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1 \input texinfo
2
3 @include gnus-overrides.texi
4
5 @setfilename ../../info/gnus.info
6 @settitle Gnus Manual
7 @include docstyle.texi
8 @syncodeindex fn cp
9 @syncodeindex vr cp
10 @syncodeindex pg cp
11
12 @copying
13 Copyright @copyright{} 1995--2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
14
15 @quotation
16 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
17 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
18 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
19 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
20 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
21 is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
22
23 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
24 modify this GNU manual.''
25 @end quotation
26 @end copying
27
28 @iftex
29 @iflatex
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290 @iftex
291 @iflatex
292
293 \begin{titlepage}
294 {
295
296 %\addtolength{\oddsidemargin}{-5cm}
297 %\addtolength{\evensidemargin}{-5cm}
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303 \vfill
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307 \gnusauthor{by Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen}
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311 \mbox{}
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314 \thispagestyle{empty}
315
316 @c @insertcopying
317 \newpage
318 \end{titlepage}
319 @end iflatex
320 @end iftex
321
322 @dircategory Emacs network features
323 @direntry
324 * Gnus: (gnus). The newsreader Gnus.
325 @end direntry
326 @iftex
327 @finalout
328 @end iftex
329
330
331 @titlepage
332 @ifset WEBHACKDEVEL
333 @title Gnus Manual (DEVELOPMENT VERSION)
334 @end ifset
335 @ifclear WEBHACKDEVEL
336 @title Gnus Manual
337 @end ifclear
338
339 @author by Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen
340 @page
341 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
342 @insertcopying
343 @end titlepage
344
345 @summarycontents
346 @contents
347
348 @node Top
349 @top The Gnus Newsreader
350
351 @ifinfo
352
353 You can read news (and mail) from within Emacs by using Gnus. The news
354 can be gotten by any nefarious means you can think of---@acronym{NNTP}, local
355 spool or your mbox file. All at the same time, if you want to push your
356 luck.
357
358 @c Adjust ../Makefile.in if you change the following line:
359 This manual corresponds to Gnus v5.13
360
361 @ifnottex
362 @insertcopying
363 @end ifnottex
364
365 @end ifinfo
366
367 @iftex
368
369 @iflatex
370 \tableofcontents
371 \gnuscleardoublepage
372 @end iflatex
373
374 Gnus is the advanced, self-documenting, customizable, extensible
375 unreal-time newsreader for GNU Emacs.
376
377 Oops. That sounds oddly familiar, so let's start over again to avoid
378 being accused of plagiarism:
379
380 Gnus is a message-reading laboratory. It will let you look at just
381 about anything as if it were a newsgroup. You can read mail with it,
382 you can browse directories with it, you can @code{ftp} with it---you
383 can even read news with it!
384
385 Gnus tries to empower people who read news the same way Emacs empowers
386 people who edit text. Gnus sets no limits to what the user should be
387 allowed to do. Users are encouraged to extend Gnus to make it behave
388 like they want it to behave. A program should not control people;
389 people should be empowered to do what they want by using (or abusing)
390 the program.
391
392 @c Adjust ../Makefile.in if you change the following line:
393 This manual corresponds to Gnus v5.13
394
395 @heading Other related manuals
396 @itemize
397 @item Message manual: Composing messages
398 @item Emacs-MIME: Composing messages; @acronym{MIME}-specific parts.
399 @item Sieve: Managing Sieve scripts in Emacs.
400 @item EasyPG: @acronym{PGP/MIME} with Gnus.
401 @item SASL: @acronym{SASL} authentication in Emacs.
402 @end itemize
403
404 @end iftex
405
406 @menu
407 * Starting Up:: Finding news can be a pain.
408 * Group Buffer:: Selecting, subscribing and killing groups.
409 * Summary Buffer:: Reading, saving and posting articles.
410 * Article Buffer:: Displaying and handling articles.
411 * Composing Messages:: Information on sending mail and news.
412 * Select Methods:: Gnus reads all messages from various select methods.
413 * Scoring:: Assigning values to articles.
414 * Searching:: Mail and News search engines.
415 * Various:: General purpose settings.
416 * The End:: Farewell and goodbye.
417 * Appendices:: Terminology, Emacs intro, @acronym{FAQ}, History, Internals.
418 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
419 * Index:: Variable, function and concept index.
420 * Key Index:: Key Index.
421
422 @c Doesn't work right in html.
423 @c FIXME Do this in a more standard way.
424 @ifinfo
425 Other related manuals
426
427 * Message:(message). Composing messages.
428 * Emacs-MIME:(emacs-mime). Composing messages; @acronym{MIME}-specific parts.
429 * Sieve:(sieve). Managing Sieve scripts in Emacs.
430 * EasyPG:(epa). @acronym{PGP/MIME} with Gnus.
431 * SASL:(sasl). @acronym{SASL} authentication in Emacs.
432 @end ifinfo
433
434 @detailmenu
435 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
436
437 Starting Gnus
438
439 * Finding the News:: Choosing a method for getting news.
440 * The Server is Down:: How can I read my mail then?
441 * Slave Gnusae:: You can have more than one Gnus active at a time.
442 * Fetching a Group:: Starting Gnus just to read a group.
443 * New Groups:: What is Gnus supposed to do with new groups?
444 * Changing Servers:: You may want to move from one server to another.
445 * Startup Files:: Those pesky startup files---@file{.newsrc}.
446 * Auto Save:: Recovering from a crash.
447 * The Active File:: Reading the active file over a slow line Takes Time.
448 * Startup Variables:: Other variables you might change.
449
450 New Groups
451
452 * Checking New Groups:: Determining what groups are new.
453 * Subscription Methods:: What Gnus should do with new groups.
454 * Filtering New Groups:: Making Gnus ignore certain new groups.
455
456 Group Buffer
457
458 * Group Buffer Format:: Information listed and how you can change it.
459 * Group Maneuvering:: Commands for moving in the group buffer.
460 * Selecting a Group:: Actually reading news.
461 * Subscription Commands:: Unsubscribing, killing, subscribing.
462 * Group Data:: Changing the info for a group.
463 * Group Levels:: Levels? What are those, then?
464 * Group Score:: A mechanism for finding out what groups you like.
465 * Marking Groups:: You can mark groups for later processing.
466 * Foreign Groups:: Creating and editing groups.
467 * Group Parameters:: Each group may have different parameters set.
468 * Listing Groups:: Gnus can list various subsets of the groups.
469 * Sorting Groups:: Re-arrange the group order.
470 * Group Maintenance:: Maintaining a tidy @file{.newsrc} file.
471 * Browse Foreign Server:: You can browse a server. See what it has to offer.
472 * Exiting Gnus:: Stop reading news and get some work done.
473 * Group Topics:: A folding group mode divided into topics.
474 * Non-ASCII Group Names:: Accessing groups of non-English names.
475 * Misc Group Stuff:: Other stuff that you can to do.
476
477 Group Buffer Format
478
479 * Group Line Specification:: Deciding how the group buffer is to look.
480 * Group Mode Line Specification:: The group buffer mode line.
481 * Group Highlighting:: Having nice colors in the group buffer.
482
483 Group Topics
484
485 * Topic Commands:: Interactive E-Z commands.
486 * Topic Variables:: How to customize the topics the Lisp Way.
487 * Topic Sorting:: Sorting each topic individually.
488 * Topic Topology:: A map of the world.
489 * Topic Parameters:: Parameters that apply to all groups in a topic.
490
491 Misc Group Stuff
492
493 * Scanning New Messages:: Asking Gnus to see whether new messages have arrived.
494 * Group Information:: Information and help on groups and Gnus.
495 * Group Timestamp:: Making Gnus keep track of when you last read a group.
496 * File Commands:: Reading and writing the Gnus files.
497 * Sieve Commands:: Managing Sieve scripts.
498
499 Summary Buffer
500
501 * Summary Buffer Format:: Deciding how the summary buffer is to look.
502 * Summary Maneuvering:: Moving around the summary buffer.
503 * Choosing Articles:: Reading articles.
504 * Paging the Article:: Scrolling the current article.
505 * Reply Followup and Post:: Posting articles.
506 * Delayed Articles:: Send articles at a later time.
507 * Marking Articles:: Marking articles as read, expirable, etc.
508 * Limiting:: You can limit the summary buffer.
509 * Threading:: How threads are made.
510 * Sorting the Summary Buffer:: How articles and threads are sorted.
511 * Asynchronous Fetching:: Gnus might be able to pre-fetch articles.
512 * Article Caching:: You may store articles in a cache.
513 * Persistent Articles:: Making articles expiry-resistant.
514 * Sticky Articles:: Article buffers that are not reused.
515 * Article Backlog:: Having already read articles hang around.
516 * Saving Articles:: Ways of customizing article saving.
517 * Decoding Articles:: Gnus can treat series of (uu)encoded articles.
518 * Article Treatment:: The article buffer can be mangled at will.
519 * MIME Commands:: Doing MIMEy things with the articles.
520 * Charsets:: Character set issues.
521 * Article Commands:: Doing various things with the article buffer.
522 * Summary Sorting:: Sorting the summary buffer in various ways.
523 * Finding the Parent:: No child support? Get the parent.
524 * Alternative Approaches:: Reading using non-default summaries.
525 * Tree Display:: A more visual display of threads.
526 * Mail Group Commands:: Some commands can only be used in mail groups.
527 * Various Summary Stuff:: What didn't fit anywhere else.
528 * Exiting the Summary Buffer:: Returning to the Group buffer,
529 or reselecting the current group.
530 * Crosspost Handling:: How crossposted articles are dealt with.
531 * Duplicate Suppression:: An alternative when crosspost handling fails.
532 * Security:: Decrypt and Verify.
533 * Mailing List:: Mailing list minor mode.
534
535 Summary Buffer Format
536
537 * Summary Buffer Lines:: You can specify how summary lines should look.
538 * To From Newsgroups:: How to not display your own name.
539 * Summary Buffer Mode Line:: You can say how the mode line should look.
540 * Summary Highlighting:: Making the summary buffer all pretty and nice.
541
542 Choosing Articles
543
544 * Choosing Commands:: Commands for choosing articles.
545 * Choosing Variables:: Variables that influence these commands.
546
547 Reply, Followup and Post
548
549 * Summary Mail Commands:: Sending mail.
550 * Summary Post Commands:: Sending news.
551 * Summary Message Commands:: Other Message-related commands.
552 * Canceling and Superseding::
553
554 Marking Articles
555
556 * Unread Articles:: Marks for unread articles.
557 * Read Articles:: Marks for read articles.
558 * Other Marks:: Marks that do not affect readedness.
559 * Setting Marks:: How to set and remove marks.
560 * Generic Marking Commands:: How to customize the marking.
561 * Setting Process Marks:: How to mark articles for later processing.
562
563 Threading
564
565 * Customizing Threading:: Variables you can change to affect the threading.
566 * Thread Commands:: Thread based commands in the summary buffer.
567
568 Customizing Threading
569
570 * Loose Threads:: How Gnus gathers loose threads into bigger threads.
571 * Filling In Threads:: Making the threads displayed look fuller.
572 * More Threading:: Even more variables for fiddling with threads.
573 * Low-Level Threading:: You thought it was over@dots{} but you were wrong!
574
575 Decoding Articles
576
577 * Uuencoded Articles:: Uudecode articles.
578 * Shell Archives:: Unshar articles.
579 * PostScript Files:: Split PostScript.
580 * Other Files:: Plain save and binhex.
581 * Decoding Variables:: Variables for a happy decoding.
582 * Viewing Files:: You want to look at the result of the decoding?
583
584 Decoding Variables
585
586 * Rule Variables:: Variables that say how a file is to be viewed.
587 * Other Decode Variables:: Other decode variables.
588 * Uuencoding and Posting:: Variables for customizing uuencoding.
589
590 Article Treatment
591
592 * Article Highlighting:: You want to make the article look like fruit salad.
593 * Article Fontisizing:: Making emphasized text look nice.
594 * Article Hiding:: You also want to make certain info go away.
595 * Article Washing:: Lots of way-neat functions to make life better.
596 * Article Header:: Doing various header transformations.
597 * Article Buttons:: Click on URLs, Message-IDs, addresses and the like.
598 * Article Button Levels:: Controlling appearance of buttons.
599 * Article Date:: Grumble, UT!
600 * Article Display:: Display various stuff---X-Face, Picons, Smileys, Gravatars
601 * Article Signature:: What is a signature?
602 * Article Miscellanea:: Various other stuff.
603
604 Alternative Approaches
605
606 * Pick and Read:: First mark articles and then read them.
607 * Binary Groups:: Auto-decode all articles.
608
609 Various Summary Stuff
610
611 * Summary Group Information:: Information oriented commands.
612 * Searching for Articles:: Multiple article commands.
613 * Summary Generation Commands::
614 * Really Various Summary Commands:: Those pesky non-conformant commands.
615
616 Article Buffer
617
618 * Hiding Headers:: Deciding what headers should be displayed.
619 * Using MIME:: Pushing articles through @acronym{MIME} before reading them.
620 * HTML:: Reading @acronym{HTML} messages.
621 * Customizing Articles:: Tailoring the look of the articles.
622 * Article Keymap:: Keystrokes available in the article buffer.
623 * Misc Article:: Other stuff.
624
625 Composing Messages
626
627 * Mail:: Mailing and replying.
628 * Posting Server:: What server should you post and mail via?
629 * POP before SMTP:: You cannot send a mail unless you read a mail.
630 * Mail and Post:: Mailing and posting at the same time.
631 * Archived Messages:: Where Gnus stores the messages you've sent.
632 * Posting Styles:: An easier way to specify who you are.
633 * Drafts:: Postponing messages and rejected messages.
634 * Rejected Articles:: What happens if the server doesn't like your article?
635 * Signing and encrypting:: How to compose secure messages.
636
637 Select Methods
638
639 * Server Buffer:: Making and editing virtual servers.
640 * Getting News:: Reading USENET news with Gnus.
641 * Using IMAP:: Reading mail from @acronym{IMAP}.
642 * Getting Mail:: Reading your personal mail with Gnus.
643 * Browsing the Web:: Getting messages from a plethora of Web sources.
644 * Other Sources:: Reading directories, files.
645 * Combined Groups:: Combining groups into one group.
646 * Email Based Diary:: Using mails to manage diary events in Gnus.
647 * Gnus Unplugged:: Reading news and mail offline.
648
649 Server Buffer
650
651 * Server Buffer Format:: You can customize the look of this buffer.
652 * Server Commands:: Commands to manipulate servers.
653 * Example Methods:: Examples server specifications.
654 * Creating a Virtual Server:: An example session.
655 * Server Variables:: Which variables to set.
656 * Servers and Methods:: You can use server names as select methods.
657 * Unavailable Servers:: Some servers you try to contact may be down.
658
659 Getting News
660
661 * NNTP:: Reading news from an @acronym{NNTP} server.
662 * News Spool:: Reading news from the local spool.
663
664 @acronym{NNTP}
665
666 * Direct Functions:: Connecting directly to the server.
667 * Indirect Functions:: Connecting indirectly to the server.
668 * Common Variables:: Understood by several connection functions.
669
670 Getting Mail
671
672 * Mail in a Newsreader:: Important introductory notes.
673 * Getting Started Reading Mail:: A simple cookbook example.
674 * Splitting Mail:: How to create mail groups.
675 * Mail Sources:: How to tell Gnus where to get mail from.
676 * Mail Back End Variables:: Variables for customizing mail handling.
677 * Fancy Mail Splitting:: Gnus can do hairy splitting of incoming mail.
678 * Group Mail Splitting:: Use group customize to drive mail splitting.
679 * Incorporating Old Mail:: What about the old mail you have?
680 * Expiring Mail:: Getting rid of unwanted mail.
681 * Washing Mail:: Removing cruft from the mail you get.
682 * Duplicates:: Dealing with duplicated mail.
683 * Not Reading Mail:: Using mail back ends for reading other files.
684 * Choosing a Mail Back End:: Gnus can read a variety of mail formats.
685
686 Mail Sources
687
688 * Mail Source Specifiers:: How to specify what a mail source is.
689 * Mail Source Customization:: Some variables that influence things.
690 * Fetching Mail:: Using the mail source specifiers.
691
692 Choosing a Mail Back End
693
694 * Unix Mail Box:: Using the (quite) standard Un*x mbox.
695 * Babyl:: Babyl was used by older versions of Rmail.
696 * Mail Spool:: Store your mail in a private spool?
697 * MH Spool:: An mhspool-like back end.
698 * Maildir:: Another one-file-per-message format.
699 * Mail Folders:: Having one file for each group.
700 * Comparing Mail Back Ends:: An in-depth looks at pros and cons.
701
702 Browsing the Web
703
704 * Archiving Mail::
705 * Web Searches:: Creating groups from articles that match a string.
706 * RSS:: Reading RDF site summary.
707
708 Other Sources
709
710 * Directory Groups:: You can read a directory as if it was a newsgroup.
711 * Anything Groups:: Dired? Who needs dired?
712 * Document Groups:: Single files can be the basis of a group.
713 * Mail-To-News Gateways:: Posting articles via mail-to-news gateways.
714 * The Empty Backend:: The backend that never has any news.
715
716 Document Groups
717
718 * Document Server Internals:: How to add your own document types.
719
720 Combined Groups
721
722 * Virtual Groups:: Combining articles from many groups.
723
724 Email Based Diary
725
726 * The NNDiary Back End:: Basic setup and usage.
727 * The Gnus Diary Library:: Utility toolkit on top of nndiary.
728 * Sending or Not Sending:: A final note on sending diary messages.
729
730 The NNDiary Back End
731
732 * Diary Messages:: What makes a message valid for nndiary.
733 * Running NNDiary:: NNDiary has two modes of operation.
734 * Customizing NNDiary:: Bells and whistles.
735
736 The Gnus Diary Library
737
738 * Diary Summary Line Format:: A nicer summary buffer line format.
739 * Diary Articles Sorting:: A nicer way to sort messages.
740 * Diary Headers Generation:: Not doing it manually.
741 * Diary Group Parameters:: Not handling them manually.
742
743 Gnus Unplugged
744
745 * Agent Basics:: How it all is supposed to work.
746 * Agent Categories:: How to tell the Gnus Agent what to download.
747 * Agent Commands:: New commands for all the buffers.
748 * Agent Visuals:: Ways that the agent may effect your summary buffer.
749 * Agent as Cache:: The Agent is a big cache too.
750 * Agent Expiry:: How to make old articles go away.
751 * Agent Regeneration:: How to recover from lost connections and other accidents.
752 * Agent and flags:: How the Agent maintains flags.
753 * Agent and IMAP:: How to use the Agent with @acronym{IMAP}.
754 * Outgoing Messages:: What happens when you post/mail something?
755 * Agent Variables:: Customizing is fun.
756 * Example Setup:: An example @file{~/.gnus.el} file for offline people.
757 * Batching Agents:: How to fetch news from a @code{cron} job.
758 * Agent Caveats:: What you think it'll do and what it does.
759
760 Agent Categories
761
762 * Category Syntax:: What a category looks like.
763 * Category Buffer:: A buffer for maintaining categories.
764 * Category Variables:: Customize'r'Us.
765
766 Agent Commands
767
768 * Group Agent Commands:: Configure groups and fetch their contents.
769 * Summary Agent Commands:: Manually select then fetch specific articles.
770 * Server Agent Commands:: Select the servers that are supported by the agent.
771
772 Scoring
773
774 * Summary Score Commands:: Adding score entries for the current group.
775 * Group Score Commands:: General score commands.
776 * Score Variables:: Customize your scoring. (My, what terminology).
777 * Score File Format:: What a score file may contain.
778 * Score File Editing:: You can edit score files by hand as well.
779 * Adaptive Scoring:: Big Sister Gnus knows what you read.
780 * Home Score File:: How to say where new score entries are to go.
781 * Followups To Yourself:: Having Gnus notice when people answer you.
782 * Scoring On Other Headers:: Scoring on non-standard headers.
783 * Scoring Tips:: How to score effectively.
784 * Reverse Scoring:: That problem child of old is not problem.
785 * Global Score Files:: Earth-spanning, ear-splitting score files.
786 * Kill Files:: They are still here, but they can be ignored.
787 * Converting Kill Files:: Translating kill files to score files.
788 * Advanced Scoring:: Using logical expressions to build score rules.
789 * Score Decays:: It can be useful to let scores wither away.
790
791 Advanced Scoring
792
793 * Advanced Scoring Syntax:: A definition.
794 * Advanced Scoring Examples:: What they look like.
795 * Advanced Scoring Tips:: Getting the most out of it.
796
797 Searching
798
799 * nnir:: Searching with various engines.
800 * nnmairix:: Searching with Mairix.
801
802 nnir
803
804 * What is nnir?:: What does nnir do.
805 * Basic Usage:: How to perform simple searches.
806 * Setting up nnir:: How to set up nnir.
807
808 Setting up nnir
809
810 * Associating Engines:: How to associate engines.
811
812 Various
813
814 * Process/Prefix:: A convention used by many treatment commands.
815 * Interactive:: Making Gnus ask you many questions.
816 * Symbolic Prefixes:: How to supply some Gnus functions with options.
817 * Formatting Variables:: You can specify what buffers should look like.
818 * Window Layout:: Configuring the Gnus buffer windows.
819 * Faces and Fonts:: How to change how faces look.
820 * Mode Lines:: Displaying information in the mode lines.
821 * Highlighting and Menus:: Making buffers look all nice and cozy.
822 * Daemons:: Gnus can do things behind your back.
823 * Undo:: Some actions can be undone.
824 * Predicate Specifiers:: Specifying predicates.
825 * Moderation:: What to do if you're a moderator.
826 * Image Enhancements:: Modern versions of Emacs/XEmacs can display images.
827 * Fuzzy Matching:: What's the big fuzz?
828 * Thwarting Email Spam:: Simple ways to avoid unsolicited commercial email.
829 * Spam Package:: A package for filtering and processing spam.
830 * The Gnus Registry:: A package for tracking messages by Message-ID.
831 * Other modes:: Interaction with other modes.
832 * Various Various:: Things that are really various.
833
834 Formatting Variables
835
836 * Formatting Basics:: A formatting variable is basically a format string.
837 * Mode Line Formatting:: Some rules about mode line formatting variables.
838 * Advanced Formatting:: Modifying output in various ways.
839 * User-Defined Specs:: Having Gnus call your own functions.
840 * Formatting Fonts:: Making the formatting look colorful and nice.
841 * Positioning Point:: Moving point to a position after an operation.
842 * Tabulation:: Tabulating your output.
843 * Wide Characters:: Dealing with wide characters.
844
845 Image Enhancements
846
847 * X-Face:: Display a funky, teensy black-and-white image.
848 * Face:: Display a funkier, teensier colored image.
849 * Smileys:: Show all those happy faces the way they were
850 meant to be shown.
851 * Picons:: How to display pictures of what you're reading.
852 * Gravatars:: Display the avatar of people you read.
853 * XVarious:: Other XEmacsy Gnusey variables.
854
855 Thwarting Email Spam
856
857 * The problem of spam:: Some background, and some solutions
858 * Anti-Spam Basics:: Simple steps to reduce the amount of spam.
859 * SpamAssassin:: How to use external anti-spam tools.
860 * Hashcash:: Reduce spam by burning CPU time.
861
862 Spam Package
863
864 * Spam Package Introduction::
865 * Filtering Incoming Mail::
866 * Detecting Spam in Groups::
867 * Spam and Ham Processors::
868 * Spam Package Configuration Examples::
869 * Spam Back Ends::
870 * Extending the Spam package::
871 * Spam Statistics Package::
872
873 Spam Statistics Package
874
875 * Creating a spam-stat dictionary::
876 * Splitting mail using spam-stat::
877 * Low-level interface to the spam-stat dictionary::
878
879 Appendices
880
881 * XEmacs:: Requirements for installing under XEmacs.
882 * History:: How Gnus got where it is today.
883 * On Writing Manuals:: Why this is not a beginner's guide.
884 * Terminology:: We use really difficult, like, words here.
885 * Customization:: Tailoring Gnus to your needs.
886 * Troubleshooting:: What you might try if things do not work.
887 * Gnus Reference Guide:: Rilly, rilly technical stuff.
888 * Emacs for Heathens:: A short introduction to Emacsian terms.
889 * Frequently Asked Questions:: The Gnus FAQ
890
891 History
892
893 * Gnus Versions:: What Gnus versions have been released.
894 * Why?:: What's the point of Gnus?
895 * Compatibility:: Just how compatible is Gnus with @sc{gnus}?
896 * Conformity:: Gnus tries to conform to all standards.
897 * Emacsen:: Gnus can be run on a few modern Emacsen.
898 * Gnus Development:: How Gnus is developed.
899 * Contributors:: Oodles of people.
900 * New Features:: Pointers to some of the new stuff in Gnus.
901
902 New Features
903
904 * ding Gnus:: New things in Gnus 5.0/5.1, the first new Gnus.
905 * September Gnus:: The Thing Formally Known As Gnus 5.2/5.3.
906 * Red Gnus:: Third time best---Gnus 5.4/5.5.
907 * Quassia Gnus:: Two times two is four, or Gnus 5.6/5.7.
908 * Pterodactyl Gnus:: Pentad also starts with P, AKA Gnus 5.8/5.9.
909 * Oort Gnus:: It's big. It's far out. Gnus 5.10/5.11.
910 * No Gnus:: Very punny. Gnus 5.12/5.13
911 * Ma Gnus:: Celebrating 25 years of Gnus.
912
913 Customization
914
915 * Slow/Expensive Connection:: You run a local Emacs and get the news elsewhere.
916 * Slow Terminal Connection:: You run a remote Emacs.
917 * Little Disk Space:: You feel that having large setup files is icky.
918 * Slow Machine:: You feel like buying a faster machine.
919
920 Gnus Reference Guide
921
922 * Gnus Utility Functions:: Common functions and variable to use.
923 * Back End Interface:: How Gnus communicates with the servers.
924 * Score File Syntax:: A BNF definition of the score file standard.
925 * Headers:: How Gnus stores headers internally.
926 * Ranges:: A handy format for storing mucho numbers.
927 * Group Info:: The group info format.
928 * Extended Interactive:: Symbolic prefixes and stuff.
929 * Emacs/XEmacs Code:: Gnus can be run under all modern Emacsen.
930 * Various File Formats:: Formats of files that Gnus use.
931
932 Back End Interface
933
934 * Required Back End Functions:: Functions that must be implemented.
935 * Optional Back End Functions:: Functions that need not be implemented.
936 * Error Messaging:: How to get messages and report errors.
937 * Writing New Back Ends:: Extending old back ends.
938 * Hooking New Back Ends Into Gnus:: What has to be done on the Gnus end.
939 * Mail-like Back Ends:: Some tips on mail back ends.
940
941 Various File Formats
942
943 * Active File Format:: Information on articles and groups available.
944 * Newsgroups File Format:: Group descriptions.
945
946 Emacs for Heathens
947
948 * Keystrokes:: Entering text and executing commands.
949 * Emacs Lisp:: The built-in Emacs programming language.
950
951 @end detailmenu
952 @end menu
953
954 @node Starting Up
955 @chapter Starting Gnus
956 @cindex starting up
957
958 If you haven't used Emacs much before using Gnus, read @ref{Emacs for
959 Heathens} first.
960
961 @kindex M-x gnus
962 @findex gnus
963 If your system administrator has set things up properly, starting Gnus
964 and reading news is extremely easy---you just type @kbd{M-x gnus} in
965 your Emacs. If not, you should customize the variable
966 @code{gnus-select-method} as described in @ref{Finding the News}. For a
967 minimal setup for posting should also customize the variables
968 @code{user-full-name} and @code{user-mail-address}.
969
970 @findex gnus-other-frame
971 @kindex M-x gnus-other-frame
972 If you want to start Gnus in a different frame, you can use the command
973 @kbd{M-x gnus-other-frame} instead.
974
975 If things do not go smoothly at startup, you have to twiddle some
976 variables in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file. This file is similar to
977 @file{~/.emacs}, but is read when Gnus starts.
978
979 If you puzzle at any terms used in this manual, please refer to the
980 terminology section (@pxref{Terminology}).
981
982 @menu
983 * Finding the News:: Choosing a method for getting news.
984 * The Server is Down:: How can I read my mail then?
985 * Slave Gnusae:: You can have more than one Gnus active at a time.
986 * New Groups:: What is Gnus supposed to do with new groups?
987 * Changing Servers:: You may want to move from one server to another.
988 * Startup Files:: Those pesky startup files---@file{.newsrc}.
989 * Auto Save:: Recovering from a crash.
990 * The Active File:: Reading the active file over a slow line Takes Time.
991 * Startup Variables:: Other variables you might change.
992 @end menu
993
994
995 @node Finding the News
996 @section Finding the News
997 @cindex finding news
998
999 First of all, you should know that there is a special buffer called
1000 @file{*Server*} that lists all the servers Gnus knows about. You can
1001 press @kbd{^} from the Group buffer to see it. In the Server buffer,
1002 you can press @kbd{RET} on a defined server to see all the groups it
1003 serves (subscribed or not!). You can also add or delete servers, edit
1004 a foreign server's definition, agentize or de-agentize a server, and
1005 do many other neat things. @xref{Server Buffer}.
1006 @xref{Foreign Groups}. @xref{Agent Basics}.
1007
1008 @vindex gnus-select-method
1009 @c @head
1010 The @code{gnus-select-method} variable says where Gnus should look for
1011 news. This variable should be a list where the first element says
1012 @dfn{how} and the second element says @dfn{where}. This method is your
1013 native method. All groups not fetched with this method are
1014 secondary or foreign groups.
1015
1016 For instance, if the @samp{news.somewhere.edu} @acronym{NNTP} server is where
1017 you want to get your daily dosage of news from, you'd say:
1018
1019 @lisp
1020 (setq gnus-select-method '(nntp "news.somewhere.edu"))
1021 @end lisp
1022
1023 If you want to read directly from the local spool, say:
1024
1025 @lisp
1026 (setq gnus-select-method '(nnspool ""))
1027 @end lisp
1028
1029 If you can use a local spool, you probably should, as it will almost
1030 certainly be much faster. But do not use the local spool if your
1031 server is running Leafnode (which is a simple, standalone private news
1032 server); in this case, use @code{(nntp "localhost")}.
1033
1034 @vindex gnus-nntpserver-file
1035 @cindex NNTPSERVER
1036 @cindex @acronym{NNTP} server
1037 If this variable is not set, Gnus will take a look at the
1038 @env{NNTPSERVER} environment variable. If that variable isn't set,
1039 Gnus will see whether @code{gnus-nntpserver-file}
1040 (@file{/etc/nntpserver} by default) has any opinions on the matter.
1041 If that fails as well, Gnus will try to use the machine running Emacs
1042 as an @acronym{NNTP} server. That's a long shot, though.
1043
1044 @findex gnus-group-browse-foreign-server
1045 @kindex B (Group)
1046 However, if you use one @acronym{NNTP} server regularly and are just
1047 interested in a couple of groups from a different server, you would be
1048 better served by using the @kbd{B} command in the group buffer. It will
1049 let you have a look at what groups are available, and you can subscribe
1050 to any of the groups you want to. This also makes @file{.newsrc}
1051 maintenance much tidier. @xref{Foreign Groups}.
1052
1053 @vindex gnus-secondary-select-methods
1054 @c @head
1055 A slightly different approach to foreign groups is to set the
1056 @code{gnus-secondary-select-methods} variable. The select methods
1057 listed in this variable are in many ways just as native as the
1058 @code{gnus-select-method} server. They will also be queried for active
1059 files during startup (if that's required), and new newsgroups that
1060 appear on these servers will be subscribed (or not) just as native
1061 groups are.
1062
1063 For instance, if you use the @code{nnmbox} back end to read your mail,
1064 you would typically set this variable to
1065
1066 @lisp
1067 (setq gnus-secondary-select-methods '((nnmbox "")))
1068 @end lisp
1069
1070
1071
1072 @node The Server is Down
1073 @section The Server is Down
1074 @cindex server errors
1075
1076 If the default server is down, Gnus will understandably have some
1077 problems starting. However, if you have some mail groups in addition to
1078 the news groups, you may want to start Gnus anyway.
1079
1080 Gnus, being the trusting sort of program, will ask whether to proceed
1081 without a native select method if that server can't be contacted. This
1082 will happen whether the server doesn't actually exist (i.e., you have
1083 given the wrong address) or the server has just momentarily taken ill
1084 for some reason or other. If you decide to continue and have no foreign
1085 groups, you'll find it difficult to actually do anything in the group
1086 buffer. But, hey, that's your problem. Blllrph!
1087
1088 @findex gnus-no-server
1089 @kindex M-x gnus-no-server
1090 @c @head
1091 If you know that the server is definitely down, or you just want to read
1092 your mail without bothering with the server at all, you can use the
1093 @code{gnus-no-server} command to start Gnus. That might come in handy
1094 if you're in a hurry as well. This command will not attempt to contact
1095 your primary server---instead, it will just activate all groups on level
1096 1 and 2. (You should preferably keep no native groups on those two
1097 levels.) Also @pxref{Group Levels}.
1098
1099
1100 @node Slave Gnusae
1101 @section Slave Gnusae
1102 @cindex slave
1103
1104 You might want to run more than one Emacs with more than one Gnus at the
1105 same time. If you are using different @file{.newsrc} files (e.g., if you
1106 are using the two different Gnusae to read from two different servers),
1107 that is no problem whatsoever. You just do it.
1108
1109 The problem appears when you want to run two Gnusae that use the same
1110 @file{.newsrc} file.
1111
1112 To work around that problem some, we here at the Think-Tank at the Gnus
1113 Towers have come up with a new concept: @dfn{Masters} and
1114 @dfn{slaves}. (We have applied for a patent on this concept, and have
1115 taken out a copyright on those words. If you wish to use those words in
1116 conjunction with each other, you have to send $1 per usage instance to
1117 me. Usage of the patent (@dfn{Master/Slave Relationships In Computer
1118 Applications}) will be much more expensive, of course.)
1119
1120 @findex gnus-slave
1121 Anyway, you start one Gnus up the normal way with @kbd{M-x gnus} (or
1122 however you do it). Each subsequent slave Gnusae should be started with
1123 @kbd{M-x gnus-slave}. These slaves won't save normal @file{.newsrc}
1124 files, but instead save @dfn{slave files} that contain information only
1125 on what groups have been read in the slave session. When a master Gnus
1126 starts, it will read (and delete) these slave files, incorporating all
1127 information from them. (The slave files will be read in the sequence
1128 they were created, so the latest changes will have precedence.)
1129
1130 Information from the slave files has, of course, precedence over the
1131 information in the normal (i.e., master) @file{.newsrc} file.
1132
1133 If the @file{.newsrc*} files have not been saved in the master when the
1134 slave starts, you may be prompted as to whether to read an auto-save
1135 file. If you answer ``yes'', the unsaved changes to the master will be
1136 incorporated into the slave. If you answer ``no'', the slave may see some
1137 messages as unread that have been read in the master.
1138
1139
1140
1141 @node New Groups
1142 @section New Groups
1143 @cindex new groups
1144 @cindex subscription
1145
1146 @vindex gnus-check-new-newsgroups
1147 If you are satisfied that you really never want to see any new groups,
1148 you can set @code{gnus-check-new-newsgroups} to @code{nil}. This will
1149 also save you some time at startup. Even if this variable is
1150 @code{nil}, you can always subscribe to the new groups just by pressing
1151 @kbd{U} in the group buffer (@pxref{Group Maintenance}). This variable
1152 is @code{ask-server} by default. If you set this variable to
1153 @code{always}, then Gnus will query the back ends for new groups even
1154 when you do the @kbd{g} command (@pxref{Scanning New Messages}).
1155
1156 @menu
1157 * Checking New Groups:: Determining what groups are new.
1158 * Subscription Methods:: What Gnus should do with new groups.
1159 * Filtering New Groups:: Making Gnus ignore certain new groups.
1160 @end menu
1161
1162
1163 @node Checking New Groups
1164 @subsection Checking New Groups
1165
1166 Gnus normally determines whether a group is new or not by comparing
1167 the list of groups from the active file(s) with the lists of
1168 subscribed and dead groups. This isn't a particularly fast method.
1169 If @code{gnus-check-new-newsgroups} is @code{ask-server}, Gnus will
1170 ask the server for new groups since the last time. This is both
1171 faster and cheaper. This also means that you can get rid of the list
1172 of killed groups (@pxref{Group Levels}) altogether, so you may set
1173 @code{gnus-save-killed-list} to @code{nil}, which will save time both
1174 at startup, at exit, and all over. Saves disk space, too. Why isn't
1175 this the default, then? Unfortunately, not all servers support this
1176 command.
1177
1178 I bet I know what you're thinking now: How do I find out whether my
1179 server supports @code{ask-server}? No? Good, because I don't have a
1180 fail-safe answer. I would suggest just setting this variable to
1181 @code{ask-server} and see whether any new groups appear within the next
1182 few days. If any do, then it works. If none do, then it doesn't
1183 work. I could write a function to make Gnus guess whether the server
1184 supports @code{ask-server}, but it would just be a guess. So I won't.
1185 You could @code{telnet} to the server and say @code{HELP} and see
1186 whether it lists @samp{NEWGROUPS} among the commands it understands. If
1187 it does, then it might work. (But there are servers that lists
1188 @samp{NEWGROUPS} without supporting the function properly.)
1189
1190 This variable can also be a list of select methods. If so, Gnus will
1191 issue an @code{ask-server} command to each of the select methods, and
1192 subscribe them (or not) using the normal methods. This might be handy
1193 if you are monitoring a few servers for new groups. A side effect is
1194 that startup will take much longer, so you can meditate while waiting.
1195 Use the mantra ``dingnusdingnusdingnus'' to achieve permanent bliss.
1196
1197
1198 @node Subscription Methods
1199 @subsection Subscription Methods
1200
1201 @vindex gnus-subscribe-newsgroup-method
1202 What Gnus does when it encounters a new group is determined by the
1203 @code{gnus-subscribe-newsgroup-method} variable.
1204
1205 This variable should contain a function. This function will be called
1206 with the name of the new group as the only parameter.
1207
1208 Some handy pre-fab functions are:
1209
1210 @table @code
1211
1212 @item gnus-subscribe-zombies
1213 @vindex gnus-subscribe-zombies
1214 Make all new groups zombies (@pxref{Group Levels}). This is the
1215 default. You can browse the zombies later (with @kbd{A z}) and either
1216 kill them all off properly (with @kbd{S z}), or subscribe to them
1217 (with @kbd{u}).
1218
1219 @item gnus-subscribe-randomly
1220 @vindex gnus-subscribe-randomly
1221 Subscribe all new groups in arbitrary order. This really means that all
1222 new groups will be added at ``the top'' of the group buffer.
1223
1224 @item gnus-subscribe-alphabetically
1225 @vindex gnus-subscribe-alphabetically
1226 Subscribe all new groups in alphabetical order.
1227
1228 @item gnus-subscribe-hierarchically
1229 @vindex gnus-subscribe-hierarchically
1230 Subscribe all new groups hierarchically. The difference between this
1231 function and @code{gnus-subscribe-alphabetically} is slight.
1232 @code{gnus-subscribe-alphabetically} will subscribe new groups in a strictly
1233 alphabetical fashion, while this function will enter groups into its
1234 hierarchy. So if you want to have the @samp{rec} hierarchy before the
1235 @samp{comp} hierarchy, this function will not mess that configuration
1236 up. Or something like that.
1237
1238 @item gnus-subscribe-interactively
1239 @vindex gnus-subscribe-interactively
1240 Subscribe new groups interactively. This means that Gnus will ask
1241 you about @strong{all} new groups. The groups you choose to subscribe
1242 to will be subscribed hierarchically.
1243
1244 @item gnus-subscribe-killed
1245 @vindex gnus-subscribe-killed
1246 Kill all new groups.
1247
1248 @item gnus-subscribe-topics
1249 @vindex gnus-subscribe-topics
1250 Put the groups into the topic that has a matching @code{subscribe} topic
1251 parameter (@pxref{Topic Parameters}). For instance, a @code{subscribe}
1252 topic parameter that looks like
1253
1254 @example
1255 "nnml"
1256 @end example
1257
1258 will mean that all groups that match that regex will be subscribed under
1259 that topic.
1260
1261 If no topics match the groups, the groups will be subscribed in the
1262 top-level topic.
1263
1264 @end table
1265
1266 @vindex gnus-subscribe-hierarchical-interactive
1267 A closely related variable is
1268 @code{gnus-subscribe-hierarchical-interactive}. (That's quite a
1269 mouthful.) If this variable is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will ask you in a
1270 hierarchical fashion whether to subscribe to new groups or not. Gnus
1271 will ask you for each sub-hierarchy whether you want to descend the
1272 hierarchy or not.
1273
1274 One common mistake is to set the variable a few paragraphs above
1275 (@code{gnus-subscribe-newsgroup-method}) to
1276 @code{gnus-subscribe-hierarchical-interactive}. This is an error. This
1277 will not work. This is ga-ga. So don't do it.
1278
1279
1280 @node Filtering New Groups
1281 @subsection Filtering New Groups
1282
1283 A nice and portable way to control which new newsgroups should be
1284 subscribed (or ignored) is to put an @dfn{options} line at the start of
1285 the @file{.newsrc} file. Here's an example:
1286
1287 @example
1288 options -n !alt.all !rec.all sci.all
1289 @end example
1290
1291 @vindex gnus-subscribe-options-newsgroup-method
1292 This line obviously belongs to a serious-minded intellectual scientific
1293 person (or she may just be plain old boring), because it says that all
1294 groups that have names beginning with @samp{alt} and @samp{rec} should
1295 be ignored, and all groups with names beginning with @samp{sci} should
1296 be subscribed. Gnus will not use the normal subscription method for
1297 subscribing these groups.
1298 @code{gnus-subscribe-options-newsgroup-method} is used instead. This
1299 variable defaults to @code{gnus-subscribe-alphabetically}.
1300
1301 The ``options -n'' format is very simplistic. The syntax above is all
1302 that is supports: you can force-subscribe hierarchies, or you can
1303 deny hierarchies, and that's it.
1304
1305 @vindex gnus-options-not-subscribe
1306 @vindex gnus-options-subscribe
1307 If you don't want to mess with your @file{.newsrc} file, you can just
1308 set the two variables @code{gnus-options-subscribe} and
1309 @code{gnus-options-not-subscribe}. These two variables do exactly the
1310 same as the @file{.newsrc} @samp{options -n} trick. Both are regexps,
1311 and if the new group matches the former, it will be unconditionally
1312 subscribed, and if it matches the latter, it will be ignored.
1313
1314 @vindex gnus-auto-subscribed-groups
1315 Yet another variable that meddles here is
1316 @code{gnus-auto-subscribed-groups}. It works exactly like
1317 @code{gnus-options-subscribe}, and is therefore really superfluous,
1318 but I thought it would be nice to have two of these. This variable is
1319 more meant for setting some ground rules, while the other variable is
1320 used more for user fiddling. By default this variable makes all new
1321 groups that come from mail back ends (@code{nnml}, @code{nnbabyl},
1322 @code{nnfolder}, @code{nnmbox}, @code{nnmh}, @code{nnimap}, and
1323 @code{nnmaildir}) subscribed. If you don't like that, just set this
1324 variable to @code{nil}.
1325
1326 @vindex gnus-auto-subscribed-categories
1327 As if that wasn't enough, @code{gnus-auto-subscribed-categories} also
1328 allows you to specify that new groups should be subscribed based on the
1329 category their select methods belong to. The default is @samp{(mail
1330 post-mail)}, meaning that all new groups from mail-like backends
1331 should be subscribed automatically.
1332
1333 New groups that match these variables are subscribed using
1334 @code{gnus-subscribe-options-newsgroup-method}.
1335
1336
1337 @node Changing Servers
1338 @section Changing Servers
1339 @cindex changing servers
1340
1341 Sometimes it is necessary to move from one @acronym{NNTP} server to another.
1342 This happens very rarely, but perhaps you change jobs, or one server is
1343 very flaky and you want to use another.
1344
1345 Changing the server is pretty easy, right? You just change
1346 @code{gnus-select-method} to point to the new server?
1347
1348 @emph{Wrong!}
1349
1350 Article numbers are not (in any way) kept synchronized between different
1351 @acronym{NNTP} servers, and the only way Gnus keeps track of what articles
1352 you have read is by keeping track of article numbers. So when you
1353 change @code{gnus-select-method}, your @file{.newsrc} file becomes
1354 worthless.
1355
1356 @kindex M-x gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups
1357 @findex gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups
1358 You can use the @kbd{M-x gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups}
1359 command to clear out all data that you have on your native groups.
1360 Use with caution.
1361
1362 @kindex M-x gnus-group-clear-data
1363 @findex gnus-group-clear-data
1364 Clear the data from the current group only---nix out marks and the
1365 list of read articles (@code{gnus-group-clear-data}).
1366
1367 After changing servers, you @strong{must} move the cache hierarchy away,
1368 since the cached articles will have wrong article numbers, which will
1369 affect which articles Gnus thinks are read.
1370 @code{gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups} will ask you if you want
1371 to have it done automatically; for @code{gnus-group-clear-data}, you
1372 can use @kbd{M-x gnus-cache-move-cache} (but beware, it will move the
1373 cache for all groups).
1374
1375
1376 @node Startup Files
1377 @section Startup Files
1378 @cindex startup files
1379 @cindex .newsrc
1380 @cindex .newsrc.el
1381 @cindex .newsrc.eld
1382
1383 Most common Unix news readers use a shared startup file called
1384 @file{.newsrc}. This file contains all the information about what
1385 groups are subscribed, and which articles in these groups have been
1386 read.
1387
1388 Things got a bit more complicated with @sc{gnus}. In addition to
1389 keeping the @file{.newsrc} file updated, it also used a file called
1390 @file{.newsrc.el} for storing all the information that didn't fit into
1391 the @file{.newsrc} file. (Actually, it also duplicated everything in
1392 the @file{.newsrc} file.) @sc{gnus} would read whichever one of these
1393 files was the most recently saved, which enabled people to swap between
1394 @sc{gnus} and other newsreaders.
1395
1396 That was kinda silly, so Gnus went one better: In addition to the
1397 @file{.newsrc} and @file{.newsrc.el} files, Gnus also has a file called
1398 @file{.newsrc.eld}. It will read whichever of these files that are most
1399 recent, but it will never write a @file{.newsrc.el} file. You should
1400 never delete the @file{.newsrc.eld} file---it contains much information
1401 not stored in the @file{.newsrc} file.
1402
1403 @vindex gnus-save-newsrc-file
1404 @vindex gnus-read-newsrc-file
1405 You can turn off writing the @file{.newsrc} file by setting
1406 @code{gnus-save-newsrc-file} to @code{nil}, which means you can delete
1407 the file and save some space, as well as exiting from Gnus faster.
1408 However, this will make it impossible to use other newsreaders than
1409 Gnus. But hey, who would want to, right? Similarly, setting
1410 @code{gnus-read-newsrc-file} to @code{nil} makes Gnus ignore the
1411 @file{.newsrc} file and any @file{.newsrc-SERVER} files, which can be
1412 convenient if you use a different news reader occasionally, and you
1413 want to read a different subset of the available groups with that
1414 news reader.
1415
1416 @vindex gnus-save-killed-list
1417 If @code{gnus-save-killed-list} (default @code{t}) is @code{nil}, Gnus
1418 will not save the list of killed groups to the startup file. This will
1419 save both time (when starting and quitting) and space (on disk). It
1420 will also mean that Gnus has no record of what groups are new or old,
1421 so the automatic new groups subscription methods become meaningless.
1422 You should always set @code{gnus-check-new-newsgroups} to @code{nil} or
1423 @code{ask-server} if you set this variable to @code{nil} (@pxref{New
1424 Groups}). This variable can also be a regular expression. If that's
1425 the case, remove all groups that do not match this regexp before
1426 saving. This can be useful in certain obscure situations that involve
1427 several servers where not all servers support @code{ask-server}.
1428
1429 @vindex gnus-startup-file
1430 @vindex gnus-backup-startup-file
1431 @vindex version-control
1432 The @code{gnus-startup-file} variable says where the startup files are.
1433 The default value is @file{~/.newsrc}, with the Gnus (El Dingo) startup
1434 file being whatever that one is, with a @samp{.eld} appended.
1435 If you want to keep multiple numbered backups of this file, set
1436 @code{gnus-backup-startup-file}. It respects the same values as the
1437 @code{version-control} variable.
1438
1439 @vindex gnus-save-newsrc-hook
1440 @vindex gnus-save-quick-newsrc-hook
1441 @vindex gnus-save-standard-newsrc-hook
1442 @code{gnus-save-newsrc-hook} is called before saving any of the newsrc
1443 files, while @code{gnus-save-quick-newsrc-hook} is called just before
1444 saving the @file{.newsrc.eld} file, and
1445 @code{gnus-save-standard-newsrc-hook} is called just before saving the
1446 @file{.newsrc} file. The latter two are commonly used to turn version
1447 control on or off. Version control is on by default when saving the
1448 startup files. If you want to turn backup creation off, say something like:
1449
1450 @lisp
1451 (defun turn-off-backup ()
1452 (set (make-local-variable 'backup-inhibited) t))
1453
1454 (add-hook 'gnus-save-quick-newsrc-hook 'turn-off-backup)
1455 (add-hook 'gnus-save-standard-newsrc-hook 'turn-off-backup)
1456 @end lisp
1457
1458 @vindex gnus-init-file
1459 @vindex gnus-site-init-file
1460 When Gnus starts, it will read the @code{gnus-site-init-file}
1461 (@file{.../site-lisp/gnus-init} by default) and @code{gnus-init-file}
1462 (@file{~/.gnus} by default) files. These are normal Emacs Lisp files
1463 and can be used to avoid cluttering your @file{~/.emacs} and
1464 @file{site-init} files with Gnus stuff. Gnus will also check for files
1465 with the same names as these, but with @file{.elc} and @file{.el}
1466 suffixes. In other words, if you have set @code{gnus-init-file} to
1467 @file{~/.gnus}, it will look for @file{~/.gnus.elc}, @file{~/.gnus.el},
1468 and finally @file{~/.gnus} (in this order). If Emacs was invoked with
1469 the @option{-q} or @option{--no-init-file} options (@pxref{Initial
1470 Options, ,Initial Options, emacs, The Emacs Manual}), Gnus doesn't read
1471 @code{gnus-init-file}.
1472
1473
1474 @node Auto Save
1475 @section Auto Save
1476 @cindex dribble file
1477 @cindex auto-save
1478
1479 Whenever you do something that changes the Gnus data (reading articles,
1480 catching up, killing/subscribing groups), the change is added to a
1481 special @dfn{dribble buffer}. This buffer is auto-saved the normal
1482 Emacs way. If your Emacs should crash before you have saved the
1483 @file{.newsrc} files, all changes you have made can be recovered from
1484 this file.
1485
1486 If Gnus detects this file at startup, it will ask the user whether to
1487 read it. The auto save file is deleted whenever the real startup file is
1488 saved.
1489
1490 @vindex gnus-use-dribble-file
1491 If @code{gnus-use-dribble-file} is @code{nil}, Gnus won't create and
1492 maintain a dribble buffer. The default is @code{t}.
1493
1494 @vindex gnus-dribble-directory
1495 Gnus will put the dribble file(s) in @code{gnus-dribble-directory}. If
1496 this variable is @code{nil}, which it is by default, Gnus will dribble
1497 into the directory where the @file{.newsrc} file is located. (This is
1498 normally the user's home directory.) The dribble file will get the same
1499 file permissions as the @file{.newsrc} file.
1500
1501 @vindex gnus-always-read-dribble-file
1502 If @code{gnus-always-read-dribble-file} is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will
1503 read the dribble file on startup without querying the user.
1504
1505
1506 @node The Active File
1507 @section The Active File
1508 @cindex active file
1509 @cindex ignored groups
1510
1511 When Gnus starts, or indeed whenever it tries to determine whether new
1512 articles have arrived, it reads the active file. This is a very large
1513 file that lists all the active groups and articles on the server.
1514
1515 @vindex gnus-ignored-newsgroups
1516 Before examining the active file, Gnus deletes all lines that match the
1517 regexp @code{gnus-ignored-newsgroups}. This is done primarily to reject
1518 any groups with bogus names, but you can use this variable to make Gnus
1519 ignore hierarchies you aren't ever interested in. However, this is not
1520 recommended. In fact, it's highly discouraged. Instead, @pxref{New
1521 Groups} for an overview of other variables that can be used instead.
1522
1523 @c This variable is
1524 @c @code{nil} by default, and will slow down active file handling somewhat
1525 @c if you set it to anything else.
1526
1527 @vindex gnus-read-active-file
1528 @c @head
1529 The active file can be rather Huge, so if you have a slow network, you
1530 can set @code{gnus-read-active-file} to @code{nil} to prevent Gnus from
1531 reading the active file. This variable is @code{some} by default.
1532
1533 Gnus will try to make do by getting information just on the groups that
1534 you actually subscribe to.
1535
1536 Note that if you subscribe to lots and lots of groups, setting this
1537 variable to @code{nil} will probably make Gnus slower, not faster. At
1538 present, having this variable @code{nil} will slow Gnus down
1539 considerably, unless you read news over a 2400 baud modem.
1540
1541 This variable can also have the value @code{some}. Gnus will then
1542 attempt to read active info only on the subscribed groups. On some
1543 servers this is quite fast (on sparkling, brand new INN servers that
1544 support the @code{LIST ACTIVE group} command), on others this isn't fast
1545 at all. In any case, @code{some} should be faster than @code{nil}, and
1546 is certainly faster than @code{t} over slow lines.
1547
1548 Some news servers (old versions of Leafnode and old versions of INN, for
1549 instance) do not support the @code{LIST ACTIVE group}. For these
1550 servers, @code{nil} is probably the most efficient value for this
1551 variable.
1552
1553 If this variable is @code{nil}, Gnus will ask for group info in total
1554 lock-step, which isn't very fast. If it is @code{some} and you use an
1555 @acronym{NNTP} server, Gnus will pump out commands as fast as it can, and
1556 read all the replies in one swoop. This will normally result in better
1557 performance, but if the server does not support the aforementioned
1558 @code{LIST ACTIVE group} command, this isn't very nice to the server.
1559
1560 If you think that starting up Gnus takes too long, try all the three
1561 different values for this variable and see what works best for you.
1562
1563 In any case, if you use @code{some} or @code{nil}, you should definitely
1564 kill all groups that you aren't interested in to speed things up.
1565
1566 Note that this variable also affects active file retrieval from
1567 secondary select methods.
1568
1569
1570 @node Startup Variables
1571 @section Startup Variables
1572
1573 @table @code
1574
1575 @item gnus-load-hook
1576 @vindex gnus-load-hook
1577 A hook run while Gnus is being loaded. Note that this hook will
1578 normally be run just once in each Emacs session, no matter how many
1579 times you start Gnus.
1580
1581 @item gnus-before-startup-hook
1582 @vindex gnus-before-startup-hook
1583 A hook called as the first thing when Gnus is started.
1584
1585 @item gnus-before-resume-hook
1586 @vindex gnus-before-resume-hook
1587 A hook called as the first thing when Gnus is resumed after a suspend.
1588
1589 @item gnus-startup-hook
1590 @vindex gnus-startup-hook
1591 A hook run as the very last thing after starting up Gnus
1592
1593 @item gnus-started-hook
1594 @vindex gnus-started-hook
1595 A hook that is run as the very last thing after starting up Gnus
1596 successfully.
1597
1598 @item gnus-setup-news-hook
1599 @vindex gnus-setup-news-hook
1600 A hook that is run after reading the @file{.newsrc} file(s), but before
1601 generating the group buffer.
1602
1603 @item gnus-check-bogus-newsgroups
1604 @vindex gnus-check-bogus-newsgroups
1605 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus will check for and delete all bogus groups at
1606 startup. A @dfn{bogus group} is a group that you have in your
1607 @file{.newsrc} file, but doesn't exist on the news server. Checking for
1608 bogus groups can take quite a while, so to save time and resources it's
1609 best to leave this option off, and do the checking for bogus groups once
1610 in a while from the group buffer instead (@pxref{Group Maintenance}).
1611
1612 @item gnus-inhibit-startup-message
1613 @vindex gnus-inhibit-startup-message
1614 If non-@code{nil}, the startup message won't be displayed. That way,
1615 your boss might not notice as easily that you are reading news instead
1616 of doing your job. Note that this variable is used before
1617 @file{~/.gnus.el} is loaded, so it should be set in @file{.emacs} instead.
1618
1619 @item gnus-no-groups-message
1620 @vindex gnus-no-groups-message
1621 Message displayed by Gnus when no groups are available.
1622
1623 @item gnus-use-backend-marks
1624 @vindex gnus-use-backend-marks
1625 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus will store article marks both in the
1626 @file{.newsrc.eld} file and in the backends. This will slow down
1627 group operation some.
1628
1629 @end table
1630
1631
1632 @node Group Buffer
1633 @chapter Group Buffer
1634 @cindex group buffer
1635
1636 @c Alex Schroeder suggests to rearrange this as follows:
1637 @c
1638 @c <kensanata> ok, just save it for reference. I'll go to bed in a minute.
1639 @c 1. Selecting a Group, 2. (new) Finding a Group, 3. Group Levels,
1640 @c 4. Subscription Commands, 5. Group Maneuvering, 6. Group Data,
1641 @c 7. Group Score, 8. Group Buffer Format
1642 @c <kensanata> Group Levels should have more information on levels 5 to 9. I
1643 @c suggest to split the 4th paragraph ("Gnus considers groups...") as follows:
1644 @c <kensanata> First, "Gnus considers groups... (default 9)."
1645 @c <kensanata> New, a table summarizing what levels 1 to 9 mean.
1646 @c <kensanata> Third, "Gnus treats subscribed ... reasons of efficiency"
1647 @c <kensanata> Then expand the next paragraph or add some more to it.
1648 @c This short one sentence explains levels 1 and 2, therefore I understand
1649 @c that I should keep important news at 3 and boring news at 4.
1650 @c Say so! Then go on to explain why I should bother with levels 6 to 9.
1651 @c Maybe keep those that you don't want to read temporarily at 6,
1652 @c those that you never want to read at 8, those that offend your
1653 @c human rights at 9...
1654
1655
1656 The @dfn{group buffer} lists all (or parts) of the available groups. It
1657 is the first buffer shown when Gnus starts, and will never be killed as
1658 long as Gnus is active.
1659
1660 @iftex
1661 @iflatex
1662 \gnusfigure{The Group Buffer}{320}{
1663 \put(75,50){\epsfig{figure=ps/group,height=9cm}}
1664 \put(120,37){\makebox(0,0)[t]{Buffer name}}
1665 \put(120,38){\vector(1,2){10}}
1666 \put(40,60){\makebox(0,0)[r]{Mode line}}
1667 \put(40,58){\vector(1,0){30}}
1668 \put(200,28){\makebox(0,0)[t]{Native select method}}
1669 \put(200,26){\vector(-1,2){15}}
1670 }
1671 @end iflatex
1672 @end iftex
1673
1674 @menu
1675 * Group Buffer Format:: Information listed and how you can change it.
1676 * Group Maneuvering:: Commands for moving in the group buffer.
1677 * Selecting a Group:: Actually reading news.
1678 * Subscription Commands:: Unsubscribing, killing, subscribing.
1679 * Group Data:: Changing the info for a group.
1680 * Group Levels:: Levels? What are those, then?
1681 * Group Score:: A mechanism for finding out what groups you like.
1682 * Marking Groups:: You can mark groups for later processing.
1683 * Foreign Groups:: Creating and editing groups.
1684 * Group Parameters:: Each group may have different parameters set.
1685 * Listing Groups:: Gnus can list various subsets of the groups.
1686 * Sorting Groups:: Re-arrange the group order.
1687 * Group Maintenance:: Maintaining a tidy @file{.newsrc} file.
1688 * Browse Foreign Server:: You can browse a server. See what it has to offer.
1689 * Exiting Gnus:: Stop reading news and get some work done.
1690 * Group Topics:: A folding group mode divided into topics.
1691 * Non-ASCII Group Names:: Accessing groups of non-English names.
1692 * Misc Group Stuff:: Other stuff that you can to do.
1693 @end menu
1694
1695
1696 @node Group Buffer Format
1697 @section Group Buffer Format
1698
1699 @menu
1700 * Group Line Specification:: Deciding how the group buffer is to look.
1701 * Group Mode Line Specification:: The group buffer mode line.
1702 * Group Highlighting:: Having nice colors in the group buffer.
1703 @end menu
1704
1705 You can customize the Group Mode tool bar, see @kbd{M-x
1706 customize-apropos RET gnus-group-tool-bar}. This feature is only
1707 available in Emacs.
1708
1709 The tool bar icons are now (de)activated correctly depending on the
1710 cursor position. Therefore, moving around in the Group Buffer is
1711 slower. You can disable this via the variable
1712 @code{gnus-group-update-tool-bar}. Its default value depends on your
1713 Emacs version.
1714
1715 @node Group Line Specification
1716 @subsection Group Line Specification
1717 @cindex group buffer format
1718
1719 The default format of the group buffer is nice and dull, but you can
1720 make it as exciting and ugly as you feel like.
1721
1722 Here's a couple of example group lines:
1723
1724 @example
1725 25: news.announce.newusers
1726 * 0: alt.fan.andrea-dworkin
1727 @end example
1728
1729 Quite simple, huh?
1730
1731 You can see that there are 25 unread articles in
1732 @samp{news.announce.newusers}. There are no unread articles, but some
1733 ticked articles, in @samp{alt.fan.andrea-dworkin} (see that little
1734 asterisk at the beginning of the line?).
1735
1736 @vindex gnus-group-line-format
1737 You can change that format to whatever you want by fiddling with the
1738 @code{gnus-group-line-format} variable. This variable works along the
1739 lines of a @code{format} specification, which is pretty much the same as
1740 a @code{printf} specifications, for those of you who use (feh!) C@.
1741 @xref{Formatting Variables}.
1742
1743 @samp{%M%S%5y:%B%(%g%)\n} is the value that produced those lines above.
1744
1745 There should always be a colon on the line; the cursor always moves to
1746 the colon after performing an operation. @xref{Positioning
1747 Point}. Nothing else is required---not even the group name. All
1748 displayed text is just window dressing, and is never examined by Gnus.
1749 Gnus stores all real information it needs using text properties.
1750
1751 (Note that if you make a really strange, wonderful, spreadsheet-like
1752 layout, everybody will believe you are hard at work with the accounting
1753 instead of wasting time reading news.)
1754
1755 Here's a list of all available format characters:
1756
1757 @table @samp
1758
1759 @item M
1760 An asterisk if the group only has marked articles.
1761
1762 @item S
1763 Whether the group is subscribed.
1764
1765 @item L
1766 Level of subscribedness.
1767
1768 @item N
1769 Number of unread articles.
1770
1771 @item I
1772 Number of dormant articles.
1773
1774 @item T
1775 Number of ticked articles.
1776
1777 @item R
1778 Number of read articles.
1779
1780 @item U
1781 Number of unseen articles.
1782
1783 @item t
1784 Estimated total number of articles. (This is really @var{max-number}
1785 minus @var{min-number} plus 1.)
1786
1787 Gnus uses this estimation because the @acronym{NNTP} protocol provides
1788 efficient access to @var{max-number} and @var{min-number} but getting
1789 the true unread message count is not possible efficiently. For
1790 hysterical raisins, even the mail back ends, where the true number of
1791 unread messages might be available efficiently, use the same limited
1792 interface. To remove this restriction from Gnus means that the back
1793 end interface has to be changed, which is not an easy job.
1794
1795 The nnml backend (@pxref{Mail Spool}) has a feature called ``group
1796 compaction'' which circumvents this deficiency: the idea is to
1797 renumber all articles from 1, removing all gaps between numbers, hence
1798 getting a correct total count. Other backends may support this in the
1799 future. In order to keep your total article count relatively up to
1800 date, you might want to compact your groups (or even directly your
1801 server) from time to time. @xref{Misc Group Stuff}, @xref{Server Commands}.
1802
1803 @item y
1804 Number of unread, unticked, non-dormant articles.
1805
1806 @item i
1807 Number of ticked and dormant articles.
1808
1809 @item g
1810 Full group name.
1811
1812 @item G
1813 Group name.
1814
1815 @item C
1816 Group comment (@pxref{Group Parameters}) or group name if there is no
1817 comment element in the group parameters.
1818
1819 @item D
1820 Newsgroup description. You need to read the group descriptions
1821 before these will appear, and to do that, you either have to set
1822 @code{gnus-read-active-file} or use the group buffer @kbd{M-d}
1823 command.
1824
1825 @item o
1826 @samp{m} if moderated.
1827
1828 @item O
1829 @samp{(m)} if moderated.
1830
1831 @item s
1832 Select method.
1833
1834 @item B
1835 If the summary buffer for the group is open or not.
1836
1837 @item n
1838 Select from where.
1839
1840 @item z
1841 A string that looks like @samp{<%s:%n>} if a foreign select method is
1842 used.
1843
1844 @item P
1845 Indentation based on the level of the topic (@pxref{Group Topics}).
1846
1847 @item c
1848 @vindex gnus-group-uncollapsed-levels
1849 Short (collapsed) group name. The @code{gnus-group-uncollapsed-levels}
1850 variable says how many levels to leave at the end of the group name.
1851 The default is 1---this will mean that group names like
1852 @samp{gnu.emacs.gnus} will be shortened to @samp{g.e.gnus}.
1853
1854 @item m
1855 @vindex gnus-new-mail-mark
1856 @cindex %
1857 @samp{%} (@code{gnus-new-mail-mark}) if there has arrived new mail to
1858 the group lately.
1859
1860 @item p
1861 @samp{#} (@code{gnus-process-mark}) if the group is process marked.
1862
1863 @item d
1864 A string that says when you last read the group (@pxref{Group
1865 Timestamp}).
1866
1867 @item F
1868 The disk space used by the articles fetched by both the cache and
1869 agent. The value is automatically scaled to bytes(B), kilobytes(K),
1870 megabytes(M), or gigabytes(G) to minimize the column width. A format
1871 of %7F is sufficient for a fixed-width column.
1872
1873 @item u
1874 User defined specifier. The next character in the format string should
1875 be a letter. Gnus will call the function
1876 @code{gnus-user-format-function-}@samp{X}, where @samp{X} is the letter
1877 following @samp{%u}. The function will be passed a single dummy
1878 parameter as argument. The function should return a string, which will
1879 be inserted into the buffer just like information from any other
1880 specifier.
1881 @end table
1882
1883 @cindex *
1884 All the ``number-of'' specs will be filled with an asterisk (@samp{*})
1885 if no info is available---for instance, if it is a non-activated foreign
1886 group, or a bogus native group.
1887
1888
1889 @node Group Mode Line Specification
1890 @subsection Group Mode Line Specification
1891 @cindex group mode line
1892
1893 @vindex gnus-group-mode-line-format
1894 The mode line can be changed by setting
1895 @code{gnus-group-mode-line-format} (@pxref{Mode Line Formatting}). It
1896 doesn't understand that many format specifiers:
1897
1898 @table @samp
1899 @item S
1900 The native news server.
1901 @item M
1902 The native select method.
1903 @end table
1904
1905
1906 @node Group Highlighting
1907 @subsection Group Highlighting
1908 @cindex highlighting
1909 @cindex group highlighting
1910
1911 @vindex gnus-group-highlight
1912 Highlighting in the group buffer is controlled by the
1913 @code{gnus-group-highlight} variable. This is an alist with elements
1914 that look like @code{(@var{form} . @var{face})}. If @var{form} evaluates to
1915 something non-@code{nil}, the @var{face} will be used on the line.
1916
1917 Here's an example value for this variable that might look nice if the
1918 background is dark:
1919
1920 @lisp
1921 (cond (window-system
1922 (setq custom-background-mode 'light)
1923 (defface my-group-face-1
1924 '((t (:foreground "Red" :bold t))) "First group face")
1925 (defface my-group-face-2
1926 '((t (:foreground "DarkSeaGreen4" :bold t)))
1927 "Second group face")
1928 (defface my-group-face-3
1929 '((t (:foreground "Green4" :bold t))) "Third group face")
1930 (defface my-group-face-4
1931 '((t (:foreground "SteelBlue" :bold t))) "Fourth group face")
1932 (defface my-group-face-5
1933 '((t (:foreground "Blue" :bold t))) "Fifth group face")))
1934
1935 (setq gnus-group-highlight
1936 '(((> unread 200) . my-group-face-1)
1937 ((and (< level 3) (zerop unread)) . my-group-face-2)
1938 ((< level 3) . my-group-face-3)
1939 ((zerop unread) . my-group-face-4)
1940 (t . my-group-face-5)))
1941 @end lisp
1942
1943 Also @pxref{Faces and Fonts}.
1944
1945 Variables that are dynamically bound when the forms are evaluated
1946 include:
1947
1948 @table @code
1949 @item group
1950 The group name.
1951 @item unread
1952 The number of unread articles in the group.
1953 @item method
1954 The select method.
1955 @item mailp
1956 Whether the group is a mail group.
1957 @item level
1958 The level of the group.
1959 @item score
1960 The score of the group.
1961 @item ticked
1962 The number of ticked articles in the group.
1963 @item total
1964 The total number of articles in the group. Or rather,
1965 @var{max-number} minus @var{min-number} plus one.
1966 @item topic
1967 When using the topic minor mode, this variable is bound to the current
1968 topic being inserted.
1969 @end table
1970
1971 When the forms are @code{eval}ed, point is at the beginning of the line
1972 of the group in question, so you can use many of the normal Gnus
1973 functions for snarfing info on the group.
1974
1975 @vindex gnus-group-update-hook
1976 @findex gnus-group-highlight-line
1977 @code{gnus-group-update-hook} is called when a group line is changed.
1978 It will not be called when @code{gnus-visual} is @code{nil}.
1979
1980
1981 @node Group Maneuvering
1982 @section Group Maneuvering
1983 @cindex group movement
1984
1985 All movement commands understand the numeric prefix and will behave as
1986 expected, hopefully.
1987
1988 @table @kbd
1989
1990 @item n
1991 @kindex n (Group)
1992 @findex gnus-group-next-unread-group
1993 Go to the next group that has unread articles
1994 (@code{gnus-group-next-unread-group}).
1995
1996 @item p
1997 @itemx DEL
1998 @kindex DEL (Group)
1999 @kindex p (Group)
2000 @findex gnus-group-prev-unread-group
2001 Go to the previous group that has unread articles
2002 (@code{gnus-group-prev-unread-group}).
2003
2004 @item N
2005 @kindex N (Group)
2006 @findex gnus-group-next-group
2007 Go to the next group (@code{gnus-group-next-group}).
2008
2009 @item P
2010 @kindex P (Group)
2011 @findex gnus-group-prev-group
2012 Go to the previous group (@code{gnus-group-prev-group}).
2013
2014 @item M-n
2015 @kindex M-n (Group)
2016 @findex gnus-group-next-unread-group-same-level
2017 Go to the next unread group on the same (or lower) level
2018 (@code{gnus-group-next-unread-group-same-level}).
2019
2020 @item M-p
2021 @kindex M-p (Group)
2022 @findex gnus-group-prev-unread-group-same-level
2023 Go to the previous unread group on the same (or lower) level
2024 (@code{gnus-group-prev-unread-group-same-level}).
2025 @end table
2026
2027 Three commands for jumping to groups:
2028
2029 @table @kbd
2030
2031 @item j
2032 @kindex j (Group)
2033 @findex gnus-group-jump-to-group
2034 Jump to a group (and make it visible if it isn't already)
2035 (@code{gnus-group-jump-to-group}). Killed groups can be jumped to, just
2036 like living groups.
2037
2038 @item ,
2039 @kindex , (Group)
2040 @findex gnus-group-best-unread-group
2041 Jump to the unread group with the lowest level
2042 (@code{gnus-group-best-unread-group}).
2043
2044 @item .
2045 @kindex . (Group)
2046 @findex gnus-group-first-unread-group
2047 Jump to the first group with unread articles
2048 (@code{gnus-group-first-unread-group}).
2049 @end table
2050
2051 @vindex gnus-group-goto-unread
2052 If @code{gnus-group-goto-unread} is @code{nil}, all the movement
2053 commands will move to the next group, not the next unread group. Even
2054 the commands that say they move to the next unread group. The default
2055 is @code{t}.
2056
2057 @vindex gnus-summary-next-group-on-exit
2058 If @code{gnus-summary-next-group-on-exit} is @code{t}, when a summary is
2059 exited, the point in the group buffer is moved to the next unread group.
2060 Otherwise, the point is set to the group just exited. The default is
2061 @code{t}.
2062
2063 @node Selecting a Group
2064 @section Selecting a Group
2065 @cindex group selection
2066
2067 @table @kbd
2068
2069 @item SPACE
2070 @kindex SPACE (Group)
2071 @findex gnus-group-read-group
2072 Select the current group, switch to the summary buffer and display the
2073 first unread article (@code{gnus-group-read-group}). If there are no
2074 unread articles in the group, or if you give a non-numerical prefix to
2075 this command, Gnus will offer to fetch all the old articles in this
2076 group from the server. If you give a numerical prefix @var{n}, @var{n}
2077 determines the number of articles Gnus will fetch. If @var{n} is
2078 positive, Gnus fetches the @var{n} newest articles, if @var{n} is
2079 negative, Gnus fetches the @code{abs(@var{n})} oldest articles.
2080
2081 Thus, @kbd{SPC} enters the group normally, @kbd{C-u SPC} offers old
2082 articles, @kbd{C-u 4 2 SPC} fetches the 42 newest articles, and @kbd{C-u
2083 - 4 2 SPC} fetches the 42 oldest ones.
2084
2085 When you are in the group (in the Summary buffer), you can type
2086 @kbd{M-g} to fetch new articles, or @kbd{C-u M-g} to also show the old
2087 ones.
2088
2089 @item RET
2090 @kindex RET (Group)
2091 @findex gnus-group-select-group
2092 Select the current group and switch to the summary buffer
2093 (@code{gnus-group-select-group}). Takes the same arguments as
2094 @code{gnus-group-read-group}---the only difference is that this command
2095 does not display the first unread article automatically upon group
2096 entry.
2097
2098 @item M-RET
2099 @kindex M-RET (Group)
2100 @findex gnus-group-quick-select-group
2101 This does the same as the command above, but tries to do it with the
2102 minimum amount of fuzz (@code{gnus-group-quick-select-group}). No
2103 scoring/killing will be performed, there will be no highlights and no
2104 expunging. This might be useful if you're in a real hurry and have to
2105 enter some humongous group. If you give a 0 prefix to this command
2106 (i.e., @kbd{0 M-RET}), Gnus won't even generate the summary buffer,
2107 which is useful if you want to toggle threading before generating the
2108 summary buffer (@pxref{Summary Generation Commands}).
2109
2110 @item M-SPACE
2111 @kindex M-SPACE (Group)
2112 @findex gnus-group-visible-select-group
2113 This is yet one more command that does the same as the @kbd{RET}
2114 command, but this one does it without expunging and hiding dormants
2115 (@code{gnus-group-visible-select-group}).
2116
2117 @item C-M-RET
2118 @kindex C-M-RET (Group)
2119 @findex gnus-group-select-group-ephemerally
2120 Finally, this command selects the current group ephemerally without
2121 doing any processing of its contents
2122 (@code{gnus-group-select-group-ephemerally}). Even threading has been
2123 turned off. Everything you do in the group after selecting it in this
2124 manner will have no permanent effects.
2125
2126 @end table
2127
2128 @vindex gnus-large-newsgroup
2129 The @code{gnus-large-newsgroup} variable says what Gnus should
2130 consider to be a big group. If it is @code{nil}, no groups are
2131 considered big. The default value is 200. If the group has more
2132 (unread and/or ticked) articles than this, Gnus will query the user
2133 before entering the group. The user can then specify how many
2134 articles should be fetched from the server. If the user specifies a
2135 negative number (@var{-n}), the @var{n} oldest articles will be
2136 fetched. If it is positive, the @var{n} articles that have arrived
2137 most recently will be fetched.
2138
2139 @vindex gnus-large-ephemeral-newsgroup
2140 @code{gnus-large-ephemeral-newsgroup} is the same as
2141 @code{gnus-large-newsgroup}, but is only used for ephemeral
2142 newsgroups.
2143
2144 @vindex gnus-newsgroup-maximum-articles
2145 In groups in some news servers, there might be a big gap between a few
2146 very old articles that will never be expired and the recent ones. In
2147 such a case, the server will return the data like @code{(1 . 30000000)}
2148 for the @code{LIST ACTIVE group} command, for example. Even if there
2149 are actually only the articles 1--10 and 29999900--30000000, Gnus doesn't
2150 know it at first and prepares for getting 30000000 articles. However,
2151 it will consume hundreds megabytes of memories and might make Emacs get
2152 stuck as the case may be. If you use such news servers, set the
2153 variable @code{gnus-newsgroup-maximum-articles} to a positive number.
2154 The value means that Gnus ignores articles other than this number of the
2155 latest ones in every group. For instance, the value 10000 makes Gnus
2156 get only the articles 29990001--30000000 (if the latest article number is
2157 30000000 in a group). Note that setting this variable to a number might
2158 prevent you from reading very old articles. The default value of the
2159 variable @code{gnus-newsgroup-maximum-articles} is @code{nil}, which
2160 means Gnus never ignores old articles.
2161
2162 @vindex gnus-select-group-hook
2163 @vindex gnus-auto-select-first
2164 @vindex gnus-auto-select-subject
2165 If @code{gnus-auto-select-first} is non-@code{nil}, select an article
2166 automatically when entering a group with the @kbd{SPACE} command.
2167 Which article this is controlled by the
2168 @code{gnus-auto-select-subject} variable. Valid values for this
2169 variable are:
2170
2171 @table @code
2172
2173 @item unread
2174 Place point on the subject line of the first unread article.
2175
2176 @item first
2177 Place point on the subject line of the first article.
2178
2179 @item unseen
2180 Place point on the subject line of the first unseen article.
2181
2182 @item unseen-or-unread
2183 Place point on the subject line of the first unseen article, and if
2184 there is no such article, place point on the subject line of the first
2185 unread article.
2186
2187 @item best
2188 Place point on the subject line of the highest-scored unread article.
2189
2190 @end table
2191
2192 This variable can also be a function. In that case, that function
2193 will be called to place point on a subject line.
2194
2195 If you want to prevent automatic selection in some group (say, in a
2196 binary group with Huge articles) you can set the
2197 @code{gnus-auto-select-first} variable to @code{nil} in
2198 @code{gnus-select-group-hook}, which is called when a group is
2199 selected.
2200
2201
2202 @node Subscription Commands
2203 @section Subscription Commands
2204 @cindex subscription
2205
2206 The following commands allow for managing your subscriptions in the
2207 Group buffer. If you want to subscribe to many groups, it's probably
2208 more convenient to go to the @ref{Server Buffer}, and choose the
2209 server there using @kbd{RET} or @kbd{SPC}. Then you'll have the
2210 commands listed in @ref{Browse Foreign Server} at hand.
2211
2212 @table @kbd
2213
2214 @item S t
2215 @itemx u
2216 @kindex S t (Group)
2217 @kindex u (Group)
2218 @findex gnus-group-unsubscribe-current-group
2219 @c @icon{gnus-group-unsubscribe}
2220 Toggle subscription to the current group
2221 (@code{gnus-group-unsubscribe-current-group}).
2222
2223 @item S s
2224 @itemx U
2225 @kindex S s (Group)
2226 @kindex U (Group)
2227 @findex gnus-group-unsubscribe-group
2228 Prompt for a group to subscribe, and then subscribe it. If it was
2229 subscribed already, unsubscribe it instead
2230 (@code{gnus-group-unsubscribe-group}).
2231
2232 @item S k
2233 @itemx C-k
2234 @kindex S k (Group)
2235 @kindex C-k (Group)
2236 @findex gnus-group-kill-group
2237 @c @icon{gnus-group-kill-group}
2238 Kill the current group (@code{gnus-group-kill-group}).
2239
2240 @item S y
2241 @itemx C-y
2242 @kindex S y (Group)
2243 @kindex C-y (Group)
2244 @findex gnus-group-yank-group
2245 Yank the last killed group (@code{gnus-group-yank-group}).
2246
2247 @item C-x C-t
2248 @kindex C-x C-t (Group)
2249 @findex gnus-group-transpose-groups
2250 Transpose two groups (@code{gnus-group-transpose-groups}). This isn't
2251 really a subscription command, but you can use it instead of a
2252 kill-and-yank sequence sometimes.
2253
2254 @item S w
2255 @itemx C-w
2256 @kindex S w (Group)
2257 @kindex C-w (Group)
2258 @findex gnus-group-kill-region
2259 Kill all groups in the region (@code{gnus-group-kill-region}).
2260
2261 @item S z
2262 @kindex S z (Group)
2263 @findex gnus-group-kill-all-zombies
2264 Kill all zombie groups (@code{gnus-group-kill-all-zombies}).
2265
2266 @item S C-k
2267 @kindex S C-k (Group)
2268 @findex gnus-group-kill-level
2269 Kill all groups on a certain level (@code{gnus-group-kill-level}).
2270 These groups can't be yanked back after killing, so this command should
2271 be used with some caution. The only time where this command comes in
2272 really handy is when you have a @file{.newsrc} with lots of unsubscribed
2273 groups that you want to get rid off. @kbd{S C-k} on level 7 will
2274 kill off all unsubscribed groups that do not have message numbers in the
2275 @file{.newsrc} file.
2276
2277 @end table
2278
2279 Also @pxref{Group Levels}.
2280
2281
2282 @node Group Data
2283 @section Group Data
2284
2285 @table @kbd
2286
2287 @item c
2288 @kindex c (Group)
2289 @findex gnus-group-catchup-current
2290 @vindex gnus-group-catchup-group-hook
2291 @c @icon{gnus-group-catchup-current}
2292 Mark all unticked articles in this group as read
2293 (@code{gnus-group-catchup-current}).
2294 @code{gnus-group-catchup-group-hook} is called when catching up a group from
2295 the group buffer.
2296
2297 @item C
2298 @kindex C (Group)
2299 @findex gnus-group-catchup-current-all
2300 Mark all articles in this group, even the ticked ones, as read
2301 (@code{gnus-group-catchup-current-all}).
2302
2303 @item M-c
2304 @kindex M-c (Group)
2305 @findex gnus-group-clear-data
2306 Clear the data from the current group---nix out marks and the list of
2307 read articles (@code{gnus-group-clear-data}).
2308
2309 @item M-x gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups
2310 @kindex M-x gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups
2311 @findex gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups
2312 If you have switched from one @acronym{NNTP} server to another, all your marks
2313 and read ranges have become worthless. You can use this command to
2314 clear out all data that you have on your native groups. Use with
2315 caution.
2316
2317 @end table
2318
2319
2320 @node Group Levels
2321 @section Group Levels
2322 @cindex group level
2323 @cindex level
2324
2325 All groups have a level of @dfn{subscribedness}. For instance, if a
2326 group is on level 2, it is more subscribed than a group on level 5. You
2327 can ask Gnus to just list groups on a given level or lower
2328 (@pxref{Listing Groups}), or to just check for new articles in groups on
2329 a given level or lower (@pxref{Scanning New Messages}).
2330
2331 Remember: The higher the level of the group, the less important it is.
2332
2333 @table @kbd
2334
2335 @item S l
2336 @kindex S l (Group)
2337 @findex gnus-group-set-current-level
2338 Set the level of the current group. If a numeric prefix is given, the
2339 next @var{n} groups will have their levels set. The user will be
2340 prompted for a level.
2341 @end table
2342
2343 @vindex gnus-level-killed
2344 @vindex gnus-level-zombie
2345 @vindex gnus-level-unsubscribed
2346 @vindex gnus-level-subscribed
2347 Gnus considers groups from levels 1 to
2348 @code{gnus-level-subscribed} (inclusive) (default 5) to be subscribed,
2349 @code{gnus-level-subscribed} (exclusive) and
2350 @code{gnus-level-unsubscribed} (inclusive) (default 7) to be
2351 unsubscribed, @code{gnus-level-zombie} to be zombies (walking dead)
2352 (default 8) and @code{gnus-level-killed} to be killed (completely dead)
2353 (default 9). Gnus treats subscribed and unsubscribed groups exactly the
2354 same, but zombie and killed groups store no information on what articles
2355 you have read, etc. This distinction between dead and living
2356 groups isn't done because it is nice or clever, it is done purely for
2357 reasons of efficiency.
2358
2359 It is recommended that you keep all your mail groups (if any) on quite
2360 low levels (e.g., 1 or 2).
2361
2362 Maybe the following description of the default behavior of Gnus helps to
2363 understand what these levels are all about. By default, Gnus shows you
2364 subscribed nonempty groups, but by hitting @kbd{L} you can have it show
2365 empty subscribed groups and unsubscribed groups, too. Type @kbd{l} to
2366 go back to showing nonempty subscribed groups again. Thus, unsubscribed
2367 groups are hidden, in a way.
2368
2369 @cindex zombie groups
2370 Zombie and killed groups are similar to unsubscribed groups in that they
2371 are hidden by default. But they are different from subscribed and
2372 unsubscribed groups in that Gnus doesn't ask the news server for
2373 information (number of messages, number of unread messages) on zombie
2374 and killed groups. Normally, you use @kbd{C-k} to kill the groups you
2375 aren't interested in. If most groups are killed, Gnus is faster.
2376
2377 Why does Gnus distinguish between zombie and killed groups? Well, when
2378 a new group arrives on the server, Gnus by default makes it a zombie
2379 group. This means that you are normally not bothered with new groups,
2380 but you can type @kbd{A z} to get a list of all new groups. Subscribe
2381 the ones you like and kill the ones you don't want. (@kbd{A k} shows a
2382 list of killed groups.)
2383
2384 If you want to play with the level variables, you should show some care.
2385 Set them once, and don't touch them ever again. Better yet, don't touch
2386 them at all unless you know exactly what you're doing.
2387
2388 @vindex gnus-level-default-unsubscribed
2389 @vindex gnus-level-default-subscribed
2390 Two closely related variables are @code{gnus-level-default-subscribed}
2391 (default 3) and @code{gnus-level-default-unsubscribed} (default 6),
2392 which are the levels that new groups will be put on if they are
2393 (un)subscribed. These two variables should, of course, be inside the
2394 relevant valid ranges.
2395
2396 @vindex gnus-keep-same-level
2397 If @code{gnus-keep-same-level} is non-@code{nil}, some movement commands
2398 will only move to groups of the same level (or lower). In
2399 particular, going from the last article in one group to the next group
2400 will go to the next group of the same level (or lower). This might be
2401 handy if you want to read the most important groups before you read the
2402 rest.
2403
2404 If this variable is @code{best}, Gnus will make the next newsgroup the
2405 one with the best level.
2406
2407 @vindex gnus-group-default-list-level
2408 All groups with a level less than or equal to
2409 @code{gnus-group-default-list-level} will be listed in the group buffer
2410 by default.
2411 This variable can also be a function. In that case, that function will
2412 be called and the result will be used as value.
2413
2414
2415 @vindex gnus-group-list-inactive-groups
2416 If @code{gnus-group-list-inactive-groups} is non-@code{nil}, non-active
2417 groups will be listed along with the unread groups. This variable is
2418 @code{t} by default. If it is @code{nil}, inactive groups won't be
2419 listed.
2420
2421 @vindex gnus-group-use-permanent-levels
2422 If @code{gnus-group-use-permanent-levels} is non-@code{nil}, once you
2423 give a level prefix to @kbd{g} or @kbd{l}, all subsequent commands will
2424 use this level as the ``work'' level.
2425
2426 @vindex gnus-activate-level
2427 Gnus will normally just activate (i.e., query the server about) groups
2428 on level @code{gnus-activate-level} or less. If you don't want to
2429 activate unsubscribed groups, for instance, you might set this variable
2430 to 5. The default is 6.
2431
2432
2433 @node Group Score
2434 @section Group Score
2435 @cindex group score
2436 @cindex group rank
2437 @cindex rank
2438
2439 You would normally keep important groups on high levels, but that scheme
2440 is somewhat restrictive. Don't you wish you could have Gnus sort the
2441 group buffer according to how often you read groups, perhaps? Within
2442 reason?
2443
2444 This is what @dfn{group score} is for. You can have Gnus assign a score
2445 to each group through the mechanism described below. You can then sort
2446 the group buffer based on this score. Alternatively, you can sort on
2447 score and then level. (Taken together, the level and the score is
2448 called the @dfn{rank} of the group. A group that is on level 4 and has
2449 a score of 1 has a higher rank than a group on level 5 that has a score
2450 of 300. (The level is the most significant part and the score is the
2451 least significant part.))
2452
2453 @findex gnus-summary-bubble-group
2454 If you want groups you read often to get higher scores than groups you
2455 read seldom you can add the @code{gnus-summary-bubble-group} function to
2456 the @code{gnus-summary-exit-hook} hook. This will result (after
2457 sorting) in a bubbling sort of action. If you want to see that in
2458 action after each summary exit, you can add
2459 @code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-rank} or
2460 @code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-score} to the same hook, but that will
2461 slow things down somewhat.
2462
2463
2464 @node Marking Groups
2465 @section Marking Groups
2466 @cindex marking groups
2467
2468 If you want to perform some command on several groups, and they appear
2469 subsequently in the group buffer, you would normally just give a
2470 numerical prefix to the command. Most group commands will then do your
2471 bidding on those groups.
2472
2473 However, if the groups are not in sequential order, you can still
2474 perform a command on several groups. You simply mark the groups first
2475 with the process mark and then execute the command.
2476
2477 @table @kbd
2478
2479 @item #
2480 @kindex # (Group)
2481 @itemx M m
2482 @kindex M m (Group)
2483 @findex gnus-group-mark-group
2484 Set the mark on the current group (@code{gnus-group-mark-group}).
2485
2486 @item M-#
2487 @kindex M-# (Group)
2488 @itemx M u
2489 @kindex M u (Group)
2490 @findex gnus-group-unmark-group
2491 Remove the mark from the current group
2492 (@code{gnus-group-unmark-group}).
2493
2494 @item M U
2495 @kindex M U (Group)
2496 @findex gnus-group-unmark-all-groups
2497 Remove the mark from all groups (@code{gnus-group-unmark-all-groups}).
2498
2499 @item M w
2500 @kindex M w (Group)
2501 @findex gnus-group-mark-region
2502 Mark all groups between point and mark (@code{gnus-group-mark-region}).
2503
2504 @item M b
2505 @kindex M b (Group)
2506 @findex gnus-group-mark-buffer
2507 Mark all groups in the buffer (@code{gnus-group-mark-buffer}).
2508
2509 @item M r
2510 @kindex M r (Group)
2511 @findex gnus-group-mark-regexp
2512 Mark all groups that match some regular expression
2513 (@code{gnus-group-mark-regexp}).
2514 @end table
2515
2516 Also @pxref{Process/Prefix}.
2517
2518 @findex gnus-group-universal-argument
2519 If you want to execute some command on all groups that have been marked
2520 with the process mark, you can use the @kbd{M-&}
2521 (@code{gnus-group-universal-argument}) command. It will prompt you for
2522 the command to be executed.
2523
2524
2525 @node Foreign Groups
2526 @section Foreign Groups
2527 @cindex foreign groups
2528
2529 If you recall how to subscribe to servers (@pxref{Finding the News})
2530 you will remember that @code{gnus-secondary-select-methods} and
2531 @code{gnus-select-method} let you write a definition in Emacs Lisp of
2532 what servers you want to see when you start up. The alternate
2533 approach is to use foreign servers and groups. ``Foreign'' here means
2534 they are not coming from the select methods. All foreign server
2535 configuration and subscriptions are stored only in the
2536 @file{~/.newsrc.eld} file.
2537
2538 Below are some group mode commands for making and editing general foreign
2539 groups, as well as commands to ease the creation of a few
2540 special-purpose groups. All these commands insert the newly created
2541 groups under point---@code{gnus-subscribe-newsgroup-method} is not
2542 consulted.
2543
2544 Changes from the group editing commands are stored in
2545 @file{~/.newsrc.eld} (@code{gnus-startup-file}). An alternative is the
2546 variable @code{gnus-parameters}, @xref{Group Parameters}.
2547
2548 @table @kbd
2549
2550 @item G m
2551 @kindex G m (Group)
2552 @findex gnus-group-make-group
2553 @cindex making groups
2554 Make a new group (@code{gnus-group-make-group}). Gnus will prompt you
2555 for a name, a method and possibly an @dfn{address}. For an easier way
2556 to subscribe to @acronym{NNTP} groups (@pxref{Browse Foreign Server}).
2557
2558 @item G M
2559 @kindex G M (Group)
2560 @findex gnus-group-read-ephemeral-group
2561 Make an ephemeral group (@code{gnus-group-read-ephemeral-group}). Gnus
2562 will prompt you for a name, a method and an @dfn{address}.
2563
2564 @item G r
2565 @kindex G r (Group)
2566 @findex gnus-group-rename-group
2567 @cindex renaming groups
2568 Rename the current group to something else
2569 (@code{gnus-group-rename-group}). This is valid only on some
2570 groups---mail groups mostly. This command might very well be quite slow
2571 on some back ends.
2572
2573 @item G c
2574 @kindex G c (Group)
2575 @cindex customizing
2576 @findex gnus-group-customize
2577 Customize the group parameters (@code{gnus-group-customize}).
2578
2579 @item G e
2580 @kindex G e (Group)
2581 @findex gnus-group-edit-group-method
2582 @cindex renaming groups
2583 Enter a buffer where you can edit the select method of the current
2584 group (@code{gnus-group-edit-group-method}).
2585
2586 @item G p
2587 @kindex G p (Group)
2588 @findex gnus-group-edit-group-parameters
2589 Enter a buffer where you can edit the group parameters
2590 (@code{gnus-group-edit-group-parameters}).
2591
2592 @item G E
2593 @kindex G E (Group)
2594 @findex gnus-group-edit-group
2595 Enter a buffer where you can edit the group info
2596 (@code{gnus-group-edit-group}).
2597
2598 @item G d
2599 @kindex G d (Group)
2600 @findex gnus-group-make-directory-group
2601 @cindex nndir
2602 Make a directory group (@pxref{Directory Groups}). You will be prompted
2603 for a directory name (@code{gnus-group-make-directory-group}).
2604
2605 @item G h
2606 @kindex G h (Group)
2607 @cindex help group
2608 @findex gnus-group-make-help-group
2609 Make the Gnus help group (@code{gnus-group-make-help-group}).
2610
2611 @item G D
2612 @kindex G D (Group)
2613 @findex gnus-group-enter-directory
2614 @cindex nneething
2615 Read an arbitrary directory as if it were a newsgroup with the
2616 @code{nneething} back end (@code{gnus-group-enter-directory}).
2617 @xref{Anything Groups}.
2618
2619 @item G f
2620 @kindex G f (Group)
2621 @findex gnus-group-make-doc-group
2622 @cindex ClariNet Briefs
2623 @cindex nndoc
2624 Make a group based on some file or other
2625 (@code{gnus-group-make-doc-group}). If you give a prefix to this
2626 command, you will be prompted for a file name and a file type.
2627 Currently supported types are @code{mbox}, @code{babyl},
2628 @code{digest}, @code{news}, @code{rnews}, @code{mmdf}, @code{forward},
2629 @code{rfc934}, @code{rfc822-forward}, @code{mime-parts},
2630 @code{standard-digest}, @code{slack-digest}, @code{clari-briefs},
2631 @code{nsmail}, @code{outlook}, @code{oe-dbx}, and @code{mailman}. If
2632 you run this command without a prefix, Gnus will guess at the file
2633 type. @xref{Document Groups}.
2634
2635 @item G u
2636 @kindex G u (Group)
2637 @vindex gnus-useful-groups
2638 @findex gnus-group-make-useful-group
2639 Create one of the groups mentioned in @code{gnus-useful-groups}
2640 (@code{gnus-group-make-useful-group}).
2641
2642 @item G w
2643 @kindex G w (Group)
2644 @findex gnus-group-make-web-group
2645 @cindex Google
2646 @cindex nnweb
2647 @cindex gmane
2648 Make an ephemeral group based on a web search
2649 (@code{gnus-group-make-web-group}). If you give a prefix to this
2650 command, make a solid group instead. You will be prompted for the
2651 search engine type and the search string. Valid search engine types
2652 include @code{google}, @code{dejanews}, and @code{gmane}.
2653 @xref{Web Searches}.
2654
2655 If you use the @code{google} search engine, you can limit the search
2656 to a particular group by using a match string like
2657 @samp{shaving group:alt.sysadmin.recovery}.
2658
2659 @item G R
2660 @kindex G R (Group)
2661 @findex gnus-group-make-rss-group
2662 Make a group based on an @acronym{RSS} feed
2663 (@code{gnus-group-make-rss-group}). You will be prompted for an URL@.
2664 @xref{RSS}.
2665
2666 @item G DEL
2667 @kindex G DEL (Group)
2668 @findex gnus-group-delete-group
2669 This function will delete the current group
2670 (@code{gnus-group-delete-group}). If given a prefix, this function will
2671 actually delete all the articles in the group, and forcibly remove the
2672 group itself from the face of the Earth. Use a prefix only if you are
2673 absolutely sure of what you are doing. This command can't be used on
2674 read-only groups (like @code{nntp} groups), though.
2675
2676 @item G V
2677 @kindex G V (Group)
2678 @findex gnus-group-make-empty-virtual
2679 Make a new, fresh, empty @code{nnvirtual} group
2680 (@code{gnus-group-make-empty-virtual}). @xref{Virtual Groups}.
2681
2682 @item G v
2683 @kindex G v (Group)
2684 @findex gnus-group-add-to-virtual
2685 Add the current group to an @code{nnvirtual} group
2686 (@code{gnus-group-add-to-virtual}). Uses the process/prefix convention.
2687 @end table
2688
2689 @xref{Select Methods}, for more information on the various select
2690 methods.
2691
2692 @vindex gnus-activate-foreign-newsgroups
2693 If @code{gnus-activate-foreign-newsgroups} is a positive number,
2694 Gnus will check all foreign groups with this level or lower at startup.
2695 This might take quite a while, especially if you subscribe to lots of
2696 groups from different @acronym{NNTP} servers. Also @pxref{Group Levels};
2697 @code{gnus-activate-level} also affects activation of foreign
2698 newsgroups.
2699
2700
2701 The following commands create ephemeral groups. They can be called not
2702 only from the Group buffer, but in any Gnus buffer.
2703
2704 @table @code
2705 @item gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group
2706 @findex gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group
2707 @vindex gnus-gmane-group-download-format
2708 Read an ephemeral group on Gmane.org. The articles are downloaded via
2709 HTTP using the URL specified by @code{gnus-gmane-group-download-format}.
2710 Gnus will prompt you for a group name, the start article number and an
2711 the article range.
2712
2713 @item gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group-url
2714 @findex gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group-url
2715 This command is similar to @code{gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group}, but
2716 the group name and the article number and range are constructed from a
2717 given @acronym{URL}. Supported @acronym{URL} formats include:
2718 @indicateurl{http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12300/focus=12399},
2719 @indicateurl{http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12345/},
2720 @indicateurl{http://article.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12345/},
2721 @indicateurl{http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12345/}, and
2722 @indicateurl{http://news.gmane.org/group/gmane.foo.bar/thread=12345}.
2723
2724 @item gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group
2725 @findex gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group
2726 Read an Emacs bug report in an ephemeral group. Gnus will prompt for a
2727 bug number. The default is the number at point. The @acronym{URL} is
2728 specified in @code{gnus-bug-group-download-format-alist}.
2729
2730 @item gnus-read-ephemeral-debian-bug-group
2731 @findex gnus-read-ephemeral-debian-bug-group
2732 Read a Debian bug report in an ephemeral group. Analog to
2733 @code{gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group}.
