Feature configuration file (features.conf)

This file contains various compile-time configuration settings, which you can adjust below. You can fine-tune the ELinks binary to include really only what you want it to. It acts as a front-end to the configure script in the sense that it is possible to control any features in this file by passing arguments to the configure script. In fact any arguments given to the script will overrule the values set in this file.

There are still some things which are to be adjusted only directly through the configure script arguments though, so check ./configure --help out as well!

All dependency checking is done by the configure script so even though a feature is enabled here it is possible that it will be disabled at compile time if the dependencies are not met. Check the features.log file generated by the configure script to make sure.

Notes for users

All features that can be controlled using this file are already set to their default values. The syntax used is hopefully familiar to most people.

# chars start a comment that runs until the end of the line.

The features are controlled by setting the various CONFIG_<FEATURE> variables to either yes or no depending on whether it should be enabled or disabled. So in order to disable bookmark support a line in this file should say:

CONFIG_BOOKMARKS=no

It is also possible to simply comment out the line in order to disable it. Therefore, if the default doesn't suit you, you can either comment it out or set it to the value you desire.

Bookmarks (CONFIG_BOOKMARKS)

ELinks has built-in hierarchic bookmarks support. Open the bookmarks manager by pressing s. When bookmarks are enabled, also support for the internal ELinks bookmarks format is always compiled in.

This is a favourite target for disabling in various embedded applications. It all depends on your requirements.

Also read the “The Ultimate Bookmarks Guide” in doc/bookmarks.txt

Default: enabled

XBEL Bookmarks (CONFIG_XBEL_BOOKMARKS)

ELinks also supports universal XML bookmarks format called XBEL, also supported by e.g. Galeon, various "always-have-my-bookmarks" websites and number of universal bookmark converters.

Frequently, you know you will not need it, then you can of course happily forcibly remove support for it and save few bytes.

Default: enabled if libexpat is found and bookmarks are enabled

Cookies (CONFIG_COOKIES)

Support for HTTP cookies --- a data token which the server sends the client once and then the client sends it back along each request to the server. This mechanism is crucial e.g. for keeping HTTP sessions (you "log in" to a site, and from then on the site recognizes you usually because of the cookie), but also for various banner systems, remembering values filled to various forms, and so on. You can further tune the ELinks behaviour at runtime (whether to accept/send cookies, ask for confirmation when accepting a cookie etc).

This functionality is usually quite important and you should not disable it unless you really know what are you doing.

Default: enabled

Form History (CONFIG_FORMHIST)

The famous Competing Browser has that annoying thing which pops up when you submit a form, offering to remember it and pre-fill it the next time. And yes, ELinks can do that too! You will still need to also enable this manually at document.browse.forms.show_formhist.

Many people find it extremely annoying (including pasky), however some others consider it extremely handy and will sacrifice almost anything to get it. It will not do any harm to have this compiled-in as long as you will leave it turned off (which is also the default configuration).

Default: enabled

Global History (CONFIG_GLOBHIST)

This device records each and every page you visit (to a configurable limit). You can browse through this history in the history manager (press h). Do not confuse this with the "session history", recording history of your browsing in the frame of one session (session history is the thing you move through when pressing back and unback or which you see in the File::History menu).

Global history does not care about the order you visited the pages in, it just records that you visited it, when did you do that and the title of the page. Then, you can see when did you visit a link last time (and what was the title of the target document at that time), links can be coloured as visited etc.

If you disable this feature, you will not lose any crucial functionality, just some relatively minor convenience features, which can nevertheless prove sometimes very practical.

Default: enabled

MIME

ELinks uses a MIME system for determining the content type of documents and configuring programs for external handling. By default the option system can be used to configure how media types are handled. More info about how to set up the MIME handling using the option system can be found in the doc/mime.html file.

Below are listed some additional ways to do it.

