Thanks, Kyle. The problem, as identified in the delivery failure message, is that openssl.org's mail server has a fixed message-size limit that is exceeded by the size of the attachment. Sorry to be unclear.
--Harold -----Original Message----- From: owner-openssl-...@openssl.org [mailto:owner-openssl-...@openssl.org] On Behalf Of Kyle Hamilton Sent: Sunday, September 19, 2010 2:17 AM To: openssl-dev@openssl.org Subject: Re: How can I upload that .chm file? A Gmail account, which allows you to send file attachments through Google's smtp server up to 10MB in size, is free. -Kyle H On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 6:11 PM, Harold S. Henry <har...@talerian.com> wrote: > No luck sending to r...@openssl.org; the mail server still said the .chm file > exceeded its fixed size limit... > > I'm happy to contribute the source (attached here), but, um, it's not exactly > easy to use. Building a .chm is a bit of an exercise, and experience is > useful. Still, here it is. > > Let me know if you find a way I can post the .chm (which, for those who don't > know, is the data file for Microsoft's HTML Help 1.x viewer, and other > viewers -- it's a pretty good way to browse moderately large interlinked doc > sets). > > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-openssl-...@openssl.org [mailto:owner-openssl-...@openssl.org] On > Behalf Of aerow...@gmail.com > Sent: Saturday, September 18, 2010 2:27 PM > To: openssl-dev@openssl.org > Subject: Re: How can I upload that .chm file? > > Send an email with the CHM attachment to r...@openssl.org. It might be a > good thing to contribute the source of the utility as well, so that the code > can be tweaked as useful, and so that new released versions (and any patches > to the pod files) can have their content integrated into that version's > generated CHM. (Note that the utility doesn't have to be written in C or > perl to be useful -- CA.sh is a Bourne shell script. > > CHM is also only natively supported on Windows, so it might be useful to > point out that OSX has a free utility called 'chmox' which can render CHM > files in the Mac Quartz environment. > > Linux/BSD have graphical CHM viewers as well. gnochm and kchmviewer, as well > as a program called xchm which is, apparently, quite outdated. > > -Kyle H > > On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 1:20 PM, Harold S. Henry <har...@talerian.com> wrote: >> The server won't accept an attachment that large (425 KB)… suggestions? > > ______________________________________________________________________ OpenSSL Project http://www.openssl.org Development Mailing List openssl-dev@openssl.org Automated List Manager majord...@openssl.org ______________________________________________________________________ OpenSSL Project http://www.openssl.org Development Mailing List openssl-dev@openssl.org Automated List Manager majord...@openssl.org