2734 @end table
2735
2736 Some of these command are also useful for article buttons, @xref{Article
2737 Buttons}.
2738
2739 Here is an example:
2740 @lisp
2741 (require 'gnus-art)
2742 (add-to-list
2743 'gnus-button-alist
2744 '("#\\([0-9]+\\)\\>" 1
2745 (string-match "\\<emacs\\>" (or gnus-newsgroup-name ""))
2746 gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group 1))
2747 @end lisp
2748
2749
2750 @node Group Parameters
2751 @section Group Parameters
2752 @cindex group parameters
2753
2754 The group parameters store information local to a particular group.
2755
2756 Use the @kbd{G p} or the @kbd{G c} command to edit group parameters of a
2757 group. (@kbd{G p} presents you with a Lisp-based interface, @kbd{G c}
2758 presents you with a Customize-like interface. The latter helps avoid
2759 silly Lisp errors.) You might also be interested in reading about topic
2760 parameters (@pxref{Topic Parameters}).
2761 Additionally, you can set group parameters via the
2762 @code{gnus-parameters} variable, see below.
2763
2764 Here's an example group parameter list:
2765
2766 @example
2767 ((to-address . "ding@@gnus.org")
2768 (auto-expire . t))
2769 @end example
2770
2771 We see that each element consists of a ``dotted pair''---the thing before
2772 the dot is the key, while the thing after the dot is the value. All the
2773 parameters have this form @emph{except} local variable specs, which are
2774 not dotted pairs, but proper lists.
2775
2776 Some parameters have correspondent customizable variables, each of which
2777 is an alist of regexps and values.
2778
2779 The following group parameters can be used:
2780
2781 @table @code
2782 @item to-address
2783 @cindex to-address
2784 Address used by when doing followups and new posts.
2785
2786 @example
2787 (to-address . "some@@where.com")
2788 @end example
2789
2790 This is primarily useful in mail groups that represent closed mailing
2791 lists---mailing lists where it's expected that everybody that writes to
2792 the mailing list is subscribed to it. Since using this parameter
2793 ensures that the mail only goes to the mailing list itself, it means
2794 that members won't receive two copies of your followups.
2795
2796 Using @code{to-address} will actually work whether the group is foreign
2797 or not. Let's say there's a group on the server that is called
2798 @samp{fa.4ad-l}. This is a real newsgroup, but the server has gotten
2799 the articles from a mail-to-news gateway. Posting directly to this
2800 group is therefore impossible---you have to send mail to the mailing
2801 list address instead.
2802
2803 See also @code{gnus-parameter-to-address-alist}.
2804
2805 @item to-list
2806 @cindex to-list
2807 Address used when doing @kbd{a} in that group.
2808
2809 @example
2810 (to-list . "some@@where.com")
2811 @end example
2812
2813 It is totally ignored
2814 when doing a followup---except that if it is present in a news group,
2815 you'll get mail group semantics when doing @kbd{f}.
2816
2817 If you do an @kbd{a} command in a mail group and you have neither a
2818 @code{to-list} group parameter nor a @code{to-address} group parameter,
2819 then a @code{to-list} group parameter will be added automatically upon
2820 sending the message if @code{gnus-add-to-list} is set to @code{t}.
2821 @vindex gnus-add-to-list
2822
2823 @findex gnus-mailing-list-mode
2824 @cindex mail list groups
2825 If this variable is set, @code{gnus-mailing-list-mode} is turned on when
2826 entering summary buffer.
2827
2828 See also @code{gnus-parameter-to-list-alist}.
2829
2830 @anchor{subscribed}
2831 @item subscribed
2832 @cindex subscribed
2833 @cindex Mail-Followup-To
2834 @findex gnus-find-subscribed-addresses
2835 If this parameter is set to @code{t}, Gnus will consider the
2836 to-address and to-list parameters for this group as addresses of
2837 mailing lists you are subscribed to. Giving Gnus this information is
2838 (only) a first step in getting it to generate correct Mail-Followup-To
2839 headers for your posts to these lists. The second step is to put the
2840 following in your @file{.gnus.el}
2841
2842 @lisp
2843 (setq message-subscribed-address-functions
2844 '(gnus-find-subscribed-addresses))
2845 @end lisp
2846
2847 @xref{Mailing Lists, ,Mailing Lists, message, The Message Manual}, for
2848 a complete treatment of available MFT support.
2849
2850 @item visible
2851 @cindex visible
2852 If the group parameter list has the element @code{(visible . t)},
2853 that group will always be visible in the Group buffer, regardless
2854 of whether it has any unread articles.
2855
2856 This parameter cannot be set via @code{gnus-parameters}. See
2857 @code{gnus-permanently-visible-groups} as an alternative.
2858
2859 @item broken-reply-to
2860 @cindex broken-reply-to
2861 Elements like @code{(broken-reply-to . t)} signals that @code{Reply-To}
2862 headers in this group are to be ignored, and for the header to be hidden
2863 if @code{reply-to} is part of @code{gnus-boring-article-headers}. This
2864 can be useful if you're reading a mailing list group where the listserv
2865 has inserted @code{Reply-To} headers that point back to the listserv
2866 itself. That is broken behavior. So there!
2867
2868 @item to-group
2869 @cindex to-group
2870 Elements like @code{(to-group . "some.group.name")} means that all
2871 posts in that group will be sent to @code{some.group.name}.
2872
2873 @item newsgroup
2874 @cindex newsgroup
2875 If you have @code{(newsgroup . t)} in the group parameter list, Gnus
2876 will treat all responses as if they were responses to news articles.
2877 This can be useful if you have a mail group that's really a mirror of a
2878 news group.
2879
2880 @item gcc-self
2881 @cindex gcc-self
2882 If @code{(gcc-self . t)} is present in the group parameter list, newly
2883 composed messages will be @code{gcc}d to the current group. If
2884 @code{(gcc-self . none)} is present, no @code{Gcc:} header will be
2885 generated, if @code{(gcc-self . "group")} is present, this string will
2886 be inserted literally as a @code{Gcc:} header. It should be a group
2887 name. The @code{gcc-self} value may also be a list of strings and
2888 @code{t}, e.g., @code{(gcc-self "group1" "group2" t)} means to
2889 @code{gcc} the newly composed message into the groups @code{"group1"}
2890 and @code{"group2"}, and into the current group. The @code{gcc-self}
2891 parameter takes precedence over any default @code{Gcc} rules as
2892 described later (@pxref{Archived Messages}), with the exception for
2893 messages to resend.
2894
2895 @strong{Caveat}: Adding @code{(gcc-self . t)} to the parameter list of
2896 @code{nntp} groups (or the like) isn't valid. An @code{nntp} server
2897 doesn't accept articles.
2898
2899 @item auto-expire
2900 @cindex auto-expire
2901 @cindex expiring mail
2902 If the group parameter has an element that looks like @code{(auto-expire
2903 . t)}, all articles read will be marked as expirable. For an
2904 alternative approach, @pxref{Expiring Mail}.
2905
2906 See also @code{gnus-auto-expirable-newsgroups}.
2907
2908 @item total-expire
2909 @cindex total-expire
2910 @cindex expiring mail
2911 If the group parameter has an element that looks like
2912 @code{(total-expire . t)}, all read articles will be put through the
2913 expiry process, even if they are not marked as expirable. Use with
2914 caution. Unread, ticked and dormant articles are not eligible for
2915 expiry.
2916
2917 See also @code{gnus-total-expirable-newsgroups}.
2918
2919 @item expiry-wait
2920 @cindex expiry-wait
2921 @vindex nnmail-expiry-wait-function
2922 If the group parameter has an element that looks like
2923 @code{(expiry-wait . 10)}, this value will override any
2924 @code{nnmail-expiry-wait} and @code{nnmail-expiry-wait-function}
2925 (@pxref{Expiring Mail}) when expiring expirable messages. The value
2926 can either be a number of days (not necessarily an integer) or the
2927 symbols @code{never} or @code{immediate}.
2928
2929 @item expiry-target
2930 @cindex expiry-target
2931 Where expired messages end up. This parameter overrides
2932 @code{nnmail-expiry-target}.
2933
2934 @item score-file
2935 @cindex score file group parameter
2936 Elements that look like @code{(score-file . "file")} will make
2937 @file{file} into the current score file for the group in question. All
2938 interactive score entries will be put into this file.
2939
2940 @item adapt-file
2941 @cindex adapt file group parameter
2942 Elements that look like @code{(adapt-file . "file")} will make
2943 @file{file} into the current adaptive file for the group in question.
2944 All adaptive score entries will be put into this file.
2945
2946 @item admin-address
2947 @cindex admin-address
2948 When unsubscribing from a mailing list you should never send the
2949 unsubscription notice to the mailing list itself. Instead, you'd send
2950 messages to the administrative address. This parameter allows you to
2951 put the admin address somewhere convenient.
2952
2953 @item display
2954 @cindex display
2955 Elements that look like @code{(display . MODE)} say which articles to
2956 display on entering the group. Valid values are:
2957
2958 @table @code
2959 @item all
2960 Display all articles, both read and unread.
2961
2962 @item an integer
2963 Display the last @var{integer} articles in the group. This is the same as
2964 entering the group with @kbd{C-u @var{integer}}.
2965
2966 @item default
2967 Display the default visible articles, which normally includes unread and
2968 ticked articles.
2969
2970 @item an array
2971 Display articles that satisfy a predicate.
2972
2973 Here are some examples:
2974
2975 @table @code
2976 @item [unread]
2977 Display only unread articles.
2978
2979 @item [not expire]
2980 Display everything except expirable articles.
2981
2982 @item [and (not reply) (not expire)]
2983 Display everything except expirable and articles you've already
2984 responded to.
2985 @end table
2986
2987 The available operators are @code{not}, @code{and} and @code{or}.
2988 Predicates include @code{tick}, @code{unsend}, @code{undownload},
2989 @code{unread}, @code{dormant}, @code{expire}, @code{reply},
2990 @code{killed}, @code{bookmark}, @code{score}, @code{save},
2991 @code{cache}, @code{forward}, and @code{unseen}.
2992
2993 @end table
2994
2995 The @code{display} parameter works by limiting the summary buffer to
2996 the subset specified. You can pop the limit by using the @kbd{/ w}
2997 command (@pxref{Limiting}).
2998
2999 @item comment
3000 @cindex comment
3001 Elements that look like @code{(comment . "This is a comment")} are
3002 arbitrary comments on the group. You can display comments in the
3003 group line (@pxref{Group Line Specification}).
3004
3005 @item charset
3006 @cindex charset
3007 Elements that look like @code{(charset . iso-8859-1)} will make
3008 @code{iso-8859-1} the default charset; that is, the charset that will be
3009 used for all articles that do not specify a charset.
3010
3011 See also @code{gnus-group-charset-alist}.
3012
3013 @item ignored-charsets
3014 @cindex ignored-charset
3015 Elements that look like @code{(ignored-charsets x-unknown iso-8859-1)}
3016 will make @code{iso-8859-1} and @code{x-unknown} ignored; that is, the
3017 default charset will be used for decoding articles.
3018
3019 See also @code{gnus-group-ignored-charsets-alist}.
3020
3021 @item posting-style
3022 @cindex posting-style
3023 You can store additional posting style information for this group
3024 here (@pxref{Posting Styles}). The format is that of an entry in the
3025 @code{gnus-posting-styles} alist, except that there's no regexp matching
3026 the group name (of course). Style elements in this group parameter will
3027 take precedence over the ones found in @code{gnus-posting-styles}.
3028
3029 For instance, if you want a funky name and signature in this group only,
3030 instead of hacking @code{gnus-posting-styles}, you could put something
3031 like this in the group parameters:
3032
3033 @example
3034 (posting-style
3035 (name "Funky Name")
3036 ("X-Message-SMTP-Method" "smtp smtp.example.org 587")
3037 ("X-My-Header" "Funky Value")
3038 (signature "Funky Signature"))
3039 @end example
3040
3041 If you're using topics to organize your group buffer
3042 (@pxref{Group Topics}), note that posting styles can also be set in
3043 the topics parameters. Posting styles in topic parameters apply to all
3044 groups in this topic. More precisely, the posting-style settings for a
3045 group result from the hierarchical merging of all posting-style
3046 entries in the parameters of this group and all the topics it belongs
3047 to.
3048
3049
3050 @item post-method
3051 @cindex post-method
3052 If it is set, the value is used as the method for posting message
3053 instead of @code{gnus-post-method}.
3054
3055 @item mail-source
3056 @cindex mail-source
3057 If it is set, and the setting of @code{mail-sources} includes a
3058 @code{group} mail source (@pxref{Mail Sources}), the value is a
3059 mail source for this group.
3060
3061 @item banner
3062 @cindex banner
3063 An item like @code{(banner . @var{regexp})} causes any part of an article
3064 that matches the regular expression @var{regexp} to be stripped. Instead of
3065 @var{regexp}, you can also use the symbol @code{signature} which strips the
3066 last signature or any of the elements of the alist
3067 @code{gnus-article-banner-alist}.
3068
3069 @item sieve
3070 @cindex sieve
3071 This parameter contains a Sieve test that should match incoming mail
3072 that should be placed in this group. From this group parameter, a
3073 Sieve @samp{IF} control structure is generated, having the test as the
3074 condition and @samp{fileinto "group.name";} as the body.
3075
3076 For example, if the @samp{INBOX.list.sieve} group has the @code{(sieve
3077 address "sender" "sieve-admin@@extundo.com")} group parameter, when
3078 translating the group parameter into a Sieve script (@pxref{Sieve
3079 Commands}) the following Sieve code is generated:
3080
3081 @example
3082 if address "sender" "sieve-admin@@extundo.com" @{
3083 fileinto "INBOX.list.sieve";
3084 @}
3085 @end example
3086
3087 To generate tests for multiple email-addresses use a group parameter
3088 like @code{(sieve address "sender" ("name@@one.org" else@@two.org"))}.
3089 When generating a sieve script (@pxref{Sieve Commands}) Sieve code
3090 like the following is generated:
3091
3092 @example
3093 if address "sender" ["name@@one.org", "else@@two.org"] @{
3094 fileinto "INBOX.list.sieve";
3095 @}
3096 @end example
3097
3098 You can also use regexp expansions in the rules:
3099
3100 @example
3101 (sieve header :regex "list-id" "<c++std-\\1.accu.org>")
3102 @end example
3103
3104 See @pxref{Sieve Commands} for commands and variables that might be of
3105 interest in relation to the sieve parameter.
3106
3107 The Sieve language is described in RFC 3028. @xref{Top, Emacs Sieve,
3108 Top, sieve, Emacs Sieve}.
3109
3110 @item (agent parameters)
3111 If the agent has been enabled, you can set any of its parameters to
3112 control the behavior of the agent in individual groups. See Agent
3113 Parameters in @ref{Category Syntax}. Most users will choose to set
3114 agent parameters in either an agent category or group topic to
3115 minimize the configuration effort.
3116
3117 @item (@var{variable} @var{form})
3118 You can use the group parameters to set variables local to the group you
3119 are entering. If you want to turn threading off in @samp{news.answers},
3120 you could put @code{(gnus-show-threads nil)} in the group parameters of
3121 that group. @code{gnus-show-threads} will be made into a local variable
3122 in the summary buffer you enter, and the form @code{nil} will be
3123 @code{eval}ed there.
3124
3125 Note that this feature sets the variable locally to the summary buffer
3126 if and only if @var{variable} has been bound as a variable. Otherwise,
3127 only evaluating the form will take place. So, you may want to bind the
3128 variable in advance using @code{defvar} or other if the result of the
3129 form needs to be set to it.
3130
3131 But some variables are evaluated in the article buffer, or in the
3132 message buffer (of a reply or followup or otherwise newly created
3133 message). As a workaround, it might help to add the variable in
3134 question to @code{gnus-newsgroup-variables}. @xref{Various Summary
3135 Stuff}. So if you want to set @code{message-from-style} via the group
3136 parameters, then you may need the following statement elsewhere in your
3137 @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
3138
3139 @lisp
3140 (add-to-list 'gnus-newsgroup-variables 'message-from-style)
3141 @end lisp
3142
3143 @vindex gnus-list-identifiers
3144 A use for this feature is to remove a mailing list identifier tag in
3145 the subject fields of articles. E.g., if the news group
3146
3147 @example
3148 nntp+news.gnus.org:gmane.text.docbook.apps
3149 @end example
3150
3151 has the tag @samp{DOC-BOOK-APPS:} in the subject of all articles, this
3152 tag can be removed from the article subjects in the summary buffer for
3153 the group by putting @code{(gnus-list-identifiers "DOCBOOK-APPS:")}
3154 into the group parameters for the group.
3155
3156 This can also be used as a group-specific hook function. If you want to
3157 hear a beep when you enter a group, you could put something like
3158 @code{(dummy-variable (ding))} in the parameters of that group. If
3159 @code{dummy-variable} has been bound (see above), it will be set to the
3160 (meaningless) result of the @code{(ding)} form.
3161
3162 Alternatively, since the VARIABLE becomes local to the group, this
3163 pattern can be used to temporarily change a hook. For example, if the
3164 following is added to a group parameter
3165
3166 @lisp
3167 (gnus-summary-prepared-hook
3168 (lambda nil (local-set-key "d" (local-key-binding "n"))))
3169 @end lisp
3170
3171 when the group is entered, the 'd' key will not mark the article as
3172 expired.
3173
3174 @end table
3175
3176 @vindex gnus-parameters
3177 Group parameters can be set via the @code{gnus-parameters} variable too.
3178 But some variables, such as @code{visible}, have no effect (For this
3179 case see @code{gnus-permanently-visible-groups} as an alternative.).
3180 For example:
3181
3182 @lisp
3183 (setq gnus-parameters
3184 '(("mail\\..*"
3185 (gnus-show-threads nil)
3186 (gnus-use-scoring nil)
3187 (gnus-summary-line-format
3188 "%U%R%z%I%(%[%d:%ub%-23,23f%]%) %s\n")
3189 (gcc-self . t)
3190 (display . all))
3191
3192 ("^nnimap:\\(foo.bar\\)$"
3193 (to-group . "\\1"))
3194
3195 ("mail\\.me"
3196 (gnus-use-scoring t))
3197
3198 ("list\\..*"
3199 (total-expire . t)
3200 (broken-reply-to . t))))
3201 @end lisp
3202
3203 All clauses that matches the group name will be used, but the last
3204 setting ``wins''. So if you have two clauses that both match the
3205 group name, and both set, say @code{display}, the last setting will
3206 override the first.
3207
3208 Parameters that are strings will be subjected to regexp substitution,
3209 as the @code{to-group} example shows.
3210
3211 @vindex gnus-parameters-case-fold-search
3212 By default, whether comparing the group name and one of those regexps
3213 specified in @code{gnus-parameters} is done in a case-sensitive manner
3214 or a case-insensitive manner depends on the value of
3215 @code{case-fold-search} at the time when the comparison is done. The
3216 value of @code{case-fold-search} is typically @code{t}; it means, for
3217 example, the element @code{("INBOX\\.FOO" (total-expire . t))} might be
3218 applied to both the @samp{INBOX.FOO} group and the @samp{INBOX.foo}
3219 group. If you want to make those regexps always case-sensitive, set the
3220 value of the @code{gnus-parameters-case-fold-search} variable to
3221 @code{nil}. Otherwise, set it to @code{t} if you want to compare them
3222 always in a case-insensitive manner.
3223
3224 You can define different sorting to different groups via
3225 @code{gnus-parameters}. Here is an example to sort an @acronym{NNTP}
3226 group by reverse date to see the latest news at the top and an
3227 @acronym{RSS} group by subject. In this example, the first group is the
3228 Debian daily news group @code{gmane.linux.debian.user.news} from
3229 news.gmane.org. The @acronym{RSS} group corresponds to the Debian
3230 weekly news RSS feed
3231 @url{http://packages.debian.org/unstable/newpkg_main.en.rdf},
3232 @xref{RSS}.
3233
3234 @lisp
3235 (setq
3236 gnus-parameters
3237 '(("nntp.*gmane\\.debian\\.user\\.news"
3238 (gnus-show-threads nil)
3239 (gnus-article-sort-functions '((not gnus-article-sort-by-date)))
3240 (gnus-use-adaptive-scoring nil)
3241 (gnus-use-scoring nil))
3242 ("nnrss.*debian"
3243 (gnus-show-threads nil)
3244 (gnus-article-sort-functions 'gnus-article-sort-by-subject)
3245 (gnus-use-adaptive-scoring nil)
3246 (gnus-use-scoring t)
3247 (gnus-score-find-score-files-function 'gnus-score-find-single)
3248 (gnus-summary-line-format "%U%R%z%d %I%(%[ %s %]%)\n"))))
3249 @end lisp
3250
3251
3252 @node Listing Groups
3253 @section Listing Groups
3254 @cindex group listing
3255
3256 These commands all list various slices of the groups available.
3257
3258 @table @kbd
3259
3260 @item l
3261 @itemx A s
3262 @kindex A s (Group)
3263 @kindex l (Group)
3264 @findex gnus-group-list-groups
3265 List all groups that have unread articles
3266 (@code{gnus-group-list-groups}). If the numeric prefix is used, this
3267 command will list only groups of level ARG and lower. By default, it
3268 only lists groups of level five (i.e.,
3269 @code{gnus-group-default-list-level}) or lower (i.e., just subscribed
3270 groups).
3271
3272 @item L
3273 @itemx A u
3274 @kindex A u (Group)
3275 @kindex L (Group)
3276 @findex gnus-group-list-all-groups
3277 List all groups, whether they have unread articles or not
3278 (@code{gnus-group-list-all-groups}). If the numeric prefix is used,
3279 this command will list only groups of level ARG and lower. By default,
3280 it lists groups of level seven or lower (i.e., just subscribed and
3281 unsubscribed groups).
3282
3283 @item A l
3284 @kindex A l (Group)
3285 @findex gnus-group-list-level
3286 List all unread groups on a specific level
3287 (@code{gnus-group-list-level}). If given a prefix, also list the groups
3288 with no unread articles.
3289
3290 @item A k
3291 @kindex A k (Group)
3292 @findex gnus-group-list-killed
3293 List all killed groups (@code{gnus-group-list-killed}). If given a
3294 prefix argument, really list all groups that are available, but aren't
3295 currently (un)subscribed. This could entail reading the active file
3296 from the server.
3297
3298 @item A z
3299 @kindex A z (Group)
3300 @findex gnus-group-list-zombies
3301 List all zombie groups (@code{gnus-group-list-zombies}).
3302
3303 @item A m
3304 @kindex A m (Group)
3305 @findex gnus-group-list-matching
3306 List all unread, subscribed groups with names that match a regexp
3307 (@code{gnus-group-list-matching}).
3308
3309 @item A M
3310 @kindex A M (Group)
3311 @findex gnus-group-list-all-matching
3312 List groups that match a regexp (@code{gnus-group-list-all-matching}).
3313
3314 @item A A
3315 @kindex A A (Group)
3316 @findex gnus-group-list-active
3317 List absolutely all groups in the active file(s) of the
3318 server(s) you are connected to (@code{gnus-group-list-active}). This
3319 might very well take quite a while. It might actually be a better idea
3320 to do a @kbd{A M} to list all matching, and just give @samp{.} as the
3321 thing to match on. Also note that this command may list groups that
3322 don't exist (yet)---these will be listed as if they were killed groups.
3323 Take the output with some grains of salt.
3324
3325 @item A a
3326 @kindex A a (Group)
3327 @findex gnus-group-apropos
3328 List all groups that have names that match a regexp
3329 (@code{gnus-group-apropos}).
3330
3331 @item A d
3332 @kindex A d (Group)
3333 @findex gnus-group-description-apropos
3334 List all groups that have names or descriptions that match a regexp
3335 (@code{gnus-group-description-apropos}).
3336
3337 @item A c
3338 @kindex A c (Group)
3339 @findex gnus-group-list-cached
3340 List all groups with cached articles (@code{gnus-group-list-cached}).
3341
3342 @item A ?
3343 @kindex A ? (Group)
3344 @findex gnus-group-list-dormant
3345 List all groups with dormant articles (@code{gnus-group-list-dormant}).
3346
3347 @item A !
3348 @kindex A ! (Group)
3349 @findex gnus-group-list-ticked
3350 List all groups with ticked articles (@code{gnus-group-list-ticked}).
3351
3352 @item A /
3353 @kindex A / (Group)
3354 @findex gnus-group-list-limit
3355 Further limit groups within the current selection
3356 (@code{gnus-group-list-limit}). If you've first limited to groups
3357 with dormant articles with @kbd{A ?}, you can then further limit with
3358 @kbd{A / c}, which will then limit to groups with cached articles,
3359 giving you the groups that have both dormant articles and cached
3360 articles.
3361
3362 @item A f
3363 @kindex A f (Group)
3364 @findex gnus-group-list-flush
3365 Flush groups from the current selection (@code{gnus-group-list-flush}).
3366
3367 @item A p
3368 @kindex A p (Group)
3369 @findex gnus-group-list-plus
3370 List groups plus the current selection (@code{gnus-group-list-plus}).
3371
3372 @end table
3373
3374 @vindex gnus-permanently-visible-groups
3375 @cindex visible group parameter
3376 Groups that match the @code{gnus-permanently-visible-groups} regexp will
3377 always be shown, whether they have unread articles or not. You can also
3378 add the @code{visible} element to the group parameters in question to
3379 get the same effect.
3380
3381 @vindex gnus-list-groups-with-ticked-articles
3382 Groups that have just ticked articles in it are normally listed in the
3383 group buffer. If @code{gnus-list-groups-with-ticked-articles} is
3384 @code{nil}, these groups will be treated just like totally empty
3385 groups. It is @code{t} by default.
3386
3387
3388 @node Sorting Groups
3389 @section Sorting Groups
3390 @cindex sorting groups
3391
3392 @kindex C-c C-s (Group)
3393 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups
3394 @vindex gnus-group-sort-function
3395 The @kbd{C-c C-s} (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups}) command sorts the
3396 group buffer according to the function(s) given by the
3397 @code{gnus-group-sort-function} variable. Available sorting functions
3398 include:
3399
3400 @table @code
3401
3402 @item gnus-group-sort-by-alphabet
3403 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-alphabet
3404 Sort the group names alphabetically. This is the default.
3405
3406 @item gnus-group-sort-by-real-name
3407 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-real-name
3408 Sort the group alphabetically on the real (unprefixed) group names.
3409
3410 @item gnus-group-sort-by-level
3411 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-level
3412 Sort by group level.
3413
3414 @item gnus-group-sort-by-score
3415 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-score
3416 Sort by group score. @xref{Group Score}.
3417
3418 @item gnus-group-sort-by-rank
3419 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-rank
3420 Sort by group score and then the group level. The level and the score
3421 are, when taken together, the group's @dfn{rank}. @xref{Group Score}.
3422
3423 @item gnus-group-sort-by-unread
3424 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-unread
3425 Sort by number of unread articles.
3426
3427 @item gnus-group-sort-by-method
3428 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-method
3429 Sort alphabetically on the select method.
3430
3431 @item gnus-group-sort-by-server
3432 @findex gnus-group-sort-by-server
3433 Sort alphabetically on the Gnus server name.
3434
3435
3436 @end table
3437
3438 @code{gnus-group-sort-function} can also be a list of sorting
3439 functions. In that case, the most significant sort key function must be
3440 the last one.
3441
3442
3443 There are also a number of commands for sorting directly according to
3444 some sorting criteria:
3445
3446 @table @kbd
3447 @item G S a
3448 @kindex G S a (Group)
3449 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-alphabet
3450 Sort the group buffer alphabetically by group name
3451 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-alphabet}).
3452
3453 @item G S u
3454 @kindex G S u (Group)
3455 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-unread
3456 Sort the group buffer by the number of unread articles
3457 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-unread}).
3458
3459 @item G S l
3460 @kindex G S l (Group)
3461 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-level
3462 Sort the group buffer by group level
3463 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-level}).
3464
3465 @item G S v
3466 @kindex G S v (Group)
3467 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-score
3468 Sort the group buffer by group score
3469 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-score}). @xref{Group Score}.
3470
3471 @item G S r
3472 @kindex G S r (Group)
3473 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-rank
3474 Sort the group buffer by group rank
3475 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-rank}). @xref{Group Score}.
3476
3477 @item G S m
3478 @kindex G S m (Group)
3479 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-method
3480 Sort the group buffer alphabetically by back end name@*
3481 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-method}).
3482
3483 @item G S n
3484 @kindex G S n (Group)
3485 @findex gnus-group-sort-groups-by-real-name
3486 Sort the group buffer alphabetically by real (unprefixed) group name
3487 (@code{gnus-group-sort-groups-by-real-name}).
3488
3489 @end table
3490
3491 All the commands below obey the process/prefix convention
3492 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
3493
3494 When given a symbolic prefix (@pxref{Symbolic Prefixes}), all these
3495 commands will sort in reverse order.
3496
3497 You can also sort a subset of the groups:
3498
3499 @table @kbd
3500 @item G P a
3501 @kindex G P a (Group)
3502 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-alphabet
3503 Sort the groups alphabetically by group name
3504 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-alphabet}).
3505
3506 @item G P u
3507 @kindex G P u (Group)
3508 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-unread
3509 Sort the groups by the number of unread articles
3510 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-unread}).
3511
3512 @item G P l
3513 @kindex G P l (Group)
3514 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-level
3515 Sort the groups by group level
3516 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-level}).
3517
3518 @item G P v
3519 @kindex G P v (Group)
3520 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-score
3521 Sort the groups by group score
3522 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-score}). @xref{Group Score}.
3523
3524 @item G P r
3525 @kindex G P r (Group)
3526 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-rank
3527 Sort the groups by group rank
3528 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-rank}). @xref{Group Score}.
3529
3530 @item G P m
3531 @kindex G P m (Group)
3532 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-method
3533 Sort the groups alphabetically by back end name@*
3534 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-method}).
3535
3536 @item G P n
3537 @kindex G P n (Group)
3538 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-real-name
3539 Sort the groups alphabetically by real (unprefixed) group name
3540 (@code{gnus-group-sort-selected-groups-by-real-name}).
3541
3542 @item G P s
3543 @kindex G P s (Group)
3544 @findex gnus-group-sort-selected-groups
3545 Sort the groups according to @code{gnus-group-sort-function}.
3546
3547 @end table
3548
3549 And finally, note that you can use @kbd{C-k} and @kbd{C-y} to manually
3550 move groups around.
3551
3552
3553 @node Group Maintenance
3554 @section Group Maintenance
3555 @cindex bogus groups
3556
3557 @table @kbd
3558 @item b
3559 @kindex b (Group)
3560 @findex gnus-group-check-bogus-groups
3561 Find bogus groups and delete them
3562 (@code{gnus-group-check-bogus-groups}).
3563
3564 @item F
3565 @kindex F (Group)
3566 @findex gnus-group-find-new-groups
3567 Find new groups and process them (@code{gnus-group-find-new-groups}).
3568 With 1 @kbd{C-u}, use the @code{ask-server} method to query the server
3569 for new groups. With 2 @kbd{C-u}'s, use most complete method possible
3570 to query the server for new groups, and subscribe the new groups as
3571 zombies.
3572
3573 @item C-c C-x
3574 @kindex C-c C-x (Group)
3575 @findex gnus-group-expire-articles
3576 @cindex expiring mail
3577 Run all expirable articles in the current group through the expiry
3578 process (if any) (@code{gnus-group-expire-articles}). That is, delete
3579 all expirable articles in the group that have been around for a while.
3580 (@pxref{Expiring Mail}).
3581
3582 @item C-c C-M-x
3583 @kindex C-c C-M-x (Group)
3584 @findex gnus-group-expire-all-groups
3585 @cindex expiring mail
3586 Run all expirable articles in all groups through the expiry process
3587 (@code{gnus-group-expire-all-groups}).
3588
3589 @end table
3590
3591
3592 @node Browse Foreign Server
3593 @section Browse Foreign Server
3594 @cindex foreign servers
3595 @cindex browsing servers
3596
3597 @table @kbd
3598 @item B
3599 @kindex B (Group)
3600 @findex gnus-group-browse-foreign-server
3601 You will be queried for a select method and a server name. Gnus will
3602 then attempt to contact this server and let you browse the groups there
3603 (@code{gnus-group-browse-foreign-server}).
3604 @end table
3605
3606 @findex gnus-browse-mode
3607 A new buffer with a list of available groups will appear. This buffer
3608 will use the @code{gnus-browse-mode}. This buffer looks a bit (well,
3609 a lot) like a normal group buffer.
3610
3611 Here's a list of keystrokes available in the browse mode:
3612
3613 @table @kbd
3614 @item n
3615 @kindex n (Browse)
3616 @findex gnus-group-next-group
3617 Go to the next group (@code{gnus-group-next-group}).
3618
3619 @item p
3620 @kindex p (Browse)
3621 @findex gnus-group-prev-group
3622 Go to the previous group (@code{gnus-group-prev-group}).
3623
3624 @item SPACE
3625 @kindex SPACE (Browse)
3626 @findex gnus-browse-read-group
3627 Enter the current group and display the first article
3628 (@code{gnus-browse-read-group}).
3629
3630 @item RET
3631 @kindex RET (Browse)
3632 @findex gnus-browse-select-group
3633 Enter the current group (@code{gnus-browse-select-group}).
3634
3635 @item u
3636 @kindex u (Browse)
3637 @findex gnus-browse-unsubscribe-current-group
3638 @vindex gnus-browse-subscribe-newsgroup-method
3639 Unsubscribe to the current group, or, as will be the case here,
3640 subscribe to it (@code{gnus-browse-unsubscribe-current-group}). You
3641 can affect the way the new group is entered into the Group buffer
3642 using the variable @code{gnus-browse-subscribe-newsgroup-method}. See
3643 @pxref{Subscription Methods} for available options.
3644
3645 @item l
3646 @itemx q
3647 @kindex q (Browse)
3648 @kindex l (Browse)
3649 @findex gnus-browse-exit
3650 Exit browse mode (@code{gnus-browse-exit}).
3651
3652 @item d
3653 @kindex d (Browse)
3654 @findex gnus-browse-describe-group
3655 Describe the current group (@code{gnus-browse-describe-group}).
3656
3657 @item ?
3658 @kindex ? (Browse)
3659 @findex gnus-browse-describe-briefly
3660 Describe browse mode briefly (well, there's not much to describe, is
3661 there) (@code{gnus-browse-describe-briefly}).
3662
3663 @item DEL
3664 @kindex DEL (Browse)
3665 @findex gnus-browse-delete-group
3666 This function will delete the current group
3667 (@code{gnus-browse-delete-group}). If given a prefix, this function
3668 will actually delete all the articles in the group, and forcibly
3669 remove the group itself from the face of the Earth. Use a prefix only
3670 if you are absolutely sure of what you are doing.
3671 @end table
3672
3673
3674 @node Exiting Gnus
3675 @section Exiting Gnus
3676 @cindex exiting Gnus
3677
3678 Yes, Gnus is ex(c)iting.
3679
3680 @table @kbd
3681 @item z
3682 @kindex z (Group)
3683 @findex gnus-group-suspend
3684 Suspend Gnus (@code{gnus-group-suspend}). This doesn't really exit Gnus,
3685 but it kills all buffers except the Group buffer. I'm not sure why this
3686 is a gain, but then who am I to judge?
3687
3688 @item q
3689 @kindex q (Group)
3690 @findex gnus-group-exit
3691 @c @icon{gnus-group-exit}
3692 Quit Gnus (@code{gnus-group-exit}).
3693
3694 @item Q
3695 @kindex Q (Group)
3696 @findex gnus-group-quit
3697 Quit Gnus without saving the @file{.newsrc} files (@code{gnus-group-quit}).
3698 The dribble file will be saved, though (@pxref{Auto Save}).
3699 @end table
3700
3701 @vindex gnus-exit-gnus-hook
3702 @vindex gnus-suspend-gnus-hook
3703 @vindex gnus-after-exiting-gnus-hook
3704 @code{gnus-suspend-gnus-hook} is called when you suspend Gnus and
3705 @code{gnus-exit-gnus-hook} is called when you quit Gnus, while
3706 @code{gnus-after-exiting-gnus-hook} is called as the final item when
3707 exiting Gnus.
3708
3709 Note:
3710
3711 @quotation
3712 Miss Lisa Cannifax, while sitting in English class, felt her feet go
3713 numbly heavy and herself fall into a hazy trance as the boy sitting
3714 behind her drew repeated lines with his pencil across the back of her
3715 plastic chair.
3716 @end quotation
3717
3718
3719 @node Group Topics
3720 @section Group Topics
3721 @cindex topics
3722
3723 If you read lots and lots of groups, it might be convenient to group
3724 them hierarchically according to topics. You put your Emacs groups over
3725 here, your sex groups over there, and the rest (what, two groups or so?)
3726 you put in some misc section that you never bother with anyway. You can
3727 even group the Emacs sex groups as a sub-topic to either the Emacs
3728 groups or the sex groups---or both! Go wild!
3729
3730 @iftex
3731 @iflatex
3732 \gnusfigure{Group Topics}{400}{
3733 \put(75,50){\epsfig{figure=ps/group-topic,height=9cm}}
3734 }
3735 @end iflatex
3736 @end iftex
3737
3738 Here's an example:
3739
3740 @example
3741 Gnus
3742 Emacs -- I wuw it!
3743 3: comp.emacs
3744 2: alt.religion.emacs
3745 Naughty Emacs
3746 452: alt.sex.emacs
3747 0: comp.talk.emacs.recovery
3748 Misc
3749 8: comp.binaries.fractals
3750 13: comp.sources.unix
3751 @end example
3752
3753 @findex gnus-topic-mode
3754 @kindex t (Group)
3755 To get this @emph{fab} functionality you simply turn on (ooh!) the
3756 @code{gnus-topic} minor mode---type @kbd{t} in the group buffer. (This
3757 is a toggling command.)
3758
3759 Go ahead, just try it. I'll still be here when you get back. La de
3760 dum@dots{} Nice tune, that@dots{} la la la@dots{} What, you're back?
3761 Yes, and now press @kbd{l}. There. All your groups are now listed
3762 under @samp{misc}. Doesn't that make you feel all warm and fuzzy?
3763 Hot and bothered?
3764
3765 If you want this permanently enabled, you should add that minor mode to
3766 the hook for the group mode. Put the following line in your
3767 @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
3768
3769 @lisp
3770 (add-hook 'gnus-group-mode-hook 'gnus-topic-mode)
3771 @end lisp
3772
3773 @menu
3774 * Topic Commands:: Interactive E-Z commands.
3775 * Topic Variables:: How to customize the topics the Lisp Way.
3776 * Topic Sorting:: Sorting each topic individually.
3777 * Topic Topology:: A map of the world.
3778 * Topic Parameters:: Parameters that apply to all groups in a topic.
3779 @end menu
3780
3781
3782 @node Topic Commands
3783 @subsection Topic Commands
3784 @cindex topic commands
3785
3786 When the topic minor mode is turned on, a new @kbd{T} submap will be
3787 available. In addition, a few of the standard keys change their
3788 definitions slightly.
3789
3790 In general, the following kinds of operations are possible on topics.
3791 First of all, you want to create topics. Secondly, you want to put
3792 groups in topics and to move them around until you have an order you
3793 like. The third kind of operation is to show/hide parts of the whole
3794 shebang. You might want to hide a topic including its subtopics and
3795 groups, to get a better overview of the other groups.
3796
3797 Here is a list of the basic keys that you might need to set up topics
3798 the way you like.
3799
3800 @table @kbd
3801
3802 @item T n
3803 @kindex T n (Topic)
3804 @findex gnus-topic-create-topic
3805 Prompt for a new topic name and create it
3806 (@code{gnus-topic-create-topic}).
3807
3808 @item T TAB
3809 @itemx TAB
3810 @kindex T TAB (Topic)
3811 @kindex TAB (Topic)
3812 @findex gnus-topic-indent
3813 ``Indent'' the current topic so that it becomes a sub-topic of the
3814 previous topic (@code{gnus-topic-indent}). If given a prefix,
3815 ``un-indent'' the topic instead.
3816
3817 @item M-TAB
3818 @kindex M-TAB (Topic)
3819 @findex gnus-topic-unindent
3820 ``Un-indent'' the current topic so that it becomes a sub-topic of the
3821 parent of its current parent (@code{gnus-topic-unindent}).
3822
3823 @end table
3824
3825 The following two keys can be used to move groups and topics around.
3826 They work like the well-known cut and paste. @kbd{C-k} is like cut and
3827 @kbd{C-y} is like paste. Of course, this being Emacs, we use the terms
3828 kill and yank rather than cut and paste.
3829
3830 @table @kbd
3831
3832 @item C-k
3833 @kindex C-k (Topic)
3834 @findex gnus-topic-kill-group
3835 Kill a group or topic (@code{gnus-topic-kill-group}). All groups in the
3836 topic will be removed along with the topic.
3837
3838 @item C-y
3839 @kindex C-y (Topic)
3840 @findex gnus-topic-yank-group
3841 Yank the previously killed group or topic
3842 (@code{gnus-topic-yank-group}). Note that all topics will be yanked
3843 before all groups.
3844
3845 So, to move a topic to the beginning of the list of topics, just hit
3846 @kbd{C-k} on it. This is like the ``cut'' part of cut and paste. Then,
3847 move the cursor to the beginning of the buffer (just below the ``Gnus''
3848 topic) and hit @kbd{C-y}. This is like the ``paste'' part of cut and
3849 paste. Like I said---E-Z.
3850
3851 You can use @kbd{C-k} and @kbd{C-y} on groups as well as on topics. So
3852 you can move topics around as well as groups.
3853
3854 @end table
3855
3856 After setting up the topics the way you like them, you might wish to
3857 hide a topic, or to show it again. That's why we have the following
3858 key.
3859
3860 @table @kbd
3861
3862 @item RET
3863 @kindex RET (Topic)
3864 @findex gnus-topic-select-group
3865 @itemx SPACE
3866 Either select a group or fold a topic (@code{gnus-topic-select-group}).
3867 When you perform this command on a group, you'll enter the group, as
3868 usual. When done on a topic line, the topic will be folded (if it was
3869 visible) or unfolded (if it was folded already). So it's basically a
3870 toggling command on topics. In addition, if you give a numerical
3871 prefix, group on that level (and lower) will be displayed.
3872
3873 @end table
3874
3875 Now for a list of other commands, in no particular order.
3876
3877 @table @kbd
3878
3879 @item T m
3880 @kindex T m (Topic)
3881 @findex gnus-topic-move-group
3882 Move the current group to some other topic
3883 (@code{gnus-topic-move-group}). This command uses the process/prefix
3884 convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
3885
3886 @item T j
3887 @kindex T j (Topic)
3888 @findex gnus-topic-jump-to-topic
3889 Go to a topic (@code{gnus-topic-jump-to-topic}).
3890
3891 @item T c
3892 @kindex T c (Topic)
3893 @findex gnus-topic-copy-group
3894 Copy the current group to some other topic
3895 (@code{gnus-topic-copy-group}). This command uses the process/prefix
3896 convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
3897
3898 @item T h
3899 @kindex T h (Topic)
3900 @findex gnus-topic-hide-topic
3901 Hide the current topic (@code{gnus-topic-hide-topic}). If given
3902 a prefix, hide the topic permanently.
3903
3904 @item T s
3905 @kindex T s (Topic)
3906 @findex gnus-topic-show-topic
3907 Show the current topic (@code{gnus-topic-show-topic}). If given
3908 a prefix, show the topic permanently.
3909
3910 @item T D
3911 @kindex T D (Topic)
3912 @findex gnus-topic-remove-group
3913 Remove a group from the current topic (@code{gnus-topic-remove-group}).
3914 This command is mainly useful if you have the same group in several
3915 topics and wish to remove it from one of the topics. You may also
3916 remove a group from all topics, but in that case, Gnus will add it to
3917 the root topic the next time you start Gnus. In fact, all new groups
3918 (which, naturally, don't belong to any topic) will show up in the root
3919 topic.
3920
3921 This command uses the process/prefix convention
3922 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
3923
3924 @item T M
3925 @kindex T M (Topic)
3926 @findex gnus-topic-move-matching
3927 Move all groups that match some regular expression to a topic
3928 (@code{gnus-topic-move-matching}).
3929
3930 @item T C
3931 @kindex T C (Topic)
3932 @findex gnus-topic-copy-matching
3933 Copy all groups that match some regular expression to a topic
3934 (@code{gnus-topic-copy-matching}).
3935
3936 @item T H
3937 @kindex T H (Topic)
3938 @findex gnus-topic-toggle-display-empty-topics
3939 Toggle hiding empty topics
3940 (@code{gnus-topic-toggle-display-empty-topics}).
3941
3942 @item T #
3943 @kindex T # (Topic)
3944 @findex gnus-topic-mark-topic
3945 Mark all groups in the current topic with the process mark
3946 (@code{gnus-topic-mark-topic}). This command works recursively on
3947 sub-topics unless given a prefix.
3948
3949 @item T M-#
3950 @kindex T M-# (Topic)
3951 @findex gnus-topic-unmark-topic
3952 Remove the process mark from all groups in the current topic
3953 (@code{gnus-topic-unmark-topic}). This command works recursively on
3954 sub-topics unless given a prefix.
3955
3956 @item C-c C-x
3957 @kindex C-c C-x (Topic)
3958 @findex gnus-topic-expire-articles
3959 @cindex expiring mail
3960 Run all expirable articles in the current group or topic through the
3961 expiry process (if any)
3962 (@code{gnus-topic-expire-articles}). (@pxref{Expiring Mail}).
3963
3964 @item T r
3965 @kindex T r (Topic)
3966 @findex gnus-topic-rename
3967 Rename a topic (@code{gnus-topic-rename}).
3968
3969 @item T DEL
3970 @kindex T DEL (Topic)
3971 @findex gnus-topic-delete
3972 Delete an empty topic (@code{gnus-topic-delete}).
3973
3974 @item A T
3975 @kindex A T (Topic)
3976 @findex gnus-topic-list-active
3977 List all groups that Gnus knows about in a topics-ified way
3978 (@code{gnus-topic-list-active}).
3979
3980 @item T M-n
3981 @kindex T M-n (Topic)
3982 @findex gnus-topic-goto-next-topic
3983 Go to the next topic (@code{gnus-topic-goto-next-topic}).
3984
3985 @item T M-p
3986 @kindex T M-p (Topic)
3987 @findex gnus-topic-goto-previous-topic
3988 Go to the previous topic (@code{gnus-topic-goto-previous-topic}).
3989
3990 @item G p
3991 @kindex G p (Topic)
3992 @findex gnus-topic-edit-parameters
3993 @cindex group parameters
3994 @cindex topic parameters
3995 @cindex parameters
3996 Edit the topic parameters (@code{gnus-topic-edit-parameters}).
3997 @xref{Topic Parameters}.
3998
3999 @end table
4000
4001
4002 @node Topic Variables
4003 @subsection Topic Variables
4004 @cindex topic variables
4005
4006 The previous section told you how to tell Gnus which topics to display.
4007 This section explains how to tell Gnus what to display about each topic.
4008
4009 @vindex gnus-topic-line-format
4010 The topic lines themselves are created according to the
4011 @code{gnus-topic-line-format} variable (@pxref{Formatting Variables}).
4012 Valid elements are:
4013
4014 @table @samp
4015 @item i
4016 Indentation.
4017 @item n
4018 Topic name.
4019 @item v
4020 Visibility.
4021 @item l
4022 Level.
4023 @item g
4024 Number of groups in the topic.
4025 @item a
4026 Number of unread articles in the topic.
4027 @item A
4028 Number of unread articles in the topic and all its subtopics.
4029 @end table
4030
4031 @vindex gnus-topic-indent-level
4032 Each sub-topic (and the groups in the sub-topics) will be indented with
4033 @code{gnus-topic-indent-level} times the topic level number of spaces.
4034 The default is 2.
4035
4036 @vindex gnus-topic-mode-hook
4037 @code{gnus-topic-mode-hook} is called in topic minor mode buffers.
4038
4039 @vindex gnus-topic-display-empty-topics
4040 The @code{gnus-topic-display-empty-topics} says whether to display even
4041 topics that have no unread articles in them. The default is @code{t}.
4042
4043
4044 @node Topic Sorting
4045 @subsection Topic Sorting
4046 @cindex topic sorting
4047
4048 You can sort the groups in each topic individually with the following
4049 commands:
4050
4051
4052 @table @kbd
4053 @item T S a
4054 @kindex T S a (Topic)
4055 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-alphabet
4056 Sort the current topic alphabetically by group name
4057 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-alphabet}).
4058
4059 @item T S u
4060 @kindex T S u (Topic)
4061 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-unread
4062 Sort the current topic by the number of unread articles
4063 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-unread}).
4064
4065 @item T S l
4066 @kindex T S l (Topic)
4067 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-level
4068 Sort the current topic by group level
4069 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-level}).
4070
4071 @item T S v
4072 @kindex T S v (Topic)
4073 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-score
4074 Sort the current topic by group score
4075 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-score}). @xref{Group Score}.
4076
4077 @item T S r
4078 @kindex T S r (Topic)
4079 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-rank
4080 Sort the current topic by group rank
4081 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-rank}). @xref{Group Score}.
4082
4083 @item T S m
4084 @kindex T S m (Topic)
4085 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-method
4086 Sort the current topic alphabetically by back end name
4087 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-method}).
4088
4089 @item T S e
4090 @kindex T S e (Topic)
4091 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-server
4092 Sort the current topic alphabetically by server name
4093 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups-by-server}).
4094
4095 @item T S s
4096 @kindex T S s (Topic)
4097 @findex gnus-topic-sort-groups
4098 Sort the current topic according to the function(s) given by the
4099 @code{gnus-group-sort-function} variable
4100 (@code{gnus-topic-sort-groups}).
4101
4102 @end table
4103
4104 When given a prefix argument, all these commands will sort in reverse
4105 order. @xref{Sorting Groups}, for more information about group
4106 sorting.
4107
4108
4109 @node Topic Topology
4110 @subsection Topic Topology
4111 @cindex topic topology
4112 @cindex topology
4113
4114 So, let's have a look at an example group buffer:
4115
4116 @example
4117 @group
4118 Gnus
4119 Emacs -- I wuw it!
4120 3: comp.emacs
4121 2: alt.religion.emacs
4122 Naughty Emacs
4123 452: alt.sex.emacs
4124 0: comp.talk.emacs.recovery
4125 Misc
4126 8: comp.binaries.fractals
4127 13: comp.sources.unix
4128 @end group
4129 @end example
4130
4131 So, here we have one top-level topic (@samp{Gnus}), two topics under
4132 that, and one sub-topic under one of the sub-topics. (There is always
4133 just one (1) top-level topic). This topology can be expressed as
4134 follows:
4135
4136 @lisp
4137 (("Gnus" visible)
4138 (("Emacs -- I wuw it!" visible)
4139 (("Naughty Emacs" visible)))
4140 (("Misc" visible)))
4141 @end lisp
4142
4143 @vindex gnus-topic-topology
4144 This is in fact how the variable @code{gnus-topic-topology} would look
4145 for the display above. That variable is saved in the @file{.newsrc.eld}
4146 file, and shouldn't be messed with manually---unless you really want
4147 to. Since this variable is read from the @file{.newsrc.eld} file,
4148 setting it in any other startup files will have no effect.
4149
4150 This topology shows what topics are sub-topics of what topics (right),
4151 and which topics are visible. Two settings are currently
4152 allowed---@code{visible} and @code{invisible}.
4153
4154
4155 @node Topic Parameters
4156 @subsection Topic Parameters
4157 @cindex topic parameters
4158
4159 All groups in a topic will inherit group parameters from the parent
4160 (and ancestor) topic parameters. All valid group parameters are valid
4161 topic parameters (@pxref{Group Parameters}). When the agent is
4162 enabled, all agent parameters (See Agent Parameters in @ref{Category
4163 Syntax}) are also valid topic parameters.
4164
4165 In addition, the following parameters are only valid as topic
4166 parameters:
4167
4168 @table @code
4169 @item subscribe
4170 When subscribing new groups by topic (@pxref{Subscription Methods}), the
4171 @code{subscribe} topic parameter says what groups go in what topic. Its
4172 value should be a regexp to match the groups that should go in that
4173 topic.
4174
4175 @item subscribe-level
4176 When subscribing new groups by topic (see the @code{subscribe} parameter),
4177 the group will be subscribed with the level specified in the
4178 @code{subscribe-level} instead of @code{gnus-level-default-subscribed}.
4179
4180 @end table
4181
4182 Group parameters (of course) override topic parameters, and topic
4183 parameters in sub-topics override topic parameters in super-topics. You
4184 know. Normal inheritance rules. (@dfn{Rules} is here a noun, not a
4185 verb, although you may feel free to disagree with me here.)
4186
4187 @example
4188 @group
4189 Gnus
4190 Emacs
4191 3: comp.emacs
4192 2: alt.religion.emacs
4193 452: alt.sex.emacs
4194 Relief
4195 452: alt.sex.emacs
4196 0: comp.talk.emacs.recovery
4197 Misc
4198 8: comp.binaries.fractals
4199 13: comp.sources.unix
4200 452: alt.sex.emacs
4201 @end group
4202 @end example
4203
4204 The @samp{Emacs} topic has the topic parameter @code{(score-file
4205 . "emacs.SCORE")}; the @samp{Relief} topic has the topic parameter
4206 @code{(score-file . "relief.SCORE")}; and the @samp{Misc} topic has the
4207 topic parameter @code{(score-file . "emacs.SCORE")}. In addition,
4208 @* @samp{alt.religion.emacs} has the group parameter @code{(score-file
4209 . "religion.SCORE")}.
4210
4211 Now, when you enter @samp{alt.sex.emacs} in the @samp{Relief} topic, you
4212 will get the @file{relief.SCORE} home score file. If you enter the same
4213 group in the @samp{Emacs} topic, you'll get the @file{emacs.SCORE} home
4214 score file. If you enter the group @samp{alt.religion.emacs}, you'll
4215 get the @file{religion.SCORE} home score file.
4216
4217 This seems rather simple and self-evident, doesn't it? Well, yes. But
4218 there are some problems, especially with the @code{total-expiry}
4219 parameter. Say you have a mail group in two topics; one with
4220 @code{total-expiry} and one without. What happens when you do @kbd{M-x
4221 gnus-expire-all-expirable-groups}? Gnus has no way of telling which one
4222 of these topics you mean to expire articles from, so anything may
4223 happen. In fact, I hereby declare that it is @dfn{undefined} what
4224 happens. You just have to be careful if you do stuff like that.
4225
4226
4227 @node Non-ASCII Group Names
4228 @section Accessing groups of non-English names
4229 @cindex non-ascii group names
4230
4231 There are some news servers that provide groups of which the names are
4232 expressed with their native languages in the world. For instance, in a
4233 certain news server there are some newsgroups of which the names are
4234 spelled in Chinese, where people are talking in Chinese. You can, of
4235 course, subscribe to such news groups using Gnus. Currently Gnus
4236 supports non-@acronym{ASCII} group names not only with the @code{nntp}
4237 back end but also with the @code{nnml} back end and the @code{nnrss}
4238 back end.
4239
4240 Every such group name is encoded by a certain charset in the server
4241 side (in an @acronym{NNTP} server its administrator determines the
4242 charset, but for groups in the other back ends it is determined by you).
4243 Gnus has to display the decoded ones for you in the group buffer and the
4244 article buffer, and needs to use the encoded ones when communicating
4245 with servers. However, Gnus doesn't know what charset is used for each
4246 non-@acronym{ASCII} group name. The following two variables are just
4247 the ones for telling Gnus what charset should be used for each group:
4248
4249 @table @code
4250 @item gnus-group-name-charset-method-alist
4251 @vindex gnus-group-name-charset-method-alist
4252 An alist of select methods and charsets. The default value is
4253 @code{nil}. The names of groups in the server specified by that select
4254 method are all supposed to use the corresponding charset. For example:
4255
4256 @lisp
4257 (setq gnus-group-name-charset-method-alist
4258 '(((nntp "news.com.cn") . cn-gb-2312)))
4259 @end lisp
4260
4261 Charsets specified for groups with this variable are preferred to the
4262 ones specified for the same groups with the
4263 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist} variable (see below).
4264
4265 A select method can be very long, like:
4266
4267 @lisp
4268 (nntp "gmane"
4269 (nntp-address "news.gmane.org")
4270 (nntp-end-of-line "\n")
4271 (nntp-open-connection-function
4272 nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-telnet)
4273 (nntp-via-rlogin-command "ssh")
4274 (nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches
4275 ("-C" "-t" "-e" "none"))
4276 (nntp-via-address @dots{}))
4277 @end lisp
4278
4279 In that case, you can truncate it into @code{(nntp "gmane")} in this
4280 variable. That is, it is enough to contain only the back end name and
4281 the server name.
4282
4283 @item gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist
4284 @cindex UTF-8 group names
4285 @vindex gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist
4286 An alist of regexp of group name and the charset for group names.
4287 @code{((".*" . utf-8))} is the default value if UTF-8 is supported,
4288 otherwise the default is @code{nil}. For example:
4289
4290 @lisp
4291 (setq gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist
4292 '(("\\.com\\.cn:" . cn-gb-2312)
4293 (".*" . utf-8)))
4294 @end lisp
4295
4296 Note that this variable is ignored if the match is made with
4297 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-method-alist}.
4298 @end table
4299
4300 Those two variables are used also to determine the charset for encoding
4301 and decoding non-@acronym{ASCII} group names that are in the back ends
4302 other than @code{nntp}. It means that it is you who determine it. If
4303 you do nothing, the charset used for group names in those back ends will
4304 all be @code{utf-8} because of the last element of
4305 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist}.
4306
4307 There is one more important variable for non-@acronym{ASCII} group
4308 names:
4309
4310 @table @code
4311 @item nnmail-pathname-coding-system
4312 @vindex nnmail-pathname-coding-system
4313 The value of this variable should be a coding system or @code{nil}. The
4314 default is @code{nil} in Emacs, or is the aliasee of the coding system
4315 named @code{file-name} (a certain coding system of which an alias is
4316 @code{file-name}) in XEmacs.
4317
4318 The @code{nnml} back end, the @code{nnrss} back end, the agent, and
4319 the cache use non-@acronym{ASCII} group names in those files and
4320 directories. This variable overrides the value of
4321 @code{file-name-coding-system} which specifies the coding system used
4322 when encoding and decoding those file names and directory names.
4323
4324 In XEmacs (with the @code{mule} feature), @code{file-name-coding-system}
4325 is the only means to specify the coding system used to encode and decode
4326 file names. On the other hand, Emacs uses the value of
4327 @code{default-file-name-coding-system} if @code{file-name-coding-system}
4328 is @code{nil} or it is bound to the value of
4329 @code{nnmail-pathname-coding-system} which is @code{nil}.
4330
4331 Normally the value of @code{default-file-name-coding-system} in Emacs or
4332 @code{nnmail-pathname-coding-system} in XEmacs is initialized according
4333 to the locale, so you will need to do nothing if the value is suitable
4334 to encode and decode non-@acronym{ASCII} group names.
4335
4336 The value of this variable (or @code{default-file-name-coding-system})
4337 does not necessarily need to be the same value that is determined by
4338 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-method-alist} and
4339 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist}.
4340
4341 If @code{default-file-name-coding-system} or this variable is
4342 initialized by default to @code{iso-latin-1} for example, although you
4343 want to subscribe to the groups spelled in Chinese, that is the most
4344 typical case where you have to customize
4345 @code{nnmail-pathname-coding-system}. The @code{utf-8} coding system is
4346 a good candidate for it. Otherwise, you may change the locale in your
4347 system so that @code{default-file-name-coding-system} or this variable
4348 may be initialized to an appropriate value.
4349 @end table
4350
4351 Note that when you copy or move articles from a non-@acronym{ASCII}
4352 group to another group, the charset used to encode and decode group
4353 names should be the same in both groups. Otherwise the Newsgroups
4354 header will be displayed incorrectly in the article buffer.
4355
4356
4357 @node Misc Group Stuff
4358 @section Misc Group Stuff
4359
4360 @menu
4361 * Scanning New Messages:: Asking Gnus to see whether new messages have arrived.
4362 * Group Information:: Information and help on groups and Gnus.
4363 * Group Timestamp:: Making Gnus keep track of when you last read a group.
4364 * File Commands:: Reading and writing the Gnus files.
4365 * Sieve Commands:: Managing Sieve scripts.
4366 @end menu
4367
4368 @table @kbd
4369
4370 @item v
4371 @kindex v (Group)
4372 @cindex keys, reserved for users (Group)
4373 The key @kbd{v} is reserved for users. You can bind it to some
4374 command or better use it as a prefix key. For example:
4375
4376 @lisp
4377 (define-key gnus-group-mode-map (kbd "v j d")
4378 (lambda ()
4379 (interactive)
4380 (gnus-group-jump-to-group "nndraft:drafts")))
4381 @end lisp
4382
4383 On keys reserved for users in Emacs and on keybindings in general
4384 @xref{Keymaps, Keymaps, , emacs, The Emacs Editor}.
4385
4386 @item ^
4387 @kindex ^ (Group)
4388 @findex gnus-group-enter-server-mode
4389 Enter the server buffer (@code{gnus-group-enter-server-mode}).
4390 @xref{Server Buffer}.
4391
4392 @item a
4393 @kindex a (Group)
4394 @findex gnus-group-post-news
4395 Start composing a message (a news by default)
4396 (@code{gnus-group-post-news}). If given a prefix, post to the group
4397 under the point. If the prefix is 1, prompt for a group to post to.
4398 Contrary to what the name of this function suggests, the prepared
4399 article might be a mail instead of a news, if a mail group is specified
4400 with the prefix argument. @xref{Composing Messages}.
4401
4402 @item m
4403 @kindex m (Group)
4404 @findex gnus-group-mail
4405 Mail a message somewhere (@code{gnus-group-mail}). If given a prefix,
4406 use the posting style of the group under the point. If the prefix is 1,
4407 prompt for a group name to find the posting style.
4408 @xref{Composing Messages}.
4409
4410 @item i
4411 @kindex i (Group)
4412 @findex gnus-group-news
4413 Start composing a news (@code{gnus-group-news}). If given a prefix,
4414 post to the group under the point. If the prefix is 1, prompt
4415 for group to post to. @xref{Composing Messages}.
4416
4417 This function actually prepares a news even when using mail groups.
4418 This is useful for ``posting'' messages to mail groups without actually
4419 sending them over the network: they're just saved directly to the group
4420 in question. The corresponding back end must have a request-post method
4421 for this to work though.
4422
4423 @item G z
4424 @kindex G z (Group)
4425 @findex gnus-group-compact-group
4426
4427 Compact the group under point (@code{gnus-group-compact-group}).
4428 Currently implemented only in nnml (@pxref{Mail Spool}). This removes
4429 gaps between article numbers, hence getting a correct total article
4430 count.
4431
4432 @end table
4433
4434 Variables for the group buffer:
4435
4436 @table @code
4437
4438 @item gnus-group-mode-hook
4439 @vindex gnus-group-mode-hook
4440 is called after the group buffer has been
4441 created.
4442
4443 @item gnus-group-prepare-hook
4444 @vindex gnus-group-prepare-hook
4445 is called after the group buffer is
4446 generated. It may be used to modify the buffer in some strange,
4447 unnatural way.
4448
4449 @item gnus-group-prepared-hook
4450 @vindex gnus-group-prepare-hook
4451 is called as the very last thing after the group buffer has been
4452 generated. It may be used to move point around, for instance.
4453
4454 @item gnus-permanently-visible-groups
4455 @vindex gnus-permanently-visible-groups
4456 Groups matching this regexp will always be listed in the group buffer,
4457 whether they are empty or not.
4458
4459 @end table
4460
4461 @node Scanning New Messages
4462 @subsection Scanning New Messages
4463 @cindex new messages
4464 @cindex scanning new news
4465
4466 @table @kbd
4467
4468 @item g
4469 @kindex g (Group)
4470 @findex gnus-group-get-new-news
4471 @c @icon{gnus-group-get-new-news}
4472 Check the server(s) for new articles. If the numerical prefix is used,
4473 this command will check only groups of level @var{arg} and lower
4474 (@code{gnus-group-get-new-news}). If given a non-numerical prefix, this
4475 command will force a total re-reading of the active file(s) from the
4476 back end(s).
4477
4478 @item M-g
4479 @kindex M-g (Group)
4480 @findex gnus-group-get-new-news-this-group
4481 @vindex gnus-goto-next-group-when-activating
4482 @c @icon{gnus-group-get-new-news-this-group}
4483 Check whether new articles have arrived in the current group
4484 (@code{gnus-group-get-new-news-this-group}).
4485 @code{gnus-goto-next-group-when-activating} says whether this command is
4486 to move point to the next group or not. It is @code{t} by default.
4487
4488 @findex gnus-activate-all-groups
4489 @cindex activating groups
4490 @item C-c M-g
4491 @kindex C-c M-g (Group)
4492 Activate absolutely all groups (@code{gnus-activate-all-groups}).
4493
4494 @item R
4495 @kindex R (Group)
4496 @cindex restarting
4497 @findex gnus-group-restart
4498 Restart Gnus (@code{gnus-group-restart}). This saves the @file{.newsrc}
4499 file(s), closes the connection to all servers, clears up all run-time
4500 Gnus variables, and then starts Gnus all over again.
4501
4502 @end table
4503
4504 @vindex gnus-get-new-news-hook
4505 @code{gnus-get-new-news-hook} is run just before checking for new news.
4506
4507 @vindex gnus-after-getting-new-news-hook
4508 @code{gnus-after-getting-new-news-hook} is run after checking for new
4509 news.
4510
4511
4512 @node Group Information
4513 @subsection Group Information
4514 @cindex group information
4515 @cindex information on groups
4516
4517 @table @kbd
4518
4519
4520 @item H d
4521 @itemx C-c C-d
4522 @c @icon{gnus-group-describe-group}
4523 @kindex H d (Group)
4524 @kindex C-c C-d (Group)
4525 @cindex describing groups
4526 @cindex group description
4527 @findex gnus-group-describe-group
4528 Describe the current group (@code{gnus-group-describe-group}). If given
4529 a prefix, force Gnus to re-read the description from the server.
4530
4531 @item M-d
4532 @kindex M-d (Group)
4533 @findex gnus-group-describe-all-groups
4534 Describe all groups (@code{gnus-group-describe-all-groups}). If given a
4535 prefix, force Gnus to re-read the description file from the server.
4536
4537 @item H v
4538 @itemx V
4539 @kindex V (Group)
4540 @kindex H v (Group)
4541 @cindex version
4542 @findex gnus-version
4543 Display current Gnus version numbers (@code{gnus-version}).
4544
4545 @item ?
4546 @kindex ? (Group)
4547 @findex gnus-group-describe-briefly
4548 Give a very short help message (@code{gnus-group-describe-briefly}).
4549
4550 @item C-c C-i
4551 @kindex C-c C-i (Group)
4552 @cindex info
4553 @cindex manual
4554 @findex gnus-info-find-node
4555 Go to the Gnus info node (@code{gnus-info-find-node}).
4556 @end table
4557
4558
4559 @node Group Timestamp
4560 @subsection Group Timestamp
4561 @cindex timestamps
4562 @cindex group timestamps
4563
4564 It can be convenient to let Gnus keep track of when you last read a
4565 group. To set the ball rolling, you should add
4566 @code{gnus-group-set-timestamp} to @code{gnus-select-group-hook}:
4567
4568 @lisp
4569 (add-hook 'gnus-select-group-hook 'gnus-group-set-timestamp)
4570 @end lisp
4571
4572 After doing this, each time you enter a group, it'll be recorded.
4573
4574 This information can be displayed in various ways---the easiest is to
4575 use the @samp{%d} spec in the group line format:
4576
4577 @lisp
4578 (setq gnus-group-line-format
4579 "%M\%S\%p\%P\%5y: %(%-40,40g%) %d\n")
4580 @end lisp
4581
4582 This will result in lines looking like:
4583
4584 @example
4585 * 0: mail.ding 19961002T012943
4586 0: custom 19961002T012713
4587 @end example
4588
4589 As you can see, the date is displayed in compact ISO 8601 format. This
4590 may be a bit too much, so to just display the date, you could say
4591 something like:
4592
4593 @lisp
4594 (setq gnus-group-line-format
4595 "%M\%S\%p\%P\%5y: %(%-40,40g%) %6,6~(cut 2)d\n")
4596 @end lisp
4597
4598 If you would like greater control of the time format, you can use a
4599 user-defined format spec. Something like the following should do the
4600 trick:
4601
4602 @lisp
4603 (setq gnus-group-line-format
4604 "%M\%S\%p\%P\%5y: %(%-40,40g%) %ud\n")
4605 (defun gnus-user-format-function-d (headers)
4606 (let ((time (gnus-group-timestamp gnus-tmp-group)))
4607 (if time
4608 (format-time-string "%b %d %H:%M" time)
4609 "")))
4610 @end lisp
4611
4612 To see what variables are dynamically bound (like
4613 @code{gnus-tmp-group}), you have to look at the source code. The
4614 variable names aren't guaranteed to be stable over Gnus versions,
4615 either.
4616
4617
4618 @node File Commands
4619 @subsection File Commands
4620 @cindex file commands
4621
4622 @table @kbd
4623
4624 @item r
4625 @kindex r (Group)
4626 @findex gnus-group-read-init-file
4627 @vindex gnus-init-file
4628 @cindex reading init file
4629 Re-read the init file (@code{gnus-init-file}, which defaults to
4630 @file{~/.gnus.el}) (@code{gnus-group-read-init-file}).
4631
4632 @item s
4633 @kindex s (Group)
4634 @findex gnus-group-save-newsrc
4635 @cindex saving .newsrc
4636 Save the @file{.newsrc.eld} file (and @file{.newsrc} if wanted)
4637 (@code{gnus-group-save-newsrc}). If given a prefix, force saving the
4638 file(s) whether Gnus thinks it is necessary or not.
4639
4640 @c @item Z
4641 @c @kindex Z (Group)
4642 @c @findex gnus-group-clear-dribble
4643 @c Clear the dribble buffer (@code{gnus-group-clear-dribble}).
4644
4645 @end table
4646
4647
4648 @node Sieve Commands
4649 @subsection Sieve Commands
4650 @cindex group sieve commands
4651
4652 Sieve is a server-side mail filtering language. In Gnus you can use
4653 the @code{sieve} group parameter (@pxref{Group Parameters}) to specify
4654 sieve rules that should apply to each group. Gnus provides two
4655 commands to translate all these group parameters into a proper Sieve
4656 script that can be transferred to the server somehow.
4657
4658 @vindex gnus-sieve-file
4659 @vindex gnus-sieve-region-start
4660 @vindex gnus-sieve-region-end
4661 The generated Sieve script is placed in @code{gnus-sieve-file} (by
4662 default @file{~/.sieve}). The Sieve code that Gnus generate is placed
4663 between two delimiters, @code{gnus-sieve-region-start} and
4664 @code{gnus-sieve-region-end}, so you may write additional Sieve code
4665 outside these delimiters that will not be removed the next time you
4666 regenerate the Sieve script.
4667
4668 @vindex gnus-sieve-crosspost
4669 The variable @code{gnus-sieve-crosspost} controls how the Sieve script
4670 is generated. If it is non-@code{nil} (the default) articles is
4671 placed in all groups that have matching rules, otherwise the article
4672 is only placed in the group with the first matching rule. For
4673 example, the group parameter @samp{(sieve address "sender"
4674 "owner-ding@@hpc.uh.edu")} will generate the following piece of Sieve
4675 code if @code{gnus-sieve-crosspost} is @code{nil}. (When
4676 @code{gnus-sieve-crosspost} is non-@code{nil}, it looks the same
4677 except that the line containing the call to @code{stop} is removed.)
4678
4679 @example
4680 if address "sender" "owner-ding@@hpc.uh.edu" @{
4681 fileinto "INBOX.ding";
4682 stop;
4683 @}
4684 @end example
4685
4686 @xref{Top, Emacs Sieve, Top, sieve, Emacs Sieve}.
4687
4688 @table @kbd
4689
4690 @item D g
4691 @kindex D g (Group)
4692 @findex gnus-sieve-generate
4693 @vindex gnus-sieve-file
4694 @cindex generating sieve script
4695 Regenerate a Sieve script from the @code{sieve} group parameters and
4696 put you into the @code{gnus-sieve-file} without saving it.
4697
4698 @item D u
4699 @kindex D u (Group)
4700 @findex gnus-sieve-update
4701 @vindex gnus-sieve-file
4702 @cindex updating sieve script
4703 Regenerates the Gnus managed part of @code{gnus-sieve-file} using the
4704 @code{sieve} group parameters, save the file and upload it to the
4705 server using the @code{sieveshell} program.
4706
4707 @end table
4708
4709
4710 @node Summary Buffer
4711 @chapter Summary Buffer
4712 @cindex summary buffer
4713
4714 A line for each article is displayed in the summary buffer. You can
4715 move around, read articles, post articles and reply to articles.
4716
4717 The most common way to a summary buffer is to select a group from the
4718 group buffer (@pxref{Selecting a Group}).
4719
4720 You can have as many summary buffers open as you wish.
4721
4722 You can customize the Summary Mode tool bar, see @kbd{M-x
4723 customize-apropos RET gnus-summary-tool-bar}. This feature is only
4724 available in Emacs.
4725
4726 @kindex v (Summary)
4727 @cindex keys, reserved for users (Summary)
4728 The key @kbd{v} is reserved for users. You can bind it to some
4729 command or better use it as a prefix key. For example:
4730 @lisp
4731 (define-key gnus-summary-mode-map (kbd "v -") "LrS") ;; lower subthread
4732 @end lisp
4733
4734 @menu
4735 * Summary Buffer Format:: Deciding how the summary buffer is to look.
4736 * Summary Maneuvering:: Moving around the summary buffer.
4737 * Choosing Articles:: Reading articles.
4738 * Paging the Article:: Scrolling the current article.
4739 * Reply Followup and Post:: Posting articles.
4740 * Delayed Articles:: Send articles at a later time.
4741 * Marking Articles:: Marking articles as read, expirable, etc.
4742 * Limiting:: You can limit the summary buffer.
4743 * Threading:: How threads are made.
4744 * Sorting the Summary Buffer:: How articles and threads are sorted.
4745 * Asynchronous Fetching:: Gnus might be able to pre-fetch articles.
4746 * Article Caching:: You may store articles in a cache.
4747 * Persistent Articles:: Making articles expiry-resistant.
4748 * Sticky Articles:: Article buffers that are not reused.
4749 * Article Backlog:: Having already read articles hang around.
4750 * Saving Articles:: Ways of customizing article saving.
4751 * Decoding Articles:: Gnus can treat series of (uu)encoded articles.
4752 * Article Treatment:: The article buffer can be mangled at will.
4753 * MIME Commands:: Doing MIMEy things with the articles.
4754 * Charsets:: Character set issues.
4755 * Article Commands:: Doing various things with the article buffer.
4756 * Summary Sorting:: Sorting the summary buffer in various ways.
4757 * Finding the Parent:: No child support? Get the parent.
4758 * Alternative Approaches:: Reading using non-default summaries.
4759 * Tree Display:: A more visual display of threads.
4760 * Mail Group Commands:: Some commands can only be used in mail groups.
4761 * Various Summary Stuff:: What didn't fit anywhere else.
4762 * Exiting the Summary Buffer:: Returning to the Group buffer,
4763 or reselecting the current group.
4764 * Crosspost Handling:: How crossposted articles are dealt with.
4765 * Duplicate Suppression:: An alternative when crosspost handling fails.
4766 * Security:: Decrypt and Verify.
4767 * Mailing List:: Mailing list minor mode.
4768 @end menu
4769
4770
4771 @node Summary Buffer Format
4772 @section Summary Buffer Format
4773 @cindex summary buffer format
4774
4775 @iftex
4776 @iflatex
4777 \gnusfigure{The Summary Buffer}{180}{
4778 \put(0,0){\epsfig{figure=ps/summary,width=7.5cm}}
4779 \put(445,0){\makebox(0,0)[br]{\epsfig{figure=ps/summary-article,width=7.5cm}}}
4780 }
4781 @end iflatex
4782 @end iftex
4783
4784 @menu
4785 * Summary Buffer Lines:: You can specify how summary lines should look.
4786 * To From Newsgroups:: How to not display your own name.
4787 * Summary Buffer Mode Line:: You can say how the mode line should look.
4788 * Summary Highlighting:: Making the summary buffer all pretty and nice.
4789 @end menu
4790
4791 @findex mail-extract-address-components
4792 @findex gnus-extract-address-components
4793 @vindex gnus-extract-address-components
4794 Gnus will use the value of the @code{gnus-extract-address-components}
4795 variable as a function for getting the name and address parts of a
4796 @code{From} header. Two pre-defined functions exist:
4797 @code{gnus-extract-address-components}, which is the default, quite
4798 fast, and too simplistic solution; and
4799 @code{mail-extract-address-components}, which works very nicely, but is
4800 slower. The default function will return the wrong answer in 5% of the
4801 cases. If this is unacceptable to you, use the other function instead:
4802
4803 @lisp
4804 (setq gnus-extract-address-components
4805 'mail-extract-address-components)
4806 @end lisp
4807
4808 @vindex gnus-summary-same-subject
4809 @code{gnus-summary-same-subject} is a string indicating that the current
4810 article has the same subject as the previous. This string will be used
4811 with those specs that require it. The default is @code{""}.
4812
4813
4814 @node Summary Buffer Lines
4815 @subsection Summary Buffer Lines
4816
4817 @vindex gnus-summary-line-format
4818 You can change the format of the lines in the summary buffer by changing
4819 the @code{gnus-summary-line-format} variable. It works along the same
4820 lines as a normal @code{format} string, with some extensions
4821 (@pxref{Formatting Variables}).
4822
4823 There should always be a colon or a point position marker on the line;
4824 the cursor always moves to the point position marker or the colon after
4825 performing an operation. (Of course, Gnus wouldn't be Gnus if it wasn't
4826 possible to change this. Just write a new function
4827 @code{gnus-goto-colon} which does whatever you like with the cursor.)
4828 @xref{Positioning Point}.
4829
4830 The default string is @samp{%U%R%z%I%(%[%4L: %-23,23f%]%) %s\n}.
4831
4832 The following format specification characters and extended format
4833 specification(s) are understood:
4834
4835 @table @samp
4836 @item N
4837 Article number.
4838 @item S
4839 Subject string. List identifiers stripped,
4840 @code{gnus-list-identifiers}. @xref{Article Hiding}.
4841 @item s
4842 Subject if the article is the root of the thread or the previous article
4843 had a different subject, @code{gnus-summary-same-subject} otherwise.
4844 (@code{gnus-summary-same-subject} defaults to @code{""}.)
4845 @item F
4846 Full @code{From} header.
4847 @item n
4848 The name (from the @code{From} header).
4849 @item f
4850 The name, @code{To} header or the @code{Newsgroups} header (@pxref{To
4851 From Newsgroups}).
4852 @item a
4853 The name (from the @code{From} header). This differs from the @code{n}
4854 spec in that it uses the function designated by the
4855 @code{gnus-extract-address-components} variable, which is slower, but
4856 may be more thorough.
4857 @item A
4858 The address (from the @code{From} header). This works the same way as
4859 the @code{a} spec.
4860 @item L
4861 Number of lines in the article.
4862 @item c
4863 Number of characters in the article. This specifier is not supported
4864 in some methods (like nnfolder).
4865 @item k
4866 Pretty-printed version of the number of characters in the article;
4867 for example, @samp{1.2k} or @samp{0.4M}.
4868 @item I
4869 Indentation based on thread level (@pxref{Customizing Threading}).
4870 @item B
4871 A complex trn-style thread tree, showing response-connecting trace
4872 lines. A thread could be drawn like this:
4873
4874 @example
4875 >
4876 +->
4877 | +->
4878 | | \->
4879 | | \->
4880 | \->
4881 +->
4882 \->
4883 @end example
4884
4885 You can customize the appearance with the following options. Note
4886 that it is possible to make the thread display look really neat by
4887 replacing the default @acronym{ASCII} characters with graphic
4888 line-drawing glyphs.
4889 @table @code
4890 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-root
4891 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-root
4892 Used for the root of a thread. If @code{nil}, use subject
4893 instead. The default is @samp{> }.
4894
4895 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-false-root
4896 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-false-root
4897 Used for the false root of a thread (@pxref{Loose Threads}). If
4898 @code{nil}, use subject instead. The default is @samp{> }.
4899
4900 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-single-indent
4901 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-single-indent
4902 Used for a thread with just one message. If @code{nil}, use subject
4903 instead. The default is @samp{}.
4904
4905 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-vertical
4906 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-vertical
4907 Used for drawing a vertical line. The default is @samp{| }.
4908
4909 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-indent
4910 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-indent
4911 Used for indenting. The default is @samp{ }.
4912
4913 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-leaf-with-other
4914 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-leaf-with-other
4915 Used for a leaf with brothers. The default is @samp{+-> }.
4916
4917 @item gnus-sum-thread-tree-single-leaf
4918 @vindex gnus-sum-thread-tree-single-leaf
4919 Used for a leaf without brothers. The default is @samp{\-> }
4920
4921 @end table
4922
4923 @item T
4924 Nothing if the article is a root and lots of spaces if it isn't (it
4925 pushes everything after it off the screen).
4926 @item [
4927 Opening bracket, which is normally @samp{[}, but can also be @samp{<}
4928 for adopted articles (@pxref{Customizing Threading}).
4929 @item ]
4930 Closing bracket, which is normally @samp{]}, but can also be @samp{>}
4931 for adopted articles.
4932 @item >
4933 One space for each thread level.
4934 @item <
4935 Twenty minus thread level spaces.
4936 @item U
4937 Unread. @xref{Read Articles}.
4938
4939 @item R
4940 This misleadingly named specifier is the @dfn{secondary mark}. This
4941 mark will say whether the article has been replied to, has been cached,
4942 or has been saved. @xref{Other Marks}.
4943
4944 @item i
4945 Score as a number (@pxref{Scoring}).
4946 @item z
4947 @vindex gnus-summary-zcore-fuzz
4948 Zcore, @samp{+} if above the default level and @samp{-} if below the
4949 default level. If the difference between
4950 @code{gnus-summary-default-score} and the score is less than
4951 @code{gnus-summary-zcore-fuzz}, this spec will not be used.
4952 @item V
4953 Total thread score.
4954 @item x
4955 @code{Xref}.
4956 @item D
4957 @code{Date}.
4958 @item d
4959 The @code{Date} in @code{DD-MMM} format.
4960 @item o
4961 The @code{Date} in @var{YYYYMMDD}@code{T}@var{HHMMSS} format.
4962 @item M
4963 @code{Message-ID}.
4964 @item r
4965 @code{References}.
4966 @item t
4967 Number of articles in the current sub-thread. Using this spec will slow
4968 down summary buffer generation somewhat.
4969 @item e
4970 An @samp{=} (@code{gnus-not-empty-thread-mark}) will be displayed if the
4971 article has any children.
4972 @item P
4973 The line number.
4974 @item O
4975 Download mark.
4976 @item *
4977 Desired cursor position (instead of after first colon).
4978 @item &user-date;
4979 Age sensitive date format. Various date format is defined in
4980 @code{gnus-user-date-format-alist}.
4981 @item u
4982 User defined specifier. The next character in the format string should
4983 be a letter. Gnus will call the function
4984 @code{gnus-user-format-function-@var{x}}, where @var{x} is the letter
4985 following @samp{%u}. The function will be passed the current header as
4986 argument. The function should return a string, which will be inserted
4987 into the summary just like information from any other summary specifier.
4988 @end table
4989
4990 Text between @samp{%(} and @samp{%)} will be highlighted with
4991 @code{gnus-mouse-face} when the mouse point is placed inside the area.
4992 There can only be one such area.
4993
4994 The @samp{%U} (status), @samp{%R} (replied) and @samp{%z} (zcore) specs
4995 have to be handled with care. For reasons of efficiency, Gnus will
4996 compute what column these characters will end up in, and ``hard-code''
4997 that. This means that it is invalid to have these specs after a
4998 variable-length spec. Well, you might not be arrested, but your summary
4999 buffer will look strange, which is bad enough.
5000
5001 The smart choice is to have these specs as far to the left as possible.
5002 (Isn't that the case with everything, though? But I digress.)
5003
5004 This restriction may disappear in later versions of Gnus.
5005
5006
5007 @node To From Newsgroups
5008 @subsection To From Newsgroups
5009 @cindex To
5010 @cindex Newsgroups
5011
5012 In some groups (particularly in archive groups), the @code{From} header
5013 isn't very interesting, since all the articles there are written by
5014 you. To display the information in the @code{To} or @code{Newsgroups}
5015 headers instead, you need to decide three things: What information to
5016 gather; where to display it; and when to display it.
5017
5018 @enumerate
5019 @item
5020 @vindex gnus-extra-headers
5021 The reading of extra header information is controlled by the
5022 @code{gnus-extra-headers}. This is a list of header symbols. For
5023 instance:
5024
5025 @lisp
5026 (setq gnus-extra-headers
5027 '(To Newsgroups X-Newsreader))
5028 @end lisp
5029
5030 This will result in Gnus trying to obtain these three headers, and
5031 storing it in header structures for later easy retrieval.
5032
5033 @item
5034 @findex gnus-extra-header
5035 The value of these extra headers can be accessed via the
5036 @code{gnus-extra-header} function. Here's a format line spec that will
5037 access the @code{X-Newsreader} header:
5038
5039 @example
5040 "%~(form (gnus-extra-header 'X-Newsreader))@@"
5041 @end example
5042
5043 @item
5044 @vindex gnus-ignored-from-addresses
5045 The @code{gnus-ignored-from-addresses} variable says when the @samp{%f}
5046 summary line spec returns the @code{To}, @code{Newsreader} or
5047 @code{From} header. If this regexp matches the contents of the
5048 @code{From} header, the value of the @code{To} or @code{Newsreader}
5049 headers are used instead.
5050
5051 To distinguish regular articles from those where the @code{From} field
5052 has been swapped, a string is prefixed to the @code{To} or
5053 @code{Newsgroups} header in the summary line. By default the string is
5054 @samp{-> } for @code{To} and @samp{=> } for @code{Newsgroups}, you can
5055 customize these strings with @code{gnus-summary-to-prefix} and
5056 @code{gnus-summary-newsgroup-prefix}.
5057
5058 @end enumerate
5059
5060 @vindex nnmail-extra-headers
5061 A related variable is @code{nnmail-extra-headers}, which controls when
5062 to include extra headers when generating overview (@acronym{NOV}) files.
5063 If you have old overview files, you should regenerate them after
5064 changing this variable, by entering the server buffer using @kbd{^},
5065 and then @kbd{g} on the appropriate mail server (e.g., nnml) to cause
5066 regeneration.
5067
5068 @vindex gnus-summary-line-format
5069 You also have to instruct Gnus to display the data by changing the
5070 @code{%n} spec to the @code{%f} spec in the
5071 @code{gnus-summary-line-format} variable.
5072
5073 In summary, you'd typically put something like the following in
5074 @file{~/.gnus.el}:
5075
5076 @lisp
5077 (setq gnus-extra-headers
5078 '(To Newsgroups))
5079 (setq nnmail-extra-headers gnus-extra-headers)
5080 (setq gnus-summary-line-format
5081 "%U%R%z%I%(%[%4L: %-23,23f%]%) %s\n")
5082 (setq gnus-ignored-from-addresses
5083 "Your Name Here")
5084 @end lisp
5085
5086 (The values listed above are the default values in Gnus. Alter them
5087 to fit your needs.)
5088
5089 A note for news server administrators, or for users who wish to try to
5090 convince their news server administrator to provide some additional
5091 support:
5092
5093 The above is mostly useful for mail groups, where you have control over
5094 the @acronym{NOV} files that are created. However, if you can persuade your
5095 nntp admin to add (in the usual implementation, notably INN):
5096
5097 @example
5098 Newsgroups:full
5099 @end example
5100
5101 to the end of her @file{overview.fmt} file, then you can use that just
5102 as you would the extra headers from the mail groups.
5103
5104
5105 @node Summary Buffer Mode Line
5106 @subsection Summary Buffer Mode Line
5107
5108 @vindex gnus-summary-mode-line-format
5109 You can also change the format of the summary mode bar (@pxref{Mode Line
5110 Formatting}). Set @code{gnus-summary-mode-line-format} to whatever you
5111 like. The default is @samp{Gnus: %%b [%A] %Z}.
5112
5113 Here are the elements you can play with:
5114
5115 @table @samp
5116 @item G
5117 Group name.
5118 @item p
5119 Unprefixed group name.
5120 @item A
5121 Current article number.
5122 @item z
5123 Current article score.
5124 @item V
5125 Gnus version.
5126 @item U
5127 Number of unread articles in this group.
5128 @item e
5129 Number of unread articles in this group that aren't displayed in the
5130 summary buffer.
5131 @item Z
5132 A string with the number of unread and unselected articles represented
5133 either as @samp{<%U(+%e) more>} if there are both unread and unselected
5134 articles, and just as @samp{<%U more>} if there are just unread articles
5135 and no unselected ones.
5136 @item g
5137 Shortish group name. For instance, @samp{rec.arts.anime} will be
5138 shortened to @samp{r.a.anime}.
5139 @item S
5140 Subject of the current article.
5141 @item u
5142 User-defined spec (@pxref{User-Defined Specs}).
5143 @item s
5144 Name of the current score file (@pxref{Scoring}).
5145 @item d
5146 Number of dormant articles (@pxref{Unread Articles}).
5147 @item t
5148 Number of ticked articles (@pxref{Unread Articles}).
5149 @item r
5150 Number of articles that have been marked as read in this session.
5151 @item E
5152 Number of articles expunged by the score files.
5153 @end table
5154
5155
5156 @node Summary Highlighting
5157 @subsection Summary Highlighting
5158
5159 @table @code
5160
5161 @item gnus-visual-mark-article-hook
5162 @vindex gnus-visual-mark-article-hook
5163 This hook is run after selecting an article. It is meant to be used for
5164 highlighting the article in some way. It is not run if
5165 @code{gnus-visual} is @code{nil}.
5166
5167 @item gnus-summary-update-hook
5168 @vindex gnus-summary-update-hook
5169 This hook is called when a summary line is changed. It is not run if
5170 @code{gnus-visual} is @code{nil}.
5171
5172 @item gnus-summary-selected-face
5173 @vindex gnus-summary-selected-face
5174 This is the face (or @dfn{font} as some people call it) used to
5175 highlight the current article in the summary buffer.
5176
5177 @item gnus-summary-highlight
5178 @vindex gnus-summary-highlight
5179 Summary lines are highlighted according to this variable, which is a
5180 list where the elements are of the format @code{(@var{form}
5181 . @var{face})}. If you would, for instance, like ticked articles to be
5182 italic and high-scored articles to be bold, you could set this variable
5183 to something like
5184 @lisp
5185 (((eq mark gnus-ticked-mark) . italic)
5186 ((> score default) . bold))
5187 @end lisp
5188 As you may have guessed, if @var{form} returns a non-@code{nil} value,
5189 @var{face} will be applied to the line.
5190 @end table
5191
5192
5193 @node Summary Maneuvering
5194 @section Summary Maneuvering
5195 @cindex summary movement
5196
5197 All the straight movement commands understand the numeric prefix and
5198 behave pretty much as you'd expect.
5199
5200 None of these commands select articles.
5201
5202 @table @kbd
5203 @item G M-n
5204 @itemx M-n
5205 @kindex M-n (Summary)
5206 @kindex G M-n (Summary)
5207 @findex gnus-summary-next-unread-subject
5208 Go to the next summary line of an unread article
5209 (@code{gnus-summary-next-unread-subject}).
5210
5211 @item G M-p
5212 @itemx M-p
5213 @kindex M-p (Summary)
5214 @kindex G M-p (Summary)
5215 @findex gnus-summary-prev-unread-subject
5216 Go to the previous summary line of an unread article
5217 (@code{gnus-summary-prev-unread-subject}).
5218
5219 @item G g
5220 @kindex G g (Summary)
5221 @findex gnus-summary-goto-subject
5222 Ask for an article number and then go to the summary line of that article
5223 without displaying the article (@code{gnus-summary-goto-subject}).
5224 @end table
5225
5226 If Gnus asks you to press a key to confirm going to the next group, you
5227 can use the @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} keys to move around the group
5228 buffer, searching for the next group to read without actually returning
5229 to the group buffer.
5230
5231 Variables related to summary movement:
5232
5233 @table @code
5234
5235 @vindex gnus-auto-select-next
5236 @item gnus-auto-select-next
5237 If you issue one of the movement commands (like @kbd{n}) and there are
5238 no more unread articles after the current one, Gnus will offer to go to
5239 the next group. If this variable is @code{t} and the next group is
5240 empty, Gnus will exit summary mode and return to the group buffer. If
5241 this variable is neither @code{t} nor @code{nil}, Gnus will select the
5242 next group with unread articles. As a special case, if this variable
5243 is @code{quietly}, Gnus will select the next group without asking for
5244 confirmation. If this variable is @code{almost-quietly}, the same
5245 will happen only if you are located on the last article in the group.
5246 Finally, if this variable is @code{slightly-quietly}, the @kbd{Z n}
5247 command will go to the next group without confirmation. Also
5248 @pxref{Group Levels}.
5249
5250 @item gnus-auto-select-same
5251 @vindex gnus-auto-select-same
5252 If non-@code{nil}, all the movement commands will try to go to the next
5253 article with the same subject as the current. (@dfn{Same} here might
5254 mean @dfn{roughly equal}. See @code{gnus-summary-gather-subject-limit}
5255 for details (@pxref{Customizing Threading}).) If there are no more
5256 articles with the same subject, go to the first unread article.
5257
5258 This variable is not particularly useful if you use a threaded display.
5259
5260 @item gnus-summary-check-current
5261 @vindex gnus-summary-check-current
5262 If non-@code{nil}, all the ``unread'' movement commands will not proceed
5263 to the next (or previous) article if the current article is unread.
5264 Instead, they will choose the current article.
5265
5266 @item gnus-auto-center-summary
5267 @vindex gnus-auto-center-summary
5268 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus will keep the point in the summary buffer
5269 centered at all times. This makes things quite tidy, but if you have a
5270 slow network connection, or simply do not like this un-Emacsism, you can
5271 set this variable to @code{nil} to get the normal Emacs scrolling
5272 action. This will also inhibit horizontal re-centering of the summary
5273 buffer, which might make it more inconvenient to read extremely long
5274 threads.
5275
5276 This variable can also be a number. In that case, center the window at
5277 the given number of lines from the top.
5278
5279 @item gnus-summary-stop-at-end-of-message
5280 @vindex gnus-summary-stop-at-end-of-message
5281 If non-@code{nil}, don't go to the next article when hitting
5282 @kbd{SPC}, and you're at the end of the article.
5283
5284 @end table
5285
5286
5287 @node Choosing Articles
5288 @section Choosing Articles
5289 @cindex selecting articles
5290
5291 @menu
5292 * Choosing Commands:: Commands for choosing articles.
5293 * Choosing Variables:: Variables that influence these commands.
5294 @end menu
5295
5296
5297 @node Choosing Commands
5298 @subsection Choosing Commands
5299
5300 None of the following movement commands understand the numeric prefix,
5301 and they all select and display an article.
5302
5303 If you want to fetch new articles or redisplay the group, see
5304 @ref{Exiting the Summary Buffer}.
5305
5306 @table @kbd
5307 @item SPACE
5308 @kindex SPACE (Summary)
5309 @findex gnus-summary-next-page
5310 Select the current article, or, if that one's read already, the next
5311 unread article (@code{gnus-summary-next-page}).
5312
5313 If you have an article window open already and you press @kbd{SPACE}
5314 again, the article will be scrolled. This lets you conveniently
5315 @kbd{SPACE} through an entire newsgroup. @xref{Paging the Article}.
5316
5317 @item G n
5318 @itemx n
5319 @kindex n (Summary)
5320 @kindex G n (Summary)
5321 @findex gnus-summary-next-unread-article
5322 @c @icon{gnus-summary-next-unread}
5323 Go to next unread article (@code{gnus-summary-next-unread-article}).
5324
5325 @item G p
5326 @itemx p
5327 @kindex p (Summary)
5328 @findex gnus-summary-prev-unread-article
5329 @c @icon{gnus-summary-prev-unread}
5330 Go to previous unread article (@code{gnus-summary-prev-unread-article}).
5331
5332 @item G N
5333 @itemx N
5334 @kindex N (Summary)
5335 @kindex G N (Summary)
5336 @findex gnus-summary-next-article
5337 Go to the next article (@code{gnus-summary-next-article}).
5338
5339 @item G P
5340 @itemx P
5341 @kindex P (Summary)
5342 @kindex G P (Summary)
5343 @findex gnus-summary-prev-article
5344 Go to the previous article (@code{gnus-summary-prev-article}).
5345
5346 @item G C-n
5347 @kindex G C-n (Summary)
5348 @findex gnus-summary-next-same-subject
5349 Go to the next article with the same subject
5350 (@code{gnus-summary-next-same-subject}).
5351
5352 @item G C-p
5353 @kindex G C-p (Summary)
5354 @findex gnus-summary-prev-same-subject
5355 Go to the previous article with the same subject
5356 (@code{gnus-summary-prev-same-subject}).
5357
5358 @item G f
5359 @itemx .
5360 @kindex G f (Summary)
5361 @kindex . (Summary)
5362 @findex gnus-summary-first-unread-article
5363 Go to the first unread article
5364 (@code{gnus-summary-first-unread-article}).
5365
5366 @item G b
5367 @itemx ,
5368 @kindex G b (Summary)
5369 @kindex , (Summary)
5370 @findex gnus-summary-best-unread-article
5371 Go to the unread article with the highest score
5372 (@code{gnus-summary-best-unread-article}). If given a prefix argument,
5373 go to the first unread article that has a score over the default score.
5374
5375 @item G l
5376 @itemx l
5377 @kindex l (Summary)
5378 @kindex G l (Summary)
5379 @findex gnus-summary-goto-last-article
5380 Go to the previous article read (@code{gnus-summary-goto-last-article}).
5381
5382 @item G o
5383 @kindex G o (Summary)
5384 @findex gnus-summary-pop-article
5385 @cindex history
5386 @cindex article history
5387 Pop an article off the summary history and go to this article
5388 (@code{gnus-summary-pop-article}). This command differs from the
5389 command above in that you can pop as many previous articles off the
5390 history as you like, while @kbd{l} toggles the two last read articles.
5391 For a somewhat related issue (if you use these commands a lot),
5392 @pxref{Article Backlog}.
5393
5394 @item G j
5395 @itemx j
5396 @kindex j (Summary)
5397 @kindex G j (Summary)
5398 @findex gnus-summary-goto-article
5399 Ask for an article number or @code{Message-ID}, and then go to that
5400 article (@code{gnus-summary-goto-article}).
5401
5402 @end table
5403
5404
5405 @node Choosing Variables
5406 @subsection Choosing Variables
5407
5408 Some variables relevant for moving and selecting articles:
5409
5410 @table @code
5411 @item gnus-auto-extend-newsgroup
5412 @vindex gnus-auto-extend-newsgroup
5413 All the movement commands will try to go to the previous (or next)
5414 article, even if that article isn't displayed in the Summary buffer if
5415 this variable is non-@code{nil}. Gnus will then fetch the article from
5416 the server and display it in the article buffer.
5417
5418 @item gnus-select-article-hook
5419 @vindex gnus-select-article-hook
5420 This hook is called whenever an article is selected. The default is
5421 @code{nil}. If you would like each article to be saved in the Agent as
5422 you read it, putting @code{gnus-agent-fetch-selected-article} on this
5423 hook will do so.
