSTRICT variable. To run Thunderbird one can create a CMD script like the following example (where an installation of Thunderbird exists in the directory d:\internet\thunderbird is assumed): set LIBPATHSTRICT=T rem The next line may be needed when a different Mozilla program is listed in LIBPATH rem set BEGINLIBPATH=d:\internet\thunderbird rem The next line is only needed to run two different versions of Thunderbird rem set MOZ_NO_REMOTE=1 d: cd d:\internet\thunderbird thunderbird.exe %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9 Similarly, one can create a program object to start Thunderbird using the following settings: Path and file name: * Parameters: /c set LIBPATHSTRICT=T & .\thunderbird.exe "%*" Working directory: d:\internet\thunderbird (One might need to add MOZ_NO_REMOTE and/or BEGINLIBPATH as in the CMD script above depending on the system configuration.) Finally, the simplest method is to use the Run! utility by Rich Walsh that can be found in the Hobbes Software Archive: http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/cgi-bin/h-search?key=Run! Read its documentation for more information. Separating profiles from installation directory ----------------------------------------------- To separate the locations of the user profile(s) (containing the bookmarks and all customizations) from the installation directory to keep your preferences in the case of an update even when using ZIP packages, set the variable MOZILLA_HOME to a directory of your choice. You can do this either in Config.sys or in a script or using a program object as listed above. If you add set MOZILLA_HOME=f:\Data the Thunderbird user profile will be created in "f:\Data\Thunderbird". If you are migrating from Mozilla, Thunderbird's import routine will only find the existing Mozilla profile data if MOZILLA_HOME is correctly set to point to it. Other important environment variables ------------------------------------- There are a few enviroment variables that can be used to control special behavior of Thunderbird on OS/2: - set NSPR_OS2_NO_HIRES_TIMER=1 This causes Thunderbird not to use OS/2's high resolution timer. Set this if other applications using the high resolution timer (multimedia apps) act strangely. - set MOZILLA_USE_EXTENDED_FT2LIB=T If you have the Innotek Font Engine installed this variable enables special functions in Thunderbird to handle unicode characters. - set MOZ_NO_REMOTE=1 Use this to run two instances of Thunderbird simultaneously (like e.g. debug and optimized version). Find more information on this topic and other tips on http://www.os2bbs.com/os2news/Warpzilla.html Known Problems of the OS/2 version ---------------------------------- Cross-platform problems are usually listed in the release notes of each milestone release. - Bug 167884, "100% CPU load when viewing site [tiling transparent PNG]": https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=167884 On OS/2, Mozilla's rendering engine is known to have very slow performance on websites that use small, repeated images with transparency for their layout. This might also affect HTML emails displayed in Thunderbird. Other known problems can be found by following the link "Current Open Warpzilla Bugs" on the OS/2 Mozilla page .