Welcome to the README! Thanks for taking the time to find it ;-) First of all, thanks to my employer, iFAX Solutions for allowing me to maintain the Red Hat RPMS for HylaFAX on company time! For an introduction to the wonderful world of HylaFAX(tm), please see http://www.hylafax.org/. Beginners should head directly to the docs: http://www.hylafax.org/content/Documentation If your company plans to deploy HylaFAX for something important, you should consider purchasing an annual support contract from hylafax.org's commercial sponsor (and my employer). For more details, see: http://www.ifax.com/ or send an email to the iFAX Sales Team . By doing so, you'll make sure you have knowledgable technicians to turn to in a crisis, and be supporting HylaFAX development at the same time. If you have a question which you think relates only to the RPM version of HylaFAX, please mail me directly, or post a bug on the HylaFAX bugzilla: http://bugs.hylafax.org/ If your question is a general one, please instead direct your query to the HylaFAX mailing list. For more info on the hylafax-users@hylafax.org mailing list see: http://www.hylafax.org/content/Mailing_Lists One minor caution - HylaFAX creates several files during normal operation which are not "owned" by the RPM. As such, if you were to uninstall it, these files would have to be removed manually. They are: /var/spool/hylafax/etc/config (faxsetup) /var/spool/hylafax/etc/setup.cache (faxsetup) /var/spool/hylafax/etc/setup.modem (faxsetup) /var/spool/hylafax/etc/config. (faxaddmodem) /var/spool/hylafax/FIFO. (faxaddmodem) /var/spool/hylafax/dev/{null,socksys,tcp} (hfaxd) files in various subdirs of /var/spool/hylafax (normal usage: sent faxes, logs,..) You should also be aware of the following system modifications: faxsetup adds the 'FaxMaster' alias in /etc/aliases. These 2 modifications are NOT undone when the RPM is uninstalled. If you think you have found a bug in the HylaFAX RPM, please report it at: http://bugs.hylafax.org/bugzilla/enter_bug.cgi Choose the product HylaFAX Binary Packages, and then the RedHat Linux RPM. Enjoy! Darren Nickerson