Mailcap (CONFIG_MAILCAP)

Mailcap files describe what program - on the local system - can be used to handle a media type. The file format is defined in RFC 1524 and more info including examples can be found in the doc/mailcap.html file.

This is very useful especially for clean interoperability with other MIME-aware applications and fitting nicely into the UNIX system, where this is the standard way of specifying MIME handlers. If you are not interested in that, you can still use the internal MIME associations system, though.

Default: enabled

Mimetypes File (CONFIG_MIMETYPES)

Mimetypes file can be used to specify the relation between media types and file extensions.

Basically same thing applies here as for the mailcap support.

Default: enabled

Gzip and Deflate Decompression (CONFIG_GZIP)

This makes ELinks send "Accept-Encoding: deflate, gzip" in HTTP requests and decompress any documents received in those formats. It works with local *.gz files as well.

Default: enabled if zlib is installed and new enough

Bzip2 Decompression (CONFIG_BZIP2)

This makes ELinks decompress local *.bz2 files. Also, ELinks sends "Accept-Encoding: bzip2" in HTTP requests and decompresses any documents received in that format, but this encoding has not been registered at http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-parameters, so most servers probably won't use it.

Default: enabled if the library is installed

LZMA Decompression (CONFIG_LZMA)

This makes ELinks decompress local *.lzma files. Also, ELinks sends "Accept-Encoding: lzma" in HTTP requests and decompresses any documents received in that format, but this encoding has not been registered at http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-parameters, so most servers probably won't use it.

To use this, first install LZMA Utils. Version 4.32.5 works; 4.42.2alpha also works and understands a newer LZMA file format. This version of ELinks does not support LZMA SDK from 7-Zip.

Default: disabled

IPv6 Protocol Support (CONFIG_IPV6)

You know this thing that was designed to obsolete IPv4 but only pasky, weirdos and projects supported with big funds really use. ;-)

Default: enabled if the system supports it

URI Rewriting (CONFIG_URI_REWRITE)

The goto dialog through which new URIs can be entered is an essential part of browsing in ELinks. This feature makes the dialog more powerful by making it possible to extend how entered text is handled through a set of rewrite rules (see protocol.rewrite options).

There are two types of rules: simple and smart ones.

Simple rewriting rules are basically URI abbreviations, making it possible to map a word to the full URI. They can also be used for hierarchic navigation to ease moving from some nested directory to the parent directory or doing other stuff with the current URI. For example, when you type gg into the goto dialog, you will be materialized at Google's homepage.

Smart rules can take arguments and therefore enable more advanced rewriting. The arguments could be search words to google for or a lookup query for a dictionary. Eg. type gg:Petr Baudis king of ELinks cvs.

This feature is also available in a more powerful form in the Lua and Guile extensions, so if you plan to or already use those, you won't miss anything by disabling this feature (besides easier and better integrated configuration).

Default: enabled

BitTorrent Protocol Support (CONFIG_BITTORRENT)

The BitTorrent protocol is a protocol for distributing files in a peer-to-peer (P2P) manner. It uses the HTTP protocol for communicating with a central server and a peer-to-peer (P2P) protocol for exchanging file pieces betweens peer downloaders. The integrity of file pieces downloaded from peers are checked using cryptographic hashing (SHA1).

Downloads using BitTorrent are started by first downloading a .torrent file with the MIME type "application/x-bittorrent". The file contains information which enables ELinks to ask a central server, called a tracker, for information about other downloading peers and start downloading from and uploading to them.

At any time, an external handler can always be defined to take precedence of the internal BitTorrent client and the internal client can always be forced by prefixing the URI of the .torrent file with "bittorrent:"

Note

The BitTorrent support is still experimental.

Default: disabled

Local CGI Support (CONFIG_CGI)

ELinks can (like w3m or lynx) execute certain executable files stored on the local disks as CGIs, when you target it on them (through a URI of the file scheme). ELinks emulates the complete CGI environment, like the program would be executed by a web server. See the protocol.file.cgi options tree for detailed runtime configuration.