5424
5425 @item gnus-mark-article-hook
5426 @vindex gnus-mark-article-hook
5427 @findex gnus-summary-mark-unread-as-read
5428 @findex gnus-summary-mark-read-and-unread-as-read
5429 @findex gnus-unread-mark
5430 This hook is called whenever an article is selected. It is intended to
5431 be used for marking articles as read. The default value is
5432 @code{gnus-summary-mark-read-and-unread-as-read}, and will change the
5433 mark of almost any article you read to @code{gnus-read-mark}. The only
5434 articles not affected by this function are ticked, dormant, and
5435 expirable articles. If you'd instead like to just have unread articles
5436 marked as read, you can use @code{gnus-summary-mark-unread-as-read}
5437 instead. It will leave marks like @code{gnus-low-score-mark},
5438 @code{gnus-del-mark} (and so on) alone.
5439
5440 @end table
5441
5442
5443 @node Paging the Article
5444 @section Scrolling the Article
5445 @cindex article scrolling
5446
5447 @table @kbd
5448
5449 @item SPACE
5450 @kindex SPACE (Summary)
5451 @findex gnus-summary-next-page
5452 Pressing @kbd{SPACE} will scroll the current article forward one page,
5453 or, if you have come to the end of the current article, will choose the
5454 next article (@code{gnus-summary-next-page}).
5455
5456 @vindex gnus-article-boring-faces
5457 @vindex gnus-article-skip-boring
5458 If @code{gnus-article-skip-boring} is non-@code{nil} and the rest of
5459 the article consists only of citations and signature, then it will be
5460 skipped; the next article will be shown instead. You can customize
5461 what is considered uninteresting with
5462 @code{gnus-article-boring-faces}. You can manually view the article's
5463 pages, no matter how boring, using @kbd{C-M-v}.
5464
5465 @item DEL
5466 @kindex DEL (Summary)
5467 @findex gnus-summary-prev-page
5468 Scroll the current article back one page (@code{gnus-summary-prev-page}).
5469
5470 @item RET
5471 @kindex RET (Summary)
5472 @findex gnus-summary-scroll-up
5473 Scroll the current article one line forward
5474 (@code{gnus-summary-scroll-up}).
5475
5476 @item M-RET
5477 @kindex M-RET (Summary)
5478 @findex gnus-summary-scroll-down
5479 Scroll the current article one line backward
5480 (@code{gnus-summary-scroll-down}).
5481
5482 @item A g
5483 @itemx g
5484 @kindex A g (Summary)
5485 @kindex g (Summary)
5486 @findex gnus-summary-show-article
5487 @vindex gnus-summary-show-article-charset-alist
5488 (Re)fetch the current article (@code{gnus-summary-show-article}). If
5489 given a prefix, show a completely ``raw'' article, just the way it
5490 came from the server. If given a prefix twice (i.e., @kbd{C-u C-u
5491 g'}), fetch the current article, but don't run any of the article
5492 treatment functions.
5493
5494 @cindex charset, view article with different charset
5495 If given a numerical prefix, you can do semi-manual charset stuff.
5496 @kbd{C-u 0 g cn-gb-2312 RET} will decode the message as if it were
5497 encoded in the @code{cn-gb-2312} charset. If you have
5498
5499 @lisp
5500 (setq gnus-summary-show-article-charset-alist
5501 '((1 . cn-gb-2312)
5502 (2 . big5)))
5503 @end lisp
5504
5505 then you can say @kbd{C-u 1 g} to get the same effect.
5506
5507 @item A <
5508 @itemx <
5509 @kindex < (Summary)
5510 @kindex A < (Summary)
5511 @findex gnus-summary-beginning-of-article
5512 Scroll to the beginning of the article
5513 (@code{gnus-summary-beginning-of-article}).
5514
5515 @item A >
5516 @itemx >
5517 @kindex > (Summary)
5518 @kindex A > (Summary)
5519 @findex gnus-summary-end-of-article
5520 Scroll to the end of the article (@code{gnus-summary-end-of-article}).
5521
5522 @item A s
5523 @itemx s
5524 @kindex A s (Summary)
5525 @kindex s (Summary)
5526 @findex gnus-summary-isearch-article
5527 Perform an isearch in the article buffer
5528 (@code{gnus-summary-isearch-article}).
5529
5530 @item h
5531 @kindex h (Summary)
5532 @findex gnus-summary-select-article-buffer
5533 Select the article buffer (@code{gnus-summary-select-article-buffer}).
5534
5535 @end table
5536
5537
5538 @node Reply Followup and Post
5539 @section Reply, Followup and Post
5540
5541 @menu
5542 * Summary Mail Commands:: Sending mail.
5543 * Summary Post Commands:: Sending news.
5544 * Summary Message Commands:: Other Message-related commands.
5545 * Canceling and Superseding::
5546 @end menu
5547
5548
5549 @node Summary Mail Commands
5550 @subsection Summary Mail Commands
5551 @cindex mail
5552 @cindex composing mail
5553
5554 Commands for composing a mail message:
5555
5556 @table @kbd
5557
5558 @item S r
5559 @itemx r
5560 @kindex S r (Summary)
5561 @kindex r (Summary)
5562 @findex gnus-summary-reply
5563 @c @icon{gnus-summary-mail-reply}
5564 @c @icon{gnus-summary-reply}
5565 Mail a reply to the author of the current article
5566 (@code{gnus-summary-reply}).
5567
5568 @item S R
5569 @itemx R
5570 @kindex R (Summary)
5571 @kindex S R (Summary)
5572 @findex gnus-summary-reply-with-original
5573 @c @icon{gnus-summary-reply-with-original}
5574 Mail a reply to the author of the current article and include the
5575 original message (@code{gnus-summary-reply-with-original}). This
5576 command uses the process/prefix convention.
5577
5578 @item S w
5579 @kindex S w (Summary)
5580 @findex gnus-summary-wide-reply
5581 Mail a wide reply to the author of the current article
5582 (@code{gnus-summary-wide-reply}). A @dfn{wide reply} is a reply that
5583 goes out to all people listed in the @code{To}, @code{From} (or
5584 @code{Reply-to}) and @code{Cc} headers. If @code{Mail-Followup-To} is
5585 present, that's used instead.
5586
5587 @item S W
5588 @kindex S W (Summary)
5589 @findex gnus-summary-wide-reply-with-original
5590 Mail a wide reply to the current article and include the original
5591 message (@code{gnus-summary-wide-reply-with-original}). This command uses
5592 the process/prefix convention, but only uses the headers from the
5593 first article to determine the recipients.
5594
5595 @item S L
5596 @kindex S L (Summary)
5597 @findex gnus-summary-reply-to-list-with-original
5598 When replying to a message from a mailing list, send a reply to that
5599 message to the mailing list, and include the original message
5600 (@code{gnus-summary-reply-to-list-with-original}).
5601
5602 @item S v
5603 @kindex S v (Summary)
5604 @findex gnus-summary-very-wide-reply
5605 Mail a very wide reply to the author of the current article
5606 (@code{gnus-summary-wide-reply}). A @dfn{very wide reply} is a reply
5607 that goes out to all people listed in the @code{To}, @code{From} (or
5608 @code{Reply-to}) and @code{Cc} headers in all the process/prefixed
5609 articles. This command uses the process/prefix convention.
5610
5611 @item S V
5612 @kindex S V (Summary)
5613 @findex gnus-summary-very-wide-reply-with-original
5614 Mail a very wide reply to the author of the current article and include the
5615 original message (@code{gnus-summary-very-wide-reply-with-original}). This
5616 command uses the process/prefix convention.
5617
5618 @item S B r
5619 @kindex S B r (Summary)
5620 @findex gnus-summary-reply-broken-reply-to
5621 Mail a reply to the author of the current article but ignore the
5622 @code{Reply-To} field (@code{gnus-summary-reply-broken-reply-to}).
5623 If you need this because a mailing list incorrectly sets a
5624 @code{Reply-To} header pointing to the list, you probably want to set
5625 the @code{broken-reply-to} group parameter instead, so things will work
5626 correctly. @xref{Group Parameters}.
5627
5628 @item S B R
5629 @kindex S B R (Summary)
5630 @findex gnus-summary-reply-broken-reply-to-with-original
5631 Mail a reply to the author of the current article and include the
5632 original message but ignore the @code{Reply-To} field
5633 (@code{gnus-summary-reply-broken-reply-to-with-original}).
5634
5635 @item S o m
5636 @itemx C-c C-f
5637 @kindex S o m (Summary)
5638 @kindex C-c C-f (Summary)
5639 @findex gnus-summary-mail-forward
5640 @c @icon{gnus-summary-mail-forward}
5641 Forward the current article to some other person
5642 (@code{gnus-summary-mail-forward}). If no prefix is given, the message
5643 is forwarded according to the value of (@code{message-forward-as-mime})
5644 and (@code{message-forward-show-mml}); if the prefix is 1, decode the
5645 message and forward directly inline; if the prefix is 2, forward message
5646 as an rfc822 @acronym{MIME} section; if the prefix is 3, decode message and
5647 forward as an rfc822 @acronym{MIME} section; if the prefix is 4, forward message
5648 directly inline; otherwise, the message is forwarded as no prefix given
5649 but use the flipped value of (@code{message-forward-as-mime}). By
5650 default, the message is decoded and forwarded as an rfc822 @acronym{MIME}
5651 section.
5652
5653 @item S m
5654 @itemx m
5655 @kindex m (Summary)
5656 @kindex S m (Summary)
5657 @findex gnus-summary-mail-other-window
5658 @c @icon{gnus-summary-mail-originate}
5659 Prepare a mail (@code{gnus-summary-mail-other-window}). By default, use
5660 the posting style of the current group. If given a prefix, disable that.
5661 If the prefix is 1, prompt for a group name to find the posting style.
5662
5663 @item S i
5664 @kindex S i (Summary)
5665 @findex gnus-summary-news-other-window
5666 Prepare a news (@code{gnus-summary-news-other-window}). By default,
5667 post to the current group. If given a prefix, disable that. If the
5668 prefix is 1, prompt for a group to post to.
5669
5670 This function actually prepares a news even when using mail groups.
5671 This is useful for ``posting'' messages to mail groups without actually
5672 sending them over the network: they're just saved directly to the group
5673 in question. The corresponding back end must have a request-post method
5674 for this to work though.
5675
5676 @item S D b
5677 @kindex S D b (Summary)
5678 @findex gnus-summary-resend-bounced-mail
5679 @cindex bouncing mail
5680 If you have sent a mail, but the mail was bounced back to you for some
5681 reason (wrong address, transient failure), you can use this command to
5682 resend that bounced mail (@code{gnus-summary-resend-bounced-mail}). You
5683 will be popped into a mail buffer where you can edit the headers before
5684 sending the mail off again. If you give a prefix to this command, and
5685 the bounced mail is a reply to some other mail, Gnus will try to fetch
5686 that mail and display it for easy perusal of its headers. This might
5687 very well fail, though.
5688
5689 @item S D r
5690 @kindex S D r (Summary)
5691 @findex gnus-summary-resend-message
5692 Not to be confused with the previous command,
5693 @code{gnus-summary-resend-message} will prompt you for an address to
5694 send the current message off to, and then send it to that place. The
5695 headers of the message won't be altered---but lots of headers that say
5696 @code{Resent-To}, @code{Resent-From} and so on will be added. This
5697 means that you actually send a mail to someone that has a @code{To}
5698 header that (probably) points to yourself. This will confuse people.
5699 So, natcherly you'll only do that if you're really eVIl.
5700
5701 This command is mainly used if you have several accounts and want to
5702 ship a mail to a different account of yours. (If you're both
5703 @code{root} and @code{postmaster} and get a mail for @code{postmaster}
5704 to the @code{root} account, you may want to resend it to
5705 @code{postmaster}. Ordnung muss sein!
5706
5707 This command understands the process/prefix convention
5708 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
5709
5710 @item S D e
5711 @kindex S D e (Summary)
5712 @findex gnus-summary-resend-message-edit
5713
5714 Like the previous command, but will allow you to edit the message as
5715 if it were a new message before resending.
5716
5717 @item S O m
5718 @kindex S O m (Summary)
5719 @findex gnus-uu-digest-mail-forward
5720 Digest the current series (@pxref{Decoding Articles}) and forward the
5721 result using mail (@code{gnus-uu-digest-mail-forward}). This command
5722 uses the process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
5723
5724 @item S M-c
5725 @kindex S M-c (Summary)
5726 @findex gnus-summary-mail-crosspost-complaint
5727 @cindex crossposting
5728 @cindex excessive crossposting
5729 Send a complaint about excessive crossposting to the author of the
5730 current article (@code{gnus-summary-mail-crosspost-complaint}).
5731
5732 @findex gnus-crosspost-complaint
5733 This command is provided as a way to fight back against the current
5734 crossposting pandemic that's sweeping Usenet. It will compose a reply
5735 using the @code{gnus-crosspost-complaint} variable as a preamble. This
5736 command understands the process/prefix convention
5737 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}) and will prompt you before sending each mail.
5738
5739 @end table
5740
5741 Also @xref{Header Commands, ,Header Commands, message, The Message
5742 Manual}, for more information.
5743
5744
5745 @node Summary Post Commands
5746 @subsection Summary Post Commands
5747 @cindex post
5748 @cindex composing news
5749
5750 Commands for posting a news article:
5751
5752 @table @kbd
5753 @item S p
5754 @itemx a
5755 @kindex a (Summary)
5756 @kindex S p (Summary)
5757 @findex gnus-summary-post-news
5758 @c @icon{gnus-summary-post-news}
5759 Prepare for posting an article (@code{gnus-summary-post-news}). By
5760 default, post to the current group. If given a prefix, disable that.
5761 If the prefix is 1, prompt for another group instead.
5762
5763 @item S f
5764 @itemx f
5765 @kindex f (Summary)
5766 @kindex S f (Summary)
5767 @findex gnus-summary-followup
5768 @c @icon{gnus-summary-followup}
5769 Post a followup to the current article (@code{gnus-summary-followup}).
5770
5771 @item S F
5772 @itemx F
5773 @kindex S F (Summary)
5774 @kindex F (Summary)
5775 @c @icon{gnus-summary-followup-with-original}
5776 @findex gnus-summary-followup-with-original
5777 Post a followup to the current article and include the original message
5778 (@code{gnus-summary-followup-with-original}). This command uses the
5779 process/prefix convention.
5780
5781 @item S n
5782 @kindex S n (Summary)
5783 @findex gnus-summary-followup-to-mail
5784 Post a followup to the current article via news, even if you got the
5785 message through mail (@code{gnus-summary-followup-to-mail}).
5786
5787 @item S N
5788 @kindex S N (Summary)
5789 @findex gnus-summary-followup-to-mail-with-original
5790 Post a followup to the current article via news, even if you got the
5791 message through mail and include the original message
5792 (@code{gnus-summary-followup-to-mail-with-original}). This command uses
5793 the process/prefix convention.
5794
5795 @item S o p
5796 @kindex S o p (Summary)
5797 @findex gnus-summary-post-forward
5798 Forward the current article to a newsgroup
5799 (@code{gnus-summary-post-forward}).
5800 If no prefix is given, the message is forwarded according to the value
5801 of (@code{message-forward-as-mime}) and
5802 (@code{message-forward-show-mml}); if the prefix is 1, decode the
5803 message and forward directly inline; if the prefix is 2, forward message
5804 as an rfc822 @acronym{MIME} section; if the prefix is 3, decode message and
5805 forward as an rfc822 @acronym{MIME} section; if the prefix is 4, forward message
5806 directly inline; otherwise, the message is forwarded as no prefix given
5807 but use the flipped value of (@code{message-forward-as-mime}). By
5808 default, the message is decoded and forwarded as an rfc822 @acronym{MIME} section.
5809
5810 @item S O p
5811 @kindex S O p (Summary)
5812 @findex gnus-uu-digest-post-forward
5813 @cindex digests
5814 @cindex making digests
5815 Digest the current series and forward the result to a newsgroup
5816 (@code{gnus-uu-digest-post-forward}). This command uses the
5817 process/prefix convention.
5818
5819 @item S u
5820 @kindex S u (Summary)
5821 @findex gnus-uu-post-news
5822 @c @icon{gnus-uu-post-news}
5823 Uuencode a file, split it into parts, and post it as a series
5824 (@code{gnus-uu-post-news}). (@pxref{Uuencoding and Posting}).
5825 @end table
5826
5827 Also @xref{Header Commands, ,Header Commands, message, The Message
5828 Manual}, for more information.
5829
5830
5831 @node Summary Message Commands
5832 @subsection Summary Message Commands
5833
5834 @table @kbd
5835 @item S y
5836 @kindex S y (Summary)
5837 @findex gnus-summary-yank-message
5838 Yank the current article into an already existing Message composition
5839 buffer (@code{gnus-summary-yank-message}). This command prompts for
5840 what message buffer you want to yank into, and understands the
5841 process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
5842
5843 @end table
5844
5845
5846 @node Canceling and Superseding
5847 @subsection Canceling Articles
5848 @cindex canceling articles
5849 @cindex superseding articles
5850
5851 Have you ever written something, and then decided that you really,
5852 really, really wish you hadn't posted that?
5853
5854 Well, you can't cancel mail, but you can cancel posts.
5855
5856 @findex gnus-summary-cancel-article
5857 @kindex C (Summary)
5858 @c @icon{gnus-summary-cancel-article}
5859 Find the article you wish to cancel (you can only cancel your own
5860 articles, so don't try any funny stuff). Then press @kbd{C} or @kbd{S
5861 c} (@code{gnus-summary-cancel-article}). Your article will be
5862 canceled---machines all over the world will be deleting your article.
5863 This command uses the process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
5864
5865 Be aware, however, that not all sites honor cancels, so your article may
5866 live on here and there, while most sites will delete the article in
5867 question.
5868
5869 Gnus will use the ``current'' select method when canceling. If you
5870 want to use the standard posting method, use the @samp{a} symbolic
5871 prefix (@pxref{Symbolic Prefixes}).
5872
5873 Gnus ensures that only you can cancel your own messages using a
5874 @code{Cancel-Lock} header (@pxref{Canceling News, Canceling News, ,
5875 message, Message Manual}).
5876
5877 If you discover that you have made some mistakes and want to do some
5878 corrections, you can post a @dfn{superseding} article that will replace
5879 your original article.
5880
5881 @findex gnus-summary-supersede-article
5882 @kindex S (Summary)
5883 Go to the original article and press @kbd{S s}
5884 (@code{gnus-summary-supersede-article}). You will be put in a buffer
5885 where you can edit the article all you want before sending it off the
5886 usual way.
5887
5888 The same goes for superseding as for canceling, only more so: Some
5889 sites do not honor superseding. On those sites, it will appear that you
5890 have posted almost the same article twice.
5891
5892 If you have just posted the article, and change your mind right away,
5893 there is a trick you can use to cancel/supersede the article without
5894 waiting for the article to appear on your site first. You simply return
5895 to the post buffer (which is called @file{*sent ...*}). There you will
5896 find the article you just posted, with all the headers intact. Change
5897 the @code{Message-ID} header to a @code{Cancel} or @code{Supersedes}
5898 header by substituting one of those words for the word
5899 @code{Message-ID}. Then just press @kbd{C-c C-c} to send the article as
5900 you would do normally. The previous article will be
5901 canceled/superseded.
5902
5903 Just remember, kids: There is no 'c' in 'supersede'.
5904
5905 @node Delayed Articles
5906 @section Delayed Articles
5907 @cindex delayed sending
5908 @cindex send delayed
5909
5910 Sometimes, you might wish to delay the sending of a message. For
5911 example, you might wish to arrange for a message to turn up just in time
5912 to remind your about the birthday of your Significant Other. For this,
5913 there is the @code{gnus-delay} package. Setup is simple:
5914
5915 @lisp
5916 (gnus-delay-initialize)
5917 @end lisp
5918
5919 @findex gnus-delay-article
5920 Normally, to send a message you use the @kbd{C-c C-c} command from
5921 Message mode. To delay a message, use @kbd{C-c C-j}
5922 (@code{gnus-delay-article}) instead. This will ask you for how long the
5923 message should be delayed. Possible answers are:
5924
5925 @itemize @bullet
5926 @item
5927 A time span. Consists of an integer and a letter. For example,
5928 @code{42d} means to delay for 42 days. Available letters are @code{m}
5929 (minutes), @code{h} (hours), @code{d} (days), @code{w} (weeks), @code{M}
5930 (months) and @code{Y} (years).
5931
5932 @item
5933 A specific date. Looks like @code{YYYY-MM-DD}. The message will be
5934 delayed until that day, at a specific time (eight o'clock by default).
5935 See also @code{gnus-delay-default-hour}.
5936
5937 @item
5938 A specific time of day. Given in @code{hh:mm} format, 24h, no am/pm
5939 stuff. The deadline will be at that time today, except if that time has
5940 already passed, then it's at the given time tomorrow. So if it's ten
5941 o'clock in the morning and you specify @code{11:15}, then the deadline
5942 is one hour and fifteen minutes hence. But if you specify @code{9:20},
5943 that means a time tomorrow.
5944 @end itemize
5945
5946 The action of the @code{gnus-delay-article} command is influenced by a
5947 couple of variables:
5948
5949 @table @code
5950 @item gnus-delay-default-hour
5951 @vindex gnus-delay-default-hour
5952 When you specify a specific date, the message will be due on that hour
5953 on the given date. Possible values are integers 0 through 23.
5954
5955 @item gnus-delay-default-delay
5956 @vindex gnus-delay-default-delay
5957 This is a string and gives the default delay. It can be of any of the
5958 formats described above.
5959
5960 @item gnus-delay-group
5961 @vindex gnus-delay-group
5962 Delayed articles will be kept in this group on the drafts server until
5963 they are due. You probably don't need to change this. The default
5964 value is @code{"delayed"}.
5965
5966 @item gnus-delay-header
5967 @vindex gnus-delay-header
5968 The deadline for each article will be stored in a header. This variable
5969 is a string and gives the header name. You probably don't need to
5970 change this. The default value is @code{"X-Gnus-Delayed"}.
5971 @end table
5972
5973 The way delaying works is like this: when you use the
5974 @code{gnus-delay-article} command, you give a certain delay. Gnus
5975 calculates the deadline of the message and stores it in the
5976 @code{X-Gnus-Delayed} header and puts the message in the
5977 @code{nndraft:delayed} group.
5978
5979 @findex gnus-delay-send-queue
5980 And whenever you get new news, Gnus looks through the group for articles
5981 which are due and sends them. It uses the @code{gnus-delay-send-queue}
5982 function for this. By default, this function is added to the hook
5983 @code{gnus-get-new-news-hook}. But of course, you can change this.
5984 Maybe you want to use the demon to send drafts? Just tell the demon to
5985 execute the @code{gnus-delay-send-queue} function.
5986
5987 @table @code
5988 @item gnus-delay-initialize
5989 @findex gnus-delay-initialize
5990 By default, this function installs @code{gnus-delay-send-queue} in
5991 @code{gnus-get-new-news-hook}. But it accepts the optional second
5992 argument @code{no-check}. If it is non-@code{nil},
5993 @code{gnus-get-new-news-hook} is not changed. The optional first
5994 argument is ignored.
5995
5996 For example, @code{(gnus-delay-initialize nil t)} means to do nothing.
5997 Presumably, you want to use the demon for sending due delayed articles.
5998 Just don't forget to set that up :-)
5999 @end table
6000
6001 When delaying an article with @kbd{C-c C-j}, Message mode will
6002 automatically add a @code{"Date"} header with the current time. In
6003 many cases you probably want the @code{"Date"} header to reflect the
6004 time the message is sent instead. To do this, you have to delete
6005 @code{Date} from @code{message-draft-headers}.
6006
6007
6008 @node Marking Articles
6009 @section Marking Articles
6010 @cindex article marking
6011 @cindex article ticking
6012 @cindex marks
6013
6014 There are several marks you can set on an article.
6015
6016 You have marks that decide the @dfn{readedness} (whoo, neato-keano
6017 neologism ohoy!) of the article. Alphabetic marks generally mean
6018 @dfn{read}, while non-alphabetic characters generally mean @dfn{unread}.
6019
6020 In addition, you also have marks that do not affect readedness.
6021
6022 @ifinfo
6023 There's a plethora of commands for manipulating these marks.
6024 @end ifinfo
6025
6026 @menu
6027 * Unread Articles:: Marks for unread articles.
6028 * Read Articles:: Marks for read articles.
6029 * Other Marks:: Marks that do not affect readedness.
6030 * Setting Marks:: How to set and remove marks.
6031 * Generic Marking Commands:: How to customize the marking.
6032 * Setting Process Marks:: How to mark articles for later processing.
6033 @end menu
6034
6035
6036 @node Unread Articles
6037 @subsection Unread Articles
6038
6039 The following marks mark articles as (kinda) unread, in one form or
6040 other.
6041
6042 @table @samp
6043 @item !
6044 @vindex gnus-ticked-mark
6045 Marked as ticked (@code{gnus-ticked-mark}).
6046
6047 @dfn{Ticked articles} are articles that will remain visible always. If
6048 you see an article that you find interesting, or you want to put off
6049 reading it, or replying to it, until sometime later, you'd typically
6050 tick it. However, articles can be expired (from news servers by the
6051 news server software, Gnus itself never expires ticked messages), so if
6052 you want to keep an article forever, you'll have to make it persistent
6053 (@pxref{Persistent Articles}).
6054
6055 @item ?
6056 @vindex gnus-dormant-mark
6057 Marked as dormant (@code{gnus-dormant-mark}).
6058
6059 @dfn{Dormant articles} will only appear in the summary buffer if there
6060 are followups to it. If you want to see them even if they don't have
6061 followups, you can use the @kbd{/ D} command (@pxref{Limiting}).
6062 Otherwise (except for the visibility issue), they are just like ticked
6063 messages.
6064
6065 @item SPACE
6066 @vindex gnus-unread-mark
6067 Marked as unread (@code{gnus-unread-mark}).
6068
6069 @dfn{Unread articles} are articles that haven't been read at all yet.
6070 @end table
6071
6072
6073 @node Read Articles
6074 @subsection Read Articles
6075 @cindex expirable mark
6076
6077 All the following marks mark articles as read.
6078
6079 @table @samp
6080
6081 @item r
6082 @vindex gnus-del-mark
6083 These are articles that the user has marked as read with the @kbd{d}
6084 command manually, more or less (@code{gnus-del-mark}).
6085
6086 @item R
6087 @vindex gnus-read-mark
6088 Articles that have actually been read (@code{gnus-read-mark}).
6089
6090 @item O
6091 @vindex gnus-ancient-mark
6092 Articles that were marked as read in previous sessions and are now
6093 @dfn{old} (@code{gnus-ancient-mark}).
6094
6095 @item K
6096 @vindex gnus-killed-mark
6097 Marked as killed (@code{gnus-killed-mark}).
6098
6099 @item X
6100 @vindex gnus-kill-file-mark
6101 Marked as killed by kill files (@code{gnus-kill-file-mark}).
6102
6103 @item Y
6104 @vindex gnus-low-score-mark
6105 Marked as read by having too low a score (@code{gnus-low-score-mark}).
6106
6107 @item C
6108 @vindex gnus-catchup-mark
6109 Marked as read by a catchup (@code{gnus-catchup-mark}).
6110
6111 @item G
6112 @vindex gnus-canceled-mark
6113 Canceled article (@code{gnus-canceled-mark})
6114
6115 @item Q
6116 @vindex gnus-sparse-mark
6117 Sparsely reffed article (@code{gnus-sparse-mark}). @xref{Customizing
6118 Threading}.
6119
6120 @item M
6121 @vindex gnus-duplicate-mark
6122 Article marked as read by duplicate suppression
6123 (@code{gnus-duplicate-mark}). @xref{Duplicate Suppression}.
6124
6125 @end table
6126
6127 All these marks just mean that the article is marked as read, really.
6128 They are interpreted differently when doing adaptive scoring, though.
6129
6130 One more special mark, though:
6131
6132 @table @samp
6133 @item E
6134 @vindex gnus-expirable-mark
6135 Marked as expirable (@code{gnus-expirable-mark}).
6136
6137 Marking articles as @dfn{expirable} (or have them marked as such
6138 automatically) doesn't make much sense in normal groups---a user doesn't
6139 control expiring of news articles, but in mail groups, for instance,
6140 articles marked as @dfn{expirable} can be deleted by Gnus at
6141 any time.
6142 @end table
6143
6144
6145 @node Other Marks
6146 @subsection Other Marks
6147 @cindex process mark
6148 @cindex bookmarks
6149
6150 There are some marks that have nothing to do with whether the article is
6151 read or not.
6152
6153 @itemize @bullet
6154
6155 @item
6156 You can set a bookmark in the current article. Say you are reading a
6157 long thesis on cats' urinary tracts, and have to go home for dinner
6158 before you've finished reading the thesis. You can then set a bookmark
6159 in the article, and Gnus will jump to this bookmark the next time it
6160 encounters the article. @xref{Setting Marks}.
6161
6162 @item
6163 @vindex gnus-replied-mark
6164 All articles that you have replied to or made a followup to (i.e., have
6165 answered) will be marked with an @samp{A} in the second column
6166 (@code{gnus-replied-mark}).
6167
6168 @item
6169 @vindex gnus-forwarded-mark
6170 All articles that you have forwarded will be marked with an @samp{F} in
6171 the second column (@code{gnus-forwarded-mark}).
6172
6173 @item
6174 @vindex gnus-cached-mark
6175 Articles stored in the article cache will be marked with an @samp{*} in
6176 the second column (@code{gnus-cached-mark}). @xref{Article Caching}.
6177
6178 @item
6179 @vindex gnus-saved-mark
6180 Articles ``saved'' (in some manner or other; not necessarily
6181 religiously) are marked with an @samp{S} in the second column
6182 (@code{gnus-saved-mark}).
6183
6184 @item
6185 @vindex gnus-unseen-mark
6186 Articles that haven't been seen before in Gnus by the user are marked
6187 with a @samp{.} in the second column (@code{gnus-unseen-mark}).
6188
6189 @item
6190 @vindex gnus-downloaded-mark
6191 When using the Gnus agent (@pxref{Agent Basics}), articles may be
6192 downloaded for unplugged (offline) viewing. If you are using the
6193 @samp{%O} spec, these articles get the @samp{+} mark in that spec.
6194 (The variable @code{gnus-downloaded-mark} controls which character to
6195 use.)
6196
6197 @item
6198 @vindex gnus-undownloaded-mark
6199 When using the Gnus agent (@pxref{Agent Basics}), some articles might
6200 not have been downloaded. Such articles cannot be viewed while you
6201 are unplugged (offline). If you are using the @samp{%O} spec, these
6202 articles get the @samp{-} mark in that spec. (The variable
6203 @code{gnus-undownloaded-mark} controls which character to use.)
6204
6205 @item
6206 @vindex gnus-downloadable-mark
6207 The Gnus agent (@pxref{Agent Basics}) downloads some articles
6208 automatically, but it is also possible to explicitly mark articles for
6209 download, even if they would not be downloaded automatically. Such
6210 explicitly-marked articles get the @samp{%} mark in the first column.
6211 (The variable @code{gnus-downloadable-mark} controls which character to
6212 use.)
6213
6214 @item
6215 @vindex gnus-not-empty-thread-mark
6216 @vindex gnus-empty-thread-mark
6217 If the @samp{%e} spec is used, the presence of threads or not will be
6218 marked with @code{gnus-not-empty-thread-mark} and
6219 @code{gnus-empty-thread-mark} in the third column, respectively.
6220
6221 @item
6222 @vindex gnus-process-mark
6223 Finally we have the @dfn{process mark} (@code{gnus-process-mark}). A
6224 variety of commands react to the presence of the process mark. For
6225 instance, @kbd{X u} (@code{gnus-uu-decode-uu}) will uudecode and view
6226 all articles that have been marked with the process mark. Articles
6227 marked with the process mark have a @samp{#} in the second column.
6228
6229 @end itemize
6230
6231 You might have noticed that most of these ``non-readedness'' marks
6232 appear in the second column by default. So if you have a cached, saved,
6233 replied article that you have process-marked, what will that look like?
6234
6235 Nothing much. The precedence rules go as follows: process -> cache ->
6236 replied -> saved. So if the article is in the cache and is replied,
6237 you'll only see the cache mark and not the replied mark.
6238
6239
6240 @node Setting Marks
6241 @subsection Setting Marks
6242 @cindex setting marks
6243
6244 All the marking commands understand the numeric prefix.
6245
6246 @table @kbd
6247 @item M c
6248 @itemx M-u
6249 @kindex M c (Summary)
6250 @kindex M-u (Summary)
6251 @findex gnus-summary-clear-mark-forward
6252 @cindex mark as unread
6253 Clear all readedness-marks from the current article
6254 (@code{gnus-summary-clear-mark-forward}). In other words, mark the
6255 article as unread.
6256
6257 @item M t
6258 @itemx !
6259 @kindex ! (Summary)
6260 @kindex M t (Summary)
6261 @findex gnus-summary-tick-article-forward
6262 Tick the current article (@code{gnus-summary-tick-article-forward}).
6263 @xref{Article Caching}.
6264
6265 @item M ?
6266 @itemx ?
6267 @kindex ? (Summary)
6268 @kindex M ? (Summary)
6269 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-dormant
6270 Mark the current article as dormant
6271 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-dormant}). @xref{Article Caching}.
6272
6273 @item M d
6274 @itemx d
6275 @kindex M d (Summary)
6276 @kindex d (Summary)
6277 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-read-forward
6278 Mark the current article as read
6279 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-read-forward}).
6280
6281 @item D
6282 @kindex D (Summary)
6283 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-read-backward
6284 Mark the current article as read and move point to the previous line
6285 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-read-backward}).
6286
6287 @item M k
6288 @itemx k
6289 @kindex k (Summary)
6290 @kindex M k (Summary)
6291 @findex gnus-summary-kill-same-subject-and-select
6292 Mark all articles that have the same subject as the current one as read,
6293 and then select the next unread article
6294 (@code{gnus-summary-kill-same-subject-and-select}).
6295
6296 @item M K
6297 @itemx C-k
6298 @kindex M K (Summary)
6299 @kindex C-k (Summary)
6300 @findex gnus-summary-kill-same-subject
6301 Mark all articles that have the same subject as the current one as read
6302 (@code{gnus-summary-kill-same-subject}).
6303
6304 @item M C
6305 @kindex M C (Summary)
6306 @findex gnus-summary-catchup
6307 @c @icon{gnus-summary-catchup}
6308 Mark all unread articles as read (@code{gnus-summary-catchup}).
6309
6310 @item M C-c
6311 @kindex M C-c (Summary)
6312 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-all
6313 Mark all articles in the group as read---even the ticked and dormant
6314 articles (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-all}).
6315
6316 @item M H
6317 @kindex M H (Summary)
6318 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-to-here
6319 Catchup the current group to point (before the point)
6320 (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-to-here}).
6321
6322 @item M h
6323 @kindex M h (Summary)
6324 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-from-here
6325 Catchup the current group from point (after the point)
6326 (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-from-here}).
6327
6328 @item C-w
6329 @kindex C-w (Summary)
6330 @findex gnus-summary-mark-region-as-read
6331 Mark all articles between point and mark as read
6332 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-region-as-read}).
6333
6334 @item M V k
6335 @kindex M V k (Summary)
6336 @findex gnus-summary-kill-below
6337 Kill all articles with scores below the default score (or below the
6338 numeric prefix) (@code{gnus-summary-kill-below}).
6339
6340 @item M e
6341 @itemx E
6342 @kindex M e (Summary)
6343 @kindex E (Summary)
6344 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-expirable
6345 Mark the current article as expirable
6346 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-expirable}).
6347
6348 @item M b
6349 @kindex M b (Summary)
6350 @findex gnus-summary-set-bookmark
6351 Set a bookmark in the current article
6352 (@code{gnus-summary-set-bookmark}).
6353
6354 @item M B
6355 @kindex M B (Summary)
6356 @findex gnus-summary-remove-bookmark
6357 Remove the bookmark from the current article
6358 (@code{gnus-summary-remove-bookmark}).
6359
6360 @item M V c
6361 @kindex M V c (Summary)
6362 @findex gnus-summary-clear-above
6363 Clear all marks from articles with scores over the default score (or
6364 over the numeric prefix) (@code{gnus-summary-clear-above}).
6365
6366 @item M V u
6367 @kindex M V u (Summary)
6368 @findex gnus-summary-tick-above
6369 Tick all articles with scores over the default score (or over the
6370 numeric prefix) (@code{gnus-summary-tick-above}).
6371
6372 @item M V m
6373 @kindex M V m (Summary)
6374 @findex gnus-summary-mark-above
6375 Prompt for a mark, and mark all articles with scores over the default
6376 score (or over the numeric prefix) with this mark
6377 (@code{gnus-summary-clear-above}).
6378 @end table
6379
6380 @vindex gnus-summary-goto-unread
6381 The @code{gnus-summary-goto-unread} variable controls what action should
6382 be taken after setting a mark. If non-@code{nil}, point will move to
6383 the next/previous unread article. If @code{nil}, point will just move
6384 one line up or down. As a special case, if this variable is
6385 @code{never}, all the marking commands as well as other commands (like
6386 @kbd{SPACE}) will move to the next article, whether it is unread or not.
6387 The default is @code{t}.
6388
6389
6390 @node Generic Marking Commands
6391 @subsection Generic Marking Commands
6392
6393 Some people would like the command that ticks an article (@kbd{!}) to
6394 go to the next article. Others would like it to go to the next unread
6395 article. Yet others would like it to stay on the current article.
6396 And even though I haven't heard of anybody wanting it to go to the
6397 previous (unread) article, I'm sure there are people that want that as
6398 well.
6399
6400 Multiply these five behaviors with five different marking commands, and
6401 you get a potentially complex set of variable to control what each
6402 command should do.
6403
6404 To sidestep that mess, Gnus provides commands that do all these
6405 different things. They can be found on the @kbd{M M} map in the summary
6406 buffer. Type @kbd{M M C-h} to see them all---there are too many of them
6407 to list in this manual.
6408
6409 While you can use these commands directly, most users would prefer
6410 altering the summary mode keymap. For instance, if you would like the
6411 @kbd{!} command to go to the next article instead of the next unread
6412 article, you could say something like:
6413
6414 @lisp
6415 @group
6416 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-mode-hook 'my-alter-summary-map)
6417 (defun my-alter-summary-map ()
6418 (local-set-key "!" 'gnus-summary-put-mark-as-ticked-next))
6419 @end group
6420 @end lisp
6421
6422 @noindent
6423 or
6424
6425 @lisp
6426 (defun my-alter-summary-map ()
6427 (local-set-key "!" "MM!n"))
6428 @end lisp
6429
6430
6431 @node Setting Process Marks
6432 @subsection Setting Process Marks
6433 @cindex setting process marks
6434
6435 Process marks are displayed as @code{#} in the summary buffer, and are
6436 used for marking articles in such a way that other commands will
6437 process these articles. For instance, if you process mark four
6438 articles and then use the @kbd{*} command, Gnus will enter these four
6439 articles into the cache. For more information,
6440 @pxref{Process/Prefix}.
6441
6442 @table @kbd
6443
6444 @item M P p
6445 @itemx #
6446 @kindex # (Summary)
6447 @kindex M P p (Summary)
6448 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-processable
6449 Mark the current article with the process mark
6450 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-processable}).
6451 @findex gnus-summary-unmark-as-processable
6452
6453 @item M P u
6454 @itemx M-#
6455 @kindex M P u (Summary)
6456 @kindex M-# (Summary)
6457 Remove the process mark, if any, from the current article
6458 (@code{gnus-summary-unmark-as-processable}).
6459
6460 @item M P U
6461 @kindex M P U (Summary)
6462 @findex gnus-summary-unmark-all-processable
6463 Remove the process mark from all articles
6464 (@code{gnus-summary-unmark-all-processable}).
6465
6466 @item M P i
6467 @kindex M P i (Summary)
6468 @findex gnus-uu-invert-processable
6469 Invert the list of process marked articles
6470 (@code{gnus-uu-invert-processable}).
6471
6472 @item M P R
6473 @kindex M P R (Summary)
6474 @findex gnus-uu-mark-by-regexp
6475 Mark articles that have a @code{Subject} header that matches a regular
6476 expression (@code{gnus-uu-mark-by-regexp}).
6477
6478 @item M P G
6479 @kindex M P G (Summary)
6480 @findex gnus-uu-unmark-by-regexp
6481 Unmark articles that have a @code{Subject} header that matches a regular
6482 expression (@code{gnus-uu-unmark-by-regexp}).
6483
6484 @item M P r
6485 @kindex M P r (Summary)
6486 @findex gnus-uu-mark-region
6487 Mark articles in region (@code{gnus-uu-mark-region}).
6488
6489 @item M P g
6490 @kindex M P g (Summary)
6491 @findex gnus-uu-unmark-region
6492 Unmark articles in region (@code{gnus-uu-unmark-region}).
6493
6494 @item M P t
6495 @kindex M P t (Summary)
6496 @findex gnus-uu-mark-thread
6497 Mark all articles in the current (sub)thread
6498 (@code{gnus-uu-mark-thread}).
6499
6500 @item M P T
6501 @kindex M P T (Summary)
6502 @findex gnus-uu-unmark-thread
6503 Unmark all articles in the current (sub)thread
6504 (@code{gnus-uu-unmark-thread}).
6505
6506 @item M P v
6507 @kindex M P v (Summary)
6508 @findex gnus-uu-mark-over
6509 Mark all articles that have a score above the prefix argument
6510 (@code{gnus-uu-mark-over}).
6511
6512 @item M P s
6513 @kindex M P s (Summary)
6514 @findex gnus-uu-mark-series
6515 Mark all articles in the current series (@code{gnus-uu-mark-series}).
6516
6517 @item M P S
6518 @kindex M P S (Summary)
6519 @findex gnus-uu-mark-sparse
6520 Mark all series that have already had some articles marked
6521 (@code{gnus-uu-mark-sparse}).
6522
6523 @item M P a
6524 @kindex M P a (Summary)
6525 @findex gnus-uu-mark-all
6526 Mark all articles in series order (@code{gnus-uu-mark-all}).
6527
6528 @item M P b
6529 @kindex M P b (Summary)
6530 @findex gnus-uu-mark-buffer
6531 Mark all articles in the buffer in the order they appear
6532 (@code{gnus-uu-mark-buffer}).
6533
6534 @item M P k
6535 @kindex M P k (Summary)
6536 @findex gnus-summary-kill-process-mark
6537 Push the current process mark set onto the stack and unmark all articles
6538 (@code{gnus-summary-kill-process-mark}).
6539
6540 @item M P y
6541 @kindex M P y (Summary)
6542 @findex gnus-summary-yank-process-mark
6543 Pop the previous process mark set from the stack and restore it
6544 (@code{gnus-summary-yank-process-mark}).
6545
6546 @item M P w
6547 @kindex M P w (Summary)
6548 @findex gnus-summary-save-process-mark
6549 Push the current process mark set onto the stack
6550 (@code{gnus-summary-save-process-mark}).
6551
6552 @end table
6553
6554 Also see the @kbd{&} command in @ref{Searching for Articles}, for how to
6555 set process marks based on article body contents.
6556
6557
6558 @node Limiting
6559 @section Limiting
6560 @cindex limiting
6561
6562 It can be convenient to limit the summary buffer to just show some
6563 subset of the articles currently in the group. The effect most limit
6564 commands have is to remove a few (or many) articles from the summary
6565 buffer.
6566
6567 Limiting commands work on subsets of the articles already fetched from
6568 the servers. These commands don't query the server for additional
6569 articles.
6570
6571 @table @kbd
6572
6573 @item / /
6574 @itemx / s
6575 @kindex / / (Summary)
6576 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-subject
6577 Limit the summary buffer to articles that match some subject
6578 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-subject}). If given a prefix, exclude
6579 matching articles.
6580
6581 @item / a
6582 @kindex / a (Summary)
6583 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-author
6584 Limit the summary buffer to articles that match some author
6585 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-author}). If given a prefix, exclude
6586 matching articles.
6587
6588 @item / R
6589 @kindex / R (Summary)
6590 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-recipient
6591 Limit the summary buffer to articles that match some recipient
6592 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-recipient}). If given a prefix, exclude
6593 matching articles.
6594
6595 @item / A
6596 @kindex / A (Summary)
6597 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-address
6598 Limit the summary buffer to articles in which contents of From, To or Cc
6599 header match a given address (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-address}). If
6600 given a prefix, exclude matching articles.
6601
6602 @item / S
6603 @kindex / S (Summary)
6604 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-singletons
6605 Limit the summary buffer to articles that aren't part of any displayed
6606 threads (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-singletons}). If given a prefix,
6607 limit to articles that are part of displayed threads.
6608
6609 @item / x
6610 @kindex / x (Summary)
6611 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-extra
6612 Limit the summary buffer to articles that match one of the ``extra''
6613 headers (@pxref{To From Newsgroups})
6614 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-extra}). If given a prefix, exclude
6615 matching articles.
6616
6617 @item / u
6618 @itemx x
6619 @kindex / u (Summary)
6620 @kindex x (Summary)
6621 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-unread
6622 Limit the summary buffer to articles not marked as read
6623 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-unread}). If given a prefix, limit the
6624 buffer to articles strictly unread. This means that ticked and
6625 dormant articles will also be excluded.
6626
6627 @item / m
6628 @kindex / m (Summary)
6629 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-marks
6630 Ask for a mark and then limit to all articles that have been marked
6631 with that mark (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-marks}).
6632
6633 @item / t
6634 @kindex / t (Summary)
6635 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-age
6636 Ask for a number and then limit the summary buffer to articles older than (or equal to) that number of days
6637 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-age}). If given a prefix, limit to
6638 articles younger than that number of days.
6639
6640 @item / n
6641 @kindex / n (Summary)
6642 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-articles
6643 With prefix @samp{n}, limit the summary buffer to the next @samp{n}
6644 articles. If not given a prefix, use the process marked articles
6645 instead. (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-articles}).
6646
6647 @item / w
6648 @kindex / w (Summary)
6649 @findex gnus-summary-pop-limit
6650 Pop the previous limit off the stack and restore it
6651 (@code{gnus-summary-pop-limit}). If given a prefix, pop all limits off
6652 the stack.
6653
6654 @item / .
6655 @kindex / . (Summary)
6656 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-unseen
6657 Limit the summary buffer to the unseen articles
6658 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-unseen}).
6659
6660 @item / v
6661 @kindex / v (Summary)
6662 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-score
6663 Limit the summary buffer to articles that have a score at or above some
6664 score (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-score}).
6665
6666 @item / p
6667 @kindex / p (Summary)
6668 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-display-predicate
6669 Limit the summary buffer to articles that satisfy the @code{display}
6670 group parameter predicate
6671 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-display-predicate}). @xref{Group
6672 Parameters}, for more on this predicate.
6673
6674 @item / r
6675 @kindex / r (Summary)
6676 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-replied
6677 Limit the summary buffer to replied articles
6678 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-replied}). If given a prefix, exclude
6679 replied articles.
6680
6681 @item / E
6682 @itemx M S
6683 @kindex M S (Summary)
6684 @kindex / E (Summary)
6685 @findex gnus-summary-limit-include-expunged
6686 Include all expunged articles in the limit
6687 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-include-expunged}).
6688
6689 @item / D
6690 @kindex / D (Summary)
6691 @findex gnus-summary-limit-include-dormant
6692 Include all dormant articles in the limit
6693 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-include-dormant}).
6694
6695 @item / *
6696 @kindex / * (Summary)
6697 @findex gnus-summary-limit-include-cached
6698 Include all cached articles in the limit
6699 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-include-cached}).
6700
6701 @item / d
6702 @kindex / d (Summary)
6703 @findex gnus-summary-limit-exclude-dormant
6704 Exclude all dormant articles from the limit
6705 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-exclude-dormant}).
6706
6707 @item / M
6708 @kindex / M (Summary)
6709 @findex gnus-summary-limit-exclude-marks
6710 Exclude all marked articles (@code{gnus-summary-limit-exclude-marks}).
6711
6712 @item / T
6713 @kindex / T (Summary)
6714 @findex gnus-summary-limit-include-thread
6715 Include all the articles in the current thread in the limit.
6716
6717 @item / c
6718 @kindex / c (Summary)
6719 @findex gnus-summary-limit-exclude-childless-dormant
6720 Exclude all dormant articles that have no children from the limit@*
6721 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-exclude-childless-dormant}).
6722
6723 @item / C
6724 @kindex / C (Summary)
6725 @findex gnus-summary-limit-mark-excluded-as-read
6726 Mark all excluded unread articles as read
6727 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-mark-excluded-as-read}). If given a prefix,
6728 also mark excluded ticked and dormant articles as read.
6729
6730 @item / b
6731 @kindex / b (Summary)
6732 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-bodies
6733 Limit the summary buffer to articles that have bodies that match a
6734 certain regexp (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-bodies}). If given a
6735 prefix, reverse the limit. This command is quite slow since it
6736 requires selecting each article to find the matches.
6737
6738 @item / h
6739 @kindex / h (Summary)
6740 @findex gnus-summary-limit-to-headers
6741 Like the previous command, only limit to headers instead
6742 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-headers}).
6743
6744 @end table
6745
6746
6747 The following commands aren't limiting commands, but use the @kbd{/}
6748 prefix as well.
6749
6750 @table @kbd
6751 @item / N
6752 @kindex / N (Summary)
6753 @findex gnus-summary-insert-new-articles
6754 Insert all new articles in the summary buffer. It scans for new emails
6755 if @var{back-end}@code{-get-new-mail} is non-@code{nil}.
6756
6757 @item / o
6758 @kindex / o (Summary)
6759 @findex gnus-summary-insert-old-articles
6760 Insert all old articles in the summary buffer. If given a numbered
6761 prefix, fetch this number of articles.
6762
6763 @end table
6764
6765
6766 @node Threading
6767 @section Threading
6768 @cindex threading
6769 @cindex article threading
6770
6771 Gnus threads articles by default. @dfn{To thread} is to put responses
6772 to articles directly after the articles they respond to---in a
6773 hierarchical fashion.
6774
6775 Threading is done by looking at the @code{References} headers of the
6776 articles. In a perfect world, this would be enough to build pretty
6777 trees, but unfortunately, the @code{References} header is often broken
6778 or simply missing. Weird news propagation exacerbates the problem,
6779 so one has to employ other heuristics to get pleasing results. A
6780 plethora of approaches exists, as detailed in horrible detail in
6781 @ref{Customizing Threading}.
6782
6783 First, a quick overview of the concepts:
6784
6785 @table @dfn
6786 @item root
6787 The top-most article in a thread; the first article in the thread.
6788
6789 @item thread
6790 A tree-like article structure.
6791
6792 @item sub-thread
6793 A small(er) section of this tree-like structure.
6794
6795 @item loose threads
6796 Threads often lose their roots due to article expiry, or due to the root
6797 already having been read in a previous session, and not displayed in the
6798 summary buffer. We then typically have many sub-threads that really
6799 belong to one thread, but are without connecting roots. These are
6800 called loose threads.
6801
6802 @item thread gathering
6803 An attempt to gather loose threads into bigger threads.
6804
6805 @item sparse threads
6806 A thread where the missing articles have been ``guessed'' at, and are
6807 displayed as empty lines in the summary buffer.
6808
6809 @end table
6810
6811
6812 @menu
6813 * Customizing Threading:: Variables you can change to affect the threading.
6814 * Thread Commands:: Thread based commands in the summary buffer.
6815 @end menu
6816
6817
6818 @node Customizing Threading
6819 @subsection Customizing Threading
6820 @cindex customizing threading
6821
6822 @menu
6823 * Loose Threads:: How Gnus gathers loose threads into bigger threads.
6824 * Filling In Threads:: Making the threads displayed look fuller.
6825 * More Threading:: Even more variables for fiddling with threads.
6826 * Low-Level Threading:: You thought it was over@dots{} but you were wrong!
6827 @end menu
6828
6829
6830 @node Loose Threads
6831 @subsubsection Loose Threads
6832 @cindex <
6833 @cindex >
6834 @cindex loose threads
6835
6836 @table @code
6837 @item gnus-summary-make-false-root
6838 @vindex gnus-summary-make-false-root
6839 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus will gather all loose subtrees into one big tree
6840 and create a dummy root at the top. (Wait a minute. Root at the top?
6841 Yup.) Loose subtrees occur when the real root has expired, or you've
6842 read or killed the root in a previous session.
6843
6844 When there is no real root of a thread, Gnus will have to fudge
6845 something. This variable says what fudging method Gnus should use.
6846 There are four possible values:
6847
6848 @iftex
6849 @iflatex
6850 \gnusfigure{The Summary Buffer}{390}{
6851 \put(0,0){\epsfig{figure=ps/summary-adopt,width=7.5cm}}
6852 \put(445,0){\makebox(0,0)[br]{\epsfig{figure=ps/summary-empty,width=7.5cm}}}
6853 \put(0,400){\makebox(0,0)[tl]{\epsfig{figure=ps/summary-none,width=7.5cm}}}
6854 \put(445,400){\makebox(0,0)[tr]{\epsfig{figure=ps/summary-dummy,width=7.5cm}}}
6855 }
6856 @end iflatex
6857 @end iftex
6858
6859 @cindex adopting articles
6860
6861 @table @code
6862
6863 @item adopt
6864 Gnus will make the first of the orphaned articles the parent. This
6865 parent will adopt all the other articles. The adopted articles will be
6866 marked as such by pointy brackets (@samp{<>}) instead of the standard
6867 square brackets (@samp{[]}). This is the default method.
6868
6869 @item dummy
6870 @vindex gnus-summary-dummy-line-format
6871 @vindex gnus-summary-make-false-root-always
6872 Gnus will create a dummy summary line that will pretend to be the
6873 parent. This dummy line does not correspond to any real article, so
6874 selecting it will just select the first real article after the dummy
6875 article. @code{gnus-summary-dummy-line-format} is used to specify the
6876 format of the dummy roots. It accepts only one format spec: @samp{S},
6877 which is the subject of the article. @xref{Formatting Variables}.
6878 If you want all threads to have a dummy root, even the non-gathered
6879 ones, set @code{gnus-summary-make-false-root-always} to @code{t}.
6880
6881 @item empty
6882 Gnus won't actually make any article the parent, but simply leave the
6883 subject field of all orphans except the first empty. (Actually, it will
6884 use @code{gnus-summary-same-subject} as the subject (@pxref{Summary
6885 Buffer Format}).)
6886
6887 @item none
6888 Don't make any article parent at all. Just gather the threads and
6889 display them after one another.
6890
6891 @item nil
6892 Don't gather loose threads.
6893 @end table
6894
6895 @item gnus-summary-gather-subject-limit
6896 @vindex gnus-summary-gather-subject-limit
6897 Loose threads are gathered by comparing subjects of articles. If this
6898 variable is @code{nil}, Gnus requires an exact match between the
6899 subjects of the loose threads before gathering them into one big
6900 super-thread. This might be too strict a requirement, what with the
6901 presence of stupid newsreaders that chop off long subject lines. If
6902 you think so, set this variable to, say, 20 to require that only the
6903 first 20 characters of the subjects have to match. If you set this
6904 variable to a really low number, you'll find that Gnus will gather
6905 everything in sight into one thread, which isn't very helpful.
6906
6907 @cindex fuzzy article gathering
6908 If you set this variable to the special value @code{fuzzy}, Gnus will
6909 use a fuzzy string comparison algorithm on the subjects (@pxref{Fuzzy
6910 Matching}).
6911
6912 @item gnus-simplify-subject-fuzzy-regexp
6913 @vindex gnus-simplify-subject-fuzzy-regexp
6914 This can either be a regular expression or list of regular expressions
6915 that match strings that will be removed from subjects if fuzzy subject
6916 simplification is used.
6917
6918 @item gnus-simplify-ignored-prefixes
6919 @vindex gnus-simplify-ignored-prefixes
6920 If you set @code{gnus-summary-gather-subject-limit} to something as low
6921 as 10, you might consider setting this variable to something sensible:
6922
6923 @c Written by Michael Ernst <mernst@cs.rice.edu>
6924 @lisp
6925 (setq gnus-simplify-ignored-prefixes
6926 (concat
6927 "\\`\\[?\\("
6928 (mapconcat
6929 'identity
6930 '("looking"
6931 "wanted" "followup" "summary\\( of\\)?"
6932 "help" "query" "problem" "question"
6933 "answer" "reference" "announce"
6934 "How can I" "How to" "Comparison of"
6935 ;; ...
6936 )
6937 "\\|")
6938 "\\)\\s *\\("
6939 (mapconcat 'identity
6940 '("for" "for reference" "with" "about")
6941 "\\|")
6942 "\\)?\\]?:?[ \t]*"))
6943 @end lisp
6944
6945 All words that match this regexp will be removed before comparing two
6946 subjects.
6947
6948 @item gnus-simplify-subject-functions
6949 @vindex gnus-simplify-subject-functions
6950 If non-@code{nil}, this variable overrides
6951 @code{gnus-summary-gather-subject-limit}. This variable should be a
6952 list of functions to apply to the @code{Subject} string iteratively to
6953 arrive at the simplified version of the string.
6954
6955 Useful functions to put in this list include:
6956
6957 @table @code
6958 @item gnus-simplify-subject-re
6959 @findex gnus-simplify-subject-re
6960 Strip the leading @samp{Re:}.
6961
6962 @item gnus-simplify-subject-fuzzy
6963 @findex gnus-simplify-subject-fuzzy
6964 Simplify fuzzily.
6965
6966 @item gnus-simplify-whitespace
6967 @findex gnus-simplify-whitespace
6968 Remove excessive whitespace.
6969
6970 @item gnus-simplify-all-whitespace
6971 @findex gnus-simplify-all-whitespace
6972 Remove all whitespace.
6973 @end table
6974
6975 You may also write your own functions, of course.
6976
6977
6978 @item gnus-summary-gather-exclude-subject
6979 @vindex gnus-summary-gather-exclude-subject
6980 Since loose thread gathering is done on subjects only, that might lead
6981 to many false hits, especially with certain common subjects like
6982 @samp{} and @samp{(none)}. To make the situation slightly better,
6983 you can use the regexp @code{gnus-summary-gather-exclude-subject} to say
6984 what subjects should be excluded from the gathering process.@*
6985 The default is @samp{^ *$\\|^(none)$}.
6986
6987 @item gnus-summary-thread-gathering-function
6988 @vindex gnus-summary-thread-gathering-function
6989 Gnus gathers threads by looking at @code{Subject} headers. This means
6990 that totally unrelated articles may end up in the same ``thread'', which
6991 is confusing. An alternate approach is to look at all the
6992 @code{Message-ID}s in all the @code{References} headers to find matches.
6993 This will ensure that no gathered threads ever include unrelated
6994 articles, but it also means that people who have posted with broken
6995 newsreaders won't be gathered properly. The choice is yours---plague or
6996 cholera:
6997
6998 @table @code
6999 @item gnus-gather-threads-by-subject
7000 @findex gnus-gather-threads-by-subject
7001 This function is the default gathering function and looks at
7002 @code{Subject}s exclusively.
7003
7004 @item gnus-gather-threads-by-references
7005 @findex gnus-gather-threads-by-references
7006 This function looks at @code{References} headers exclusively.
7007 @end table
7008
7009 If you want to test gathering by @code{References}, you could say
7010 something like:
7011
7012 @lisp
7013 (setq gnus-summary-thread-gathering-function
7014 'gnus-gather-threads-by-references)
7015 @end lisp
7016
7017 @end table
7018
7019
7020 @node Filling In Threads
7021 @subsubsection Filling In Threads
7022
7023 @table @code
7024 @item gnus-fetch-old-headers
7025 @vindex gnus-fetch-old-headers
7026 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus will attempt to build old threads by fetching
7027 more old headers---headers to articles marked as read. If you would
7028 like to display as few summary lines as possible, but still connect as
7029 many loose threads as possible, you should set this variable to
7030 @code{some} or a number. If you set it to a number, no more than that
7031 number of extra old headers will be fetched. In either case, fetching
7032 old headers only works if the back end you are using carries overview
7033 files---this would normally be @code{nntp}, @code{nnspool},
7034 @code{nnml}, and @code{nnmaildir}. Also remember that if the root of
7035 the thread has been expired by the server, there's not much Gnus can
7036 do about that.
7037
7038 This variable can also be set to @code{invisible}. This won't have any
7039 visible effects, but is useful if you use the @kbd{A T} command a lot
7040 (@pxref{Finding the Parent}).
7041
7042 The server has to support @acronym{NOV} for any of this to work.
7043
7044 @cindex Gmane, gnus-fetch-old-headers
7045 This feature can seriously impact performance it ignores all locally
7046 cached header entries. Setting it to @code{t} for groups for a server
7047 that doesn't expire articles (such as news.gmane.org), leads to very
7048 slow summary generation.
7049
7050 @item gnus-fetch-old-ephemeral-headers
7051 @vindex gnus-fetch-old-ephemeral-headers
7052 Same as @code{gnus-fetch-old-headers}, but only used for ephemeral
7053 newsgroups.
7054
7055 @item gnus-build-sparse-threads
7056 @vindex gnus-build-sparse-threads
7057 Fetching old headers can be slow. A low-rent similar effect can be
7058 gotten by setting this variable to @code{some}. Gnus will then look at
7059 the complete @code{References} headers of all articles and try to string
7060 together articles that belong in the same thread. This will leave
7061 @dfn{gaps} in the threading display where Gnus guesses that an article
7062 is missing from the thread. (These gaps appear like normal summary
7063 lines. If you select a gap, Gnus will try to fetch the article in
7064 question.) If this variable is @code{t}, Gnus will display all these
7065 ``gaps'' without regard for whether they are useful for completing the
7066 thread or not. Finally, if this variable is @code{more}, Gnus won't cut
7067 off sparse leaf nodes that don't lead anywhere. This variable is
7068 @code{nil} by default.
7069
7070 @item gnus-read-all-available-headers
7071 @vindex gnus-read-all-available-headers
7072 This is a rather obscure variable that few will find useful. It's
7073 intended for those non-news newsgroups where the back end has to fetch
7074 quite a lot to present the summary buffer, and where it's impossible to
7075 go back to parents of articles. This is mostly the case in the
7076 web-based groups.
7077
7078 If you don't use those, then it's safe to leave this as the default
7079 @code{nil}. If you want to use this variable, it should be a regexp
7080 that matches the group name, or @code{t} for all groups.
7081
7082 @end table
7083
7084
7085 @node More Threading
7086 @subsubsection More Threading
7087
7088 @table @code
7089 @item gnus-show-threads
7090 @vindex gnus-show-threads
7091 If this variable is @code{nil}, no threading will be done, and all of
7092 the rest of the variables here will have no effect. Turning threading
7093 off will speed group selection up a bit, but it is sure to make reading
7094 slower and more awkward.
7095
7096 @item gnus-thread-hide-subtree
7097 @vindex gnus-thread-hide-subtree
7098 If non-@code{nil}, all threads will be hidden when the summary buffer is
7099 generated.
7100
7101 This can also be a predicate specifier (@pxref{Predicate Specifiers}).
7102 Available predicates are @code{gnus-article-unread-p} and
7103 @code{gnus-article-unseen-p}.
7104
7105 Here's an example:
7106
7107 @lisp
7108 (setq gnus-thread-hide-subtree
7109 '(or gnus-article-unread-p
7110 gnus-article-unseen-p))
7111 @end lisp
7112
7113 (It's a pretty nonsensical example, since all unseen articles are also
7114 unread, but you get my drift.)
7115
7116
7117 @item gnus-thread-expunge-below
7118 @vindex gnus-thread-expunge-below
7119 All threads that have a total score (as defined by
7120 @code{gnus-thread-score-function}) less than this number will be
7121 expunged. This variable is @code{nil} by default, which means that no
7122 threads are expunged.
7123
7124 @item gnus-thread-hide-killed
7125 @vindex gnus-thread-hide-killed
7126 if you kill a thread and this variable is non-@code{nil}, the subtree
7127 will be hidden.
7128
7129 @item gnus-thread-ignore-subject
7130 @vindex gnus-thread-ignore-subject
7131 Sometimes somebody changes the subject in the middle of a thread. If
7132 this variable is non-@code{nil}, which is the default, the subject
7133 change is ignored. If it is @code{nil}, a change in the subject will
7134 result in a new thread.
7135
7136 @item gnus-thread-indent-level
7137 @vindex gnus-thread-indent-level
7138 This is a number that says how much each sub-thread should be indented.
7139 The default is 4.
7140
7141 @item gnus-sort-gathered-threads-function
7142 @vindex gnus-sort-gathered-threads-function
7143 Sometimes, particularly with mailing lists, the order in which mails
7144 arrive locally is not necessarily the same as the order in which they
7145 arrived on the mailing list. Consequently, when sorting sub-threads
7146 using the default @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-number}, responses can end
7147 up appearing before the article to which they are responding to.
7148 Setting this variable to an alternate value
7149 (e.g., @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-date}), in a group's parameters or in an
7150 appropriate hook (e.g., @code{gnus-summary-generate-hook}) can produce a
7151 more logical sub-thread ordering in such instances.
7152
7153 @end table
7154
7155
7156 @node Low-Level Threading
7157 @subsubsection Low-Level Threading
7158
7159 @table @code
7160
7161 @item gnus-parse-headers-hook
7162 @vindex gnus-parse-headers-hook
7163 Hook run before parsing any headers.
7164
7165 @item gnus-alter-header-function
7166 @vindex gnus-alter-header-function
7167 If non-@code{nil}, this function will be called to allow alteration of
7168 article header structures. The function is called with one parameter,
7169 the article header vector, which it may alter in any way. For instance,
7170 if you have a mail-to-news gateway which alters the @code{Message-ID}s
7171 in systematic ways (by adding prefixes and such), you can use this
7172 variable to un-scramble the @code{Message-ID}s so that they are more
7173 meaningful. Here's one example:
7174
7175 @lisp
7176 (setq gnus-alter-header-function 'my-alter-message-id)
7177
7178 (defun my-alter-message-id (header)
7179 (let ((id (mail-header-id header)))
7180 (when (string-match
7181 "\\(<[^<>@@]*\\)\\.?cygnus\\..*@@\\([^<>@@]*>\\)" id)
7182 (mail-header-set-id
7183 (concat (match-string 1 id) "@@" (match-string 2 id))
7184 header))))
7185 @end lisp
7186
7187 @end table
7188
7189
7190 @node Thread Commands
7191 @subsection Thread Commands
7192 @cindex thread commands
7193
7194 @table @kbd
7195
7196 @item T k
7197 @itemx C-M-k
7198 @kindex T k (Summary)
7199 @kindex C-M-k (Summary)
7200 @findex gnus-summary-kill-thread
7201 Mark all articles in the current (sub-)thread as read
7202 (@code{gnus-summary-kill-thread}). If the prefix argument is positive,
7203 remove all marks instead. If the prefix argument is negative, tick
7204 articles instead.
7205
7206 @item T l
7207 @itemx C-M-l
7208 @kindex T l (Summary)
7209 @kindex C-M-l (Summary)
7210 @findex gnus-summary-lower-thread
7211 Lower the score of the current (sub-)thread
7212 (@code{gnus-summary-lower-thread}).
7213
7214 @item T i
7215 @kindex T i (Summary)
7216 @findex gnus-summary-raise-thread
7217 Increase the score of the current (sub-)thread
7218 (@code{gnus-summary-raise-thread}).
7219
7220 @item T #
7221 @kindex T # (Summary)
7222 @findex gnus-uu-mark-thread
7223 Set the process mark on the current (sub-)thread
7224 (@code{gnus-uu-mark-thread}).
7225
7226 @item T M-#
7227 @kindex T M-# (Summary)
7228 @findex gnus-uu-unmark-thread
7229 Remove the process mark from the current (sub-)thread
7230 (@code{gnus-uu-unmark-thread}).
7231
7232 @item T T
7233 @kindex T T (Summary)
7234 @findex gnus-summary-toggle-threads
7235 Toggle threading (@code{gnus-summary-toggle-threads}).
7236
7237 @item T s
7238 @kindex T s (Summary)
7239 @findex gnus-summary-show-thread
7240 Expose the (sub-)thread hidden under the current article, if any@*
7241 (@code{gnus-summary-show-thread}).
7242
7243 @item T h
7244 @kindex T h (Summary)
7245 @findex gnus-summary-hide-thread
7246 Hide the current (sub-)thread (@code{gnus-summary-hide-thread}).
7247
7248 @item T S
7249 @kindex T S (Summary)
7250 @findex gnus-summary-show-all-threads
7251 Expose all hidden threads (@code{gnus-summary-show-all-threads}).
7252
7253 @item T H
7254 @kindex T H (Summary)
7255 @findex gnus-summary-hide-all-threads
7256 Hide all threads (@code{gnus-summary-hide-all-threads}).
7257
7258 @item T t
7259 @kindex T t (Summary)
7260 @findex gnus-summary-rethread-current
7261 Re-thread the current article's thread
7262 (@code{gnus-summary-rethread-current}). This works even when the
7263 summary buffer is otherwise unthreaded.
7264
7265 @item T ^
7266 @kindex T ^ (Summary)
7267 @findex gnus-summary-reparent-thread
7268 Make the current article the child of the marked (or previous) article
7269 (@code{gnus-summary-reparent-thread}).
7270
7271 @item T M-^
7272 @kindex T M-^ (Summary)
7273 @findex gnus-summary-reparent-children
7274 Make the current article the parent of the marked articles
7275 (@code{gnus-summary-reparent-children}).
7276
7277 @end table
7278
7279 The following commands are thread movement commands. They all
7280 understand the numeric prefix.
7281
7282 @table @kbd
7283
7284 @item T n
7285 @kindex T n (Summary)
7286 @itemx C-M-f
7287 @kindex C-M-n (Summary)
7288 @itemx M-down
7289 @kindex M-down (Summary)
7290 @findex gnus-summary-next-thread
7291 Go to the next thread (@code{gnus-summary-next-thread}).
7292
7293 @item T p
7294 @kindex T p (Summary)
7295 @itemx C-M-b
7296 @kindex C-M-p (Summary)
7297 @itemx M-up
7298 @kindex M-up (Summary)
7299 @findex gnus-summary-prev-thread
7300 Go to the previous thread (@code{gnus-summary-prev-thread}).
7301
7302 @item T d
7303 @kindex T d (Summary)
7304 @findex gnus-summary-down-thread
7305 Descend the thread (@code{gnus-summary-down-thread}).
7306
7307 @item T u
7308 @kindex T u (Summary)
7309 @findex gnus-summary-up-thread
7310 Ascend the thread (@code{gnus-summary-up-thread}).
7311
7312 @item T o
7313 @kindex T o (Summary)
7314 @findex gnus-summary-top-thread
7315 Go to the top of the thread (@code{gnus-summary-top-thread}).
7316 @end table
7317
7318 @vindex gnus-thread-operation-ignore-subject
7319 If you ignore subject while threading, you'll naturally end up with
7320 threads that have several different subjects in them. If you then issue
7321 a command like @kbd{T k} (@code{gnus-summary-kill-thread}) you might not
7322 wish to kill the entire thread, but just those parts of the thread that
7323 have the same subject as the current article. If you like this idea,
7324 you can fiddle with @code{gnus-thread-operation-ignore-subject}. If it
7325 is non-@code{nil} (which it is by default), subjects will be ignored
7326 when doing thread commands. If this variable is @code{nil}, articles in
7327 the same thread with different subjects will not be included in the
7328 operation in question. If this variable is @code{fuzzy}, only articles
7329 that have subjects fuzzily equal will be included (@pxref{Fuzzy
7330 Matching}).
7331
7332
7333 @node Sorting the Summary Buffer
7334 @section Sorting the Summary Buffer
7335
7336 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-total-score
7337 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-date
7338 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-score
7339 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-subject
7340 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-author
7341 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-recipient
7342 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-number
7343 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-random
7344 @vindex gnus-thread-sort-functions
7345 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-most-recent-number
7346 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-most-recent-date
7347 If you are using a threaded summary display, you can sort the threads by
7348 setting @code{gnus-thread-sort-functions}, which can be either a single
7349 function, a list of functions, or a list containing functions and
7350 @code{(not some-function)} elements.
7351
7352 By default, sorting is done on article numbers. Ready-made sorting
7353 predicate functions include @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-number},
7354 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-author}, @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-recipient},
7355 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-subject},
7356 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-date},
7357 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-score},
7358 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-most-recent-number},
7359 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-most-recent-date},
7360 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-random} and
7361 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-total-score}.
7362
7363 Each function takes two threads and returns non-@code{nil} if the first
7364 thread should be sorted before the other. Note that sorting really is
7365 normally done by looking only at the roots of each thread. Exceptions
7366 to this rule are @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-most-recent-number} and
7367 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-most-recent-date}.
7368
7369 If you use more than one function, the primary sort key should be the
7370 last function in the list. You should probably always include
7371 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-number} in the list of sorting
7372 functions---preferably first. This will ensure that threads that are
7373 equal with respect to the other sort criteria will be displayed in
7374 ascending article order.
7375
7376 If you would like to sort by reverse score, then by subject, and finally
7377 by number, you could do something like:
7378
7379 @lisp
7380 (setq gnus-thread-sort-functions
7381 '(gnus-thread-sort-by-number
7382 gnus-thread-sort-by-subject
7383 (not gnus-thread-sort-by-total-score)))
7384 @end lisp
7385
7386 The threads that have highest score will be displayed first in the
7387 summary buffer. When threads have the same score, they will be sorted
7388 alphabetically. The threads that have the same score and the same
7389 subject will be sorted by number, which is (normally) the sequence in
7390 which the articles arrived.
7391
7392 If you want to sort by score and then reverse arrival order, you could
7393 say something like:
7394
7395 @lisp
7396 (setq gnus-thread-sort-functions
7397 '((not gnus-thread-sort-by-number)
7398 gnus-thread-sort-by-score))
7399 @end lisp
7400
7401 By default, threads including their subthreads are sorted according to
7402 the value of @code{gnus-thread-sort-functions}. By customizing
7403 @code{gnus-subthread-sort-functions} you can define a custom sorting
7404 order for subthreads. This allows for example to sort threads from
7405 high score to low score in the summary buffer, but to have subthreads
7406 still sorted chronologically from old to new without taking their
7407 score into account.
7408
7409 @vindex gnus-thread-score-function
7410 The function in the @code{gnus-thread-score-function} variable (default
7411 @code{+}) is used for calculating the total score of a thread. Useful
7412 functions might be @code{max}, @code{min}, or squared means, or whatever
7413 tickles your fancy.
7414
7415 @findex gnus-article-sort-functions
7416 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-date
7417 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-most-recent-date
7418 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-score
7419 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-subject
7420 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-author
7421 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-random
7422 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-number
7423 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-most-recent-number
7424 If you are using an unthreaded display for some strange reason or
7425 other, you have to fiddle with the @code{gnus-article-sort-functions}
7426 variable. It is very similar to the
7427 @code{gnus-thread-sort-functions}, except that it uses slightly
7428 different functions for article comparison. Available sorting
7429 predicate functions are @code{gnus-article-sort-by-number},
7430 @code{gnus-article-sort-by-author},
7431 @code{gnus-article-sort-by-subject}, @code{gnus-article-sort-by-date},
7432 @code{gnus-article-sort-by-random}, and
7433 @code{gnus-article-sort-by-score}.
7434
7435 If you want to sort an unthreaded summary display by subject, you could
7436 say something like:
7437
7438 @lisp
7439 (setq gnus-article-sort-functions
7440 '(gnus-article-sort-by-number
7441 gnus-article-sort-by-subject))
7442 @end lisp
7443
7444 You can define group specific sorting via @code{gnus-parameters},
7445 @xref{Group Parameters}.
7446
7447
7448 @node Asynchronous Fetching
7449 @section Asynchronous Article Fetching
7450 @cindex asynchronous article fetching
7451 @cindex article pre-fetch
7452 @cindex pre-fetch
7453
7454 If you read your news from an @acronym{NNTP} server that's far away, the
7455 network latencies may make reading articles a chore. You have to wait
7456 for a while after pressing @kbd{n} to go to the next article before the
7457 article appears. Why can't Gnus just go ahead and fetch the article
7458 while you are reading the previous one? Why not, indeed.
7459
7460 First, some caveats. There are some pitfalls to using asynchronous
7461 article fetching, especially the way Gnus does it.
7462
7463 Let's say you are reading article 1, which is short, and article 2 is
7464 quite long, and you are not interested in reading that. Gnus does not
7465 know this, so it goes ahead and fetches article 2. You decide to read
7466 article 3, but since Gnus is in the process of fetching article 2, the
7467 connection is blocked.
7468
7469 To avoid these situations, Gnus will open two (count 'em two)
7470 connections to the server. Some people may think this isn't a very nice
7471 thing to do, but I don't see any real alternatives. Setting up that
7472 extra connection takes some time, so Gnus startup will be slower.
7473
7474 Gnus will fetch more articles than you will read. This will mean that
7475 the link between your machine and the @acronym{NNTP} server will become more
7476 loaded than if you didn't use article pre-fetch. The server itself will
7477 also become more loaded---both with the extra article requests, and the
7478 extra connection.
7479
7480 Ok, so now you know that you shouldn't really use this thing@dots{} unless
7481 you really want to.
7482
7483 @vindex gnus-asynchronous
7484 Here's how: Set @code{gnus-asynchronous} to @code{t}. The rest should
7485 happen automatically.
7486
7487 @vindex gnus-use-article-prefetch
7488 You can control how many articles are to be pre-fetched by setting
7489 @code{gnus-use-article-prefetch}. This is 30 by default, which means
7490 that when you read an article in the group, the back end will pre-fetch
7491 the next 30 articles. If this variable is @code{t}, the back end will
7492 pre-fetch all the articles it can without bound. If it is
7493 @code{nil}, no pre-fetching will be done.
7494
7495 @vindex gnus-async-prefetch-article-p
7496 @findex gnus-async-unread-p
7497 There are probably some articles that you don't want to pre-fetch---read
7498 articles, for instance. The @code{gnus-async-prefetch-article-p}
7499 variable controls whether an article is to be pre-fetched. This
7500 function should return non-@code{nil} when the article in question is
7501 to be pre-fetched. The default is @code{gnus-async-unread-p}, which
7502 returns @code{nil} on read articles. The function is called with an
7503 article data structure as the only parameter.
7504
7505 If, for instance, you wish to pre-fetch only unread articles shorter
7506 than 100 lines, you could say something like:
7507
7508 @lisp
7509 (defun my-async-short-unread-p (data)
7510 "Return non-nil for short, unread articles."
7511 (and (gnus-data-unread-p data)
7512 (< (mail-header-lines (gnus-data-header data))
7513 100)))
7514
7515 (setq gnus-async-prefetch-article-p 'my-async-short-unread-p)
7516 @end lisp
7517
7518 These functions will be called many, many times, so they should
7519 preferably be short and sweet to avoid slowing down Gnus too much.
7520 It's probably a good idea to byte-compile things like this.
7521
7522 @vindex gnus-async-post-fetch-function
7523 @findex gnus-html-prefetch-images
7524 After an article has been prefetched, this
7525 @code{gnus-async-post-fetch-function} will be called. The buffer will
7526 be narrowed to the region of the article that was fetched. A useful
7527 value would be @code{gnus-html-prefetch-images}, which will prefetch
7528 and store images referenced in the article, so that you don't have to
7529 wait for them to be fetched when you read the article. This is useful
7530 for @acronym{HTML} messages that have external images.
7531
7532 @vindex gnus-prefetched-article-deletion-strategy
7533 Articles have to be removed from the asynch buffer sooner or later. The
7534 @code{gnus-prefetched-article-deletion-strategy} says when to remove
7535 articles. This is a list that may contain the following elements:
7536
7537 @table @code
7538 @item read
7539 Remove articles when they are read.
7540
7541 @item exit
7542 Remove articles when exiting the group.
7543 @end table
7544
7545 The default value is @code{(read exit)}.
7546
7547 @c @vindex gnus-use-header-prefetch
7548 @c If @code{gnus-use-header-prefetch} is non-@code{nil}, prefetch articles
7549 @c from the next group.
7550
7551
7552 @node Article Caching
7553 @section Article Caching
7554 @cindex article caching
7555 @cindex caching
7556
7557 If you have an @emph{extremely} slow @acronym{NNTP} connection, you may
7558 consider turning article caching on. Each article will then be stored
7559 locally under your home directory. As you may surmise, this could
7560 potentially use @emph{huge} amounts of disk space, as well as eat up all
7561 your inodes so fast it will make your head swim. In vodka.
7562
7563 Used carefully, though, it could be just an easier way to save articles.
7564
7565 @vindex gnus-use-long-file-name
7566 @vindex gnus-cache-directory
7567 @vindex gnus-use-cache
7568 To turn caching on, set @code{gnus-use-cache} to @code{t}. By default,
7569 all articles ticked or marked as dormant will then be copied
7570 over to your local cache (@code{gnus-cache-directory}). Whether this
7571 cache is flat or hierarchical is controlled by the
7572 @code{gnus-use-long-file-name} variable, as usual.
7573
7574 When re-selecting a ticked or dormant article, it will be fetched from the
7575 cache instead of from the server. As articles in your cache will never
7576 expire, this might serve as a method of saving articles while still
7577 keeping them where they belong. Just mark all articles you want to save
7578 as dormant, and don't worry.
7579
7580 When an article is marked as read, is it removed from the cache.
7581
7582 @vindex gnus-cache-remove-articles
7583 @vindex gnus-cache-enter-articles
7584 The entering/removal of articles from the cache is controlled by the
7585 @code{gnus-cache-enter-articles} and @code{gnus-cache-remove-articles}
7586 variables. Both are lists of symbols. The first is @code{(ticked
7587 dormant)} by default, meaning that ticked and dormant articles will be
7588 put in the cache. The latter is @code{(read)} by default, meaning that
7589 articles marked as read are removed from the cache. Possibly
7590 symbols in these two lists are @code{ticked}, @code{dormant},
7591 @code{unread} and @code{read}.
7592
7593 @findex gnus-jog-cache
7594 So where does the massive article-fetching and storing come into the
7595 picture? The @code{gnus-jog-cache} command will go through all
7596 subscribed newsgroups, request all unread articles, score them, and
7597 store them in the cache. You should only ever, ever ever ever, use this
7598 command if 1) your connection to the @acronym{NNTP} server is really, really,
7599 really slow and 2) you have a really, really, really huge disk.
7600 Seriously. One way to cut down on the number of articles downloaded is
7601 to score unwanted articles down and have them marked as read. They will
7602 not then be downloaded by this command.
7603
7604 @vindex gnus-uncacheable-groups
7605 @vindex gnus-cacheable-groups
7606 It is likely that you do not want caching on all groups. For instance,
7607 if your @code{nnml} mail is located under your home directory, it makes no
7608 sense to cache it somewhere else under your home directory. Unless you
7609 feel that it's neat to use twice as much space.
7610
7611 To limit the caching, you could set @code{gnus-cacheable-groups} to a
7612 regexp of groups to cache, @samp{^nntp} for instance, or set the
7613 @code{gnus-uncacheable-groups} regexp to @samp{^nnml}, for instance.
7614 Both variables are @code{nil} by default. If a group matches both
7615 variables, the group is not cached.
7616
7617 @findex gnus-cache-generate-nov-databases
7618 @findex gnus-cache-generate-active
7619 @vindex gnus-cache-active-file
7620 The cache stores information on what articles it contains in its active
7621 file (@code{gnus-cache-active-file}). If this file (or any other parts
7622 of the cache) becomes all messed up for some reason or other, Gnus
7623 offers two functions that will try to set things right. @kbd{M-x
7624 gnus-cache-generate-nov-databases} will (re)build all the @acronym{NOV}
7625 files, and @kbd{gnus-cache-generate-active} will (re)generate the active
7626 file.
7627
7628 @findex gnus-cache-move-cache
7629 @code{gnus-cache-move-cache} will move your whole
7630 @code{gnus-cache-directory} to some other location. You get asked to
7631 where, isn't that cool?
7632
7633 @node Persistent Articles
7634 @section Persistent Articles
7635 @cindex persistent articles
7636
7637 Closely related to article caching, we have @dfn{persistent articles}.
7638 In fact, it's just a different way of looking at caching, and much more
7639 useful in my opinion.
7640
7641 Say you're reading a newsgroup, and you happen on to some valuable gem
7642 that you want to keep and treasure forever. You'd normally just save it
7643 (using one of the many saving commands) in some file. The problem with
7644 that is that it's just, well, yucky. Ideally you'd prefer just having
7645 the article remain in the group where you found it forever; untouched by
7646 the expiry going on at the news server.
7647
7648 This is what a @dfn{persistent article} is---an article that just won't
7649 be deleted. It's implemented using the normal cache functions, but
7650 you use two explicit commands for managing persistent articles:
7651
7652 @table @kbd
7653
7654 @item *
7655 @kindex * (Summary)
7656 @findex gnus-cache-enter-article
7657 Make the current article persistent (@code{gnus-cache-enter-article}).
7658
7659 @item M-*
7660 @kindex M-* (Summary)
7661 @findex gnus-cache-remove-article
7662 Remove the current article from the persistent articles
7663 (@code{gnus-cache-remove-article}). This will normally delete the
7664 article.
7665 @end table
7666
7667 Both these commands understand the process/prefix convention.
7668
7669 To avoid having all ticked articles (and stuff) entered into the cache,
7670 you should set @code{gnus-use-cache} to @code{passive} if you're just
7671 interested in persistent articles:
7672
7673 @lisp
7674 (setq gnus-use-cache 'passive)
7675 @end lisp
7676
7677 @node Sticky Articles
7678 @section Sticky Articles
7679 @cindex sticky articles
7680
7681 When you select an article the current article buffer will be reused
7682 according to the value of the variable
7683 @code{gnus-single-article-buffer}. If its value is non-@code{nil} (the
7684 default) all articles reuse the same article buffer. Else each group
7685 has its own article buffer.
7686
7687 This implies that it's not possible to have more than one article buffer
7688 in a group at a time. But sometimes you might want to display all the
7689 latest emails from your mother, your father, your aunt, your uncle and
7690 your 17 cousins to coordinate the next Christmas party.
7691
7692 That's where sticky articles come in handy. A sticky article buffer
7693 basically is a normal article buffer, but it won't be reused when you
7694 select another article. You can make an article sticky with:
7695
7696 @table @kbd
7697 @item A S
7698 @kindex A S (Summary)
7699 @findex gnus-sticky-article
7700 Make the current article sticky. If a prefix arg is given, ask for a
7701 name for this sticky article buffer.
7702 @end table
7703
7704 To close a sticky article buffer you can use these commands:
7705
7706 @table @kbd
7707 @item q
7708 @kindex q (Article)
7709 @findex bury-buffer
7710 Puts this sticky article buffer at the end of the list of all buffers.
7711
7712 @item k
7713 @kindex k (Article)
7714 @findex gnus-kill-sticky-article-buffer
7715 Kills this sticky article buffer.
7716 @end table
7717
7718 To kill all sticky article buffers you can use:
7719
7720 @defun gnus-kill-sticky-article-buffers ARG
7721 Kill all sticky article buffers.
7722 If a prefix ARG is given, ask for confirmation.
7723 @end defun
7724
7725 @node Article Backlog
7726 @section Article Backlog
7727 @cindex backlog
7728 @cindex article backlog
7729
7730 If you have a slow connection, but the idea of using caching seems
7731 unappealing to you (and it is, really), you can help the situation some
7732 by switching on the @dfn{backlog}. This is where Gnus will buffer
7733 already read articles so that it doesn't have to re-fetch articles
7734 you've already read. This only helps if you are in the habit of
7735 re-selecting articles you've recently read, of course. If you never do
7736 that, turning the backlog on will slow Gnus down a little bit, and
7737 increase memory usage some.
7738
7739 @vindex gnus-keep-backlog
7740 If you set @code{gnus-keep-backlog} to a number @var{n}, Gnus will store
7741 at most @var{n} old articles in a buffer for later re-fetching. If this
7742 variable is non-@code{nil} and is not a number, Gnus will store
7743 @emph{all} read articles, which means that your Emacs will grow without
7744 bound before exploding and taking your machine down with you. I put
7745 that in there just to keep y'all on your toes.
7746
7747 The default value is 20.
7748
7749
7750 @node Saving Articles
7751 @section Saving Articles
7752 @cindex saving articles
7753
7754 Gnus can save articles in a number of ways. Below is the documentation
7755 for saving articles in a fairly straight-forward fashion (i.e., little
7756 processing of the article is done before it is saved). For a different
7757 approach (uudecoding, unsharing) you should use @code{gnus-uu}
7758 (@pxref{Decoding Articles}).
7759
7760 For the commands listed here, the target is a file. If you want to
7761 save to a group, see the @kbd{B c} (@code{gnus-summary-copy-article})
7762 command (@pxref{Mail Group Commands}).
7763
7764 @vindex gnus-save-all-headers
7765 If @code{gnus-save-all-headers} is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will not delete
7766 unwanted headers before saving the article.
7767
7768 @vindex gnus-saved-headers
7769 If the preceding variable is @code{nil}, all headers that match the
7770 @code{gnus-saved-headers} regexp will be kept, while the rest will be
7771 deleted before saving.
7772
7773 @table @kbd
7774
7775 @item O o
7776 @itemx o
7777 @kindex O o (Summary)
7778 @kindex o (Summary)
7779 @findex gnus-summary-save-article
7780 @c @icon{gnus-summary-save-article}
7781 Save the current article using the default article saver
7782 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article}).
7783
7784 @item O m
7785 @kindex O m (Summary)
7786 @findex gnus-summary-save-article-mail
7787 Save the current article in a Unix mail box (mbox) file
7788 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article-mail}).
7789
7790 @item O r
7791 @kindex O r (Summary)
7792 @findex gnus-summary-save-article-rmail
7793 Save the current article in Rmail format
7794 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article-rmail}). This is mbox since Emacs 23,
7795 Babyl in older versions.
7796
7797 @item O f
7798 @kindex O f (Summary)
7799 @findex gnus-summary-save-article-file
7800 @c @icon{gnus-summary-save-article-file}
7801 Save the current article in plain file format
7802 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article-file}).
7803
7804 @item O F
7805 @kindex O F (Summary)
7806 @findex gnus-summary-write-article-file
7807 Write the current article in plain file format, overwriting any previous
7808 file contents (@code{gnus-summary-write-article-file}).
7809
7810 @item O b
7811 @kindex O b (Summary)
7812 @findex gnus-summary-save-article-body-file
7813 Save the current article body in plain file format
7814 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article-body-file}).
7815
7816 @item O h
7817 @kindex O h (Summary)
7818 @findex gnus-summary-save-article-folder
7819 Save the current article in mh folder format
7820 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article-folder}).
7821
7822 @item O v
7823 @kindex O v (Summary)
7824 @findex gnus-summary-save-article-vm
7825 Save the current article in a VM folder
7826 (@code{gnus-summary-save-article-vm}).
7827
7828 @item O p
7829 @itemx |
7830 @kindex O p (Summary)
7831 @kindex | (Summary)
7832 @findex gnus-summary-pipe-output
7833 @vindex gnus-summary-pipe-output-default-command
7834 Save the current article in a pipe. Uhm, like, what I mean is---Pipe
7835 the current article to a process (@code{gnus-summary-pipe-output}).
7836 If given a symbolic prefix (@pxref{Symbolic Prefixes}), include the
7837 complete headers in the piped output. The symbolic prefix @code{r} is
7838 special; it lets this command pipe a raw article including all headers.
7839 The @code{gnus-summary-pipe-output-default-command} variable can be set
7840 to a string containing the default command and options (default
7841 @code{nil}).
7842
7843 @item O P
7844 @kindex O P (Summary)
7845 @findex gnus-summary-muttprint
7846 @vindex gnus-summary-muttprint-program
7847 Save the current article into muttprint. That is, print it using the
7848 external program @uref{http://muttprint.sourceforge.net/,
7849 Muttprint}. The program name and options to use is controlled by the
7850 variable @code{gnus-summary-muttprint-program}.
7851 (@code{gnus-summary-muttprint}).
7852
7853 @end table
7854
7855 @vindex gnus-prompt-before-saving
7856 All these commands use the process/prefix convention
7857 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}). If you save bunches of articles using these
7858 functions, you might get tired of being prompted for files to save each
7859 and every article in. The prompting action is controlled by
7860 the @code{gnus-prompt-before-saving} variable, which is @code{always} by
7861 default, giving you that excessive prompting action you know and
7862 loathe. If you set this variable to @code{t} instead, you'll be prompted
7863 just once for each series of articles you save. If you like to really
7864 have Gnus do all your thinking for you, you can even set this variable
7865 to @code{nil}, which means that you will never be prompted for files to
7866 save articles in. Gnus will simply save all the articles in the default
7867 files.
7868
7869
7870 @vindex gnus-default-article-saver
7871 You can customize the @code{gnus-default-article-saver} variable to make
7872 Gnus do what you want it to. You can use any of the eight ready-made
7873 functions below, or you can create your own.
7874
7875 @table @code
7876
7877 @item gnus-summary-save-in-rmail
7878 @findex gnus-summary-save-in-rmail
7879 @vindex gnus-rmail-save-name
7880 @findex gnus-plain-save-name
7881 This is the default format, that used by the Rmail package. Since Emacs
7882 23, Rmail uses standard mbox format. Before this, it used the
7883 @dfn{Babyl} format. Accordingly, this command writes mbox format since
7884 Emacs 23, unless appending to an existing Babyl file. In older versions
7885 of Emacs, it always uses Babyl format. Uses the function in the
7886 @code{gnus-rmail-save-name} variable to get a file name to save the
7887 article in. The default is @code{gnus-plain-save-name}.
7888
7889 @item gnus-summary-save-in-mail
7890 @findex gnus-summary-save-in-mail
7891 @vindex gnus-mail-save-name
7892 Save in a Unix mail (mbox) file. Uses the function in the
7893 @code{gnus-mail-save-name} variable to get a file name to save the
7894 article in. The default is @code{gnus-plain-save-name}.
7895
7896 @item gnus-summary-save-in-file
7897 @findex gnus-summary-save-in-file
7898 @vindex gnus-file-save-name
7899 @findex gnus-numeric-save-name
7900 Append the article straight to an ordinary file. Uses the function in
7901 the @code{gnus-file-save-name} variable to get a file name to save the
7902 article in. The default is @code{gnus-numeric-save-name}.
7903
7904 @item gnus-summary-write-to-file
7905 @findex gnus-summary-write-to-file
7906 Write the article straight to an ordinary file. The file is
7907 overwritten if it exists. Uses the function in the
7908 @code{gnus-file-save-name} variable to get a file name to save the
7909 article in. The default is @code{gnus-numeric-save-name}.
7910
7911 @item gnus-summary-save-body-in-file
7912 @findex gnus-summary-save-body-in-file
7913 Append the article body to an ordinary file. Uses the function in the
7914 @code{gnus-file-save-name} variable to get a file name to save the
7915 article in. The default is @code{gnus-numeric-save-name}.
7916
7917 @item gnus-summary-write-body-to-file
7918 @findex gnus-summary-write-body-to-file
7919 Write the article body straight to an ordinary file. The file is
7920 overwritten if it exists. Uses the function in the
7921 @code{gnus-file-save-name} variable to get a file name to save the
7922 article in. The default is @code{gnus-numeric-save-name}.
7923
7924 @item gnus-summary-save-in-folder
7925 @findex gnus-summary-save-in-folder
7926 @findex gnus-folder-save-name
7927 @findex gnus-Folder-save-name
7928 @vindex gnus-folder-save-name
7929 @cindex rcvstore
7930 @cindex MH folders
7931 Save the article to an MH folder using @code{rcvstore} from the MH
7932 library. Uses the function in the @code{gnus-folder-save-name} variable
7933 to get a file name to save the article in. The default is
7934 @code{gnus-folder-save-name}, but you can also use
7935 @code{gnus-Folder-save-name}, which creates capitalized names.
7936
7937 @item gnus-summary-save-in-vm
7938 @findex gnus-summary-save-in-vm
7939 Save the article in a VM folder. You have to have the VM mail
7940 reader to use this setting.
7941
7942 @item gnus-summary-save-in-pipe
7943 @findex gnus-summary-save-in-pipe
7944 Pipe the article to a shell command. This function takes optional two
7945 arguments COMMAND and RAW@. Valid values for COMMAND include:
7946
7947 @itemize @bullet
7948 @item a string@*
7949 The executable command name and possibly arguments.
7950 @item @code{nil}@*
7951 You will be prompted for the command in the minibuffer.
7952 @item the symbol @code{default}@*
7953 It will be replaced with the command which the variable
7954 @code{gnus-summary-pipe-output-default-command} holds or the command
7955 last used for saving.
7956 @end itemize
7957
7958 Non-@code{nil} value for RAW overrides @code{:decode} and
7959 @code{:headers} properties (see below) and the raw article including all
7960 headers will be piped.
7961 @end table
7962
7963 The symbol of each function may have the following properties:
7964
7965 @table @code
7966 @item :decode
7967 The value non-@code{nil} means save decoded articles. This is
7968 meaningful only with @code{gnus-summary-save-in-file},
7969 @code{gnus-summary-save-body-in-file},
7970 @code{gnus-summary-write-to-file},
7971 @code{gnus-summary-write-body-to-file}, and
7972 @code{gnus-summary-save-in-pipe}.
7973
7974 @item :function
7975 The value specifies an alternative function which appends, not
7976 overwrites, articles to a file. This implies that when saving many
7977 articles at a time, @code{gnus-prompt-before-saving} is bound to
7978 @code{t} and all articles are saved in a single file. This is
7979 meaningful only with @code{gnus-summary-write-to-file} and
7980 @code{gnus-summary-write-body-to-file}.
7981
7982 @item :headers
7983 The value specifies the symbol of a variable of which the value
7984 specifies headers to be saved. If it is omitted,
7985 @code{gnus-save-all-headers} and @code{gnus-saved-headers} control what
7986 headers should be saved.
7987 @end table
7988
7989 @vindex gnus-article-save-directory
7990 All of these functions, except for the last one, will save the article
7991 in the @code{gnus-article-save-directory}, which is initialized from the
7992 @env{SAVEDIR} environment variable. This is @file{~/News/} by
7993 default.
7994
7995 As you can see above, the functions use different functions to find a
7996 suitable name of a file to save the article in. Below is a list of
7997 available functions that generate names:
7998
7999 @table @code
8000
8001 @item gnus-Numeric-save-name
8002 @findex gnus-Numeric-save-name
8003 File names like @file{~/News/Alt.andrea-dworkin/45}.
8004
8005 @item gnus-numeric-save-name
8006 @findex gnus-numeric-save-name
8007 File names like @file{~/News/alt.andrea-dworkin/45}.
8008
8009 @item gnus-Plain-save-name
8010 @findex gnus-Plain-save-name
8011 File names like @file{~/News/Alt.andrea-dworkin}.
8012
8013 @item gnus-plain-save-name
8014 @findex gnus-plain-save-name
8015 File names like @file{~/News/alt.andrea-dworkin}.
8016
8017 @item gnus-sender-save-name
8018 @findex gnus-sender-save-name
8019 File names like @file{~/News/larsi}.
8020 @end table
8021
8022 @vindex gnus-split-methods
8023 You can have Gnus suggest where to save articles by plonking a regexp into
8024 the @code{gnus-split-methods} alist. For instance, if you would like to
8025 save articles related to Gnus in the file @file{gnus-stuff}, and articles
8026 related to VM in @file{vm-stuff}, you could set this variable to something
8027 like:
8028
8029 @lisp
8030 (("^Subject:.*gnus\\|^Newsgroups:.*gnus" "gnus-stuff")
8031 ("^Subject:.*vm\\|^Xref:.*vm" "vm-stuff")
8032 (my-choosing-function "../other-dir/my-stuff")
8033 ((equal gnus-newsgroup-name "mail.misc") "mail-stuff"))
8034 @end lisp
8035
8036 We see that this is a list where each element is a list that has two
8037 elements---the @dfn{match} and the @dfn{file}. The match can either be
8038 a string (in which case it is used as a regexp to match on the article
8039 head); it can be a symbol (which will be called as a function with the
8040 group name as a parameter); or it can be a list (which will be
8041 @code{eval}ed). If any of these actions have a non-@code{nil} result,
8042 the @dfn{file} will be used as a default prompt. In addition, the
8043 result of the operation itself will be used if the function or form
8044 called returns a string or a list of strings.
