From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 X-Msuck: nntp://news.gmane.io/gmane.emacs.gnus.general/5152 Path: main.gmane.org!not-for-mail From: larsi@ifi.uio.no (Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen) Newsgroups: gmane.emacs.gnus.general Subject: Re: Compressing nnfolders.. Date: 15 Feb 1996 22:00:23 +0100 Organization: Dept. of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway Sender: larsi@ifi.uio.no Message-ID: References: NNTP-Posting-Host: coloc-standby.netfonds.no X-Trace: main.gmane.org 1035145794 31926 80.91.224.250 (20 Oct 2002 20:29:54 GMT) X-Complaints-To: usenet@main.gmane.org NNTP-Posting-Date: Sun, 20 Oct 2002 20:29:54 +0000 (UTC) Return-Path: ding-request@ifi.uio.no Original-Received: from biggulp.callamer.com (root@biggulp.callamer.com [199.74.141.2]) by miranova.com (8.7.3/8.6.9) with SMTP id OAA00247 for ; Thu, 15 Feb 1996 14:55:21 -0800 Original-Received: from ifi.uio.no (0@ifi.uio.no [129.240.64.2]) by biggulp.callamer.com (8.6.12/8.6.9-callamer-rdw080995) with ESMTP id NAA14724 for ; Thu, 15 Feb 1996 13:38:40 -0800 Original-Received: from eistla.ifi.uio.no (4867@eistla.ifi.uio.no [129.240.94.29]) by ifi.uio.no with ESMTP (8.6.11/ifi2.4) id for ; Thu, 15 Feb 1996 22:00:24 +0100 Original-Received: (from larsi@localhost) by eistla.ifi.uio.no ; Thu, 15 Feb 1996 22:00:24 +0100 Original-To: ding@ifi.uio.no In-Reply-To: Stainless Steel Rat's message of 15 Feb 1996 13:56:50 -0500 Original-Lines: 16 Xref: main.gmane.org gmane.emacs.gnus.general:5152 X-Report-Spam: http://spam.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.gnus.general:5152 Stainless Steel Rat writes: > 2: Minor hackery in the backend .el files to expand the regular > expressions used in buffers filled with the output of 'ls', to > include a regular expression built out of jka-aux-extensions. > Normally this is a simple list, '(".gz" ".Z")', should not be too > difficult to turn into a regexp. This is key, as the > jka-compr/jka-aux functions will not operate inside buffers. nnml does this as of September 0.27. You should be able to gzip all articles in nnml directories. It has been only lightly tested, though. -- "Yes. The journey through the human heart would have to wait until some other time."