Some people just write their bookmark management application as Perl CGI script and then access it from the web browser using this feature, not needing any web server or so. Therefore, this is a great possible way to extended the browser capabilities.

Even when you compile this in, you need to enable this yet in the configuration, and even then only CGI files passing certain user-defined filters (path-based) will be allowed to be executed (and there are certain other security barriers in place).

Default: disabled, available if setenv() or putenv() is found

Data URI protocol (CONFIG_DATA)

The data URI protocol is defined in RFC 2397 and allows inclusion of small data items as "immediate" data, as if it had been included externally.

A data URL might be used for arbitrary types of data. The URI

data:,A%20brief%20note

encodes the text/plain string "A brief note", which might be useful in a footnote link.

Default: enabled

Finger User Information Protocol Support (CONFIG_FINGER)

The finger protocol is a simple protocol defined in RFC 1288. The server return a friendly, human-oriented status report on either the system at the moment or a particular person in depth such as whether a user is currently logged-on, e-mail address, full name etc. As well as standard user information, it displays the contents of ".plan" file in the user's home directory. Often this file (maintained by the user) contained either useful information about the user's current activities, or alternatively all manner of humor.

It is most often implemented on Unix or Unix-like systems however due to security and privacy reasons it is usually disabled or only allowed locally on the system.

Default: disabled

File Service Protocol (CONFIG_FSP)

File Service Protocol (FSP) is a very lightweight UDP based protocol for transferring files. FSP has many benefits over FTP, mainly for running anonymous archives. FSP protocol is valuable in all kinds of environments because it is one of the only TCP/IP protocols that is not aggressive about bandwidth, while still being sufficiently fault tolerant.

FSP is what anonymous FTP should be!

See http://fsp.sourceforge.net/ for more info.

Default: disabled

File Transfer Protocol Support (CONFIG_FTP)

The File Transfer Protocol (FTP) is a software standard for transferring computer files between machines with widely different operating systems.

Many sites that run FTP servers enable so-called "anonymous ftp". Under this arrangement, users do not need an account on the server. By default, the account name for the anonymous access is anonymous. This account does not need a password, but users are commonly asked to send their email addresses as their passwords for authentication (protocol.ftp.anon_passwd), but there is no verification.

See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ftp .

Default: enabled

Gopher Protocol Support (CONFIG_GOPHER)

Gopher is a distributed document search and retrieval network protocol designed for the Internet in RFC 1436. The need for gopher arose in in the early days of the hypertext Internet where the number of documents that were being published in campus and research environments could not easily be distributed using known protocols like FTP because these documents were stored not in one place, but in many computers connected to the Internet.

The support works much like local file browsing with directories (aka. menus) and various file types that can be downloaded and viewed.

It is still very experimental and the CSO phone-book protocol is not implemented.

Default: disabled

NNTP Protocol Support (CONFIG_NNTP)

Network news transport protocol support makes it possible to access nntp and news servers and read postings. It is still very experimental and is far from being considered a “news reader”.

It is possible to list news groups on a server, articles in a news group and retrieve articles by their number or message-id.

Default: disabled

SMB Protocol Support (CONFIG_SMB)

ELinks supports browsing over the SMB protocol (URI smb scheme), using the libsmbclient library as back-end. Therefore, in order to have this enabled, you will need to install Samba (or at least just the libsmbclient part, if you can install it separately).

This use of libsmbclient is believed to be immune to the command injection attacks (CVE-2006-5925, bug 841) from which earlier ELinks releases (0.9.0 to 0.11.1) suffered.

Default: disabled

Cascading Style Sheets (CONFIG_CSS)

Simplistic CSS support. It is still very much in it's infancy so don't expect too much. If you have use of background colors enabled more pages will have the intended background color. Also quite a few additional text attributes are applied. One example is highlighting of search words on Google's cached pages.