8045
8046 You basically end up with a list of file names that might be used when
8047 saving the current article. (All ``matches'' will be used.) You will
8048 then be prompted for what you really want to use as a name, with file
8049 name completion over the results from applying this variable.
8050
8051 This variable is @code{((gnus-article-archive-name))} by default, which
8052 means that Gnus will look at the articles it saves for an
8053 @code{Archive-name} line and use that as a suggestion for the file
8054 name.
8055
8056 Here's an example function to clean up file names somewhat. If you have
8057 lots of mail groups called things like
8058 @samp{nnml:mail.whatever}, you may want to chop off the beginning of
8059 these group names before creating the file name to save to. The
8060 following will do just that:
8061
8062 @lisp
8063 (defun my-save-name (group)
8064 (when (string-match "^nnml:mail." group)
8065 (substring group (match-end 0))))
8066
8067 (setq gnus-split-methods
8068 '((gnus-article-archive-name)
8069 (my-save-name)))
8070 @end lisp
8071
8072
8073 @vindex gnus-use-long-file-name
8074 Finally, you have the @code{gnus-use-long-file-name} variable. If it is
8075 @code{nil}, all the preceding functions will replace all periods
8076 (@samp{.}) in the group names with slashes (@samp{/})---which means that
8077 the functions will generate hierarchies of directories instead of having
8078 all the files in the top level directory
8079 (@file{~/News/alt/andrea-dworkin} instead of
8080 @file{~/News/alt.andrea-dworkin}.) This variable is @code{t} by default
8081 on most systems. However, for historical reasons, this is @code{nil} on
8082 Xenix and usg-unix-v machines by default.
8083
8084 This function also affects kill and score file names. If this variable
8085 is a list, and the list contains the element @code{not-score}, long file
8086 names will not be used for score files, if it contains the element
8087 @code{not-save}, long file names will not be used for saving, and if it
8088 contains the element @code{not-kill}, long file names will not be used
8089 for kill files.
8090
8091 If you'd like to save articles in a hierarchy that looks something like
8092 a spool, you could
8093
8094 @lisp
8095 (setq gnus-use-long-file-name '(not-save)) ; @r{to get a hierarchy}
8096 (setq gnus-default-article-saver
8097 'gnus-summary-save-in-file) ; @r{no encoding}
8098 @end lisp
8099
8100 Then just save with @kbd{o}. You'd then read this hierarchy with
8101 ephemeral @code{nneething} groups---@kbd{G D} in the group buffer, and
8102 the top level directory as the argument (@file{~/News/}). Then just walk
8103 around to the groups/directories with @code{nneething}.
8104
8105
8106 @node Decoding Articles
8107 @section Decoding Articles
8108 @cindex decoding articles
8109
8110 Sometime users post articles (or series of articles) that have been
8111 encoded in some way or other. Gnus can decode them for you.
8112
8113 @menu
8114 * Uuencoded Articles:: Uudecode articles.
8115 * Shell Archives:: Unshar articles.
8116 * PostScript Files:: Split PostScript.
8117 * Other Files:: Plain save and binhex.
8118 * Decoding Variables:: Variables for a happy decoding.
8119 * Viewing Files:: You want to look at the result of the decoding?
8120 @end menu
8121
8122 @cindex series
8123 @cindex article series
8124 All these functions use the process/prefix convention
8125 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}) for finding out what articles to work on, with
8126 the extension that a ``single article'' means ``a single series''. Gnus
8127 can find out by itself what articles belong to a series, decode all the
8128 articles and unpack/view/save the resulting file(s).
8129
8130 Gnus guesses what articles are in the series according to the following
8131 simplish rule: The subjects must be (nearly) identical, except for the
8132 last two numbers of the line. (Spaces are largely ignored, however.)
8133
8134 For example: If you choose a subject called @samp{cat.gif (2/3)}, Gnus
8135 will find all the articles that match the regexp @samp{^cat.gif
8136 ([0-9]+/[0-9]+).*$}.
8137
8138 Subjects that are non-standard, like @samp{cat.gif (2/3) Part 6 of a
8139 series}, will not be properly recognized by any of the automatic viewing
8140 commands, and you have to mark the articles manually with @kbd{#}.
8141
8142
8143 @node Uuencoded Articles
8144 @subsection Uuencoded Articles
8145 @cindex uudecode
8146 @cindex uuencoded articles
8147
8148 @table @kbd
8149
8150 @item X u
8151 @kindex X u (Summary)
8152 @findex gnus-uu-decode-uu
8153 @c @icon{gnus-uu-decode-uu}
8154 Uudecodes the current series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-uu}).
8155
8156 @item X U
8157 @kindex X U (Summary)
8158 @findex gnus-uu-decode-uu-and-save
8159 Uudecodes and saves the current series
8160 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-uu-and-save}).
8161
8162 @item X v u
8163 @kindex X v u (Summary)
8164 @findex gnus-uu-decode-uu-view
8165 Uudecodes and views the current series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-uu-view}).
8166
8167 @item X v U
8168 @kindex X v U (Summary)
8169 @findex gnus-uu-decode-uu-and-save-view
8170 Uudecodes, views and saves the current series
8171 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-uu-and-save-view}).
8172
8173 @end table
8174
8175 Remember that these all react to the presence of articles marked with
8176 the process mark. If, for instance, you'd like to decode and save an
8177 entire newsgroup, you'd typically do @kbd{M P a}
8178 (@code{gnus-uu-mark-all}) and then @kbd{X U}
8179 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-uu-and-save}).
8180
8181 All this is very much different from how @code{gnus-uu} worked with
8182 @sc{gnus 4.1}, where you had explicit keystrokes for everything under
8183 the sun. This version of @code{gnus-uu} generally assumes that you mark
8184 articles in some way (@pxref{Setting Process Marks}) and then press
8185 @kbd{X u}.
8186
8187 @vindex gnus-uu-notify-files
8188 Note: When trying to decode articles that have names matching
8189 @code{gnus-uu-notify-files}, which is hard-coded to
8190 @samp{[Cc][Ii][Nn][Dd][Yy][0-9]+.\\(gif\\|jpg\\)}, @code{gnus-uu} will
8191 automatically post an article on @samp{comp.unix.wizards} saying that
8192 you have just viewed the file in question. This feature can't be turned
8193 off.
8194
8195
8196 @node Shell Archives
8197 @subsection Shell Archives
8198 @cindex unshar
8199 @cindex shell archives
8200 @cindex shared articles
8201
8202 Shell archives (``shar files'') used to be a popular way to distribute
8203 sources, but it isn't used all that much today. In any case, we have
8204 some commands to deal with these:
8205
8206 @table @kbd
8207
8208 @item X s
8209 @kindex X s (Summary)
8210 @findex gnus-uu-decode-unshar
8211 Unshars the current series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-unshar}).
8212
8213 @item X S
8214 @kindex X S (Summary)
8215 @findex gnus-uu-decode-unshar-and-save
8216 Unshars and saves the current series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-unshar-and-save}).
8217
8218 @item X v s
8219 @kindex X v s (Summary)
8220 @findex gnus-uu-decode-unshar-view
8221 Unshars and views the current series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-unshar-view}).
8222
8223 @item X v S
8224 @kindex X v S (Summary)
8225 @findex gnus-uu-decode-unshar-and-save-view
8226 Unshars, views and saves the current series
8227 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-unshar-and-save-view}).
8228 @end table
8229
8230
8231 @node PostScript Files
8232 @subsection PostScript Files
8233 @cindex PostScript
8234
8235 @table @kbd
8236
8237 @item X p
8238 @kindex X p (Summary)
8239 @findex gnus-uu-decode-postscript
8240 Unpack the current PostScript series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-postscript}).
8241
8242 @item X P
8243 @kindex X P (Summary)
8244 @findex gnus-uu-decode-postscript-and-save
8245 Unpack and save the current PostScript series
8246 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-postscript-and-save}).
8247
8248 @item X v p
8249 @kindex X v p (Summary)
8250 @findex gnus-uu-decode-postscript-view
8251 View the current PostScript series
8252 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-postscript-view}).
8253
8254 @item X v P
8255 @kindex X v P (Summary)
8256 @findex gnus-uu-decode-postscript-and-save-view
8257 View and save the current PostScript series
8258 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-postscript-and-save-view}).
8259 @end table
8260
8261
8262 @node Other Files
8263 @subsection Other Files
8264
8265 @table @kbd
8266 @item X o
8267 @kindex X o (Summary)
8268 @findex gnus-uu-decode-save
8269 Save the current series
8270 (@code{gnus-uu-decode-save}).
8271
8272 @item X b
8273 @kindex X b (Summary)
8274 @findex gnus-uu-decode-binhex
8275 Unbinhex the current series (@code{gnus-uu-decode-binhex}). This
8276 doesn't really work yet.
8277
8278 @item X Y
8279 @kindex X Y (Summary)
8280 @findex gnus-uu-decode-yenc
8281 yEnc-decode the current series and save it (@code{gnus-uu-decode-yenc}).
8282 @end table
8283
8284
8285 @node Decoding Variables
8286 @subsection Decoding Variables
8287
8288 Adjective, not verb.
8289
8290 @menu
8291 * Rule Variables:: Variables that say how a file is to be viewed.
8292 * Other Decode Variables:: Other decode variables.
8293 * Uuencoding and Posting:: Variables for customizing uuencoding.
8294 @end menu
8295
8296
8297 @node Rule Variables
8298 @subsubsection Rule Variables
8299 @cindex rule variables
8300
8301 Gnus uses @dfn{rule variables} to decide how to view a file. All these
8302 variables are of the form
8303
8304 @lisp
8305 (list '(regexp1 command2)
8306 '(regexp2 command2)
8307 ...)
8308 @end lisp
8309
8310 @table @code
8311
8312 @item gnus-uu-user-view-rules
8313 @vindex gnus-uu-user-view-rules
8314 @cindex sox
8315 This variable is consulted first when viewing files. If you wish to use,
8316 for instance, @code{sox} to convert an @file{.au} sound file, you could
8317 say something like:
8318 @lisp
8319 (setq gnus-uu-user-view-rules
8320 (list '("\\\\.au$" "sox %s -t .aiff > /dev/audio")))
8321 @end lisp
8322
8323 @item gnus-uu-user-view-rules-end
8324 @vindex gnus-uu-user-view-rules-end
8325 This variable is consulted if Gnus couldn't make any matches from the
8326 user and default view rules.
8327
8328 @item gnus-uu-user-archive-rules
8329 @vindex gnus-uu-user-archive-rules
8330 This variable can be used to say what commands should be used to unpack
8331 archives.
8332 @end table
8333
8334
8335 @node Other Decode Variables
8336 @subsubsection Other Decode Variables
8337
8338 @table @code
8339 @vindex gnus-uu-grabbed-file-functions
8340
8341 @item gnus-uu-grabbed-file-functions
8342 All functions in this list will be called right after each file has been
8343 successfully decoded---so that you can move or view files right away,
8344 and don't have to wait for all files to be decoded before you can do
8345 anything. Ready-made functions you can put in this list are:
8346
8347 @table @code
8348
8349 @item gnus-uu-grab-view
8350 @findex gnus-uu-grab-view
8351 View the file.
8352
8353 @item gnus-uu-grab-move
8354 @findex gnus-uu-grab-move
8355 Move the file (if you're using a saving function.)
8356 @end table
8357
8358 @item gnus-uu-be-dangerous
8359 @vindex gnus-uu-be-dangerous
8360 Specifies what to do if unusual situations arise during decoding. If
8361 @code{nil}, be as conservative as possible. If @code{t}, ignore things
8362 that didn't work, and overwrite existing files. Otherwise, ask each
8363 time.
8364
8365 @item gnus-uu-ignore-files-by-name
8366 @vindex gnus-uu-ignore-files-by-name
8367 Files with name matching this regular expression won't be viewed.
8368
8369 @item gnus-uu-ignore-files-by-type
8370 @vindex gnus-uu-ignore-files-by-type
8371 Files with a @acronym{MIME} type matching this variable won't be viewed.
8372 Note that Gnus tries to guess what type the file is based on the name.
8373 @code{gnus-uu} is not a @acronym{MIME} package (yet), so this is slightly
8374 kludgy.
8375
8376 @item gnus-uu-tmp-dir
8377 @vindex gnus-uu-tmp-dir
8378 Where @code{gnus-uu} does its work.
8379
8380 @item gnus-uu-do-not-unpack-archives
8381 @vindex gnus-uu-do-not-unpack-archives
8382 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} won't peek inside archives
8383 looking for files to display.
8384
8385 @item gnus-uu-view-and-save
8386 @vindex gnus-uu-view-and-save
8387 Non-@code{nil} means that the user will always be asked to save a file
8388 after viewing it.
8389
8390 @item gnus-uu-ignore-default-view-rules
8391 @vindex gnus-uu-ignore-default-view-rules
8392 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will ignore the default viewing
8393 rules.
8394
8395 @item gnus-uu-ignore-default-archive-rules
8396 @vindex gnus-uu-ignore-default-archive-rules
8397 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will ignore the default archive
8398 unpacking commands.
8399
8400 @item gnus-uu-kill-carriage-return
8401 @vindex gnus-uu-kill-carriage-return
8402 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will strip all carriage returns
8403 from articles.
8404
8405 @item gnus-uu-unmark-articles-not-decoded
8406 @vindex gnus-uu-unmark-articles-not-decoded
8407 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will mark unsuccessfully
8408 decoded articles as unread.
8409
8410 @item gnus-uu-correct-stripped-uucode
8411 @vindex gnus-uu-correct-stripped-uucode
8412 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will @emph{try} to fix
8413 uuencoded files that have had trailing spaces deleted.
8414
8415 @item gnus-uu-pre-uudecode-hook
8416 @vindex gnus-uu-pre-uudecode-hook
8417 Hook run before sending a message to @code{uudecode}.
8418
8419 @item gnus-uu-view-with-metamail
8420 @vindex gnus-uu-view-with-metamail
8421 @cindex metamail
8422 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will ignore the viewing
8423 commands defined by the rule variables and just fudge a @acronym{MIME}
8424 content type based on the file name. The result will be fed to
8425 @code{metamail} for viewing.
8426
8427 @item gnus-uu-save-in-digest
8428 @vindex gnus-uu-save-in-digest
8429 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu}, when asked to save without
8430 decoding, will save in digests. If this variable is @code{nil},
8431 @code{gnus-uu} will just save everything in a file without any
8432 embellishments. The digesting almost conforms to RFC 1153---no easy way
8433 to specify any meaningful volume and issue numbers were found, so I
8434 simply dropped them.
8435
8436 @end table
8437
8438
8439 @node Uuencoding and Posting
8440 @subsubsection Uuencoding and Posting
8441
8442 @table @code
8443
8444 @item gnus-uu-post-include-before-composing
8445 @vindex gnus-uu-post-include-before-composing
8446 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will ask for a file to encode
8447 before you compose the article. If this variable is @code{t}, you can
8448 either include an encoded file with @kbd{C-c C-i} or have one included
8449 for you when you post the article.
8450
8451 @item gnus-uu-post-length
8452 @vindex gnus-uu-post-length
8453 Maximum length of an article. The encoded file will be split into how
8454 many articles it takes to post the entire file.
8455
8456 @item gnus-uu-post-threaded
8457 @vindex gnus-uu-post-threaded
8458 Non-@code{nil} means that @code{gnus-uu} will post the encoded file in a
8459 thread. This may not be smart, as no other decoder I have seen is able
8460 to follow threads when collecting uuencoded articles. (Well, I have
8461 seen one package that does that---@code{gnus-uu}, but somehow, I don't
8462 think that counts@dots{}) Default is @code{nil}.
8463
8464 @item gnus-uu-post-separate-description
8465 @vindex gnus-uu-post-separate-description
8466 Non-@code{nil} means that the description will be posted in a separate
8467 article. The first article will typically be numbered (0/x). If this
8468 variable is @code{nil}, the description the user enters will be included
8469 at the beginning of the first article, which will be numbered (1/x).
8470 Default is @code{t}.
8471
8472 @end table
8473
8474
8475 @node Viewing Files
8476 @subsection Viewing Files
8477 @cindex viewing files
8478 @cindex pseudo-articles
8479
8480 After decoding, if the file is some sort of archive, Gnus will attempt
8481 to unpack the archive and see if any of the files in the archive can be
8482 viewed. For instance, if you have a gzipped tar file @file{pics.tar.gz}
8483 containing the files @file{pic1.jpg} and @file{pic2.gif}, Gnus will
8484 uncompress and de-tar the main file, and then view the two pictures.
8485 This unpacking process is recursive, so if the archive contains archives
8486 of archives, it'll all be unpacked.
8487
8488 Finally, Gnus will normally insert a @dfn{pseudo-article} for each
8489 extracted file into the summary buffer. If you go to these
8490 ``articles'', you will be prompted for a command to run (usually Gnus
8491 will make a suggestion), and then the command will be run.
8492
8493 @vindex gnus-view-pseudo-asynchronously
8494 If @code{gnus-view-pseudo-asynchronously} is @code{nil}, Emacs will wait
8495 until the viewing is done before proceeding.
8496
8497 @vindex gnus-view-pseudos
8498 If @code{gnus-view-pseudos} is @code{automatic}, Gnus will not insert
8499 the pseudo-articles into the summary buffer, but view them
8500 immediately. If this variable is @code{not-confirm}, the user won't even
8501 be asked for a confirmation before viewing is done.
8502
8503 @vindex gnus-view-pseudos-separately
8504 If @code{gnus-view-pseudos-separately} is non-@code{nil}, one
8505 pseudo-article will be created for each file to be viewed. If
8506 @code{nil}, all files that use the same viewing command will be given as
8507 a list of parameters to that command.
8508
8509 @vindex gnus-insert-pseudo-articles
8510 If @code{gnus-insert-pseudo-articles} is non-@code{nil}, insert
8511 pseudo-articles when decoding. It is @code{t} by default.
8512
8513 So; there you are, reading your @emph{pseudo-articles} in your
8514 @emph{virtual newsgroup} from the @emph{virtual server}; and you think:
8515 Why isn't anything real anymore? How did we get here?
8516
8517
8518 @node Article Treatment
8519 @section Article Treatment
8520
8521 Reading through this huge manual, you may have quite forgotten that the
8522 object of newsreaders is to actually, like, read what people have
8523 written. Reading articles. Unfortunately, people are quite bad at
8524 writing, so there are tons of functions and variables to make reading
8525 these articles easier.
8526
8527 @menu
8528 * Article Highlighting:: You want to make the article look like fruit salad.
8529 * Article Fontisizing:: Making emphasized text look nice.
8530 * Article Hiding:: You also want to make certain info go away.
8531 * Article Washing:: Lots of way-neat functions to make life better.
8532 * Article Header:: Doing various header transformations.
8533 * Article Buttons:: Click on URLs, Message-IDs, addresses and the like.
8534 * Article Button Levels:: Controlling appearance of buttons.
8535 * Article Date:: Grumble, UT!
8536 * Article Display:: Display various stuff:
8537 X-Face, Picons, Gravatars, Smileys.
8538 * Article Signature:: What is a signature?
8539 * Article Miscellanea:: Various other stuff.
8540 @end menu
8541
8542
8543 @node Article Highlighting
8544 @subsection Article Highlighting
8545 @cindex highlighting
8546
8547 Not only do you want your article buffer to look like fruit salad, but
8548 you want it to look like technicolor fruit salad.
8549
8550 @table @kbd
8551
8552 @item W H a
8553 @kindex W H a (Summary)
8554 @findex gnus-article-highlight
8555 @findex gnus-article-maybe-highlight
8556 Do much highlighting of the current article
8557 (@code{gnus-article-highlight}). This function highlights header, cited
8558 text, the signature, and adds buttons to the body and the head.
8559
8560 @item W H h
8561 @kindex W H h (Summary)
8562 @findex gnus-article-highlight-headers
8563 @vindex gnus-header-face-alist
8564 Highlight the headers (@code{gnus-article-highlight-headers}). The
8565 highlighting will be done according to the @code{gnus-header-face-alist}
8566 variable, which is a list where each element has the form
8567 @code{(@var{regexp} @var{name} @var{content})}.
8568 @var{regexp} is a regular expression for matching the
8569 header, @var{name} is the face used for highlighting the header name
8570 (@pxref{Faces and Fonts}) and @var{content} is the face for highlighting
8571 the header value. The first match made will be used. Note that
8572 @var{regexp} shouldn't have @samp{^} prepended---Gnus will add one.
8573
8574 @item W H c
8575 @kindex W H c (Summary)
8576 @findex gnus-article-highlight-citation
8577 Highlight cited text (@code{gnus-article-highlight-citation}).
8578
8579 Some variables to customize the citation highlights:
8580
8581 @table @code
8582 @vindex gnus-cite-parse-max-size
8583
8584 @item gnus-cite-parse-max-size
8585 If the article size in bytes is bigger than this variable (which is
8586 25000 by default), no citation highlighting will be performed.
8587
8588 @item gnus-cite-max-prefix
8589 @vindex gnus-cite-max-prefix
8590 Maximum possible length for a citation prefix (default 20).
8591
8592 @item gnus-cite-face-list
8593 @vindex gnus-cite-face-list
8594 List of faces used for highlighting citations (@pxref{Faces and Fonts}).
8595 When there are citations from multiple articles in the same message,
8596 Gnus will try to give each citation from each article its own face.
8597 This should make it easier to see who wrote what.
8598
8599 @item gnus-supercite-regexp
8600 @vindex gnus-supercite-regexp
8601 Regexp matching normal Supercite attribution lines.
8602
8603 @item gnus-supercite-secondary-regexp
8604 @vindex gnus-supercite-secondary-regexp
8605 Regexp matching mangled Supercite attribution lines.
8606
8607 @item gnus-cite-minimum-match-count
8608 @vindex gnus-cite-minimum-match-count
8609 Minimum number of identical prefixes we have to see before we believe
8610 that it's a citation.
8611
8612 @item gnus-cite-attribution-prefix
8613 @vindex gnus-cite-attribution-prefix
8614 Regexp matching the beginning of an attribution line.
8615
8616 @item gnus-cite-attribution-suffix
8617 @vindex gnus-cite-attribution-suffix
8618 Regexp matching the end of an attribution line.
8619
8620 @item gnus-cite-attribution-face
8621 @vindex gnus-cite-attribution-face
8622 Face used for attribution lines. It is merged with the face for the
8623 cited text belonging to the attribution.
8624
8625 @item gnus-cite-ignore-quoted-from
8626 @vindex gnus-cite-ignore-quoted-from
8627 If non-@code{nil}, no citation highlighting will be performed on lines
8628 beginning with @samp{>From }. Those lines may have been quoted by MTAs
8629 in order not to mix up with the envelope From line. The default value
8630 is @code{t}.
8631
8632 @end table
8633
8634
8635 @item W H s
8636 @kindex W H s (Summary)
8637 @vindex gnus-signature-separator
8638 @vindex gnus-signature-face
8639 @findex gnus-article-highlight-signature
8640 Highlight the signature (@code{gnus-article-highlight-signature}).
8641 Everything after @code{gnus-signature-separator} (@pxref{Article
8642 Signature}) in an article will be considered a signature and will be
8643 highlighted with @code{gnus-signature-face}, which is @code{italic} by
8644 default.
8645
8646 @end table
8647
8648 @xref{Customizing Articles}, for how to highlight articles automatically.
8649
8650
8651 @node Article Fontisizing
8652 @subsection Article Fontisizing
8653 @cindex emphasis
8654 @cindex article emphasis
8655
8656 @findex gnus-article-emphasize
8657 @kindex W e (Summary)
8658 People commonly add emphasis to words in news articles by writing things
8659 like @samp{_this_} or @samp{*this*} or @samp{/this/}. Gnus can make
8660 this look nicer by running the article through the @kbd{W e}
8661 (@code{gnus-article-emphasize}) command.
8662
8663 @vindex gnus-emphasis-alist
8664 How the emphasis is computed is controlled by the
8665 @code{gnus-emphasis-alist} variable. This is an alist where the first
8666 element is a regular expression to be matched. The second is a number
8667 that says what regular expression grouping is used to find the entire
8668 emphasized word. The third is a number that says what regexp grouping
8669 should be displayed and highlighted. (The text between these two
8670 groupings will be hidden.) The fourth is the face used for
8671 highlighting.
8672
8673 @lisp
8674 (setq gnus-emphasis-alist
8675 '(("_\\(\\w+\\)_" 0 1 gnus-emphasis-underline)
8676 ("\\*\\(\\w+\\)\\*" 0 1 gnus-emphasis-bold)))
8677 @end lisp
8678
8679 @cindex slash
8680 @cindex asterisk
8681 @cindex underline
8682 @cindex /
8683 @cindex *
8684
8685 @vindex gnus-emphasis-underline
8686 @vindex gnus-emphasis-bold
8687 @vindex gnus-emphasis-italic
8688 @vindex gnus-emphasis-underline-bold
8689 @vindex gnus-emphasis-underline-italic
8690 @vindex gnus-emphasis-bold-italic
8691 @vindex gnus-emphasis-underline-bold-italic
8692 By default, there are seven rules, and they use the following faces:
8693 @code{gnus-emphasis-bold}, @code{gnus-emphasis-italic},
8694 @code{gnus-emphasis-underline}, @code{gnus-emphasis-bold-italic},
8695 @code{gnus-emphasis-underline-italic},
8696 @code{gnus-emphasis-underline-bold}, and
8697 @code{gnus-emphasis-underline-bold-italic}.
8698
8699 If you want to change these faces, you can either use @kbd{M-x
8700 customize}, or you can use @code{copy-face}. For instance, if you want
8701 to make @code{gnus-emphasis-italic} use a red face instead, you could
8702 say something like:
8703
8704 @lisp
8705 (copy-face 'red 'gnus-emphasis-italic)
8706 @end lisp
8707
8708 @vindex gnus-group-highlight-words-alist
8709
8710 If you want to highlight arbitrary words, you can use the
8711 @code{gnus-group-highlight-words-alist} variable, which uses the same
8712 syntax as @code{gnus-emphasis-alist}. The @code{highlight-words} group
8713 parameter (@pxref{Group Parameters}) can also be used.
8714
8715 @xref{Customizing Articles}, for how to fontize articles automatically.
8716
8717
8718 @node Article Hiding
8719 @subsection Article Hiding
8720 @cindex article hiding
8721
8722 Or rather, hiding certain things in each article. There usually is much
8723 too much cruft in most articles.
8724
8725 @table @kbd
8726
8727 @item W W a
8728 @kindex W W a (Summary)
8729 @findex gnus-article-hide
8730 Do quite a lot of hiding on the article buffer
8731 (@kbd{gnus-article-hide}). In particular, this function will hide
8732 headers, @acronym{PGP}, cited text and the signature.
8733
8734 @item W W h
8735 @kindex W W h (Summary)
8736 @findex gnus-article-hide-headers
8737 Hide headers (@code{gnus-article-hide-headers}). @xref{Hiding
8738 Headers}.
8739
8740 @item W W b
8741 @kindex W W b (Summary)
8742 @findex gnus-article-hide-boring-headers
8743 Hide headers that aren't particularly interesting
8744 (@code{gnus-article-hide-boring-headers}). @xref{Hiding Headers}.
8745
8746 @item W W s
8747 @kindex W W s (Summary)
8748 @findex gnus-article-hide-signature
8749 Hide signature (@code{gnus-article-hide-signature}). @xref{Article
8750 Signature}.
8751
8752 @item W W l
8753 @kindex W W l (Summary)
8754 @findex gnus-article-hide-list-identifiers
8755 @vindex gnus-list-identifiers
8756 Strip list identifiers specified in @code{gnus-list-identifiers}. These
8757 are strings some mailing list servers add to the beginning of all
8758 @code{Subject} headers---for example, @samp{[zebra 4711]}. Any leading
8759 @samp{Re: } is skipped before stripping. @code{gnus-list-identifiers}
8760 may not contain @code{\\(..\\)}.
8761
8762 @table @code
8763
8764 @item gnus-list-identifiers
8765 @vindex gnus-list-identifiers
8766 A regular expression that matches list identifiers to be removed from
8767 subject. This can also be a list of regular expressions.
8768
8769 @end table
8770
8771 @item W W P
8772 @kindex W W P (Summary)
8773 @findex gnus-article-hide-pem
8774 Hide @acronym{PEM} (privacy enhanced messages) cruft
8775 (@code{gnus-article-hide-pem}).
8776
8777 @item W W B
8778 @kindex W W B (Summary)
8779 @findex gnus-article-strip-banner
8780 @vindex gnus-article-banner-alist
8781 @vindex gnus-article-address-banner-alist
8782 @cindex banner
8783 @cindex OneList
8784 @cindex stripping advertisements
8785 @cindex advertisements
8786 Strip the banner specified by the @code{banner} group parameter
8787 (@code{gnus-article-strip-banner}). This is mainly used to hide those
8788 annoying banners and/or signatures that some mailing lists and moderated
8789 groups adds to all the messages. The way to use this function is to add
8790 the @code{banner} group parameter (@pxref{Group Parameters}) to the
8791 group you want banners stripped from. The parameter either be a string,
8792 which will be interpreted as a regular expression matching text to be
8793 removed, or the symbol @code{signature}, meaning that the (last)
8794 signature should be removed, or other symbol, meaning that the
8795 corresponding regular expression in @code{gnus-article-banner-alist} is
8796 used.
8797
8798 For instance:
8799
8800 @lisp
8801 (setq gnus-article-banner-alist
8802 ((googleGroups .
8803 "^\n*--~--~---------\\(.+\n\\)+")))
8804 @end lisp
8805
8806 Regardless of a group, you can hide things like advertisements only when
8807 the sender of an article has a certain mail address specified in
8808 @code{gnus-article-address-banner-alist}.
8809
8810 @table @code
8811
8812 @item gnus-article-address-banner-alist
8813 @vindex gnus-article-address-banner-alist
8814 Alist of mail addresses and banners. Each element has the form
8815 @code{(@var{address} . @var{banner})}, where @var{address} is a regexp
8816 matching a mail address in the From header, @var{banner} is one of a
8817 symbol @code{signature}, an item in @code{gnus-article-banner-alist},
8818 a regexp and @code{nil}. If @var{address} matches author's mail
8819 address, it will remove things like advertisements. For example, if a
8820 sender has the mail address @samp{hail@@yoo-hoo.co.jp} and there is a
8821 banner something like @samp{Do You Yoo-hoo!?} in all articles he
8822 sends, you can use the following element to remove them:
8823
8824 @lisp
8825 ("@@yoo-hoo\\.co\\.jp\\'" .
8826 "\n_+\nDo You Yoo-hoo!\\?\n.*\n.*\n")
8827 @end lisp
8828
8829 @end table
8830
8831 @item W W c
8832 @kindex W W c (Summary)
8833 @findex gnus-article-hide-citation
8834 Hide citation (@code{gnus-article-hide-citation}). Some variables for
8835 customizing the hiding:
8836
8837 @table @code
8838
8839 @item gnus-cited-opened-text-button-line-format
8840 @itemx gnus-cited-closed-text-button-line-format
8841 @vindex gnus-cited-closed-text-button-line-format
8842 @vindex gnus-cited-opened-text-button-line-format
8843 Gnus adds buttons to show where the cited text has been hidden, and to
8844 allow toggle hiding the text. The format of the variable is specified
8845 by these format-like variable (@pxref{Formatting Variables}). These
8846 specs are valid:
8847
8848 @table @samp
8849 @item b
8850 Starting point of the hidden text.
8851 @item e
8852 Ending point of the hidden text.
8853 @item l
8854 Number of characters in the hidden region.
8855 @item n
8856 Number of lines of hidden text.
8857 @end table
8858
8859 @item gnus-cited-lines-visible
8860 @vindex gnus-cited-lines-visible
8861 The number of lines at the beginning of the cited text to leave
8862 shown. This can also be a cons cell with the number of lines at the top
8863 and bottom of the text, respectively, to remain visible.
8864
8865 @end table
8866
8867 @item W W C-c
8868 @kindex W W C-c (Summary)
8869 @findex gnus-article-hide-citation-maybe
8870
8871 Hide citation (@code{gnus-article-hide-citation-maybe}) depending on the
8872 following two variables:
8873
8874 @table @code
8875 @item gnus-cite-hide-percentage
8876 @vindex gnus-cite-hide-percentage
8877 If the cited text is of a bigger percentage than this variable (default
8878 50), hide the cited text.
8879
8880 @item gnus-cite-hide-absolute
8881 @vindex gnus-cite-hide-absolute
8882 The cited text must have at least this length (default 10) before it
8883 is hidden.
8884 @end table
8885
8886 @item W W C
8887 @kindex W W C (Summary)
8888 @findex gnus-article-hide-citation-in-followups
8889 Hide cited text in articles that aren't roots
8890 (@code{gnus-article-hide-citation-in-followups}). This isn't very
8891 useful as an interactive command, but might be a handy function to stick
8892 have happen automatically (@pxref{Customizing Articles}).
8893
8894 @end table
8895
8896 All these ``hiding'' commands are toggles, but if you give a negative
8897 prefix to these commands, they will show what they have previously
8898 hidden. If you give a positive prefix, they will always hide.
8899
8900 Also @pxref{Article Highlighting} for further variables for
8901 citation customization.
8902
8903 @xref{Customizing Articles}, for how to hide article elements
8904 automatically.
8905
8906
8907 @node Article Washing
8908 @subsection Article Washing
8909 @cindex washing
8910 @cindex article washing
8911
8912 We call this ``article washing'' for a really good reason. Namely, the
8913 @kbd{A} key was taken, so we had to use the @kbd{W} key instead.
8914
8915 @dfn{Washing} is defined by us as ``changing something from something to
8916 something else'', but normally results in something looking better.
8917 Cleaner, perhaps.
8918
8919 @xref{Customizing Articles}, if you want to change how Gnus displays
8920 articles by default.
8921
8922 @table @kbd
8923
8924 @item C-u g
8925 This is not really washing, it's sort of the opposite of washing. If
8926 you type this, you see the article exactly as it exists on disk or on
8927 the server.
8928
8929 @item g
8930 Force redisplaying of the current article
8931 (@code{gnus-summary-show-article}). This is also not really washing.
8932 If you type this, you see the article without any previously applied
8933 interactive Washing functions but with all default treatments
8934 (@pxref{Customizing Articles}).
8935
8936 @item W l
8937 @kindex W l (Summary)
8938 @findex gnus-summary-stop-page-breaking
8939 Remove page breaks from the current article
8940 (@code{gnus-summary-stop-page-breaking}). @xref{Misc Article}, for page
8941 delimiters.
8942
8943 @item W r
8944 @kindex W r (Summary)
8945 @findex gnus-summary-caesar-message
8946 @c @icon{gnus-summary-caesar-message}
8947 Do a Caesar rotate (rot13) on the article buffer
8948 (@code{gnus-summary-caesar-message}).
8949 Unreadable articles that tell you to read them with Caesar rotate or rot13.
8950 (Typically offensive jokes and such.)
8951
8952 It's commonly called ``rot13'' because each letter is rotated 13
8953 positions in the alphabet, e.g., @samp{B} (letter #2) -> @samp{O} (letter
8954 #15). It is sometimes referred to as ``Caesar rotate'' because Caesar
8955 is rumored to have employed this form of, uh, somewhat weak encryption.
8956
8957 @item W m
8958 @kindex W m (Summary)
8959 @findex gnus-summary-morse-message
8960 Morse decode the article buffer (@code{gnus-summary-morse-message}).
8961
8962 @item W i
8963 @kindex W i (Summary)
8964 @findex gnus-summary-idna-message
8965 Decode IDNA encoded domain names in the current articles. IDNA
8966 encoded domain names looks like @samp{xn--bar}. If a string remain
8967 unencoded after running invoking this, it is likely an invalid IDNA
8968 string (@samp{xn--bar} is invalid). You must have GNU Libidn
8969 (@url{http://www.gnu.org/software/libidn/}) installed for this command
8970 to work.
8971
8972 @item W t
8973 @item t
8974 @kindex W t (Summary)
8975 @kindex t (Summary)
8976 @findex gnus-summary-toggle-header
8977 Toggle whether to display all headers in the article buffer
8978 (@code{gnus-summary-toggle-header}).
8979
8980 @item W v
8981 @kindex W v (Summary)
8982 @findex gnus-summary-verbose-headers
8983 Toggle whether to display all headers in the article buffer permanently
8984 (@code{gnus-summary-verbose-headers}).
8985
8986 @item W o
8987 @kindex W o (Summary)
8988 @findex gnus-article-treat-overstrike
8989 Treat overstrike (@code{gnus-article-treat-overstrike}).
8990
8991 @item W d
8992 @kindex W d (Summary)
8993 @findex gnus-article-treat-dumbquotes
8994 @vindex gnus-article-dumbquotes-map
8995 @cindex Smartquotes
8996 @cindex M****s*** sm*rtq**t*s
8997 @cindex Latin 1
8998 Treat M****s*** sm*rtq**t*s according to
8999 @code{gnus-article-dumbquotes-map}
9000 (@code{gnus-article-treat-dumbquotes}). Note that this function guesses
9001 whether a character is a sm*rtq**t* or not, so it should only be used
9002 interactively.
9003
9004 Sm*rtq**t*s are M****s***'s unilateral extension to the character map in
9005 an attempt to provide more quoting characters. If you see something
9006 like @code{\222} or @code{\264} where you're expecting some kind of
9007 apostrophe or quotation mark, then try this wash.
9008
9009 @item W U
9010 @kindex W U (Summary)
9011 @findex gnus-article-treat-non-ascii
9012 @cindex Unicode
9013 @cindex Non-@acronym{ASCII}
9014 Translate many non-@acronym{ASCII} characters into their
9015 @acronym{ASCII} equivalents (@code{gnus-article-treat-non-ascii}).
9016 This is mostly useful if you're on a terminal that has a limited font
9017 and doesn't show accented characters, ``advanced'' punctuation, and the
9018 like. For instance, @samp{»} is translated into @samp{>>}, and so on.
9019
9020 @item W Y f
9021 @kindex W Y f (Summary)
9022 @findex gnus-article-outlook-deuglify-article
9023 @cindex Outlook Express
9024 Full deuglify of broken Outlook (Express) articles: Treat dumbquotes,
9025 unwrap lines, repair attribution and rearrange citation.
9026 (@code{gnus-article-outlook-deuglify-article}).
9027
9028 @item W Y u
9029 @kindex W Y u (Summary)
9030 @findex gnus-article-outlook-unwrap-lines
9031 @vindex gnus-outlook-deuglify-unwrap-min
9032 @vindex gnus-outlook-deuglify-unwrap-max
9033 Unwrap lines that appear to be wrapped citation lines. You can control
9034 what lines will be unwrapped by frobbing
9035 @code{gnus-outlook-deuglify-unwrap-min} and
9036 @code{gnus-outlook-deuglify-unwrap-max}, indicating the minimum and
9037 maximum length of an unwrapped citation line.
9038 (@code{gnus-article-outlook-unwrap-lines}).
9039
9040 @item W Y a
9041 @kindex W Y a (Summary)
9042 @findex gnus-article-outlook-repair-attribution
9043 Repair a broken attribution line.@*
9044 (@code{gnus-article-outlook-repair-attribution}).
9045
9046 @item W Y c
9047 @kindex W Y c (Summary)
9048 @findex gnus-article-outlook-rearrange-citation
9049 Repair broken citations by rearranging the text.
9050 (@code{gnus-article-outlook-rearrange-citation}).
9051
9052 @item W w
9053 @kindex W w (Summary)
9054 @findex gnus-article-fill-cited-article
9055 Do word wrap (@code{gnus-article-fill-cited-article}).
9056
9057 You can give the command a numerical prefix to specify the width to use
9058 when filling.
9059
9060 @item W Q
9061 @kindex W Q (Summary)
9062 @findex gnus-article-fill-long-lines
9063 Fill long lines (@code{gnus-article-fill-long-lines}).
9064
9065 @item W C
9066 @kindex W C (Summary)
9067 @findex gnus-article-capitalize-sentences
9068 Capitalize the first word in each sentence
9069 (@code{gnus-article-capitalize-sentences}).
9070
9071 @item W c
9072 @kindex W c (Summary)
9073 @findex gnus-article-remove-cr
9074 Translate CRLF pairs (i.e., @samp{^M}s on the end of the lines) into LF
9075 (this takes care of DOS line endings), and then translate any remaining
9076 CRs into LF (this takes care of Mac line endings)
9077 (@code{gnus-article-remove-cr}).
9078
9079 @item W q
9080 @kindex W q (Summary)
9081 @findex gnus-article-de-quoted-unreadable
9082 Treat quoted-printable (@code{gnus-article-de-quoted-unreadable}).
9083 Quoted-Printable is one common @acronym{MIME} encoding employed when
9084 sending non-@acronym{ASCII} (i.e., 8-bit) articles. It typically
9085 makes strings like @samp{déjà vu} look like @samp{d=E9j=E0 vu},
9086 which doesn't look very readable to me. Note that this is usually
9087 done automatically by Gnus if the message in question has a
9088 @code{Content-Transfer-Encoding} header that says that this encoding
9089 has been done. If a prefix is given, a charset will be asked for.
9090
9091 @item W 6
9092 @kindex W 6 (Summary)
9093 @findex gnus-article-de-base64-unreadable
9094 Treat base64 (@code{gnus-article-de-base64-unreadable}). Base64 is
9095 one common @acronym{MIME} encoding employed when sending
9096 non-@acronym{ASCII} (i.e., 8-bit) articles. Note that this is
9097 usually done automatically by Gnus if the message in question has a
9098 @code{Content-Transfer-Encoding} header that says that this encoding
9099 has been done. If a prefix is given, a charset will be asked for.
9100
9101 @item W Z
9102 @kindex W Z (Summary)
9103 @findex gnus-article-decode-HZ
9104 Treat HZ or HZP (@code{gnus-article-decode-HZ}). HZ (or HZP) is one
9105 common encoding employed when sending Chinese articles. It typically
9106 makes strings look like @samp{~@{<:Ky2;S@{#,NpJ)l6HK!#~@}}.
9107
9108 @item W A
9109 @kindex W A (Summary)
9110 @findex gnus-article-treat-ansi-sequences
9111 @cindex @acronym{ANSI} control sequences
9112 Translate @acronym{ANSI} SGR control sequences into overlays or
9113 extents (@code{gnus-article-treat-ansi-sequences}). @acronym{ANSI}
9114 sequences are used in some Chinese hierarchies for highlighting.
9115
9116 @item W u
9117 @kindex W u (Summary)
9118 @findex gnus-article-unsplit-urls
9119 Remove newlines from within URLs. Some mailers insert newlines into
9120 outgoing email messages to keep lines short. This reformatting can
9121 split long URLs onto multiple lines. Repair those URLs by removing
9122 the newlines (@code{gnus-article-unsplit-urls}).
9123
9124 @item W h
9125 @kindex W h (Summary)
9126 @findex gnus-article-wash-html
9127 Treat @acronym{HTML} (@code{gnus-article-wash-html}). Note that this is
9128 usually done automatically by Gnus if the message in question has a
9129 @code{Content-Type} header that says that the message is @acronym{HTML}.
9130
9131 If a prefix is given, a charset will be asked for. If it is a number,
9132 the charset defined in @code{gnus-summary-show-article-charset-alist}
9133 (@pxref{Paging the Article}) will be used.
9134
9135 The default is to use the function specified by
9136 @code{mm-text-html-renderer} (@pxref{Display Customization, ,Display
9137 Customization, emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME Manual}) to convert the
9138 @acronym{HTML}. Pre-defined functions you can use include:
9139
9140 @table @code
9141 @item shr
9142 Use Gnus simple html renderer.
9143
9144 @item gnus-w3m
9145 Use Gnus rendered based on w3m.
9146
9147 @item w3m
9148 Use @uref{http://emacs-w3m.namazu.org/, emacs-w3m}.
9149
9150 @item w3m-standalone
9151 Use @uref{http://w3m.sourceforge.net/, w3m}.
9152
9153 @item links
9154 Use @uref{http://links.sf.net/, Links}.
9155
9156 @item lynx
9157 Use @uref{http://lynx.isc.org/, Lynx}.
9158
9159 @item html2text
9160 Use html2text---a simple @acronym{HTML} converter included with Gnus.
9161
9162 @end table
9163
9164 @item W b
9165 @kindex W b (Summary)
9166 @findex gnus-article-add-buttons
9167 Add clickable buttons to the article (@code{gnus-article-add-buttons}).
9168 @xref{Article Buttons}.
9169
9170 @item W B
9171 @kindex W B (Summary)
9172 @findex gnus-article-add-buttons-to-head
9173 Add clickable buttons to the article headers
9174 (@code{gnus-article-add-buttons-to-head}).
9175
9176 @item W p
9177 @kindex W p (Summary)
9178 @findex gnus-article-verify-x-pgp-sig
9179 Verify a signed control message
9180 (@code{gnus-article-verify-x-pgp-sig}). Control messages such as
9181 @code{newgroup} and @code{checkgroups} are usually signed by the
9182 hierarchy maintainer. You need to add the @acronym{PGP} public key of
9183 the maintainer to your keyring to verify the
9184 message.@footnote{@acronym{PGP} keys for many hierarchies are
9185 available at @uref{ftp://ftp.isc.org/pub/pgpcontrol/README.html}}
9186
9187 @item W s
9188 @kindex W s (Summary)
9189 @findex gnus-summary-force-verify-and-decrypt
9190 Verify a signed (@acronym{PGP}, @acronym{PGP/MIME} or
9191 @acronym{S/MIME}) message
9192 (@code{gnus-summary-force-verify-and-decrypt}). @xref{Security}.
9193
9194 @item W a
9195 @kindex W a (Summary)
9196 @findex gnus-article-strip-headers-in-body
9197 Strip headers like the @code{X-No-Archive} header from the beginning of
9198 article bodies (@code{gnus-article-strip-headers-in-body}).
9199
9200 @item W E l
9201 @kindex W E l (Summary)
9202 @findex gnus-article-strip-leading-blank-lines
9203 Remove all blank lines from the beginning of the article
9204 (@code{gnus-article-strip-leading-blank-lines}).
9205
9206 @item W E m
9207 @kindex W E m (Summary)
9208 @findex gnus-article-strip-multiple-blank-lines
9209 Replace all blank lines with empty lines and then all multiple empty
9210 lines with a single empty line.
9211 (@code{gnus-article-strip-multiple-blank-lines}).
9212
9213 @item W E t
9214 @kindex W E t (Summary)
9215 @findex gnus-article-remove-trailing-blank-lines
9216 Remove all blank lines at the end of the article
9217 (@code{gnus-article-remove-trailing-blank-lines}).
9218
9219 @item W E a
9220 @kindex W E a (Summary)
9221 @findex gnus-article-strip-blank-lines
9222 Do all the three commands above
9223 (@code{gnus-article-strip-blank-lines}).
9224
9225 @item W E A
9226 @kindex W E A (Summary)
9227 @findex gnus-article-strip-all-blank-lines
9228 Remove all blank lines
9229 (@code{gnus-article-strip-all-blank-lines}).
9230
9231 @item W E s
9232 @kindex W E s (Summary)
9233 @findex gnus-article-strip-leading-space
9234 Remove all white space from the beginning of all lines of the article
9235 body (@code{gnus-article-strip-leading-space}).
9236
9237 @item W E e
9238 @kindex W E e (Summary)
9239 @findex gnus-article-strip-trailing-space
9240 Remove all white space from the end of all lines of the article
9241 body (@code{gnus-article-strip-trailing-space}).
9242
9243 @end table
9244
9245 @xref{Customizing Articles}, for how to wash articles automatically.
9246
9247
9248 @node Article Header
9249 @subsection Article Header
9250
9251 These commands perform various transformations of article header.
9252
9253 @table @kbd
9254
9255 @item W G u
9256 @kindex W G u (Summary)
9257 @findex gnus-article-treat-unfold-headers
9258 Unfold folded header lines (@code{gnus-article-treat-unfold-headers}).
9259
9260 @item W G n
9261 @kindex W G n (Summary)
9262 @findex gnus-article-treat-fold-newsgroups
9263 Fold the @code{Newsgroups} and @code{Followup-To} headers
9264 (@code{gnus-article-treat-fold-newsgroups}).
9265
9266 @item W G f
9267 @kindex W G f (Summary)
9268 @findex gnus-article-treat-fold-headers
9269 Fold all the message headers
9270 (@code{gnus-article-treat-fold-headers}).
9271
9272 @item W E w
9273 @kindex W E w (Summary)
9274 @findex gnus-article-remove-leading-whitespace
9275 Remove excessive whitespace from all headers
9276 (@code{gnus-article-remove-leading-whitespace}).
9277
9278 @end table
9279
9280
9281 @node Article Buttons
9282 @subsection Article Buttons
9283 @cindex buttons
9284
9285 People often include references to other stuff in articles, and it would
9286 be nice if Gnus could just fetch whatever it is that people talk about
9287 with the minimum of fuzz when you hit @kbd{RET} or use the middle mouse
9288 button on these references.
9289
9290 @vindex gnus-button-man-handler
9291 Gnus adds @dfn{buttons} to certain standard references by default:
9292 Well-formed URLs, mail addresses, Message-IDs, Info links, man pages and
9293 Emacs or Gnus related references. This is controlled by two variables,
9294 one that handles article bodies and one that handles article heads:
9295
9296 @table @code
9297
9298 @item gnus-button-alist
9299 @vindex gnus-button-alist
9300 This is an alist where each entry has this form:
9301
9302 @lisp
9303 (@var{regexp} @var{button-par} @var{use-p} @var{function} @var{data-par})
9304 @end lisp
9305
9306 @table @var
9307
9308 @item regexp
9309 All text that match this regular expression (case insensitive) will be
9310 considered an external reference. Here's a typical regexp that matches
9311 embedded URLs: @samp{<URL:\\([^\n\r>]*\\)>}. This can also be a
9312 variable containing a regexp, useful variables to use include
9313 @code{gnus-button-url-regexp} and @code{gnus-button-mid-or-mail-regexp}.
9314
9315 @item button-par
9316 Gnus has to know which parts of the matches is to be highlighted. This
9317 is a number that says what sub-expression of the regexp is to be
9318 highlighted. If you want it all highlighted, you use 0 here.
9319
9320 @item use-p
9321 This form will be @code{eval}ed, and if the result is non-@code{nil},
9322 this is considered a match. This is useful if you want extra sifting to
9323 avoid false matches. Often variables named
9324 @code{gnus-button-@var{*}-level} are used here, @xref{Article Button
9325 Levels}, but any other form may be used too.
9326
9327 @c @code{use-p} is @code{eval}ed only if @code{regexp} matches.
9328
9329 @item function
9330 This function will be called when you click on this button.
9331
9332 @item data-par
9333 As with @var{button-par}, this is a sub-expression number, but this one
9334 says which part of the match is to be sent as data to @var{function}.
9335
9336 @end table
9337
9338 So the full entry for buttonizing URLs is then
9339
9340 @lisp
9341 ("<URL:\\([^\n\r>]*\\)>" 0 t gnus-button-url 1)
9342 @end lisp
9343
9344 @item gnus-header-button-alist
9345 @vindex gnus-header-button-alist
9346 This is just like the other alist, except that it is applied to the
9347 article head only, and that each entry has an additional element that is
9348 used to say what headers to apply the buttonize coding to:
9349
9350 @lisp
9351 (@var{header} @var{regexp} @var{button-par} @var{use-p} @var{function} @var{data-par})
9352 @end lisp
9353
9354 @var{header} is a regular expression.
9355 @end table
9356
9357 @subsubsection Related variables and functions
9358
9359 @table @code
9360 @item gnus-button-@var{*}-level
9361 @xref{Article Button Levels}.
9362
9363 @c Stuff related to gnus-button-browse-level
9364
9365 @item gnus-button-url-regexp
9366 @vindex gnus-button-url-regexp
9367 A regular expression that matches embedded URLs. It is used in the
9368 default values of the variables above.
9369
9370 @c Stuff related to gnus-button-man-level
9371
9372 @item gnus-button-man-handler
9373 @vindex gnus-button-man-handler
9374 The function to use for displaying man pages. It must take at least one
9375 argument with a string naming the man page.
9376
9377 @c Stuff related to gnus-button-message-level
9378
9379 @item gnus-button-mid-or-mail-regexp
9380 @vindex gnus-button-mid-or-mail-regexp
9381 Regular expression that matches a message ID or a mail address.
9382
9383 @item gnus-button-prefer-mid-or-mail
9384 @vindex gnus-button-prefer-mid-or-mail
9385 This variable determines what to do when the button on a string as
9386 @samp{foo123@@bar.invalid} is pushed. Strings like this can be either a
9387 message ID or a mail address. If it is one of the symbols @code{mid} or
9388 @code{mail}, Gnus will always assume that the string is a message ID or
9389 a mail address, respectively. If this variable is set to the symbol
9390 @code{ask}, always query the user what to do. If it is a function, this
9391 function will be called with the string as its only argument. The
9392 function must return @code{mid}, @code{mail}, @code{invalid} or
9393 @code{ask}. The default value is the function
9394 @code{gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic}.
9395
9396 @item gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic
9397 @findex gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic
9398 Function that guesses whether its argument is a message ID or a mail
9399 address. Returns @code{mid} if it's a message IDs, @code{mail} if
9400 it's a mail address, @code{ask} if unsure and @code{invalid} if the
9401 string is invalid.
9402
9403 @item gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic-alist
9404 @vindex gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic-alist
9405 An alist of @code{(RATE . REGEXP)} pairs used by the function
9406 @code{gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic}.
9407
9408 @c Misc stuff
9409
9410 @item gnus-article-button-face
9411 @vindex gnus-article-button-face
9412 Face used on buttons.
9413
9414 @item gnus-article-mouse-face
9415 @vindex gnus-article-mouse-face
9416 Face used when the mouse cursor is over a button.
9417
9418 @end table
9419
9420 @xref{Customizing Articles}, for how to buttonize articles automatically.
9421
9422
9423 @node Article Button Levels
9424 @subsection Article button levels
9425 @cindex button levels
9426 The higher the value of the variables @code{gnus-button-@var{*}-level},
9427 the more buttons will appear. If the level is zero, no corresponding
9428 buttons are displayed. With the default value (which is 5) you should
9429 already see quite a lot of buttons. With higher levels, you will see
9430 more buttons, but you may also get more false positives. To avoid them,
9431 you can set the variables @code{gnus-button-@var{*}-level} local to
9432 specific groups (@pxref{Group Parameters}). Here's an example for the
9433 variable @code{gnus-parameters}:
9434
9435 @lisp
9436 ;; @r{increase @code{gnus-button-*-level} in some groups:}
9437 (setq gnus-parameters
9438 '(("\\<\\(emacs\\|gnus\\)\\>" (gnus-button-emacs-level 10))
9439 ("\\<unix\\>" (gnus-button-man-level 10))
9440 ("\\<tex\\>" (gnus-button-tex-level 10))))
9441 @end lisp
9442
9443 @table @code
9444
9445 @item gnus-button-browse-level
9446 @vindex gnus-button-browse-level
9447 Controls the display of references to message IDs, mail addresses and
9448 news URLs. Related variables and functions include
9449 @code{gnus-button-url-regexp}, @code{browse-url}, and
9450 @code{browse-url-browser-function}.
9451
9452 @item gnus-button-emacs-level
9453 @vindex gnus-button-emacs-level
9454 Controls the display of Emacs or Gnus references. Related functions are
9455 @code{gnus-button-handle-custom},
9456 @code{gnus-button-handle-describe-function},
9457 @code{gnus-button-handle-describe-variable},
9458 @code{gnus-button-handle-symbol},
9459 @code{gnus-button-handle-describe-key},
9460 @code{gnus-button-handle-apropos},
9461 @code{gnus-button-handle-apropos-command},
9462 @code{gnus-button-handle-apropos-variable},
9463 @code{gnus-button-handle-apropos-documentation}, and
9464 @code{gnus-button-handle-library}.
9465
9466 @item gnus-button-man-level
9467 @vindex gnus-button-man-level
9468 Controls the display of references to (Unix) man pages.
9469 See @code{gnus-button-man-handler}.
9470
9471 @item gnus-button-message-level
9472 @vindex gnus-button-message-level
9473 Controls the display of message IDs, mail addresses and news URLs.
9474 Related variables and functions include
9475 @code{gnus-button-mid-or-mail-regexp},
9476 @code{gnus-button-prefer-mid-or-mail},
9477 @code{gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic}, and
9478 @code{gnus-button-mid-or-mail-heuristic-alist}.
9479
9480 @end table
9481
9482
9483 @node Article Date
9484 @subsection Article Date
9485
9486 The date is most likely generated in some obscure timezone you've never
9487 heard of, so it's quite nice to be able to find out what the time was
9488 when the article was sent.
9489
9490 @table @kbd
9491
9492 @item W T u
9493 @kindex W T u (Summary)
9494 @findex gnus-article-date-ut
9495 Display the date in UT (aka. GMT, aka ZULU)
9496 (@code{gnus-article-date-ut}).
9497
9498 @item W T i
9499 @kindex W T i (Summary)
9500 @findex gnus-article-date-iso8601
9501 @cindex ISO 8601
9502 Display the date in international format, aka. ISO 8601
9503 (@code{gnus-article-date-iso8601}).
9504
9505 @item W T l
9506 @kindex W T l (Summary)
9507 @findex gnus-article-date-local
9508 Display the date in the local timezone (@code{gnus-article-date-local}).
9509
9510 @item W T p
9511 @kindex W T p (Summary)
9512 @findex gnus-article-date-english
9513 Display the date in a format that's easily pronounceable in English
9514 (@code{gnus-article-date-english}).
9515
9516 @item W T s
9517 @kindex W T s (Summary)
9518 @vindex gnus-article-time-format
9519 @findex gnus-article-date-user
9520 @findex format-time-string
9521 Display the date using a user-defined format
9522 (@code{gnus-article-date-user}). The format is specified by the
9523 @code{gnus-article-time-format} variable, and is a string that's passed
9524 to @code{format-time-string}. See the documentation of that variable
9525 for a list of possible format specs.
9526
9527 @item W T e
9528 @kindex W T e (Summary)
9529 @findex gnus-article-date-lapsed
9530 @findex gnus-start-date-timer
9531 @findex gnus-stop-date-timer
9532 Say how much time has elapsed between the article was posted and now
9533 (@code{gnus-article-date-lapsed}). It looks something like:
9534
9535 @example
9536 Date: 6 weeks, 4 days, 1 hour, 3 minutes, 8 seconds ago
9537 @end example
9538
9539 To make this line updated continually, set the
9540 @code{gnus-article-update-date-headers} variable to the frequency in
9541 seconds (the default is @code{nil}).
9542
9543 @item W T o
9544 @kindex W T o (Summary)
9545 @findex gnus-article-date-original
9546 Display the original date (@code{gnus-article-date-original}). This can
9547 be useful if you normally use some other conversion function and are
9548 worried that it might be doing something totally wrong. Say, claiming
9549 that the article was posted in 1854. Although something like that is
9550 @emph{totally} impossible. Don't you trust me? *titter*
9551
9552 @end table
9553
9554 @xref{Customizing Articles}, for how to display the date in your
9555 preferred format automatically.
9556
9557
9558 @node Article Display
9559 @subsection Article Display
9560 @cindex picons
9561 @cindex x-face
9562 @cindex smileys
9563 @cindex gravatars
9564
9565 These commands add various frivolous display gimmicks to the article
9566 buffer in Emacs versions that support them.
9567
9568 @code{X-Face} headers are small black-and-white images supplied by the
9569 message headers (@pxref{X-Face}).
9570
9571 @code{Face} headers are small colored images supplied by the message
9572 headers (@pxref{Face}).
9573
9574 Smileys are those little @samp{:-)} symbols that people like to litter
9575 their messages with (@pxref{Smileys}).
9576
9577 Picons, on the other hand, reside on your own system, and Gnus will
9578 try to match the headers to what you have (@pxref{Picons}).
9579
9580 Gravatars reside on-line and are fetched from
9581 @uref{http://www.gravatar.com/} (@pxref{Gravatars}).
9582
9583 All these functions are toggles---if the elements already exist,
9584 they'll be removed.
9585
9586 @table @kbd
9587 @item W D x
9588 @kindex W D x (Summary)
9589 @findex gnus-article-display-x-face
9590 Display an @code{X-Face} in the @code{From} header.
9591 (@code{gnus-article-display-x-face}).
9592
9593 @item W D d
9594 @kindex W D d (Summary)
9595 @findex gnus-article-display-face
9596 Display a @code{Face} in the @code{From} header.
9597 (@code{gnus-article-display-face}).
9598
9599 @item W D s
9600 @kindex W D s (Summary)
9601 @findex gnus-treat-smiley
9602 Display smileys (@code{gnus-treat-smiley}).
9603
9604 @item W D f
9605 @kindex W D f (Summary)
9606 @findex gnus-treat-from-picon
9607 Piconify the @code{From} header (@code{gnus-treat-from-picon}).
9608
9609 @item W D m
9610 @kindex W D m (Summary)
9611 @findex gnus-treat-mail-picon
9612 Piconify all mail headers (i.e., @code{Cc}, @code{To})
9613 (@code{gnus-treat-mail-picon}).
9614
9615 @item W D n
9616 @kindex W D n (Summary)
9617 @findex gnus-treat-newsgroups-picon
9618 Piconify all news headers (i.e., @code{Newsgroups} and
9619 @code{Followup-To}) (@code{gnus-treat-newsgroups-picon}).
9620
9621 @item W D g
9622 @kindex W D g (Summary)
9623 @findex gnus-treat-from-gravatar
9624 Gravatarify the @code{From} header (@code{gnus-treat-from-gravatar}).
9625
9626 @item W D h
9627 @kindex W D h (Summary)
9628 @findex gnus-treat-mail-gravatar
9629 Gravatarify all mail headers (i.e., @code{Cc}, @code{To})
9630 (@code{gnus-treat-from-gravatar}).
9631
9632 @item W D D
9633 @kindex W D D (Summary)
9634 @findex gnus-article-remove-images
9635 Remove all images from the article buffer
9636 (@code{gnus-article-remove-images}).
9637
9638 @item W D W
9639 @kindex W D W (Summary)
9640 @findex gnus-html-show-images
9641 If you're reading an @acronym{HTML} article rendered with
9642 @code{gnus-article-html}, then you can insert any blocked images in
9643 the buffer with this command.
9644 (@code{gnus-html-show-images}).
9645
9646 @end table
9647
9648
9649
9650 @node Article Signature
9651 @subsection Article Signature
9652 @cindex signatures
9653 @cindex article signature
9654
9655 @vindex gnus-signature-separator
9656 Each article is divided into two parts---the head and the body. The
9657 body can be divided into a signature part and a text part. The variable
9658 that says what is to be considered a signature is
9659 @code{gnus-signature-separator}. This is normally the standard
9660 @samp{^-- $} as mandated by son-of-RFC 1036. However, many people use
9661 non-standard signature separators, so this variable can also be a list
9662 of regular expressions to be tested, one by one. (Searches are done
9663 from the end of the body towards the beginning.) One likely value is:
9664
9665 @lisp
9666 (setq gnus-signature-separator
9667 '("^-- $" ; @r{The standard}
9668 "^-- *$" ; @r{A common mangling}
9669 "^-------*$" ; @r{Many people just use a looong}
9670 ; @r{line of dashes. Shame!}
9671 "^ *--------*$" ; @r{Double-shame!}
9672 "^________*$" ; @r{Underscores are also popular}
9673 "^========*$")) ; @r{Pervert!}
9674 @end lisp
9675
9676 The more permissive you are, the more likely it is that you'll get false
9677 positives.
9678
9679 @vindex gnus-signature-limit
9680 @code{gnus-signature-limit} provides a limit to what is considered a
9681 signature when displaying articles.
9682
9683 @enumerate
9684 @item
9685 If it is an integer, no signature may be longer (in characters) than
9686 that integer.
9687 @item
9688 If it is a floating point number, no signature may be longer (in lines)
9689 than that number.
9690 @item
9691 If it is a function, the function will be called without any parameters,
9692 and if it returns @code{nil}, there is no signature in the buffer.
9693 @item
9694 If it is a string, it will be used as a regexp. If it matches, the text
9695 in question is not a signature.
9696 @end enumerate
9697
9698 This variable can also be a list where the elements may be of the types
9699 listed above. Here's an example:
9700
9701 @lisp
9702 (setq gnus-signature-limit
9703 '(200.0 "^---*Forwarded article"))
9704 @end lisp
9705
9706 This means that if there are more than 200 lines after the signature
9707 separator, or the text after the signature separator is matched by
9708 the regular expression @samp{^---*Forwarded article}, then it isn't a
9709 signature after all.
9710
9711
9712 @node Article Miscellanea
9713 @subsection Article Miscellanea
9714
9715 @table @kbd
9716 @item A t
9717 @kindex A t (Summary)
9718 @findex gnus-article-babel
9719 Translate the article from one language to another
9720 (@code{gnus-article-babel}).
9721
9722 @end table
9723
9724
9725 @node MIME Commands
9726 @section MIME Commands
9727 @cindex MIME decoding
9728 @cindex attachments
9729 @cindex viewing attachments
9730
9731 The following commands all understand the numerical prefix. For
9732 instance, @kbd{3 K v} means ``view the third @acronym{MIME} part''.
9733
9734 @table @kbd
9735 @item b
9736 @itemx K v
9737 @kindex b (Summary)
9738 @kindex K v (Summary)
9739 View the @acronym{MIME} part.
9740
9741 @item K o
9742 @kindex K o (Summary)
9743 Save the @acronym{MIME} part.
9744
9745 @item K O
9746 @kindex K O (Summary)
9747 Prompt for a file name, then save the @acronym{MIME} part and strip it
9748 from the article. The stripped @acronym{MIME} object will be referred
9749 via the message/external-body @acronym{MIME} type.
9750
9751 @item K r
9752 @kindex K r (Summary)
9753 Replace the @acronym{MIME} part with an external body.
9754
9755 @item K d
9756 @kindex K d (Summary)
9757 Delete the @acronym{MIME} part and add some information about the
9758 removed part.
9759
9760 @item K c
9761 @kindex K c (Summary)
9762 Copy the @acronym{MIME} part.
9763
9764 @item K e
9765 @kindex K e (Summary)
9766 View the @acronym{MIME} part externally.
9767
9768 @item K i
9769 @kindex K i (Summary)
9770 View the @acronym{MIME} part internally.
9771
9772 @item K |
9773 @kindex K | (Summary)
9774 Pipe the @acronym{MIME} part to an external command.
9775 @end table
9776
9777 The rest of these @acronym{MIME} commands do not use the numerical prefix in
9778 the same manner:
9779
9780 @table @kbd
9781 @item K H
9782 @kindex K H (Summary)
9783 @findex gnus-article-browse-html-article
9784 View @samp{text/html} parts of the current article with a WWW browser.
9785 Inline images embedded in a message using the @code{cid} scheme, as they
9786 are generally considered to be safe, will be processed properly. The
9787 message header is added to the beginning of every @acronym{HTML} part
9788 unless the prefix argument is given.
9789
9790 Warning: Spammers use links to images (using the @code{http} scheme) in
9791 @acronym{HTML} articles to verify whether you have read the message. As
9792 this command passes the @acronym{HTML} content to the browser without
9793 eliminating these ``web bugs'' you should only use it for mails from
9794 trusted senders.
9795
9796 If you always want to display @acronym{HTML} parts in the browser, set
9797 @code{mm-text-html-renderer} to @code{nil}.
9798
9799 This command creates temporary files to pass @acronym{HTML} contents
9800 including images if any to the browser, and deletes them when exiting
9801 the group (if you want).
9802
9803 @item K b
9804 @kindex K b (Summary)
9805 Make all the @acronym{MIME} parts have buttons in front of them. This is
9806 mostly useful if you wish to save (or perform other actions) on inlined
9807 parts.
9808
9809 @item W M h
9810 @kindex W M h (Summary)
9811 @findex gnus-mime-buttonize-attachments-in-header
9812 @vindex gnus-mime-display-attachment-buttons-in-header
9813 Display @acronym{MIME} part buttons in the end of the header of an
9814 article (@code{gnus-mime-buttonize-attachments-in-header}). This
9815 command toggles the display. Note that buttons to be added to the
9816 header are only the ones that aren't inlined in the body. If you want
9817 those buttons always to be displayed, set
9818 @code{gnus-mime-display-attachment-buttons-in-header} to non-@code{nil}.
9819 The default is @code{t}. To change the appearance of buttons, customize
9820 @code{gnus-header-face-alist}.
9821
9822 @item K m
9823 @kindex K m (Summary)
9824 @findex gnus-summary-repair-multipart
9825 Some multipart messages are transmitted with missing or faulty headers.
9826 This command will attempt to ``repair'' these messages so that they can
9827 be viewed in a more pleasant manner
9828 (@code{gnus-summary-repair-multipart}).
9829
9830 @item X m
9831 @kindex X m (Summary)
9832 @findex gnus-summary-save-parts
9833 Save all parts matching a @acronym{MIME} type to a directory
9834 (@code{gnus-summary-save-parts}). Understands the process/prefix
9835 convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
9836
9837 @item M-t
9838 @kindex M-t (Summary)
9839 @findex gnus-summary-toggle-display-buttonized
9840 Toggle the buttonized display of the article buffer
9841 (@code{gnus-summary-toggle-display-buttonized}).
9842
9843 @item W M w
9844 @kindex W M w (Summary)
9845 @findex gnus-article-decode-mime-words
9846 Decode RFC 2047-encoded words in the article headers
9847 (@code{gnus-article-decode-mime-words}).
9848
9849 @item W M c
9850 @kindex W M c (Summary)
9851 @findex gnus-article-decode-charset
9852 Decode encoded article bodies as well as charsets
9853 (@code{gnus-article-decode-charset}).
9854
9855 This command looks in the @code{Content-Type} header to determine the
9856 charset. If there is no such header in the article, you can give it a
9857 prefix, which will prompt for the charset to decode as. In regional
9858 groups where people post using some common encoding (but do not
9859 include @acronym{MIME} headers), you can set the @code{charset} group/topic
9860 parameter to the required charset (@pxref{Group Parameters}).
9861
9862 @item W M v
9863 @kindex W M v (Summary)
9864 @findex gnus-mime-view-all-parts
9865 View all the @acronym{MIME} parts in the current article
9866 (@code{gnus-mime-view-all-parts}).
9867
9868 @end table
9869
9870 Relevant variables:
9871
9872 @table @code
9873 @item gnus-ignored-mime-types
9874 @vindex gnus-ignored-mime-types
9875 This is a list of regexps. @acronym{MIME} types that match a regexp from
9876 this list will be completely ignored by Gnus. The default value is
9877 @code{nil}.
9878
9879 To have all Vcards be ignored, you'd say something like this:
9880
9881 @lisp
9882 (setq gnus-ignored-mime-types
9883 '("text/x-vcard"))
9884 @end lisp
9885
9886 @item gnus-article-loose-mime
9887 @vindex gnus-article-loose-mime
9888 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus won't require the @samp{MIME-Version} header
9889 before interpreting the message as a @acronym{MIME} message. This helps
9890 when reading messages from certain broken mail user agents. The
9891 default is @code{t}.
9892
9893 @item gnus-article-emulate-mime
9894 @vindex gnus-article-emulate-mime
9895 @cindex uuencode
9896 @cindex yEnc
9897 There are other, non-@acronym{MIME} encoding methods used. The most common
9898 is @samp{uuencode}, but yEncode is also getting to be popular. If
9899 this variable is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will look in message bodies to
9900 see if it finds these encodings, and if so, it'll run them through the
9901 Gnus @acronym{MIME} machinery. The default is @code{t}. Only
9902 single-part yEnc encoded attachments can be decoded. There's no support
9903 for encoding in Gnus.
9904
9905 @item gnus-unbuttonized-mime-types
9906 @vindex gnus-unbuttonized-mime-types
9907 This is a list of regexps. @acronym{MIME} types that match a regexp from
9908 this list won't have @acronym{MIME} buttons inserted unless they aren't
9909 displayed or this variable is overridden by
9910 @code{gnus-buttonized-mime-types}. The default value is
9911 @code{(".*/.*")}. This variable is only used when
9912 @code{gnus-inhibit-mime-unbuttonizing} is @code{nil}.
9913
9914 @item gnus-buttonized-mime-types
9915 @vindex gnus-buttonized-mime-types
9916 This is a list of regexps. @acronym{MIME} types that match a regexp from
9917 this list will have @acronym{MIME} buttons inserted unless they aren't
9918 displayed. This variable overrides
9919 @code{gnus-unbuttonized-mime-types}. The default value is @code{nil}.
9920 This variable is only used when @code{gnus-inhibit-mime-unbuttonizing}
9921 is @code{nil}.
9922
9923 E.g., to see security buttons but no other buttons, you could set this
9924 variable to @code{("multipart/signed")} and leave
9925 @code{gnus-unbuttonized-mime-types} at the default value.
9926
9927 You could also add @code{"multipart/alternative"} to this list to
9928 display radio buttons that allow you to choose one of two media types
9929 those mails include. See also @code{mm-discouraged-alternatives}
9930 (@pxref{Display Customization, ,Display Customization, emacs-mime, The
9931 Emacs MIME Manual}).
9932
9933 @item gnus-inhibit-mime-unbuttonizing
9934 @vindex gnus-inhibit-mime-unbuttonizing
9935 If this is non-@code{nil}, then all @acronym{MIME} parts get buttons. The
9936 default value is @code{nil}.
9937
9938 @item gnus-article-mime-part-function
9939 @vindex gnus-article-mime-part-function
9940 For each @acronym{MIME} part, this function will be called with the @acronym{MIME}
9941 handle as the parameter. The function is meant to be used to allow
9942 users to gather information from the article (e.g., add Vcard info to
9943 the bbdb database) or to do actions based on parts (e.g., automatically
9944 save all jpegs into some directory).
9945
9946 Here's an example function the does the latter:
9947
9948 @lisp
9949 (defun my-save-all-jpeg-parts (handle)
9950 (when (equal (car (mm-handle-type handle)) "image/jpeg")
9951 (with-temp-buffer
9952 (insert (mm-get-part handle))
9953 (write-region (point-min) (point-max)
9954 (read-file-name "Save jpeg to: ")))))
9955 (setq gnus-article-mime-part-function
9956 'my-save-all-jpeg-parts)
9957 @end lisp
9958
9959 @vindex gnus-mime-multipart-functions
9960 @item gnus-mime-multipart-functions
9961 Alist of @acronym{MIME} multipart types and functions to handle them.
9962
9963 @vindex gnus-mime-display-multipart-alternative-as-mixed
9964 @item gnus-mime-display-multipart-alternative-as-mixed
9965 Display "multipart/alternative" parts as "multipart/mixed".
9966
9967 @vindex gnus-mime-display-multipart-related-as-mixed
9968 @item gnus-mime-display-multipart-related-as-mixed
9969 Display "multipart/related" parts as "multipart/mixed".
9970
9971 If displaying @samp{text/html} is discouraged, see
9972 @code{mm-discouraged-alternatives}, images or other material inside a
9973 "multipart/related" part might be overlooked when this variable is
9974 @code{nil}. @ref{Display Customization, Display Customization, ,
9975 emacs-mime, Emacs-Mime Manual}.
9976
9977 @vindex gnus-mime-display-multipart-as-mixed
9978 @item gnus-mime-display-multipart-as-mixed
9979 Display "multipart" parts as "multipart/mixed". If @code{t}, it
9980 overrides @code{nil} values of
9981 @code{gnus-mime-display-multipart-alternative-as-mixed} and
9982 @code{gnus-mime-display-multipart-related-as-mixed}.
9983
9984 @vindex mm-file-name-rewrite-functions
9985 @item mm-file-name-rewrite-functions
9986 List of functions used for rewriting file names of @acronym{MIME} parts.
9987 Each function takes a file name as input and returns a file name.
9988
9989 Ready-made functions include@*
9990 @code{mm-file-name-delete-whitespace},
9991 @code{mm-file-name-trim-whitespace},
9992 @code{mm-file-name-collapse-whitespace}, and
9993 @code{mm-file-name-replace-whitespace}. The later uses the value of
9994 the variable @code{mm-file-name-replace-whitespace} to replace each
9995 whitespace character in a file name with that string; default value
9996 is @code{"_"} (a single underscore).
9997 @findex mm-file-name-delete-whitespace
9998 @findex mm-file-name-trim-whitespace
9999 @findex mm-file-name-collapse-whitespace
10000 @findex mm-file-name-replace-whitespace
10001 @vindex mm-file-name-replace-whitespace
10002
10003 The standard functions @code{capitalize}, @code{downcase},
10004 @code{upcase}, and @code{upcase-initials} may be useful, too.
10005
10006 Everybody knows that whitespace characters in file names are evil,
10007 except those who don't know. If you receive lots of attachments from
10008 such unenlightened users, you can make live easier by adding
10009
10010 @lisp
10011 (setq mm-file-name-rewrite-functions
10012 '(mm-file-name-trim-whitespace
10013 mm-file-name-collapse-whitespace
10014 mm-file-name-replace-whitespace))
10015 @end lisp
10016
10017 @noindent
10018 to your @file{~/.gnus.el} file.
10019
10020 @end table
10021
10022
10023 @node Charsets
10024 @section Charsets
10025 @cindex charsets
10026
10027 People use different charsets, and we have @acronym{MIME} to let us know what
10028 charsets they use. Or rather, we wish we had. Many people use
10029 newsreaders and mailers that do not understand or use @acronym{MIME}, and
10030 just send out messages without saying what character sets they use. To
10031 help a bit with this, some local news hierarchies have policies that say
10032 what character set is the default. For instance, the @samp{fj}
10033 hierarchy uses @code{iso-2022-jp}.
10034
10035 @vindex gnus-group-charset-alist
10036 This knowledge is encoded in the @code{gnus-group-charset-alist}
10037 variable, which is an alist of regexps (use the first item to match full
10038 group names) and default charsets to be used when reading these groups.
10039
10040 @vindex gnus-newsgroup-ignored-charsets
10041 In addition, some people do use soi-disant @acronym{MIME}-aware agents that
10042 aren't. These blithely mark messages as being in @code{iso-8859-1}
10043 even if they really are in @code{koi-8}. To help here, the
10044 @code{gnus-newsgroup-ignored-charsets} variable can be used. The
10045 charsets that are listed here will be ignored. The variable can be
10046 set on a group-by-group basis using the group parameters (@pxref{Group
10047 Parameters}). The default value is @code{(unknown-8bit x-unknown)},
10048 which includes values some agents insist on having in there.
10049
10050 @vindex gnus-group-posting-charset-alist
10051 When posting, @code{gnus-group-posting-charset-alist} is used to
10052 determine which charsets should not be encoded using the @acronym{MIME}
10053 encodings. For instance, some hierarchies discourage using
10054 quoted-printable header encoding.
10055
10056 This variable is an alist of regexps and permitted unencoded charsets
10057 for posting. Each element of the alist has the form @code{(}@var{test
10058 header body-list}@code{)}, where:
10059
10060 @table @var
10061 @item test
10062 is either a regular expression matching the newsgroup header or a
10063 variable to query,
10064 @item header
10065 is the charset which may be left unencoded in the header (@code{nil}
10066 means encode all charsets),
10067 @item body-list
10068 is a list of charsets which may be encoded using 8bit content-transfer
10069 encoding in the body, or one of the special values @code{nil} (always
10070 encode using quoted-printable) or @code{t} (always use 8bit).
10071 @end table
10072
10073 @cindex Russian
10074 @cindex koi8-r
10075 @cindex koi8-u
10076 @cindex iso-8859-5
10077 @cindex coding system aliases
10078 @cindex preferred charset
10079
10080 @xref{Encoding Customization, , Encoding Customization, emacs-mime,
10081 The Emacs MIME Manual}, for additional variables that control which
10082 MIME charsets are used when sending messages.
10083
10084 Other charset tricks that may be useful, although not Gnus-specific:
10085
10086 If there are several @acronym{MIME} charsets that encode the same Emacs
10087 charset, you can choose what charset to use by saying the following:
10088
10089 @lisp
10090 (put-charset-property 'cyrillic-iso8859-5
10091 'preferred-coding-system 'koi8-r)
10092 @end lisp
10093
10094 This means that Russian will be encoded using @code{koi8-r} instead of
10095 the default @code{iso-8859-5} @acronym{MIME} charset.
10096
10097 If you want to read messages in @code{koi8-u}, you can cheat and say
10098
10099 @lisp
10100 (define-coding-system-alias 'koi8-u 'koi8-r)
10101 @end lisp
10102
10103 This will almost do the right thing.
10104
10105 And finally, to read charsets like @code{windows-1251}, you can say
10106 something like
10107
10108 @lisp
10109 (codepage-setup 1251)
10110 (define-coding-system-alias 'windows-1251 'cp1251)
10111 @end lisp
10112
10113
10114 @node Article Commands
10115 @section Article Commands
10116
10117 @table @kbd
10118
10119 @item A P
10120 @cindex PostScript
10121 @cindex printing
10122 @kindex A P (Summary)
10123 @vindex gnus-ps-print-hook
10124 @findex gnus-summary-print-article
10125 Generate and print a PostScript image of the article buffer
10126 (@code{gnus-summary-print-article}). @code{gnus-ps-print-hook} will
10127 be run just before printing the buffer. An alternative way to print
10128 article is to use Muttprint (@pxref{Saving Articles}).
10129
10130 @item A C
10131 @vindex gnus-fetch-partial-articles
10132 @findex gnus-summary-show-complete-article
10133 If @code{<backend>-fetch-partial-articles} is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will
10134 fetch partial articles, if the backend it fetches them from supports
10135 it. Currently only @code{nnimap} does. If you're looking at a
10136 partial article, and want to see the complete article instead, then
10137 the @kbd{A C} command (@code{gnus-summary-show-complete-article}) will
10138 do so.
10139
10140 @end table
10141
10142
10143 @node Summary Sorting
10144 @section Summary Sorting
10145 @cindex summary sorting
10146
10147 You can have the summary buffer sorted in various ways, even though I
10148 can't really see why you'd want that.
10149
10150 @table @kbd
10151
10152 @item C-c C-s C-n
10153 @kindex C-c C-s C-n (Summary)
10154 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-number
10155 Sort by article number (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-number}).
10156
10157 @item C-c C-s C-m C-n
10158 @kindex C-c C-s C-n (Summary)
10159 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-most-recent-number
10160 Sort by most recent article number
10161 (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-most-recent-number}).
10162
10163 @item C-c C-s C-a
10164 @kindex C-c C-s C-a (Summary)
10165 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-author
10166 Sort by author (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-author}).
10167
10168 @item C-c C-s C-t
10169 @kindex C-c C-s C-t (Summary)
10170 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-recipient
10171 Sort by recipient (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-recipient}).
10172
10173 @item C-c C-s C-s
10174 @kindex C-c C-s C-s (Summary)
10175 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-subject
10176 Sort by subject (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-subject}).
10177
10178 @item C-c C-s C-d
10179 @kindex C-c C-s C-d (Summary)
10180 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-date
10181 Sort by date (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-date}).
10182
10183 @item C-c C-s C-m C-d
10184 @kindex C-c C-s C-m C-d (Summary)
10185 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-most-recent-date
10186 Sort by most recent date (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-most-recent-date}).
10187
10188 @item C-c C-s C-l
10189 @kindex C-c C-s C-l (Summary)
10190 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-lines
10191 Sort by lines (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-lines}).
10192
10193 @item C-c C-s C-c
10194 @kindex C-c C-s C-c (Summary)
10195 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-chars
10196 Sort by article length (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-chars}).
10197
10198 @item C-c C-s C-i
10199 @kindex C-c C-s C-i (Summary)
10200 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-score
10201 Sort by score (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-score}).
10202
10203 @item C-c C-s C-r
10204 @kindex C-c C-s C-r (Summary)
10205 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-random
10206 Randomize (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-random}).
10207
10208 @item C-c C-s C-o
10209 @kindex C-c C-s C-o (Summary)
10210 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-original
10211 Sort using the default sorting method
10212 (@code{gnus-summary-sort-by-original}).
10213 @end table
10214
10215 These functions will work both when you use threading and when you don't
10216 use threading. In the latter case, all summary lines will be sorted,
10217 line by line. In the former case, sorting will be done on a
10218 root-by-root basis, which might not be what you were looking for. To
10219 toggle whether to use threading, type @kbd{T T} (@pxref{Thread
10220 Commands}).
10221
10222 If a prefix argument if given, the sort order is reversed.
10223
10224
10225 @node Finding the Parent
10226 @section Finding the Parent
10227 @cindex parent articles
10228 @cindex referring articles
10229
10230 @table @kbd
10231 @item ^
10232 @kindex ^ (Summary)
10233 @findex gnus-summary-refer-parent-article
10234 If you'd like to read the parent of the current article, and it is not
10235 displayed in the summary buffer, you might still be able to. That is,
10236 if the current group is fetched by @acronym{NNTP}, the parent hasn't expired
10237 and the @code{References} in the current article are not mangled, you
10238 can just press @kbd{^} or @kbd{A r}
10239 (@code{gnus-summary-refer-parent-article}). If everything goes well,
10240 you'll get the parent. If the parent is already displayed in the
10241 summary buffer, point will just move to this article.
10242
10243 If given a positive numerical prefix, fetch that many articles back into
10244 the ancestry. If given a negative numerical prefix, fetch just that
10245 ancestor. So if you say @kbd{3 ^}, Gnus will fetch the parent, the
10246 grandparent and the great-grandparent of the current article. If you say
10247 @kbd{-3 ^}, Gnus will only fetch the great-grandparent of the current
10248 article.
10249
10250 @item A R (Summary)
10251 @findex gnus-summary-refer-references
10252 @kindex A R (Summary)
10253 Fetch all articles mentioned in the @code{References} header of the
10254 article (@code{gnus-summary-refer-references}).
10255
10256 @item A T (Summary)
10257 @findex gnus-summary-refer-thread
10258 @kindex A T (Summary)
10259 Display the full thread where the current article appears
10260 (@code{gnus-summary-refer-thread}). This command has to fetch all the
10261 headers in the current group to work, so it usually takes a while. If
10262 you do it often, you may consider setting @code{gnus-fetch-old-headers}
10263 to @code{invisible} (@pxref{Filling In Threads}). This won't have any
10264 visible effects normally, but it'll make this command work a whole lot
10265 faster. Of course, it'll make group entry somewhat slow.
10266
10267 @vindex gnus-refer-thread-limit
10268 The @code{gnus-refer-thread-limit} variable says how many old (i.e.,
10269 articles before the first displayed in the current group) headers to
10270 fetch when doing this command. The default is 200. If @code{t}, all
10271 the available headers will be fetched. This variable can be overridden
10272 by giving the @kbd{A T} command a numerical prefix.
10273
10274 @item M-^ (Summary)
10275 @findex gnus-summary-refer-article
10276 @kindex M-^ (Summary)
10277 @cindex Message-ID
10278 @cindex fetching by Message-ID
10279 You can also ask Gnus for an arbitrary article, no matter what group it
10280 belongs to. @kbd{M-^} (@code{gnus-summary-refer-article}) will ask you
10281 for a @code{Message-ID}, which is one of those long, hard-to-read
10282 thingies that look something like @samp{<38o6up$6f2@@hymir.ifi.uio.no>}.
10283 You have to get it all exactly right. No fuzzy searches, I'm afraid.
10284
10285 Gnus looks for the @code{Message-ID} in the headers that have already
10286 been fetched, but also tries all the select methods specified by
10287 @code{gnus-refer-article-method} if it is not found.
10288 @end table
10289
10290 @vindex gnus-refer-article-method
10291 If the group you are reading is located on a back end that does not
10292 support fetching by @code{Message-ID} very well (like @code{nnspool}),
10293 you can set @code{gnus-refer-article-method} to an @acronym{NNTP} method. It
10294 would, perhaps, be best if the @acronym{NNTP} server you consult is the one
10295 updating the spool you are reading from, but that's not really
10296 necessary.
10297
10298 It can also be a list of select methods, as well as the special symbol
10299 @code{current}, which means to use the current select method. If it
10300 is a list, Gnus will try all the methods in the list until it finds a
10301 match.
10302
10303 Here's an example setting that will first try the current method, and
10304 then ask Google if that fails:
10305
10306 @lisp
10307 (setq gnus-refer-article-method
10308 '(current
10309 (nnweb "google" (nnweb-type google))))
10310 @end lisp
10311
10312 Most of the mail back ends support fetching by @code{Message-ID}, but
10313 do not do a particularly excellent job at it. That is, @code{nnmbox},
10314 @code{nnbabyl}, @code{nnmaildir}, @code{nnml}, are able to locate
10315 articles from any groups, while @code{nnfolder}, and @code{nnimap} are
10316 only able to locate articles that have been posted to the current
10317 group. @code{nnmh} does not support this at all.
10318
10319 Fortunately, the special @code{nnregistry} back end is able to locate
10320 articles in any groups, regardless of their back end (@pxref{Registry
10321 Article Refer Method, fetching by @code{Message-ID} using the
10322 registry}).
10323
10324 @node Alternative Approaches
10325 @section Alternative Approaches
10326
10327 Different people like to read news using different methods. This being
10328 Gnus, we offer a small selection of minor modes for the summary buffers.
10329
10330 @menu
10331 * Pick and Read:: First mark articles and then read them.
10332 * Binary Groups:: Auto-decode all articles.
10333 @end menu
10334
10335
10336 @node Pick and Read
10337 @subsection Pick and Read
10338 @cindex pick and read
10339
10340 Some newsreaders (like @code{nn} and, uhm, @code{Netnews} on VM/CMS) use
10341 a two-phased reading interface. The user first marks in a summary
10342 buffer the articles she wants to read. Then she starts reading the
10343 articles with just an article buffer displayed.
10344
10345 @findex gnus-pick-mode
10346 @kindex M-x gnus-pick-mode
10347 Gnus provides a summary buffer minor mode that allows
10348 this---@code{gnus-pick-mode}. This basically means that a few process
10349 mark commands become one-keystroke commands to allow easy marking, and
10350 it provides one additional command for switching to the summary buffer.
10351
10352 Here are the available keystrokes when using pick mode:
10353
10354 @table @kbd
10355 @item .
10356 @kindex . (Pick)
10357 @findex gnus-pick-article-or-thread
10358 Pick the article or thread on the current line
10359 (@code{gnus-pick-article-or-thread}). If the variable
10360 @code{gnus-thread-hide-subtree} is true, then this key selects the
10361 entire thread when used at the first article of the thread. Otherwise,
10362 it selects just the article. If given a numerical prefix, go to that
10363 thread or article and pick it. (The line number is normally displayed
10364 at the beginning of the summary pick lines.)
10365
10366 @item SPACE
10367 @kindex SPACE (Pick)
10368 @findex gnus-pick-next-page
10369 Scroll the summary buffer up one page (@code{gnus-pick-next-page}). If
10370 at the end of the buffer, start reading the picked articles.
10371
10372 @item u
10373 @kindex u (Pick)
10374 @findex gnus-pick-unmark-article-or-thread.
10375 Unpick the thread or article
10376 (@code{gnus-pick-unmark-article-or-thread}). If the variable
10377 @code{gnus-thread-hide-subtree} is true, then this key unpicks the
10378 thread if used at the first article of the thread. Otherwise it unpicks
10379 just the article. You can give this key a numerical prefix to unpick
10380 the thread or article at that line.
10381
10382 @item RET
10383 @kindex RET (Pick)
10384 @findex gnus-pick-start-reading
10385 @vindex gnus-pick-display-summary
10386 Start reading the picked articles (@code{gnus-pick-start-reading}). If
10387 given a prefix, mark all unpicked articles as read first. If
10388 @code{gnus-pick-display-summary} is non-@code{nil}, the summary buffer
10389 will still be visible when you are reading.
10390
10391 @end table
10392
10393 All the normal summary mode commands are still available in the
10394 pick-mode, with the exception of @kbd{u}. However @kbd{!} is available
10395 which is mapped to the same function
10396 @code{gnus-summary-tick-article-forward}.
10397
10398 If this sounds like a good idea to you, you could say:
10399
10400 @lisp
10401 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-mode-hook 'gnus-pick-mode)
10402 @end lisp
10403
10404 @vindex gnus-pick-mode-hook
10405 @code{gnus-pick-mode-hook} is run in pick minor mode buffers.
10406
10407 @vindex gnus-mark-unpicked-articles-as-read
10408 If @code{gnus-mark-unpicked-articles-as-read} is non-@code{nil}, mark
10409 all unpicked articles as read. The default is @code{nil}.
10410
10411 @vindex gnus-summary-pick-line-format
10412 The summary line format in pick mode is slightly different from the
10413 standard format. At the beginning of each line the line number is
10414 displayed. The pick mode line format is controlled by the
10415 @code{gnus-summary-pick-line-format} variable (@pxref{Formatting
10416 Variables}). It accepts the same format specs that
10417 @code{gnus-summary-line-format} does (@pxref{Summary Buffer Lines}).
10418
10419
10420 @node Binary Groups
10421 @subsection Binary Groups
10422 @cindex binary groups
10423
10424 @findex gnus-binary-mode
10425 @kindex M-x gnus-binary-mode
10426 If you spend much time in binary groups, you may grow tired of hitting
10427 @kbd{X u}, @kbd{n}, @kbd{RET} all the time. @kbd{M-x gnus-binary-mode}
10428 is a minor mode for summary buffers that makes all ordinary Gnus article
10429 selection functions uudecode series of articles and display the result
10430 instead of just displaying the articles the normal way.
10431
10432 @kindex g (Binary)
10433 @findex gnus-binary-show-article
10434 The only way, in fact, to see the actual articles is the @kbd{g}
10435 command, when you have turned on this mode
10436 (@code{gnus-binary-show-article}).
10437
10438 @vindex gnus-binary-mode-hook
10439 @code{gnus-binary-mode-hook} is called in binary minor mode buffers.
10440
10441
10442 @node Tree Display
10443 @section Tree Display
10444 @cindex trees
10445
10446 @vindex gnus-use-trees
10447 If you don't like the normal Gnus summary display, you might try setting
10448 @code{gnus-use-trees} to @code{t}. This will create (by default) an
10449 additional @dfn{tree buffer}. You can execute all summary mode commands
10450 in the tree buffer.
10451
10452 There are a few variables to customize the tree display, of course:
10453
10454 @table @code
10455 @item gnus-tree-mode-hook
10456 @vindex gnus-tree-mode-hook
10457 A hook called in all tree mode buffers.
10458
10459 @item gnus-tree-mode-line-format
10460 @vindex gnus-tree-mode-line-format
10461 A format string for the mode bar in the tree mode buffers (@pxref{Mode
10462 Line Formatting}). The default is @samp{Gnus: %%b %S %Z}. For a list
10463 of valid specs, @pxref{Summary Buffer Mode Line}.
10464
10465 @item gnus-selected-tree-face
10466 @vindex gnus-selected-tree-face
10467 Face used for highlighting the selected article in the tree buffer. The
10468 default is @code{modeline}.
10469
10470 @item gnus-tree-line-format
10471 @vindex gnus-tree-line-format
10472 A format string for the tree nodes. The name is a bit of a misnomer,
10473 though---it doesn't define a line, but just the node. The default value
10474 is @samp{%(%[%3,3n%]%)}, which displays the first three characters of
10475 the name of the poster. It is vital that all nodes are of the same
10476 length, so you @emph{must} use @samp{%4,4n}-like specifiers.
10477
10478 Valid specs are:
10479
10480 @table @samp
10481 @item n
10482 The name of the poster.
10483 @item f
10484 The @code{From} header.
10485 @item N
10486 The number of the article.
10487 @item [
10488 The opening bracket.
10489 @item ]
10490 The closing bracket.
10491 @item s
10492 The subject.
10493 @end table
10494
10495 @xref{Formatting Variables}.
10496
10497 Variables related to the display are:
10498
10499 @table @code
10500 @item gnus-tree-brackets
10501 @vindex gnus-tree-brackets
10502 This is used for differentiating between ``real'' articles and
10503 ``sparse'' articles. The format is
10504 @example
10505 ((@var{real-open} . @var{real-close})
10506 (@var{sparse-open} . @var{sparse-close})
10507 (@var{dummy-open} . @var{dummy-close}))
10508 @end example
10509 and the default is @code{((?[ . ?]) (?( . ?)) (?@{ . ?@}) (?< . ?>))}.
10510
10511 @item gnus-tree-parent-child-edges
10512 @vindex gnus-tree-parent-child-edges
10513 This is a list that contains the characters used for connecting parent
10514 nodes to their children. The default is @code{(?- ?\\ ?|)}.
10515
10516 @end table
10517
10518 @item gnus-tree-minimize-window
10519 @vindex gnus-tree-minimize-window
10520 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will try to keep the tree
10521 buffer as small as possible to allow more room for the other Gnus
10522 windows. If this variable is a number, the tree buffer will never be
10523 higher than that number. The default is @code{t}. Note that if you
10524 have several windows displayed side-by-side in a frame and the tree
10525 buffer is one of these, minimizing the tree window will also resize all
10526 other windows displayed next to it.
10527
10528 You may also wish to add the following hook to keep the window minimized
10529 at all times:
10530
10531 @lisp
10532 (add-hook 'gnus-configure-windows-hook
10533 'gnus-tree-perhaps-minimize)
10534 @end lisp
10535
10536 @item gnus-generate-tree-function
10537 @vindex gnus-generate-tree-function
10538 @findex gnus-generate-horizontal-tree
10539 @findex gnus-generate-vertical-tree
10540 The function that actually generates the thread tree. Two predefined
10541 functions are available: @code{gnus-generate-horizontal-tree} and
10542 @code{gnus-generate-vertical-tree} (which is the default).
10543
10544 @end table
10545
10546 Here's an example from a horizontal tree buffer:
10547
10548 @example
10549 @{***@}-(***)-[odd]-[Gun]
10550 | \[Jan]
10551 | \[odd]-[Eri]
10552 | \(***)-[Eri]
10553 | \[odd]-[Paa]
10554 \[Bjo]
10555 \[Gun]
10556 \[Gun]-[Jor]
10557 @end example
10558
10559 Here's the same thread displayed in a vertical tree buffer:
10560
10561 @example
10562 @group
10563 @{***@}
10564 |--------------------------\-----\-----\
10565 (***) [Bjo] [Gun] [Gun]
10566 |--\-----\-----\ |
10567 [odd] [Jan] [odd] (***) [Jor]
10568 | | |--\
10569 [Gun] [Eri] [Eri] [odd]
10570 |
10571 [Paa]
10572 @end group
10573 @end example
10574
10575 If you're using horizontal trees, it might be nice to display the trees
10576 side-by-side with the summary buffer. You could add something like the
10577 following to your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
10578
10579 @lisp
10580 (setq gnus-use-trees t
10581 gnus-generate-tree-function 'gnus-generate-horizontal-tree
10582 gnus-tree-minimize-window nil)
10583 (gnus-add-configuration
10584 '(article
10585 (vertical 1.0
10586 (horizontal 0.25
10587 (summary 0.75 point)
10588 (tree 1.0))
10589 (article 1.0))))
10590 @end lisp
10591
10592 @xref{Window Layout}.
10593
10594
10595 @node Mail Group Commands
10596 @section Mail Group Commands
10597 @cindex mail group commands
10598
10599 Some commands only make sense in mail groups. If these commands are
10600 invalid in the current group, they will raise a hell and let you know.
10601
10602 All these commands (except the expiry and edit commands) use the
10603 process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
10604
10605 @table @kbd
10606
10607 @item B e
10608 @kindex B e (Summary)
10609 @findex gnus-summary-expire-articles
10610 @cindex expiring mail
10611 Run all expirable articles in the current group through the expiry
10612 process (@code{gnus-summary-expire-articles}). That is, delete all
10613 expirable articles in the group that have been around for a while.
10614 (@pxref{Expiring Mail}).
