Provided by: inn2-inews_2.6.3-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       inn.conf - Configuration data for InterNetNews programs

DESCRIPTION

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

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

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

           <name>: <value>

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

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

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

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

PARAMETERS

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

       domain
           This should be the domain name of the local host.  It should not have a leading period, and it should
           not be a full host address.  It is used only if the inn_getfqdn() routine in libinn(3) cannot get the
           fully qualified domain name by using either the gethostname(3) or getaddrinfo(3) calls.  The check is
           very  simple;  if  either  routine returns a name with a period in it, then it is assumed to have the
           full domain name.  As this parameter is rarely used, do not use it to affect the  righthand  side  of
           autogenerated  Message-IDs; see instead virtualhost and domain in readers.conf(5).  The default value
           is unset.

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

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

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

       mta The command to use when mailing postings to moderators and for the use of innmail(1).   The  message,
           with  headers  and  an added To: header, will be piped into this program.  The string %s, if present,
           will be replaced by the e-mail address of the moderator.  It's strongly recommended for this  command
           to  include  %s  on  the command line rather than use the addresses in the To: and Cc: headers of the
           message, since the latter approach allows the news server to be abused as a mechanism to send mail to
           arbitrary addresses and will result in unexpected behavior.  There  is  no  default  value  for  this
           parameter; it must be set in inn.conf or a fatal error message will be logged via syslog.

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

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

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

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

       server
           The name of the default NNTP server.  If nnrpdposthost is not set and UNIX  domain  sockets  are  not
           supported,  nnrpd(8)  tries to hand off locally-posted articles through an INET domain socket to this
           server.  actsync(8), nntpget(8), and getlist(8) also use this value as the default server to  connect
           to.   In  the latter cases, the value of the NNTPSERVER environment variable, if it exists, overrides
           this.  The default value is unset.

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

               syntaxchecks: [ no-laxmid ]

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

           Only one check can currently be enabled/disabled:

           laxmid / no-laxmid
               When  laxmid  is  set,  Message-IDs  containing  ".."  in  the left part are accepted, as well as
               Message-IDs with two "@".  Some non-compliant news posters generate  such  syntactically  invalid
               Message-IDs,  especially  in  binary  newsgroups.   The  default is no-laxmid, that is to say INN
               strictly follows the standard regarding syntax checks.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

       pathalias
           If set, this value is prepended to the Path: header of accepted posts (before pathhost) if it doesn't
           already appear in the Path: header.  The main purpose of this parameter  is  to  configure  all  news
           servers  within  a  particular organization to add a common identity string to the Path: header.  The
           default value is unset.

       pathcluster
           If set, this value is appended to the Path: header of accepted posts (after  pathhost)  if  it  isn't
           already  present  as  the last element of the Path: header.  The main purpose of this parameter is to
           make several news servers appear as one server.  The default value is unset.

           Note that the Path: header reads right to left, so appended means inserted at the  leftmost  side  of
           the Path: header.

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

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

       refusecybercancels
           Whether to refuse all articles whose message IDs start with "<cancel.".  This message  ID  convention
           is widely followed by spam cancellers, so the vast majority of such articles will be cancels of spam.
           This  check,  if  enabled,  is done before the history check and the message ID is not written to the
           history file.  This is a boolean value and the default is false.

           This is a somewhat messy, inefficient, and inexact way of refusing spam cancels.  A much  better  way
           is  to  ask  all of your upstream peers to not send to you any articles with "cyberspam" in the Path:
           header (usually accomplished by having them mark "cyberspam" as an alias for your  machine  in  their
           feed  configuration).   The  filtering  enabled by this parameter is hard-coded; general filtering of
           message IDs can be done via the embedded filtering support.

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

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

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

       verifycancels
           Set this to true to enable a simplistic check on all cancel messages, attempting to verify (by simple
           header comparison) that at least one newsgroup in the cancel message can be found in the  article  to
           be  cancelled.   This  check  can't be done if the cancel arrives before the article does.  This is a
           boolean value, and the default is false.

           Note that RFC 5537 (USEPRO) mentions that "cancel control messages are not required to contain  From:
           and  Sender:  header  fields  matching  the  target message.  This requirement only encouraged cancel
           issuers to conceal their identity and provided no security".  This check is therefore not done as  it
           is extremely easy to spoof.

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

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

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

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

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

   History Settings
       The following parameter affect the history database.

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

           "hisv6"
               Stores history data in the INN history v6 format:  history(5) text file and a  number  of  dbz(3)
               database  files;  this  may be in true history v6 format, or tagged hash format, depending on the
               build options.  Separation of these two is a project which has not yet been undertaken.