There are options to disable both imported style sheets to minimize network traffic and whether to use CSS at all. Also a default style sheet can be defined to control the basic layout in the HTML renderer.

Default: enabled

HTML Highlighting (CONFIG_HTML_HIGHLIGHT)

Makes it possible to view HTML source with the markup highlighted in colors configurable using CSS. It also makes values of referencing attributes accessible like the href="<uri>" attribute in <a> elements.

The HTML highlighting uses components of an experimental DOM implementation still in progress so enabling this feature will add a considerable amount of code to the compiled binary. On the other hand it will help to debug what will hopefully evolve into the next generation document renderer.

Default: disabled, requires that CSS is enabled

ECMAScript (JavaScript) Browser Scripting (CONFIG_SCRIPTING_SPIDERMONKEY)

By enabling this feature, certain parts of ELinks, such as the goto URL dialog, may be extended using ECMAScript (aka. JavaScript) scripts. This can be useful to optimise your usage of ELinks.

For example you can define shortcuts (or abbreviations) for URLs of sites you often visit by having a goto URL hook expand them. This can also be achieved with the URI rewrite feature (CONFIG_URI_REWRITE), however it is not as powerful as doing it with scripting.

Default: enabled if Spidermonkey is found

Mouse Support (CONFIG_MOUSE)

ELinks may be controlled not only by keyboard, but also by mouse to quite some extent. You can select links, menu items, scroll document, click at buttons etc, and it should hopefully work. ELinks supports mouse control by GPM, xterm mouse reporting and TWAIN's twterm mouse reporting.

It is generally nice convenience and doesn't cost too much. However, you can do everything with keyboard as you can with mouse. Also note that the xterm mouse reporting takes control over the terminal so that copy and pasting text from and to ELinks has to be done by holding down the Shift key.

Default: enabled

88 Colors in Terminals (CONFIG_88_COLORS)

Define to add support for using 88 colors in terminals. Note that this requires a capable terminal emulator, such as:

  • Thomas Dickey's XTerm, version 111 or later (check which version you have with xterm -version) compiled with --enable-88-color.
  • Rxvt, version 2.7.9 or later compiled with --enable-88-color.

You will still need to enable this at runtime for a given terminal in terminal options, or set your $TERM variable to xterm-88color - then, ELinks will automatically configure itself to make use of all the available terminal features, while still acting sensibly when you happen to run it in an xterm w/o the 88 colors support.

When enabled, the memory usage is somewhat increased even when running in mono and 16 colors mode (the memory consumption can be especially remarkable when rendering very large documents and/or using very large terminals). However, when you actually run it in the suitable terminal, it looks really impressive, I'd say marvelous!

Default: disabled

256 Colors in Terminals (CONFIG_256_COLORS)

Define to add support for using 256 colors in terminals. Note that this requires a capable terminal emulator, such as:

  • Thomas Dickey's XTerm, version 111 or later (check which version you have with xterm -version) compiled with --enable-256-color.
  • Rxvt, version 2.7.9 or later compiled with --enable-256-color.
  • Recent versions of PuTTY also have some support for 256 colors.

You will still need to enable this at runtime for a given terminal in terminal options, or set your $TERM variable to xterm-256color - then, ELinks will automatically configure itself to make use of all the available terminal features, while still acting sensibly when you happen to run it in an xterm w/o the 256 colors support.

When enabled, the memory usage is somewhat increased even when running in mono and 16 colors mode (the memory consumption can be especially remarkable when rendering very large documents and/or using very large terminals). However, when you actually run it in the suitable terminal, it looks really impressive, I'd say marvelous!

Default: disabled

True color (CONFIG_TRUE_COLOR)

Define to add support for True color. Note that only terminal capable to show it is konsole from kdebase-3.5.4. This mode eats a lot of memory.

Default: disabled

Ex-mode Interface (CONFIG_EXMODE)

The ex-mode interface makes a prompt available when pressing :. The prompt can be used for entering actions like :goto-url and configuration file commands.