10615
10616 @item B C-M-e
10617 @kindex B C-M-e (Summary)
10618 @findex gnus-summary-expire-articles-now
10619 @cindex expiring mail
10620 Delete all the expirable articles in the group
10621 (@code{gnus-summary-expire-articles-now}). This means that @strong{all}
10622 articles eligible for expiry in the current group will
10623 disappear forever into that big @file{/dev/null} in the sky.
10624
10625 @item B DEL
10626 @kindex B DEL (Summary)
10627 @cindex deleting mail
10628 @findex gnus-summary-delete-article
10629 @c @icon{gnus-summary-mail-delete}
10630 Delete the mail article. This is ``delete'' as in ``delete it from your
10631 disk forever and ever, never to return again.'' Use with caution.
10632 (@code{gnus-summary-delete-article}).
10633
10634 @item B m
10635 @kindex B m (Summary)
10636 @cindex move mail
10637 @findex gnus-summary-move-article
10638 @vindex gnus-preserve-marks
10639 Move the article from one mail group to another
10640 (@code{gnus-summary-move-article}). Marks will be preserved if
10641 @code{gnus-preserve-marks} is non-@code{nil} (which is the default).
10642
10643 @item B c
10644 @kindex B c (Summary)
10645 @cindex copy mail
10646 @findex gnus-summary-copy-article
10647 @c @icon{gnus-summary-mail-copy}
10648 Copy the article from one group (mail group or not) to a mail group
10649 (@code{gnus-summary-copy-article}). Marks will be preserved if
10650 @code{gnus-preserve-marks} is non-@code{nil} (which is the default).
10651
10652 @item B B
10653 @kindex B B (Summary)
10654 @cindex crosspost mail
10655 @findex gnus-summary-crosspost-article
10656 Crosspost the current article to some other group
10657 (@code{gnus-summary-crosspost-article}). This will create a new copy of
10658 the article in the other group, and the Xref headers of the article will
10659 be properly updated.
10660
10661 @item B i
10662 @kindex B i (Summary)
10663 @findex gnus-summary-import-article
10664 Import an arbitrary file into the current mail newsgroup
10665 (@code{gnus-summary-import-article}). You will be prompted for a file
10666 name, a @code{From} header and a @code{Subject} header.
10667
10668 @item B I
10669 @kindex B I (Summary)
10670 @findex gnus-summary-create-article
10671 Create an empty article in the current mail newsgroups
10672 (@code{gnus-summary-create-article}). You will be prompted for a
10673 @code{From} header and a @code{Subject} header.
10674
10675 @item B r
10676 @kindex B r (Summary)
10677 @findex gnus-summary-respool-article
10678 @vindex gnus-summary-respool-default-method
10679 Respool the mail article (@code{gnus-summary-respool-article}).
10680 @code{gnus-summary-respool-default-method} will be used as the default
10681 select method when respooling. This variable is @code{nil} by default,
10682 which means that the current group select method will be used instead.
10683 Marks will be preserved if @code{gnus-preserve-marks} is non-@code{nil}
10684 (which is the default).
10685
10686 @item B w
10687 @itemx e
10688 @kindex B w (Summary)
10689 @kindex e (Summary)
10690 @findex gnus-summary-edit-article
10691 @kindex C-c C-c (Article)
10692 @findex gnus-summary-edit-article-done
10693 Edit the current article (@code{gnus-summary-edit-article}). To finish
10694 editing and make the changes permanent, type @kbd{C-c C-c}
10695 (@code{gnus-summary-edit-article-done}). If you give a prefix to the
10696 @kbd{C-c C-c} command, Gnus won't re-highlight the article.
10697
10698 @item B q
10699 @kindex B q (Summary)
10700 @findex gnus-summary-respool-query
10701 If you want to re-spool an article, you might be curious as to what group
10702 the article will end up in before you do the re-spooling. This command
10703 will tell you (@code{gnus-summary-respool-query}).
10704
10705 @item B t
10706 @kindex B t (Summary)
10707 @findex gnus-summary-respool-trace
10708 Similarly, this command will display all fancy splitting patterns used
10709 when respooling, if any (@code{gnus-summary-respool-trace}).
10710
10711 @item B p
10712 @kindex B p (Summary)
10713 @findex gnus-summary-article-posted-p
10714 Some people have a tendency to send you ``courtesy'' copies when they
10715 follow up to articles you have posted. These usually have a
10716 @code{Newsgroups} header in them, but not always. This command
10717 (@code{gnus-summary-article-posted-p}) will try to fetch the current
10718 article from your news server (or rather, from
10719 @code{gnus-refer-article-method} or @code{gnus-select-method}) and will
10720 report back whether it found the article or not. Even if it says that
10721 it didn't find the article, it may have been posted anyway---mail
10722 propagation is much faster than news propagation, and the news copy may
10723 just not have arrived yet.
10724
10725 @item K E
10726 @kindex K E (Summary)
10727 @findex gnus-article-encrypt-body
10728 @vindex gnus-article-encrypt-protocol
10729 Encrypt the body of an article (@code{gnus-article-encrypt-body}).
10730 The body is encrypted with the encryption protocol specified by the
10731 variable @code{gnus-article-encrypt-protocol}.
10732
10733 @end table
10734
10735 @vindex gnus-move-split-methods
10736 @cindex moving articles
10737 If you move (or copy) articles regularly, you might wish to have Gnus
10738 suggest where to put the articles. @code{gnus-move-split-methods} is a
10739 variable that uses the same syntax as @code{gnus-split-methods}
10740 (@pxref{Saving Articles}). You may customize that variable to create
10741 suggestions you find reasonable. (Note that
10742 @code{gnus-move-split-methods} uses group names where
10743 @code{gnus-split-methods} uses file names.)
10744
10745 @lisp
10746 (setq gnus-move-split-methods
10747 '(("^From:.*Lars Magne" "nnml:junk")
10748 ("^Subject:.*gnus" "nnfolder:important")
10749 (".*" "nnml:misc")))
10750 @end lisp
10751
10752
10753 @node Various Summary Stuff
10754 @section Various Summary Stuff
10755
10756 @menu
10757 * Summary Group Information:: Information oriented commands.
10758 * Searching for Articles:: Multiple article commands.
10759 * Summary Generation Commands::
10760 * Really Various Summary Commands:: Those pesky non-conformant commands.
10761 @end menu
10762
10763 @table @code
10764 @vindex gnus-summary-display-while-building
10765 @item gnus-summary-display-while-building
10766 If non-@code{nil}, show and update the summary buffer as it's being
10767 built. If @code{t}, update the buffer after every line is inserted.
10768 If the value is an integer, @var{n}, update the display every @var{n}
10769 lines. The default is @code{nil}.
10770
10771 @vindex gnus-summary-display-arrow
10772 @item gnus-summary-display-arrow
10773 If non-@code{nil}, display an arrow in the fringe to indicate the
10774 current article.
10775
10776 @vindex gnus-summary-mode-hook
10777 @item gnus-summary-mode-hook
10778 This hook is called when creating a summary mode buffer.
10779
10780 @vindex gnus-summary-generate-hook
10781 @item gnus-summary-generate-hook
10782 This is called as the last thing before doing the threading and the
10783 generation of the summary buffer. It's quite convenient for customizing
10784 the threading variables based on what data the newsgroup has. This hook
10785 is called from the summary buffer after most summary buffer variables
10786 have been set.
10787
10788 @vindex gnus-summary-prepare-hook
10789 @item gnus-summary-prepare-hook
10790 It is called after the summary buffer has been generated. You might use
10791 it to, for instance, highlight lines or modify the look of the buffer in
10792 some other ungodly manner. I don't care.
10793
10794 @vindex gnus-summary-prepared-hook
10795 @item gnus-summary-prepared-hook
10796 A hook called as the very last thing after the summary buffer has been
10797 generated.
10798
10799 @vindex gnus-summary-ignore-duplicates
10800 @item gnus-summary-ignore-duplicates
10801 When Gnus discovers two articles that have the same @code{Message-ID},
10802 it has to do something drastic. No articles are allowed to have the
10803 same @code{Message-ID}, but this may happen when reading mail from some
10804 sources. Gnus allows you to customize what happens with this variable.
10805 If it is @code{nil} (which is the default), Gnus will rename the
10806 @code{Message-ID} (for display purposes only) and display the article as
10807 any other article. If this variable is @code{t}, it won't display the
10808 article---it'll be as if it never existed.
10809
10810 @vindex gnus-alter-articles-to-read-function
10811 @item gnus-alter-articles-to-read-function
10812 This function, which takes two parameters (the group name and the list
10813 of articles to be selected), is called to allow the user to alter the
10814 list of articles to be selected.
10815
10816 For instance, the following function adds the list of cached articles to
10817 the list in one particular group:
10818
10819 @lisp
10820 (defun my-add-cached-articles (group articles)
10821 (if (string= group "some.group")
10822 (append gnus-newsgroup-cached articles)
10823 articles))
10824 @end lisp
10825
10826 @vindex gnus-newsgroup-variables
10827 @item gnus-newsgroup-variables
10828 A list of newsgroup (summary buffer) local variables, or cons of
10829 variables and their default expressions to be evalled (when the default
10830 values are not @code{nil}), that should be made global while the summary
10831 buffer is active.
10832
10833 Note: The default expressions will be evaluated (using function
10834 @code{eval}) before assignment to the local variable rather than just
10835 assigned to it. If the default expression is the symbol @code{global},
10836 that symbol will not be evaluated but the global value of the local
10837 variable will be used instead.
10838
10839 These variables can be used to set variables in the group parameters
10840 while still allowing them to affect operations done in other
10841 buffers. For example:
10842
10843 @lisp
10844 (setq gnus-newsgroup-variables
10845 '(message-use-followup-to
10846 (gnus-visible-headers .
10847 "^From:\\|^Newsgroups:\\|^Subject:\\|^Date:\\|^To:")))
10848 @end lisp
10849
10850 Also @pxref{Group Parameters}.
10851
10852 @end table
10853
10854
10855 @node Summary Group Information
10856 @subsection Summary Group Information
10857
10858 @table @kbd
10859
10860 @item H d
10861 @kindex H d (Summary)
10862 @findex gnus-summary-describe-group
10863 Give a brief description of the current group
10864 (@code{gnus-summary-describe-group}). If given a prefix, force
10865 rereading the description from the server.
10866
10867 @item H h
10868 @kindex H h (Summary)
10869 @findex gnus-summary-describe-briefly
10870 Give an extremely brief description of the most important summary
10871 keystrokes (@code{gnus-summary-describe-briefly}).
10872
10873 @item H i
10874 @kindex H i (Summary)
10875 @findex gnus-info-find-node
10876 Go to the Gnus info node (@code{gnus-info-find-node}).
10877 @end table
10878
10879
10880 @node Searching for Articles
10881 @subsection Searching for Articles
10882
10883 @table @kbd
10884
10885 @item M-s
10886 @kindex M-s (Summary)
10887 @findex gnus-summary-search-article-forward
10888 Search through all subsequent (raw) articles for a regexp
10889 (@code{gnus-summary-search-article-forward}).
10890
10891 @item M-r
10892 @kindex M-r (Summary)
10893 @findex gnus-summary-search-article-backward
10894 Search through all previous (raw) articles for a regexp
10895 (@code{gnus-summary-search-article-backward}).
10896
10897 @item M-S
10898 @kindex M-S (Summary)
10899 @findex gnus-summary-repeat-search-article-forward
10900 Repeat the previous search forwards
10901 (@code{gnus-summary-repeat-search-article-forward}).
10902
10903 @item M-R
10904 @kindex M-R (Summary)
10905 @findex gnus-summary-repeat-search-article-backward
10906 Repeat the previous search backwards
10907 (@code{gnus-summary-repeat-search-article-backward}).
10908
10909 @item &
10910 @kindex & (Summary)
10911 @findex gnus-summary-execute-command
10912 This command will prompt you for a header, a regular expression to match
10913 on this field, and a command to be executed if the match is made
10914 (@code{gnus-summary-execute-command}). If the header is an empty
10915 string, the match is done on the entire article. If given a prefix,
10916 search backward instead.
10917
10918 For instance, @kbd{& RET some.*string RET #} will put the process mark on
10919 all articles that have heads or bodies that match @samp{some.*string}.
10920
10921 @item M-&
10922 @kindex M-& (Summary)
10923 @findex gnus-summary-universal-argument
10924 Perform any operation on all articles that have been marked with
10925 the process mark (@code{gnus-summary-universal-argument}).
10926 @end table
10927
10928 @node Summary Generation Commands
10929 @subsection Summary Generation Commands
10930
10931 @table @kbd
10932
10933 @item Y g
10934 @kindex Y g (Summary)
10935 @findex gnus-summary-prepare
10936 Regenerate the current summary buffer (@code{gnus-summary-prepare}).
10937
10938 @item Y c
10939 @kindex Y c (Summary)
10940 @findex gnus-summary-insert-cached-articles
10941 Pull all cached articles (for the current group) into the summary buffer
10942 (@code{gnus-summary-insert-cached-articles}).
10943
10944 @item Y d
10945 @kindex Y d (Summary)
10946 @findex gnus-summary-insert-dormant-articles
10947 Pull all dormant articles (for the current group) into the summary buffer
10948 (@code{gnus-summary-insert-dormant-articles}).
10949
10950 @item Y t
10951 @kindex Y t (Summary)
10952 @findex gnus-summary-insert-ticked-articles
10953 Pull all ticked articles (for the current group) into the summary buffer
10954 (@code{gnus-summary-insert-ticked-articles}).
10955
10956 @end table
10957
10958
10959 @node Really Various Summary Commands
10960 @subsection Really Various Summary Commands
10961
10962 @table @kbd
10963
10964 @item A D
10965 @itemx C-d
10966 @kindex C-d (Summary)
10967 @kindex A D (Summary)
10968 @findex gnus-summary-enter-digest-group
10969 If the current article is a collection of other articles (for instance,
10970 a digest), you might use this command to enter a group based on the that
10971 article (@code{gnus-summary-enter-digest-group}). Gnus will try to
10972 guess what article type is currently displayed unless you give a prefix
10973 to this command, which forces a ``digest'' interpretation. Basically,
10974 whenever you see a message that is a collection of other messages of
10975 some format, you @kbd{C-d} and read these messages in a more convenient
10976 fashion.
10977
10978 @vindex gnus-auto-select-on-ephemeral-exit
10979 The variable @code{gnus-auto-select-on-ephemeral-exit} controls what
10980 article should be selected after exiting a digest group. Valid values
10981 include:
10982
10983 @table @code
10984 @item next
10985 Select the next article.
10986
10987 @item next-unread
10988 Select the next unread article.
10989
10990 @item next-noselect
10991 Move the cursor to the next article. This is the default.
10992
10993 @item next-unread-noselect
10994 Move the cursor to the next unread article.
10995 @end table
10996
10997 If it has any other value or there is no next (unread) article, the
10998 article selected before entering to the digest group will appear.
10999
11000 @item C-M-d
11001 @kindex C-M-d (Summary)
11002 @findex gnus-summary-read-document
11003 This command is very similar to the one above, but lets you gather
11004 several documents into one biiig group
11005 (@code{gnus-summary-read-document}). It does this by opening several
11006 @code{nndoc} groups for each document, and then opening an
11007 @code{nnvirtual} group on top of these @code{nndoc} groups. This
11008 command understands the process/prefix convention
11009 (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
11010
11011 @item C-t
11012 @kindex C-t (Summary)
11013 @findex gnus-summary-toggle-truncation
11014 Toggle truncation of summary lines
11015 (@code{gnus-summary-toggle-truncation}). This will probably confuse the
11016 line centering function in the summary buffer, so it's not a good idea
11017 to have truncation switched off while reading articles.
11018
11019 @item =
11020 @kindex = (Summary)
11021 @findex gnus-summary-expand-window
11022 Expand the summary buffer window (@code{gnus-summary-expand-window}).
11023 If given a prefix, force an @code{article} window configuration.
11024
11025 @item C-M-e
11026 @kindex C-M-e (Summary)
11027 @findex gnus-summary-edit-parameters
11028 Edit the group parameters (@pxref{Group Parameters}) of the current
11029 group (@code{gnus-summary-edit-parameters}).
11030
11031 @item C-M-a
11032 @kindex C-M-a (Summary)
11033 @findex gnus-summary-customize-parameters
11034 Customize the group parameters (@pxref{Group Parameters}) of the current
11035 group (@code{gnus-summary-customize-parameters}).
11036
11037 @end table
11038
11039
11040 @node Exiting the Summary Buffer
11041 @section Exiting the Summary Buffer
11042 @cindex summary exit
11043 @cindex exiting groups
11044
11045 Exiting from the summary buffer will normally update all info on the
11046 group and return you to the group buffer.
11047
11048 @table @kbd
11049
11050 @item Z Z
11051 @itemx Z Q
11052 @itemx q
11053 @kindex Z Z (Summary)
11054 @kindex Z Q (Summary)
11055 @kindex q (Summary)
11056 @findex gnus-summary-exit
11057 @vindex gnus-summary-exit-hook
11058 @vindex gnus-summary-prepare-exit-hook
11059 @vindex gnus-group-no-more-groups-hook
11060 @c @icon{gnus-summary-exit}
11061 Exit the current group and update all information on the group
11062 (@code{gnus-summary-exit}). @code{gnus-summary-prepare-exit-hook} is
11063 called before doing much of the exiting, which calls
11064 @code{gnus-summary-expire-articles} by default.
11065 @code{gnus-summary-exit-hook} is called after finishing the exit
11066 process. @code{gnus-group-no-more-groups-hook} is run when returning to
11067 group mode having no more (unread) groups.
11068
11069 @item Z E
11070 @itemx Q
11071 @kindex Z E (Summary)
11072 @kindex Q (Summary)
11073 @findex gnus-summary-exit-no-update
11074 Exit the current group without updating any information on the group
11075 (@code{gnus-summary-exit-no-update}).
11076
11077 @item Z c
11078 @itemx c
11079 @kindex Z c (Summary)
11080 @kindex c (Summary)
11081 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-and-exit
11082 @c @icon{gnus-summary-catchup-and-exit}
11083 Mark all unticked articles in the group as read and then exit
11084 (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-and-exit}).
11085
11086 @item Z C
11087 @kindex Z C (Summary)
11088 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-all-and-exit
11089 Mark all articles, even the ticked ones, as read and then exit
11090 (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-all-and-exit}).
11091
11092 @item Z n
11093 @kindex Z n (Summary)
11094 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-and-goto-next-group
11095 Mark all articles as read and go to the next group
11096 (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-and-goto-next-group}).
11097
11098 @item Z p
11099 @kindex Z p (Summary)
11100 @findex gnus-summary-catchup-and-goto-prev-group
11101 Mark all articles as read and go to the previous group
11102 (@code{gnus-summary-catchup-and-goto-prev-group}).
11103
11104 @item Z R
11105 @itemx C-x C-s
11106 @kindex Z R (Summary)
11107 @kindex C-x C-s (Summary)
11108 @findex gnus-summary-reselect-current-group
11109 Exit this group, and then enter it again
11110 (@code{gnus-summary-reselect-current-group}). If given a prefix, select
11111 all articles, both read and unread.
11112
11113 @item Z G
11114 @itemx M-g
11115 @kindex Z G (Summary)
11116 @kindex M-g (Summary)
11117 @findex gnus-summary-rescan-group
11118 @c @icon{gnus-summary-mail-get}
11119 Exit the group, check for new articles in the group, and select the
11120 group (@code{gnus-summary-rescan-group}). If given a prefix, select all
11121 articles, both read and unread.
11122
11123 @item Z N
11124 @kindex Z N (Summary)
11125 @findex gnus-summary-next-group
11126 Exit the group and go to the next group
11127 (@code{gnus-summary-next-group}).
11128
11129 @item Z P
11130 @kindex Z P (Summary)
11131 @findex gnus-summary-prev-group
11132 Exit the group and go to the previous group
11133 (@code{gnus-summary-prev-group}).
11134
11135 @item Z s
11136 @kindex Z s (Summary)
11137 @findex gnus-summary-save-newsrc
11138 Save the current number of read/marked articles in the dribble buffer
11139 and then save the dribble buffer (@code{gnus-summary-save-newsrc}). If
11140 given a prefix, also save the @file{.newsrc} file(s). Using this
11141 command will make exit without updating (the @kbd{Q} command) worthless.
11142 @end table
11143
11144 @vindex gnus-exit-group-hook
11145 @code{gnus-exit-group-hook} is called when you exit the current group
11146 with an ``updating'' exit. For instance @kbd{Q}
11147 (@code{gnus-summary-exit-no-update}) does not call this hook.
11148
11149 @findex gnus-summary-wake-up-the-dead
11150 @findex gnus-dead-summary-mode
11151 @vindex gnus-kill-summary-on-exit
11152 If you're in the habit of exiting groups, and then changing your mind
11153 about it, you might set @code{gnus-kill-summary-on-exit} to @code{nil}.
11154 If you do that, Gnus won't kill the summary buffer when you exit it.
11155 (Quelle surprise!) Instead it will change the name of the buffer to
11156 something like @file{*Dead Summary ... *} and install a minor mode
11157 called @code{gnus-dead-summary-mode}. Now, if you switch back to this
11158 buffer, you'll find that all keys are mapped to a function called
11159 @code{gnus-summary-wake-up-the-dead}. So tapping any keys in a dead
11160 summary buffer will result in a live, normal summary buffer.
11161
11162 There will never be more than one dead summary buffer at any one time.
11163
11164 @vindex gnus-use-cross-reference
11165 The data on the current group will be updated (which articles you have
11166 read, which articles you have replied to, etc.)@: when you exit the
11167 summary buffer. If the @code{gnus-use-cross-reference} variable is
11168 @code{t} (which is the default), articles that are cross-referenced to
11169 this group and are marked as read, will also be marked as read in the
11170 other subscribed groups they were cross-posted to. If this variable is
11171 neither @code{nil} nor @code{t}, the article will be marked as read in
11172 both subscribed and unsubscribed groups (@pxref{Crosspost Handling}).
11173
11174
11175 @node Crosspost Handling
11176 @section Crosspost Handling
11177
11178 @cindex velveeta
11179 @cindex spamming
11180 Marking cross-posted articles as read ensures that you'll never have to
11181 read the same article more than once. Unless, of course, somebody has
11182 posted it to several groups separately. Posting the same article to
11183 several groups (not cross-posting) is called @dfn{spamming}, and you are
11184 by law required to send nasty-grams to anyone who perpetrates such a
11185 heinous crime.
11186
11187 Remember: Cross-posting is kinda ok, but posting the same article
11188 separately to several groups is not. Massive cross-posting (aka.
11189 @dfn{velveeta}) is to be avoided at all costs, and you can even use the
11190 @code{gnus-summary-mail-crosspost-complaint} command to complain about
11191 excessive crossposting (@pxref{Summary Mail Commands}).
11192
11193 @cindex cross-posting
11194 @cindex Xref
11195 @cindex @acronym{NOV}
11196 One thing that may cause Gnus to not do the cross-posting thing
11197 correctly is if you use an @acronym{NNTP} server that supports @sc{xover}
11198 (which is very nice, because it speeds things up considerably) which
11199 does not include the @code{Xref} header in its @acronym{NOV} lines. This is
11200 Evil, but all too common, alas, alack. Gnus tries to Do The Right Thing
11201 even with @sc{xover} by registering the @code{Xref} lines of all
11202 articles you actually read, but if you kill the articles, or just mark
11203 them as read without reading them, Gnus will not get a chance to snoop
11204 the @code{Xref} lines out of these articles, and will be unable to use
11205 the cross reference mechanism.
11206
11207 @cindex LIST overview.fmt
11208 @cindex overview.fmt
11209 To check whether your @acronym{NNTP} server includes the @code{Xref} header
11210 in its overview files, try @samp{telnet your.nntp.server nntp},
11211 @samp{MODE READER} on @code{inn} servers, and then say @samp{LIST
11212 overview.fmt}. This may not work, but if it does, and the last line you
11213 get does not read @samp{Xref:full}, then you should shout and whine at
11214 your news admin until she includes the @code{Xref} header in the
11215 overview files.
11216
11217 If you want Gnus to get the @code{Xref}s right all the time, you have to
11218 set @code{nntp-nov-is-evil} to @code{t}, which slows things down
11219 considerably. Also @pxref{Slow/Expensive Connection}.
11220
11221 C'est la vie.
11222
11223 For an alternative approach, @pxref{Duplicate Suppression}.
11224
11225
11226 @node Duplicate Suppression
11227 @section Duplicate Suppression
11228
11229 By default, Gnus tries to make sure that you don't have to read the same
11230 article more than once by utilizing the crossposting mechanism
11231 (@pxref{Crosspost Handling}). However, that simple and efficient
11232 approach may not work satisfactory for some users for various
11233 reasons.
11234
11235 @enumerate
11236 @item
11237 The @acronym{NNTP} server may fail to generate the @code{Xref} header. This
11238 is evil and not very common.
11239
11240 @item
11241 The @acronym{NNTP} server may fail to include the @code{Xref} header in the
11242 @file{.overview} data bases. This is evil and all too common, alas.
11243
11244 @item
11245 You may be reading the same group (or several related groups) from
11246 different @acronym{NNTP} servers.
11247
11248 @item
11249 You may be getting mail that duplicates articles posted to groups.
11250 @end enumerate
11251
11252 I'm sure there are other situations where @code{Xref} handling fails as
11253 well, but these four are the most common situations.
11254
11255 If, and only if, @code{Xref} handling fails for you, then you may
11256 consider switching on @dfn{duplicate suppression}. If you do so, Gnus
11257 will remember the @code{Message-ID}s of all articles you have read or
11258 otherwise marked as read, and then, as if by magic, mark them as read
11259 all subsequent times you see them---in @emph{all} groups. Using this
11260 mechanism is quite likely to be somewhat inefficient, but not overly
11261 so. It's certainly preferable to reading the same articles more than
11262 once.
11263
11264 Duplicate suppression is not a very subtle instrument. It's more like a
11265 sledge hammer than anything else. It works in a very simple
11266 fashion---if you have marked an article as read, it adds this Message-ID
11267 to a cache. The next time it sees this Message-ID, it will mark the
11268 article as read with the @samp{M} mark. It doesn't care what group it
11269 saw the article in.
11270
11271 @table @code
11272 @item gnus-suppress-duplicates
11273 @vindex gnus-suppress-duplicates
11274 If non-@code{nil}, suppress duplicates.
11275
11276 @item gnus-save-duplicate-list
11277 @vindex gnus-save-duplicate-list
11278 If non-@code{nil}, save the list of duplicates to a file. This will
11279 make startup and shutdown take longer, so the default is @code{nil}.
11280 However, this means that only duplicate articles read in a single Gnus
11281 session are suppressed.
11282
11283 @item gnus-duplicate-list-length
11284 @vindex gnus-duplicate-list-length
11285 This variable says how many @code{Message-ID}s to keep in the duplicate
11286 suppression list. The default is 10000.
11287
11288 @item gnus-duplicate-file
11289 @vindex gnus-duplicate-file
11290 The name of the file to store the duplicate suppression list in. The
11291 default is @file{~/News/suppression}.
11292 @end table
11293
11294 If you have a tendency to stop and start Gnus often, setting
11295 @code{gnus-save-duplicate-list} to @code{t} is probably a good idea. If
11296 you leave Gnus running for weeks on end, you may have it @code{nil}. On
11297 the other hand, saving the list makes startup and shutdown much slower,
11298 so that means that if you stop and start Gnus often, you should set
11299 @code{gnus-save-duplicate-list} to @code{nil}. Uhm. I'll leave this up
11300 to you to figure out, I think.
11301
11302 @node Security
11303 @section Security
11304
11305 Gnus is able to verify signed messages or decrypt encrypted messages.
11306 The formats that are supported are @acronym{PGP}, @acronym{PGP/MIME}
11307 and @acronym{S/MIME}, however you need some external programs to get
11308 things to work:
11309
11310 @enumerate
11311 @item
11312 To handle @acronym{PGP} and @acronym{PGP/MIME} messages, you have to
11313 install an OpenPGP implementation such as GnuPG@. The Lisp interface
11314 to GnuPG included with Emacs is called EasyPG (@pxref{Top, ,EasyPG,
11315 epa, EasyPG Assistant user's manual}), but PGG (@pxref{Top, ,PGG, pgg,
11316 PGG Manual}), and Mailcrypt are also supported.
11317
11318 @item
11319 To handle @acronym{S/MIME} message, you need to install OpenSSL@. OpenSSL 0.9.6
11320 or newer is recommended.
11321
11322 @end enumerate
11323
11324 The variables that control security functionality on reading/composing
11325 messages include:
11326
11327 @table @code
11328 @item mm-verify-option
11329 @vindex mm-verify-option
11330 Option of verifying signed parts. @code{never}, not verify;
11331 @code{always}, always verify; @code{known}, only verify known
11332 protocols. Otherwise, ask user.
11333
11334 @item mm-decrypt-option
11335 @vindex mm-decrypt-option
11336 Option of decrypting encrypted parts. @code{never}, no decryption;
11337 @code{always}, always decrypt; @code{known}, only decrypt known
11338 protocols. Otherwise, ask user.
11339
11340 @item mm-sign-option
11341 @vindex mm-sign-option
11342 Option of creating signed parts. @code{nil}, use default signing
11343 keys; @code{guided}, ask user to select signing keys from the menu.
11344
11345 @item mm-encrypt-option
11346 @vindex mm-encrypt-option
11347 Option of creating encrypted parts. @code{nil}, use the first
11348 public-key matching the @samp{From:} header as the recipient;
11349 @code{guided}, ask user to select recipient keys from the menu.
11350
11351 @item mml1991-use
11352 @vindex mml1991-use
11353 Symbol indicating elisp interface to OpenPGP implementation for
11354 @acronym{PGP} messages. The default is @code{epg}, but @code{pgg},
11355 and @code{mailcrypt} are also supported although
11356 deprecated. By default, Gnus uses the first available interface in
11357 this order.
11358
11359 @item mml2015-use
11360 @vindex mml2015-use
11361 Symbol indicating elisp interface to OpenPGP implementation for
11362 @acronym{PGP/MIME} messages. The default is @code{epg}, but
11363 @code{pgg}, and @code{mailcrypt} are also supported
11364 although deprecated. By default, Gnus uses the first available
11365 interface in this order.
11366
11367 @end table
11368
11369 By default the buttons that display security information are not
11370 shown, because they clutter reading the actual e-mail. You can type
11371 @kbd{K b} manually to display the information. Use the
11372 @code{gnus-buttonized-mime-types} and
11373 @code{gnus-unbuttonized-mime-types} variables to control this
11374 permanently. @ref{MIME Commands} for further details, and hints on
11375 how to customize these variables to always display security
11376 information.
11377
11378 @cindex snarfing keys
11379 @cindex importing PGP keys
11380 @cindex PGP key ring import
11381 Snarfing OpenPGP keys (i.e., importing keys from articles into your
11382 key ring) is not supported explicitly through a menu item or command,
11383 rather Gnus do detect and label keys as @samp{application/pgp-keys},
11384 allowing you to specify whatever action you think is appropriate
11385 through the usual @acronym{MIME} infrastructure. You can use a
11386 @file{~/.mailcap} entry (@pxref{mailcap, , mailcap, emacs-mime, The
11387 Emacs MIME Manual}) such as the following to import keys using GNU
11388 Privacy Guard when you click on the @acronym{MIME} button
11389 (@pxref{Using MIME}).
11390
11391 @example
11392 application/pgp-keys; gpg --import --interactive --verbose; needsterminal
11393 @end example
11394 @noindent
11395 This happens to also be the default action defined in
11396 @code{mailcap-mime-data}.
11397
11398 More information on how to set things for sending outgoing signed and
11399 encrypted messages up can be found in the message manual
11400 (@pxref{Security, ,Security, message, Message Manual}).
11401
11402 @node Mailing List
11403 @section Mailing List
11404 @cindex mailing list
11405 @cindex RFC 2396
11406
11407 @kindex A M (summary)
11408 @findex gnus-mailing-list-insinuate
11409 Gnus understands some mailing list fields of RFC 2369. To enable it,
11410 add a @code{to-list} group parameter (@pxref{Group Parameters}),
11411 possibly using @kbd{A M} (@code{gnus-mailing-list-insinuate}) in the
11412 summary buffer.
11413
11414 That enables the following commands to the summary buffer:
11415
11416 @table @kbd
11417
11418 @item C-c C-n h
11419 @kindex C-c C-n h (Summary)
11420 @findex gnus-mailing-list-help
11421 Send a message to fetch mailing list help, if List-Help field exists.
11422
11423 @item C-c C-n s
11424 @kindex C-c C-n s (Summary)
11425 @findex gnus-mailing-list-subscribe
11426 Send a message to subscribe the mailing list, if List-Subscribe field exists.
11427
11428 @item C-c C-n u
11429 @kindex C-c C-n u (Summary)
11430 @findex gnus-mailing-list-unsubscribe
11431 Send a message to unsubscribe the mailing list, if List-Unsubscribe
11432 field exists.
11433
11434 @item C-c C-n p
11435 @kindex C-c C-n p (Summary)
11436 @findex gnus-mailing-list-post
11437 Post to the mailing list, if List-Post field exists.
11438
11439 @item C-c C-n o
11440 @kindex C-c C-n o (Summary)
11441 @findex gnus-mailing-list-owner
11442 Send a message to the mailing list owner, if List-Owner field exists.
11443
11444 @item C-c C-n a
11445 @kindex C-c C-n a (Summary)
11446 @findex gnus-mailing-list-archive
11447 Browse the mailing list archive, if List-Archive field exists.
11448
11449 @end table
11450
11451
11452 @node Article Buffer
11453 @chapter Article Buffer
11454 @cindex article buffer
11455
11456 The articles are displayed in the article buffer, of which there is only
11457 one. All the summary buffers share the same article buffer unless you
11458 tell Gnus otherwise.
11459
11460 @menu
11461 * Hiding Headers:: Deciding what headers should be displayed.
11462 * Using MIME:: Pushing articles through @acronym{MIME} before reading them.
11463 * HTML:: Reading @acronym{HTML} messages.
11464 * Customizing Articles:: Tailoring the look of the articles.
11465 * Article Keymap:: Keystrokes available in the article buffer.
11466 * Misc Article:: Other stuff.
11467 @end menu
11468
11469
11470 @node Hiding Headers
11471 @section Hiding Headers
11472 @cindex hiding headers
11473 @cindex deleting headers
11474
11475 The top section of each article is the @dfn{head}. (The rest is the
11476 @dfn{body}, but you may have guessed that already.)
11477
11478 @vindex gnus-show-all-headers
11479 There is a lot of useful information in the head: the name of the person
11480 who wrote the article, the date it was written and the subject of the
11481 article. That's well and nice, but there's also lots of information
11482 most people do not want to see---what systems the article has passed
11483 through before reaching you, the @code{Message-ID}, the
11484 @code{References}, etc.@: ad nauseam---and you'll probably want to get rid
11485 of some of those lines. If you want to keep all those lines in the
11486 article buffer, you can set @code{gnus-show-all-headers} to @code{t}.
11487
11488 Gnus provides you with two variables for sifting headers:
11489
11490 @table @code
11491
11492 @item gnus-visible-headers
11493 @vindex gnus-visible-headers
11494 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a regular expression
11495 that says what headers you wish to keep in the article buffer. All
11496 headers that do not match this variable will be hidden.
11497
11498 For instance, if you only want to see the name of the person who wrote
11499 the article and the subject, you'd say:
11500
11501 @lisp
11502 (setq gnus-visible-headers "^From:\\|^Subject:")
11503 @end lisp
11504
11505 This variable can also be a list of regexps to match headers to
11506 remain visible.
11507
11508 @item gnus-ignored-headers
11509 @vindex gnus-ignored-headers
11510 This variable is the reverse of @code{gnus-visible-headers}. If this
11511 variable is set (and @code{gnus-visible-headers} is @code{nil}), it
11512 should be a regular expression that matches all lines that you want to
11513 hide. All lines that do not match this variable will remain visible.
11514
11515 For instance, if you just want to get rid of the @code{References} line
11516 and the @code{Xref} line, you might say:
11517
11518 @lisp
11519 (setq gnus-ignored-headers "^References:\\|^Xref:")
11520 @end lisp
11521
11522 This variable can also be a list of regexps to match headers to
11523 be removed.
11524
11525 Note that if @code{gnus-visible-headers} is non-@code{nil}, this
11526 variable will have no effect.
11527
11528 @end table
11529
11530 @vindex gnus-sorted-header-list
11531 Gnus can also sort the headers for you. (It does this by default.) You
11532 can control the sorting by setting the @code{gnus-sorted-header-list}
11533 variable. It is a list of regular expressions that says in what order
11534 the headers are to be displayed.
11535
11536 For instance, if you want the name of the author of the article first,
11537 and then the subject, you might say something like:
11538
11539 @lisp
11540 (setq gnus-sorted-header-list '("^From:" "^Subject:"))
11541 @end lisp
11542
11543 Any headers that are to remain visible, but are not listed in this
11544 variable, will be displayed in random order after all the headers listed in this variable.
11545
11546 @findex gnus-article-hide-boring-headers
11547 @vindex gnus-boring-article-headers
11548 You can hide further boring headers by setting
11549 @code{gnus-treat-hide-boring-headers} to @code{head}. What this function
11550 does depends on the @code{gnus-boring-article-headers} variable. It's a
11551 list, but this list doesn't actually contain header names. Instead it
11552 lists various @dfn{boring conditions} that Gnus can check and remove
11553 from sight.
11554
11555 These conditions are:
11556 @table @code
11557 @item empty
11558 Remove all empty headers.
11559 @item followup-to
11560 Remove the @code{Followup-To} header if it is identical to the
11561 @code{Newsgroups} header.
11562 @item reply-to
11563 Remove the @code{Reply-To} header if it lists the same addresses as
11564 the @code{From} header, or if the @code{broken-reply-to} group
11565 parameter is set.
11566 @item newsgroups
11567 Remove the @code{Newsgroups} header if it only contains the current group
11568 name.
11569 @item to-address
11570 Remove the @code{To} header if it only contains the address identical to
11571 the current group's @code{to-address} parameter.
11572 @item to-list
11573 Remove the @code{To} header if it only contains the address identical to
11574 the current group's @code{to-list} parameter.
11575 @item cc-list
11576 Remove the @code{Cc} header if it only contains the address identical to
11577 the current group's @code{to-list} parameter.
11578 @item date
11579 Remove the @code{Date} header if the article is less than three days
11580 old.
11581 @item long-to
11582 Remove the @code{To} and/or @code{Cc} header if it is very long.
11583 @item many-to
11584 Remove all @code{To} and/or @code{Cc} headers if there are more than one.
11585 @end table
11586
11587 To include these three elements, you could say something like:
11588
11589 @lisp
11590 (setq gnus-boring-article-headers
11591 '(empty followup-to reply-to))
11592 @end lisp
11593
11594 This is also the default value for this variable.
11595
11596
11597 @node Using MIME
11598 @section Using MIME
11599 @cindex @acronym{MIME}
11600
11601 Mime is a standard for waving your hands through the air, aimlessly,
11602 while people stand around yawning.
11603
11604 @acronym{MIME}, however, is a standard for encoding your articles, aimlessly,
11605 while all newsreaders die of fear.
11606
11607 @acronym{MIME} may specify what character set the article uses, the encoding
11608 of the characters, and it also makes it possible to embed pictures and
11609 other naughty stuff in innocent-looking articles.
11610
11611 @vindex gnus-display-mime-function
11612 @findex gnus-display-mime
11613 Gnus pushes @acronym{MIME} articles through @code{gnus-display-mime-function}
11614 to display the @acronym{MIME} parts. This is @code{gnus-display-mime} by
11615 default, which creates a bundle of clickable buttons that can be used to
11616 display, save and manipulate the @acronym{MIME} objects.
11617
11618 The following commands are available when you have placed point over a
11619 @acronym{MIME} button:
11620
11621 @table @kbd
11622 @findex gnus-article-press-button
11623 @item RET (Article)
11624 @kindex RET (Article)
11625 @itemx BUTTON-2 (Article)
11626 Toggle displaying of the @acronym{MIME} object
11627 (@code{gnus-article-press-button}). If built-in viewers can not display
11628 the object, Gnus resorts to external viewers in the @file{mailcap}
11629 files. If a viewer has the @samp{copiousoutput} specification, the
11630 object is displayed inline.
11631
11632 @findex gnus-mime-view-part
11633 @item M-RET (Article)
11634 @kindex M-RET (Article)
11635 @itemx v (Article)
11636 Prompt for a method, and then view the @acronym{MIME} object using this
11637 method (@code{gnus-mime-view-part}).
11638
11639 @findex gnus-mime-view-part-as-type
11640 @item t (Article)
11641 @kindex t (Article)
11642 View the @acronym{MIME} object as if it were a different @acronym{MIME} media type
11643 (@code{gnus-mime-view-part-as-type}).
11644
11645 @findex gnus-mime-view-part-as-charset
11646 @item C (Article)
11647 @kindex C (Article)
11648 Prompt for a charset, and then view the @acronym{MIME} object using this
11649 charset (@code{gnus-mime-view-part-as-charset}).
11650
11651 @findex gnus-mime-save-part
11652 @item o (Article)
11653 @kindex o (Article)
11654 Prompt for a file name, and then save the @acronym{MIME} object
11655 (@code{gnus-mime-save-part}).
11656
11657 @findex gnus-mime-save-part-and-strip
11658 @item C-o (Article)
11659 @kindex C-o (Article)
11660 Prompt for a file name, then save the @acronym{MIME} object and strip it from
11661 the article. Then proceed to article editing, where a reasonable
11662 suggestion is being made on how the altered article should look
11663 like. The stripped @acronym{MIME} object will be referred via the
11664 message/external-body @acronym{MIME} type.
11665 (@code{gnus-mime-save-part-and-strip}).
11666
11667 @findex gnus-mime-replace-part
11668 @item r (Article)
11669 @kindex r (Article)
11670 Prompt for a file name, replace the @acronym{MIME} object with an
11671 external body referring to the file via the message/external-body
11672 @acronym{MIME} type. (@code{gnus-mime-replace-part}).
11673
11674 @findex gnus-mime-delete-part
11675 @item d (Article)
11676 @kindex d (Article)
11677 Delete the @acronym{MIME} object from the article and replace it with some
11678 information about the removed @acronym{MIME} object
11679 (@code{gnus-mime-delete-part}).
11680
11681 @c FIXME: gnus-auto-select-part should be documented here
11682
11683 @findex gnus-mime-copy-part
11684 @item c (Article)
11685 @kindex c (Article)
11686 Copy the @acronym{MIME} object to a fresh buffer and display this buffer
11687 (@code{gnus-mime-copy-part}). If given a prefix, copy the raw contents
11688 without decoding. If given a numerical prefix, you can do semi-manual
11689 charset stuff (see @code{gnus-summary-show-article-charset-alist} in
11690 @ref{Paging the Article}). Compressed files like @file{.gz} and
11691 @file{.bz2} are automatically decompressed if
11692 @code{auto-compression-mode} is enabled (@pxref{Compressed Files,,
11693 Accessing Compressed Files, emacs, The Emacs Editor}).
11694
11695 @findex gnus-mime-print-part
11696 @item p (Article)
11697 @kindex p (Article)
11698 Print the @acronym{MIME} object (@code{gnus-mime-print-part}). This
11699 command respects the @samp{print=} specifications in the
11700 @file{.mailcap} file.
11701
11702 @findex gnus-mime-inline-part
11703 @item i (Article)
11704 @kindex i (Article)
11705 Insert the contents of the @acronym{MIME} object into the buffer
11706 (@code{gnus-mime-inline-part}) as @samp{text/plain}. If given a prefix, insert
11707 the raw contents without decoding. If given a numerical prefix, you can
11708 do semi-manual charset stuff (see
11709 @code{gnus-summary-show-article-charset-alist} in @ref{Paging the
11710 Article}). Compressed files like @file{.gz} and @file{.bz2} are
11711 automatically decompressed depending on @code{jka-compr} regardless of
11712 @code{auto-compression-mode} (@pxref{Compressed Files,, Accessing
11713 Compressed Files, emacs, The Emacs Editor}).
11714
11715 @findex gnus-mime-view-part-internally
11716 @item E (Article)
11717 @kindex E (Article)
11718 View the @acronym{MIME} object with an internal viewer. If no internal
11719 viewer is available, use an external viewer
11720 (@code{gnus-mime-view-part-internally}).
11721
11722 @findex gnus-mime-view-part-externally
11723 @item e (Article)
11724 @kindex e (Article)
11725 View the @acronym{MIME} object with an external viewer.
11726 (@code{gnus-mime-view-part-externally}).
11727
11728 @findex gnus-mime-pipe-part
11729 @item | (Article)
11730 @kindex | (Article)
11731 Output the @acronym{MIME} object to a process (@code{gnus-mime-pipe-part}).
11732
11733 @findex gnus-mime-action-on-part
11734 @item . (Article)
11735 @kindex . (Article)
11736 Interactively run an action on the @acronym{MIME} object
11737 (@code{gnus-mime-action-on-part}).
11738
11739 @end table
11740
11741 Gnus will display some @acronym{MIME} objects automatically. The way Gnus
11742 determines which parts to do this with is described in the Emacs
11743 @acronym{MIME} manual.
11744
11745 It might be best to just use the toggling functions from the article
11746 buffer to avoid getting nasty surprises. (For instance, you enter the
11747 group @samp{alt.sing-a-long} and, before you know it, @acronym{MIME} has
11748 decoded the sound file in the article and some horrible sing-a-long song
11749 comes screaming out your speakers, and you can't find the volume button,
11750 because there isn't one, and people are starting to look at you, and you
11751 try to stop the program, but you can't, and you can't find the program
11752 to control the volume, and everybody else in the room suddenly decides
11753 to look at you disdainfully, and you'll feel rather stupid.)
11754
11755 Any similarity to real events and people is purely coincidental. Ahem.
11756
11757 Also @pxref{MIME Commands}.
11758
11759
11760 @node HTML
11761 @section @acronym{HTML}
11762 @cindex @acronym{HTML}
11763
11764 Gnus can display @acronym{HTML} articles nicely formatted in the
11765 article buffer. There are many methods for doing that, but two of
11766 them are kind of default methods.
11767
11768 If your Emacs copy has been built with libxml2 support, then Gnus uses
11769 Emacs' built-in, plain elisp Simple HTML Renderer @code{shr}
11770 @footnote{@code{shr} displays colors as declared in the @acronym{HTML}
11771 article but tries to adjust them in order to be readable. If you
11772 prefer more contrast, @xref{FAQ 4-16}.} which is also used by Emacs'
11773 browser EWW (@pxref{EWW, ,EWW, emacs, The Emacs Manual}).
11774
11775 If your Emacs copy lacks libxml2 support but you have @code{w3m}
11776 installed on your system, Gnus uses that to render @acronym{HTML} mail
11777 and display the results in the article buffer (@code{gnus-w3m}).
11778
11779 For a complete overview, consult @xref{Display Customization, ,Display
11780 Customization, emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME Manual}. This section only
11781 describes the default method.
11782
11783 @table @code
11784 @item mm-text-html-renderer
11785 @vindex mm-text-html-renderer
11786 If set to @code{shr}, Gnus uses its own simple @acronym{HTML}
11787 renderer. If set to @code{gnus-w3m}, it uses @code{w3m}.
11788
11789 @item gnus-blocked-images
11790 @vindex gnus-blocked-images
11791 External images that have @acronym{URL}s that match this regexp won't
11792 be fetched and displayed. For instance, to block all @acronym{URL}s
11793 that have the string ``ads'' in them, do the following:
11794
11795 @lisp
11796 (setq gnus-blocked-images "ads")
11797 @end lisp
11798
11799 This can also be a function to be evaluated. If so, it will be
11800 called with the group name as the parameter. The default value is
11801 @code{gnus-block-private-groups}, which will return @samp{"."} for
11802 anything that isn't a newsgroup. This means that no external images
11803 will be fetched as a result of reading mail, so that nobody can use
11804 web bugs (and the like) to track whether you've read email.
11805
11806 Also @pxref{Misc Article} for @code{gnus-inhibit-images}.
11807
11808 @item gnus-html-cache-directory
11809 @vindex gnus-html-cache-directory
11810 Gnus will download and cache images according to how
11811 @code{gnus-blocked-images} is set. These images will be stored in
11812 this directory.
11813
11814 @item gnus-html-cache-size
11815 @vindex gnus-html-cache-size
11816 When @code{gnus-html-cache-size} bytes have been used in that
11817 directory, the oldest files will be deleted. The default is 500MB.
11818
11819 @item gnus-html-frame-width
11820 @vindex gnus-html-frame-width
11821 The width to use when rendering HTML@. The default is 70.
11822
11823 @item gnus-max-image-proportion
11824 @vindex gnus-max-image-proportion
11825 How big pictures displayed are in relation to the window they're in.
11826 A value of 0.7 (the default) means that they are allowed to take up
11827 70% of the width and height of the window. If they are larger than
11828 this, and Emacs supports it, then the images will be rescaled down to
11829 fit these criteria.
11830
11831 @item gnus-article-show-cursor
11832 @vindex gnus-article-show-cursor
11833 If non-@code{nil}, display the cursor in the article buffer even when
11834 the article buffer isn't the current buffer.
11835 @end table
11836
11837 To use this, make sure that you have @code{w3m} and @code{curl}
11838 installed. If you have, then Gnus should display @acronym{HTML}
11839 automatically.
11840
11841
11842
11843 @node Customizing Articles
11844 @section Customizing Articles
11845 @cindex article customization
11846
11847 A slew of functions for customizing how the articles are to look like
11848 exist. You can call these functions interactively
11849 (@pxref{Article Washing}), or you can have them
11850 called automatically when you select the articles.
11851
11852 To have them called automatically, you should set the corresponding
11853 ``treatment'' variable. For instance, to have headers hidden, you'd set
11854 @code{gnus-treat-hide-headers}. Below is a list of variables that can
11855 be set, but first we discuss the values these variables can have.
11856
11857 Note: Some values, while valid, make little sense. Check the list below
11858 for sensible values.
11859
11860 @enumerate
11861 @item
11862 @code{nil}: Don't do this treatment.
11863
11864 @item
11865 @code{t}: Do this treatment on all body parts.
11866
11867 @item
11868 @code{head}: Do the treatment on the headers.
11869
11870 @item
11871 @code{first}: Do this treatment on the first body part.
11872
11873 @item
11874 @code{last}: Do this treatment on the last body part.
11875
11876 @item
11877 An integer: Do this treatment on all body parts that have a length less
11878 than this number.
11879
11880 @item
11881 A list of strings: Do this treatment on all body parts that are in
11882 articles that are read in groups that have names that match one of the
11883 regexps in the list.
11884
11885 @item
11886 A list where the first element is not a string:
11887
11888 The list is evaluated recursively. The first element of the list is a
11889 predicate. The following predicates are recognized: @code{or},
11890 @code{and}, @code{not} and @code{typep}. Here's an example:
11891
11892 @lisp
11893 (or last
11894 (typep "text/x-vcard"))
11895 @end lisp
11896
11897 @item
11898 A function: the function is called with no arguments and should return
11899 @code{nil} or non-@code{nil}. The current article is available in the
11900 buffer named by @code{gnus-article-buffer}.
11901
11902 @end enumerate
11903
11904 You may have noticed that the word @dfn{part} is used here. This refers
11905 to the fact that some messages are @acronym{MIME} multipart articles that may
11906 be divided into several parts. Articles that are not multiparts are
11907 considered to contain just a single part.
11908
11909 @vindex gnus-article-treat-types
11910 Are the treatments applied to all sorts of multipart parts? Yes, if you
11911 want to, but by default, only @samp{text/plain} parts are given the
11912 treatment. This is controlled by the @code{gnus-article-treat-types}
11913 variable, which is a list of regular expressions that are matched to the
11914 type of the part. This variable is ignored if the value of the
11915 controlling variable is a predicate list, as described above.
11916
11917 @ifinfo
11918 @c Avoid sort of redundant entries in the same section for the printed
11919 @c manual, but add them in info to allow 'i gnus-treat-foo-bar RET' or
11920 @c 'i foo-bar'.
11921 @vindex gnus-treat-buttonize
11922 @vindex gnus-treat-buttonize-head
11923 @vindex gnus-treat-capitalize-sentences
11924 @vindex gnus-treat-overstrike
11925 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-cr
11926 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-headers-in-body
11927 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-leading-blank-lines
11928 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-multiple-blank-lines
11929 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-pem
11930 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-trailing-blank-lines
11931 @vindex gnus-treat-unsplit-urls
11932 @vindex gnus-treat-wash-html
11933 @vindex gnus-treat-date
11934 @vindex gnus-treat-from-picon
11935 @vindex gnus-treat-mail-picon
11936 @vindex gnus-treat-newsgroups-picon
11937 @vindex gnus-treat-from-gravatar
11938 @vindex gnus-treat-mail-gravatar
11939 @vindex gnus-treat-display-smileys
11940 @vindex gnus-treat-body-boundary
11941 @vindex gnus-treat-display-x-face
11942 @vindex gnus-treat-display-face
11943 @vindex gnus-treat-emphasize
11944 @vindex gnus-treat-fill-article
11945 @vindex gnus-treat-fill-long-lines
11946 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-boring-headers
11947 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-citation
11948 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-citation-maybe
11949 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-headers
11950 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-signature
11951 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-banner
11952 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-list-identifiers
11953 @vindex gnus-treat-highlight-citation
11954 @vindex gnus-treat-highlight-headers
11955 @vindex gnus-treat-highlight-signature
11956 @vindex gnus-treat-play-sounds
11957 @vindex gnus-treat-x-pgp-sig
11958 @vindex gnus-treat-unfold-headers
11959 @vindex gnus-treat-fold-headers
11960 @vindex gnus-treat-fold-newsgroups
11961 @vindex gnus-treat-leading-whitespace
11962 @end ifinfo
11963
11964 The following treatment options are available. The easiest way to
11965 customize this is to examine the @code{gnus-article-treat} customization
11966 group. Values in parenthesis are suggested sensible values. Others are
11967 possible but those listed are probably sufficient for most people.
11968
11969 @table @code
11970 @item gnus-treat-buttonize (t, integer)
11971 @item gnus-treat-buttonize-head (head)
11972
11973 @xref{Article Buttons}.
11974
11975 @item gnus-treat-capitalize-sentences (t, integer)
11976 @item gnus-treat-overstrike (t, integer)
11977 @item gnus-treat-strip-cr (t, integer)
11978 @item gnus-treat-strip-headers-in-body (t, integer)
11979 @item gnus-treat-strip-leading-blank-lines (t, first, integer)
11980 @item gnus-treat-strip-multiple-blank-lines (t, integer)
11981 @item gnus-treat-strip-pem (t, last, integer)
11982 @item gnus-treat-strip-trailing-blank-lines (t, last, integer)
11983 @item gnus-treat-unsplit-urls (t, integer)
11984 @item gnus-treat-wash-html (t, integer)
11985
11986 @xref{Article Washing}.
11987
11988 @item gnus-treat-date (head)
11989
11990 This will transform/add date headers according to the
11991 @code{gnus-article-date-headers} variable. This is a list of Date
11992 headers to display. The formats available are:
11993
11994 @table @code
11995 @item ut
11996 Universal time, aka GMT, aka ZULU.
11997
11998 @item local
11999 The user's local time zone.
12000
12001 @item english
12002 A semi-readable English sentence.
12003
12004 @item lapsed
12005 The time elapsed since the message was posted.
12006
12007 @item combined-lapsed
12008 Both the original date header and a (shortened) elapsed time.
12009
12010 @item original
12011 The original date header.
12012
12013 @item iso8601
12014 ISO8601 format, i.e., ``2010-11-23T22:05:21''.
12015
12016 @item user-defined
12017 A format done according to the @code{gnus-article-time-format}
12018 variable.
12019
12020 @end table
12021
12022 @xref{Article Date}.
12023
12024 @item gnus-treat-from-picon (head)
12025 @item gnus-treat-mail-picon (head)
12026 @item gnus-treat-newsgroups-picon (head)
12027
12028 @xref{Picons}.
12029
12030 @item gnus-treat-from-gravatar (head)
12031 @item gnus-treat-mail-gravatar (head)
12032
12033 @xref{Gravatars}.
12034
12035 @item gnus-treat-display-smileys (t, integer)
12036
12037 @item gnus-treat-body-boundary (head)
12038
12039 @vindex gnus-body-boundary-delimiter
12040 Adds a delimiter between header and body, the string used as delimiter
12041 is controlled by @code{gnus-body-boundary-delimiter}.
12042
12043 @xref{Smileys}.
12044
12045 @vindex gnus-treat-display-x-face
12046 @item gnus-treat-display-x-face (head)
12047
12048 @xref{X-Face}.
12049
12050 @vindex gnus-treat-display-face
12051 @item gnus-treat-display-face (head)
12052
12053 @xref{Face}.
12054
12055 @vindex gnus-treat-emphasize
12056 @item gnus-treat-emphasize (t, head, integer)
12057 @vindex gnus-treat-fill-article
12058 @item gnus-treat-fill-article (t, integer)
12059 @vindex gnus-treat-fill-long-lines
12060 @item gnus-treat-fill-long-lines (t, integer)
12061 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-boring-headers
12062 @item gnus-treat-hide-boring-headers (head)
12063 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-citation
12064 @item gnus-treat-hide-citation (t, integer)
12065 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-citation-maybe
12066 @item gnus-treat-hide-citation-maybe (t, integer)
12067 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-headers
12068 @item gnus-treat-hide-headers (head)
12069 @vindex gnus-treat-hide-signature
12070 @item gnus-treat-hide-signature (t, last)
12071 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-banner
12072 @item gnus-treat-strip-banner (t, last)
12073 @vindex gnus-treat-strip-list-identifiers
12074 @item gnus-treat-strip-list-identifiers (head)
12075
12076 @xref{Article Hiding}.
12077
12078 @vindex gnus-treat-highlight-citation
12079 @item gnus-treat-highlight-citation (t, integer)
12080 @vindex gnus-treat-highlight-headers
12081 @item gnus-treat-highlight-headers (head)
12082 @vindex gnus-treat-highlight-signature
12083 @item gnus-treat-highlight-signature (t, last, integer)
12084
12085 @xref{Article Highlighting}.
12086
12087 @vindex gnus-treat-play-sounds
12088 @item gnus-treat-play-sounds
12089 @item gnus-treat-ansi-sequences (t)
12090 @vindex gnus-treat-x-pgp-sig
12091 @item gnus-treat-x-pgp-sig (head)
12092
12093 @vindex gnus-treat-unfold-headers
12094 @item gnus-treat-unfold-headers (head)
12095 @vindex gnus-treat-fold-headers
12096 @item gnus-treat-fold-headers (head)
12097 @vindex gnus-treat-fold-newsgroups
12098 @item gnus-treat-fold-newsgroups (head)
12099 @vindex gnus-treat-leading-whitespace
12100 @item gnus-treat-leading-whitespace (head)
12101
12102 @xref{Article Header}.
12103
12104
12105 @end table
12106
12107 @vindex gnus-part-display-hook
12108 You can, of course, write your own functions to be called from
12109 @code{gnus-part-display-hook}. The functions are called narrowed to the
12110 part, and you can do anything you like, pretty much. There is no
12111 information that you have to keep in the buffer---you can change
12112 everything.
12113
12114
12115 @node Article Keymap
12116 @section Article Keymap
12117
12118 Most of the keystrokes in the summary buffer can also be used in the
12119 article buffer. They should behave as if you typed them in the summary
12120 buffer, which means that you don't actually have to have a summary
12121 buffer displayed while reading. You can do it all from the article
12122 buffer.
12123
12124 @kindex v (Article)
12125 @cindex keys, reserved for users (Article)
12126 The key @kbd{v} is reserved for users. You can bind it to some
12127 command or better use it as a prefix key.
12128
12129 A few additional keystrokes are available:
12130
12131 @table @kbd
12132
12133 @item SPACE
12134 @kindex SPACE (Article)
12135 @findex gnus-article-next-page
12136 Scroll forwards one page (@code{gnus-article-next-page}).
12137 This is exactly the same as @kbd{h SPACE h}.
12138
12139 @item DEL
12140 @kindex DEL (Article)
12141 @findex gnus-article-prev-page
12142 Scroll backwards one page (@code{gnus-article-prev-page}).
12143 This is exactly the same as @kbd{h DEL h}.
12144
12145 @item C-c ^
12146 @kindex C-c ^ (Article)
12147 @findex gnus-article-refer-article
12148 If point is in the neighborhood of a @code{Message-ID} and you press
12149 @kbd{C-c ^}, Gnus will try to get that article from the server
12150 (@code{gnus-article-refer-article}).
12151
12152 @item C-c C-m
12153 @kindex C-c C-m (Article)
12154 @findex gnus-article-mail
12155 Send a reply to the address near point (@code{gnus-article-mail}). If
12156 given a prefix, include the mail.
12157
12158 @item s
12159 @kindex s (Article)
12160 @findex gnus-article-show-summary
12161 Reconfigure the buffers so that the summary buffer becomes visible
12162 (@code{gnus-article-show-summary}).
12163
12164 @item ?
12165 @kindex ? (Article)
12166 @findex gnus-article-describe-briefly
12167 Give a very brief description of the available keystrokes
12168 (@code{gnus-article-describe-briefly}).
12169
12170 @item TAB
12171 @kindex TAB (Article)
12172 @findex gnus-article-next-button
12173 Go to the next button, if any (@code{gnus-article-next-button}). This
12174 only makes sense if you have buttonizing turned on.
12175
12176 @item M-TAB
12177 @kindex M-TAB (Article)
12178 @findex gnus-article-prev-button
12179 Go to the previous button, if any (@code{gnus-article-prev-button}).
12180
12181 @item R
12182 @kindex R (Article)
12183 @findex gnus-article-reply-with-original
12184 Send a reply to the current article and yank the current article
12185 (@code{gnus-article-reply-with-original}). If the region is active,
12186 only yank the text in the region.
12187
12188 @item S W
12189 @kindex S W (Article)
12190 @findex gnus-article-wide-reply-with-original
12191 Send a wide reply to the current article and yank the current article
12192 (@code{gnus-article-wide-reply-with-original}). If the region is
12193 active, only yank the text in the region.
12194
12195 @item F
12196 @kindex F (Article)
12197 @findex gnus-article-followup-with-original
12198 Send a followup to the current article and yank the current article
12199 (@code{gnus-article-followup-with-original}). If the region is active,
12200 only yank the text in the region.
12201
12202
12203 @end table
12204
12205
12206 @node Misc Article
12207 @section Misc Article
12208
12209 @table @code
12210
12211 @item gnus-single-article-buffer
12212 @vindex gnus-single-article-buffer
12213 @cindex article buffers, several
12214 If non-@code{nil}, use the same article buffer for all the groups.
12215 (This is the default.) If @code{nil}, each group will have its own
12216 article buffer.
12217
12218 @item gnus-widen-article-window
12219 @cindex gnus-widen-article-window
12220 If non-@code{nil}, selecting the article buffer with the @kbd{h}
12221 command will ``widen'' the article window to take the entire frame.
12222
12223 @vindex gnus-article-decode-hook
12224 @item gnus-article-decode-hook
12225 @cindex @acronym{MIME}
12226 Hook used to decode @acronym{MIME} articles. The default value is
12227 @code{(article-decode-charset article-decode-encoded-words)}
12228
12229 @vindex gnus-article-prepare-hook
12230 @item gnus-article-prepare-hook
12231 This hook is called right after the article has been inserted into the
12232 article buffer. It is mainly intended for functions that do something
12233 depending on the contents; it should probably not be used for changing
12234 the contents of the article buffer.
12235
12236 @item gnus-article-mode-hook
12237 @vindex gnus-article-mode-hook
12238 Hook called in article mode buffers.
12239
12240 @item gnus-article-mode-syntax-table
12241 @vindex gnus-article-mode-syntax-table
12242 Syntax table used in article buffers. It is initialized from
12243 @code{text-mode-syntax-table}.
12244
12245 @vindex gnus-article-over-scroll
12246 @item gnus-article-over-scroll
12247 If non-@code{nil}, allow scrolling the article buffer even when there
12248 no more new text to scroll in. The default is @code{nil}.
12249
12250 @vindex gnus-article-mode-line-format
12251 @item gnus-article-mode-line-format
12252 This variable is a format string along the same lines as
12253 @code{gnus-summary-mode-line-format} (@pxref{Summary Buffer Mode
12254 Line}). It accepts the same format specifications as that variable,
12255 with two extensions:
12256
12257 @table @samp
12258
12259 @item w
12260 The @dfn{wash status} of the article. This is a short string with one
12261 character for each possible article wash operation that may have been
12262 performed. The characters and their meaning:
12263
12264 @table @samp
12265
12266 @item c
12267 Displayed when cited text may be hidden in the article buffer.
12268
12269 @item h
12270 Displayed when headers are hidden in the article buffer.
12271
12272 @item p
12273 Displayed when article is digitally signed or encrypted, and Gnus has
12274 hidden the security headers. (N.B. does not tell anything about
12275 security status, i.e., good or bad signature.)
12276
12277 @item s
12278 Displayed when the signature has been hidden in the Article buffer.
12279
12280 @item o
12281 Displayed when Gnus has treated overstrike characters in the article buffer.
12282
12283 @item e
12284 Displayed when Gnus has treated emphasized strings in the article buffer.
12285
12286 @end table
12287
12288 @item m
12289 The number of @acronym{MIME} parts in the article.
12290
12291 @end table
12292
12293 @vindex gnus-break-pages
12294
12295 @item gnus-break-pages
12296 Controls whether @dfn{page breaking} is to take place. If this variable
12297 is non-@code{nil}, the articles will be divided into pages whenever a
12298 page delimiter appears in the article. If this variable is @code{nil},
12299 paging will not be done.
12300
12301 @item gnus-page-delimiter
12302 @vindex gnus-page-delimiter
12303 This is the delimiter mentioned above. By default, it is @samp{^L}
12304 (formfeed).
12305
12306 @cindex IDNA
12307 @cindex internationalized domain names
12308 @vindex gnus-use-idna
12309 @item gnus-use-idna
12310 This variable controls whether Gnus performs IDNA decoding of
12311 internationalized domain names inside @samp{From}, @samp{To} and
12312 @samp{Cc} headers. @xref{IDNA, ,IDNA,message, The Message Manual},
12313 for how to compose such messages. This requires
12314 @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/libidn/, GNU Libidn}, and this
12315 variable is only enabled if you have installed it.
12316
12317 @vindex gnus-inhibit-images
12318 @item gnus-inhibit-images
12319 If this is non-@code{nil}, inhibit displaying of images inline in the
12320 article body. It is effective to images that are in articles as
12321 @acronym{MIME} parts, and images in @acronym{HTML} articles rendered
12322 when @code{mm-text-html-renderer} (@pxref{Display Customization,
12323 ,Display Customization, emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME Manual}) is
12324 @code{shr} or @code{gnus-w3m}.
12325
12326 @end table
12327
12328
12329 @node Composing Messages
12330 @chapter Composing Messages
12331 @cindex composing messages
12332 @cindex messages
12333 @cindex mail
12334 @cindex sending mail
12335 @cindex reply
12336 @cindex followup
12337 @cindex post
12338 @cindex using gpg
12339 @cindex using s/mime
12340 @cindex using smime
12341
12342 @kindex C-c C-c (Post)
12343 All commands for posting and mailing will put you in a message buffer
12344 where you can edit the article all you like, before you send the
12345 article by pressing @kbd{C-c C-c}. @xref{Top, , Overview, message,
12346 Message Manual}. Where the message will be posted/mailed to depends
12347 on your setup (@pxref{Posting Server}).
12348
12349 @menu
12350 * Mail:: Mailing and replying.
12351 * Posting Server:: What server should you post and mail via?
12352 * POP before SMTP:: You cannot send a mail unless you read a mail.
12353 * Mail and Post:: Mailing and posting at the same time.
12354 * Archived Messages:: Where Gnus stores the messages you've sent.
12355 * Posting Styles:: An easier way to specify who you are.
12356 * Drafts:: Postponing messages and rejected messages.
12357 * Rejected Articles:: What happens if the server doesn't like your article?
12358 * Signing and encrypting:: How to compose secure messages.
12359 @end menu
12360
12361 Also @pxref{Canceling and Superseding} for information on how to
12362 remove articles you shouldn't have posted.
12363
12364
12365 @node Mail
12366 @section Mail
12367
12368 Variables for customizing outgoing mail:
12369
12370 @table @code
12371 @item gnus-uu-digest-headers
12372 @vindex gnus-uu-digest-headers
12373 List of regexps to match headers included in digested messages. The
12374 headers will be included in the sequence they are matched. If
12375 @code{nil} include all headers.
12376
12377 @item gnus-add-to-list
12378 @vindex gnus-add-to-list
12379 If non-@code{nil}, add a @code{to-list} group parameter to mail groups
12380 that have none when you do a @kbd{a}.
12381
12382 @item gnus-confirm-mail-reply-to-news
12383 @vindex gnus-confirm-mail-reply-to-news
12384 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus will ask you for a confirmation when you are
12385 about to reply to news articles by mail. If it is @code{nil}, nothing
12386 interferes in what you want to do. This can also be a function
12387 receiving the group name as the only parameter which should return
12388 non-@code{nil} if a confirmation is needed, or a regular expression
12389 matching group names, where confirmation should be asked for.
12390
12391 If you find yourself never wanting to reply to mail, but occasionally
12392 press @kbd{R} anyway, this variable might be for you.
12393
12394 @item gnus-confirm-treat-mail-like-news
12395 @vindex gnus-confirm-treat-mail-like-news
12396 If non-@code{nil}, Gnus also requests confirmation according to
12397 @code{gnus-confirm-mail-reply-to-news} when replying to mail. This is
12398 useful for treating mailing lists like newsgroups.
12399
12400 @end table
12401
12402
12403 @node Posting Server
12404 @section Posting Server
12405
12406 When you press those magical @kbd{C-c C-c} keys to ship off your latest
12407 (extremely intelligent, of course) article, where does it go?
12408
12409 Thank you for asking. I hate you.
12410
12411 It can be quite complicated.
12412
12413 @vindex gnus-post-method
12414 When posting news, Message usually invokes @code{message-send-news}
12415 (@pxref{News Variables, , News Variables, message, Message Manual}).
12416 Normally, Gnus will post using the same select method as you're
12417 reading from (which might be convenient if you're reading lots of
12418 groups from different private servers). However. If the server
12419 you're reading from doesn't allow posting, just reading, you probably
12420 want to use some other server to post your (extremely intelligent and
12421 fabulously interesting) articles. You can then set the
12422 @code{gnus-post-method} to some other method:
12423
12424 @lisp
12425 (setq gnus-post-method '(nnspool ""))
12426 @end lisp
12427
12428 Now, if you've done this, and then this server rejects your article, or
12429 this server is down, what do you do then? To override this variable you
12430 can use a non-zero prefix to the @kbd{C-c C-c} command to force using
12431 the ``current'' server, to get back the default behavior, for posting.
12432
12433 If you give a zero prefix (i.e., @kbd{C-u 0 C-c C-c}) to that command,
12434 Gnus will prompt you for what method to use for posting.
12435
12436 You can also set @code{gnus-post-method} to a list of select methods.
12437 If that's the case, Gnus will always prompt you for what method to use
12438 for posting.
12439
12440 Finally, if you want to always post using the native select method,
12441 you can set this variable to @code{native}.
12442
12443 @vindex message-send-mail-function
12444 When sending mail, Message invokes the function specified by the
12445 variable @code{message-send-mail-function}. Gnus tries to set it to a
12446 value suitable for your system.
12447 @xref{Mail Variables, ,Mail Variables,message,Message manual}, for more
12448 information.
12449
12450
12451 @node POP before SMTP
12452 @section POP before SMTP
12453 @cindex pop before smtp
12454 @findex mail-source-touch-pop
12455
12456 Does your @acronym{ISP} use @acronym{POP}-before-@acronym{SMTP}
12457 authentication? This authentication method simply requires you to
12458 contact the @acronym{POP} server before sending email. To do that,
12459 put the following lines in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
12460
12461 @lisp
12462 (add-hook 'message-send-mail-hook 'mail-source-touch-pop)
12463 @end lisp
12464
12465 @noindent
12466 The @code{mail-source-touch-pop} function does @acronym{POP}
12467 authentication according to the value of @code{mail-sources} without
12468 fetching mails, just before sending a mail. @xref{Mail Sources}.
12469
12470 If you have two or more @acronym{POP} mail servers set in
12471 @code{mail-sources}, you may want to specify one of them to
12472 @code{mail-source-primary-source} as the @acronym{POP} mail server to be
12473 used for the @acronym{POP}-before-@acronym{SMTP} authentication. If it
12474 is your primary @acronym{POP} mail server (i.e., you are fetching mails
12475 mainly from that server), you can set it permanently as follows:
12476
12477 @lisp
12478 (setq mail-source-primary-source
12479 '(pop :server "pop3.mail.server"
12480 :password "secret"))
12481 @end lisp
12482
12483 @noindent
12484 Otherwise, bind it dynamically only when performing the
12485 @acronym{POP}-before-@acronym{SMTP} authentication as follows:
12486
12487 @lisp
12488 (add-hook 'message-send-mail-hook
12489 (lambda ()
12490 (let ((mail-source-primary-source
12491 '(pop :server "pop3.mail.server"
12492 :password "secret")))
12493 (mail-source-touch-pop))))
12494 @end lisp
12495
12496
12497 @node Mail and Post
12498 @section Mail and Post
12499
12500 Here's a list of variables relevant to both mailing and
12501 posting:
12502
12503 @table @code
12504 @item gnus-mailing-list-groups
12505 @findex gnus-mailing-list-groups
12506 @cindex mailing lists
12507
12508 If your news server offers groups that are really mailing lists
12509 gatewayed to the @acronym{NNTP} server, you can read those groups without
12510 problems, but you can't post/followup to them without some difficulty.
12511 One solution is to add a @code{to-address} to the group parameters
12512 (@pxref{Group Parameters}). An easier thing to do is set the
12513 @code{gnus-mailing-list-groups} to a regexp that matches the groups that
12514 really are mailing lists. Then, at least, followups to the mailing
12515 lists will work most of the time. Posting to these groups (@kbd{a}) is
12516 still a pain, though.
12517
12518 @item gnus-user-agent
12519 @vindex gnus-user-agent
12520 @cindex User-Agent
12521
12522 This variable controls which information should be exposed in the
12523 User-Agent header. It can be a list of symbols or a string. Valid
12524 symbols are @code{gnus} (show Gnus version) and @code{emacs} (show Emacs
12525 version). In addition to the Emacs version, you can add @code{codename}
12526 (show (S)XEmacs codename) or either @code{config} (show system
12527 configuration) or @code{type} (show system type). If you set it to a
12528 string, be sure to use a valid format, see RFC 2616.
12529
12530 @end table
12531
12532 You may want to do spell-checking on messages that you send out. Or, if
12533 you don't want to spell-check by hand, you could add automatic
12534 spell-checking via the @code{ispell} package:
12535
12536 @cindex ispell
12537 @findex ispell-message
12538 @lisp
12539 (add-hook 'message-send-hook 'ispell-message)
12540 @end lisp
12541
12542 If you want to change the @code{ispell} dictionary based on what group
12543 you're in, you could say something like the following:
12544
12545 @lisp
12546 (add-hook 'gnus-select-group-hook
12547 (lambda ()
12548 (cond
12549 ((string-match
12550 "^de\\." (gnus-group-real-name gnus-newsgroup-name))
12551 (ispell-change-dictionary "deutsch"))
12552 (t
12553 (ispell-change-dictionary "english")))))
12554 @end lisp
12555
12556 Modify to suit your needs.
12557
12558 @vindex gnus-message-highlight-citation
12559 If @code{gnus-message-highlight-citation} is @code{t}, different levels of
12560 citations are highlighted like in Gnus article buffers also in message
12561 mode buffers.
12562
12563 @node Archived Messages
12564 @section Archived Messages
12565 @cindex archived messages
12566 @cindex sent messages
12567
12568 Gnus provides a few different methods for storing the mail and news you
12569 send. The default method is to use the @dfn{archive virtual server} to
12570 store the messages. If you want to disable this completely, the
12571 @code{gnus-message-archive-group} variable should be @code{nil}. The
12572 default is @code{"sent.%Y-%m"}, which gives you one archive group per month.
12573
12574 For archiving interesting messages in a group you read, see the
12575 @kbd{B c} (@code{gnus-summary-copy-article}) command (@pxref{Mail
12576 Group Commands}).
12577
12578 @vindex gnus-message-archive-method
12579 @code{gnus-message-archive-method} says what virtual server Gnus is to
12580 use to store sent messages. The default is @code{"archive"}, and when
12581 actually being used it is expanded into:
12582
12583 @lisp
12584 (nnfolder "archive"
12585 (nnfolder-directory "~/Mail/archive")
12586 (nnfolder-active-file "~/Mail/archive/active")
12587 (nnfolder-get-new-mail nil)
12588 (nnfolder-inhibit-expiry t))
12589 @end lisp
12590
12591 @quotation
12592 @vindex gnus-update-message-archive-method
12593 Note: a server like this is saved in the @file{~/.newsrc.eld} file first
12594 so that it may be used as a real method of the server which is named
12595 @code{"archive"} (that is, for the case where
12596 @code{gnus-message-archive-method} is set to @code{"archive"}) ever
12597 since. If it once has been saved, it will never be updated by default
12598 even if you change the value of @code{gnus-message-archive-method}
12599 afterward. Therefore, the server @code{"archive"} doesn't necessarily
12600 mean the @code{nnfolder} server like this at all times. If you want the
12601 saved method to reflect always the value of
12602 @code{gnus-message-archive-method}, set the
12603 @code{gnus-update-message-archive-method} variable to a non-@code{nil}
12604 value. The default value of this variable is @code{nil}.
12605 @end quotation
12606
12607 You can, however, use any mail select method (@code{nnml},
12608 @code{nnmbox}, etc.). @code{nnfolder} is a quite likable select method
12609 for doing this sort of thing, though. If you don't like the default
12610 directory chosen, you could say something like:
12611
12612 @lisp
12613 (setq gnus-message-archive-method
12614 '(nnfolder "archive"
12615 (nnfolder-inhibit-expiry t)
12616 (nnfolder-active-file "~/News/sent-mail/active")
12617 (nnfolder-directory "~/News/sent-mail/")))
12618 @end lisp
12619
12620 @vindex gnus-message-archive-group
12621 @cindex Gcc
12622 Gnus will insert @code{Gcc} headers in all outgoing messages that point
12623 to one or more group(s) on that server. Which group to use is
12624 determined by the @code{gnus-message-archive-group} variable.
12625
12626 This variable can be used to do the following:
12627
12628 @table @asis
12629 @item a string
12630 Messages will be saved in that group.
12631
12632 Note that you can include a select method in the group name, then the
12633 message will not be stored in the select method given by
12634 @code{gnus-message-archive-method}, but in the select method specified
12635 by the group name, instead. Suppose @code{gnus-message-archive-method}
12636 has the default value shown above. Then setting
12637 @code{gnus-message-archive-group} to @code{"foo"} means that outgoing
12638 messages are stored in @samp{nnfolder+archive:foo}, but if you use the
12639 value @code{"nnml:foo"}, then outgoing messages will be stored in
12640 @samp{nnml:foo}.
12641
12642 @item a list of strings
12643 Messages will be saved in all those groups.
12644
12645 @item an alist of regexps, functions and forms
12646 When a key ``matches'', the result is used.
12647
12648 @item @code{nil}
12649 No message archiving will take place.
12650 @end table
12651
12652 Let's illustrate:
12653
12654 Just saving to a single group called @samp{MisK}:
12655 @lisp
12656 (setq gnus-message-archive-group "MisK")
12657 @end lisp
12658
12659 Saving to two groups, @samp{MisK} and @samp{safe}:
12660 @lisp
12661 (setq gnus-message-archive-group '("MisK" "safe"))
12662 @end lisp
12663
12664 Save to different groups based on what group you are in:
12665 @lisp
12666 (setq gnus-message-archive-group
12667 '(("^alt" "sent-to-alt")
12668 ("mail" "sent-to-mail")
12669 (".*" "sent-to-misc")))
12670 @end lisp
12671
12672 More complex stuff:
12673 @lisp
12674 (setq gnus-message-archive-group
12675 '((if (message-news-p)
12676 "misc-news"
12677 "misc-mail")))
12678 @end lisp
12679
12680 How about storing all news messages in one file, but storing all mail
12681 messages in one file per month:
12682
12683 @lisp
12684 (setq gnus-message-archive-group
12685 '((if (message-news-p)
12686 "misc-news"
12687 (concat "mail." (format-time-string "%Y-%m")))))
12688 @end lisp
12689
12690 Now, when you send a message off, it will be stored in the appropriate
12691 group. (If you want to disable storing for just one particular message,
12692 you can just remove the @code{Gcc} header that has been inserted.) The
12693 archive group will appear in the group buffer the next time you start
12694 Gnus, or the next time you press @kbd{F} in the group buffer. You can
12695 enter it and read the articles in it just like you'd read any other
12696 group. If the group gets really big and annoying, you can simply rename
12697 if (using @kbd{G r} in the group buffer) to something
12698 nice---@samp{misc-mail-september-1995}, or whatever. New messages will
12699 continue to be stored in the old (now empty) group.
12700
12701 @table @code
12702 @item gnus-gcc-mark-as-read
12703 @vindex gnus-gcc-mark-as-read
12704 If non-@code{nil}, automatically mark @code{Gcc} articles as read.
12705
12706 @item gnus-gcc-externalize-attachments
12707 @vindex gnus-gcc-externalize-attachments
12708 If @code{nil}, attach files as normal parts in Gcc copies; if a regexp
12709 and matches the Gcc group name, attach files as external parts; if it is
12710 @code{all}, attach local files as external parts; if it is other
12711 non-@code{nil}, the behavior is the same as @code{all}, but it may be
12712 changed in the future.
12713
12714 @item gnus-gcc-self-resent-messages
12715 @vindex gnus-gcc-self-resent-messages
12716 Like the @code{gcc-self} group parameter, applied only for unmodified
12717 messages that @code{gnus-summary-resend-message} (@pxref{Summary Mail
12718 Commands}) resends. Non-@code{nil} value of this variable takes
12719 precedence over any existing @code{Gcc} header.
12720
12721 If this is @code{none}, no @code{Gcc} copy will be made. If this is
12722 @code{t}, messages resent will be @code{Gcc} copied to the current
12723 group. If this is a string, it specifies a group to which resent
12724 messages will be @code{Gcc} copied. If this is @code{nil}, @code{Gcc}
12725 will be done according to existing @code{Gcc} header(s), if any. If
12726 this is @code{no-gcc-self}, that is the default, resent messages will be
12727 @code{Gcc} copied to groups that existing @code{Gcc} header specifies,
12728 except for the current group.
12729
12730 @item gnus-gcc-pre-body-encode-hook
12731 @vindex gnus-gcc-pre-body-encode-hook
12732 @itemx gnus-gcc-post-body-encode-hook
12733 @vindex gnus-gcc-post-body-encode-hook
12734
12735 These hooks are run before/after encoding the message body of the Gcc
12736 copy of a sent message. The current buffer (when the hook is run)
12737 contains the message including the message header. Changes made to
12738 the message will only affect the Gcc copy, but not the original
12739 message. You can use these hooks to edit the copy (and influence
12740 subsequent transformations), e.g., remove MML secure tags
12741 (@pxref{Signing and encrypting}).
12742
12743 @end table
12744
12745
12746 @node Posting Styles
12747 @section Posting Styles
12748 @cindex posting styles
12749 @cindex styles
12750
12751 All them variables, they make my head swim.
12752
12753 So what if you want a different @code{Organization} and signature based
12754 on what groups you post to? And you post both from your home machine
12755 and your work machine, and you want different @code{From} lines, and so
12756 on?
12757
12758 @vindex gnus-posting-styles
12759 One way to do stuff like that is to write clever hooks that change the
12760 variables you need to have changed. That's a bit boring, so somebody
12761 came up with the bright idea of letting the user specify these things in
12762 a handy alist. Here's an example of a @code{gnus-posting-styles}
12763 variable:
12764
12765 @lisp
12766 ((".*"
12767 (signature "Peace and happiness")
12768 (organization "What me?"))
12769 ("^comp"
12770 (signature "Death to everybody"))
12771 ("comp.emacs.i-love-it"
12772 (organization "Emacs is it")))
12773 @end lisp
12774
12775 As you might surmise from this example, this alist consists of several
12776 @dfn{styles}. Each style will be applicable if the first element
12777 ``matches'', in some form or other. The entire alist will be iterated
12778 over, from the beginning towards the end, and each match will be
12779 applied, which means that attributes in later styles that match override
12780 the same attributes in earlier matching styles. So
12781 @samp{comp.programming.literate} will have the @samp{Death to everybody}
12782 signature and the @samp{What me?} @code{Organization} header.
12783
12784 The first element in each style is called the @code{match}. If it's a
12785 string, then Gnus will try to regexp match it against the group name.
12786 If it is the form @code{(header @var{match} @var{regexp})}, then Gnus
12787 will look in the original article for a header whose name is
12788 @var{match} and compare that @var{regexp}. @var{match} and
12789 @var{regexp} are strings. (The original article is the one you are
12790 replying or following up to. If you are not composing a reply or a
12791 followup, then there is nothing to match against.) If the
12792 @code{match} is a function symbol, that function will be called with
12793 no arguments. If it's a variable symbol, then the variable will be
12794 referenced. If it's a list, then that list will be @code{eval}ed. In
12795 any case, if this returns a non-@code{nil} value, then the style is
12796 said to @dfn{match}.
12797
12798 Each style may contain an arbitrary amount of @dfn{attributes}. Each
12799 attribute consists of a @code{(@var{name} @var{value})} pair. In
12800 addition, you can also use the @code{(@var{name} :file @var{value})}
12801 form or the @code{(@var{name} :value @var{value})} form. Where
12802 @code{:file} signifies @var{value} represents a file name and its
12803 contents should be used as the attribute value, @code{:value} signifies
12804 @var{value} does not represent a file name explicitly. The attribute
12805 name can be one of:
12806
12807 @itemize @bullet
12808 @item @code{signature}
12809 @item @code{signature-file}
12810 @item @code{x-face-file}
12811 @item @code{address}, overriding @code{user-mail-address}
12812 @item @code{name}, overriding @code{(user-full-name)}
12813 @item @code{body}
12814 @end itemize
12815
12816 Note that the @code{signature-file} attribute honors the variable
12817 @code{message-signature-directory}.
12818
12819 The attribute name can also be a string or a symbol. In that case,
12820 this will be used as a header name, and the value will be inserted in
12821 the headers of the article; if the value is @code{nil}, the header
12822 name will be removed. If the attribute name is @code{eval}, the form
12823 is evaluated, and the result is thrown away.
12824
12825 The attribute value can be a string, a function with zero arguments
12826 (the return value will be used), a variable (its value will be used)
12827 or a list (it will be @code{eval}ed and the return value will be
12828 used). The functions and sexps are called/@code{eval}ed in the
12829 message buffer that is being set up. The headers of the current
12830 article are available through the @code{message-reply-headers}
12831 variable, which is a vector of the following headers: number subject
12832 from date id references chars lines xref extra.
12833
12834 In the case of a string value, if the @code{match} is a regular
12835 expression, or if it takes the form @code{(header @var{match}
12836 @var{regexp})}, a @samp{gnus-match-substitute-replacement} is proceed
12837 on the value to replace the positional parameters @samp{\@var{n}} by
12838 the corresponding parenthetical matches (see @xref{Replacing Match,,
12839 Replacing the Text that Matched, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference
12840 Manual}.)
12841
12842 @vindex message-reply-headers
12843
12844 If you wish to check whether the message you are about to compose is
12845 meant to be a news article or a mail message, you can check the values
12846 of the @code{message-news-p} and @code{message-mail-p} functions.
12847
12848 @findex message-mail-p
12849 @findex message-news-p
12850
12851 So here's a new example:
12852
12853 @lisp
12854 (setq gnus-posting-styles
12855 '((".*"
12856 (signature-file "~/.signature")
12857 (name "User Name")
12858 (x-face-file "~/.xface")
12859 (x-url (getenv "WWW_HOME"))
12860 (organization "People's Front Against MWM"))
12861 ("^rec.humor"
12862 (signature my-funny-signature-randomizer))
12863 ((equal (system-name) "gnarly") ;; @r{A form}
12864 (signature my-quote-randomizer))
12865 (message-news-p ;; @r{A function symbol}
12866 (signature my-news-signature))
12867 (window-system ;; @r{A value symbol}
12868 ("X-Window-System" (format "%s" window-system)))
12869 ;; @r{If I'm replying to Larsi, set the Organization header.}
12870 ((header "from" "larsi.*org")
12871 (Organization "Somewhere, Inc."))
12872 ;; @r{Reply to a message from the same subaddress the message}
12873 ;; @r{was sent to.}
12874 ((header "x-original-to" "me\\(\\+.+\\)@@example.org")
12875 (address "me\\1@@example.org"))
12876 ((posting-from-work-p) ;; @r{A user defined function}
12877 (signature-file "~/.work-signature")
12878 (address "user@@bar.foo")
12879 (body "You are fired.\n\nSincerely, your boss.")
12880 ("X-Message-SMTP-Method" "smtp smtp.example.org 587")
12881 (organization "Important Work, Inc"))
12882 ("nnml:.*"
12883 (From (with-current-buffer gnus-article-buffer
12884 (message-fetch-field "to"))))
12885 ("^nn.+:"
12886 (signature-file "~/.mail-signature"))))
12887 @end lisp
12888
12889 The @samp{nnml:.*} rule means that you use the @code{To} address as the
12890 @code{From} address in all your outgoing replies, which might be handy
12891 if you fill many roles.
12892 You may also use @code{message-alternative-emails} instead.
12893 @xref{Message Headers, ,Message Headers, message, Message Manual}.
12894
12895 Of particular interest in the ``work-mail'' style is the
12896 @samp{X-Message-SMTP-Method} header. It specifies how to send the
12897 outgoing email. You may want to sent certain emails through certain
12898 @acronym{SMTP} servers due to company policies, for instance.
12899 @xref{Mail Variables, ,Message Variables, message, Message Manual}.
12900
12901
12902 @node Drafts
12903 @section Drafts
12904 @cindex drafts
12905
12906 If you are writing a message (mail or news) and suddenly remember that
12907 you have a steak in the oven (or some pesto in the food processor, you
12908 craaazy vegetarians), you'll probably wish there was a method to save
12909 the message you are writing so that you can continue editing it some
12910 other day, and send it when you feel its finished.
12911
12912 Well, don't worry about it. Whenever you start composing a message of
12913 some sort using the Gnus mail and post commands, the buffer you get will
12914 automatically associate to an article in a special @dfn{draft} group.
12915 If you save the buffer the normal way (@kbd{C-x C-s}, for instance), the
12916 article will be saved there. (Auto-save files also go to the draft
12917 group.)
12918
12919 @cindex nndraft
12920 @vindex nndraft-directory
12921 The draft group is a special group (which is implemented as an
12922 @code{nndraft} group, if you absolutely have to know) called
12923 @samp{nndraft:drafts}. The variable @code{nndraft-directory} says where
12924 @code{nndraft} is to store its files. What makes this group special is
12925 that you can't tick any articles in it or mark any articles as
12926 read---all articles in the group are permanently unread.
12927
12928 If the group doesn't exist, it will be created and you'll be subscribed
12929 to it. The only way to make it disappear from the Group buffer is to
12930 unsubscribe it. The special properties of the draft group comes from
12931 a group property (@pxref{Group Parameters}), and if lost the group
12932 behaves like any other group. This means the commands below will not
12933 be available. To restore the special properties of the group, the
12934 simplest way is to kill the group, using @kbd{C-k}, and restart
12935 Gnus. The group is automatically created again with the
12936 correct parameters. The content of the group is not lost.
12937
12938 @c @findex gnus-dissociate-buffer-from-draft
12939 @c @kindex C-c M-d (Mail)
12940 @c @kindex C-c M-d (Post)
12941 @c @findex gnus-associate-buffer-with-draft
12942 @c @kindex C-c C-d (Mail)
12943 @c @kindex C-c C-d (Post)
12944 @c If you're writing some super-secret message that you later want to
12945 @c encode with PGP before sending, you may wish to turn the auto-saving
12946 @c (and association with the draft group) off. You never know who might be
12947 @c interested in reading all your extremely valuable and terribly horrible
12948 @c and interesting secrets. The @kbd{C-c M-d}
12949 @c (@code{gnus-dissociate-buffer-from-draft}) command does that for you.
12950 @c If you change your mind and want to turn the auto-saving back on again,
12951 @c @kbd{C-c C-d} (@code{gnus-associate-buffer-with-draft} does that.
12952 @c
12953 @c @vindex gnus-use-draft
12954 @c To leave association with the draft group off by default, set
12955 @c @code{gnus-use-draft} to @code{nil}. It is @code{t} by default.
12956
12957 @findex gnus-draft-edit-message
12958 @kindex D e (Draft)
12959 When you want to continue editing the article, you simply enter the
12960 draft group and push @kbd{D e} (@code{gnus-draft-edit-message}) to do
12961 that. You will be placed in a buffer where you left off.
12962
12963 Rejected articles will also be put in this draft group (@pxref{Rejected
12964 Articles}).
12965
12966 @findex gnus-draft-send-all-messages
12967 @kindex D s (Draft)
12968 @findex gnus-draft-send-message
12969 @kindex D S (Draft)
12970 If you have lots of rejected messages you want to post (or mail) without
12971 doing further editing, you can use the @kbd{D s} command
12972 (@code{gnus-draft-send-message}). This command understands the
12973 process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}). The @kbd{D S}
12974 command (@code{gnus-draft-send-all-messages}) will ship off all messages
12975 in the buffer.
12976
12977 @findex gnus-draft-toggle-sending
12978 @kindex D t (Draft)
12979 If you have some messages that you wish not to send, you can use the
12980 @kbd{D t} (@code{gnus-draft-toggle-sending}) command to mark the message
12981 as unsendable. This is a toggling command.
12982
12983 Finally, if you want to delete a draft, use the normal @kbd{B DEL}
12984 command (@pxref{Mail Group Commands}).
12985
12986
12987 @node Rejected Articles
12988 @section Rejected Articles
12989 @cindex rejected articles
12990
12991 Sometimes a news server will reject an article. Perhaps the server
12992 doesn't like your face. Perhaps it just feels miserable. Perhaps
12993 @emph{there be demons}. Perhaps you have included too much cited text.
12994 Perhaps the disk is full. Perhaps the server is down.
12995
12996 These situations are, of course, totally beyond the control of Gnus.
12997 (Gnus, of course, loves the way you look, always feels great, has angels
12998 fluttering around inside of it, doesn't care about how much cited text
12999 you include, never runs full and never goes down.) So Gnus saves these
13000 articles until some later time when the server feels better.
13001
13002 The rejected articles will automatically be put in a special draft group
13003 (@pxref{Drafts}). When the server comes back up again, you'd then
13004 typically enter that group and send all the articles off.
13005
13006 @node Signing and encrypting
13007 @section Signing and encrypting
13008 @cindex using gpg
13009 @cindex using s/mime
13010 @cindex using smime
13011
13012 Gnus can digitally sign and encrypt your messages, using vanilla
13013 @acronym{PGP} format or @acronym{PGP/MIME} or @acronym{S/MIME}. For
13014 decoding such messages, see the @code{mm-verify-option} and
13015 @code{mm-decrypt-option} options (@pxref{Security}).
13016
13017 @vindex gnus-message-replysign
13018 @vindex gnus-message-replyencrypt
13019 @vindex gnus-message-replysignencrypted
13020 Often, you would like to sign replies to people who send you signed
13021 messages. Even more often, you might want to encrypt messages which
13022 are in reply to encrypted messages. Gnus offers
13023 @code{gnus-message-replysign} to enable the former, and
13024 @code{gnus-message-replyencrypt} for the latter. In addition, setting
13025 @code{gnus-message-replysignencrypted} (on by default) will sign
13026 automatically encrypted messages.
13027
13028 Instructing @acronym{MML} to perform security operations on a
13029 @acronym{MIME} part is done using the @kbd{C-c C-m s} key map for
13030 signing and the @kbd{C-c C-m c} key map for encryption, as follows.
13031
13032 @table @kbd
13033
13034 @item C-c C-m s s
13035 @kindex C-c C-m s s (Message)
13036 @findex mml-secure-message-sign-smime
13037
13038 Digitally sign current message using @acronym{S/MIME}.
13039
13040 @item C-c C-m s o
13041 @kindex C-c C-m s o (Message)
13042 @findex mml-secure-message-sign-pgp
13043
13044 Digitally sign current message using @acronym{PGP}.
13045
13046 @item C-c C-m s p
13047 @kindex C-c C-m s p (Message)
13048 @findex mml-secure-message-sign-pgp
13049
13050 Digitally sign current message using @acronym{PGP/MIME}.
13051
13052 @item C-c C-m c s
13053 @kindex C-c C-m c s (Message)
13054 @findex mml-secure-message-encrypt-smime
13055
13056 Digitally encrypt current message using @acronym{S/MIME}.
13057
13058 @item C-c C-m c o
13059 @kindex C-c C-m c o (Message)
13060 @findex mml-secure-message-encrypt-pgp
13061
13062 Digitally encrypt current message using @acronym{PGP}.
13063
13064 @item C-c C-m c p
13065 @kindex C-c C-m c p (Message)
13066 @findex mml-secure-message-encrypt-pgpmime
13067
13068 Digitally encrypt current message using @acronym{PGP/MIME}.
13069
13070 @item C-c C-m C-n
13071 @kindex C-c C-m C-n (Message)
13072 @findex mml-unsecure-message
13073 Remove security related @acronym{MML} tags from message.
13074
13075 @end table
13076
13077 @xref{Security, ,Security, message, Message Manual}, for more information.
13078
13079 @node Select Methods
13080 @chapter Select Methods
13081 @cindex foreign groups
13082 @cindex select methods
13083
13084 A @dfn{foreign group} is a group not read by the usual (or
13085 default) means. It could be, for instance, a group from a different
13086 @acronym{NNTP} server, it could be a virtual group, or it could be your own
13087 personal mail group.
13088
13089 A foreign group (or any group, really) is specified by a @dfn{name} and
13090 a @dfn{select method}. To take the latter first, a select method is a
13091 list where the first element says what back end to use (e.g., @code{nntp},
13092 @code{nnspool}, @code{nnml}) and the second element is the @dfn{server
13093 name}. There may be additional elements in the select method, where the
13094 value may have special meaning for the back end in question.
13095
13096 One could say that a select method defines a @dfn{virtual server}---so
13097 we do just that (@pxref{Server Buffer}).
13098
13099 The @dfn{name} of the group is the name the back end will recognize the
13100 group as.
13101
13102 For instance, the group @samp{soc.motss} on the @acronym{NNTP} server
13103 @samp{some.where.edu} will have the name @samp{soc.motss} and select
13104 method @code{(nntp "some.where.edu")}. Gnus will call this group
13105 @samp{nntp+some.where.edu:soc.motss}, even though the @code{nntp}
13106 back end just knows this group as @samp{soc.motss}.
13107
13108 The different methods all have their peculiarities, of course.
13109
13110 @menu
13111 * Server Buffer:: Making and editing virtual servers.
13112 * Getting News:: Reading USENET news with Gnus.
13113 * Using IMAP:: Reading mail from @acronym{IMAP}.
13114 * Getting Mail:: Reading your personal mail with Gnus.
13115 * Browsing the Web:: Getting messages from a plethora of Web sources.
13116 * Other Sources:: Reading directories, files.
13117 * Combined Groups:: Combining groups into one group.
13118 * Email Based Diary:: Using mails to manage diary events in Gnus.
13119 * Gnus Unplugged:: Reading news and mail offline.