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

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

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

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

               extraoverviewadvertised: [ Path Injection-Info ]

           it implies that nnrpd will advertise "Path:full" and "Injection-Info:full" as  the  ninth  and  tenth
           fields  in  response  to  LIST OVERVIEW.FMT and that these two headers will be stored in the overview
           database for each new article.

           The default value is an empty list (no additional fields are stored).  Owing  to  optimizations  when
           innd  parses  the  articles  it  receives,  it  is  possible  that all the values in the list are not
           recognized by innd as standard headers.  In such cases, innd will log an error in news.err at startup
           and the unrecognized fields will be discarded.

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

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

           If for instance you want to store the content of the To: header in addition  to  the  fields  already
           stored above, you should use:

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

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

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

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

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

               extraoverviewadvertised: [ Path ]
               extraoverviewhidden:     [ To ]

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

               extraoverviewadvertised: [ Path To ]
               extraoverviewhidden:     [ ]

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

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

           The default value is an empty list (no additional fields are stored).  Owing  to  optimizations  when
           innd  parses  the  articles  it  receives,  it  is  possible  that all the values in the list are not
           recognized by innd as standard headers.  In such cases, innd will log an error in news.err at startup
           and the unrecognized fields will be discarded.

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

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

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

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

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

       ovgrouppat
           If set, restricts the overview data stored by  INN  to  only  the  newsgroups  matching  this  comma-
           separated list of uwildmat(3) expressions.  Newsgroups not matching this setting may not be readable,
           and if groupbaseexpiry is set to true and the storage method for these newsgroups does not have self-
           expire functionality, storing overview data will fail.  The default is unset.

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

           "buffindexed"
               Stores overview data and index information into buffers, which are preconfigured files defined in
               buffindexed.conf.   "buffindexed"  never  consumes additional disk space beyond that allocated to
               these buffers.

           "tradindexed"
               Uses two files per newsgroup, one containing the overview data  and  one  containing  the  index.
               Fast for readers, but slow to write to.

           "ovdb"
               Stores data into a Berkeley DB database.  See the ovdb(5) man page.

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

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

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

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

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

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

       Note that the two parameters nnrpperlauth and nnrppythonauth are  now  obsolete;  see  "Changes  to  Perl
       Authentication  Support  for  nnrpd"  in  doc/hook-perl  and "Changes to Python Authentication and Access
       Control Support for nnrpd" in doc/hook-python for more information.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

       INN has optional support for generating keyword information automatically  from  article  body  text  and
       putting  that information in overview for the use of clients that know to look for it (HDR, OVER and XPAT
       commands).  The following parameters control that feature.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

       Here are the parameters that control exponential posting backoff:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

       The parameters related to certificates are:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

               tlsprotocols: [ TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3 ]

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

   Logging
       These parameters control what information INN logs.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

       nicennrpd
           If set to anything greater than 0, all nnrpd(8) processes will  nice(1)  themselves  to  this  value.
           This gives other news processes a higher priority and can help overchan(8) keep up with incoming news
           (if  that's  the  object,  be sure overchan(8) isn't also set to a lower priority via nicekids).  The
           default value is 0, which will cause nnrpd(8) processes spawned from innd(8)  to  use  the  value  of
           nicekids,  while  nnrpd(8)  run  as  a  daemon  will  use the system default priority.  Note that for
           nnrpd(8) processes spawned from innd(8), this value will be ignored if set  to  a  value  lower  than
           nicekids.

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

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

       rlimitnofile
           The maximum number of file descriptors that innd(8) or innfeed(8) can have open at once.  If  innd(8)
           or  innfeed(8) attempts to open more file descriptors than this value, it is possible the program may
           throttle or otherwise suffer reduced functionality.  The number of open file descriptors  is  roughly
           the  maximum  number  of  incoming  feeds and outgoing batches for innd(8) and the number of outgoing
           streams for innfeed(8).  If this parameter is set to a negative  value,  the  default  limit  of  the
           operating  system will be used; this will normally be adequate on systems other than Solaris.  Nearly
           all operating systems have some hard maximum limit beyond which this value cannot be raised,  usually
           either 128, 256, or 1024.  The default value of this parameter is "-1".  Setting it to 256 on Solaris
           systems is highly recommended.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

EXAMPLE

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

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

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

HISTORY

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

       $Id: inn.conf.pod 10304 2018-12-02 14:05:50Z iulius $

SEE ALSO

       inews(1), innd(8), innwatch(8), makehistory(8), nnrpd(8), rnews(1).

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

INN 2.6.3                                          2018-12-02                                        INN.CONF(5)