The code is still very experimental and lacks much work such as tab completion.

Default: disabled

LEDs (CONFIG_LEDS)

These are the tiny LED-like indicators, shown at the bottom-right of the screen as [-----]. They are used for indication of various states, e.g. whether you are currently talking through a SSL-secured connection, what is the current input mode (normal or insert), JavaScript errors etc.

Default: enabled

Document Marks (CONFIG_MARKS)

Makes it possible to set marks in a document and then later jump to them kind of like how fragments in URIs work. It is currently only possible to jump to marks set in the current document.

Default: enabled

Debug mode (CONFIG_DEBUG)

Assertions are evaluated and will core dump on failure. Some extra sanity checks are done, and some errors will cause core dump instead of just a message. Internal memory leak detection is activated (memory usage will grow), and every allocation/reallocation/free operations will be slower due to extra tests. Lists sanity checks are enabled, so list operations are slower. Hot-key debugging is enabled, it highlights redundant hot-keys in a menu.

This option should be _always_ used by beta testers and developers, it helps to detect many issues. Binary packages maintainers should not use this option in normal situation.

Default: disabled

Fast mode (CONFIG_FASTMEM)

This option provides a way to generate a faster and smaller binary of a _stable_ version of ELinks. Please do not use it with unstable releases (unless memory footprint, performance and/or binary size are major issues for you).

It disables all assertion tests and sanity checks effectively reducing safety. It disables internal memory allocation routines, directly calling libc functions (so it's much faster, but memory allocation issues and memory leaks will be not detected). It defines fmem_alloc(), and fmem_free() to be in fact alloca() and nothing, providing much faster allocations in routines where they are used

Default: disabled

Own C library functions (CONFIG_OWN_LIBC)

Enable this to use the various C library stub functions that is part of the portability layer instead of those available in the C library on the system.

It will make the binary slightly bigger and should only be used for testing the portability layer.

Default: disabled

Small binary (CONFIG_SMALL)

Reduces the size of the binary but also disables a few memory consuming optimizations to make the program much lighter when running.

Part of the size reduction is due to various help text not being compiled in which will affect usability. Also the disabled optimization will make ELinks run slower.

See doc/small.txt for more information about how to reduce the size of ELinks.

Default: disabled

Unicode UTF-8 support (CONFIG_UTF8)

By enabling this option you get better Unicode support. At present only some parts of ELinks are influenced with this. It includes DOM, plain, HTML renderer and user interface. Beside normal Unicode characters there is support for double-width characters (like Japanese, etc.).

Some features of Unicode are not handled at all. Combining characters is most visible absence. Some features are partially supported. Like line breaking between double-width characters. There is no other detection for determining when to break or not. Character conversions are still incomplete for ECMAScript strings (bug 805), local file names, and IRIs (RFC 3987).

Default: enabled

Back-trace Printing (CONFIG_BACKTRACE)

Once upon a time, a disaster happens and ELinks crashes. That is a very sad event and it would be very nice to have some means how to diagnose it. In the crash handler, ELinks prints out various helpful things, however the truly important information is _where_ did it crash. Usually, users do not have gdb installed and can't provide a back-trace. However, ELinks can print a back-trace on its own, if the system supports it (currently, it is implemented only for glibc). It is not always accurate, it is useless when the ELinks binary is stripped and it still misses a lot of important information, but it can be sometimes still an indispensable help for the developers.

You should keep this, unless you will strip your ELinks binary anyway, you know you are not going to report back any failures and you care about each single wasted bit.

Default: enabled if the libc supports it (only glibc)

Disable Root User (CONFIG_NO_ROOT_EXEC)

Browsers are scary monsters used for traveling around in an even more scary world where people indifferently throw garbage files at you and threaten your perfect world. Altho' ELinks is a small monster compared to most browsers, it can still bite your head off and some might consider running it as the root user extremely dangerous. To prevent such usage simply enable this feature.

Default: disabled