13120 @end menu
13121
13122
13123 @node Server Buffer
13124 @section Server Buffer
13125
13126 Traditionally, a @dfn{server} is a machine or a piece of software that
13127 one connects to, and then requests information from. Gnus does not
13128 connect directly to any real servers, but does all transactions through
13129 one back end or other. But that's just putting one layer more between
13130 the actual media and Gnus, so we might just as well say that each
13131 back end represents a virtual server.
13132
13133 For instance, the @code{nntp} back end may be used to connect to several
13134 different actual @acronym{NNTP} servers, or, perhaps, to many different ports
13135 on the same actual @acronym{NNTP} server. You tell Gnus which back end to
13136 use, and what parameters to set by specifying a @dfn{select method}.
13137
13138 These select method specifications can sometimes become quite
13139 complicated---say, for instance, that you want to read from the
13140 @acronym{NNTP} server @samp{news.funet.fi} on port number 13, which
13141 hangs if queried for @acronym{NOV} headers and has a buggy select. Ahem.
13142 Anyway, if you had to specify that for each group that used this
13143 server, that would be too much work, so Gnus offers a way of naming
13144 select methods, which is what you do in the server buffer.
13145
13146 To enter the server buffer, use the @kbd{^}
13147 (@code{gnus-group-enter-server-mode}) command in the group buffer.
13148
13149 @menu
13150 * Server Buffer Format:: You can customize the look of this buffer.
13151 * Server Commands:: Commands to manipulate servers.
13152 * Example Methods:: Examples server specifications.
13153 * Creating a Virtual Server:: An example session.
13154 * Server Variables:: Which variables to set.
13155 * Servers and Methods:: You can use server names as select methods.
13156 * Unavailable Servers:: Some servers you try to contact may be down.
13157 @end menu
13158
13159 @vindex gnus-server-mode-hook
13160 @code{gnus-server-mode-hook} is run when creating the server buffer.
13161
13162
13163 @node Server Buffer Format
13164 @subsection Server Buffer Format
13165 @cindex server buffer format
13166
13167 @vindex gnus-server-line-format
13168 You can change the look of the server buffer lines by changing the
13169 @code{gnus-server-line-format} variable. This is a @code{format}-like
13170 variable, with some simple extensions:
13171
13172 @table @samp
13173
13174 @item h
13175 How the news is fetched---the back end name.
13176
13177 @item n
13178 The name of this server.
13179
13180 @item w
13181 Where the news is to be fetched from---the address.
13182
13183 @item s
13184 The opened/closed/denied status of the server.
13185
13186 @item a
13187 Whether this server is agentized.
13188 @end table
13189
13190 @vindex gnus-server-mode-line-format
13191 The mode line can also be customized by using the
13192 @code{gnus-server-mode-line-format} variable (@pxref{Mode Line
13193 Formatting}). The following specs are understood:
13194
13195 @table @samp
13196 @item S
13197 Server name.
13198
13199 @item M
13200 Server method.
13201 @end table
13202
13203 Also @pxref{Formatting Variables}.
13204
13205
13206 @node Server Commands
13207 @subsection Server Commands
13208 @cindex server commands
13209
13210 @table @kbd
13211
13212 @item v
13213 @kindex v (Server)
13214 @cindex keys, reserved for users (Server)
13215 The key @kbd{v} is reserved for users. You can bind it to some
13216 command or better use it as a prefix key.
13217
13218 @item a
13219 @kindex a (Server)
13220 @findex gnus-server-add-server
13221 Add a new server (@code{gnus-server-add-server}).
13222
13223 @item e
13224 @kindex e (Server)
13225 @findex gnus-server-edit-server
13226 Edit a server (@code{gnus-server-edit-server}).
13227
13228 @item S
13229 @kindex S (Server)
13230 @findex gnus-server-show-server
13231 Show the definition of a server (@code{gnus-server-show-server}).
13232
13233 @item SPACE
13234 @kindex SPACE (Server)
13235 @findex gnus-server-read-server
13236 Browse the current server (@code{gnus-server-read-server}).
13237
13238 @item q
13239 @kindex q (Server)
13240 @findex gnus-server-exit
13241 Return to the group buffer (@code{gnus-server-exit}).
13242
13243 @item k
13244 @kindex k (Server)
13245 @findex gnus-server-kill-server
13246 Kill the current server (@code{gnus-server-kill-server}).
13247
13248 @item y
13249 @kindex y (Server)
13250 @findex gnus-server-yank-server
13251 Yank the previously killed server (@code{gnus-server-yank-server}).
13252
13253 @item c
13254 @kindex c (Server)
13255 @findex gnus-server-copy-server
13256 Copy the current server (@code{gnus-server-copy-server}).
13257
13258 @item l
13259 @kindex l (Server)
13260 @findex gnus-server-list-servers
13261 List all servers (@code{gnus-server-list-servers}).
13262
13263 @item s
13264 @kindex s (Server)
13265 @findex gnus-server-scan-server
13266 Request that the server scan its sources for new articles
13267 (@code{gnus-server-scan-server}). This is mainly sensible with mail
13268 servers.
13269
13270 @item g
13271 @kindex g (Server)
13272 @findex gnus-server-regenerate-server
13273 Request that the server regenerate all its data structures
13274 (@code{gnus-server-regenerate-server}). This can be useful if you have
13275 a mail back end that has gotten out of sync.
13276
13277 @item z
13278 @kindex z (Server)
13279 @findex gnus-server-compact-server
13280
13281 Compact all groups in the server under point
13282 (@code{gnus-server-compact-server}). Currently implemented only in
13283 nnml (@pxref{Mail Spool}). This removes gaps between article numbers,
13284 hence getting a correct total article count.
13285
13286 @end table
13287
13288 Some more commands for closing, disabling, and re-opening servers are
13289 listed in @ref{Unavailable Servers}.
13290
13291
13292 @node Example Methods
13293 @subsection Example Methods
13294
13295 Most select methods are pretty simple and self-explanatory:
13296
13297 @lisp
13298 (nntp "news.funet.fi")
13299 @end lisp
13300
13301 Reading directly from the spool is even simpler:
13302
13303 @lisp
13304 (nnspool "")
13305 @end lisp
13306
13307 As you can see, the first element in a select method is the name of the
13308 back end, and the second is the @dfn{address}, or @dfn{name}, if you
13309 will.
13310
13311 After these two elements, there may be an arbitrary number of
13312 @code{(@var{variable} @var{form})} pairs.
13313
13314 To go back to the first example---imagine that you want to read from
13315 port 15 on that machine. This is what the select method should
13316 look like then:
13317
13318 @lisp
13319 (nntp "news.funet.fi" (nntp-port-number 15))
13320 @end lisp
13321
13322 You should read the documentation to each back end to find out what
13323 variables are relevant, but here's an @code{nnmh} example:
13324
13325 @code{nnmh} is a mail back end that reads a spool-like structure. Say
13326 you have two structures that you wish to access: One is your private
13327 mail spool, and the other is a public one. Here's the possible spec for
13328 your private mail:
13329
13330 @lisp
13331 (nnmh "private" (nnmh-directory "~/private/mail/"))
13332 @end lisp
13333
13334 (This server is then called @samp{private}, but you may have guessed
13335 that.)
13336
13337 Here's the method for a public spool:
13338
13339 @lisp
13340 (nnmh "public"
13341 (nnmh-directory "/usr/information/spool/")
13342 (nnmh-get-new-mail nil))
13343 @end lisp
13344
13345 @cindex proxy
13346 @cindex firewall
13347
13348 If you are behind a firewall and only have access to the @acronym{NNTP}
13349 server from the firewall machine, you can instruct Gnus to @code{rlogin}
13350 on the firewall machine and connect with
13351 @uref{http://netcat.sourceforge.net/, netcat} from there to the
13352 @acronym{NNTP} server.
13353 Doing this can be rather fiddly, but your virtual server definition
13354 should probably look something like this:
13355
13356 @lisp
13357 (nntp "firewall"
13358 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-netcat)
13359 (nntp-via-address "the.firewall.machine")
13360 (nntp-address "the.real.nntp.host"))
13361 @end lisp
13362
13363 If you want to use the wonderful @code{ssh} program to provide a
13364 compressed connection over the modem line, you could add the following
13365 configuration to the example above:
13366
13367 @lisp
13368 (nntp-via-rlogin-command "ssh")
13369 @end lisp
13370
13371 See also @code{nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches}. Here's an example for
13372 an indirect connection:
13373
13374 @lisp
13375 (setq gnus-select-method
13376 '(nntp "indirect"
13377 (nntp-address "news.server.example")
13378 (nntp-via-user-name "intermediate_user_name")
13379 (nntp-via-address "intermediate.host.example")
13380 (nntp-via-rlogin-command "ssh")
13381 (nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches ("-C"))
13382 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-netcat)))
13383 @end lisp
13384
13385 This means that you have to have set up @code{ssh-agent} correctly to
13386 provide automatic authorization, of course.
13387
13388 If you're behind a firewall, but have direct access to the outside world
13389 through a wrapper command like "runsocks", you could open a socksified
13390 netcat connection to the news server as follows:
13391
13392 @lisp
13393 (nntp "outside"
13394 (nntp-pre-command "runsocks")
13395 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-netcat-stream)
13396 (nntp-address "the.news.server"))
13397 @end lisp
13398
13399
13400 @node Creating a Virtual Server
13401 @subsection Creating a Virtual Server
13402
13403 If you're saving lots of articles in the cache by using persistent
13404 articles, you may want to create a virtual server to read the cache.
13405
13406 First you need to add a new server. The @kbd{a} command does that. It
13407 would probably be best to use @code{nnml} to read the cache. You
13408 could also use @code{nnspool} or @code{nnmh}, though.
13409
13410 Type @kbd{a nnml RET cache RET}.
13411
13412 You should now have a brand new @code{nnml} virtual server called
13413 @samp{cache}. You now need to edit it to have the right definitions.
13414 Type @kbd{e} to edit the server. You'll be entered into a buffer that
13415 will contain the following:
13416
13417 @lisp
13418 (nnml "cache")
13419 @end lisp
13420
13421 Change that to:
13422
13423 @lisp
13424 (nnml "cache"
13425 (nnml-directory "~/News/cache/")
13426 (nnml-active-file "~/News/cache/active"))
13427 @end lisp
13428
13429 Type @kbd{C-c C-c} to return to the server buffer. If you now press
13430 @kbd{RET} over this virtual server, you should be entered into a browse
13431 buffer, and you should be able to enter any of the groups displayed.
13432
13433
13434 @node Server Variables
13435 @subsection Server Variables
13436 @cindex server variables
13437 @cindex server parameters
13438
13439 One sticky point when defining variables (both on back ends and in Emacs
13440 in general) is that some variables are typically initialized from other
13441 variables when the definition of the variables is being loaded. If you
13442 change the ``base'' variable after the variables have been loaded, you
13443 won't change the ``derived'' variables.
13444
13445 This typically affects directory and file variables. For instance,
13446 @code{nnml-directory} is @file{~/Mail/} by default, and all @code{nnml}
13447 directory variables are initialized from that variable, so
13448 @code{nnml-active-file} will be @file{~/Mail/active}. If you define a
13449 new virtual @code{nnml} server, it will @emph{not} suffice to set just
13450 @code{nnml-directory}---you have to explicitly set all the file
13451 variables to be what you want them to be. For a complete list of
13452 variables for each back end, see each back end's section later in this
13453 manual, but here's an example @code{nnml} definition:
13454
13455 @lisp
13456 (nnml "public"
13457 (nnml-directory "~/my-mail/")
13458 (nnml-active-file "~/my-mail/active")
13459 (nnml-newsgroups-file "~/my-mail/newsgroups"))
13460 @end lisp
13461
13462 Server variables are often called @dfn{server parameters}.
13463
13464 @node Servers and Methods
13465 @subsection Servers and Methods
13466
13467 Wherever you would normally use a select method
13468 (e.g., @code{gnus-secondary-select-method}, in the group select method,
13469 when browsing a foreign server) you can use a virtual server name
13470 instead. This could potentially save lots of typing. And it's nice all
13471 over.
13472
13473
13474 @node Unavailable Servers
13475 @subsection Unavailable Servers
13476
13477 If a server seems to be unreachable, Gnus will mark that server as
13478 @code{denied}. That means that any subsequent attempt to make contact
13479 with that server will just be ignored. ``It can't be opened,'' Gnus
13480 will tell you, without making the least effort to see whether that is
13481 actually the case or not.
13482
13483 That might seem quite naughty, but it does make sense most of the time.
13484 Let's say you have 10 groups subscribed to on server
13485 @samp{nephelococcygia.com}. This server is located somewhere quite far
13486 away from you and the machine is quite slow, so it takes 1 minute just
13487 to find out that it refuses connection to you today. If Gnus were to
13488 attempt to do that 10 times, you'd be quite annoyed, so Gnus won't
13489 attempt to do that. Once it has gotten a single ``connection refused'',
13490 it will regard that server as ``down''.
13491
13492 So, what happens if the machine was only feeling unwell temporarily?
13493 How do you test to see whether the machine has come up again?
13494
13495 You jump to the server buffer (@pxref{Server Buffer}) and poke it
13496 with the following commands:
13497
13498 @table @kbd
13499
13500 @item O
13501 @kindex O (Server)
13502 @findex gnus-server-open-server
13503 Try to establish connection to the server on the current line
13504 (@code{gnus-server-open-server}).
13505
13506 @item C
13507 @kindex C (Server)
13508 @findex gnus-server-close-server
13509 Close the connection (if any) to the server
13510 (@code{gnus-server-close-server}).
13511
13512 @item D
13513 @kindex D (Server)
13514 @findex gnus-server-deny-server
13515 Mark the current server as unreachable
13516 (@code{gnus-server-deny-server}).
13517
13518 @item M-o
13519 @kindex M-o (Server)
13520 @findex gnus-server-open-all-servers
13521 Open the connections to all servers in the buffer
13522 (@code{gnus-server-open-all-servers}).
13523
13524 @item M-c
13525 @kindex M-c (Server)
13526 @findex gnus-server-close-all-servers
13527 Close the connections to all servers in the buffer
13528 (@code{gnus-server-close-all-servers}).
13529
13530 @item R
13531 @kindex R (Server)
13532 @findex gnus-server-remove-denials
13533 Remove all marks to whether Gnus was denied connection from any servers
13534 (@code{gnus-server-remove-denials}).
13535
13536 @item c
13537 @kindex c (Server)
13538 @findex gnus-server-copy-server
13539 Copy a server and give it a new name
13540 (@code{gnus-server-copy-server}). This can be useful if you have a
13541 complex method definition, and want to use the same definition towards
13542 a different (physical) server.
13543
13544 @item L
13545 @kindex L (Server)
13546 @findex gnus-server-offline-server
13547 Set server status to offline (@code{gnus-server-offline-server}).
13548
13549 @end table
13550
13551
13552 @node Getting News
13553 @section Getting News
13554 @cindex reading news
13555 @cindex news back ends
13556
13557 A newsreader is normally used for reading news. Gnus currently provides
13558 only two methods of getting news---it can read from an @acronym{NNTP} server,
13559 or it can read from a local spool.
13560
13561 @menu
13562 * NNTP:: Reading news from an @acronym{NNTP} server.
13563 * News Spool:: Reading news from the local spool.
13564 @end menu
13565
13566
13567 @node NNTP
13568 @subsection NNTP
13569 @cindex nntp
13570
13571 Subscribing to a foreign group from an @acronym{NNTP} server is rather easy.
13572 You just specify @code{nntp} as method and the address of the @acronym{NNTP}
13573 server as the, uhm, address.
13574
13575 If the @acronym{NNTP} server is located at a non-standard port, setting the
13576 third element of the select method to this port number should allow you
13577 to connect to the right port. You'll have to edit the group info for
13578 that (@pxref{Foreign Groups}).
13579
13580 The name of the foreign group can be the same as a native group. In
13581 fact, you can subscribe to the same group from as many different servers
13582 you feel like. There will be no name collisions.
13583
13584 The following variables can be used to create a virtual @code{nntp}
13585 server:
13586
13587 @table @code
13588
13589 @item nntp-server-opened-hook
13590 @vindex nntp-server-opened-hook
13591 @cindex @sc{mode reader}
13592 @cindex authinfo
13593 @cindex authentication
13594 @cindex nntp authentication
13595 @findex nntp-send-authinfo
13596 @findex nntp-send-mode-reader
13597 is run after a connection has been made. It can be used to send
13598 commands to the @acronym{NNTP} server after it has been contacted. By
13599 default it sends the command @code{MODE READER} to the server with the
13600 @code{nntp-send-mode-reader} function. This function should always be
13601 present in this hook.
13602
13603 @item nntp-authinfo-function
13604 @vindex nntp-authinfo-function
13605 @findex nntp-send-authinfo
13606 @vindex nntp-authinfo-file
13607 This function will be used to send @samp{AUTHINFO} to the @acronym{NNTP}
13608 server. The default function is @code{nntp-send-authinfo}, which looks
13609 through your @file{~/.authinfo} (or whatever you've set the
13610 @code{nntp-authinfo-file} variable to) for applicable entries. If none
13611 are found, it will prompt you for a login name and a password. The
13612 format of the @file{~/.authinfo} file is (almost) the same as the
13613 @code{ftp} @file{~/.netrc} file, which is defined in the @code{ftp}
13614 manual page, but here are the salient facts:
13615
13616 @enumerate
13617 @item
13618 The file contains one or more line, each of which define one server.
13619
13620 @item
13621 Each line may contain an arbitrary number of token/value pairs.
13622
13623 The valid tokens include @samp{machine}, @samp{login}, @samp{password},
13624 @samp{default}. In addition Gnus introduces two new tokens, not present
13625 in the original @file{.netrc}/@code{ftp} syntax, namely @samp{port} and
13626 @samp{force}. (This is the only way the @file{.authinfo} file format
13627 deviates from the @file{.netrc} file format.) @samp{port} is used to
13628 indicate what port on the server the credentials apply to and
13629 @samp{force} is explained below.
13630
13631 @end enumerate
13632
13633 Here's an example file:
13634
13635 @example
13636 machine news.uio.no login larsi password geheimnis
13637 machine nntp.ifi.uio.no login larsi force yes
13638 @end example
13639
13640 The token/value pairs may appear in any order; @samp{machine} doesn't
13641 have to be first, for instance.
13642
13643 In this example, both login name and password have been supplied for the
13644 former server, while the latter has only the login name listed, and the
13645 user will be prompted for the password. The latter also has the
13646 @samp{force} tag, which means that the authinfo will be sent to the
13647 @var{nntp} server upon connection; the default (i.e., when there is not
13648 @samp{force} tag) is to not send authinfo to the @var{nntp} server
13649 until the @var{nntp} server asks for it.
13650
13651 You can also add @samp{default} lines that will apply to all servers
13652 that don't have matching @samp{machine} lines.
13653
13654 @example
13655 default force yes
13656 @end example
13657
13658 This will force sending @samp{AUTHINFO} commands to all servers not
13659 previously mentioned.
13660
13661 Remember to not leave the @file{~/.authinfo} file world-readable.
13662
13663 @item nntp-server-action-alist
13664 @vindex nntp-server-action-alist
13665 This is a list of regexps to match on server types and actions to be
13666 taken when matches are made. For instance, if you want Gnus to beep
13667 every time you connect to innd, you could say something like:
13668
13669 @lisp
13670 (setq nntp-server-action-alist
13671 '(("innd" (ding))))
13672 @end lisp
13673
13674 You probably don't want to do that, though.
13675
13676 The default value is
13677
13678 @lisp
13679 '(("nntpd 1\\.5\\.11t"
13680 (remove-hook 'nntp-server-opened-hook
13681 'nntp-send-mode-reader)))
13682 @end lisp
13683
13684 This ensures that Gnus doesn't send the @code{MODE READER} command to
13685 nntpd 1.5.11t, since that command chokes that server, I've been told.
13686
13687 @item nntp-maximum-request
13688 @vindex nntp-maximum-request
13689 If the @acronym{NNTP} server doesn't support @acronym{NOV} headers, this back end
13690 will collect headers by sending a series of @code{head} commands. To
13691 speed things up, the back end sends lots of these commands without
13692 waiting for reply, and then reads all the replies. This is controlled
13693 by the @code{nntp-maximum-request} variable, and is 400 by default. If
13694 your network is buggy, you should set this to 1.
13695
13696 @item nntp-connection-timeout
13697 @vindex nntp-connection-timeout
13698 If you have lots of foreign @code{nntp} groups that you connect to
13699 regularly, you're sure to have problems with @acronym{NNTP} servers not
13700 responding properly, or being too loaded to reply within reasonable
13701 time. This is can lead to awkward problems, which can be helped
13702 somewhat by setting @code{nntp-connection-timeout}. This is an integer
13703 that says how many seconds the @code{nntp} back end should wait for a
13704 connection before giving up. If it is @code{nil}, which is the default,
13705 no timeouts are done.
13706
13707 @item nntp-nov-is-evil
13708 @vindex nntp-nov-is-evil
13709 If the @acronym{NNTP} server does not support @acronym{NOV}, you could set this
13710 variable to @code{t}, but @code{nntp} usually checks automatically whether @acronym{NOV}
13711 can be used.
13712
13713 @item nntp-xover-commands
13714 @vindex nntp-xover-commands
13715 @cindex @acronym{NOV}
13716 @cindex XOVER
13717 List of strings used as commands to fetch @acronym{NOV} lines from a
13718 server. The default value of this variable is @code{("XOVER"
13719 "XOVERVIEW")}.
13720
13721 @item nntp-nov-gap
13722 @vindex nntp-nov-gap
13723 @code{nntp} normally sends just one big request for @acronym{NOV} lines to
13724 the server. The server responds with one huge list of lines. However,
13725 if you have read articles 2--5000 in the group, and only want to read
13726 article 1 and 5001, that means that @code{nntp} will fetch 4999 @acronym{NOV}
13727 lines that you will not need. This variable says how
13728 big a gap between two consecutive articles is allowed to be before the
13729 @code{XOVER} request is split into several request. Note that if your
13730 network is fast, setting this variable to a really small number means
13731 that fetching will probably be slower. If this variable is @code{nil},
13732 @code{nntp} will never split requests. The default is 5.
13733
13734 @item nntp-xref-number-is-evil
13735 @vindex nntp-xref-number-is-evil
13736 When Gnus refers to an article having the @code{Message-ID} that a user
13737 specifies or having the @code{Message-ID} of the parent article of the
13738 current one (@pxref{Finding the Parent}), Gnus sends a @code{HEAD}
13739 command to the @acronym{NNTP} server to know where it is, and the server
13740 returns the data containing the pairs of a group and an article number
13741 in the @code{Xref} header. Gnus normally uses the article number to
13742 refer to the article if the data shows that that article is in the
13743 current group, while it uses the @code{Message-ID} otherwise. However,
13744 some news servers, e.g., ones running Diablo, run multiple engines
13745 having the same articles but article numbers are not kept synchronized
13746 between them. In that case, the article number that appears in the
13747 @code{Xref} header varies by which engine is chosen, so you cannot refer
13748 to the parent article that is in the current group, for instance. If
13749 you connect to such a server, set this variable to a non-@code{nil}
13750 value, and Gnus never uses article numbers. For example:
13751
13752 @lisp
13753 (setq gnus-select-method
13754 '(nntp "newszilla"
13755 (nntp-address "newszilla.example.com")
13756 (nntp-xref-number-is-evil t)
13757 @dots{}))
13758 @end lisp
13759
13760 The default value of this server variable is @code{nil}.
13761
13762 @item nntp-prepare-server-hook
13763 @vindex nntp-prepare-server-hook
13764 A hook run before attempting to connect to an @acronym{NNTP} server.
13765
13766 @item nntp-record-commands
13767 @vindex nntp-record-commands
13768 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nntp} will log all commands it sends to the
13769 @acronym{NNTP} server (along with a timestamp) in the @file{*nntp-log*}
13770 buffer. This is useful if you are debugging a Gnus/@acronym{NNTP} connection
13771 that doesn't seem to work.
13772
13773 @item nntp-open-connection-function
13774 @vindex nntp-open-connection-function
13775 It is possible to customize how the connection to the nntp server will
13776 be opened. If you specify an @code{nntp-open-connection-function}
13777 parameter, Gnus will use that function to establish the connection.
13778 Seven pre-made functions are supplied. These functions can be grouped
13779 in two categories: direct connection functions (four pre-made), and
13780 indirect ones (three pre-made).
13781
13782 @item nntp-never-echoes-commands
13783 @vindex nntp-never-echoes-commands
13784 Non-@code{nil} means the nntp server never echoes commands. It is
13785 reported that some nntps server doesn't echo commands. So, you may want
13786 to set this to non-@code{nil} in the method for such a server setting
13787 @code{nntp-open-connection-function} to @code{nntp-open-ssl-stream} for
13788 example. The default value is @code{nil}. Note that the
13789 @code{nntp-open-connection-functions-never-echo-commands} variable
13790 overrides the @code{nil} value of this variable.
13791
13792 @item nntp-open-connection-functions-never-echo-commands
13793 @vindex nntp-open-connection-functions-never-echo-commands
13794 List of functions that never echo commands. Add or set a function which
13795 you set to @code{nntp-open-connection-function} to this list if it does
13796 not echo commands. Note that a non-@code{nil} value of the
13797 @code{nntp-never-echoes-commands} variable overrides this variable. The
13798 default value is @code{(nntp-open-network-stream)}.
13799
13800 @item nntp-prepare-post-hook
13801 @vindex nntp-prepare-post-hook
13802 A hook run just before posting an article. If there is no
13803 @code{Message-ID} header in the article and the news server provides the
13804 recommended ID, it will be added to the article before running this
13805 hook. It is useful to make @code{Cancel-Lock} headers even if you
13806 inhibit Gnus to add a @code{Message-ID} header, you could say:
13807
13808 @lisp
13809 (add-hook 'nntp-prepare-post-hook 'canlock-insert-header)
13810 @end lisp
13811
13812 Note that not all servers support the recommended ID@. This works for
13813 INN versions 2.3.0 and later, for instance.
13814
13815 @item nntp-server-list-active-group
13816 If @code{nil}, then always use @samp{GROUP} instead of @samp{LIST
13817 ACTIVE}. This is usually slower, but on misconfigured servers that
13818 don't update their active files often, this can help.
13819
13820
13821 @end table
13822
13823 @menu
13824 * Direct Functions:: Connecting directly to the server.
13825 * Indirect Functions:: Connecting indirectly to the server.
13826 * Common Variables:: Understood by several connection functions.
13827 @end menu
13828
13829
13830 @node Direct Functions
13831 @subsubsection Direct Functions
13832 @cindex direct connection functions
13833
13834 These functions are called direct because they open a direct connection
13835 between your machine and the @acronym{NNTP} server. The behavior of these
13836 functions is also affected by commonly understood variables
13837 (@pxref{Common Variables}).
13838
13839 @table @code
13840 @findex nntp-open-network-stream
13841 @item nntp-open-network-stream
13842 This is the default, and simply connects to some port or other on the
13843 remote system. If both Emacs and the server supports it, the
13844 connection will be upgraded to an encrypted @acronym{STARTTLS}
13845 connection automatically.
13846
13847 @item network-only
13848 The same as the above, but don't do automatic @acronym{STARTTLS} upgrades.
13849
13850 @findex nntp-open-tls-stream
13851 @item nntp-open-tls-stream
13852 Opens a connection to a server over a @dfn{secure} channel. To use
13853 this you must have @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/, GnuTLS}
13854 installed. You then define a server as follows:
13855
13856 @lisp
13857 ;; @r{"nntps" is port 563 and is predefined in our @file{/etc/services}}
13858 ;; @r{however, @samp{gnutls-cli -p} doesn't like named ports.}
13859 ;;
13860 (nntp "snews.bar.com"
13861 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-tls-stream)
13862 (nntp-port-number 563)
13863 (nntp-address "snews.bar.com"))
13864 @end lisp
13865
13866 @findex nntp-open-ssl-stream
13867 @item nntp-open-ssl-stream
13868 Opens a connection to a server over a @dfn{secure} channel. To use
13869 this you must have @uref{http://www.openssl.org, OpenSSL}
13870 @ignore
13871 @c Defunct URL, ancient package, so don't mention it.
13872 or @uref{ftp://ftp.psy.uq.oz.au/pub/Crypto/SSL, SSLeay}
13873 @end ignore
13874 installed. You then define a server as follows:
13875
13876 @lisp
13877 ;; @r{"snews" is port 563 and is predefined in our @file{/etc/services}}
13878 ;; @r{however, @samp{openssl s_client -port} doesn't like named ports.}
13879 ;;
13880 (nntp "snews.bar.com"
13881 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-ssl-stream)
13882 (nntp-port-number 563)
13883 (nntp-address "snews.bar.com"))
13884 @end lisp
13885
13886 @findex nntp-open-netcat-stream
13887 @item nntp-open-netcat-stream
13888 Opens a connection to an @acronym{NNTP} server using the @code{netcat}
13889 program. You might wonder why this function exists, since we have
13890 the default @code{nntp-open-network-stream} which would do the job. (One
13891 of) the reason(s) is that if you are behind a firewall but have direct
13892 connections to the outside world thanks to a command wrapper like
13893 @code{runsocks}, you can use it like this:
13894
13895 @lisp
13896 (nntp "socksified"
13897 (nntp-pre-command "runsocks")
13898 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-netcat-stream)
13899 (nntp-address "the.news.server"))
13900 @end lisp
13901
13902 With the default method, you would need to wrap your whole Emacs
13903 session, which is not a good idea.
13904
13905 @findex nntp-open-telnet-stream
13906 @item nntp-open-telnet-stream
13907 Like @code{nntp-open-netcat-stream}, but uses @code{telnet} rather than
13908 @code{netcat}. @code{telnet} is a bit less robust because of things
13909 like line-end-conversion, but sometimes netcat is simply
13910 not available. The previous example would turn into:
13911
13912 @lisp
13913 (nntp "socksified"
13914 (nntp-pre-command "runsocks")
13915 (nntp-open-connection-function nntp-open-telnet-stream)
13916 (nntp-address "the.news.server")
13917 (nntp-end-of-line "\n"))
13918 @end lisp
13919 @end table
13920
13921
13922 @node Indirect Functions
13923 @subsubsection Indirect Functions
13924 @cindex indirect connection functions
13925
13926 These functions are called indirect because they connect to an
13927 intermediate host before actually connecting to the @acronym{NNTP} server.
13928 All of these functions and related variables are also said to belong to
13929 the ``via'' family of connection: they're all prefixed with ``via'' to make
13930 things cleaner. The behavior of these functions is also affected by
13931 commonly understood variables (@pxref{Common Variables}).
13932
13933 @table @code
13934 @item nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-netcat
13935 @findex nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-netcat
13936 Does an @samp{rlogin} on a remote system, and then uses @code{netcat} to connect
13937 to the real @acronym{NNTP} server from there. This is useful for instance if
13938 you need to connect to a firewall machine first.
13939
13940 @code{nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-netcat}-specific variables:
13941
13942 @table @code
13943 @item nntp-via-rlogin-command
13944 @vindex nntp-via-rlogin-command
13945 Command used to log in on the intermediate host. The default is
13946 @samp{rsh}, but @samp{ssh} is a popular alternative.
13947
13948 @item nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches
13949 @vindex nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches
13950 List of strings to be used as the switches to
13951 @code{nntp-via-rlogin-command}. The default is @code{nil}. If you use
13952 @samp{ssh} for @code{nntp-via-rlogin-command}, you may set this to
13953 @samp{("-C")} in order to compress all data connections.
13954 @end table
13955
13956 @item nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-telnet
13957 @findex nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-telnet
13958 Does essentially the same, but uses @code{telnet} instead of @samp{netcat}
13959 to connect to the real @acronym{NNTP} server from the intermediate host.
13960 @code{telnet} is a bit less robust because of things like
13961 line-end-conversion, but sometimes @code{netcat} is simply not available.
13962
13963 @code{nntp-open-via-rlogin-and-telnet}-specific variables:
13964
13965 @table @code
13966 @item nntp-telnet-command
13967 @vindex nntp-telnet-command
13968 Command used to connect to the real @acronym{NNTP} server from the
13969 intermediate host. The default is @samp{telnet}.
13970
13971 @item nntp-telnet-switches
13972 @vindex nntp-telnet-switches
13973 List of strings to be used as the switches to the
13974 @code{nntp-telnet-command} command. The default is @code{("-8")}.
13975
13976 @item nntp-via-rlogin-command
13977 @vindex nntp-via-rlogin-command
13978 Command used to log in on the intermediate host. The default is
13979 @samp{rsh}, but @samp{ssh} is a popular alternative.
13980
13981 @item nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches
13982 @vindex nntp-via-rlogin-command-switches
13983 List of strings to be used as the switches to
13984 @code{nntp-via-rlogin-command}. If you use @samp{ssh}, you may need to set
13985 this to @samp{("-t" "-e" "none")} or @samp{("-C" "-t" "-e" "none")} if
13986 the telnet command requires a pseudo-tty allocation on an intermediate
13987 host. The default is @code{nil}.
13988 @end table
13989
13990 Note that you may want to change the value for @code{nntp-end-of-line}
13991 to @samp{\n} (@pxref{Common Variables}).
13992
13993 @item nntp-open-via-telnet-and-telnet
13994 @findex nntp-open-via-telnet-and-telnet
13995 Does essentially the same, but uses @samp{telnet} instead of
13996 @samp{rlogin} to connect to the intermediate host.
13997
13998 @code{nntp-open-via-telnet-and-telnet}-specific variables:
13999
14000 @table @code
14001 @item nntp-via-telnet-command
14002 @vindex nntp-via-telnet-command
14003 Command used to @code{telnet} the intermediate host. The default is
14004 @samp{telnet}.
14005
14006 @item nntp-via-telnet-switches
14007 @vindex nntp-via-telnet-switches
14008 List of strings to be used as the switches to the
14009 @code{nntp-via-telnet-command} command. The default is @samp{("-8")}.
14010
14011 @item nntp-via-user-password
14012 @vindex nntp-via-user-password
14013 Password to use when logging in on the intermediate host.
14014
14015 @item nntp-via-envuser
14016 @vindex nntp-via-envuser
14017 If non-@code{nil}, the intermediate @code{telnet} session (client and
14018 server both) will support the @code{ENVIRON} option and not prompt for
14019 login name. This works for Solaris @code{telnet}, for instance.
14020
14021 @item nntp-via-shell-prompt
14022 @vindex nntp-via-shell-prompt
14023 Regexp matching the shell prompt on the intermediate host. The default
14024 is @samp{bash\\|\$ *\r?$\\|> *\r?}.
14025
14026 @end table
14027
14028 Note that you may want to change the value for @code{nntp-end-of-line}
14029 to @samp{\n} (@pxref{Common Variables}).
14030 @end table
14031
14032
14033 Here are some additional variables that are understood by all the above
14034 functions:
14035
14036 @table @code
14037
14038 @item nntp-via-user-name
14039 @vindex nntp-via-user-name
14040 User name to use when connecting to the intermediate host.
14041
14042 @item nntp-via-address
14043 @vindex nntp-via-address
14044 Address of the intermediate host to connect to.
14045
14046 @end table
14047
14048
14049 @node Common Variables
14050 @subsubsection Common Variables
14051
14052 The following variables affect the behavior of all, or several of the
14053 pre-made connection functions. When not specified, all functions are
14054 affected (the values of the following variables will be used as the
14055 default if each virtual @code{nntp} server doesn't specify those server
14056 variables individually).
14057
14058 @table @code
14059
14060 @item nntp-pre-command
14061 @vindex nntp-pre-command
14062 A command wrapper to use when connecting through a non native
14063 connection function (all except @code{nntp-open-network-stream},
14064 @code{nntp-open-tls-stream}, and @code{nntp-open-ssl-stream}). This is
14065 where you would put a @samp{SOCKS} wrapper for instance.
14066
14067 @item nntp-address
14068 @vindex nntp-address
14069 The address of the @acronym{NNTP} server.
14070
14071 @item nntp-port-number
14072 @vindex nntp-port-number
14073 Port number to connect to the @acronym{NNTP} server. The default is
14074 @samp{nntp}. If you use @acronym{NNTP} over
14075 @acronym{TLS}/@acronym{SSL}, you may want to use integer ports rather
14076 than named ports (i.e., use @samp{563} instead of @samp{snews} or
14077 @samp{nntps}), because external @acronym{TLS}/@acronym{SSL} tools may
14078 not work with named ports.
14079
14080 @item nntp-end-of-line
14081 @vindex nntp-end-of-line
14082 String to use as end-of-line marker when talking to the @acronym{NNTP}
14083 server. This is @samp{\r\n} by default, but should be @samp{\n} when
14084 using a non native telnet connection function.
14085
14086 @item nntp-netcat-command
14087 @vindex nntp-netcat-command
14088 Command to use when connecting to the @acronym{NNTP} server through
14089 @samp{netcat}. This is @emph{not} for an intermediate host. This is
14090 just for the real @acronym{NNTP} server. The default is
14091 @samp{nc}.
14092
14093 @item nntp-netcat-switches
14094 @vindex nntp-netcat-switches
14095 A list of switches to pass to @code{nntp-netcat-command}. The default
14096 is @samp{()}.
14097
14098 @end table
14099
14100 @node News Spool
14101 @subsection News Spool
14102 @cindex nnspool
14103 @cindex news spool
14104
14105 Subscribing to a foreign group from the local spool is extremely easy,
14106 and might be useful, for instance, to speed up reading groups that
14107 contain very big articles---@samp{alt.binaries.pictures.furniture}, for
14108 instance.
14109
14110 Anyway, you just specify @code{nnspool} as the method and @code{""} (or
14111 anything else) as the address.
14112
14113 If you have access to a local spool, you should probably use that as the
14114 native select method (@pxref{Finding the News}). It is normally faster
14115 than using an @code{nntp} select method, but might not be. It depends.
14116 You just have to try to find out what's best at your site.
14117
14118 @table @code
14119
14120 @item nnspool-inews-program
14121 @vindex nnspool-inews-program
14122 Program used to post an article.
14123
14124 @item nnspool-inews-switches
14125 @vindex nnspool-inews-switches
14126 Parameters given to the inews program when posting an article.
14127
14128 @item nnspool-spool-directory
14129 @vindex nnspool-spool-directory
14130 Where @code{nnspool} looks for the articles. This is normally
14131 @file{/usr/spool/news/}.
14132
14133 @item nnspool-nov-directory
14134 @vindex nnspool-nov-directory
14135 Where @code{nnspool} will look for @acronym{NOV} files. This is normally@*
14136 @file{/usr/spool/news/over.view/}.
14137
14138 @item nnspool-lib-dir
14139 @vindex nnspool-lib-dir
14140 Where the news lib dir is (@file{/usr/lib/news/} by default).
14141
14142 @item nnspool-active-file
14143 @vindex nnspool-active-file
14144 The name of the active file.
14145
14146 @item nnspool-newsgroups-file
14147 @vindex nnspool-newsgroups-file
14148 The name of the group descriptions file.
14149
14150 @item nnspool-history-file
14151 @vindex nnspool-history-file
14152 The name of the news history file.
14153
14154 @item nnspool-active-times-file
14155 @vindex nnspool-active-times-file
14156 The name of the active date file.
14157
14158 @item nnspool-nov-is-evil
14159 @vindex nnspool-nov-is-evil
14160 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnspool} won't try to use any @acronym{NOV} files
14161 that it finds.
14162
14163 @item nnspool-sift-nov-with-sed
14164 @vindex nnspool-sift-nov-with-sed
14165 @cindex sed
14166 If non-@code{nil}, which is the default, use @code{sed} to get the
14167 relevant portion from the overview file. If @code{nil},
14168 @code{nnspool} will load the entire file into a buffer and process it
14169 there.
14170
14171 @end table
14172
14173
14174 @node Using IMAP
14175 @section Using IMAP
14176 @cindex imap
14177
14178 The most popular mail backend is probably @code{nnimap}, which
14179 provides access to @acronym{IMAP} servers. @acronym{IMAP} servers
14180 store mail remotely, so the client doesn't store anything locally.
14181 This means that it's a convenient choice when you're reading your mail
14182 from different locations, or with different user agents.
14183
14184 @menu
14185 * Connecting to an IMAP Server:: Getting started with @acronym{IMAP}.
14186 * Customizing the IMAP Connection:: Variables for @acronym{IMAP} connection.
14187 * Client-Side IMAP Splitting:: Put mail in the correct mail box.
14188 * Support for IMAP Extensions:: Getting extensions and labels from servers.
14189 @end menu
14190
14191
14192 @node Connecting to an IMAP Server
14193 @subsection Connecting to an IMAP Server
14194
14195 Connecting to an @acronym{IMAP} can be very easy. Type @kbd{B} in the
14196 group buffer, or (if your primary interest is reading email), say
14197 something like:
14198
14199 @example
14200 (setq gnus-select-method
14201 '(nnimap "imap.gmail.com"))
14202 @end example
14203
14204 You'll be prompted for a user name and password. If you grow tired of
14205 that, then add the following to your @file{~/.authinfo} file:
14206
14207 @example
14208 machine imap.gmail.com login <username> password <password> port imap
14209 @end example
14210
14211 That should basically be it for most users.
14212
14213
14214 @node Customizing the IMAP Connection
14215 @subsection Customizing the IMAP Connection
14216
14217 Here's an example method that's more complex:
14218
14219 @example
14220 (nnimap "imap.gmail.com"
14221 (nnimap-inbox "INBOX")
14222 (nnimap-split-methods default)
14223 (nnimap-expunge t)
14224 (nnimap-stream ssl))
14225 @end example
14226
14227 @table @code
14228 @item nnimap-address
14229 The address of the server, like @samp{imap.gmail.com}.
14230
14231 @item nnimap-server-port
14232 If the server uses a non-standard port, that can be specified here. A
14233 typical port would be @code{"imap"} or @code{"imaps"}.
14234
14235 @item nnimap-stream
14236 How @code{nnimap} should connect to the server. Possible values are:
14237
14238 @table @code
14239 @item undecided
14240 This is the default, and this first tries the @code{ssl} setting, and
14241 then tries the @code{network} setting.
14242
14243 @item ssl
14244 This uses standard @acronym{TLS}/@acronym{SSL} connections.
14245
14246 @item network
14247 Non-encrypted and unsafe straight socket connection, but will upgrade
14248 to encrypted @acronym{STARTTLS} if both Emacs and the server
14249 supports it.
14250
14251 @item starttls
14252 Encrypted @acronym{STARTTLS} over the normal @acronym{IMAP} port.
14253
14254 @item shell
14255 If you need to tunnel via other systems to connect to the server, you
14256 can use this option, and customize @code{nnimap-shell-program} to be
14257 what you need.
14258
14259 @item plain
14260 Non-encrypted and unsafe straight socket connection.
14261 @acronym{STARTTLS} will not be used even if it is available.
14262
14263 @end table
14264
14265 @item nnimap-authenticator
14266 Some @acronym{IMAP} servers allow anonymous logins. In that case,
14267 this should be set to @code{anonymous}. If this variable isn't set,
14268 the normal login methods will be used. If you wish to specify a
14269 specific login method to be used, you can set this variable to either
14270 @code{login} (the traditional @acronym{IMAP} login method),
14271 @code{plain} or @code{cram-md5}.
14272
14273 @item nnimap-expunge
14274 If non-@code{nil}, expunge articles after deleting them. This is always done
14275 if the server supports UID EXPUNGE, but it's not done by default on
14276 servers that doesn't support that command.
14277
14278 @item nnimap-streaming
14279 Virtually all @acronym{IMAP} server support fast streaming of data.
14280 If you have problems connecting to the server, try setting this to
14281 @code{nil}.
14282
14283 @item nnimap-fetch-partial-articles
14284 If non-@code{nil}, fetch partial articles from the server. If set to
14285 a string, then it's interpreted as a regexp, and parts that have
14286 matching types will be fetched. For instance, @samp{"text/"} will
14287 fetch all textual parts, while leaving the rest on the server.
14288
14289 @item nnimap-record-commands
14290 If non-@code{nil}, record all @acronym{IMAP} commands in the
14291 @samp{"*imap log*"} buffer.
14292
14293 @end table
14294
14295
14296 @node Client-Side IMAP Splitting
14297 @subsection Client-Side IMAP Splitting
14298
14299 Many people prefer to do the sorting/splitting of mail into their mail
14300 boxes on the @acronym{IMAP} server. That way they don't have to
14301 download the mail they're not all that interested in.
14302
14303 If you do want to do client-side mail splitting, then the following
14304 variables are relevant:
14305
14306 @table @code
14307 @item nnimap-inbox
14308 This is the @acronym{IMAP} mail box that will be scanned for new
14309 mail. This can also be a list of mail box names.
14310
14311 @item nnimap-split-methods
14312 Uses the same syntax as @code{nnmail-split-methods} (@pxref{Splitting
14313 Mail}), except the symbol @code{default}, which means that it should
14314 use the value of the @code{nnmail-split-methods} variable.
14315
14316 @item nnimap-split-fancy
14317 Uses the same syntax as @code{nnmail-split-fancy}.
14318
14319 @item nnimap-unsplittable-articles
14320 List of flag symbols to ignore when doing splitting. That is,
14321 articles that have these flags won't be considered when splitting.
14322 The default is @samp{(%Deleted %Seen)}.
14323
14324 @end table
14325
14326 Here's a complete example @code{nnimap} backend with a client-side
14327 ``fancy'' splitting method:
14328
14329 @example
14330 (nnimap "imap.example.com"
14331 (nnimap-inbox "INBOX")
14332 (nnimap-split-fancy
14333 (| ("MailScanner-SpamCheck" "spam" "spam.detected")
14334 (to "foo@@bar.com" "foo")
14335 "undecided")))
14336 @end example
14337
14338
14339 @node Support for IMAP Extensions
14340 @subsection Support for IMAP Extensions
14341
14342 @cindex Gmail
14343 @cindex X-GM-LABELS
14344 @cindex IMAP labels
14345
14346 If you're using Google's Gmail, you may want to see your Gmail labels
14347 when reading your mail. Gnus can give you this information if you ask
14348 for @samp{X-GM-LABELS} in the variable @code{gnus-extra-headers}. For
14349 example:
14350
14351 @example
14352 (setq gnus-extra-headers
14353 '(To Newsgroups X-GM-LABELS))
14354 @end example
14355
14356 This will result in Gnus storing your labels in message header
14357 structures for later use. The content is always a parenthesized
14358 (possible empty) list.
14359
14360
14361
14362 @node Getting Mail
14363 @section Getting Mail
14364 @cindex reading mail
14365 @cindex mail
14366
14367 Reading mail with a newsreader---isn't that just plain WeIrD@? But of
14368 course.
14369
14370 @menu
14371 * Mail in a Newsreader:: Important introductory notes.
14372 * Getting Started Reading Mail:: A simple cookbook example.
14373 * Splitting Mail:: How to create mail groups.
14374 * Mail Sources:: How to tell Gnus where to get mail from.
14375 * Mail Back End Variables:: Variables for customizing mail handling.
14376 * Fancy Mail Splitting:: Gnus can do hairy splitting of incoming mail.
14377 * Group Mail Splitting:: Use group customize to drive mail splitting.
14378 * Incorporating Old Mail:: What about the old mail you have?
14379 * Expiring Mail:: Getting rid of unwanted mail.
14380 * Washing Mail:: Removing cruft from the mail you get.
14381 * Duplicates:: Dealing with duplicated mail.
14382 * Not Reading Mail:: Using mail back ends for reading other files.
14383 * Choosing a Mail Back End:: Gnus can read a variety of mail formats.
14384 @end menu
14385
14386
14387 @node Mail in a Newsreader
14388 @subsection Mail in a Newsreader
14389
14390 If you are used to traditional mail readers, but have decided to switch
14391 to reading mail with Gnus, you may find yourself experiencing something
14392 of a culture shock.
14393
14394 Gnus does not behave like traditional mail readers. If you want to make
14395 it behave that way, you can, but it's an uphill battle.
14396
14397 Gnus, by default, handles all its groups using the same approach. This
14398 approach is very newsreaderly---you enter a group, see the new/unread
14399 messages, and when you read the messages, they get marked as read, and
14400 you don't see them any more. (Unless you explicitly ask for them.)
14401
14402 In particular, you do not do anything explicitly to delete messages.
14403
14404 Does this mean that all the messages that have been marked as read are
14405 deleted? How awful!
14406
14407 But, no, it means that old messages are @dfn{expired} according to some
14408 scheme or other. For news messages, the expire process is controlled by
14409 the news administrator; for mail, the expire process is controlled by
14410 you. The expire process for mail is covered in depth in @ref{Expiring
14411 Mail}.
14412
14413 What many Gnus users find, after using it a while for both news and
14414 mail, is that the transport mechanism has very little to do with how
14415 they want to treat a message.
14416
14417 Many people subscribe to several mailing lists. These are transported
14418 via @acronym{SMTP}, and are therefore mail. But we might go for weeks without
14419 answering, or even reading these messages very carefully. We may not
14420 need to save them because if we should need to read one again, they are
14421 archived somewhere else.
14422
14423 Some people have local news groups which have only a handful of readers.
14424 These are transported via @acronym{NNTP}, and are therefore news. But we may need
14425 to read and answer a large fraction of the messages very carefully in
14426 order to do our work. And there may not be an archive, so we may need
14427 to save the interesting messages the same way we would personal mail.
14428
14429 The important distinction turns out to be not the transport mechanism,
14430 but other factors such as how interested we are in the subject matter,
14431 or how easy it is to retrieve the message if we need to read it again.
14432
14433 Gnus provides many options for sorting mail into ``groups'' which behave
14434 like newsgroups, and for treating each group (whether mail or news)
14435 differently.
14436
14437 Some users never get comfortable using the Gnus (ahem) paradigm and wish
14438 that Gnus should grow up and be a male, er, mail reader. It is possible
14439 to whip Gnus into a more mailreaderly being, but, as said before, it's
14440 not easy. People who prefer proper mail readers should try @sc{vm}
14441 instead, which is an excellent, and proper, mail reader.
14442
14443 I don't mean to scare anybody off, but I want to make it clear that you
14444 may be required to learn a new way of thinking about messages. After
14445 you've been subjected to The Gnus Way, you will come to love it. I can
14446 guarantee it. (At least the guy who sold me the Emacs Subliminal
14447 Brain-Washing Functions that I've put into Gnus did guarantee it. You
14448 Will Be Assimilated. You Love Gnus. You Love The Gnus Mail Way.
14449 You Do.)
14450
14451
14452 @node Getting Started Reading Mail
14453 @subsection Getting Started Reading Mail
14454
14455 It's quite easy to use Gnus to read your new mail. You just plonk the
14456 mail back end of your choice into @code{gnus-secondary-select-methods},
14457 and things will happen automatically.
14458
14459 For instance, if you want to use @code{nnml} (which is a ``one file per
14460 mail'' back end), you could put the following in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
14461
14462 @lisp
14463 (setq gnus-secondary-select-methods '((nnml "")))
14464 @end lisp
14465
14466 Now, the next time you start Gnus, this back end will be queried for new
14467 articles, and it will move all the messages in your spool file to its
14468 directory, which is @file{~/Mail/} by default. The new group that will
14469 be created (@samp{mail.misc}) will be subscribed, and you can read it
14470 like any other group.
14471
14472 You will probably want to split the mail into several groups, though:
14473
14474 @lisp
14475 (setq nnmail-split-methods
14476 '(("junk" "^From:.*Lars Ingebrigtsen")
14477 ("crazy" "^Subject:.*die\\|^Organization:.*flabby")
14478 ("other" "")))
14479 @end lisp
14480
14481 This will result in three new @code{nnml} mail groups being created:
14482 @samp{nnml:junk}, @samp{nnml:crazy}, and @samp{nnml:other}. All the
14483 mail that doesn't fit into the first two groups will be placed in the
14484 last group.
14485
14486 This should be sufficient for reading mail with Gnus. You might want to
14487 give the other sections in this part of the manual a perusal, though.
14488 Especially @pxref{Choosing a Mail Back End} and @pxref{Expiring Mail}.
14489
14490
14491 @node Splitting Mail
14492 @subsection Splitting Mail
14493 @cindex splitting mail
14494 @cindex mail splitting
14495 @cindex mail filtering (splitting)
14496
14497 @vindex nnmail-split-methods
14498 The @code{nnmail-split-methods} variable says how the incoming mail is
14499 to be split into groups.
14500
14501 @lisp
14502 (setq nnmail-split-methods
14503 '(("mail.junk" "^From:.*Lars Ingebrigtsen")
14504 ("mail.crazy" "^Subject:.*die\\|^Organization:.*flabby")
14505 ("mail.other" "")))
14506 @end lisp
14507
14508 This variable is a list of lists, where the first element of each of
14509 these lists is the name of the mail group (they do not have to be called
14510 something beginning with @samp{mail}, by the way), and the second
14511 element is a regular expression used on the header of each mail to
14512 determine if it belongs in this mail group. The first string may
14513 contain @samp{\\1} forms, like the ones used by @code{replace-match} to
14514 insert sub-expressions from the matched text. For instance:
14515
14516 @lisp
14517 ("list.\\1" "From:.* \\(.*\\)-list@@majordomo.com")
14518 @end lisp
14519
14520 @noindent
14521 In that case, @code{nnmail-split-lowercase-expanded} controls whether
14522 the inserted text should be made lowercase. @xref{Fancy Mail Splitting}.
14523
14524 The second element can also be a function. In that case, it will be
14525 called narrowed to the headers with the first element of the rule as the
14526 argument. It should return a non-@code{nil} value if it thinks that the
14527 mail belongs in that group.
14528
14529 @cindex @samp{bogus} group
14530 The last of these groups should always be a general one, and the regular
14531 expression should @emph{always} be @samp{""} so that it matches any mails
14532 that haven't been matched by any of the other regexps. (These rules are
14533 processed from the beginning of the alist toward the end. The first rule
14534 to make a match will ``win'', unless you have crossposting enabled. In
14535 that case, all matching rules will ``win''.) If no rule matched, the mail
14536 will end up in the @samp{bogus} group. When new groups are created by
14537 splitting mail, you may want to run @code{gnus-group-find-new-groups} to
14538 see the new groups. This also applies to the @samp{bogus} group.
14539
14540 If you like to tinker with this yourself, you can set this variable to a
14541 function of your choice. This function will be called without any
14542 arguments in a buffer narrowed to the headers of an incoming mail
14543 message. The function should return a list of group names that it
14544 thinks should carry this mail message.
14545
14546 This variable can also be a fancy split method. For the syntax,
14547 see @ref{Fancy Mail Splitting}.
14548
14549 Note that the mail back ends are free to maul the poor, innocent,
14550 incoming headers all they want to. They all add @code{Lines} headers;
14551 some add @code{X-Gnus-Group} headers; most rename the Unix mbox
14552 @code{From<SPACE>} line to something else.
14553
14554 @vindex nnmail-crosspost
14555 The mail back ends all support cross-posting. If several regexps match,
14556 the mail will be ``cross-posted'' to all those groups.
14557 @code{nnmail-crosspost} says whether to use this mechanism or not. Note
14558 that no articles are crossposted to the general (@samp{""}) group.
14559
14560 @vindex nnmail-crosspost-link-function
14561 @cindex crosspost
14562 @cindex links
14563 @code{nnmh} and @code{nnml} makes crossposts by creating hard links to
14564 the crossposted articles. However, not all file systems support hard
14565 links. If that's the case for you, set
14566 @code{nnmail-crosspost-link-function} to @code{copy-file}. (This
14567 variable is @code{add-name-to-file} by default.)
14568
14569 @kindex M-x nnmail-split-history
14570 @findex nnmail-split-history
14571 If you wish to see where the previous mail split put the messages, you
14572 can use the @kbd{M-x nnmail-split-history} command. If you wish to see
14573 where re-spooling messages would put the messages, you can use
14574 @code{gnus-summary-respool-trace} and related commands (@pxref{Mail
14575 Group Commands}).
14576
14577 @vindex nnmail-split-header-length-limit
14578 Header lines longer than the value of
14579 @code{nnmail-split-header-length-limit} are excluded from the split
14580 function.
14581
14582 @vindex nnmail-mail-splitting-decodes
14583 @vindex nnmail-mail-splitting-charset
14584 By default, splitting does not decode headers, so you can not match on
14585 non-@acronym{ASCII} strings. But it is useful if you want to match
14586 articles based on the raw header data. To enable it, set the
14587 @code{nnmail-mail-splitting-decodes} variable to a non-@code{nil} value.
14588 In addition, the value of the @code{nnmail-mail-splitting-charset}
14589 variable is used for decoding non-@acronym{MIME} encoded string when
14590 @code{nnmail-mail-splitting-decodes} is non-@code{nil}. The default
14591 value is @code{nil} which means not to decode non-@acronym{MIME} encoded
14592 string. A suitable value for you will be @code{undecided} or be the
14593 charset used normally in mails you are interested in.
14594
14595 @vindex nnmail-resplit-incoming
14596 By default, splitting is performed on all incoming messages. If you
14597 specify a @code{directory} entry for the variable @code{mail-sources}
14598 (@pxref{Mail Source Specifiers}), however, then splitting does
14599 @emph{not} happen by default. You can set the variable
14600 @code{nnmail-resplit-incoming} to a non-@code{nil} value to make
14601 splitting happen even in this case. (This variable has no effect on
14602 other kinds of entries.)
14603
14604 Gnus gives you all the opportunity you could possibly want for shooting
14605 yourself in the foot. Let's say you create a group that will contain
14606 all the mail you get from your boss. And then you accidentally
14607 unsubscribe from the group. Gnus will still put all the mail from your
14608 boss in the unsubscribed group, and so, when your boss mails you ``Have
14609 that report ready by Monday or you're fired!'', you'll never see it and,
14610 come Tuesday, you'll still believe that you're gainfully employed while
14611 you really should be out collecting empty bottles to save up for next
14612 month's rent money.
14613
14614
14615 @node Mail Sources
14616 @subsection Mail Sources
14617
14618 Mail can be gotten from many different sources---the mail spool, from
14619 a @acronym{POP} mail server, from a procmail directory, or from a
14620 maildir, for instance.
14621
14622 @menu
14623 * Mail Source Specifiers:: How to specify what a mail source is.
14624 * Mail Source Functions::
14625 * Mail Source Customization:: Some variables that influence things.
14626 * Fetching Mail:: Using the mail source specifiers.
14627 @end menu
14628
14629
14630 @node Mail Source Specifiers
14631 @subsubsection Mail Source Specifiers
14632 @cindex POP
14633 @cindex mail server
14634 @cindex procmail
14635 @cindex mail spool
14636 @cindex mail source
14637
14638 You tell Gnus how to fetch mail by setting @code{mail-sources}
14639 (@pxref{Fetching Mail}) to a @dfn{mail source specifier}.
14640
14641 Here's an example:
14642
14643 @lisp
14644 (pop :server "pop3.mailserver.com" :user "myname")
14645 @end lisp
14646
14647 As can be observed, a mail source specifier is a list where the first
14648 element is a @dfn{mail source type}, followed by an arbitrary number of
14649 @dfn{keywords}. Keywords that are not explicitly specified are given
14650 default values.
14651
14652 The @code{mail-sources} is global for all mail groups. You can specify
14653 an additional mail source for a particular group by including the
14654 @code{group} mail specifier in @code{mail-sources}, and setting a
14655 @code{mail-source} group parameter (@pxref{Group Parameters}) specifying
14656 a single mail source. When this is used, @code{mail-sources} is
14657 typically just @code{(group)}; the @code{mail-source} parameter for a
14658 group might look like this:
14659
14660 @lisp
14661 (mail-source . (file :path "home/user/spools/foo.spool"))
14662 @end lisp
14663
14664 This means that the group's (and only this group's) messages will be
14665 fetched from the spool file @samp{/user/spools/foo.spool}.
14666
14667 The following mail source types are available:
14668
14669 @table @code
14670 @item file
14671 Get mail from a single file; typically from the mail spool.
14672
14673 Keywords:
14674
14675 @table @code
14676 @item :path
14677 The file name. Defaults to the value of the @env{MAIL}
14678 environment variable or the value of @code{rmail-spool-directory}
14679 (usually something like @file{/usr/mail/spool/user-name}).
14680
14681 @item :prescript
14682 @itemx :postscript
14683 Script run before/after fetching mail.
14684 @end table
14685
14686 An example file mail source:
14687
14688 @lisp
14689 (file :path "/usr/spool/mail/user-name")
14690 @end lisp
14691
14692 Or using the default file name:
14693
14694 @lisp
14695 (file)
14696 @end lisp
14697
14698 If the mail spool file is not located on the local machine, it's best
14699 to use @acronym{POP} or @acronym{IMAP} or the like to fetch the mail.
14700 You can not use ange-ftp file names here---it has no way to lock the
14701 mail spool while moving the mail.
14702
14703 If it's impossible to set up a proper server, you can use ssh instead.
14704
14705 @lisp
14706 (setq mail-sources
14707 '((file :prescript "ssh host bin/getmail >%t")))
14708 @end lisp
14709
14710 The @samp{getmail} script would look something like the following:
14711
14712 @example
14713 #!/bin/sh
14714 # getmail - move mail from spool to stdout
14715 # flu@@iki.fi
14716
14717 MOVEMAIL=/usr/lib/emacs/20.3/i386-redhat-linux/movemail
14718 TMP=$HOME/Mail/tmp
14719 rm -f $TMP; $MOVEMAIL $MAIL $TMP >/dev/null && cat $TMP
14720 @end example
14721
14722 Alter this script to fit the @samp{movemail} and temporary
14723 file you want to use.
14724
14725
14726 @item directory
14727 @vindex nnmail-scan-directory-mail-source-once
14728 Get mail from several files in a directory. This is typically used
14729 when you have procmail split the incoming mail into several files.
14730 That is, there is a one-to-one correspondence between files in that
14731 directory and groups, so that mail from the file @file{foo.bar.spool}
14732 will be put in the group @code{foo.bar}. (You can change the suffix
14733 to be used instead of @code{.spool}.) Setting
14734 @code{nnmail-scan-directory-mail-source-once} to non-@code{nil} forces
14735 Gnus to scan the mail source only once. This is particularly useful
14736 if you want to scan mail groups at a specified level.
14737
14738 @vindex nnmail-resplit-incoming
14739 There is also the variable @code{nnmail-resplit-incoming}, if you set
14740 that to a non-@code{nil} value, then the normal splitting process is
14741 applied to all the files from the directory, @ref{Splitting Mail}.
14742
14743 Keywords:
14744
14745 @table @code
14746 @item :path
14747 The name of the directory where the files are. There is no default
14748 value.
14749
14750 @item :suffix
14751 Only files ending with this suffix are used. The default is
14752 @samp{.spool}.
14753
14754 @item :predicate
14755 Only files that have this predicate return non-@code{nil} are returned.
14756 The default is @code{identity}. This is used as an additional
14757 filter---only files that have the right suffix @emph{and} satisfy this
14758 predicate are considered.
14759
14760 @item :prescript
14761 @itemx :postscript
14762 Script run before/after fetching mail.
14763
14764 @end table
14765
14766 An example directory mail source:
14767
14768 @lisp
14769 (directory :path "/home/user-name/procmail-dir/"
14770 :suffix ".prcml")
14771 @end lisp
14772
14773 @item pop
14774 Get mail from a @acronym{POP} server.
14775
14776 Keywords:
14777
14778 @table @code
14779 @item :server
14780 The name of the @acronym{POP} server. The default is taken from the
14781 @env{MAILHOST} environment variable.
14782
14783 @item :port
14784 The port number of the @acronym{POP} server. This can be a number (e.g.,
14785 @samp{:port 1234}) or a string (e.g., @samp{:port "pop3"}). If it is a
14786 string, it should be a service name as listed in @file{/etc/services} on
14787 Unix systems. The default is @samp{"pop3"}. On some systems you might
14788 need to specify it as @samp{"pop-3"} instead.
14789
14790 @item :user
14791 The user name to give to the @acronym{POP} server. The default is the login
14792 name.
14793
14794 @item :password
14795 The password to give to the @acronym{POP} server. If not specified,
14796 the user is prompted.
14797
14798 @item :program
14799 The program to use to fetch mail from the @acronym{POP} server. This
14800 should be a @code{format}-like string. Here's an example:
14801
14802 @example
14803 fetchmail %u@@%s -P %p %t
14804 @end example
14805
14806 The valid format specifier characters are:
14807
14808 @table @samp
14809 @item t
14810 The name of the file the mail is to be moved to. This must always be
14811 included in this string.
14812
14813 @item s
14814 The name of the server.
14815
14816 @item P
14817 The port number of the server.
14818
14819 @item u
14820 The user name to use.
14821
14822 @item p
14823 The password to use.
14824 @end table
14825
14826 The values used for these specs are taken from the values you give the
14827 corresponding keywords.
14828
14829 @item :prescript
14830 A script to be run before fetching the mail. The syntax is the same as
14831 the @code{:program} keyword. This can also be a function to be run.
14832
14833 One popular way to use this is to set up an SSH tunnel to access the
14834 @acronym{POP} server. Here's an example:
14835
14836 @lisp
14837 (pop :server "127.0.0.1"
14838 :port 1234
14839 :user "foo"
14840 :password "secret"
14841 :prescript
14842 "nohup ssh -f -L 1234:pop.server:110 remote.host sleep 3600 &")
14843 @end lisp
14844
14845 @item :postscript
14846 A script to be run after fetching the mail. The syntax is the same as
14847 the @code{:program} keyword. This can also be a function to be run.
14848
14849 @item :function
14850 The function to use to fetch mail from the @acronym{POP} server. The
14851 function is called with one parameter---the name of the file where the
14852 mail should be moved to.
14853
14854 @item :authentication
14855 This can be either the symbol @code{password} or the symbol @code{apop}
14856 and says what authentication scheme to use. The default is
14857 @code{password}.
14858
14859 @item :leave
14860 Non-@code{nil} if the mail is to be left on the @acronym{POP} server
14861 after fetching. Only the built-in @code{pop3-movemail} program (the
14862 default) supports this keyword.
14863
14864 If this is a number, leave mails on the server for this many days since
14865 you first checked new mails. In that case, mails once fetched will
14866 never be fetched again by the @acronym{UIDL} control. If this is
14867 @code{nil} (the default), mails will be deleted on the server right
14868 after fetching. If this is neither @code{nil} nor a number, all mails
14869 will be left on the server, and you will end up getting the same mails
14870 again and again.
14871
14872 @vindex pop3-uidl-file
14873 The @code{pop3-uidl-file} variable specifies the file to which the
14874 @acronym{UIDL} data are locally stored. The default value is
14875 @file{~/.pop3-uidl}.
14876
14877 Note that @acronym{POP} servers maintain no state information between
14878 sessions, so what the client believes is there and what is actually
14879 there may not match up. If they do not, then you may get duplicate
14880 mails or the whole thing can fall apart and leave you with a corrupt
14881 mailbox.
14882
14883 @end table
14884
14885 @findex pop3-movemail
14886 @vindex pop3-leave-mail-on-server
14887 If the @code{:program} and @code{:function} keywords aren't specified,
14888 @code{pop3-movemail} will be used.
14889
14890 Here are some examples for getting mail from a @acronym{POP} server.
14891
14892 Fetch from the default @acronym{POP} server, using the default user
14893 name, and default fetcher:
14894
14895 @lisp
14896 (pop)
14897 @end lisp
14898
14899 Fetch from a named server with a named user and password:
14900
14901 @lisp
14902 (pop :server "my.pop.server"
14903 :user "user-name" :password "secret")
14904 @end lisp
14905
14906 Leave mails on the server for 14 days:
14907
14908 @lisp
14909 (pop :server "my.pop.server"
14910 :user "user-name" :password "secret"
14911 :leave 14)
14912 @end lisp
14913
14914 Use @samp{movemail} to move the mail:
14915
14916 @lisp
14917 (pop :program "movemail po:%u %t %p")
14918 @end lisp
14919
14920 @item maildir
14921 Get mail from a maildir. This is a type of mailbox that is supported by
14922 at least qmail and postfix, where each file in a special directory
14923 contains exactly one mail.
14924
14925 Keywords:
14926
14927 @table @code
14928 @item :path
14929 The name of the directory where the mails are stored. The default is
14930 taken from the @env{MAILDIR} environment variable or
14931 @file{~/Maildir/}.
14932 @item :subdirs
14933 The subdirectories of the Maildir. The default is
14934 @samp{("new" "cur")}.
14935
14936 @c If you sometimes look at your mail through a pop3 daemon before fetching
14937 @c them with Gnus, you may also have to fetch your mails from the
14938 @c @code{cur} directory inside the maildir, like in the first example
14939 @c below.
14940
14941 You can also get mails from remote hosts (because maildirs don't suffer
14942 from locking problems).
14943
14944 @end table
14945
14946 Two example maildir mail sources:
14947
14948 @lisp
14949 (maildir :path "/home/user-name/Maildir/"
14950 :subdirs ("cur" "new"))
14951 @end lisp
14952
14953 @lisp
14954 (maildir :path "/user@@remotehost.org:~/Maildir/"
14955 :subdirs ("new"))
14956 @end lisp
14957
14958 @item imap
14959 Get mail from a @acronym{IMAP} server. If you don't want to use
14960 @acronym{IMAP} as intended, as a network mail reading protocol (i.e.,
14961 with nnimap), for some reason or other, Gnus let you treat it similar
14962 to a @acronym{POP} server and fetches articles from a given
14963 @acronym{IMAP} mailbox. @xref{Using IMAP}, for more information.
14964
14965 Keywords:
14966
14967 @table @code
14968 @item :server
14969 The name of the @acronym{IMAP} server. The default is taken from the
14970 @env{MAILHOST} environment variable.
14971
14972 @item :port
14973 The port number of the @acronym{IMAP} server. The default is @samp{143}, or
14974 @samp{993} for @acronym{TLS}/@acronym{SSL} connections.
14975
14976 @item :user
14977 The user name to give to the @acronym{IMAP} server. The default is the login
14978 name.
14979
14980 @item :password
14981 The password to give to the @acronym{IMAP} server. If not specified, the user is
14982 prompted.
14983
14984 @item :stream
14985 What stream to use for connecting to the server, this is one of the
14986 symbols in @code{imap-stream-alist}. Right now, this means
14987 @samp{gssapi}, @samp{kerberos4}, @samp{starttls}, @samp{tls},
14988 @samp{ssl}, @samp{shell} or the default @samp{network}.
14989
14990 @item :authentication
14991 Which authenticator to use for authenticating to the server, this is
14992 one of the symbols in @code{imap-authenticator-alist}. Right now,
14993 this means @samp{gssapi}, @samp{kerberos4}, @samp{digest-md5},
14994 @samp{cram-md5}, @samp{anonymous} or the default @samp{login}.
14995
14996 @item :program
14997 When using the @samp{shell} :stream, the contents of this variable is
14998 mapped into the @code{imap-shell-program} variable. This should be a
14999 @code{format}-like string (or list of strings). Here's an example:
15000
15001 @example
15002 ssh %s imapd
15003 @end example
15004
15005 Make sure nothing is interfering with the output of the program, e.g.,
15006 don't forget to redirect the error output to the void. The valid format
15007 specifier characters are:
15008
15009 @table @samp
15010 @item s
15011 The name of the server.
15012
15013 @item l
15014 User name from @code{imap-default-user}.
15015
15016 @item p
15017 The port number of the server.
15018 @end table
15019
15020 The values used for these specs are taken from the values you give the
15021 corresponding keywords.
15022
15023 @item :mailbox
15024 The name of the mailbox to get mail from. The default is @samp{INBOX}
15025 which normally is the mailbox which receives incoming mail. Instead of
15026 a single mailbox, this can be a list of mailboxes to fetch mail from.
15027
15028 @item :predicate
15029 The predicate used to find articles to fetch. The default, @samp{UNSEEN
15030 UNDELETED}, is probably the best choice for most people, but if you
15031 sometimes peek in your mailbox with a @acronym{IMAP} client and mark some
15032 articles as read (or; SEEN) you might want to set this to @samp{1:*}.
15033 Then all articles in the mailbox is fetched, no matter what. For a
15034 complete list of predicates, see RFC 2060 section 6.4.4.
15035
15036 @item :fetchflag
15037 How to flag fetched articles on the server, the default @samp{\Deleted}
15038 will mark them as deleted, an alternative would be @samp{\Seen} which
15039 would simply mark them as read. These are the two most likely choices,
15040 but more flags are defined in RFC 2060 section 2.3.2.
15041
15042 @item :dontexpunge
15043 If non-@code{nil}, don't remove all articles marked as deleted in the
15044 mailbox after finishing the fetch.
15045
15046 @end table
15047
15048 An example @acronym{IMAP} mail source:
15049
15050 @lisp
15051 (imap :server "mail.mycorp.com"
15052 :stream kerberos4
15053 :fetchflag "\\Seen")
15054 @end lisp
15055
15056 @item group
15057 Get the actual mail source from the @code{mail-source} group parameter,
15058 @xref{Group Parameters}.
15059
15060 @end table
15061
15062 @table @dfn
15063 @item Common Keywords
15064 Common keywords can be used in any type of mail source.
15065
15066 Keywords:
15067
15068 @table @code
15069 @item :plugged
15070 If non-@code{nil}, fetch the mail even when Gnus is unplugged. If you
15071 use directory source to get mail, you can specify it as in this
15072 example:
15073
15074 @lisp
15075 (setq mail-sources
15076 '((directory :path "/home/pavel/.Spool/"
15077 :suffix ""
15078 :plugged t)))
15079 @end lisp
15080
15081 Gnus will then fetch your mail even when you are unplugged. This is
15082 useful when you use local mail and news.
15083
15084 @end table
15085 @end table
15086
15087 @node Mail Source Functions
15088 @subsubsection Function Interface
15089
15090 Some of the above keywords specify a Lisp function to be executed.
15091 For each keyword @code{:foo}, the Lisp variable @code{foo} is bound to
15092 the value of the keyword while the function is executing. For example,
15093 consider the following mail-source setting:
15094
15095 @lisp
15096 (setq mail-sources '((pop :user "jrl"
15097 :server "pophost" :function fetchfunc)))
15098 @end lisp
15099
15100 While the function @code{fetchfunc} is executing, the symbol @code{user}
15101 is bound to @code{"jrl"}, and the symbol @code{server} is bound to
15102 @code{"pophost"}. The symbols @code{port}, @code{password},
15103 @code{program}, @code{prescript}, @code{postscript}, @code{function},
15104 and @code{authentication} are also bound (to their default values).
15105
15106 See above for a list of keywords for each type of mail source.
15107
15108
15109 @node Mail Source Customization
15110 @subsubsection Mail Source Customization
15111
15112 The following is a list of variables that influence how the mail is
15113 fetched. You would normally not need to set or change any of these
15114 variables.
15115
15116 @table @code
15117 @item mail-source-crash-box
15118 @vindex mail-source-crash-box
15119 File where mail will be stored while processing it. The default is@*
15120 @file{~/.emacs-mail-crash-box}.
15121
15122 @cindex Incoming*
15123 @item mail-source-delete-incoming
15124 @vindex mail-source-delete-incoming
15125 If non-@code{nil}, delete incoming files after handling them. If
15126 @code{t}, delete the files immediately, if @code{nil}, never delete any
15127 files. If a positive number, delete files older than number of days
15128 (the deletion will only happen when receiving new mail). You may also
15129 set @code{mail-source-delete-incoming} to @code{nil} and call
15130 @code{mail-source-delete-old-incoming} from a hook or interactively.
15131 @code{mail-source-delete-incoming} defaults to @code{10} in alpha Gnusae
15132 and @code{2} in released Gnusae. @xref{Gnus Development}.
15133
15134 @item mail-source-delete-old-incoming-confirm
15135 @vindex mail-source-delete-old-incoming-confirm
15136 If non-@code{nil}, ask for confirmation before deleting old incoming
15137 files. This variable only applies when
15138 @code{mail-source-delete-incoming} is a positive number.
15139
15140 @item mail-source-ignore-errors
15141 @vindex mail-source-ignore-errors
15142 If non-@code{nil}, ignore errors when reading mail from a mail source.
15143
15144 @item mail-source-directory
15145 @vindex mail-source-directory
15146 Directory where incoming mail source files (if any) will be stored. The
15147 default is @file{~/Mail/}. At present, the only thing this is used for
15148 is to say where the incoming files will be stored if the variable
15149 @code{mail-source-delete-incoming} is @code{nil} or a number.
15150
15151 @item mail-source-incoming-file-prefix
15152 @vindex mail-source-incoming-file-prefix
15153 Prefix for file name for storing incoming mail. The default is
15154 @file{Incoming}, in which case files will end up with names like
15155 @file{Incoming30630D_} or @file{Incoming298602ZD}. This is really only
15156 relevant if @code{mail-source-delete-incoming} is @code{nil} or a
15157 number.
15158
15159 @item mail-source-default-file-modes
15160 @vindex mail-source-default-file-modes
15161 All new mail files will get this file mode. The default is @code{#o600}.
15162
15163 @item mail-source-movemail-program
15164 @vindex mail-source-movemail-program
15165 If non-@code{nil}, name of program for fetching new mail. If
15166 @code{nil}, @code{movemail} in @var{exec-directory}.
15167
15168 @end table
15169
15170
15171 @node Fetching Mail
15172 @subsubsection Fetching Mail
15173
15174 @vindex mail-sources
15175 The way to actually tell Gnus where to get new mail from is to set
15176 @code{mail-sources} to a list of mail source specifiers
15177 (@pxref{Mail Source Specifiers}).
15178
15179 If this variable is @code{nil}, the mail back ends will never attempt to
15180 fetch mail by themselves.
15181
15182 If you want to fetch mail both from your local spool as well as a
15183 @acronym{POP} mail server, you'd say something like:
15184
15185 @lisp
15186 (setq mail-sources
15187 '((file)
15188 (pop :server "pop3.mail.server"
15189 :password "secret")))
15190 @end lisp
15191
15192 Or, if you don't want to use any of the keyword defaults:
15193
15194 @lisp
15195 (setq mail-sources
15196 '((file :path "/var/spool/mail/user-name")
15197 (pop :server "pop3.mail.server"
15198 :user "user-name"
15199 :port "pop3"
15200 :password "secret")))
15201 @end lisp
15202
15203
15204 When you use a mail back end, Gnus will slurp all your mail from your
15205 inbox and plonk it down in your home directory. Gnus doesn't move any
15206 mail if you're not using a mail back end---you have to do a lot of magic
15207 invocations first. At the time when you have finished drawing the
15208 pentagram, lightened the candles, and sacrificed the goat, you really
15209 shouldn't be too surprised when Gnus moves your mail.
15210
15211
15212
15213 @node Mail Back End Variables
15214 @subsection Mail Back End Variables
15215
15216 These variables are (for the most part) pertinent to all the various
15217 mail back ends.
15218
15219 @table @code
15220 @vindex nnmail-read-incoming-hook
15221 @item nnmail-read-incoming-hook
15222 The mail back ends all call this hook after reading new mail. You can
15223 use this hook to notify any mail watch programs, if you want to.
15224
15225 @vindex nnmail-split-hook
15226 @item nnmail-split-hook
15227 @findex gnus-article-decode-encoded-words
15228 @cindex RFC 1522 decoding
15229 @cindex RFC 2047 decoding
15230 Hook run in the buffer where the mail headers of each message is kept
15231 just before the splitting based on these headers is done. The hook is
15232 free to modify the buffer contents in any way it sees fit---the buffer
15233 is discarded after the splitting has been done, and no changes performed
15234 in the buffer will show up in any files.
15235 @code{gnus-article-decode-encoded-words} is one likely function to add
15236 to this hook.
15237
15238 @vindex nnmail-pre-get-new-mail-hook
15239 @vindex nnmail-post-get-new-mail-hook
15240 @item nnmail-pre-get-new-mail-hook
15241 @itemx nnmail-post-get-new-mail-hook
15242 These are two useful hooks executed when treating new incoming
15243 mail---@code{nnmail-pre-get-new-mail-hook} (is called just before
15244 starting to handle the new mail) and
15245 @code{nnmail-post-get-new-mail-hook} (is called when the mail handling
15246 is done). Here's and example of using these two hooks to change the
15247 default file modes the new mail files get:
15248
15249 @lisp
15250 (add-hook 'nnmail-pre-get-new-mail-hook
15251 (lambda () (set-default-file-modes #o700)))
15252
15253 (add-hook 'nnmail-post-get-new-mail-hook
15254 (lambda () (set-default-file-modes #o775)))
15255 @end lisp
15256
15257 @item nnmail-use-long-file-names
15258 @vindex nnmail-use-long-file-names
15259 If non-@code{nil}, the mail back ends will use long file and directory
15260 names. Groups like @samp{mail.misc} will end up in directories
15261 (assuming use of @code{nnml} back end) or files (assuming use of
15262 @code{nnfolder} back end) like @file{mail.misc}. If it is @code{nil},
15263 the same group will end up in @file{mail/misc}.
15264
15265 @item nnmail-delete-file-function
15266 @vindex nnmail-delete-file-function
15267 @findex delete-file
15268 Function called to delete files. It is @code{delete-file} by default.
15269
15270 @item nnmail-cache-accepted-message-ids
15271 @vindex nnmail-cache-accepted-message-ids
15272 If non-@code{nil}, put the @code{Message-ID}s of articles imported into
15273 the back end (via @code{Gcc}, for instance) into the mail duplication
15274 discovery cache. The default is @code{nil}.
15275
15276 @item nnmail-cache-ignore-groups
15277 @vindex nnmail-cache-ignore-groups
15278 This can be a regular expression or a list of regular expressions.
15279 Group names that match any of the regular expressions will never be
15280 recorded in the @code{Message-ID} cache.
15281
15282 This can be useful, for example, when using Fancy Splitting
15283 (@pxref{Fancy Mail Splitting}) together with the function
15284 @code{nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent}.
15285
15286 @end table
15287
15288
15289 @node Fancy Mail Splitting
15290 @subsection Fancy Mail Splitting
15291 @cindex mail splitting
15292 @cindex fancy mail splitting
15293
15294 @vindex nnmail-split-fancy
15295 @findex nnmail-split-fancy
15296 If the rather simple, standard method for specifying how to split mail
15297 doesn't allow you to do what you want, you can set
15298 @code{nnmail-split-methods} to @code{nnmail-split-fancy}. Then you can
15299 play with the @code{nnmail-split-fancy} variable.
15300
15301 Let's look at an example value of this variable first:
15302
15303 @lisp
15304 ;; @r{Messages from the mailer daemon are not crossposted to any of}
15305 ;; @r{the ordinary groups. Warnings are put in a separate group}
15306 ;; @r{from real errors.}
15307 (| ("from" mail (| ("subject" "warn.*" "mail.warning")
15308 "mail.misc"))
15309 ;; @r{Non-error messages are crossposted to all relevant}
15310 ;; @r{groups, but we don't crosspost between the group for the}
15311 ;; @r{(ding) list and the group for other (ding) related mail.}
15312 (& (| (any "ding@@ifi\\.uio\\.no" "ding.list")
15313 ("subject" "ding" "ding.misc"))
15314 ;; @r{Other mailing lists@dots{}}
15315 (any "procmail@@informatik\\.rwth-aachen\\.de" "procmail.list")
15316 (any "SmartList@@informatik\\.rwth-aachen\\.de" "SmartList.list")
15317 ;; @r{Both lists below have the same suffix, so prevent}
15318 ;; @r{cross-posting to mkpkg.list of messages posted only to}
15319 ;; @r{the bugs- list, but allow cross-posting when the}
15320 ;; @r{message was really cross-posted.}
15321 (any "bugs-mypackage@@somewhere" "mypkg.bugs")
15322 (any "mypackage@@somewhere" - "bugs-mypackage" "mypkg.list")
15323 ;; @r{People@dots{}}
15324 (any "larsi@@ifi\\.uio\\.no" "people.Lars_Magne_Ingebrigtsen"))
15325 ;; @r{Unmatched mail goes to the catch all group.}
15326 "misc.misc")
15327 @end lisp
15328
15329 This variable has the format of a @dfn{split}. A split is a
15330 (possibly) recursive structure where each split may contain other
15331 splits. Here are the possible split syntaxes:
15332
15333 @table @code
15334
15335 @item group
15336 If the split is a string, that will be taken as a group name. Normal
15337 regexp match expansion will be done. See below for examples.
15338
15339 @c Don't fold this line.
15340 @item (@var{field} @var{value} [- @var{restrict} [@dots{}] ] @var{split} [@var{invert-partial}])
15341 The split can be a list containing at least three elements. If the
15342 first element @var{field} (a regexp matching a header) contains
15343 @var{value} (also a regexp) then store the message as specified by
15344 @var{split}.
15345
15346 If @var{restrict} (yet another regexp) matches some string after
15347 @var{field} and before the end of the matched @var{value}, the
15348 @var{split} is ignored. If none of the @var{restrict} clauses match,
15349 @var{split} is processed.
15350
15351 The last element @var{invert-partial} is optional. If it is
15352 non-@code{nil}, the match-partial-words behavior controlled by the
15353 variable @code{nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words} (see below) is
15354 be inverted. (New in Gnus 5.10.7)
15355
15356 @item (| @var{split} @dots{})
15357 If the split is a list, and the first element is @code{|} (vertical
15358 bar), then process each @var{split} until one of them matches. A
15359 @var{split} is said to match if it will cause the mail message to be
15360 stored in one or more groups.
15361
15362 @item (& @var{split} @dots{})
15363 If the split is a list, and the first element is @code{&}, then
15364 process all @var{split}s in the list.
15365
15366 @item junk
15367 If the split is the symbol @code{junk}, then don't save (i.e., delete)
15368 this message. Use with extreme caution.
15369
15370 @item (: @var{function} @var{arg1} @var{arg2} @dots{})
15371 If the split is a list, and the first element is @samp{:}, then the
15372 second element will be called as a function with @var{args} given as
15373 arguments. The function should return a @var{split}.
15374
15375 @cindex body split
15376 For instance, the following function could be used to split based on the
15377 body of the messages:
15378
15379 @lisp
15380 (defun split-on-body ()
15381 (save-excursion
15382 (save-restriction
15383 (widen)
15384 (goto-char (point-min))
15385 (when (re-search-forward "Some.*string" nil t)
15386 "string.group"))))
15387 @end lisp
15388
15389 The buffer is narrowed to the header of the message in question when
15390 @var{function} is run. That's why @code{(widen)} needs to be called
15391 after @code{save-excursion} and @code{save-restriction} in the example
15392 above. Also note that with the nnimap backend, message bodies will
15393 not be downloaded by default. You need to set
15394 @code{nnimap-split-download-body} to @code{t} to do that
15395 (@pxref{Client-Side IMAP Splitting}).
15396
15397 @item (! @var{func} @var{split})
15398 If the split is a list, and the first element is @code{!}, then
15399 @var{split} will be processed, and @var{func} will be called as a
15400 function with the result of @var{split} as argument. @var{func}
15401 should return a split.
15402
15403 @item nil
15404 If the split is @code{nil}, it is ignored.
15405
15406 @end table
15407
15408 In these splits, @var{field} must match a complete field name.
15409
15410 Normally, @var{value} in these splits must match a complete @emph{word}
15411 according to the fundamental mode syntax table. In other words, all
15412 @var{value}'s will be implicitly surrounded by @code{\<...\>} markers,
15413 which are word delimiters. Therefore, if you use the following split,
15414 for example,
15415
15416 @example
15417 (any "joe" "joemail")
15418 @end example
15419
15420 @noindent
15421 messages sent from @samp{joedavis@@foo.org} will normally not be filed
15422 in @samp{joemail}. If you want to alter this behavior, you can use any
15423 of the following three ways:
15424
15425 @enumerate
15426 @item
15427 @vindex nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words
15428 You can set the @code{nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words} variable
15429 to non-@code{nil} in order to ignore word boundaries and instead the
15430 match becomes more like a grep. This variable controls whether partial
15431 words are matched during fancy splitting. The default value is
15432 @code{nil}.
15433
15434 Note that it influences all @var{value}'s in your split rules.
15435
15436 @item
15437 @var{value} beginning with @code{.*} ignores word boundaries in front of
15438 a word. Similarly, if @var{value} ends with @code{.*}, word boundaries
15439 in the rear of a word will be ignored. For example, the @var{value}
15440 @code{"@@example\\.com"} does not match @samp{foo@@example.com} but
15441 @code{".*@@example\\.com"} does.
15442
15443 @item
15444 You can set the @var{invert-partial} flag in your split rules of the
15445 @samp{(@var{field} @var{value} @dots{})} types, aforementioned in this
15446 section. If the flag is set, word boundaries on both sides of a word
15447 are ignored even if @code{nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words} is
15448 @code{nil}. Contrarily, if the flag is set, word boundaries are not
15449 ignored even if @code{nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words} is
15450 non-@code{nil}. (New in Gnus 5.10.7)
15451 @end enumerate
15452
15453 @vindex nnmail-split-abbrev-alist
15454 @var{field} and @var{value} can also be Lisp symbols, in that case
15455 they are expanded as specified by the variable
15456 @code{nnmail-split-abbrev-alist}. This is an alist of cons cells,
15457 where the @sc{car} of a cell contains the key, and the @sc{cdr}
15458 contains the associated value. Predefined entries in
15459 @code{nnmail-split-abbrev-alist} include:
15460
15461 @table @code
15462 @item from
15463 Matches the @samp{From}, @samp{Sender} and @samp{Resent-From} fields.
15464 @item to
15465 Matches the @samp{To}, @samp{Cc}, @samp{Apparently-To},
15466 @samp{Resent-To} and @samp{Resent-Cc} fields.
15467 @item any
15468 Is the union of the @code{from} and @code{to} entries.
15469 @end table
15470
15471 @vindex nnmail-split-fancy-syntax-table
15472 @code{nnmail-split-fancy-syntax-table} is the syntax table in effect
15473 when all this splitting is performed.
15474
15475 If you want to have Gnus create groups dynamically based on some
15476 information in the headers (i.e., do @code{replace-match}-like
15477 substitutions in the group names), you can say things like:
15478
15479 @example
15480 (any "debian-\\b\\(\\w+\\)@@lists.debian.org" "mail.debian.\\1")
15481 @end example
15482
15483 In this example, messages sent to @samp{debian-foo@@lists.debian.org}
15484 will be filed in @samp{mail.debian.foo}.
15485
15486 If the string contains the element @samp{\\&}, then the previously
15487 matched string will be substituted. Similarly, the elements @samp{\\1}
15488 up to @samp{\\9} will be substituted with the text matched by the
15489 groupings 1 through 9.
15490
15491 @vindex nnmail-split-lowercase-expanded
15492 Where @code{nnmail-split-lowercase-expanded} controls whether the
15493 lowercase of the matched string should be used for the substitution.
15494 Setting it as non-@code{nil} is useful to avoid the creation of multiple
15495 groups when users send to an address using different case
15496 (i.e., mailing-list@@domain vs Mailing-List@@Domain). The default value
15497 is @code{t}.
15498
15499 @findex nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent
15500 @code{nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent} is a function which allows you to
15501 split followups into the same groups their parents are in. Sometimes
15502 you can't make splitting rules for all your mail. For example, your
15503 boss might send you personal mail regarding different projects you are
15504 working on, and as you can't tell your boss to put a distinguishing
15505 string into the subject line, you have to resort to manually moving the
15506 messages into the right group. With this function, you only have to do
15507 it once per thread.
15508
15509 To use this feature, you have to set @code{nnmail-treat-duplicates}
15510 and @code{nnmail-cache-accepted-message-ids} to a non-@code{nil}
15511 value. And then you can include @code{nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent}
15512 using the colon feature, like so:
15513 @lisp
15514 (setq nnmail-treat-duplicates 'warn ; @r{or @code{delete}}
15515 nnmail-cache-accepted-message-ids t
15516 nnmail-split-fancy
15517 '(| (: nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent)
15518 ;; @r{other splits go here}
15519 ))
15520 @end lisp
15521
15522 This feature works as follows: when @code{nnmail-treat-duplicates} is
15523 non-@code{nil}, Gnus records the message id of every message it sees
15524 in the file specified by the variable
15525 @code{nnmail-message-id-cache-file}, together with the group it is in
15526 (the group is omitted for non-mail messages). When mail splitting is
15527 invoked, the function @code{nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent} then looks
15528 at the References (and In-Reply-To) header of each message to split
15529 and searches the file specified by @code{nnmail-message-id-cache-file}
15530 for the message ids. When it has found a parent, it returns the
15531 corresponding group name unless the group name matches the regexp
15532 @code{nnmail-split-fancy-with-parent-ignore-groups}. It is
15533 recommended that you set @code{nnmail-message-id-cache-length} to a
15534 somewhat higher number than the default so that the message ids are
15535 still in the cache. (A value of 5000 appears to create a file some
15536 300 kBytes in size.)
15537 @vindex nnmail-cache-accepted-message-ids
15538 When @code{nnmail-cache-accepted-message-ids} is non-@code{nil}, Gnus
15539 also records the message ids of moved articles, so that the followup
15540 messages goes into the new group.
15541
15542 Also see the variable @code{nnmail-cache-ignore-groups} if you don't
15543 want certain groups to be recorded in the cache. For example, if all
15544 outgoing messages are written to an ``outgoing'' group, you could set
15545 @code{nnmail-cache-ignore-groups} to match that group name.
15546 Otherwise, answers to all your messages would end up in the
15547 ``outgoing'' group.
15548
15549
15550 @node Group Mail Splitting
15551 @subsection Group Mail Splitting
15552 @cindex mail splitting
15553 @cindex group mail splitting
15554
15555 @findex gnus-group-split
15556 If you subscribe to dozens of mailing lists but you don't want to
15557 maintain mail splitting rules manually, group mail splitting is for you.
15558 You just have to set @code{to-list} and/or @code{to-address} in group
15559 parameters or group customization and set @code{nnmail-split-methods} to
15560 @code{gnus-group-split}. This splitting function will scan all groups
15561 for those parameters and split mail accordingly, i.e., messages posted
15562 from or to the addresses specified in the parameters @code{to-list} or
15563 @code{to-address} of a mail group will be stored in that group.
15564
15565 Sometimes, mailing lists have multiple addresses, and you may want mail
15566 splitting to recognize them all: just set the @code{extra-aliases} group
15567 parameter to the list of additional addresses and it's done. If you'd
15568 rather use a regular expression, set @code{split-regexp}.
15569
15570 All these parameters in a group will be used to create an
15571 @code{nnmail-split-fancy} split, in which the @var{field} is @samp{any},
15572 the @var{value} is a single regular expression that matches
15573 @code{to-list}, @code{to-address}, all of @code{extra-aliases} and all
15574 matches of @code{split-regexp}, and the @var{split} is the name of the
15575 group. @var{restrict}s are also supported: just set the
15576 @code{split-exclude} parameter to a list of regular expressions.
15577
15578 If you can't get the right split to be generated using all these
15579 parameters, or you just need something fancier, you can set the
15580 parameter @code{split-spec} to an @code{nnmail-split-fancy} split. In
15581 this case, all other aforementioned parameters will be ignored by
15582 @code{gnus-group-split}. In particular, @code{split-spec} may be set to
15583 @code{nil}, in which case the group will be ignored by
15584 @code{gnus-group-split}.
15585
15586 @vindex gnus-group-split-default-catch-all-group
15587 @code{gnus-group-split} will do cross-posting on all groups that match,
15588 by defining a single @code{&} fancy split containing one split for each
15589 group. If a message doesn't match any split, it will be stored in the
15590 group named in @code{gnus-group-split-default-catch-all-group}, unless
15591 some group has @code{split-spec} set to @code{catch-all}, in which case
15592 that group is used as the catch-all group. Even though this variable is
15593 often used just to name a group, it may also be set to an arbitrarily
15594 complex fancy split (after all, a group name is a fancy split), and this
15595 may be useful to split mail that doesn't go to any mailing list to
15596 personal mail folders. Note that this fancy split is added as the last
15597 element of a @code{|} split list that also contains a @code{&} split
15598 with the rules extracted from group parameters.
15599
15600 It's time for an example. Assume the following group parameters have
15601 been defined:
15602
15603 @example
15604 nnml:mail.bar:
15605 ((to-address . "bar@@femail.com")
15606 (split-regexp . ".*@@femail\\.com"))
15607 nnml:mail.foo:
15608 ((to-list . "foo@@nowhere.gov")
15609 (extra-aliases "foo@@localhost" "foo-redist@@home")
15610 (split-exclude "bugs-foo" "rambling-foo")
15611 (admin-address . "foo-request@@nowhere.gov"))
15612 nnml:mail.others:
15613 ((split-spec . catch-all))
15614 @end example
15615
15616 Setting @code{nnmail-split-methods} to @code{gnus-group-split} will
15617 behave as if @code{nnmail-split-fancy} had been selected and variable
15618 @code{nnmail-split-fancy} had been set as follows:
15619
15620 @lisp
15621 (| (& (any "\\(bar@@femail\\.com\\|.*@@femail\\.com\\)" "mail.bar")
15622 (any "\\(foo@@nowhere\\.gov\\|foo@@localhost\\|foo-redist@@home\\)"
15623 - "bugs-foo" - "rambling-foo" "mail.foo"))
15624 "mail.others")
15625 @end lisp
15626
15627 @findex gnus-group-split-fancy
15628 If you'd rather not use group splitting for all your mail groups, you
15629 may use it for only some of them, by using @code{nnmail-split-fancy}
15630 splits like this:
15631
15632 @lisp
15633 (: gnus-group-split-fancy @var{groups} @var{no-crosspost} @var{catch-all})
15634 @end lisp
15635
15636 @var{groups} may be a regular expression or a list of group names whose
15637 parameters will be scanned to generate the output split.
15638 @var{no-crosspost} can be used to disable cross-posting; in this case, a
15639 single @code{|} split will be output. @var{catch-all} is the fall back
15640 fancy split, used like @code{gnus-group-split-default-catch-all-group}.
15641 If @var{catch-all} is @code{nil}, or if @code{split-regexp} matches the
15642 empty string in any selected group, no catch-all split will be issued.
15643 Otherwise, if some group has @code{split-spec} set to @code{catch-all},
15644 this group will override the value of the @var{catch-all} argument.
15645
15646 @findex gnus-group-split-setup
15647 Unfortunately, scanning all groups and their parameters can be quite
15648 slow, especially considering that it has to be done for every message.
15649 But don't despair! The function @code{gnus-group-split-setup} can be
15650 used to enable @code{gnus-group-split} in a much more efficient way. It
15651 sets @code{nnmail-split-methods} to @code{nnmail-split-fancy} and sets
15652 @code{nnmail-split-fancy} to the split produced by
15653 @code{gnus-group-split-fancy}. Thus, the group parameters are only
15654 scanned once, no matter how many messages are split.
15655
15656 @findex gnus-group-split-update
15657 However, if you change group parameters, you'd have to update
15658 @code{nnmail-split-fancy} manually. You can do it by running
15659 @code{gnus-group-split-update}. If you'd rather have it updated
15660 automatically, just tell @code{gnus-group-split-setup} to do it for
15661 you. For example, add to your @file{~/.gnus.el}:
15662
15663 @lisp
15664 (gnus-group-split-setup @var{auto-update} @var{catch-all})
15665 @end lisp
15666
15667 If @var{auto-update} is non-@code{nil}, @code{gnus-group-split-update}
15668 will be added to @code{nnmail-pre-get-new-mail-hook}, so you won't ever
15669 have to worry about updating @code{nnmail-split-fancy} again. If you
15670 don't omit @var{catch-all} (it's optional, equivalent to @code{nil}),
15671 @code{gnus-group-split-default-catch-all-group} will be set to its
15672 value.
15673
15674 @vindex gnus-group-split-updated-hook
15675 Because you may want to change @code{nnmail-split-fancy} after it is set
15676 by @code{gnus-group-split-update}, this function will run
15677 @code{gnus-group-split-updated-hook} just before finishing.
15678
15679 @node Incorporating Old Mail
15680 @subsection Incorporating Old Mail
15681 @cindex incorporating old mail
15682 @cindex import old mail
15683
15684 Most people have lots of old mail stored in various file formats. If
15685 you have set up Gnus to read mail using one of the spiffy Gnus mail
15686 back ends, you'll probably wish to have that old mail incorporated into
15687 your mail groups.
15688
15689 Doing so can be quite easy.
15690
15691 To take an example: You're reading mail using @code{nnml}
15692 (@pxref{Mail Spool}), and have set @code{nnmail-split-methods} to a
15693 satisfactory value (@pxref{Splitting Mail}). You have an old Unix mbox
15694 file filled with important, but old, mail. You want to move it into
15695 your @code{nnml} groups.
15696
15697 Here's how:
15698
15699 @enumerate
15700 @item
15701 Go to the group buffer.
15702
15703 @item
15704 Type @kbd{G f} and give the file name to the mbox file when prompted to create an
15705 @code{nndoc} group from the mbox file (@pxref{Foreign Groups}).
15706
15707 @item
15708 Type @kbd{SPACE} to enter the newly created group.
15709
15710 @item
15711 Type @kbd{M P b} to process-mark all articles in this group's buffer
15712 (@pxref{Setting Process Marks}).
15713
15714 @item
15715 Type @kbd{B r} to respool all the process-marked articles, and answer
15716 @samp{nnml} when prompted (@pxref{Mail Group Commands}).
15717 @end enumerate
15718
15719 All the mail messages in the mbox file will now also be spread out over
15720 all your @code{nnml} groups. Try entering them and check whether things
15721 have gone without a glitch. If things look ok, you may consider
15722 deleting the mbox file, but I wouldn't do that unless I was absolutely
15723 sure that all the mail has ended up where it should be.
15724
15725 Respooling is also a handy thing to do if you're switching from one mail
15726 back end to another. Just respool all the mail in the old mail groups
15727 using the new mail back end.
15728
15729
15730 @node Expiring Mail
15731 @subsection Expiring Mail
15732 @cindex article expiry
15733 @cindex expiring mail
15734
15735 Traditional mail readers have a tendency to remove mail articles when
15736 you mark them as read, in some way. Gnus takes a fundamentally
15737 different approach to mail reading.
15738
15739 Gnus basically considers mail just to be news that has been received in
15740 a rather peculiar manner. It does not think that it has the power to
15741 actually change the mail, or delete any mail messages. If you enter a
15742 mail group, and mark articles as ``read'', or kill them in some other
15743 fashion, the mail articles will still exist on the system. I repeat:
15744 Gnus will not delete your old, read mail. Unless you ask it to, of
15745 course.
15746
15747 To make Gnus get rid of your unwanted mail, you have to mark the
15748 articles as @dfn{expirable}. (With the default key bindings, this means
15749 that you have to type @kbd{E}.) This does not mean that the articles
15750 will disappear right away, however. In general, a mail article will be
15751 deleted from your system if, 1) it is marked as expirable, AND 2) it is
15752 more than one week old. If you do not mark an article as expirable, it
15753 will remain on your system until hell freezes over. This bears
15754 repeating one more time, with some spurious capitalizations: IF you do
15755 NOT mark articles as EXPIRABLE, Gnus will NEVER delete those ARTICLES.
15756
15757 @vindex gnus-auto-expirable-marks
15758 You do not have to mark articles as expirable by hand. Gnus provides
15759 two features, called ``auto-expire'' and ``total-expire'', that can help you
15760 with this. In a nutshell, ``auto-expire'' means that Gnus hits @kbd{E}
15761 for you when you select an article. And ``total-expire'' means that Gnus
15762 considers all articles as expirable that are read. So, in addition to
15763 the articles marked @samp{E}, also the articles marked @samp{r},
15764 @samp{R}, @samp{O}, @samp{K}, @samp{Y} (and so on) are considered
15765 expirable. @code{gnus-auto-expirable-marks} has the full list of
15766 these marks.
15767
15768 When should either auto-expire or total-expire be used? Most people
15769 who are subscribed to mailing lists split each list into its own group
15770 and then turn on auto-expire or total-expire for those groups.
15771 (@xref{Splitting Mail}, for more information on splitting each list
15772 into its own group.)
15773
15774 Which one is better, auto-expire or total-expire? It's not easy to
15775 answer. Generally speaking, auto-expire is probably faster. Another
15776 advantage of auto-expire is that you get more marks to work with: for
15777 the articles that are supposed to stick around, you can still choose
15778 between tick and dormant and read marks. But with total-expire, you
15779 only have dormant and ticked to choose from. The advantage of
15780 total-expire is that it works well with adaptive scoring (@pxref{Adaptive
15781 Scoring}). Auto-expire works with normal scoring but not with adaptive
15782 scoring.
15783
15784 @vindex gnus-auto-expirable-newsgroups
15785 Groups that match the regular expression
15786 @code{gnus-auto-expirable-newsgroups} will have all articles that you
15787 read marked as expirable automatically. All articles marked as
15788 expirable have an @samp{E} in the first column in the summary buffer.
15789
15790 By default, if you have auto expiry switched on, Gnus will mark all the
15791 articles you read as expirable, no matter if they were read or unread
15792 before. To avoid having articles marked as read marked as expirable
15793 automatically, you can put something like the following in your
15794 @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
15795
15796 @vindex gnus-mark-article-hook
15797 @lisp
15798 (remove-hook 'gnus-mark-article-hook
15799 'gnus-summary-mark-read-and-unread-as-read)
15800 (add-hook 'gnus-mark-article-hook 'gnus-summary-mark-unread-as-read)
15801 @end lisp
15802
15803 Note that making a group auto-expirable doesn't mean that all read
15804 articles are expired---only the articles marked as expirable
15805 will be expired. Also note that using the @kbd{d} command won't make
15806 articles expirable---only semi-automatic marking of articles as read will
15807 mark the articles as expirable in auto-expirable groups.
15808
15809 Let's say you subscribe to a couple of mailing lists, and you want the
15810 articles you have read to disappear after a while:
15811
15812 @lisp
15813 (setq gnus-auto-expirable-newsgroups
15814 "mail.nonsense-list\\|mail.nice-list")
15815 @end lisp
15816
15817 Another way to have auto-expiry happen is to have the element
15818 @code{auto-expire} in the group parameters of the group.
15819
15820 If you use adaptive scoring (@pxref{Adaptive Scoring}) and
15821 auto-expiring, you'll have problems. Auto-expiring and adaptive scoring
15822 don't really mix very well.
15823
15824 @vindex nnmail-expiry-wait
15825 The @code{nnmail-expiry-wait} variable supplies the default time an
15826 expirable article has to live. Gnus starts counting days from when the
15827 message @emph{arrived}, not from when it was sent. The default is seven
15828 days.
15829
15830 Gnus also supplies a function that lets you fine-tune how long articles
15831 are to live, based on what group they are in. Let's say you want to
15832 have one month expiry period in the @samp{mail.private} group, a one day
15833 expiry period in the @samp{mail.junk} group, and a six day expiry period
15834 everywhere else:
15835
15836 @vindex nnmail-expiry-wait-function
15837 @lisp
15838 (setq nnmail-expiry-wait-function
15839 (lambda (group)
15840 (cond ((string= group "mail.private")
15841 31)
15842 ((string= group "mail.junk")
15843 1)
15844 ((string= group "important")
15845 'never)
15846 (t
15847 6))))
15848 @end lisp
15849
15850 The group names this function is fed are ``unadorned'' group
15851 names---no @samp{nnml:} prefixes and the like.
15852
15853 The @code{nnmail-expiry-wait} variable and
15854 @code{nnmail-expiry-wait-function} function can either be a number (not
15855 necessarily an integer) or one of the symbols @code{immediate} or
15856 @code{never}.
15857
15858 You can also use the @code{expiry-wait} group parameter to selectively
15859 change the expiry period (@pxref{Group Parameters}).
15860
15861 @vindex nnmail-expiry-target
15862 The normal action taken when expiring articles is to delete them.
15863 However, in some circumstances it might make more sense to move them
15864 to other groups instead of deleting them. The variable
15865 @code{nnmail-expiry-target} (and the @code{expiry-target} group
15866 parameter) controls this. The variable supplies a default value for
15867 all groups, which can be overridden for specific groups by the group
15868 parameter. default value is @code{delete}, but this can also be a
15869 string (which should be the name of the group the message should be
15870 moved to), or a function (which will be called in a buffer narrowed to
15871 the message in question, and with the name of the group being moved
15872 from as its parameter) which should return a target---either a group
15873 name or @code{delete}.
15874
15875 Here's an example for specifying a group name:
15876 @lisp
15877 (setq nnmail-expiry-target "nnml:expired")
15878 @end lisp
15879
15880 @findex nnmail-fancy-expiry-target
15881 @vindex nnmail-fancy-expiry-targets
15882 Gnus provides a function @code{nnmail-fancy-expiry-target} which will
15883 expire mail to groups according to the variable
15884 @code{nnmail-fancy-expiry-targets}. Here's an example:
15885
15886 @lisp
15887 (setq nnmail-expiry-target 'nnmail-fancy-expiry-target
15888 nnmail-fancy-expiry-targets
15889 '((to-from "boss" "nnfolder:Work")
15890 ("subject" "IMPORTANT" "nnfolder:IMPORTANT.%Y.%b")
15891 ("from" ".*" "nnfolder:Archive-%Y")))
15892 @end lisp
15893
15894 With this setup, any mail that has @code{IMPORTANT} in its Subject
15895 header and was sent in the year @code{YYYY} and month @code{MMM}, will
15896 get expired to the group @code{nnfolder:IMPORTANT.YYYY.MMM}. If its
15897 From or To header contains the string @code{boss}, it will get expired
15898 to @code{nnfolder:Work}. All other mail will get expired to
15899 @code{nnfolder:Archive-YYYY}.
15900
15901 @vindex nnmail-keep-last-article
15902 If @code{nnmail-keep-last-article} is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will never
15903 expire the final article in a mail newsgroup. This is to make life
15904 easier for procmail users.
15905
15906 @vindex gnus-total-expirable-newsgroups
15907 By the way: That line up there, about Gnus never expiring non-expirable
15908 articles, is a lie. If you put @code{total-expire} in the group
15909 parameters, articles will not be marked as expirable, but all read
15910 articles will be put through the expiry process. Use with extreme
15911 caution. Even more dangerous is the
15912 @code{gnus-total-expirable-newsgroups} variable. All groups that match
15913 this regexp will have all read articles put through the expiry process,
15914 which means that @emph{all} old mail articles in the groups in question
15915 will be deleted after a while. Use with extreme caution, and don't come
15916 crying to me when you discover that the regexp you used matched the
15917 wrong group and all your important mail has disappeared. Be a
15918 @emph{man}! Or a @emph{woman}! Whatever you feel more comfortable
15919 with! So there!
15920
15921 Most people make most of their mail groups total-expirable, though.
15922
15923 @vindex gnus-inhibit-user-auto-expire
15924 If @code{gnus-inhibit-user-auto-expire} is non-@code{nil}, user marking
15925 commands will not mark an article as expirable, even if the group has
15926 auto-expire turned on.
15927
15928 @vindex gnus-mark-copied-or-moved-articles-as-expirable
15929 The expirable marks of articles will be removed when copying or moving
15930 them to a group in which auto-expire is not turned on. This is for
15931 preventing articles from being expired unintentionally. On the other
15932 hand, to a group that has turned auto-expire on, the expirable marks of
15933 articles that are copied or moved will not be changed by default. I.e.,
15934 when copying or moving to such a group, articles that were expirable
15935 will be left expirable and ones that were not expirable will not be
15936 marked as expirable. So, even though in auto-expire groups, some
15937 articles will never get expired (unless you read them again). If you
15938 don't side with that behavior that unexpirable articles may be mixed
15939 into auto-expire groups, you can set
15940 @code{gnus-mark-copied-or-moved-articles-as-expirable} to a
15941 non-@code{nil} value. In that case, articles that have been read will
15942 be marked as expirable automatically when being copied or moved to a
15943 group that has auto-expire turned on. The default value is @code{nil}.
15944
15945
15946 @node Washing Mail
15947 @subsection Washing Mail
15948 @cindex mail washing
15949 @cindex list server brain damage
15950 @cindex incoming mail treatment
15951
15952 Mailers and list servers are notorious for doing all sorts of really,
15953 really stupid things with mail. ``Hey, RFC 822 doesn't explicitly
15954 prohibit us from adding the string @code{wE aRe ElItE!!!!!1!!} to the
15955 end of all lines passing through our server, so let's do that!!!!1!''
15956 Yes, but RFC 822 wasn't designed to be read by morons. Things that were
15957 considered to be self-evident were not discussed. So. Here we are.
15958
15959 Case in point: The German version of Microsoft Exchange adds @samp{AW:
15960 } to the subjects of replies instead of @samp{Re: }. I could pretend to
15961 be shocked and dismayed by this, but I haven't got the energy. It is to
15962 laugh.
15963
15964 Gnus provides a plethora of functions for washing articles while
15965 displaying them, but it might be nicer to do the filtering before
15966 storing the mail to disk. For that purpose, we have three hooks and
15967 various functions that can be put in these hooks.
15968
15969 @table @code
15970 @item nnmail-prepare-incoming-hook
15971 @vindex nnmail-prepare-incoming-hook
15972 This hook is called before doing anything with the mail and is meant for
15973 grand, sweeping gestures. It is called in a buffer that contains all
15974 the new, incoming mail. Functions to be used include:
15975
15976 @table @code
15977 @item nnheader-ms-strip-cr
15978 @findex nnheader-ms-strip-cr
15979 Remove trailing carriage returns from each line. This is default on
15980 Emacs running on MS machines.
15981
15982 @end table
15983
15984 @item nnmail-prepare-incoming-header-hook
15985 @vindex nnmail-prepare-incoming-header-hook
15986 This hook is called narrowed to each header. It can be used when
15987 cleaning up the headers. Functions that can be used include:
15988
15989 @table @code
15990 @item nnmail-remove-leading-whitespace
15991 @findex nnmail-remove-leading-whitespace
15992 Clear leading white space that ``helpful'' listservs have added to the
15993 headers to make them look nice. Aaah.
15994
15995 (Note that this function works on both the header on the body of all
15996 messages, so it is a potentially dangerous function to use (if a body
15997 of a message contains something that looks like a header line). So
15998 rather than fix the bug, it is of course the right solution to make it
15999 into a feature by documenting it.)
16000
16001 @item nnmail-remove-list-identifiers
16002 @findex nnmail-remove-list-identifiers
16003 Some list servers add an identifier---for example, @samp{(idm)}---to the
16004 beginning of all @code{Subject} headers. I'm sure that's nice for
16005 people who use stone age mail readers. This function will remove
16006 strings that match the @code{nnmail-list-identifiers} regexp, which can
16007 also be a list of regexp. @code{nnmail-list-identifiers} may not contain
16008 @code{\\(..\\)}.
16009
16010 For instance, if you want to remove the @samp{(idm)} and the
16011 @samp{nagnagnag} identifiers:
16012
16013 @lisp
16014 (setq nnmail-list-identifiers
16015 '("(idm)" "nagnagnag"))
16016 @end lisp
16017
16018 This can also be done non-destructively with
16019 @code{gnus-list-identifiers}, @xref{Article Hiding}.
16020
16021 @item nnmail-remove-tabs
16022 @findex nnmail-remove-tabs
16023 Translate all @samp{TAB} characters into @samp{SPACE} characters.
16024
16025 @item nnmail-ignore-broken-references
16026 @findex nnmail-ignore-broken-references
16027 @c @findex nnmail-fix-eudora-headers
16028 @cindex Eudora
16029 @cindex Pegasus
16030 Some mail user agents (e.g., Eudora and Pegasus) produce broken
16031 @code{References} headers, but correct @code{In-Reply-To} headers. This
16032 function will get rid of the @code{References} header if the headers
16033 contain a line matching the regular expression
16034 @code{nnmail-broken-references-mailers}.
16035
16036 @end table
16037
16038 @item nnmail-prepare-incoming-message-hook
16039 @vindex nnmail-prepare-incoming-message-hook
16040 This hook is called narrowed to each message. Functions to be used
16041 include:
16042
16043 @table @code
16044 @item article-de-quoted-unreadable
16045 @findex article-de-quoted-unreadable
16046 Decode Quoted Readable encoding.
16047
16048 @end table
16049 @end table
16050
16051
16052 @node Duplicates
16053 @subsection Duplicates
16054
16055 @vindex nnmail-treat-duplicates
16056 @vindex nnmail-message-id-cache-length
16057 @vindex nnmail-message-id-cache-file
16058 @cindex duplicate mails
16059 If you are a member of a couple of mailing lists, you will sometimes
16060 receive two copies of the same mail. This can be quite annoying, so
16061 @code{nnmail} checks for and treats any duplicates it might find. To do
16062 this, it keeps a cache of old @code{Message-ID}s:
16063 @code{nnmail-message-id-cache-file}, which is @file{~/.nnmail-cache} by
16064 default. The approximate maximum number of @code{Message-ID}s stored
16065 there is controlled by the @code{nnmail-message-id-cache-length}
16066 variable, which is 1000 by default. (So 1000 @code{Message-ID}s will be
16067 stored.) If all this sounds scary to you, you can set
16068 @code{nnmail-treat-duplicates} to @code{warn} (which is what it is by
16069 default), and @code{nnmail} won't delete duplicate mails. Instead it
16070 will insert a warning into the head of the mail saying that it thinks
16071 that this is a duplicate of a different message.
16072
16073 This variable can also be a function. If that's the case, the function
16074 will be called from a buffer narrowed to the message in question with
16075 the @code{Message-ID} as a parameter. The function must return either
16076 @code{nil}, @code{warn}, or @code{delete}.
16077
16078 You can turn this feature off completely by setting the variable to
16079 @code{nil}.
16080
16081 If you want all the duplicate mails to be put into a special
16082 @dfn{duplicates} group, you could do that using the normal mail split
16083 methods:
16084
16085 @lisp
16086 (setq nnmail-split-fancy
16087 '(| ;; @r{Messages duplicates go to a separate group.}
16088 ("gnus-warning" "duplicat\\(e\\|ion\\) of message" "duplicate")
16089 ;; @r{Message from daemons, postmaster, and the like to another.}
16090 (any mail "mail.misc")
16091 ;; @r{Other rules.}
16092 [...] ))
16093 @end lisp
16094 @noindent
16095 Or something like:
16096 @lisp
16097 (setq nnmail-split-methods
16098 '(("duplicates" "^Gnus-Warning:.*duplicate")
16099 ;; @r{Other rules.}
16100 [...]))
16101 @end lisp
16102
16103 Here's a neat feature: If you know that the recipient reads her mail
16104 with Gnus, and that she has @code{nnmail-treat-duplicates} set to
16105 @code{delete}, you can send her as many insults as you like, just by
16106 using a @code{Message-ID} of a mail that you know that she's already
16107 received. Think of all the fun! She'll never see any of it! Whee!
16108
16109
16110 @node Not Reading Mail
16111 @subsection Not Reading Mail
16112
16113 If you start using any of the mail back ends, they have the annoying
16114 habit of assuming that you want to read mail with them. This might not
16115 be unreasonable, but it might not be what you want.
16116
16117 If you set @code{mail-sources} and @code{nnmail-spool-file} to
16118 @code{nil}, none of the back ends will ever attempt to read incoming
16119 mail, which should help.
16120
16121 @vindex nnbabyl-get-new-mail
16122 @vindex nnmbox-get-new-mail
16123 @vindex nnml-get-new-mail
16124 @vindex nnmh-get-new-mail
16125 @vindex nnfolder-get-new-mail
16126 This might be too much, if, for instance, you are reading mail quite
16127 happily with @code{nnml} and just want to peek at some old (pre-Emacs
16128 23) Rmail file you have stashed away with @code{nnbabyl}. All back ends have
16129 variables called back-end-@code{get-new-mail}. If you want to disable
16130 the @code{nnbabyl} mail reading, you edit the virtual server for the
16131 group to have a setting where @code{nnbabyl-get-new-mail} to @code{nil}.
16132
16133 All the mail back ends will call @code{nn}*@code{-prepare-save-mail-hook}
16134 narrowed to the article to be saved before saving it when reading
16135 incoming mail.
16136
16137
16138 @node Choosing a Mail Back End
16139 @subsection Choosing a Mail Back End
16140
16141 Gnus will read the mail spool when you activate a mail group. The mail
16142 file is first copied to your home directory. What happens after that
16143 depends on what format you want to store your mail in.
16144
16145 There are six different mail back ends in the standard Gnus, and more
16146 back ends are available separately. The mail back end most people use
16147 (because it is possibly the fastest) is @code{nnml} (@pxref{Mail
16148 Spool}).
16149
16150 @menu
16151 * Unix Mail Box:: Using the (quite) standard Un*x mbox.
16152 * Babyl:: Babyl was used by older versions of Rmail.
16153 * Mail Spool:: Store your mail in a private spool?
16154 * MH Spool:: An mhspool-like back end.
16155 * Maildir:: Another one-file-per-message format.
16156 * nnmaildir Group Parameters::
16157 * Article Identification::
16158 * NOV Data::
16159 * Article Marks::
16160 * Mail Folders:: Having one file for each group.
16161 * Comparing Mail Back Ends:: An in-depth looks at pros and cons.
16162 @end menu
16163
16164
16165
16166 @node Unix Mail Box
16167 @subsubsection Unix Mail Box
16168 @cindex nnmbox
16169 @cindex unix mail box
16170
16171 @vindex nnmbox-active-file
16172 @vindex nnmbox-mbox-file
16173 The @dfn{nnmbox} back end will use the standard Un*x mbox file to store
16174 mail. @code{nnmbox} will add extra headers to each mail article to say
16175 which group it belongs in.
16176
16177 Virtual server settings:
16178
16179 @table @code
16180 @item nnmbox-mbox-file
16181 @vindex nnmbox-mbox-file
16182 The name of the mail box in the user's home directory. Default is
16183 @file{~/mbox}.
16184
16185 @item nnmbox-active-file
16186 @vindex nnmbox-active-file
16187 The name of the active file for the mail box. Default is
16188 @file{~/.mbox-active}.
16189
16190 @item nnmbox-get-new-mail
16191 @vindex nnmbox-get-new-mail
16192 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnmbox} will read incoming mail and split it
16193 into groups. Default is @code{t}.
16194 @end table
16195
16196
16197 @node Babyl
16198 @subsubsection Babyl
16199 @cindex nnbabyl
16200
16201 @vindex nnbabyl-active-file
16202 @vindex nnbabyl-mbox-file
16203 The @dfn{nnbabyl} back end will use a Babyl mail box to store mail.
16204 @code{nnbabyl} will add extra headers to each mail article to say which
16205 group it belongs in.
16206
16207 Virtual server settings:
16208
16209 @table @code
16210 @item nnbabyl-mbox-file
16211 @vindex nnbabyl-mbox-file
16212 The name of the Babyl file. The default is @file{~/RMAIL}
16213
16214 @item nnbabyl-active-file
16215 @vindex nnbabyl-active-file
16216 The name of the active file for the Babyl file. The default is
16217 @file{~/.rmail-active}
16218
16219 @item nnbabyl-get-new-mail
16220 @vindex nnbabyl-get-new-mail
16221 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnbabyl} will read incoming mail. Default is
16222 @code{t}
16223 @end table
16224
16225
16226 @node Mail Spool
16227 @subsubsection Mail Spool
16228 @cindex nnml
16229 @cindex mail @acronym{NOV} spool
16230
16231 The @dfn{nnml} spool mail format isn't compatible with any other known
16232 format. It should be used with some caution.
16233
16234 @vindex nnml-directory
16235 If you use this back end, Gnus will split all incoming mail into files,
16236 one file for each mail, and put the articles into the corresponding
16237 directories under the directory specified by the @code{nnml-directory}
16238 variable. The default value is @file{~/Mail/}.
16239
16240 You do not have to create any directories beforehand; Gnus will take
16241 care of all that.
16242
16243 If you have a strict limit as to how many files you are allowed to store
16244 in your account, you should not use this back end. As each mail gets its
16245 own file, you might very well occupy thousands of inodes within a few
16246 weeks. If this is no problem for you, and it isn't a problem for you
16247 having your friendly systems administrator walking around, madly,
16248 shouting ``Who is eating all my inodes?! Who? Who!?!'', then you should
16249 know that this is probably the fastest format to use. You do not have
16250 to trudge through a big mbox file just to read your new mail.
16251
16252 @code{nnml} is probably the slowest back end when it comes to article
16253 splitting. It has to create lots of files, and it also generates
16254 @acronym{NOV} databases for the incoming mails. This makes it possibly the
16255 fastest back end when it comes to reading mail.
16256
16257 Virtual server settings:
16258
16259 @table @code
16260 @item nnml-directory
16261 @vindex nnml-directory
16262 All @code{nnml} directories will be placed under this directory. The
16263 default is the value of @code{message-directory} (whose default value
16264 is @file{~/Mail}).
16265
16266 @item nnml-active-file
16267 @vindex nnml-active-file
16268 The active file for the @code{nnml} server. The default is
16269 @file{~/Mail/active}.
16270
16271 @item nnml-newsgroups-file
16272 @vindex nnml-newsgroups-file
16273 The @code{nnml} group descriptions file. @xref{Newsgroups File
16274 Format}. The default is @file{~/Mail/newsgroups}.
16275
16276 @item nnml-get-new-mail
16277 @vindex nnml-get-new-mail
16278 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnml} will read incoming mail. The default is
16279 @code{t}.
16280
16281 @item nnml-nov-is-evil
16282 @vindex nnml-nov-is-evil
16283 If non-@code{nil}, this back end will ignore any @acronym{NOV} files. The
16284 default is @code{nil}.
16285
16286 @item nnml-nov-file-name
16287 @vindex nnml-nov-file-name
16288 The name of the @acronym{NOV} files. The default is @file{.overview}.
16289
16290 @item nnml-prepare-save-mail-hook
16291 @vindex nnml-prepare-save-mail-hook
16292 Hook run narrowed to an article before saving.
16293
16294 @item nnml-use-compressed-files
16295 @vindex nnml-use-compressed-files
16296 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnml} will allow using compressed message
16297 files. This requires @code{auto-compression-mode} to be enabled
16298 (@pxref{Compressed Files, ,Compressed Files, emacs, The Emacs Manual}).
16299 If the value of @code{nnml-use-compressed-files} is a string, it is used
16300 as the file extension specifying the compression program. You can set it
16301 to @samp{.bz2} if your Emacs supports it. A value of @code{t} is
16302 equivalent to @samp{.gz}.
16303
16304 @item nnml-compressed-files-size-threshold
16305 @vindex nnml-compressed-files-size-threshold
16306 Default size threshold for compressed message files. Message files with
16307 bodies larger than that many characters will be automatically compressed
16308 if @code{nnml-use-compressed-files} is non-@code{nil}.
16309
16310 @end table
16311
16312 @findex nnml-generate-nov-databases
16313 If your @code{nnml} groups and @acronym{NOV} files get totally out of
16314 whack, you can do a complete update by typing @kbd{M-x
16315 nnml-generate-nov-databases}. This command will trawl through the
16316 entire @code{nnml} hierarchy, looking at each and every article, so it
16317 might take a while to complete. A better interface to this
16318 functionality can be found in the server buffer (@pxref{Server
16319 Commands}).
16320
16321
16322 @node MH Spool
16323 @subsubsection MH Spool
16324 @cindex nnmh
16325 @cindex mh-e mail spool
16326
16327 @code{nnmh} is just like @code{nnml}, except that is doesn't generate
16328 @acronym{NOV} databases and it doesn't keep an active file or marks
16329 file. This makes @code{nnmh} a @emph{much} slower back end than
16330 @code{nnml}, but it also makes it easier to write procmail scripts
16331 for.
16332
16333 Virtual server settings:
16334
16335 @table @code
16336 @item nnmh-directory
16337 @vindex nnmh-directory
16338 All @code{nnmh} directories will be located under this directory. The
16339 default is the value of @code{message-directory} (whose default is
16340 @file{~/Mail})
16341
16342 @item nnmh-get-new-mail
16343 @vindex nnmh-get-new-mail
16344 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnmh} will read incoming mail. The default is
16345 @code{t}.
16346
16347 @item nnmh-be-safe
16348 @vindex nnmh-be-safe
16349 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnmh} will go to ridiculous lengths to make
16350 sure that the articles in the folder are actually what Gnus thinks
16351 they are. It will check date stamps and stat everything in sight, so
16352 setting this to @code{t} will mean a serious slow-down. If you never
16353 use anything but Gnus to read the @code{nnmh} articles, you do not
16354 have to set this variable to @code{t}. The default is @code{nil}.
16355 @end table
16356
16357
16358 @node Maildir
16359 @subsubsection Maildir
16360 @cindex nnmaildir
16361 @cindex maildir
16362
16363 @code{nnmaildir} stores mail in the maildir format, with each maildir
16364 corresponding to a group in Gnus. This format is documented here:
16365 @uref{http://cr.yp.to/proto/maildir.html} and here:
16366 @uref{http://www.qmail.org/man/man5/maildir.html}. @code{nnmaildir}
16367 also stores extra information in the @file{.nnmaildir/} directory
16368 within a maildir.
16369
16370 Maildir format was designed to allow concurrent deliveries and
16371 reading, without needing locks. With other back ends, you would have
16372 your mail delivered to a spool of some kind, and then you would
16373 configure Gnus to split mail from that spool into your groups. You
16374 can still do that with @code{nnmaildir}, but the more common
16375 configuration is to have your mail delivered directly to the maildirs
16376 that appear as group in Gnus.
16377
16378 @code{nnmaildir} is designed to be perfectly reliable: @kbd{C-g} will
16379 never corrupt its data in memory, and @code{SIGKILL} will never
16380 corrupt its data in the filesystem.
16381
16382 @code{nnmaildir} stores article marks and @acronym{NOV} data in each
16383 maildir. So you can copy a whole maildir from one Gnus setup to
16384 another, and you will keep your marks.
16385
16386 Virtual server settings:
16387
16388 @table @code
16389 @item directory
16390 For each of your @code{nnmaildir} servers (it's very unlikely that
16391 you'd need more than one), you need to create a directory and populate
16392 it with maildirs or symlinks to maildirs (and nothing else; do not
16393 choose a directory already used for other purposes). Each maildir
16394 will be represented in Gnus as a newsgroup on that server; the
16395 filename of the symlink will be the name of the group. Any filenames
16396 in the directory starting with @samp{.} are ignored. The directory is
16397 scanned when you first start Gnus, and each time you type @kbd{g} in
16398 the group buffer; if any maildirs have been removed or added,
16399 @code{nnmaildir} notices at these times.
16400
16401 The value of the @code{directory} parameter should be a Lisp form
16402 which is processed by @code{eval} and @code{expand-file-name} to get
16403 the path of the directory for this server. The form is @code{eval}ed
16404 only when the server is opened; the resulting string is used until the
16405 server is closed. (If you don't know about forms and @code{eval},
16406 don't worry---a simple string will work.) This parameter is not
16407 optional; you must specify it. I don't recommend using
16408 @code{"~/Mail"} or a subdirectory of it; several other parts of Gnus
16409 use that directory by default for various things, and may get confused
16410 if @code{nnmaildir} uses it too. @code{"~/.nnmaildir"} is a typical
16411 value.
16412
16413 @item target-prefix
16414 This should be a Lisp form which is processed by @code{eval} and
16415 @code{expand-file-name}. The form is @code{eval}ed only when the
16416 server is opened; the resulting string is used until the server is
16417 closed.
16418
16419 When you create a group on an @code{nnmaildir} server, the maildir is
16420 created with @code{target-prefix} prepended to its name, and a symlink
16421 pointing to that maildir is created, named with the plain group name.
16422 So if @code{directory} is @code{"~/.nnmaildir"} and
16423 @code{target-prefix} is @code{"../maildirs/"}, then when you create
16424 the group @code{foo}, @code{nnmaildir} will create
16425 @file{~/.nnmaildir/../maildirs/foo} as a maildir, and will create
16426 @file{~/.nnmaildir/foo} as a symlink pointing to
16427 @file{../maildirs/foo}.
16428
16429 You can set @code{target-prefix} to a string without any slashes to
16430 create both maildirs and symlinks in the same @code{directory}; in
16431 this case, any maildirs found in @code{directory} whose names start
16432 with @code{target-prefix} will not be listed as groups (but the
16433 symlinks pointing to them will be).
16434
16435 As a special case, if @code{target-prefix} is @code{""} (the default),
16436 then when you create a group, the maildir will be created in
16437 @code{directory} without a corresponding symlink. Beware that you
16438 cannot use @code{gnus-group-delete-group} on such groups without the
16439 @code{force} argument.
16440
16441 @item directory-files
16442 This should be a function with the same interface as
16443 @code{directory-files} (such as @code{directory-files} itself). It is
16444 used to scan the server's @code{directory} for maildirs. This
16445 parameter is optional; the default is
16446 @code{nnheader-directory-files-safe} if
16447 @code{nnheader-directory-files-is-safe} is @code{nil}, and
16448 @code{directory-files} otherwise.
16449 (@code{nnheader-directory-files-is-safe} is checked only once when the
16450 server is opened; if you want to check it each time the directory is
16451 scanned, you'll have to provide your own function that does that.)
16452
16453 @item get-new-mail
16454 If non-@code{nil}, then after scanning for new mail in the group
16455 maildirs themselves as usual, this server will also incorporate mail
16456 the conventional Gnus way, from @code{mail-sources} according to
16457 @code{nnmail-split-methods} or @code{nnmail-split-fancy}. The default
16458 value is @code{nil}.
16459
16460 Do @emph{not} use the same maildir both in @code{mail-sources} and as
16461 an @code{nnmaildir} group. The results might happen to be useful, but
16462 that would be by chance, not by design, and the results might be
16463 different in the future. If your split rules create new groups,
16464 remember to supply a @code{create-directory} server parameter.
16465 @end table
16466
16467 @node nnmaildir Group Parameters
16468 @subsubsection Group parameters
16469
16470 @code{nnmaildir} uses several group parameters. It's safe to ignore
16471 all this; the default behavior for @code{nnmaildir} is the same as the
16472 default behavior for other mail back ends: articles are deleted after
16473 one week, etc. Except for the expiry parameters, all this
16474 functionality is unique to @code{nnmaildir}, so you can ignore it if
16475 you're just trying to duplicate the behavior you already have with
16476 another back end.
16477
16478 If the value of any of these parameters is a vector, the first element
16479 is evaluated as a Lisp form and the result is used, rather than the
16480 original value. If the value is not a vector, the value itself is
16481 evaluated as a Lisp form. (This is why these parameters use names
16482 different from those of other, similar parameters supported by other
16483 back ends: they have different, though similar, meanings.) (For
16484 numbers, strings, @code{nil}, and @code{t}, you can ignore the
16485 @code{eval} business again; for other values, remember to use an extra
16486 quote and wrap the value in a vector when appropriate.)
16487
16488 @table @code
16489 @item expire-age
16490 An integer specifying the minimum age, in seconds, of an article
16491 before it will be expired, or the symbol @code{never} to specify that
16492 articles should never be expired. If this parameter is not set,
16493 @code{nnmaildir} falls back to the usual
16494 @code{nnmail-expiry-wait}(@code{-function}) variables (the
16495 @code{expiry-wait} group parameter overrides @code{nnmail-expiry-wait}
16496 and makes @code{nnmail-expiry-wait-function} ineffective). If you
16497 wanted a value of 3 days, you could use something like @code{[(* 3 24
16498 60 60)]}; @code{nnmaildir} will evaluate the form and use the result.
16499 An article's age is measured starting from the article file's
16500 modification time. Normally, this is the same as the article's
16501 delivery time, but editing an article makes it younger. Moving an
16502 article (other than via expiry) may also make an article younger.
16503
16504 @item expire-group
16505 If this is set to a string such as a full Gnus group name, like
16506 @example
16507 "backend+server.address.string:group.name"
16508 @end example
16509 and if it is not the name of the same group that the parameter belongs
16510 to, then articles will be moved to the specified group during expiry
16511 before being deleted. @emph{If this is set to an @code{nnmaildir}
16512 group, the article will be just as old in the destination group as it
16513 was in the source group.} So be careful with @code{expire-age} in the
16514 destination group. If this is set to the name of the same group that
16515 the parameter belongs to, then the article is not expired at all. If
16516 you use the vector form, the first element is evaluated once for each
16517 article. So that form can refer to
16518 @code{nnmaildir-article-file-name}, etc., to decide where to put the
16519 article. @emph{Even if this parameter is not set, @code{nnmaildir}
16520 does not fall back to the @code{expiry-target} group parameter or the
16521 @code{nnmail-expiry-target} variable.}
16522
16523 @item read-only
16524 If this is set to @code{t}, @code{nnmaildir} will treat the articles
16525 in this maildir as read-only. This means: articles are not renamed
16526 from @file{new/} into @file{cur/}; articles are only found in
16527 @file{new/}, not @file{cur/}; articles are never deleted; articles
16528 cannot be edited. @file{new/} is expected to be a symlink to the
16529 @file{new/} directory of another maildir---e.g., a system-wide mailbox
16530 containing a mailing list of common interest. Everything in the
16531 maildir outside @file{new/} is @emph{not} treated as read-only, so for
16532 a shared mailbox, you do still need to set up your own maildir (or
16533 have write permission to the shared mailbox); your maildir just won't
16534 contain extra copies of the articles.
16535
16536 @item directory-files
16537 A function with the same interface as @code{directory-files}. It is
16538 used to scan the directories in the maildir corresponding to this
16539 group to find articles. The default is the function specified by the
16540 server's @code{directory-files} parameter.
16541
16542 @item distrust-Lines:
16543 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnmaildir} will always count the lines of an
16544 article, rather than use the @code{Lines:} header field. If
16545 @code{nil}, the header field will be used if present.
16546
16547 @item always-marks
16548 A list of mark symbols, such as @code{['(read expire)]}. Whenever
16549 Gnus asks @code{nnmaildir} for article marks, @code{nnmaildir} will
16550 say that all articles have these marks, regardless of whether the
16551 marks stored in the filesystem say so. This is a proof-of-concept
16552 feature that will probably be removed eventually; it ought to be done
16553 in Gnus proper, or abandoned if it's not worthwhile.
16554
16555 @item never-marks
16556 A list of mark symbols, such as @code{['(tick expire)]}. Whenever
16557 Gnus asks @code{nnmaildir} for article marks, @code{nnmaildir} will
16558 say that no articles have these marks, regardless of whether the marks
16559 stored in the filesystem say so. @code{never-marks} overrides
16560 @code{always-marks}. This is a proof-of-concept feature that will
16561 probably be removed eventually; it ought to be done in Gnus proper, or
16562 abandoned if it's not worthwhile.
16563
16564 @item nov-cache-size
16565 An integer specifying the size of the @acronym{NOV} memory cache. To
16566 speed things up, @code{nnmaildir} keeps @acronym{NOV} data in memory
16567 for a limited number of articles in each group. (This is probably not
16568 worthwhile, and will probably be removed in the future.) This
16569 parameter's value is noticed only the first time a group is seen after
16570 the server is opened---i.e., when you first start Gnus, typically.
16571 The @acronym{NOV} cache is never resized until the server is closed
16572 and reopened. The default is an estimate of the number of articles
16573 that would be displayed in the summary buffer: a count of articles
16574 that are either marked with @code{tick} or not marked with
16575 @code{read}, plus a little extra.
16576 @end table
16577
16578 @node Article Identification
16579 @subsubsection Article identification
16580 Articles are stored in the @file{cur/} subdirectory of each maildir.
16581 Each article file is named like @code{uniq:info}, where @code{uniq}
16582 contains no colons. @code{nnmaildir} ignores, but preserves, the
16583 @code{:info} part. (Other maildir readers typically use this part of
16584 the filename to store marks.) The @code{uniq} part uniquely
16585 identifies the article, and is used in various places in the
16586 @file{.nnmaildir/} subdirectory of the maildir to store information
16587 about the corresponding article. The full pathname of an article is
16588 available in the variable @code{nnmaildir-article-file-name} after you
16589 request the article in the summary buffer.
16590
16591 @node NOV Data
16592 @subsubsection NOV data
16593 An article identified by @code{uniq} has its @acronym{NOV} data (used
16594 to generate lines in the summary buffer) stored in
16595 @code{.nnmaildir/nov/uniq}. There is no
16596 @code{nnmaildir-generate-nov-databases} function. (There isn't much
16597 need for it---an article's @acronym{NOV} data is updated automatically
16598 when the article or @code{nnmail-extra-headers} has changed.) You can
16599 force @code{nnmaildir} to regenerate the @acronym{NOV} data for a
16600 single article simply by deleting the corresponding @acronym{NOV}
16601 file, but @emph{beware}: this will also cause @code{nnmaildir} to
16602 assign a new article number for this article, which may cause trouble
16603 with @code{seen} marks, the Agent, and the cache.
16604
16605 @node Article Marks
16606 @subsubsection Article marks
16607 An article identified by @code{uniq} is considered to have the mark
16608 @code{flag} when the file @file{.nnmaildir/marks/flag/uniq} exists.
16609 When Gnus asks @code{nnmaildir} for a group's marks, @code{nnmaildir}
16610 looks for such files and reports the set of marks it finds. When Gnus
16611 asks @code{nnmaildir} to store a new set of marks, @code{nnmaildir}
16612 creates and deletes the corresponding files as needed. (Actually,
16613 rather than create a new file for each mark, it just creates hard
16614 links to @file{.nnmaildir/markfile}, to save inodes.)
16615
16616 You can invent new marks by creating a new directory in
16617 @file{.nnmaildir/marks/}. You can tar up a maildir and remove it from
16618 your server, untar it later, and keep your marks. You can add and
16619 remove marks yourself by creating and deleting mark files. If you do
16620 this while Gnus is running and your @code{nnmaildir} server is open,
16621 it's best to exit all summary buffers for @code{nnmaildir} groups and
16622 type @kbd{s} in the group buffer first, and to type @kbd{g} or
16623 @kbd{M-g} in the group buffer afterwards. Otherwise, Gnus might not
16624 pick up the changes, and might undo them.
16625
16626
16627 @node Mail Folders
16628 @subsubsection Mail Folders
16629 @cindex nnfolder
16630 @cindex mbox folders
16631 @cindex mail folders
16632
16633 @code{nnfolder} is a back end for storing each mail group in a
16634 separate file. Each file is in the standard Un*x mbox format.
16635 @code{nnfolder} will add extra headers to keep track of article
16636 numbers and arrival dates.
16637
16638 Virtual server settings:
16639
16640 @table @code
16641 @item nnfolder-directory
16642 @vindex nnfolder-directory
16643 All the @code{nnfolder} mail boxes will be stored under this
16644 directory. The default is the value of @code{message-directory}
16645 (whose default is @file{~/Mail})
16646
16647 @item nnfolder-active-file
16648 @vindex nnfolder-active-file
16649 The name of the active file. The default is @file{~/Mail/active}.
16650
16651 @item nnfolder-newsgroups-file
16652 @vindex nnfolder-newsgroups-file
16653 The name of the group descriptions file. @xref{Newsgroups File
16654 Format}. The default is @file{~/Mail/newsgroups}
16655
16656 @item nnfolder-get-new-mail
16657 @vindex nnfolder-get-new-mail
16658 If non-@code{nil}, @code{nnfolder} will read incoming mail. The
16659 default is @code{t}
16660
16661 @item nnfolder-save-buffer-hook
16662 @vindex nnfolder-save-buffer-hook
16663 @cindex backup files
16664 Hook run before saving the folders. Note that Emacs does the normal
16665 backup renaming of files even with the @code{nnfolder} buffers. If
16666 you wish to switch this off, you could say something like the
16667 following in your @file{.emacs} file:
16668
16669 @lisp
16670 (defun turn-off-backup ()
16671 (set (make-local-variable 'backup-inhibited) t))
16672
16673 (add-hook 'nnfolder-save-buffer-hook 'turn-off-backup)
16674 @end lisp
16675
16676 @item nnfolder-delete-mail-hook
16677 @vindex nnfolder-delete-mail-hook
16678 Hook run in a buffer narrowed to the message that is to be deleted.
16679 This function can be used to copy the message to somewhere else, or to
16680 extract some information from it before removing it.
16681
16682 @item nnfolder-nov-is-evil
16683 @vindex nnfolder-nov-is-evil
16684 If non-@code{nil}, this back end will ignore any @acronym{NOV} files. The
16685 default is @code{nil}.
16686
16687 @item nnfolder-nov-file-suffix
16688 @vindex nnfolder-nov-file-suffix
16689 The extension for @acronym{NOV} files. The default is @file{.nov}.
16690
16691 @item nnfolder-nov-directory
16692 @vindex nnfolder-nov-directory
16693 The directory where the @acronym{NOV} files should be stored. If
16694 @code{nil}, @code{nnfolder-directory} is used.
16695
16696 @end table
16697
16698
16699 @findex nnfolder-generate-active-file
16700 @kindex M-x nnfolder-generate-active-file
16701 If you have lots of @code{nnfolder}-like files you'd like to read with
16702 @code{nnfolder}, you can use the @kbd{M-x nnfolder-generate-active-file}
16703 command to make @code{nnfolder} aware of all likely files in
16704 @code{nnfolder-directory}. This only works if you use long file names,
16705 though.
16706
16707 @node Comparing Mail Back Ends
16708 @subsubsection Comparing Mail Back Ends
16709
16710 First, just for terminology, the @dfn{back end} is the common word for a
16711 low-level access method---a transport, if you will, by which something
16712 is acquired. The sense is that one's mail has to come from somewhere,
16713 and so selection of a suitable back end is required in order to get that
16714 mail within spitting distance of Gnus.
16715
16716 The same concept exists for Usenet itself: Though access to articles is
16717 typically done by @acronym{NNTP} these days, once upon a midnight dreary, everyone
16718 in the world got at Usenet by running a reader on the machine where the
16719 articles lay (the machine which today we call an @acronym{NNTP} server), and
16720 access was by the reader stepping into the articles' directory spool
16721 area directly. One can still select between either the @code{nntp} or
16722 @code{nnspool} back ends, to select between these methods, if one happens
16723 actually to live on the server (or can see its spool directly, anyway,
16724 via NFS).
16725
16726 The goal in selecting a mail back end is to pick one which
16727 simultaneously represents a suitable way of dealing with the original
16728 format plus leaving mail in a form that is convenient to use in the
16729 future. Here are some high and low points on each:
16730
16731 @table @code
16732 @item nnmbox
16733
16734 UNIX systems have historically had a single, very common, and well-defined
16735 format. All messages arrive in a single @dfn{spool file}, and
16736 they are delineated by a line whose regular expression matches
16737 @samp{^From_}. (My notational use of @samp{_} is to indicate a space,
16738 to make it clear in this instance that this is not the RFC-specified
16739 @samp{From:} header.) Because Emacs and therefore Gnus emanate
16740 historically from the Unix environment, it is simplest if one does not
16741 mess a great deal with the original mailbox format, so if one chooses
16742 this back end, Gnus' primary activity in getting mail from the real spool
16743 area to Gnus' preferred directory is simply to copy it, with no
16744 (appreciable) format change in the process. It is the ``dumbest'' way
16745 to move mail into availability in the Gnus environment. This makes it
16746 fast to move into place, but slow to parse, when Gnus has to look at
16747 what's where.
16748
16749 @item nnbabyl
16750
16751 Once upon a time, there was the DEC-10 and DEC-20, running operating
16752 systems called TOPS and related things, and the usual (only?) mail
16753 reading environment was a thing called Babyl. I don't know what format
16754 was used for mail landing on the system, but Babyl had its own internal
16755 format to which mail was converted, primarily involving creating a
16756 spool-file-like entity with a scheme for inserting Babyl-specific
16757 headers and status bits above the top of each message in the file.
16758 Rmail was Emacs's first mail reader, it was written by Richard Stallman,
16759 and Stallman came out of that TOPS/Babyl environment, so he wrote Rmail
16760 to understand the mail files folks already had in existence. Gnus (and
16761 VM, for that matter) continue to support this format because it's
16762 perceived as having some good qualities in those mailer-specific
16763 headers/status bits stuff. Rmail itself still exists as well, of
16764 course, and is still maintained within Emacs. Since Emacs 23, it
16765 uses standard mbox format rather than Babyl.
16766
16767 Both of the above forms leave your mail in a single file on your
16768 file system, and they must parse that entire file each time you take a
16769 look at your mail.
16770
16771 @item nnml
16772
16773 @code{nnml} is the back end which smells the most as though you were
16774 actually operating with an @code{nnspool}-accessed Usenet system. (In
16775 fact, I believe @code{nnml} actually derived from @code{nnspool} code,
16776 lo these years ago.) One's mail is taken from the original spool file,
16777 and is then cut up into individual message files, 1:1. It maintains a
16778 Usenet-style active file (analogous to what one finds in an INN- or
16779 CNews-based news system in (for instance) @file{/var/lib/news/active},
16780 or what is returned via the @samp{NNTP LIST} verb) and also creates
16781 @dfn{overview} files for efficient group entry, as has been defined for
16782 @acronym{NNTP} servers for some years now. It is slower in mail-splitting,
16783 due to the creation of lots of files, updates to the @code{nnml} active
16784 file, and additions to overview files on a per-message basis, but it is
16785 extremely fast on access because of what amounts to the indexing support
16786 provided by the active file and overviews.
16787
16788 @code{nnml} costs @dfn{inodes} in a big way; that is, it soaks up the
16789 resource which defines available places in the file system to put new
16790 files. Sysadmins take a dim view of heavy inode occupation within
16791 tight, shared file systems. But if you live on a personal machine where
16792 the file system is your own and space is not at a premium, @code{nnml}
16793 wins big.
16794
16795 It is also problematic using this back end if you are living in a
16796 FAT16-based Windows world, since much space will be wasted on all these
16797 tiny files.
16798
16799 @item nnmh
16800
16801 The Rand MH mail-reading system has been around UNIX systems for a very
16802 long time; it operates by splitting one's spool file of messages into
16803 individual files, but with little or no indexing support---@code{nnmh}
16804 is considered to be semantically equivalent to ``@code{nnml} without
16805 active file or overviews''. This is arguably the worst choice, because
16806 one gets the slowness of individual file creation married to the
16807 slowness of access parsing when learning what's new in one's groups.
16808
16809 @item nnfolder
16810
16811 Basically the effect of @code{nnfolder} is @code{nnmbox} (the first
16812 method described above) on a per-group basis. That is, @code{nnmbox}
16813 itself puts @emph{all} one's mail in one file; @code{nnfolder} provides a
16814 little bit of optimization to this so that each of one's mail groups has
16815 a Unix mail box file. It's faster than @code{nnmbox} because each group
16816 can be parsed separately, and still provides the simple Unix mail box
16817 format requiring minimal effort in moving the mail around. In addition,
16818 it maintains an ``active'' file making it much faster for Gnus to figure
16819 out how many messages there are in each separate group.
16820
16821 If you have groups that are expected to have a massive amount of
16822 messages, @code{nnfolder} is not the best choice, but if you receive
16823 only a moderate amount of mail, @code{nnfolder} is probably the most
16824 friendly mail back end all over.
16825
16826 @item nnmaildir
16827
16828 For configuring expiry and other things, @code{nnmaildir} uses
16829 incompatible group parameters, slightly different from those of other
16830 mail back ends.
16831
16832 @code{nnmaildir} is largely similar to @code{nnml}, with some notable
16833 differences. Each message is stored in a separate file, but the
16834 filename is unrelated to the article number in Gnus. @code{nnmaildir}
16835 also stores the equivalent of @code{nnml}'s overview files in one file
16836 per article, so it uses about twice as many inodes as @code{nnml}.
16837 (Use @code{df -i} to see how plentiful your inode supply is.) If this
16838 slows you down or takes up very much space, a non-block-structured
16839 file system.
16840
16841 Since maildirs don't require locking for delivery, the maildirs you use
16842 as groups can also be the maildirs your mail is directly delivered to.
16843 This means you can skip Gnus' mail splitting if your mail is already
16844 organized into different mailboxes during delivery. A @code{directory}
16845 entry in @code{mail-sources} would have a similar effect, but would
16846 require one set of mailboxes for spooling deliveries (in mbox format,
16847 thus damaging message bodies), and another set to be used as groups (in
16848 whatever format you like). A maildir has a built-in spool, in the
16849 @code{new/} subdirectory. Beware that currently, mail moved from
16850 @code{new/} to @code{cur/} instead of via mail splitting will not
16851 undergo treatment such as duplicate checking.
16852
16853 @code{nnmaildir} stores article marks for a given group in the
16854 corresponding maildir, in a way designed so that it's easy to manipulate
16855 them from outside Gnus. You can tar up a maildir, unpack it somewhere
16856 else, and still have your marks.
16857
16858 @code{nnmaildir} uses a significant amount of memory to speed things up.
16859 (It keeps in memory some of the things that @code{nnml} stores in files
16860 and that @code{nnmh} repeatedly parses out of message files.) If this
16861 is a problem for you, you can set the @code{nov-cache-size} group
16862 parameter to something small (0 would probably not work, but 1 probably
16863 would) to make it use less memory. This caching will probably be
16864 removed in the future.
16865
16866 Startup is likely to be slower with @code{nnmaildir} than with other
16867 back ends. Everything else is likely to be faster, depending in part
16868 on your file system.
16869
16870 @code{nnmaildir} does not use @code{nnoo}, so you cannot use @code{nnoo}
16871 to write an @code{nnmaildir}-derived back end.
16872
16873 @end table
16874
16875
16876 @node Browsing the Web
16877 @section Browsing the Web
16878 @cindex web
16879 @cindex browsing the web
16880 @cindex www
16881 @cindex http
16882
16883 Web-based discussion forums are getting more and more popular. On many
16884 subjects, the web-based forums have become the most important forums,
16885 eclipsing the importance of mailing lists and news groups. The reason
16886 is easy to understand---they are friendly to new users; you just point
16887 and click, and there's the discussion. With mailing lists, you have to
16888 go through a cumbersome subscription procedure, and most people don't
16889 even know what a news group is.
16890
16891 The problem with this scenario is that web browsers are not very good at
16892 being newsreaders. They do not keep track of what articles you've read;
16893 they do not allow you to score on subjects you're interested in; they do
16894 not allow off-line browsing; they require you to click around and drive
16895 you mad in the end.
16896
16897 So---if web browsers suck at reading discussion forums, why not use Gnus
16898 to do it instead?
16899
16900 Gnus has been getting a bit of a collection of back ends for providing
16901 interfaces to these sources.
16902
16903 @menu
16904 * Archiving Mail::
16905 * Web Searches:: Creating groups from articles that match a string.
16906 * RSS:: Reading RDF site summary.
16907 @end menu
16908
16909 The main caveat with all these web sources is that they probably won't
16910 work for a very long time. Gleaning information from the @acronym{HTML} data
16911 is guesswork at best, and when the layout is altered, the Gnus back end
16912 will fail. If you have reasonably new versions of these back ends,
16913 though, you should be ok.
16914
16915 One thing all these Web methods have in common is that the Web sources
16916 are often down, unavailable or just plain too slow to be fun. In those
16917 cases, it makes a lot of sense to let the Gnus Agent (@pxref{Gnus
16918 Unplugged}) handle downloading articles, and then you can read them at
16919 leisure from your local disk. No more World Wide Wait for you.
16920
16921 @node Archiving Mail
16922 @subsection Archiving Mail
16923 @cindex archiving mail
16924 @cindex backup of mail
16925
16926 Some of the back ends, notably @code{nnml}, @code{nnfolder}, and
16927 @code{nnmaildir}, now actually store the article marks with each group.
16928 For these servers, archiving and restoring a group while preserving
16929 marks is fairly simple.
16930
16931 (Preserving the group level and group parameters as well still
16932 requires ritual dancing and sacrifices to the @file{.newsrc.eld} deity
16933 though.)
16934
16935 To archive an entire @code{nnml}, @code{nnfolder}, or @code{nnmaildir}
16936 server, take a recursive copy of the server directory. There is no need
16937 to shut down Gnus, so archiving may be invoked by @code{cron} or
16938 similar. You restore the data by restoring the directory tree, and
16939 adding a server definition pointing to that directory in Gnus. The
16940 @ref{Article Backlog}, @ref{Asynchronous Fetching} and other things
16941 might interfere with overwriting data, so you may want to shut down Gnus
16942 before you restore the data.
16943
16944 @node Web Searches
16945 @subsection Web Searches
16946 @cindex nnweb
16947 @cindex Google
16948 @cindex dejanews
16949 @cindex gmane
16950 @cindex Usenet searches
16951 @cindex searching the Usenet
16952
16953 It's, like, too neat to search the Usenet for articles that match a
16954 string, but it, like, totally @emph{sucks}, like, totally, to use one of
16955 those, like, Web browsers, and you, like, have to, rilly, like, look at
16956 the commercials, so, like, with Gnus you can do @emph{rad}, rilly,
16957 searches without having to use a browser.
16958
16959 The @code{nnweb} back end allows an easy interface to the mighty search
16960 engine. You create an @code{nnweb} group, enter a search pattern, and
16961 then enter the group and read the articles like you would any normal
16962 group. The @kbd{G w} command in the group buffer (@pxref{Foreign
16963 Groups}) will do this in an easy-to-use fashion.
16964
16965 @code{nnweb} groups don't really lend themselves to being solid
16966 groups---they have a very fleeting idea of article numbers. In fact,
16967 each time you enter an @code{nnweb} group (not even changing the search
16968 pattern), you are likely to get the articles ordered in a different
16969 manner. Not even using duplicate suppression (@pxref{Duplicate
16970 Suppression}) will help, since @code{nnweb} doesn't even know the
16971 @code{Message-ID} of the articles before reading them using some search
16972 engines (Google, for instance). The only possible way to keep track
16973 of which articles you've read is by scoring on the @code{Date}
16974 header---mark all articles posted before the last date you read the
16975 group as read.
16976
16977 If the search engine changes its output substantially, @code{nnweb}
16978 won't be able to parse it and will fail. One could hardly fault the Web
16979 providers if they were to do this---their @emph{raison d'être} is to
16980 make money off of advertisements, not to provide services to the
16981 community. Since @code{nnweb} washes the ads off all the articles, one
16982 might think that the providers might be somewhat miffed. We'll see.
16983
16984 Virtual server variables:
16985
16986 @table @code
16987 @item nnweb-type
16988 @vindex nnweb-type
16989 What search engine type is being used. The currently supported types
16990 are @code{google}, @code{dejanews}, and @code{gmane}. Note that
16991 @code{dejanews} is an alias to @code{google}.
16992
16993 @item nnweb-search
16994 @vindex nnweb-search
16995 The search string to feed to the search engine.
16996
16997 @item nnweb-max-hits
16998 @vindex nnweb-max-hits
16999 Advisory maximum number of hits per search to display. The default is
17000 999.
17001
17002 @item nnweb-type-definition
17003 @vindex nnweb-type-definition
17004 Type-to-definition alist. This alist says what @code{nnweb} should do
17005 with the various search engine types. The following elements must be
17006 present:
17007
17008 @table @code
17009 @item article
17010 Function to decode the article and provide something that Gnus
17011 understands.
17012
17013 @item map
17014 Function to create an article number to message header and URL alist.
17015
17016 @item search
17017 Function to send the search string to the search engine.
17018
17019 @item address
17020 The address the aforementioned function should send the search string
17021 to.
17022
17023 @item id
17024 Format string URL to fetch an article by @code{Message-ID}.
17025 @end table
17026
17027 @end table
17028
17029
17030 @node RSS
17031 @subsection RSS
17032 @cindex nnrss
17033 @cindex RSS
17034
17035 Some web sites have an RDF Site Summary (@acronym{RSS}).
17036 @acronym{RSS} is a format for summarizing headlines from news related
17037 sites (such as BBC or CNN). But basically anything list-like can be
17038 presented as an @acronym{RSS} feed: weblogs, changelogs or recent
17039 changes to a wiki (e.g., @url{http://cliki.net/site/recent-changes}).
17040
17041 @acronym{RSS} has a quite regular and nice interface, and it's
17042 possible to get the information Gnus needs to keep groups updated.
17043
17044 Note: you had better use Emacs which supports the @code{utf-8} coding
17045 system because @acronym{RSS} uses UTF-8 for encoding non-@acronym{ASCII}
17046 text by default. It is also used by default for non-@acronym{ASCII}
17047 group names.
17048
17049 @kindex G R (Group)
17050 Use @kbd{G R} from the group buffer to subscribe to a feed---you will be
17051 prompted for the location, the title and the description of the feed.
17052 The title, which allows any characters, will be used for the group name
17053 and the name of the group data file. The description can be omitted.
17054
17055 An easy way to get started with @code{nnrss} is to say something like
17056 the following in the group buffer: @kbd{B nnrss RET RET y}, then
17057 subscribe to groups.
17058
17059 The @code{nnrss} back end saves the group data file in
17060 @code{nnrss-directory} (see below) for each @code{nnrss} group. File
17061 names containing non-@acronym{ASCII} characters will be encoded by the
17062 coding system specified with the @code{nnmail-pathname-coding-system}
17063 variable or other. Also @xref{Non-ASCII Group Names}, for more
17064 information.
17065
17066 The @code{nnrss} back end generates @samp{multipart/alternative}
17067 @acronym{MIME} articles in which each contains a @samp{text/plain} part
17068 and a @samp{text/html} part.
17069
17070 @cindex OPML
17071 You can also use the following commands to import and export your
17072 subscriptions from a file in @acronym{OPML} format (Outline Processor
17073 Markup Language).
17074
17075 @defun nnrss-opml-import file
17076 Prompt for an @acronym{OPML} file, and subscribe to each feed in the
17077 file.
17078 @end defun
17079
17080 @defun nnrss-opml-export
17081 Write your current @acronym{RSS} subscriptions to a buffer in
17082 @acronym{OPML} format.
17083 @end defun
17084
17085 The following @code{nnrss} variables can be altered:
17086
17087 @table @code
17088 @item nnrss-directory
17089 @vindex nnrss-directory
17090 The directory where @code{nnrss} stores its files. The default is
17091 @file{~/News/rss/}.
17092
17093 @item nnrss-file-coding-system
17094 @vindex nnrss-file-coding-system
17095 The coding system used when reading and writing the @code{nnrss} groups
17096 data files. The default is the value of
17097 @code{mm-universal-coding-system} (which defaults to @code{emacs-mule}
17098 in Emacs or @code{escape-quoted} in XEmacs).
17099
17100 @item nnrss-ignore-article-fields
17101 @vindex nnrss-ignore-article-fields
17102 Some feeds update constantly article fields during their publications,
17103 e.g., to indicate the number of comments. However, if there is
17104 a difference between the local article and the distant one, the latter
17105 is considered to be new. To avoid this and discard some fields, set this
17106 variable to the list of fields to be ignored. The default is
17107 @code{'(slash:comments)}.
17108
17109 @item nnrss-use-local
17110 @vindex nnrss-use-local
17111 @findex nnrss-generate-download-script
17112 If you set @code{nnrss-use-local} to @code{t}, @code{nnrss} will read
17113 the feeds from local files in @code{nnrss-directory}. You can use
17114 the command @code{nnrss-generate-download-script} to generate a
17115 download script using @command{wget}.
17116 @end table
17117
17118 The following code may be helpful, if you want to show the description in
17119 the summary buffer.
17120
17121 @lisp
17122 (add-to-list 'nnmail-extra-headers nnrss-description-field)
17123 (setq gnus-summary-line-format "%U%R%z%I%(%[%4L: %-15,15f%]%) %s%uX\n")
17124
17125 (defun gnus-user-format-function-X (header)
17126 (let ((descr
17127 (assq nnrss-description-field (mail-header-extra header))))
17128 (if descr (concat "\n\t" (cdr descr)) "")))
17129 @end lisp
17130
17131 The following code may be useful to open an nnrss url directly from the
17132 summary buffer.
17133
17134 @lisp
17135 (require 'browse-url)
17136
17137 (defun browse-nnrss-url (arg)
17138 (interactive "p")
17139 (let ((url (assq nnrss-url-field
17140 (mail-header-extra
17141 (gnus-data-header
17142 (assq (gnus-summary-article-number)
17143 gnus-newsgroup-data))))))
17144 (if url
17145 (progn
17146 (browse-url (cdr url))
17147 (gnus-summary-mark-as-read-forward 1))
17148 (gnus-summary-scroll-up arg))))
17149
17150 (eval-after-load "gnus"
17151 #'(define-key gnus-summary-mode-map
17152 (kbd "<RET>") 'browse-nnrss-url))
17153 (add-to-list 'nnmail-extra-headers nnrss-url-field)
17154 @end lisp
17155
17156 Even if you have added @samp{text/html} to the
17157 @code{mm-discouraged-alternatives} variable (@pxref{Display
17158 Customization, ,Display Customization, emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME
17159 Manual}) since you don't want to see @acronym{HTML} parts, it might be
17160 more useful especially in @code{nnrss} groups to display
17161 @samp{text/html} parts. Here's an example of setting
17162 @code{mm-discouraged-alternatives} as a group parameter (@pxref{Group
17163 Parameters}) in order to display @samp{text/html} parts only in
17164 @code{nnrss} groups:
17165
17166 @lisp
17167 ;; @r{Set the default value of @code{mm-discouraged-alternatives}.}
17168 (eval-after-load "gnus-sum"
17169 '(add-to-list
17170 'gnus-newsgroup-variables
17171 '(mm-discouraged-alternatives
17172 . '("text/html" "image/.*"))))
17173
17174 ;; @r{Display @samp{text/html} parts in @code{nnrss} groups.}
17175 (add-to-list
17176 'gnus-parameters
17177 '("\\`nnrss:" (mm-discouraged-alternatives nil)))
17178 @end lisp
17179
17180
17181 @node Other Sources
17182 @section Other Sources
17183
17184 Gnus can do more than just read news or mail. The methods described
17185 below allow Gnus to view directories and files as if they were
17186 newsgroups.
17187
17188 @menu
17189 * Directory Groups:: You can read a directory as if it was a newsgroup.
17190 * Anything Groups:: Dired? Who needs dired?
17191 * Document Groups:: Single files can be the basis of a group.
17192 * Mail-To-News Gateways:: Posting articles via mail-to-news gateways.
17193 * The Empty Backend:: The backend that never has any news.
17194 @end menu
17195
17196
17197 @node Directory Groups
17198 @subsection Directory Groups
17199 @cindex nndir
17200 @cindex directory groups
17201
17202 If you have a directory that has lots of articles in separate files in
17203 it, you might treat it as a newsgroup. The files have to have numerical
17204 names, of course.
17205
17206 This might be an opportune moment to mention @code{ange-ftp} (and its
17207 successor @code{efs}), that most wonderful of all wonderful Emacs
17208 packages. When I wrote @code{nndir}, I didn't think much about it---a
17209 back end to read directories. Big deal.
17210
17211 @code{ange-ftp} changes that picture dramatically. For instance, if you
17212 enter the @code{ange-ftp} file name
17213 @file{/ftp.hpc.uh.edu:/pub/emacs/ding-list/} as the directory name,
17214 @code{ange-ftp} or @code{efs} will actually allow you to read this
17215 directory over at @samp{sina} as a newsgroup. Distributed news ahoy!
17216
17217 @code{nndir} will use @acronym{NOV} files if they are present.
17218
17219 @code{nndir} is a ``read-only'' back end---you can't delete or expire
17220 articles with this method. You can use @code{nnmh} or @code{nnml} for
17221 whatever you use @code{nndir} for, so you could switch to any of those
17222 methods if you feel the need to have a non-read-only @code{nndir}.
17223
17224
17225 @node Anything Groups
17226 @subsection Anything Groups
17227 @cindex nneething
17228
17229 From the @code{nndir} back end (which reads a single spool-like
17230 directory), it's just a hop and a skip to @code{nneething}, which
17231 pretends that any arbitrary directory is a newsgroup. Strange, but
17232 true.
17233
17234 When @code{nneething} is presented with a directory, it will scan this
17235 directory and assign article numbers to each file. When you enter such
17236 a group, @code{nneething} must create ``headers'' that Gnus can use.
17237 After all, Gnus is a newsreader, in case you're forgetting.
17238 @code{nneething} does this in a two-step process. First, it snoops each
17239 file in question. If the file looks like an article (i.e., the first
17240 few lines look like headers), it will use this as the head. If this is
17241 just some arbitrary file without a head (e.g., a C source file),
17242 @code{nneething} will cobble up a header out of thin air. It will use
17243 file ownership, name and date and do whatever it can with these
17244 elements.
17245
17246 All this should happen automatically for you, and you will be presented
17247 with something that looks very much like a newsgroup. Totally like a
17248 newsgroup, to be precise. If you select an article, it will be displayed
17249 in the article buffer, just as usual.
17250
17251 If you select a line that represents a directory, Gnus will pop you into
17252 a new summary buffer for this @code{nneething} group. And so on. You can
17253 traverse the entire disk this way, if you feel like, but remember that
17254 Gnus is not dired, really, and does not intend to be, either.
17255
17256 There are two overall modes to this action---ephemeral or solid. When
17257 doing the ephemeral thing (i.e., @kbd{G D} from the group buffer), Gnus
17258 will not store information on what files you have read, and what files
17259 are new, and so on. If you create a solid @code{nneething} group the
17260 normal way with @kbd{G m}, Gnus will store a mapping table between
17261 article numbers and file names, and you can treat this group like any
17262 other groups. When you activate a solid @code{nneething} group, you will
17263 be told how many unread articles it contains, etc., etc.
17264
17265 Some variables:
17266
17267 @table @code
17268 @item nneething-map-file-directory
17269 @vindex nneething-map-file-directory
17270 All the mapping files for solid @code{nneething} groups will be stored
17271 in this directory, which defaults to @file{~/.nneething/}.
17272
17273 @item nneething-exclude-files
17274 @vindex nneething-exclude-files
17275 All files that match this regexp will be ignored. Nice to use to exclude
17276 auto-save files and the like, which is what it does by default.
17277
17278 @item nneething-include-files
17279 @vindex nneething-include-files
17280 Regexp saying what files to include in the group. If this variable is
17281 non-@code{nil}, only files matching this regexp will be included.
17282
17283 @item nneething-map-file
17284 @vindex nneething-map-file
17285 Name of the map files.
17286 @end table
17287
17288
17289 @node Document Groups
17290 @subsection Document Groups
17291 @cindex nndoc
17292 @cindex documentation group
17293 @cindex help group
17294
17295 @code{nndoc} is a cute little thing that will let you read a single file
17296 as a newsgroup. Several files types are supported:
17297
17298 @table @code
17299 @cindex Babyl
17300 @item babyl
17301 The Babyl format.
17302
17303 @cindex mbox
17304 @cindex Unix mbox
17305 @item mbox
17306 The standard Unix mbox file.
17307
17308 @cindex MMDF mail box
17309 @item mmdf
17310 The MMDF mail box format.
17311
17312 @item news
17313 Several news articles appended into a file.
17314
17315 @cindex rnews batch files
17316 @item rnews
17317 The rnews batch transport format.
17318
17319 @item nsmail
17320 Netscape mail boxes.
17321
17322 @item mime-parts
17323 @acronym{MIME} multipart messages.
17324
17325 @item standard-digest
17326 The standard (RFC 1153) digest format.
17327
17328 @item mime-digest
17329 A @acronym{MIME} digest of messages.
17330
17331 @item lanl-gov-announce
17332 Announcement messages from LANL Gov Announce.
17333
17334 @cindex git commit messages
17335 @item git
17336 @code{git} commit messages.
17337
17338 @cindex forwarded messages
17339 @item rfc822-forward
17340 A message forwarded according to RFC822.
17341
17342 @item outlook
17343 The Outlook mail box.
17344
17345 @item oe-dbx
17346 The Outlook Express dbx mail box.
17347
17348 @item exim-bounce
17349 A bounce message from the Exim MTA.
17350
17351 @item forward
17352 A message forwarded according to informal rules.
17353
17354 @item rfc934
17355 An RFC934-forwarded message.
17356
17357 @item mailman
17358 A mailman digest.
17359
17360 @item clari-briefs
17361 A digest of Clarinet brief news items.
17362
17363 @item slack-digest
17364 Non-standard digest format---matches most things, but does it badly.
17365
17366 @item mail-in-mail
17367 The last resort.
17368 @end table
17369
17370 You can also use the special ``file type'' @code{guess}, which means
17371 that @code{nndoc} will try to guess what file type it is looking at.
17372 @code{digest} means that @code{nndoc} should guess what digest type the
17373 file is.
17374
17375 @code{nndoc} will not try to change the file or insert any extra headers into
17376 it---it will simply, like, let you use the file as the basis for a
17377 group. And that's it.
17378
17379 If you have some old archived articles that you want to insert into your
17380 new & spiffy Gnus mail back end, @code{nndoc} can probably help you with
17381 that. Say you have an old @file{RMAIL} file with mail that you now want
17382 to split into your new @code{nnml} groups. You look at that file using
17383 @code{nndoc} (using the @kbd{G f} command in the group buffer
17384 (@pxref{Foreign Groups})), set the process mark on all the articles in
17385 the buffer (@kbd{M P b}, for instance), and then re-spool (@kbd{B r})
17386 using @code{nnml}. If all goes well, all the mail in the @file{RMAIL}
17387 file is now also stored in lots of @code{nnml} directories, and you can
17388 delete that pesky @file{RMAIL} file. If you have the guts!
17389
17390 Virtual server variables:
17391
17392 @table @code
17393 @item nndoc-article-type
17394 @vindex nndoc-article-type
17395 This should be one of @code{mbox}, @code{babyl}, @code{digest},
17396 @code{news}, @code{rnews}, @code{mmdf}, @code{forward}, @code{rfc934},
17397 @code{rfc822-forward}, @code{mime-parts}, @code{standard-digest},
17398 @code{slack-digest}, @code{clari-briefs}, @code{nsmail}, @code{outlook},
17399 @code{oe-dbx}, @code{mailman}, and @code{mail-in-mail} or @code{guess}.
17400
17401 @item nndoc-post-type
17402 @vindex nndoc-post-type
17403 This variable says whether Gnus is to consider the group a news group or
17404 a mail group. There are two valid values: @code{mail} (the default)
17405 and @code{news}.
17406 @end table
17407
17408 @menu
17409 * Document Server Internals:: How to add your own document types.
17410 @end menu
17411
17412
17413 @node Document Server Internals
17414 @subsubsection Document Server Internals
17415
17416 Adding new document types to be recognized by @code{nndoc} isn't
17417 difficult. You just have to whip up a definition of what the document
17418 looks like, write a predicate function to recognize that document type,
17419 and then hook into @code{nndoc}.
17420
17421 First, here's an example document type definition:
17422
17423 @example
17424 (mmdf
17425 (article-begin . "^\^A\^A\^A\^A\n")
17426 (body-end . "^\^A\^A\^A\^A\n"))
17427 @end example
17428
17429 The definition is simply a unique @dfn{name} followed by a series of
17430 regexp pseudo-variable settings. Below are the possible
17431 variables---don't be daunted by the number of variables; most document
17432 types can be defined with very few settings:
17433
17434 @table @code
17435 @item first-article
17436 If present, @code{nndoc} will skip past all text until it finds
17437 something that match this regexp. All text before this will be
17438 totally ignored.
17439
17440 @item article-begin
17441 This setting has to be present in all document type definitions. It
17442 says what the beginning of each article looks like. To do more
17443 complicated things that cannot be dealt with a simple regexp, you can
17444 use @code{article-begin-function} instead of this.
17445
17446 @item article-begin-function
17447 If present, this should be a function that moves point to the beginning
17448 of each article. This setting overrides @code{article-begin}.
17449
17450 @item head-begin
17451 If present, this should be a regexp that matches the head of the
17452 article. To do more complicated things that cannot be dealt with a
17453 simple regexp, you can use @code{head-begin-function} instead of this.
17454
17455 @item head-begin-function
17456 If present, this should be a function that moves point to the head of
17457 the article. This setting overrides @code{head-begin}.
17458
17459 @item head-end
17460 This should match the end of the head of the article. It defaults to
17461 @samp{^$}---the empty line.
17462
17463 @item body-begin
17464 This should match the beginning of the body of the article. It defaults
17465 to @samp{^\n}. To do more complicated things that cannot be dealt with
17466 a simple regexp, you can use @code{body-begin-function} instead of this.
17467
17468 @item body-begin-function
17469 If present, this function should move point to the beginning of the body
17470 of the article. This setting overrides @code{body-begin}.
17471
17472 @item body-end
17473 If present, this should match the end of the body of the article. To do
17474 more complicated things that cannot be dealt with a simple regexp, you
17475 can use @code{body-end-function} instead of this.
17476
17477 @item body-end-function
17478 If present, this function should move point to the end of the body of
17479 the article. This setting overrides @code{body-end}.
17480
17481 @item file-begin
17482 If present, this should match the beginning of the file. All text
17483 before this regexp will be totally ignored.
17484
17485 @item file-end
17486 If present, this should match the end of the file. All text after this
17487 regexp will be totally ignored.
17488
17489 @end table
17490
17491 So, using these variables @code{nndoc} is able to dissect a document
17492 file into a series of articles, each with a head and a body. However, a
17493 few more variables are needed since not all document types are all that
17494 news-like---variables needed to transform the head or the body into
17495 something that's palatable for Gnus:
17496
17497 @table @code
17498 @item prepare-body-function
17499 If present, this function will be called when requesting an article. It
17500 will be called with point at the start of the body, and is useful if the
17501 document has encoded some parts of its contents.
17502
17503 @item article-transform-function
17504 If present, this function is called when requesting an article. It's
17505 meant to be used for more wide-ranging transformation of both head and
17506 body of the article.
17507
17508 @item generate-head-function
17509 If present, this function is called to generate a head that Gnus can
17510 understand. It is called with the article number as a parameter, and is
17511 expected to generate a nice head for the article in question. It is
17512 called when requesting the headers of all articles.
17513
17514 @item generate-article-function
17515 If present, this function is called to generate an entire article that
17516 Gnus can understand. It is called with the article number as a
17517 parameter when requesting all articles.
17518
17519 @item dissection-function
17520 If present, this function is called to dissect a document by itself,
17521 overriding @code{first-article}, @code{article-begin},
17522 @code{article-begin-function}, @code{head-begin},
17523 @code{head-begin-function}, @code{head-end}, @code{body-begin},
17524 @code{body-begin-function}, @code{body-end}, @code{body-end-function},
17525 @code{file-begin}, and @code{file-end}.
17526
17527 @end table
17528
17529 Let's look at the most complicated example I can come up with---standard
17530 digests:
17531
17532 @example
17533 (standard-digest
17534 (first-article . ,(concat "^" (make-string 70 ?-) "\n\n+"))
17535 (article-begin . ,(concat "\n\n" (make-string 30 ?-) "\n\n+"))
17536 (prepare-body-function . nndoc-unquote-dashes)
17537 (body-end-function . nndoc-digest-body-end)
17538 (head-end . "^ ?$")
17539 (body-begin . "^ ?\n")
17540 (file-end . "^End of .*digest.*[0-9].*\n\\*\\*\\|^End of.*Digest *$")
17541 (subtype digest guess))
17542 @end example
17543
17544 We see that all text before a 70-width line of dashes is ignored; all
17545 text after a line that starts with that @samp{^End of} is also ignored;
17546 each article begins with a 30-width line of dashes; the line separating
17547 the head from the body may contain a single space; and that the body is
17548 run through @code{nndoc-unquote-dashes} before being delivered.
17549
17550 To hook your own document definition into @code{nndoc}, use the
17551 @code{nndoc-add-type} function. It takes two parameters---the first
17552 is the definition itself and the second (optional) parameter says
17553 where in the document type definition alist to put this definition.
17554 The alist is traversed sequentially, and
17555 @code{nndoc-@var{type}-type-p} is called for a given type @var{type}.
17556 So @code{nndoc-mmdf-type-p} is called to see whether a document is of
17557 @code{mmdf} type, and so on. These type predicates should return
17558 @code{nil} if the document is not of the correct type; @code{t} if it
17559 is of the correct type; and a number if the document might be of the
17560 correct type. A high number means high probability; a low number
17561 means low probability with @samp{0} being the lowest valid number.
17562
17563
17564 @node Mail-To-News Gateways
17565 @subsection Mail-To-News Gateways
17566 @cindex mail-to-news gateways
17567 @cindex gateways
17568
17569 If your local @code{nntp} server doesn't allow posting, for some reason
17570 or other, you can post using one of the numerous mail-to-news gateways.
17571 The @code{nngateway} back end provides the interface.
17572
17573 Note that you can't read anything from this back end---it can only be
17574 used to post with.
17575
17576 Server variables:
17577
17578 @table @code
17579 @item nngateway-address
17580 @vindex nngateway-address
17581 This is the address of the mail-to-news gateway.
17582
17583 @item nngateway-header-transformation
17584 @vindex nngateway-header-transformation
17585 News headers often have to be transformed in some odd way or other
17586 for the mail-to-news gateway to accept it. This variable says what
17587 transformation should be called, and defaults to
17588 @code{nngateway-simple-header-transformation}. The function is called
17589 narrowed to the headers to be transformed and with one parameter---the
17590 gateway address.
17591
17592 This default function just inserts a new @code{To} header based on the
17593 @code{Newsgroups} header and the gateway address.
17594 For instance, an article with this @code{Newsgroups} header:
17595
17596 @example
17597 Newsgroups: alt.religion.emacs
17598 @end example
17599
17600 will get this @code{To} header inserted:
17601
17602 @example
17603 To: alt-religion-emacs@@GATEWAY
17604 @end example
17605
17606 The following pre-defined functions exist:
17607
17608 @findex nngateway-simple-header-transformation
17609 @table @code
17610
17611 @item nngateway-simple-header-transformation
17612 Creates a @code{To} header that looks like
17613 @var{newsgroup}@@@code{nngateway-address}.
17614
17615 @findex nngateway-mail2news-header-transformation
17616
17617 @item nngateway-mail2news-header-transformation
17618 Creates a @code{To} header that looks like
17619 @code{nngateway-address}.
17620 @end table
17621
17622 @end table
17623
17624 Here's an example:
17625
17626 @lisp
17627 (setq gnus-post-method
17628 '(nngateway
17629 "mail2news@@replay.com"
17630 (nngateway-header-transformation
17631 nngateway-mail2news-header-transformation)))
17632 @end lisp
17633
17634 So, to use this, simply say something like:
17635
17636 @lisp
17637 (setq gnus-post-method '(nngateway "GATEWAY.ADDRESS"))
17638 @end lisp
17639
17640
17641 @node The Empty Backend
17642 @subsection The Empty Backend
17643 @cindex nnnil
17644
17645 @code{nnnil} is a backend that can be used as a placeholder if you
17646 have to specify a backend somewhere, but don't really want to. The
17647 classical example is if you don't want to have a primary select
17648 methods, but want to only use secondary ones:
17649
17650 @lisp
17651 (setq gnus-select-method '(nnnil ""))
17652 (setq gnus-secondary-select-methods
17653 '((nnimap "foo")
17654 (nnml "")))
17655 @end lisp
17656
17657
17658 @node Combined Groups
17659 @section Combined Groups
17660
17661 Gnus allows combining a mixture of all the other group types into bigger
17662 groups.
17663
17664 @menu
17665 * Virtual Groups:: Combining articles from many groups.
17666 @end menu
17667
17668
17669 @node Virtual Groups
17670 @subsection Virtual Groups
17671 @cindex nnvirtual
17672 @cindex virtual groups
17673 @cindex merging groups
17674
17675 An @dfn{nnvirtual group} is really nothing more than a collection of
17676 other groups.
17677
17678 For instance, if you are tired of reading many small groups, you can
17679 put them all in one big group, and then grow tired of reading one
17680 big, unwieldy group. The joys of computing!
17681
17682 You specify @code{nnvirtual} as the method. The address should be a
17683 regexp to match component groups.
17684
17685 All marks in the virtual group will stick to the articles in the
17686 component groups. So if you tick an article in a virtual group, the
17687 article will also be ticked in the component group from whence it
17688 came. (And vice versa---marks from the component groups will also be
17689 shown in the virtual group.). To create an empty virtual group, run
17690 @kbd{G V} (@code{gnus-group-make-empty-virtual}) in the group buffer
17691 and edit the method regexp with @kbd{M-e}
17692 (@code{gnus-group-edit-group-method})
17693
17694 Here's an example @code{nnvirtual} method that collects all Andrea Dworkin
17695 newsgroups into one, big, happy newsgroup:
17696
17697 @lisp
17698 (nnvirtual "^alt\\.fan\\.andrea-dworkin$\\|^rec\\.dworkin.*")
17699 @end lisp
17700
17701 The component groups can be native or foreign; everything should work
17702 smoothly, but if your computer explodes, it was probably my fault.
17703
17704 Collecting the same group from several servers might actually be a good
17705 idea if users have set the Distribution header to limit distribution.
17706 If you would like to read @samp{soc.motss} both from a server in Japan
17707 and a server in Norway, you could use the following as the group regexp:
17708
17709 @example
17710 "^nntp\\+server\\.jp:soc\\.motss$\\|^nntp\\+server\\.no:soc\\.motss$"
17711 @end example
17712
17713 (Remember, though, that if you're creating the group with @kbd{G m}, you
17714 shouldn't double the backslashes, and you should leave off the quote
17715 characters at the beginning and the end of the string.)
17716
17717 This should work kinda smoothly---all articles from both groups should
17718 end up in this one, and there should be no duplicates. Threading (and
17719 the rest) will still work as usual, but there might be problems with the
17720 sequence of articles. Sorting on date might be an option here
17721 (@pxref{Selecting a Group}).
17722
17723 One limitation, however---all groups included in a virtual
17724 group have to be alive (i.e., subscribed or unsubscribed). Killed or
17725 zombie groups can't be component groups for @code{nnvirtual} groups.
17726
17727 @vindex nnvirtual-always-rescan
17728 If the @code{nnvirtual-always-rescan} variable is non-@code{nil} (which
17729 is the default), @code{nnvirtual} will always scan groups for unread
17730 articles when entering a virtual group. If this variable is @code{nil}
17731 and you read articles in a component group after the virtual group has
17732 been activated, the read articles from the component group will show up
17733 when you enter the virtual group. You'll also see this effect if you
17734 have two virtual groups that have a component group in common. If
17735 that's the case, you should set this variable to @code{t}. Or you can
17736 just tap @code{M-g} on the virtual group every time before you enter
17737 it---it'll have much the same effect.
17738
17739 @code{nnvirtual} can have both mail and news groups as component groups.
17740 When responding to articles in @code{nnvirtual} groups, @code{nnvirtual}
17741 has to ask the back end of the component group the article comes from
17742 whether it is a news or mail back end. However, when you do a @kbd{^},
17743 there is typically no sure way for the component back end to know this,
17744 and in that case @code{nnvirtual} tells Gnus that the article came from a
17745 not-news back end. (Just to be on the safe side.)
17746
17747 @kbd{C-c C-n} in the message buffer will insert the @code{Newsgroups}
17748 line from the article you respond to in these cases.
17749
17750 @code{nnvirtual} groups do not inherit anything but articles and marks
17751 from component groups---group parameters, for instance, are not
17752 inherited.
17753
17754
17755 @node Email Based Diary
17756 @section Email Based Diary
17757 @cindex diary
17758 @cindex email based diary
17759 @cindex calendar
17760
17761 This section describes a special mail back end called @code{nndiary},
17762 and its companion library @code{gnus-diary}. It is ``special'' in the
17763 sense that it is not meant to be one of the standard alternatives for
17764 reading mail with Gnus. See @ref{Choosing a Mail Back End} for that.
17765 Instead, it is used to treat @emph{some} of your mails in a special way,
17766 namely, as event reminders.
17767
17768 Here is a typical scenario:
17769
17770 @itemize @bullet
17771 @item
17772 You've got a date with Andy Mc Dowell or Bruce Willis (select according
17773 to your sexual preference) in one month. You don't want to forget it.
17774 @item
17775 So you send a ``reminder'' message (actually, a diary one) to yourself.
17776 @item
17777 You forget all about it and keep on getting and reading new mail, as usual.
17778 @item
17779 From time to time, as you type @kbd{g} in the group buffer and as the date
17780 is getting closer, the message will pop up again to remind you of your
17781 appointment, just as if it were new and unread.
17782 @item
17783 Read your ``new'' messages, this one included, and start dreaming again
17784 of the night you're gonna have.
17785 @item
17786 Once the date is over (you actually fell asleep just after dinner), the
17787 message will be automatically deleted if it is marked as expirable.
17788 @end itemize
17789
17790 The Gnus Diary back end has the ability to handle regular appointments
17791 (that wouldn't ever be deleted) as well as punctual ones, operates as a
17792 real mail back end and is configurable in many ways. All of this is
17793 explained in the sections below.
17794
17795 @menu
17796 * The NNDiary Back End:: Basic setup and usage.
17797 * The Gnus Diary Library:: Utility toolkit on top of nndiary.
17798 * Sending or Not Sending:: A final note on sending diary messages.
17799 @end menu
17800
17801
17802 @node The NNDiary Back End
17803 @subsection The NNDiary Back End
17804 @cindex nndiary
17805 @cindex the nndiary back end
17806
17807 @code{nndiary} is a back end very similar to @code{nnml} (@pxref{Mail
17808 Spool}). Actually, it could appear as a mix of @code{nnml} and
17809 @code{nndraft}. If you know @code{nnml}, you're already familiar with
17810 the message storing scheme of @code{nndiary}: one file per message, one
17811 directory per group.
17812
17813 Before anything, there is one requirement to be able to run
17814 @code{nndiary} properly: you @emph{must} use the group timestamp feature
17815 of Gnus. This adds a timestamp to each group's parameters. @ref{Group
17816 Timestamp} to see how it's done.
17817
17818 @menu
17819 * Diary Messages:: What makes a message valid for nndiary.
17820 * Running NNDiary:: NNDiary has two modes of operation.
17821 * Customizing NNDiary:: Bells and whistles.
17822 @end menu
17823
17824 @node Diary Messages
17825 @subsubsection Diary Messages
17826 @cindex nndiary messages
17827 @cindex nndiary mails
17828
17829 @code{nndiary} messages are just normal ones, except for the mandatory
17830 presence of 7 special headers. These headers are of the form
17831 @code{X-Diary-<something>}, @code{<something>} being one of
17832 @code{Minute}, @code{Hour}, @code{Dom}, @code{Month}, @code{Year},
17833 @code{Time-Zone} and @code{Dow}. @code{Dom} means ``Day of Month'', and
17834 @code{dow} means ``Day of Week''. These headers actually behave like
17835 crontab specifications and define the event date(s):
17836
17837 @itemize @bullet
17838 @item
17839 For all headers except the @code{Time-Zone} one, a header value is
17840 either a star (meaning all possible values), or a list of fields
17841 (separated by a comma).
17842 @item
17843 A field is either an integer, or a range.
17844 @item
17845 A range is two integers separated by a dash.
17846 @item
17847 Possible integer values are 0--59 for @code{Minute}, 0--23 for
17848 @code{Hour}, 1--31 for @code{Dom}, 1--12 for @code{Month}, above 1971
17849 for @code{Year} and 0--6 for @code{Dow} (0 meaning Sunday).
17850 @item
17851 As a special case, a star in either @code{Dom} or @code{Dow} doesn't
17852 mean ``all possible values'', but ``use only the other field''. Note
17853 that if both are star'ed, the use of either one gives the same result.
17854 @item
17855 The @code{Time-Zone} header is special in that it can only have one
17856 value (@code{GMT}, for instance). A star doesn't mean ``all possible
17857 values'' (because it makes no sense), but ``the current local time
17858 zone''. Most of the time, you'll be using a star here. However, for a
17859 list of available time zone values, see the variable
17860 @code{nndiary-headers}.
17861 @end itemize
17862
17863 As a concrete example, here are the diary headers to add to your message
17864 for specifying ``Each Monday and each 1st of month, at 12:00, 20:00,
17865 21:00, 22:00, 23:00 and 24:00, from 1999 to 2010'' (I'll let you find
17866 what to do then):
17867
17868 @example
17869 X-Diary-Minute: 0
17870 X-Diary-Hour: 12, 20-24
17871 X-Diary-Dom: 1
17872 X-Diary-Month: *
17873 X-Diary-Year: 1999-2010
17874 X-Diary-Dow: 1
17875 X-Diary-Time-Zone: *
17876 @end example
17877
17878 @node Running NNDiary
17879 @subsubsection Running NNDiary
17880 @cindex running nndiary
17881 @cindex nndiary operation modes
17882
17883 @code{nndiary} has two modes of operation: ``traditional'' (the default)
17884 and ``autonomous''. In traditional mode, @code{nndiary} does not get new
17885 mail by itself. You have to move (@kbd{B m}) or copy (@kbd{B c}) mails
17886 from your primary mail back end to nndiary groups in order to handle them
17887 as diary messages. In autonomous mode, @code{nndiary} retrieves its own
17888 mail and handles it independently from your primary mail back end.
17889
17890 One should note that Gnus is not inherently designed to allow several
17891 ``master'' mail back ends at the same time. However, this does make
17892 sense with @code{nndiary}: you really want to send and receive diary
17893 messages to your diary groups directly. So, @code{nndiary} supports
17894 being sort of a ``second primary mail back end'' (to my knowledge, it is
17895 the only back end offering this feature). However, there is a limitation
17896 (which I hope to fix some day): respooling doesn't work in autonomous
17897 mode.
17898
17899 In order to use @code{nndiary} in autonomous mode, you have several
17900 things to do:
17901
17902 @itemize @bullet
17903 @item
17904 Allow @code{nndiary} to retrieve new mail by itself. Put the following
17905 line in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
17906
17907 @lisp
17908 (setq nndiary-get-new-mail t)
17909 @end lisp
17910 @item
17911 You must arrange for diary messages (those containing @code{X-Diary-*}
17912 headers) to be split in a private folder @emph{before} Gnus treat them.
17913 Again, this is needed because Gnus cannot (yet ?) properly handle
17914 multiple primary mail back ends. Getting those messages from a separate
17915 source will compensate this misfeature to some extent.
17916
17917 As an example, here's my procmailrc entry to store diary files in
17918 @file{~/.nndiary} (the default @code{nndiary} mail source file):
17919
17920 @example
17921 :0 HD :
17922 * ^X-Diary
17923 .nndiary
17924 @end example
17925 @end itemize
17926
17927 Once this is done, you might want to customize the following two options
17928 that affect the diary mail retrieval and splitting processes:
17929
17930 @defvar nndiary-mail-sources
17931 This is the diary-specific replacement for the standard
17932 @code{mail-sources} variable. It obeys the same syntax, and defaults to
17933 @code{(file :path "~/.nndiary")}.
17934 @end defvar
17935
17936 @defvar nndiary-split-methods
17937 This is the diary-specific replacement for the standard
17938 @code{nnmail-split-methods} variable. It obeys the same syntax.
17939 @end defvar
17940
17941 Finally, you may add a permanent @code{nndiary} virtual server
17942 (something like @code{(nndiary "diary")} should do) to your
17943 @code{gnus-secondary-select-methods}.
17944
17945 Hopefully, almost everything (see the TODO section in
17946 @file{nndiary.el}) will work as expected when you restart Gnus: in
17947 autonomous mode, typing @kbd{g} and @kbd{M-g} in the group buffer, will
17948 also get your new diary mails and split them according to your
17949 diary-specific rules, @kbd{F} will find your new diary groups etc.
17950
17951 @node Customizing NNDiary
17952 @subsubsection Customizing NNDiary
17953 @cindex customizing nndiary
17954 @cindex nndiary customization
17955
17956 Now that @code{nndiary} is up and running, it's time to customize it.
17957 The custom group is called @code{nndiary} (no, really ?!). You should
17958 browse it to figure out which options you'd like to tweak. The following
17959 two variables are probably the only ones you will want to change:
17960
17961 @defvar nndiary-reminders
17962 This is the list of times when you want to be reminded of your
17963 appointments (e.g., 3 weeks before, then 2 days before, then 1 hour
17964 before and that's it). Remember that ``being reminded'' means that the
17965 diary message will pop up as brand new and unread again when you get new
17966 mail.
17967 @end defvar
17968
17969 @defvar nndiary-week-starts-on-monday
17970 Rather self-explanatory. Otherwise, Sunday is assumed (this is the
17971 default).
17972 @end defvar
17973
17974
17975 @node The Gnus Diary Library
17976 @subsection The Gnus Diary Library
17977 @cindex gnus-diary
17978 @cindex the gnus diary library
17979
17980 Using @code{nndiary} manually (I mean, writing the headers by hand and
17981 so on) would be rather boring. Fortunately, there is a library called
17982 @code{gnus-diary} written on top of @code{nndiary}, that does many
17983 useful things for you.
17984
17985 In order to use it, add the following line to your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
17986
17987 @lisp
17988 (require 'gnus-diary)
17989 @end lisp
17990
17991 Also, you shouldn't use any @code{gnus-user-format-function-[d|D]}
17992 (@pxref{Summary Buffer Lines}). @code{gnus-diary} provides both of these
17993 (sorry if you used them before).
17994
17995
17996 @menu
17997 * Diary Summary Line Format:: A nicer summary buffer line format.
17998 * Diary Articles Sorting:: A nicer way to sort messages.
17999 * Diary Headers Generation:: Not doing it manually.
18000 * Diary Group Parameters:: Not handling them manually.
18001 @end menu
18002
18003 @node Diary Summary Line Format
18004 @subsubsection Diary Summary Line Format
18005 @cindex diary summary buffer line
18006 @cindex diary summary line format
18007
18008 Displaying diary messages in standard summary line format (usually
18009 something like @samp{From Joe: Subject}) is pretty useless. Most of
18010 the time, you're the one who wrote the message, and you mostly want to
18011 see the event's date.
18012
18013 @code{gnus-diary} provides two supplemental user formats to be used in
18014 summary line formats. @code{D} corresponds to a formatted time string
18015 for the next occurrence of the event (e.g., ``Sat, Sep 22 01, 12:00''),
18016 while @code{d} corresponds to an approximate remaining time until the
18017 next occurrence of the event (e.g., ``in 6 months, 1 week'').
18018
18019 For example, here's how Joe's birthday is displayed in my
18020 @code{nndiary+diary:birthdays} summary buffer (note that the message is
18021 expirable, but will never be deleted, as it specifies a periodic event):
18022
18023 @example
18024 E Sat, Sep 22 01, 12:00: Joe's birthday (in 6 months, 1 week)
18025 @end example
18026
18027 In order to get something like the above, you would normally add the
18028 following line to your diary groups'parameters:
18029
18030 @lisp
18031 (gnus-summary-line-format "%U%R%z %uD: %(%s%) (%ud)\n")
18032 @end lisp
18033
18034 However, @code{gnus-diary} does it automatically (@pxref{Diary Group
18035 Parameters}). You can however customize the provided summary line format
18036 with the following user options:
18037
18038 @defvar gnus-diary-summary-line-format
18039 Defines the summary line format used for diary groups (@pxref{Summary
18040 Buffer Lines}). @code{gnus-diary} uses it to automatically update the
18041 diary groups'parameters.
18042 @end defvar
18043
18044 @defvar gnus-diary-time-format
18045 Defines the format to display dates in diary summary buffers. This is
18046 used by the @code{D} user format. See the docstring for details.
18047 @end defvar
18048
18049 @defvar gnus-diary-delay-format-function
18050 Defines the format function to use for displaying delays (remaining
18051 times) in diary summary buffers. This is used by the @code{d} user
18052 format. There are currently built-in functions for English and French;
18053 you can also define your own. See the docstring for details.
18054 @end defvar
18055
18056 @node Diary Articles Sorting
18057 @subsubsection Diary Articles Sorting
18058 @cindex diary articles sorting
18059 @cindex diary summary lines sorting
18060 @findex gnus-summary-sort-by-schedule
18061 @findex gnus-thread-sort-by-schedule
18062 @findex gnus-article-sort-by-schedule
18063
18064 @code{gnus-diary} provides new sorting functions (@pxref{Sorting the
18065 Summary Buffer} ) called @code{gnus-summary-sort-by-schedule},
18066 @code{gnus-thread-sort-by-schedule} and
18067 @code{gnus-article-sort-by-schedule}. These functions let you organize
18068 your diary summary buffers from the closest event to the farthest one.
18069
18070 @code{gnus-diary} automatically installs
18071 @code{gnus-summary-sort-by-schedule} as a menu item in the summary
18072 buffer's ``sort'' menu, and the two others as the primary (hence
18073 default) sorting functions in the group parameters (@pxref{Diary Group
18074 Parameters}).
18075
18076 @node Diary Headers Generation
18077 @subsubsection Diary Headers Generation
18078 @cindex diary headers generation
18079 @findex gnus-diary-check-message
18080
18081 @code{gnus-diary} provides a function called
18082 @code{gnus-diary-check-message} to help you handle the @code{X-Diary-*}
18083 headers. This function ensures that the current message contains all the
18084 required diary headers, and prompts you for values or corrections if
18085 needed.
18086
18087 This function is hooked into the @code{nndiary} back end, so that
18088 moving or copying an article to a diary group will trigger it
18089 automatically. It is also bound to @kbd{C-c C-f d} in
18090 @code{message-mode} and @code{article-edit-mode} in order to ease the
18091 process of converting a usual mail to a diary one.
18092
18093 This function takes a prefix argument which will force prompting of
18094 all diary headers, regardless of their presence or validity. That way,
18095 you can very easily reschedule an already valid diary message, for
18096 instance.
18097
18098 @node Diary Group Parameters
18099 @subsubsection Diary Group Parameters
18100 @cindex diary group parameters
18101
18102 When you create a new diary group, or visit one, @code{gnus-diary}
18103 automatically checks your group parameters and if needed, sets the
18104 summary line format to the diary-specific value, installs the
18105 diary-specific sorting functions, and also adds the different
18106 @code{X-Diary-*} headers to the group's posting-style. It is then easier
18107 to send a diary message, because if you use @kbd{C-u a} or @kbd{C-u m}
18108 on a diary group to prepare a message, these headers will be inserted
18109 automatically (although not filled with proper values yet).
18110
18111 @node Sending or Not Sending
18112 @subsection Sending or Not Sending
18113
18114 Well, assuming you've read all of the above, here are two final notes on
18115 mail sending with @code{nndiary}:
18116
18117 @itemize @bullet
18118 @item
18119 @code{nndiary} is a @emph{real} mail back end. You really send real diary
18120 messages for real. This means for instance that you can give
18121 appointments to anybody (provided they use Gnus and @code{nndiary}) by
18122 sending the diary message to them as well.
18123 @item
18124 However, since @code{nndiary} also has a @code{request-post} method, you
18125 can also use @kbd{C-u a} instead of @kbd{C-u m} on a diary group and the
18126 message won't actually be sent; just stored locally in the group. This
18127 comes in very handy for private appointments.
18128 @end itemize
18129
18130 @node Gnus Unplugged
18131 @section Gnus Unplugged
18132 @cindex offline
18133 @cindex unplugged
18134 @cindex agent
18135 @cindex Gnus agent
18136 @cindex Gnus unplugged
18137
18138 In olden times (ca. February '88), people used to run their newsreaders
18139 on big machines with permanent connections to the net. News transport
18140 was dealt with by news servers, and all the newsreaders had to do was to
18141 read news. Believe it or not.
18142
18143 Nowadays most people read news and mail at home, and use some sort of
18144 modem to connect to the net. To avoid running up huge phone bills, it
18145 would be nice to have a way to slurp down all the news and mail, hang up
18146 the phone, read for several hours, and then upload any responses you
18147 have to make. And then you repeat the procedure.
18148
18149 Of course, you can use news servers for doing this as well. I've used
18150 @code{inn} together with @code{slurp}, @code{pop} and @code{sendmail}
18151 for some years, but doing that's a bore. Moving the news server
18152 functionality up to the newsreader makes sense if you're the only person
18153 reading news on a machine.
18154
18155 Setting up Gnus as an ``offline'' newsreader is quite simple. In
18156 fact, you don't have to configure anything as the agent is now enabled
18157 by default (@pxref{Agent Variables, gnus-agent}).
18158
18159 Of course, to use it as such, you have to learn a few new commands.
18160
18161 @menu
18162 * Agent Basics:: How it all is supposed to work.
18163 * Agent Categories:: How to tell the Gnus Agent what to download.
18164 * Agent Commands:: New commands for all the buffers.
18165 * Agent Visuals:: Ways that the agent may effect your summary buffer.
18166 * Agent as Cache:: The Agent is a big cache too.
18167 * Agent Expiry:: How to make old articles go away.
18168 * Agent Regeneration:: How to recover from lost connections and other accidents.
18169 * Agent and flags:: How the Agent maintains flags.
18170 * Agent and IMAP:: How to use the Agent with @acronym{IMAP}.
18171 * Outgoing Messages:: What happens when you post/mail something?
18172 * Agent Variables:: Customizing is fun.
18173 * Example Setup:: An example @file{~/.gnus.el} file for offline people.
18174 * Batching Agents:: How to fetch news from a @code{cron} job.
18175 * Agent Caveats:: What you think it'll do and what it does.
18176 @end menu
18177
18178
18179 @node Agent Basics
18180 @subsection Agent Basics
18181
18182 First, let's get some terminology out of the way.
18183
18184 The Gnus Agent is said to be @dfn{unplugged} when you have severed the
18185 connection to the net (and notified the Agent that this is the case).
18186 When the connection to the net is up again (and Gnus knows this), the
18187 Agent is @dfn{plugged}.
18188
18189 The @dfn{local} machine is the one you're running on, and which isn't
18190 connected to the net continuously.
18191
18192 @dfn{Downloading} means fetching things from the net to your local
18193 machine. @dfn{Uploading} is doing the opposite.
18194
18195 You know that Gnus gives you all the opportunity you'd ever want for
18196 shooting yourself in the foot. Some people call it flexibility. Gnus
18197 is also customizable to a great extent, which means that the user has a
18198 say on how Gnus behaves. Other newsreaders might unconditionally shoot
18199 you in your foot, but with Gnus, you have a choice!
18200
18201 Gnus is never really in plugged or unplugged state. Rather, it applies
18202 that state to each server individually. This means that some servers
18203 can be plugged while others can be unplugged. Additionally, some
18204 servers can be ignored by the Agent altogether (which means that
18205 they're kinda like plugged always).
18206
18207 So when you unplug the Agent and then wonder why is Gnus opening a
18208 connection to the Net, the next step to do is to look whether all
18209 servers are agentized. If there is an unagentized server, you found
18210 the culprit.
18211
18212 Another thing is the @dfn{offline} state. Sometimes, servers aren't
18213 reachable. When Gnus notices this, it asks you whether you want the
18214 server to be switched to offline state. If you say yes, then the
18215 server will behave somewhat as if it was unplugged, except that Gnus
18216 will ask you whether you want to switch it back online again.
18217
18218 Let's take a typical Gnus session using the Agent.
18219
18220 @itemize @bullet
18221
18222 @item
18223 @findex gnus-unplugged
18224 You start Gnus with @code{gnus-unplugged}. This brings up the Gnus
18225 Agent in a disconnected state. You can read all the news that you have
18226 already fetched while in this mode.
18227
18228 @item
18229 You then decide to see whether any new news has arrived. You connect
18230 your machine to the net (using PPP or whatever), and then hit @kbd{J j}
18231 to make Gnus become @dfn{plugged} and use @kbd{g} to check for new mail
18232 as usual. To check for new mail in unplugged mode (@pxref{Mail
18233 Source Specifiers}).
18234
18235 @item
18236 You can then read the new news immediately, or you can download the
18237 news onto your local machine. If you want to do the latter, you press
18238 @kbd{g} to check if there are any new news and then @kbd{J s} to fetch
18239 all the eligible articles in all the groups. (To let Gnus know which
18240 articles you want to download, @pxref{Agent Categories}).
18241
18242 @item
18243 After fetching the articles, you press @kbd{J j} to make Gnus become
18244 unplugged again, and you shut down the PPP thing (or whatever). And
18245 then you read the news offline.
18246
18247 @item
18248 And then you go to step 2.
18249 @end itemize
18250
18251 Here are some things you should do the first time (or so) that you use
18252 the Agent.
18253
18254 @itemize @bullet
18255
18256 @item
18257 Decide which servers should be covered by the Agent. If you have a mail
18258 back end, it would probably be nonsensical to have it covered by the
18259 Agent. Go to the server buffer (@kbd{^} in the group buffer) and press
18260 @kbd{J a} on the server (or servers) that you wish to have covered by the
18261 Agent (@pxref{Server Agent Commands}), or @kbd{J r} on automatically
18262 added servers you do not wish to have covered by the Agent. By default,
18263 no servers are agentized.
18264
18265 @item
18266 Decide on download policy. It's fairly simple once you decide whether
18267 you are going to use agent categories, topic parameters, and/or group
18268 parameters to implement your policy. If you're new to gnus, it
18269 is probably best to start with a category, @xref{Agent Categories}.
18270
18271 Both topic parameters (@pxref{Topic Parameters}) and agent categories
18272 (@pxref{Agent Categories}) provide for setting a policy that applies
18273 to multiple groups. Which you use is entirely up to you. Topic
18274 parameters do override categories so, if you mix the two, you'll have
18275 to take that into account. If you have a few groups that deviate from
18276 your policy, you can use group parameters (@pxref{Group Parameters}) to
18277 configure them.
18278
18279 @item
18280 Uhm@dots{} that's it.
18281 @end itemize
18282
18283
18284 @node Agent Categories
18285 @subsection Agent Categories
18286
18287 One of the main reasons to integrate the news transport layer into the
18288 newsreader is to allow greater control over what articles to download.
18289 There's not much point in downloading huge amounts of articles, just to
18290 find out that you're not interested in reading any of them. It's better
18291 to be somewhat more conservative in choosing what to download, and then
18292 mark the articles for downloading manually if it should turn out that
18293 you're interested in the articles anyway.
18294
18295 One of the more effective methods for controlling what is to be
18296 downloaded is to create a @dfn{category} and then assign some (or all)
18297 groups to this category. Groups that do not belong in any other
18298 category belong to the @code{default} category. Gnus has its own
18299 buffer for creating and managing categories.
18300
18301 If you prefer, you can also use group parameters (@pxref{Group
18302 Parameters}) and topic parameters (@pxref{Topic Parameters}) for an
18303 alternative approach to controlling the agent. The only real
18304 difference is that categories are specific to the agent (so there is
18305 less to learn) while group and topic parameters include the kitchen
18306 sink.
18307
18308 Since you can set agent parameters in several different places we have
18309 a rule to decide which source to believe. This rule specifies that
18310 the parameter sources are checked in the following order: group
18311 parameters, topic parameters, agent category, and finally customizable
18312 variables. So you can mix all of these sources to produce a wide range
18313 of behavior, just don't blame me if you don't remember where you put
18314 your settings.
18315
18316 @menu
18317 * Category Syntax:: What a category looks like.
18318 * Category Buffer:: A buffer for maintaining categories.
18319 * Category Variables:: Customize'r'Us.
18320 @end menu
18321
18322
18323 @node Category Syntax
18324 @subsubsection Category Syntax
18325
18326 A category consists of a name, the list of groups belonging to the
18327 category, and a number of optional parameters that override the
18328 customizable variables. The complete list of agent parameters are
18329 listed below.
18330
18331 @cindex Agent Parameters
18332 @table @code
18333 @item agent-groups
18334 The list of groups that are in this category.
18335
18336 @item agent-predicate
18337 A predicate which (generally) gives a rough outline of which articles
18338 are eligible for downloading; and
18339
18340 @item agent-score
18341 a score rule which (generally) gives you a finer granularity when
18342 deciding what articles to download. (Note that this @dfn{download
18343 score} is not necessarily related to normal scores.)
18344
18345 @item agent-enable-expiration
18346 a boolean indicating whether the agent should expire old articles in
18347 this group. Most groups should be expired to conserve disk space. In
18348 fact, its probably safe to say that the gnus.* hierarchy contains the
18349 only groups that should not be expired.
18350
18351 @item agent-days-until-old
18352 an integer indicating the number of days that the agent should wait
18353 before deciding that a read article is safe to expire.
18354
18355 @item agent-low-score
18356 an integer that overrides the value of @code{gnus-agent-low-score}.
18357
18358 @item agent-high-score
18359 an integer that overrides the value of @code{gnus-agent-high-score}.
18360
18361 @item agent-short-article
18362 an integer that overrides the value of
18363 @code{gnus-agent-short-article}.
18364
18365 @item agent-long-article
18366 an integer that overrides the value of @code{gnus-agent-long-article}.
18367
18368 @item agent-enable-undownloaded-faces
18369 a symbol indicating whether the summary buffer should display
18370 undownloaded articles using the @code{gnus-summary-*-undownloaded-face}
18371 faces. Any symbol other than @code{nil} will enable the use of
18372 undownloaded faces.
18373 @end table
18374
18375 The name of a category can not be changed once the category has been
18376 created.
18377
18378 Each category maintains a list of groups that are exclusive members of
18379 that category. The exclusivity rule is automatically enforced, add a
18380 group to a new category and it is automatically removed from its old
18381 category.
18382
18383 A predicate in its simplest form can be a single predicate such as
18384 @code{true} or @code{false}. These two will download every available
18385 article or nothing respectively. In the case of these two special
18386 predicates an additional score rule is superfluous.
18387
18388 Predicates of @code{high} or @code{low} download articles in respect of
18389 their scores in relationship to @code{gnus-agent-high-score} and
18390 @code{gnus-agent-low-score} as described below.
18391
18392 To gain even finer control of what is to be regarded eligible for
18393 download a predicate can consist of a number of predicates with logical
18394 operators sprinkled in between.
18395
18396 Perhaps some examples are in order.
18397
18398 Here's a simple predicate. (It's the default predicate, in fact, used
18399 for all groups that don't belong to any other category.)
18400
18401 @lisp
18402 short
18403 @end lisp
18404
18405 Quite simple, eh? This predicate is true if and only if the article is
18406 short (for some value of ``short'').
18407
18408 Here's a more complex predicate:
18409
18410 @lisp
18411 (or high
18412 (and
18413 (not low)
18414 (not long)))
18415 @end lisp
18416
18417 This means that an article should be downloaded if it has a high score,
18418 or if the score is not low and the article is not long. You get the
18419 drift.
18420
18421 The available logical operators are @code{or}, @code{and} and
18422 @code{not}. (If you prefer, you can use the more ``C''-ish operators
18423 @samp{|}, @code{&} and @code{!} instead.)
18424
18425 The following predicates are pre-defined, but if none of these fit what
18426 you want to do, you can write your own.
18427
18428 When evaluating each of these predicates, the named constant will be
18429 bound to the value determined by calling
18430 @code{gnus-agent-find-parameter} on the appropriate parameter. For
18431 example, gnus-agent-short-article will be bound to
18432 @code{(gnus-agent-find-parameter group 'agent-short-article)}. This
18433 means that you can specify a predicate in your category then tune that
18434 predicate to individual groups.
18435
18436 @table @code
18437 @item short
18438 True if the article is shorter than @code{gnus-agent-short-article}
18439 lines; default 100.
18440
18441 @item long
18442 True if the article is longer than @code{gnus-agent-long-article}
18443 lines; default 200.
18444
18445 @item low
18446 True if the article has a download score less than
18447 @code{gnus-agent-low-score}; default 0.
18448
18449 @item high
18450 True if the article has a download score greater than
18451 @code{gnus-agent-high-score}; default 0.
18452
18453 @item spam
18454 True if the Gnus Agent guesses that the article is spam. The
18455 heuristics may change over time, but at present it just computes a
18456 checksum and sees whether articles match.
18457
18458 @item true
18459 Always true.
18460
18461 @item false
18462 Always false.
18463 @end table
18464
18465 If you want to create your own predicate function, here's what you have
18466 to know: The functions are called with no parameters, but the
18467 @code{gnus-headers} and @code{gnus-score} dynamic variables are bound to
18468 useful values.
18469
18470 For example, you could decide that you don't want to download articles
18471 that were posted more than a certain number of days ago (e.g., posted
18472 more than @code{gnus-agent-expire-days} ago) you might write a function
18473 something along the lines of the following:
18474
18475 @lisp
18476 (defun my-article-old-p ()
18477 "Say whether an article is old."
18478 (< (time-to-days (date-to-time (mail-header-date gnus-headers)))
18479 (- (time-to-days (current-time)) gnus-agent-expire-days)))
18480 @end lisp
18481
18482 with the predicate then defined as:
18483
18484 @lisp
18485 (not my-article-old-p)
18486 @end lisp
18487
18488 or you could append your predicate to the predefined
18489 @code{gnus-category-predicate-alist} in your @file{~/.gnus.el} or
18490 wherever.
18491
18492 @lisp
18493 (require 'gnus-agent)
18494 (setq gnus-category-predicate-alist
18495 (append gnus-category-predicate-alist
18496 '((old . my-article-old-p))))
18497 @end lisp
18498
18499 and simply specify your predicate as:
18500
18501 @lisp
18502 (not old)
18503 @end lisp
18504
18505 If/when using something like the above, be aware that there are many
18506 misconfigured systems/mailers out there and so an article's date is not
18507 always a reliable indication of when it was posted. Hell, some people
18508 just don't give a damn.
18509
18510 The above predicates apply to @emph{all} the groups which belong to the
18511 category. However, if you wish to have a specific predicate for an
18512 individual group within a category, or you're just too lazy to set up a
18513 new category, you can enter a group's individual predicate in its group
18514 parameters like so:
18515
18516 @lisp
18517 (agent-predicate . short)
18518 @end lisp
18519
18520 This is the group/topic parameter equivalent of the agent category default.
18521 Note that when specifying a single word predicate like this, the
18522 @code{agent-predicate} specification must be in dotted pair notation.
18523
18524 The equivalent of the longer example from above would be:
18525
18526 @lisp
18527 (agent-predicate or high (and (not low) (not long)))
18528 @end lisp
18529
18530 The outer parenthesis required in the category specification are not
18531 entered here as, not being in dotted pair notation, the value of the
18532 predicate is assumed to be a list.
18533
18534
18535 Now, the syntax of the download score is the same as the syntax of
18536 normal score files, except that all elements that require actually
18537 seeing the article itself are verboten. This means that only the
18538 following headers can be scored on: @code{Subject}, @code{From},
18539 @code{Date}, @code{Message-ID}, @code{References}, @code{Chars},
18540 @code{Lines}, and @code{Xref}.
18541
18542 As with predicates, the specification of the @code{download score rule}
18543 to use in respect of a group can be in either the category definition if
18544 it's to be applicable to all groups in therein, or a group's parameters
18545 if it's to be specific to that group.
18546
18547 In both of these places the @code{download score rule} can take one of
18548 three forms:
18549
18550 @enumerate
18551 @item
18552 Score rule
18553
18554 This has the same syntax as a normal Gnus score file except only a
18555 subset of scoring keywords are available as mentioned above.
18556
18557 example:
18558
18559 @itemize @bullet
18560 @item
18561 Category specification
18562
18563 @lisp
18564 (("from"
18565 ("Lars Ingebrigtsen" 1000000 nil s))
18566 ("lines"
18567 (500 -100 nil <)))
18568 @end lisp
18569
18570 @item
18571 Group/Topic Parameter specification
18572
18573 @lisp
18574 (agent-score ("from"
18575 ("Lars Ingebrigtsen" 1000000 nil s))
18576 ("lines"
18577 (500 -100 nil <)))
18578 @end lisp
18579
18580 Again, note the omission of the outermost parenthesis here.
18581 @end itemize
18582
18583 @item
18584 Agent score file
18585
18586 These score files must @emph{only} contain the permitted scoring
18587 keywords stated above.
18588
18589 example:
18590
18591 @itemize @bullet
18592 @item
18593 Category specification
18594
18595 @lisp
18596 ("~/News/agent.SCORE")
18597 @end lisp
18598
18599 or perhaps
18600
18601 @lisp
18602 ("~/News/agent.SCORE" "~/News/agent.group.SCORE")
18603 @end lisp
18604
18605 @item
18606 Group Parameter specification
18607
18608 @lisp
18609 (agent-score "~/News/agent.SCORE")
18610 @end lisp
18611
18612 Additional score files can be specified as above. Need I say anything
18613 about parenthesis?
18614 @end itemize
18615
18616 @item
18617 Use @code{normal} score files
18618
18619 If you don't want to maintain two sets of scoring rules for a group, and
18620 your desired @code{downloading} criteria for a group are the same as your
18621 @code{reading} criteria then you can tell the agent to refer to your
18622 @code{normal} score files when deciding what to download.
18623
18624 These directives in either the category definition or a group's
18625 parameters will cause the agent to read in all the applicable score
18626 files for a group, @emph{filtering out} those sections that do not
18627 relate to one of the permitted subset of scoring keywords.
18628
18629 @itemize @bullet
18630 @item
18631 Category Specification
18632
18633 @lisp
18634 file
18635 @end lisp
18636
18637 @item
18638 Group Parameter specification
18639
18640 @lisp
18641 (agent-score . file)
18642 @end lisp
18643 @end itemize
18644 @end enumerate
18645
18646 @node Category Buffer
18647 @subsubsection Category Buffer
18648
18649 You'd normally do all category maintenance from the category buffer.
18650 When you enter it for the first time (with the @kbd{J c} command from
18651 the group buffer), you'll only see the @code{default} category.
18652
18653 The following commands are available in this buffer:
18654
18655 @table @kbd
18656 @item q
18657 @kindex q (Category)
18658 @findex gnus-category-exit
18659 Return to the group buffer (@code{gnus-category-exit}).
18660
18661 @item e
18662 @kindex e (Category)
18663 @findex gnus-category-customize-category
18664 Use a customization buffer to set all of the selected category's
18665 parameters at one time (@code{gnus-category-customize-category}).
18666
18667 @item k
18668 @kindex k (Category)
18669 @findex gnus-category-kill
18670 Kill the current category (@code{gnus-category-kill}).
18671
18672 @item c
18673 @kindex c (Category)
18674 @findex gnus-category-copy
18675 Copy the current category (@code{gnus-category-copy}).
18676
18677 @item a
18678 @kindex a (Category)
18679 @findex gnus-category-add
18680 Add a new category (@code{gnus-category-add}).
18681
18682 @item p
18683 @kindex p (Category)
18684 @findex gnus-category-edit-predicate
18685 Edit the predicate of the current category
18686 (@code{gnus-category-edit-predicate}).
18687
18688 @item g
18689 @kindex g (Category)
18690 @findex gnus-category-edit-groups
18691 Edit the list of groups belonging to the current category
18692 (@code{gnus-category-edit-groups}).
18693
18694 @item s
18695 @kindex s (Category)
18696 @findex gnus-category-edit-score
18697 Edit the download score rule of the current category
18698 (@code{gnus-category-edit-score}).
18699
18700 @item l
18701 @kindex l (Category)
18702 @findex gnus-category-list
18703 List all the categories (@code{gnus-category-list}).
18704 @end table
18705
18706
18707 @node Category Variables
18708 @subsubsection Category Variables
18709
18710 @table @code
18711 @item gnus-category-mode-hook
18712 @vindex gnus-category-mode-hook
18713 Hook run in category buffers.
18714
18715 @item gnus-category-line-format
18716 @vindex gnus-category-line-format
18717 Format of the lines in the category buffer (@pxref{Formatting
18718 Variables}). Valid elements are:
18719
18720 @table @samp
18721 @item c
18722 The name of the category.
18723
18724 @item g
18725 The number of groups in the category.
18726 @end table
18727
18728 @item gnus-category-mode-line-format
18729 @vindex gnus-category-mode-line-format
18730 Format of the category mode line (@pxref{Mode Line Formatting}).
18731
18732 @item gnus-agent-short-article
18733 @vindex gnus-agent-short-article
18734 Articles that have fewer lines than this are short. Default 100.
18735
18736 @item gnus-agent-long-article
18737 @vindex gnus-agent-long-article
18738 Articles that have more lines than this are long. Default 200.
18739
18740 @item gnus-agent-low-score
18741 @vindex gnus-agent-low-score
18742 Articles that have a score lower than this have a low score. Default
18743 0.
18744
18745 @item gnus-agent-high-score
18746 @vindex gnus-agent-high-score
18747 Articles that have a score higher than this have a high score. Default
18748 0.
18749
18750 @item gnus-agent-expire-days
18751 @vindex gnus-agent-expire-days
18752 The number of days that a @samp{read} article must stay in the agent's
18753 local disk before becoming eligible for expiration (While the name is
18754 the same, this doesn't mean expiring the article on the server. It
18755 just means deleting the local copy of the article). What is also
18756 important to understand is that the counter starts with the time the
18757 article was written to the local disk and not the time the article was
18758 read.
18759 Default 7.
18760
18761 @item gnus-agent-enable-expiration
18762 @vindex gnus-agent-enable-expiration
18763 Determines whether articles in a group are, by default, expired or
18764 retained indefinitely. The default is @code{ENABLE} which means that
18765 you'll have to disable expiration when desired. On the other hand,
18766 you could set this to @code{DISABLE}. In that case, you would then
18767 have to enable expiration in selected groups.
18768
18769 @end table
18770
18771
18772 @node Agent Commands
18773 @subsection Agent Commands
18774 @findex gnus-agent-toggle-plugged
18775 @kindex J j (Agent)
18776
18777 All the Gnus Agent commands are on the @kbd{J} submap. The @kbd{J j}
18778 (@code{gnus-agent-toggle-plugged}) command works in all modes, and
18779 toggles the plugged/unplugged state of the Gnus Agent.
18780
18781
18782 @menu
18783 * Group Agent Commands:: Configure groups and fetch their contents.
18784 * Summary Agent Commands:: Manually select then fetch specific articles.
18785 * Server Agent Commands:: Select the servers that are supported by the agent.
18786 @end menu
18787
18788
18789
18790
18791 @node Group Agent Commands
18792 @subsubsection Group Agent Commands
18793
18794 @table @kbd
18795 @item J u
18796 @kindex J u (Agent Group)
18797 @findex gnus-agent-fetch-groups
18798 Fetch all eligible articles in the current group
18799 (@code{gnus-agent-fetch-groups}).
18800
18801 @item J c
18802 @kindex J c (Agent Group)
18803 @findex gnus-enter-category-buffer
18804 Enter the Agent category buffer (@code{gnus-enter-category-buffer}).
18805
18806 @item J s
18807 @kindex J s (Agent Group)
18808 @findex gnus-agent-fetch-session
18809 Fetch all eligible articles in all groups
18810 (@code{gnus-agent-fetch-session}).
18811
18812 @item J S
18813 @kindex J S (Agent Group)
18814 @findex gnus-group-send-queue
18815 Send all sendable messages in the queue group
18816 (@code{gnus-group-send-queue}). @xref{Drafts}.
18817
18818 @item J a
18819 @kindex J a (Agent Group)
18820 @findex gnus-agent-add-group
18821 Add the current group to an Agent category
18822 (@code{gnus-agent-add-group}). This command understands the
18823 process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
18824
18825 @item J r
18826 @kindex J r (Agent Group)
18827 @findex gnus-agent-remove-group
18828 Remove the current group from its category, if any
18829 (@code{gnus-agent-remove-group}). This command understands the
18830 process/prefix convention (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
18831
18832 @item J Y
18833 @kindex J Y (Agent Group)
18834 @findex gnus-agent-synchronize-flags
18835 Synchronize flags changed while unplugged with remote server, if any.
18836
18837
18838 @end table
18839
18840
18841 @node Summary Agent Commands
18842 @subsubsection Summary Agent Commands
18843
18844 @table @kbd
18845 @item J #
18846 @kindex J # (Agent Summary)
18847 @findex gnus-agent-mark-article
18848 Mark the article for downloading (@code{gnus-agent-mark-article}).
18849
18850 @item J M-#
18851 @kindex J M-# (Agent Summary)
18852 @findex gnus-agent-unmark-article
18853 Remove the downloading mark from the article
18854 (@code{gnus-agent-unmark-article}).
18855
18856 @cindex %
18857 @item @@
18858 @kindex @@ (Agent Summary)
18859 @findex gnus-agent-toggle-mark
18860 Toggle whether to download the article
18861 (@code{gnus-agent-toggle-mark}). The download mark is @samp{%} by
18862 default.
18863
18864 @item J c
18865 @kindex J c (Agent Summary)
18866 @findex gnus-agent-catchup
18867 Mark all articles as read (@code{gnus-agent-catchup}) that are neither cached, downloaded, nor downloadable.
18868
18869 @item J S
18870 @kindex J S (Agent Summary)
18871 @findex gnus-agent-fetch-group
18872 Download all eligible (@pxref{Agent Categories}) articles in this group.
18873 (@code{gnus-agent-fetch-group}).
18874
18875 @item J s
18876 @kindex J s (Agent Summary)
18877 @findex gnus-agent-summary-fetch-series
18878 Download all processable articles in this group.
18879 (@code{gnus-agent-summary-fetch-series}).
18880
18881 @item J u
18882 @kindex J u (Agent Summary)
18883 @findex gnus-agent-summary-fetch-group
18884 Download all downloadable articles in the current group
18885 (@code{gnus-agent-summary-fetch-group}).
18886
18887 @end table
18888
18889
18890 @node Server Agent Commands
18891 @subsubsection Server Agent Commands
18892
18893 @table @kbd
18894 @item J a
18895 @kindex J a (Agent Server)
18896 @findex gnus-agent-add-server
18897 Add the current server to the list of servers covered by the Gnus Agent
18898 (@code{gnus-agent-add-server}).
18899
18900 @item J r
18901 @kindex J r (Agent Server)
18902 @findex gnus-agent-remove-server
18903 Remove the current server from the list of servers covered by the Gnus
18904 Agent (@code{gnus-agent-remove-server}).
18905
18906 @end table
18907
18908
18909 @node Agent Visuals
18910 @subsection Agent Visuals
18911
18912 If you open a summary while unplugged and, Gnus knows from the group's
18913 active range that there are more articles than the headers currently
18914 stored in the Agent, you may see some articles whose subject looks
18915 something like @samp{[Undownloaded article #####]}. These are
18916 placeholders for the missing headers. Aside from setting a mark,
18917 there is not much that can be done with one of these placeholders.
18918 When Gnus finally gets a chance to fetch the group's headers, the
18919 placeholders will automatically be replaced by the actual headers.
18920 You can configure the summary buffer's maneuvering to skip over the
18921 placeholders if you care (See @code{gnus-auto-goto-ignores}).
18922
18923 While it may be obvious to all, the only headers and articles
18924 available while unplugged are those headers and articles that were
18925 fetched into the Agent while previously plugged. To put it another
18926 way, ``If you forget to fetch something while plugged, you might have a
18927 less than satisfying unplugged session''. For this reason, the Agent
18928 adds two visual effects to your summary buffer. These effects display
18929 the download status of each article so that you always know which
18930 articles will be available when unplugged.
18931
18932 The first visual effect is the @samp{%O} spec. If you customize
18933 @code{gnus-summary-line-format} to include this specifier, you will add
18934 a single character field that indicates an article's download status.
18935 Articles that have been fetched into either the Agent or the Cache,
18936 will display @code{gnus-downloaded-mark} (defaults to @samp{+}). All
18937 other articles will display @code{gnus-undownloaded-mark} (defaults to
18938 @samp{-}). If you open a group that has not been agentized, a space
18939 (@samp{ }) will be displayed.
18940
18941 The second visual effect are the undownloaded faces. The faces, there
18942 are three indicating the article's score (low, normal, high), seem to
18943 result in a love/hate response from many Gnus users. The problem is
18944 that the face selection is controlled by a list of condition tests and
18945 face names (See @code{gnus-summary-highlight}). Each condition is
18946 tested in the order in which it appears in the list so early
18947 conditions have precedence over later conditions. All of this means
18948 that, if you tick an undownloaded article, the article will continue
18949 to be displayed in the undownloaded face rather than the ticked face.
18950
18951 If you use the Agent as a cache (to avoid downloading the same article
18952 each time you visit it or to minimize your connection time), the
18953 undownloaded face will probably seem like a good idea. The reason
18954 being that you do all of our work (marking, reading, deleting) with
18955 downloaded articles so the normal faces always appear. For those
18956 users using the agent to improve online performance by caching the NOV
18957 database (most users since 5.10.2), the undownloaded faces may appear
18958 to be an absolutely horrible idea. The issue being that, since none
18959 of their articles have been fetched into the Agent, all of the
18960 normal faces will be obscured by the undownloaded faces.
18961
18962 If you would like to use the undownloaded faces, you must enable the
18963 undownloaded faces by setting the @code{agent-enable-undownloaded-faces}
18964 group parameter to @code{t}. This parameter, like all other agent
18965 parameters, may be set on an Agent Category (@pxref{Agent Categories}),
18966 a Group Topic (@pxref{Topic Parameters}), or an individual group
18967 (@pxref{Group Parameters}).
18968
18969 The one problem common to all users using the agent is how quickly it
18970 can consume disk space. If you using the agent on many groups, it is
18971 even more difficult to effectively recover disk space. One solution
18972 is the @samp{%F} format available in @code{gnus-group-line-format}.
18973 This format will display the actual disk space used by articles
18974 fetched into both the agent and cache. By knowing which groups use
18975 the most space, users know where to focus their efforts when ``agent
18976 expiring'' articles.
18977
18978 @node Agent as Cache
18979 @subsection Agent as Cache
18980
18981 When Gnus is plugged, it is not efficient to download headers or
18982 articles from the server again, if they are already stored in the
18983 Agent. So, Gnus normally only downloads headers once, and stores them
18984 in the Agent. These headers are later used when generating the summary
18985 buffer, regardless of whether you are plugged or unplugged. Articles
18986 are not cached in the Agent by default though (that would potentially
18987 consume lots of disk space), but if you have already downloaded an
18988 article into the Agent, Gnus will not download the article from the
18989 server again but use the locally stored copy instead.
18990
18991 If you so desire, you can configure the agent (see @code{gnus-agent-cache}
18992 @pxref{Agent Variables}) to always download headers and articles while
18993 plugged. Gnus will almost certainly be slower, but it will be kept
18994 synchronized with the server. That last point probably won't make any
18995 sense if you are using a nntp or nnimap back end.
18996
18997 @node Agent Expiry
18998 @subsection Agent Expiry
18999
19000 @vindex gnus-agent-expire-days
19001 @findex gnus-agent-expire
19002 @kindex M-x gnus-agent-expire
19003 @kindex M-x gnus-agent-expire-group
19004 @findex gnus-agent-expire-group
19005 @cindex agent expiry
19006 @cindex Gnus agent expiry
19007 @cindex expiry, in Gnus agent
19008
19009 The Agent back end, @code{nnagent}, doesn't handle expiry. Well, at
19010 least it doesn't handle it like other back ends. Instead, there are
19011 special @code{gnus-agent-expire} and @code{gnus-agent-expire-group}
19012 commands that will expire all read articles that are older than
19013 @code{gnus-agent-expire-days} days. They can be run whenever you feel
19014 that you're running out of space. Neither are particularly fast or
19015 efficient, and it's not a particularly good idea to interrupt them (with
19016 @kbd{C-g} or anything else) once you've started one of them.
19017
19018 Note that other functions might run @code{gnus-agent-expire} for you
19019 to keep the agent synchronized with the group.
19020
19021 The agent parameter @code{agent-enable-expiration} may be used to
19022 prevent expiration in selected groups.
19023
19024 @vindex gnus-agent-expire-all
19025 If @code{gnus-agent-expire-all} is non-@code{nil}, the agent
19026 expiration commands will expire all articles---unread, read, ticked
19027 and dormant. If @code{nil} (which is the default), only read articles
19028 are eligible for expiry, and unread, ticked and dormant articles will
19029 be kept indefinitely.
19030
19031 If you find that some articles eligible for expiry are never expired,
19032 perhaps some Gnus Agent files are corrupted. There's are special
19033 commands, @code{gnus-agent-regenerate} and
19034 @code{gnus-agent-regenerate-group}, to fix possible problems.
19035
19036 @node Agent Regeneration
19037 @subsection Agent Regeneration
19038
19039 @cindex agent regeneration
19040 @cindex Gnus agent regeneration
19041 @cindex regeneration
19042
19043 The local data structures used by @code{nnagent} may become corrupted
19044 due to certain exceptional conditions. When this happens,
19045 @code{nnagent} functionality may degrade or even fail. The solution
19046 to this problem is to repair the local data structures by removing all
19047 internal inconsistencies.
19048
19049 For example, if your connection to your server is lost while
19050 downloaded articles into the agent, the local data structures will not
19051 know about articles successfully downloaded prior to the connection
19052 failure. Running @code{gnus-agent-regenerate} or
19053 @code{gnus-agent-regenerate-group} will update the data structures
19054 such that you don't need to download these articles a second time.
19055
19056 @findex gnus-agent-regenerate
19057 @kindex M-x gnus-agent-regenerate
19058 The command @code{gnus-agent-regenerate} will perform
19059 @code{gnus-agent-regenerate-group} on every agentized group. While
19060 you can run @code{gnus-agent-regenerate} in any buffer, it is strongly
19061 recommended that you first close all summary buffers.
19062
19063 @findex gnus-agent-regenerate-group
19064 @kindex M-x gnus-agent-regenerate-group
19065 The command @code{gnus-agent-regenerate-group} uses the local copies
19066 of individual articles to repair the local @acronym{NOV}(header) database. It
19067 then updates the internal data structures that document which articles
19068 are stored locally. An optional argument will mark articles in the
19069 agent as unread.
19070
19071 @node Agent and flags
19072 @subsection Agent and flags
19073
19074 The Agent works with any Gnus back end including those, such as
19075 nnimap, that store flags (read, ticked, etc.)@: on the server. Sadly,
19076 the Agent does not actually know which backends keep their flags in
19077 the backend server rather than in @file{.newsrc}. This means that the
19078 Agent, while unplugged or disconnected, will always record all changes
19079 to the flags in its own files.
19080
19081 When you plug back in, Gnus will then check to see if you have any
19082 changed any flags and ask if you wish to synchronize these with the
19083 server. This behavior is customizable by @code{gnus-agent-synchronize-flags}.
19084
19085 @vindex gnus-agent-synchronize-flags
19086 If @code{gnus-agent-synchronize-flags} is @code{nil}, the Agent will
19087 never automatically synchronize flags. If it is @code{ask}, which is
19088 the default, the Agent will check if you made any changes and if so
19089 ask if you wish to synchronize these when you re-connect. If it has
19090 any other value, all flags will be synchronized automatically.
19091
19092 If you do not wish to synchronize flags automatically when you
19093 re-connect, you can do it manually with the
19094 @code{gnus-agent-synchronize-flags} command that is bound to @kbd{J Y}
19095 in the group buffer.
19096
19097 Technical note: the synchronization algorithm does not work by ``pushing''
19098 all local flags to the server, but rather by incrementally updated the
19099 server view of flags by changing only those flags that were changed by
19100 the user. Thus, if you set one flag on an article, quit the group then
19101 re-select the group and remove the flag; the flag will be set and
19102 removed from the server when you ``synchronize''. The queued flag
19103 operations can be found in the per-server @code{flags} file in the Agent
19104 directory. It's emptied when you synchronize flags.
19105
19106 @node Agent and IMAP
19107 @subsection Agent and IMAP
19108
19109 The Agent works with any Gnus back end, including nnimap. However,
19110 since there are some conceptual differences between @acronym{NNTP} and
19111 @acronym{IMAP}, this section (should) provide you with some information to
19112 make Gnus Agent work smoother as a @acronym{IMAP} Disconnected Mode client.
19113
19114 Some things are currently not implemented in the Agent that you'd might
19115 expect from a disconnected @acronym{IMAP} client, including:
19116
19117 @itemize @bullet
19118
19119 @item
19120 Copying/moving articles into nnimap groups when unplugged.
19121
19122 @item
19123 Creating/deleting nnimap groups when unplugged.
19124
19125 @end itemize
19126
19127 @node Outgoing Messages
19128 @subsection Outgoing Messages
19129
19130 By default, when Gnus is unplugged, all outgoing messages (both mail
19131 and news) are stored in the draft group ``queue'' (@pxref{Drafts}).
19132 You can view them there after posting, and edit them at will.
19133
19134 You can control the circumstances under which outgoing mail is queued
19135 (see @code{gnus-agent-queue-mail}, @pxref{Agent Variables}). Outgoing
19136 news is always queued when Gnus is unplugged, and never otherwise.
19137
19138 You can send the messages either from the draft group with the special
19139 commands available there, or you can use the @kbd{J S} command in the
19140 group buffer to send all the sendable messages in the draft group.
19141 Posting news will only work when Gnus is plugged, but you can send
19142 mail at any time.
19143
19144 If sending mail while unplugged does not work for you and you worry
19145 about hitting @kbd{J S} by accident when unplugged, you can have Gnus
19146 ask you to confirm your action (see
19147 @code{gnus-agent-prompt-send-queue}, @pxref{Agent Variables}).
19148
19149 @node Agent Variables
19150 @subsection Agent Variables
19151
19152 @table @code
19153 @item gnus-agent
19154 @vindex gnus-agent
19155 Is the agent enabled? The default is @code{t}. When first enabled,
19156 the agent will use @code{gnus-agent-auto-agentize-methods} to
19157 automatically mark some back ends as agentized. You may change which
19158 back ends are agentized using the agent commands in the server buffer.
19159
19160 To enter the server buffer, use the @kbd{^}
19161 (@code{gnus-group-enter-server-mode}) command in the group buffer.
19162
19163
19164 @item gnus-agent-directory
19165 @vindex gnus-agent-directory
19166 Where the Gnus Agent will store its files. The default is
19167 @file{~/News/agent/}.
19168
19169 @item gnus-agent-handle-level
19170 @vindex gnus-agent-handle-level
19171 Groups on levels (@pxref{Group Levels}) higher than this variable will
19172 be ignored by the Agent. The default is @code{gnus-level-subscribed},
19173 which means that only subscribed group will be considered by the Agent
19174 by default.
19175
19176 @item gnus-agent-plugged-hook
19177 @vindex gnus-agent-plugged-hook
19178 Hook run when connecting to the network.
19179
19180 @item gnus-agent-unplugged-hook
19181 @vindex gnus-agent-unplugged-hook
19182 Hook run when disconnecting from the network.
19183
19184 @item gnus-agent-fetched-hook
19185 @vindex gnus-agent-fetched-hook
19186 Hook run when finished fetching articles.
19187
19188 @item gnus-agent-cache
19189 @vindex gnus-agent-cache
19190 Variable to control whether use the locally stored @acronym{NOV} and
19191 articles when plugged, e.g., essentially using the Agent as a cache.
19192 The default is non-@code{nil}, which means to use the Agent as a cache.
19193
19194 @item gnus-agent-go-online
19195 @vindex gnus-agent-go-online
19196 If @code{gnus-agent-go-online} is @code{nil}, the Agent will never
19197 automatically switch offline servers into online status. If it is
19198 @code{ask}, the default, the Agent will ask if you wish to switch
19199 offline servers into online status when you re-connect. If it has any
19200 other value, all offline servers will be automatically switched into
19201 online status.
19202
19203 @item gnus-agent-mark-unread-after-downloaded
19204 @vindex gnus-agent-mark-unread-after-downloaded
19205 If @code{gnus-agent-mark-unread-after-downloaded} is non-@code{nil},
19206 mark articles as unread after downloading. This is usually a safe
19207 thing to do as the newly downloaded article has obviously not been
19208 read. The default is @code{t}.
19209
19210 @item gnus-agent-synchronize-flags
19211 @vindex gnus-agent-synchronize-flags
19212 If @code{gnus-agent-synchronize-flags} is @code{nil}, the Agent will
19213 never automatically synchronize flags. If it is @code{ask}, which is
19214 the default, the Agent will check if you made any changes and if so
19215 ask if you wish to synchronize these when you re-connect. If it has
19216 any other value, all flags will be synchronized automatically.
19217
19218 @item gnus-agent-consider-all-articles
19219 @vindex gnus-agent-consider-all-articles
19220 If @code{gnus-agent-consider-all-articles} is non-@code{nil}, the
19221 agent will let the agent predicate decide whether articles need to be
19222 downloaded or not, for all articles. When @code{nil}, the default,
19223 the agent will only let the predicate decide whether unread articles
19224 are downloaded or not. If you enable this, you may also want to look
19225 into the agent expiry settings (@pxref{Category Variables}), so that
19226 the agent doesn't download articles which the agent will later expire,
19227 over and over again.
19228
19229 @item gnus-agent-max-fetch-size
19230 @vindex gnus-agent-max-fetch-size
19231 The agent fetches articles into a temporary buffer prior to parsing
19232 them into individual files. To avoid exceeding the max. buffer size,
19233 the agent alternates between fetching and parsing until all articles
19234 have been fetched. @code{gnus-agent-max-fetch-size} provides a size
19235 limit to control how often the cycling occurs. A large value improves
19236 performance. A small value minimizes the time lost should the
19237 connection be lost while fetching (You may need to run
19238 @code{gnus-agent-regenerate-group} to update the group's state.
19239 However, all articles parsed prior to losing the connection will be
19240 available while unplugged). The default is 10M so it is unusual to
19241 see any cycling.
19242
19243 @item gnus-server-unopen-status
19244 @vindex gnus-server-unopen-status
19245 Perhaps not an Agent variable, but closely related to the Agent, this
19246 variable says what will happen if Gnus cannot open a server. If the
19247 Agent is enabled, the default, @code{nil}, makes Gnus ask the user
19248 whether to deny the server or whether to unplug the agent. If the
19249 Agent is disabled, Gnus always simply deny the server. Other choices
19250 for this variable include @code{denied} and @code{offline} the latter
19251 is only valid if the Agent is used.
19252
19253 @item gnus-auto-goto-ignores
19254 @vindex gnus-auto-goto-ignores
19255 Another variable that isn't an Agent variable, yet so closely related
19256 that most will look for it here, this variable tells the summary
19257 buffer how to maneuver around undownloaded (only headers stored in the
19258 agent) and unfetched (neither article nor headers stored) articles.
19259
19260 The valid values are @code{nil} (maneuver to any article),
19261 @code{undownloaded} (maneuvering while unplugged ignores articles that
19262 have not been fetched), @code{always-undownloaded} (maneuvering always
19263 ignores articles that have not been fetched), @code{unfetched}
19264 (maneuvering ignores articles whose headers have not been fetched).
19265
19266 @item gnus-agent-queue-mail
19267 @vindex gnus-agent-queue-mail
19268 When @code{gnus-agent-queue-mail} is @code{always}, Gnus will always
19269 queue mail rather than sending it straight away. When @code{t}, Gnus
19270 will queue mail when unplugged only. When @code{nil}, never queue
19271 mail. The default is @code{t}.
19272
19273 @item gnus-agent-prompt-send-queue
19274 @vindex gnus-agent-prompt-send-queue
19275 When @code{gnus-agent-prompt-send-queue} is non-@code{nil} Gnus will
19276 prompt you to confirm that you really wish to proceed if you hit
19277 @kbd{J S} while unplugged. The default is @code{nil}.
19278
19279 @item gnus-agent-auto-agentize-methods
19280 @vindex gnus-agent-auto-agentize-methods
19281 If you have never used the Agent before (or more technically, if
19282 @file{~/News/agent/lib/servers} does not exist), Gnus will
19283 automatically agentize a few servers for you. This variable control
19284 which back ends should be auto-agentized. It is typically only useful
19285 to agentize remote back ends. The auto-agentizing has the same effect
19286 as running @kbd{J a} on the servers (@pxref{Server Agent Commands}).
19287 If the file exist, you must manage the servers manually by adding or
19288 removing them, this variable is only applicable the first time you
19289 start Gnus. The default is @samp{nil}.
19290
19291 @end table
19292
19293
19294 @node Example Setup
19295 @subsection Example Setup
19296
19297 If you don't want to read this manual, and you have a fairly standard
19298 setup, you may be able to use something like the following as your
19299 @file{~/.gnus.el} file to get started.
19300
19301 @lisp
19302 ;; @r{Define how Gnus is to fetch news. We do this over @acronym{NNTP}}
19303 ;; @r{from your ISP's server.}
19304 (setq gnus-select-method '(nntp "news.your-isp.com"))
19305
19306 ;; @r{Define how Gnus is to read your mail. We read mail from}
19307 ;; @r{your ISP's @acronym{POP} server.}
19308 (setq mail-sources '((pop :server "pop.your-isp.com")))
19309
19310 ;; @r{Say how Gnus is to store the mail. We use nnml groups.}
19311 (setq gnus-secondary-select-methods '((nnml "")))
19312
19313 ;; @r{Make Gnus into an offline newsreader.}
19314 ;; (gnus-agentize) ; @r{The obsolete setting.}
19315 ;; (setq gnus-agent t) ; @r{Now the default.}
19316 @end lisp
19317
19318 That should be it, basically. Put that in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file,
19319 edit to suit your needs, start up PPP (or whatever), and type @kbd{M-x
19320 gnus}.
19321
19322 If this is the first time you've run Gnus, you will be subscribed
19323 automatically to a few default newsgroups. You'll probably want to
19324 subscribe to more groups, and to do that, you have to query the
19325 @acronym{NNTP} server for a complete list of groups with the @kbd{A A}
19326 command. This usually takes quite a while, but you only have to do it
19327 once.
19328
19329 After reading and parsing a while, you'll be presented with a list of
19330 groups. Subscribe to the ones you want to read with the @kbd{u}
19331 command. @kbd{l} to make all the killed groups disappear after you've
19332 subscribe to all the groups you want to read. (@kbd{A k} will bring
19333 back all the killed groups.)
19334
19335 You can now read the groups at once, or you can download the articles
19336 with the @kbd{J s} command. And then read the rest of this manual to
19337 find out which of the other gazillion things you want to customize.
19338
19339
19340 @node Batching Agents
19341 @subsection Batching Agents
19342 @findex gnus-agent-batch
19343
19344 Having the Gnus Agent fetch articles (and post whatever messages you've
19345 written) is quite easy once you've gotten things set up properly. The
19346 following shell script will do everything that is necessary:
19347
19348 You can run a complete batch command from the command line with the
19349 following incantation:
19350
19351 @example
19352 #!/bin/sh
19353 emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l ~/.gnus.el -f gnus-agent-batch >/dev/null 2>&1
19354 @end example
19355
19356
19357 @node Agent Caveats
19358 @subsection Agent Caveats
19359
19360 The Gnus Agent doesn't seem to work like most other offline
19361 newsreaders. Here are some common questions that some imaginary people
19362 may ask:
19363
19364 @table @dfn
19365 @item If I read an article while plugged, do they get entered into the Agent?
19366
19367 @strong{No}. If you want this behavior, add
19368 @code{gnus-agent-fetch-selected-article} to
19369 @code{gnus-select-article-hook}.
19370
19371 @item If I read an article while plugged, and the article already exists in
19372 the Agent, will it get downloaded once more?
19373
19374 @strong{No}, unless @code{gnus-agent-cache} is @code{nil}.
19375
19376 @end table
19377
19378 In short, when Gnus is unplugged, it only looks into the locally stored
19379 articles; when it's plugged, it talks to your ISP and may also use the
19380 locally stored articles.
19381
19382
19383 @node Scoring
19384 @chapter Scoring
19385 @cindex scoring
19386
19387 Other people use @dfn{kill files}, but we here at Gnus Towers like
19388 scoring better than killing, so we'd rather switch than fight. They do
19389 something completely different as well, so sit up straight and pay
19390 attention!
19391
19392 @vindex gnus-summary-mark-below
19393 All articles have a default score (@code{gnus-summary-default-score}),
19394 which is 0 by default. This score may be raised or lowered either
19395 interactively or by score files. Articles that have a score lower than
19396 @code{gnus-summary-mark-below} are marked as read.
19397
19398 Gnus will read any @dfn{score files} that apply to the current group
19399 before generating the summary buffer.
19400
19401 There are several commands in the summary buffer that insert score
19402 entries based on the current article. You can, for instance, ask Gnus to
19403 lower or increase the score of all articles with a certain subject.
19404
19405 There are two sorts of scoring entries: Permanent and temporary.
19406 Temporary score entries are self-expiring entries. Any entries that are
19407 temporary and have not been used for, say, a week, will be removed
19408 silently to help keep the sizes of the score files down.
19409
19410 @menu
19411 * Summary Score Commands:: Adding score entries for the current group.
19412 * Group Score Commands:: General score commands.
19413 * Score Variables:: Customize your scoring. (My, what terminology).
19414 * Score File Format:: What a score file may contain.
19415 * Score File Editing:: You can edit score files by hand as well.
19416 * Adaptive Scoring:: Big Sister Gnus knows what you read.
19417 * Home Score File:: How to say where new score entries are to go.
19418 * Followups To Yourself:: Having Gnus notice when people answer you.
19419 * Scoring On Other Headers:: Scoring on non-standard headers.
19420 * Scoring Tips:: How to score effectively.
19421 * Reverse Scoring:: That problem child of old is not problem.
19422 * Global Score Files:: Earth-spanning, ear-splitting score files.
19423 * Kill Files:: They are still here, but they can be ignored.
19424 * Converting Kill Files:: Translating kill files to score files.
19425 * Advanced Scoring:: Using logical expressions to build score rules.
19426 * Score Decays:: It can be useful to let scores wither away.
19427 @end menu
19428
19429
19430 @node Summary Score Commands
19431 @section Summary Score Commands
19432 @cindex score commands
19433
19434 The score commands that alter score entries do not actually modify real
19435 score files. That would be too inefficient. Gnus maintains a cache of
19436 previously loaded score files, one of which is considered the
19437 @dfn{current score file alist}. The score commands simply insert
19438 entries into this list, and upon group exit, this list is saved.
19439
19440 The current score file is by default the group's local score file, even
19441 if no such score file actually exists. To insert score commands into
19442 some other score file (e.g., @file{all.SCORE}), you must first make this
19443 score file the current one.
19444
19445 General score commands that don't actually change the score file:
19446
19447 @table @kbd
19448
19449 @item V s
19450 @kindex V s (Summary)
19451 @findex gnus-summary-set-score
19452 Set the score of the current article (@code{gnus-summary-set-score}).
19453
19454 @item V S
19455 @kindex V S (Summary)
19456 @findex gnus-summary-current-score
19457 Display the score of the current article
19458 (@code{gnus-summary-current-score}).
19459
19460 @item V t
19461 @kindex V t (Summary)
19462 @findex gnus-score-find-trace
19463 Display all score rules that have been used on the current article
19464 (@code{gnus-score-find-trace}). In the @file{*Score Trace*} buffer, you
19465 may type @kbd{e} to edit score file corresponding to the score rule on
19466 current line and @kbd{f} to format (@code{gnus-score-pretty-print}) the
19467 score file and edit it.
19468
19469 @item V w
19470 @kindex V w (Summary)
19471 @findex gnus-score-find-favourite-words
19472 List words used in scoring (@code{gnus-score-find-favourite-words}).
19473
19474 @item V R
19475 @kindex V R (Summary)
19476 @findex gnus-summary-rescore
19477 Run the current summary through the scoring process
19478 (@code{gnus-summary-rescore}). This might be useful if you're playing
19479 around with your score files behind Gnus' back and want to see the
19480 effect you're having.
19481
19482 @item V c
19483 @kindex V c (Summary)
19484 @findex gnus-score-change-score-file
19485 Make a different score file the current
19486 (@code{gnus-score-change-score-file}).
19487
19488 @item V e
19489 @kindex V e (Summary)
19490 @findex gnus-score-edit-current-scores
19491 Edit the current score file (@code{gnus-score-edit-current-scores}).
19492 You will be popped into a @code{gnus-score-mode} buffer (@pxref{Score
19493 File Editing}).
19494
19495 @item V f
19496 @kindex V f (Summary)
19497 @findex gnus-score-edit-file
19498 Edit a score file and make this score file the current one
19499 (@code{gnus-score-edit-file}).
19500
19501 @item V F
19502 @kindex V F (Summary)
19503 @findex gnus-score-flush-cache
19504 Flush the score cache (@code{gnus-score-flush-cache}). This is useful
19505 after editing score files.
19506
19507 @item V C
19508 @kindex V C (Summary)
19509 @findex gnus-score-customize
19510 Customize a score file in a visually pleasing manner
19511 (@code{gnus-score-customize}).
19512
19513 @end table
19514
19515 The rest of these commands modify the local score file.
19516
19517 @table @kbd
19518
19519 @item V m
19520 @kindex V m (Summary)
19521 @findex gnus-score-set-mark-below
19522 Prompt for a score, and mark all articles with a score below this as
19523 read (@code{gnus-score-set-mark-below}).
19524
19525 @item V x
19526 @kindex V x (Summary)
19527 @findex gnus-score-set-expunge-below
19528 Prompt for a score, and add a score rule to the current score file to
19529 expunge all articles below this score
19530 (@code{gnus-score-set-expunge-below}).
19531 @end table
19532
19533 The keystrokes for actually making score entries follow a very regular
19534 pattern, so there's no need to list all the commands. (Hundreds of
19535 them.)
19536
19537 @findex gnus-summary-increase-score
19538 @findex gnus-summary-lower-score
19539
19540 @enumerate
19541 @item
19542 The first key is either @kbd{I} (upper case i) for increasing the score
19543 or @kbd{L} for lowering the score.
19544 @item
19545 The second key says what header you want to score on. The following
19546 keys are available:
19547 @table @kbd
19548
19549 @item a
19550 Score on the author name.
19551
19552 @item s
19553 Score on the subject line.
19554
19555 @item x
19556 Score on the @code{Xref} line---i.e., the cross-posting line.
19557
19558 @item r
19559 Score on the @code{References} line.
19560
19561 @item d
19562 Score on the date.
19563
19564 @item l
19565 Score on the number of lines.
19566
19567 @item i
19568 Score on the @code{Message-ID} header.
19569
19570 @item e
19571 Score on an ``extra'' header, that is, one of those in gnus-extra-headers,
19572 if your @acronym{NNTP} server tracks additional header data in overviews.
19573
19574 @item f
19575 Score on followups---this matches the author name, and adds scores to
19576 the followups to this author. (Using this key leads to the creation of
19577 @file{ADAPT} files.)
19578
19579 @item b
19580 Score on the body.
19581
19582 @item h
19583 Score on the head.
19584
19585 @item t
19586 Score on thread. (Using this key leads to the creation of @file{ADAPT}
19587 files.)
19588
19589 @end table
19590
19591 @item
19592 The third key is the match type. Which match types are valid depends on
19593 what headers you are scoring on.
19594
19595 @table @code
19596
19597 @item strings
19598
19599 @table @kbd
19600
19601 @item e
19602 Exact matching.
19603
19604 @item s
19605 Substring matching.
19606
19607 @item f
19608 Fuzzy matching (@pxref{Fuzzy Matching}).
19609
19610 @item r
19611 Regexp matching
19612 @end table
19613
19614 @item date
19615 @table @kbd
19616
19617 @item b
19618 Before date.
19619
19620 @item a
19621 After date.
19622
19623 @item n
19624 This date.
19625 @end table
19626
19627 @item number
19628 @table @kbd
19629
19630 @item <
19631 Less than number.
19632
19633 @item =
19634 Equal to number.
19635
19636 @item >
19637 Greater than number.
19638 @end table
19639 @end table
19640
19641 @item
19642 The fourth and usually final key says whether this is a temporary (i.e.,
19643 expiring) score entry, or a permanent (i.e., non-expiring) score entry,
19644 or whether it is to be done immediately, without adding to the score
19645 file.
19646 @table @kbd
19647
19648 @item t
19649 Temporary score entry.
19650
19651 @item p
19652 Permanent score entry.
19653
19654 @item i
19655 Immediately scoring.
19656 @end table
19657
19658 @item
19659 If you are scoring on @samp{e} (extra) headers, you will then be prompted for
19660 the header name on which you wish to score. This must be a header named
19661 in gnus-extra-headers, and @samp{TAB} completion is available.
19662
19663 @end enumerate
19664
19665 So, let's say you want to increase the score on the current author with
19666 exact matching permanently: @kbd{I a e p}. If you want to lower the
19667 score based on the subject line, using substring matching, and make a
19668 temporary score entry: @kbd{L s s t}. Pretty easy.
19669
19670 To make things a bit more complicated, there are shortcuts. If you use
19671 a capital letter on either the second or third keys, Gnus will use
19672 defaults for the remaining one or two keystrokes. The defaults are
19673 ``substring'' and ``temporary''. So @kbd{I A} is the same as @kbd{I a s
19674 t}, and @kbd{I a R} is the same as @kbd{I a r t}.
19675
19676 These functions take both the numerical prefix and the symbolic prefix
19677 (@pxref{Symbolic Prefixes}). A numerical prefix says how much to lower
19678 (or increase) the score of the article. A symbolic prefix of @code{a}
19679 says to use the @file{all.SCORE} file for the command instead of the
19680 current score file.
19681
19682 @vindex gnus-score-mimic-keymap
19683 The @code{gnus-score-mimic-keymap} says whether these commands will
19684 pretend they are keymaps or not.
19685
19686
19687 @node Group Score Commands
19688 @section Group Score Commands
19689 @cindex group score commands
19690
19691 There aren't many of these as yet, I'm afraid.
19692
19693 @table @kbd
19694
19695 @item W e
19696 @kindex W e (Group)
19697 @findex gnus-score-edit-all-score
19698 Edit the apply-to-all-groups all.SCORE file. You will be popped into
19699 a @code{gnus-score-mode} buffer (@pxref{Score File Editing}).
19700
19701 @item W f
19702 @kindex W f (Group)
19703 @findex gnus-score-flush-cache
19704 Gnus maintains a cache of score alists to avoid having to reload them
19705 all the time. This command will flush the cache
19706 (@code{gnus-score-flush-cache}).
19707
19708 @end table
19709
19710 You can do scoring from the command line by saying something like:
19711
19712 @findex gnus-batch-score
19713 @cindex batch scoring
19714 @example
19715 $ emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l ~/.gnus.el -f gnus-batch-score
19716 @end example
19717
19718
19719 @node Score Variables
19720 @section Score Variables
19721 @cindex score variables
19722
19723 @table @code
19724
19725 @item gnus-use-scoring
19726 @vindex gnus-use-scoring
19727 If @code{nil}, Gnus will not check for score files, and will not, in
19728 general, do any score-related work. This is @code{t} by default.
19729
19730 @item gnus-kill-killed
19731 @vindex gnus-kill-killed
19732 If this variable is @code{nil}, Gnus will never apply score files to
19733 articles that have already been through the kill process. While this
19734 may save you lots of time, it also means that if you apply a kill file
19735 to a group, and then change the kill file and want to run it over you
19736 group again to kill more articles, it won't work. You have to set this
19737 variable to @code{t} to do that. (It is @code{t} by default.)
19738
19739 @item gnus-kill-files-directory
19740 @vindex gnus-kill-files-directory
19741 All kill and score files will be stored in this directory, which is
19742 initialized from the @env{SAVEDIR} environment variable by default.
19743 This is @file{~/News/} by default.
19744
19745 @item gnus-score-file-suffix
19746 @vindex gnus-score-file-suffix
19747 Suffix to add to the group name to arrive at the score file name
19748 (@file{SCORE} by default.)
19749
19750 @item gnus-score-uncacheable-files
19751 @vindex gnus-score-uncacheable-files
19752 @cindex score cache
19753 All score files are normally cached to avoid excessive re-loading of
19754 score files. However, this might make your Emacs grow big and
19755 bloated, so this regexp can be used to weed out score files unlikely
19756 to be needed again. It would be a bad idea to deny caching of
19757 @file{all.SCORE}, while it might be a good idea to not cache
19758 @file{comp.infosystems.www.authoring.misc.ADAPT}. In fact, this
19759 variable is @samp{ADAPT$} by default, so no adaptive score files will
19760 be cached.
19761
19762 @item gnus-save-score
19763 @vindex gnus-save-score
19764 If you have really complicated score files, and do lots of batch
19765 scoring, then you might set this variable to @code{t}. This will make
19766 Gnus save the scores into the @file{.newsrc.eld} file.
19767
19768 If you do not set this to @code{t}, then manual scores (like those set
19769 with @kbd{V s} (@code{gnus-summary-set-score})) will not be preserved
19770 across group visits.
19771
19772 @item gnus-score-interactive-default-score
19773 @vindex gnus-score-interactive-default-score
19774 Score used by all the interactive raise/lower commands to raise/lower
19775 score with. Default is 1000, which may seem excessive, but this is to
19776 ensure that the adaptive scoring scheme gets enough room to play with.
19777 We don't want the small changes from the adaptive scoring to overwrite
19778 manually entered data.
19779
19780 @item gnus-summary-default-score
19781 @vindex gnus-summary-default-score
19782 Default score of an article, which is 0 by default.
19783
19784 @item gnus-summary-expunge-below
19785 @vindex gnus-summary-expunge-below
19786 Don't display the summary lines of articles that have scores lower than
19787 this variable. This is @code{nil} by default, which means that no
19788 articles will be hidden. This variable is local to the summary buffers,
19789 and has to be set from @code{gnus-summary-mode-hook}.
19790
19791 @item gnus-score-over-mark
19792 @vindex gnus-score-over-mark
19793 Mark (in the third column) used for articles with a score over the
19794 default. Default is @samp{+}.
19795
19796 @item gnus-score-below-mark
19797 @vindex gnus-score-below-mark
19798 Mark (in the third column) used for articles with a score below the
19799 default. Default is @samp{-}.
19800
19801 @item gnus-score-find-score-files-function
19802 @vindex gnus-score-find-score-files-function
19803 Function used to find score files for the current group. This function
19804 is called with the name of the group as the argument.
19805
19806 Predefined functions available are:
19807 @table @code
19808
19809 @item gnus-score-find-single
19810 @findex gnus-score-find-single
19811 Only apply the group's own score file.
19812
19813 @item gnus-score-find-bnews
19814 @findex gnus-score-find-bnews
19815 Apply all score files that match, using bnews syntax. This is the
19816 default. If the current group is @samp{gnu.emacs.gnus}, for instance,
19817 @file{all.emacs.all.SCORE}, @file{not.alt.all.SCORE} and
19818 @file{gnu.all.SCORE} would all apply. In short, the instances of
19819 @samp{all} in the score file names are translated into @samp{.*}, and
19820 then a regexp match is done.
19821
19822 This means that if you have some score entries that you want to apply to
19823 all groups, then you put those entries in the @file{all.SCORE} file.
19824
19825 The score files are applied in a semi-random order, although Gnus will
19826 try to apply the more general score files before the more specific score
19827 files. It does this by looking at the number of elements in the score
19828 file names---discarding the @samp{all} elements.
19829
19830 @item gnus-score-find-hierarchical
19831 @findex gnus-score-find-hierarchical
19832 Apply all score files from all the parent groups. This means that you
19833 can't have score files like @file{all.SCORE}, but you can have
19834 @file{SCORE}, @file{comp.SCORE} and @file{comp.emacs.SCORE} for each
19835 server.
19836
19837 @end table
19838 This variable can also be a list of functions. In that case, all
19839 these functions will be called with the group name as argument, and
19840 all the returned lists of score files will be applied. These
19841 functions can also return lists of lists of score alists directly. In
19842 that case, the functions that return these non-file score alists
19843 should probably be placed before the ``real'' score file functions, to
19844 ensure that the last score file returned is the local score file.
19845 Phu.
19846
19847 For example, to do hierarchical scoring but use a non-server-specific
19848 overall score file, you could use the value
19849 @example
19850 (list (lambda (group) ("all.SCORE"))
19851 'gnus-score-find-hierarchical)
19852 @end example
19853
19854 @item gnus-score-expiry-days
19855 @vindex gnus-score-expiry-days
19856 This variable says how many days should pass before an unused score file
19857 entry is expired. If this variable is @code{nil}, no score file entries
19858 are expired. It's 7 by default.
19859
19860 @item gnus-update-score-entry-dates
19861 @vindex gnus-update-score-entry-dates
19862 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, temporary score entries that have
19863 been triggered (matched) will have their dates updated. (This is how Gnus
19864 controls expiry---all non-matched-entries will become too old while
19865 matched entries will stay fresh and young.) However, if you set this
19866 variable to @code{nil}, even matched entries will grow old and will
19867 have to face that oh-so grim reaper.
19868
19869 @item gnus-score-after-write-file-function
19870 @vindex gnus-score-after-write-file-function
19871 Function called with the name of the score file just written.
19872
19873 @item gnus-score-thread-simplify
19874 @vindex gnus-score-thread-simplify
19875 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, article subjects will be
19876 simplified for subject scoring purposes in the same manner as with
19877 threading---according to the current value of
19878 @code{gnus-simplify-subject-functions}. If the scoring entry uses
19879 @code{substring} or @code{exact} matching, the match will also be
19880 simplified in this manner.
19881
19882 @end table
19883
19884
19885 @node Score File Format
19886 @section Score File Format
19887 @cindex score file format
19888
19889 A score file is an @code{emacs-lisp} file that normally contains just a
19890 single form. Casual users are not expected to edit these files;
19891 everything can be changed from the summary buffer.
19892
19893 Anyway, if you'd like to dig into it yourself, here's an example:
19894
19895 @lisp
19896 (("from"
19897 ("Lars Ingebrigtsen" -10000)
19898 ("Per Abrahamsen")
19899 ("larsi\\|lmi" -50000 nil R))
19900 ("subject"
19901 ("Ding is Badd" nil 728373))
19902 ("xref"
19903 ("alt.politics" -1000 728372 s))
19904 ("lines"
19905 (2 -100 nil <))
19906 (mark 0)
19907 (expunge -1000)
19908 (mark-and-expunge -10)
19909 (read-only nil)
19910 (orphan -10)
19911 (adapt t)
19912 (files "/hom/larsi/News/gnu.SCORE")
19913 (exclude-files "all.SCORE")
19914 (local (gnus-newsgroup-auto-expire t)
19915 (gnus-summary-make-false-root empty))
19916 (eval (ding)))
19917 @end lisp
19918
19919 This example demonstrates most score file elements. @xref{Advanced
19920 Scoring}, for a different approach.
19921
19922 Even though this looks much like Lisp code, nothing here is actually
19923 @code{eval}ed. The Lisp reader is used to read this form, though, so it
19924 has to be valid syntactically, if not semantically.
19925
19926 Six keys are supported by this alist:
19927
19928 @table @code
19929
19930 @item STRING
19931 If the key is a string, it is the name of the header to perform the
19932 match on. Scoring can only be performed on these eight headers:
19933 @code{From}, @code{Subject}, @code{References}, @code{Message-ID},
19934 @code{Xref}, @code{Lines}, @code{Chars} and @code{Date}. In addition to
19935 these headers, there are three strings to tell Gnus to fetch the entire
19936 article and do the match on larger parts of the article: @code{Body}
19937 will perform the match on the body of the article, @code{Head} will
19938 perform the match on the head of the article, and @code{All} will
19939 perform the match on the entire article. Note that using any of these
19940 last three keys will slow down group entry @emph{considerably}. The
19941 final ``header'' you can score on is @code{Followup}. These score
19942 entries will result in new score entries being added for all follow-ups
19943 to articles that matches these score entries.
19944
19945 Following this key is an arbitrary number of score entries, where each
19946 score entry has one to four elements.
19947 @enumerate
19948
19949 @item
19950 The first element is the @dfn{match element}. On most headers this will
19951 be a string, but on the Lines and Chars headers, this must be an
19952 integer.
19953
19954 @item
19955 If the second element is present, it should be a number---the @dfn{score
19956 element}. This number should be an integer in the neginf to posinf
19957 interval. This number is added to the score of the article if the match
19958 is successful. If this element is not present, the
19959 @code{gnus-score-interactive-default-score} number will be used
19960 instead. This is 1000 by default.
19961
19962 @item
19963 If the third element is present, it should be a number---the @dfn{date
19964 element}. This date says when the last time this score entry matched,
19965 which provides a mechanism for expiring the score entries. It this
19966 element is not present, the score entry is permanent. The date is
19967 represented by the number of days since December 31, 1 BCE.
19968
19969 @item
19970 If the fourth element is present, it should be a symbol---the @dfn{type
19971 element}. This element specifies what function should be used to see
19972 whether this score entry matches the article. What match types that can
19973 be used depends on what header you wish to perform the match on.
19974 @table @dfn
19975
19976 @item From, Subject, References, Xref, Message-ID
19977 For most header types, there are the @code{r} and @code{R} (regexp), as
19978 well as @code{s} and @code{S} (substring) types, and @code{e} and
19979 @code{E} (exact match), and @code{w} (word match) types. If this
19980 element is not present, Gnus will assume that substring matching should
19981 be used. @code{R}, @code{S}, and @code{E} differ from the others in
19982 that the matches will be done in a case-sensitive manner. All these
19983 one-letter types are really just abbreviations for the @code{regexp},
19984 @code{string}, @code{exact}, and @code{word} types, which you can use
19985 instead, if you feel like.
19986
19987 @item Extra
19988 Just as for the standard string overview headers, if you are using
19989 gnus-extra-headers, you can score on these headers' values. In this
19990 case, there is a 5th element in the score entry, being the name of the
19991 header to be scored. The following entry is useful in your
19992 @file{all.SCORE} file in case of spam attacks from a single origin
19993 host, if your @acronym{NNTP} server tracks @samp{NNTP-Posting-Host} in
19994 overviews:
19995
19996 @lisp
19997 ("111.222.333.444" -1000 nil s
19998 "NNTP-Posting-Host")
19999 @end lisp
20000
20001 @item Lines, Chars
20002 These two headers use different match types: @code{<}, @code{>},
20003 @code{=}, @code{>=} and @code{<=}.
20004
20005 These predicates are true if
20006
20007 @example
20008 (PREDICATE HEADER MATCH)
20009 @end example
20010
20011 evaluates to non-@code{nil}. For instance, the advanced match
20012 @code{("lines" 4 <)} (@pxref{Advanced Scoring}) will result in the
20013 following form:
20014
20015 @lisp
20016 (< header-value 4)
20017 @end lisp
20018
20019 Or to put it another way: When using @code{<} on @code{Lines} with 4 as
20020 the match, we get the score added if the article has less than 4 lines.
20021 (It's easy to get confused and think it's the other way around. But
20022 it's not. I think.)
20023
20024 When matching on @code{Lines}, be careful because some back ends (like
20025 @code{nndir}) do not generate @code{Lines} header, so every article ends
20026 up being marked as having 0 lines. This can lead to strange results if
20027 you happen to lower score of the articles with few lines.
20028
20029 @item Date
20030 For the Date header we have three kinda silly match types:
20031 @code{before}, @code{at} and @code{after}. I can't really imagine this
20032 ever being useful, but, like, it would feel kinda silly not to provide
20033 this function. Just in case. You never know. Better safe than sorry.
20034 Once burnt, twice shy. Don't judge a book by its cover. Never not have
20035 sex on a first date. (I have been told that at least one person, and I
20036 quote, ``found this function indispensable'', however.)
20037
20038 @cindex ISO8601
20039 @cindex date
20040 A more useful match type is @code{regexp}. With it, you can match the
20041 date string using a regular expression. The date is normalized to
20042 ISO8601 compact format first---@var{YYYYMMDD}@code{T}@var{HHMMSS}. If
20043 you want to match all articles that have been posted on April 1st in
20044 every year, you could use @samp{....0401.........} as a match string,
20045 for instance. (Note that the date is kept in its original time zone, so
20046 this will match articles that were posted when it was April 1st where
20047 the article was posted from. Time zones are such wholesome fun for the
20048 whole family, eh?)
20049
20050 @item Head, Body, All
20051 These three match keys use the same match types as the @code{From} (etc.)@:
20052 header uses.
20053
20054 @item Followup
20055 This match key is somewhat special, in that it will match the
20056 @code{From} header, and affect the score of not only the matching
20057 articles, but also all followups to the matching articles. This allows
20058 you to increase the score of followups to your own articles, or
20059 decrease the score of followups to the articles of some known
20060 trouble-maker. Uses the same match types as the @code{From} header
20061 uses. (Using this match key will lead to creation of @file{ADAPT}
20062 files.)
20063
20064 @item Thread
20065 This match key works along the same lines as the @code{Followup} match
20066 key. If you say that you want to score on a (sub-)thread started by an
20067 article with a @code{Message-ID} @var{x}, then you add a @samp{thread}
20068 match. This will add a new @samp{thread} match for each article that
20069 has @var{x} in its @code{References} header. (These new @samp{thread}
20070 matches will use the @code{Message-ID}s of these matching articles.)
20071 This will ensure that you can raise/lower the score of an entire thread,
20072 even though some articles in the thread may not have complete
20073 @code{References} headers. Note that using this may lead to
20074 nondeterministic scores of the articles in the thread. (Using this match
20075 key will lead to creation of @file{ADAPT} files.)
20076 @end table
20077 @end enumerate
20078
20079 @cindex score file atoms
20080 @item mark
20081 The value of this entry should be a number. Any articles with a score
20082 lower than this number will be marked as read.
20083
20084 @item expunge
20085 The value of this entry should be a number. Any articles with a score
20086 lower than this number will be removed from the summary buffer.
20087
20088 @item mark-and-expunge
20089 The value of this entry should be a number. Any articles with a score
20090 lower than this number will be marked as read and removed from the
20091 summary buffer.
20092
20093 @item thread-mark-and-expunge
20094 The value of this entry should be a number. All articles that belong to
20095 a thread that has a total score below this number will be marked as read
20096 and removed from the summary buffer. @code{gnus-thread-score-function}
20097 says how to compute the total score for a thread.
20098
20099 @item files
20100 The value of this entry should be any number of file names. These files
20101 are assumed to be score files as well, and will be loaded the same way
20102 this one was.
20103
20104 @item exclude-files
20105 The clue of this entry should be any number of files. These files will
20106 not be loaded, even though they would normally be so, for some reason or
20107 other.
20108
20109 @item eval
20110 The value of this entry will be @code{eval}ed. This element will be
20111 ignored when handling global score files.
20112
20113 @item read-only
20114 Read-only score files will not be updated or saved. Global score files
20115 should feature this atom (@pxref{Global Score Files}). (Note:
20116 @dfn{Global} here really means @dfn{global}; not your personal
20117 apply-to-all-groups score files.)
20118
20119 @item orphan
20120 The value of this entry should be a number. Articles that do not have
20121 parents will get this number added to their scores. Imagine you follow
20122 some high-volume newsgroup, like @samp{comp.lang.c}. Most likely you
20123 will only follow a few of the threads, also want to see any new threads.
20124
20125 You can do this with the following two score file entries:
20126
20127 @example
20128 (orphan -500)
20129 (mark-and-expunge -100)
20130 @end example
20131
20132 When you enter the group the first time, you will only see the new
20133 threads. You then raise the score of the threads that you find
20134 interesting (with @kbd{I T} or @kbd{I S}), and ignore (@kbd{c y}) the
20135 rest. Next time you enter the group, you will see new articles in the
20136 interesting threads, plus any new threads.
20137
20138 I.e., the orphan score atom is for high-volume groups where a few
20139 interesting threads which can't be found automatically by ordinary
20140 scoring rules exist.
20141
20142 @item adapt
20143 This entry controls the adaptive scoring. If it is @code{t}, the
20144 default adaptive scoring rules will be used. If it is @code{ignore}, no
20145 adaptive scoring will be performed on this group. If it is a list, this
20146 list will be used as the adaptive scoring rules. If it isn't present,
20147 or is something other than @code{t} or @code{ignore}, the default
20148 adaptive scoring rules will be used. If you want to use adaptive
20149 scoring on most groups, you'd set @code{gnus-use-adaptive-scoring} to
20150 @code{t}, and insert an @code{(adapt ignore)} in the groups where you do
20151 not want adaptive scoring. If you only want adaptive scoring in a few
20152 groups, you'd set @code{gnus-use-adaptive-scoring} to @code{nil}, and
20153 insert @code{(adapt t)} in the score files of the groups where you want
20154 it.
20155
20156 @item adapt-file
20157 All adaptive score entries will go to the file named by this entry. It
20158 will also be applied when entering the group. This atom might be handy
20159 if you want to adapt on several groups at once, using the same adaptive
20160 file for a number of groups.
20161
20162 @item local
20163 @cindex local variables
20164 The value of this entry should be a list of @code{(@var{var}
20165 @var{value})} pairs. Each @var{var} will be made buffer-local to the
20166 current summary buffer, and set to the value specified. This is a
20167 convenient, if somewhat strange, way of setting variables in some
20168 groups if you don't like hooks much. Note that the @var{value} won't
20169 be evaluated.
20170 @end table
20171
20172
20173 @node Score File Editing
20174 @section Score File Editing
20175
20176 You normally enter all scoring commands from the summary buffer, but you
20177 might feel the urge to edit them by hand as well, so we've supplied you
20178 with a mode for that.
20179
20180 It's simply a slightly customized @code{emacs-lisp} mode, with these
20181 additional commands:
20182
20183 @table @kbd
20184
20185 @item C-c C-c
20186 @kindex C-c C-c (Score)
20187 @findex gnus-score-edit-exit
20188 Save the changes you have made and return to the summary buffer
20189 (@code{gnus-score-edit-exit}).
20190
20191 @item C-c C-d
20192 @kindex C-c C-d (Score)
20193 @findex gnus-score-edit-insert-date
20194 Insert the current date in numerical format
20195 (@code{gnus-score-edit-insert-date}). This is really the day number, if
20196 you were wondering.
20197
20198 @item C-c C-p
20199 @kindex C-c C-p (Score)
20200 @findex gnus-score-pretty-print
20201 The adaptive score files are saved in an unformatted fashion. If you
20202 intend to read one of these files, you want to @dfn{pretty print} it
20203 first. This command (@code{gnus-score-pretty-print}) does that for
20204 you.
20205
20206 @end table
20207
20208 Type @kbd{M-x gnus-score-mode} to use this mode.
20209
20210 @vindex gnus-score-mode-hook
20211 @code{gnus-score-menu-hook} is run in score mode buffers.
20212
20213 In the summary buffer you can use commands like @kbd{V f}, @kbd{V e} and
20214 @kbd{V t} to begin editing score files.
20215
20216
20217 @node Adaptive Scoring
20218 @section Adaptive Scoring
20219 @cindex adaptive scoring
20220
20221 If all this scoring is getting you down, Gnus has a way of making it all
20222 happen automatically---as if by magic. Or rather, as if by artificial
20223 stupidity, to be precise.
20224
20225 @vindex gnus-use-adaptive-scoring
20226 When you read an article, or mark an article as read, or kill an
20227 article, you leave marks behind. On exit from the group, Gnus can sniff
20228 these marks and add score elements depending on what marks it finds.
20229 You turn on this ability by setting @code{gnus-use-adaptive-scoring} to
20230 @code{t} or @code{(line)}. If you want score adaptively on separate
20231 words appearing in the subjects, you should set this variable to
20232 @code{(word)}. If you want to use both adaptive methods, set this
20233 variable to @code{(word line)}.
20234
20235 @vindex gnus-default-adaptive-score-alist
20236 To give you complete control over the scoring process, you can customize
20237 the @code{gnus-default-adaptive-score-alist} variable. For instance, it
20238 might look something like this:
20239
20240 @lisp
20241 (setq gnus-default-adaptive-score-alist
20242 '((gnus-unread-mark)
20243 (gnus-ticked-mark (from 4))
20244 (gnus-dormant-mark (from 5))
20245 (gnus-del-mark (from -4) (subject -1))
20246 (gnus-read-mark (from 4) (subject 2))
20247 (gnus-expirable-mark (from -1) (subject -1))
20248 (gnus-killed-mark (from -1) (subject -3))
20249 (gnus-kill-file-mark)
20250 (gnus-ancient-mark)
20251 (gnus-low-score-mark)
20252 (gnus-catchup-mark (from -1) (subject -1))))
20253 @end lisp
20254
20255 As you see, each element in this alist has a mark as a key (either a
20256 variable name or a ``real'' mark---a character). Following this key is
20257 a arbitrary number of header/score pairs. If there are no header/score
20258 pairs following the key, no adaptive scoring will be done on articles
20259 that have that key as the article mark. For instance, articles with
20260 @code{gnus-unread-mark} in the example above will not get adaptive score
20261 entries.
20262
20263 Each article can have only one mark, so just a single of these rules
20264 will be applied to each article.
20265
20266 To take @code{gnus-del-mark} as an example---this alist says that all
20267 articles that have that mark (i.e., are marked with @samp{e}) will have a
20268 score entry added to lower based on the @code{From} header by -4, and
20269 lowered by @code{Subject} by -1. Change this to fit your prejudices.
20270
20271 If you have marked 10 articles with the same subject with
20272 @code{gnus-del-mark}, the rule for that mark will be applied ten times.
20273 That means that that subject will get a score of ten times -1, which
20274 should be, unless I'm much mistaken, -10.
20275
20276 If you have auto-expirable (mail) groups (@pxref{Expiring Mail}), all
20277 the read articles will be marked with the @samp{E} mark. This'll
20278 probably make adaptive scoring slightly impossible, so auto-expiring and
20279 adaptive scoring doesn't really mix very well.
20280
20281 The headers you can score on are @code{from}, @code{subject},
20282 @code{message-id}, @code{references}, @code{xref}, @code{lines},
20283 @code{chars} and @code{date}. In addition, you can score on
20284 @code{followup}, which will create an adaptive score entry that matches
20285 on the @code{References} header using the @code{Message-ID} of the
20286 current article, thereby matching the following thread.
20287
20288 If you use this scheme, you should set the score file atom @code{mark}
20289 to something small---like -300, perhaps, to avoid having small random
20290 changes result in articles getting marked as read.
20291
20292 After using adaptive scoring for a week or so, Gnus should start to
20293 become properly trained and enhance the authors you like best, and kill
20294 the authors you like least, without you having to say so explicitly.
20295
20296 You can control what groups the adaptive scoring is to be performed on
20297 by using the score files (@pxref{Score File Format}). This will also
20298 let you use different rules in different groups.
20299
20300 @vindex gnus-adaptive-file-suffix
20301 The adaptive score entries will be put into a file where the name is the
20302 group name with @code{gnus-adaptive-file-suffix} appended. The default
20303 is @file{ADAPT}.
20304
20305 @vindex gnus-adaptive-pretty-print
20306 Adaptive score files can get huge and are not meant to be edited by
20307 human hands. If @code{gnus-adaptive-pretty-print} is @code{nil} (the
20308 default) those files will not be written in a human readable way.
20309
20310 @vindex gnus-score-exact-adapt-limit
20311 When doing adaptive scoring, substring or fuzzy matching would probably
20312 give you the best results in most cases. However, if the header one
20313 matches is short, the possibility for false positives is great, so if
20314 the length of the match is less than
20315 @code{gnus-score-exact-adapt-limit}, exact matching will be used. If
20316 this variable is @code{nil}, exact matching will always be used to avoid
20317 this problem.
20318
20319 @vindex gnus-default-adaptive-word-score-alist
20320 As mentioned above, you can adapt either on individual words or entire
20321 headers. If you adapt on words, the
20322 @code{gnus-default-adaptive-word-score-alist} variable says what score
20323 each instance of a word should add given a mark.
20324
20325 @lisp
20326 (setq gnus-default-adaptive-word-score-alist
20327 `((,gnus-read-mark . 30)
20328 (,gnus-catchup-mark . -10)
20329 (,gnus-killed-mark . -20)
20330 (,gnus-del-mark . -15)))
20331 @end lisp
20332
20333 This is the default value. If you have adaption on words enabled, every
20334 word that appears in subjects of articles marked with
20335 @code{gnus-read-mark} will result in a score rule that increase the
20336 score with 30 points.
20337
20338 @vindex gnus-default-ignored-adaptive-words
20339 @vindex gnus-ignored-adaptive-words
20340 Words that appear in the @code{gnus-default-ignored-adaptive-words} list
20341 will be ignored. If you wish to add more words to be ignored, use the
20342 @code{gnus-ignored-adaptive-words} list instead.
20343
20344 @vindex gnus-adaptive-word-length-limit
20345 Some may feel that short words shouldn't count when doing adaptive
20346 scoring. If so, you may set @code{gnus-adaptive-word-length-limit} to
20347 an integer. Words shorter than this number will be ignored. This
20348 variable defaults to @code{nil}.
20349
20350 @vindex gnus-adaptive-word-syntax-table
20351 When the scoring is done, @code{gnus-adaptive-word-syntax-table} is the
20352 syntax table in effect. It is similar to the standard syntax table, but
20353 it considers numbers to be non-word-constituent characters.
20354
20355 @vindex gnus-adaptive-word-minimum
20356 If @code{gnus-adaptive-word-minimum} is set to a number, the adaptive
20357 word scoring process will never bring down the score of an article to
20358 below this number. The default is @code{nil}.
20359
20360 @vindex gnus-adaptive-word-no-group-words
20361 If @code{gnus-adaptive-word-no-group-words} is set to @code{t}, gnus
20362 won't adaptively word score any of the words in the group name. Useful
20363 for groups like @samp{comp.editors.emacs}, where most of the subject
20364 lines contain the word @samp{emacs}.
20365
20366 After using this scheme for a while, it might be nice to write a
20367 @code{gnus-psychoanalyze-user} command to go through the rules and see
20368 what words you like and what words you don't like. Or perhaps not.
20369
20370 Note that the adaptive word scoring thing is highly experimental and is
20371 likely to change in the future. Initial impressions seem to indicate
20372 that it's totally useless as it stands. Some more work (involving more
20373 rigorous statistical methods) will have to be done to make this useful.
20374
20375
20376 @node Home Score File
20377 @section Home Score File
20378
20379 The score file where new score file entries will go is called the
20380 @dfn{home score file}. This is normally (and by default) the score file
20381 for the group itself. For instance, the home score file for
20382 @samp{gnu.emacs.gnus} is @file{gnu.emacs.gnus.SCORE}.
20383
20384 However, this may not be what you want. It is often convenient to share
20385 a common home score file among many groups---all @samp{emacs} groups
20386 could perhaps use the same home score file.
20387
20388 @vindex gnus-home-score-file
20389 The variable that controls this is @code{gnus-home-score-file}. It can
20390 be:
20391
20392 @enumerate
20393 @item
20394 A string. Then this file will be used as the home score file for all
20395 groups.
20396
20397 @item
20398 A function. The result of this function will be used as the home score
20399 file. The function will be called with the name of the group as the
20400 parameter.
20401
20402 @item
20403 A list. The elements in this list can be:
20404
20405 @enumerate
20406 @item
20407 @code{(@var{regexp} @var{file-name})}. If the @var{regexp} matches the
20408 group name, the @var{file-name} will be used as the home score file.
20409
20410 @item
20411 A function. If the function returns non-@code{nil}, the result will
20412 be used as the home score file. The function will be called with the
20413 name of the group as the parameter.
20414
20415 @item
20416 A string. Use the string as the home score file.
20417 @end enumerate
20418
20419 The list will be traversed from the beginning towards the end looking
20420 for matches.
20421
20422 @end enumerate
20423
20424 So, if you want to use just a single score file, you could say:
20425
20426 @lisp
20427 (setq gnus-home-score-file
20428 "my-total-score-file.SCORE")
20429 @end lisp
20430
20431 If you want to use @file{gnu.SCORE} for all @samp{gnu} groups and
20432 @file{rec.SCORE} for all @samp{rec} groups (and so on), you can say:
20433
20434 @findex gnus-hierarchial-home-score-file
20435 @lisp
20436 (setq gnus-home-score-file
20437 'gnus-hierarchial-home-score-file)
20438 @end lisp
20439
20440 This is a ready-made function provided for your convenience.
20441 Other functions include
20442
20443 @table @code
20444 @item gnus-current-home-score-file
20445 @findex gnus-current-home-score-file
20446 Return the ``current'' regular score file. This will make scoring
20447 commands add entry to the ``innermost'' matching score file.
20448
20449 @end table
20450
20451 If you want to have one score file for the @samp{emacs} groups and
20452 another for the @samp{comp} groups, while letting all other groups use
20453 their own home score files:
20454
20455 @lisp
20456 (setq gnus-home-score-file
20457 ;; @r{All groups that match the regexp @code{"\\.emacs"}}
20458 '(("\\.emacs" "emacs.SCORE")
20459 ;; @r{All the comp groups in one score file}
20460 ("^comp" "comp.SCORE")))
20461 @end lisp
20462
20463 @vindex gnus-home-adapt-file
20464 @code{gnus-home-adapt-file} works exactly the same way as
20465 @code{gnus-home-score-file}, but says what the home adaptive score file
20466 is instead. All new adaptive file entries will go into the file
20467 specified by this variable, and the same syntax is allowed.
20468
20469 In addition to using @code{gnus-home-score-file} and
20470 @code{gnus-home-adapt-file}, you can also use group parameters
20471 (@pxref{Group Parameters}) and topic parameters (@pxref{Topic
20472 Parameters}) to achieve much the same. Group and topic parameters take
20473 precedence over this variable.
20474
20475
20476 @node Followups To Yourself
20477 @section Followups To Yourself
20478
20479 Gnus offers two commands for picking out the @code{Message-ID} header in
20480 the current buffer. Gnus will then add a score rule that scores using
20481 this @code{Message-ID} on the @code{References} header of other
20482 articles. This will, in effect, increase the score of all articles that
20483 respond to the article in the current buffer. Quite useful if you want
20484 to easily note when people answer what you've said.
20485
20486 @table @code
20487
20488 @item gnus-score-followup-article
20489 @findex gnus-score-followup-article
20490 This will add a score to articles that directly follow up your own
20491 article.
20492
20493 @item gnus-score-followup-thread
20494 @findex gnus-score-followup-thread
20495 This will add a score to all articles that appear in a thread ``below''
20496 your own article.
20497 @end table
20498
20499 @vindex message-sent-hook
20500 These two functions are both primarily meant to be used in hooks like
20501 @code{message-sent-hook}, like this:
20502 @lisp
20503 (add-hook 'message-sent-hook 'gnus-score-followup-thread)
20504 @end lisp
20505
20506
20507 If you look closely at your own @code{Message-ID}, you'll notice that
20508 the first two or three characters are always the same. Here's two of
20509 mine:
20510
20511 @example
20512 <x6u3u47icf.fsf@@eyesore.no>
20513 <x6sp9o7ibw.fsf@@eyesore.no>
20514 @end example
20515
20516 So ``my'' ident on this machine is @samp{x6}. This can be
20517 exploited---the following rule will raise the score on all followups to
20518 myself:
20519
20520 @lisp
20521 ("references"
20522 ("<x6[0-9a-z]+\\.fsf\\(_-_\\)?@@.*eyesore\\.no>"
20523 1000 nil r))
20524 @end lisp
20525
20526 Whether it's the first two or first three characters that are ``yours''
20527 is system-dependent.
20528
20529
20530 @node Scoring On Other Headers
20531 @section Scoring On Other Headers
20532 @cindex scoring on other headers
20533
20534 Gnus is quite fast when scoring the ``traditional''
20535 headers---@samp{From}, @samp{Subject} and so on. However, scoring
20536 other headers requires writing a @code{head} scoring rule, which means
20537 that Gnus has to request every single article from the back end to find
20538 matches. This takes a long time in big groups.
20539
20540 @vindex gnus-inhibit-slow-scoring
20541 You can inhibit this slow scoring on headers or body by setting the
20542 variable @code{gnus-inhibit-slow-scoring}. If
20543 @code{gnus-inhibit-slow-scoring} is regexp, slow scoring is inhibited if
20544 the group matches the regexp. If it is @code{t}, slow scoring on it is
20545 inhibited for all groups.
20546
20547 Now, there's not much you can do about the slowness for news groups, but for
20548 mail groups, you have greater control. In @ref{To From Newsgroups},
20549 it's explained in greater detail what this mechanism does, but here's
20550 a cookbook example for @code{nnml} on how to allow scoring on the
20551 @samp{To} and @samp{Cc} headers.
20552
20553 Put the following in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file.
20554
20555 @lisp
20556 (setq gnus-extra-headers '(To Cc Newsgroups Keywords)
20557 nnmail-extra-headers gnus-extra-headers)
20558 @end lisp
20559
20560 Restart Gnus and rebuild your @code{nnml} overview files with the
20561 @kbd{M-x nnml-generate-nov-databases} command. This will take a long
20562 time if you have much mail.
20563
20564 Now you can score on @samp{To} and @samp{Cc} as ``extra headers'' like
20565 so: @kbd{I e s p To RET <your name> RET}.
20566
20567 See? Simple.
20568
20569
20570 @node Scoring Tips
20571 @section Scoring Tips
20572 @cindex scoring tips
20573
20574 @table @dfn
20575
20576 @item Crossposts
20577 @cindex crossposts
20578 @cindex scoring crossposts
20579 If you want to lower the score of crossposts, the line to match on is
20580 the @code{Xref} header.
20581 @lisp
20582 ("xref" (" talk.politics.misc:" -1000))
20583 @end lisp
20584
20585 @item Multiple crossposts
20586 If you want to lower the score of articles that have been crossposted to
20587 more than, say, 3 groups:
20588 @lisp
20589 ("xref"
20590 ("[^:\n]+:[0-9]+ +[^:\n]+:[0-9]+ +[^:\n]+:[0-9]+"
20591 -1000 nil r))
20592 @end lisp
20593
20594 @item Matching on the body
20595 This is generally not a very good idea---it takes a very long time.
20596 Gnus actually has to fetch each individual article from the server. But
20597 you might want to anyway, I guess. Even though there are three match
20598 keys (@code{Head}, @code{Body} and @code{All}), you should choose one
20599 and stick with it in each score file. If you use any two, each article
20600 will be fetched @emph{twice}. If you want to match a bit on the
20601 @code{Head} and a bit on the @code{Body}, just use @code{All} for all
20602 the matches.
20603
20604 @item Marking as read
20605 You will probably want to mark articles that have scores below a certain
20606 number as read. This is most easily achieved by putting the following
20607 in your @file{all.SCORE} file:
20608 @lisp
20609 ((mark -100))
20610 @end lisp
20611 You may also consider doing something similar with @code{expunge}.
20612
20613 @item Negated character classes
20614 If you say stuff like @code{[^abcd]*}, you may get unexpected results.
20615 That will match newlines, which might lead to, well, The Unknown. Say
20616 @code{[^abcd\n]*} instead.
20617 @end table
20618
20619
20620 @node Reverse Scoring
20621 @section Reverse Scoring
20622 @cindex reverse scoring
20623
20624 If you want to keep just articles that have @samp{Sex with Emacs} in the
20625 subject header, and expunge all other articles, you could put something
20626 like this in your score file:
20627
20628 @lisp
20629 (("subject"
20630 ("Sex with Emacs" 2))
20631 (mark 1)
20632 (expunge 1))
20633 @end lisp
20634
20635 So, you raise all articles that match @samp{Sex with Emacs} and mark the
20636 rest as read, and expunge them to boot.
20637
20638
20639 @node Global Score Files
20640 @section Global Score Files
20641 @cindex global score files
20642
20643 Sure, other newsreaders have ``global kill files''. These are usually
20644 nothing more than a single kill file that applies to all groups, stored
20645 in the user's home directory. Bah! Puny, weak newsreaders!
20646
20647 What I'm talking about here are Global Score Files. Score files from
20648 all over the world, from users everywhere, uniting all nations in one
20649 big, happy score file union! Ange-score! New and untested!
20650
20651 @vindex gnus-global-score-files
20652 All you have to do to use other people's score files is to set the
20653 @code{gnus-global-score-files} variable. One entry for each score file,
20654 or each score file directory. Gnus will decide by itself what score
20655 files are applicable to which group.
20656
20657 To use the score file
20658 @file{/ftp@@ftp.gnus.org:/pub/larsi/ding/score/soc.motss.SCORE} and
20659 all score files in the @file{/ftp@@ftp.some-where:/pub/score} directory,
20660 say this:
20661
20662 @lisp
20663 (setq gnus-global-score-files
20664 '("/ftp@@ftp.gnus.org:/pub/larsi/ding/score/soc.motss.SCORE"
20665 "/ftp@@ftp.some-where:/pub/score/"))
20666 @end lisp
20667
20668 @findex gnus-score-search-global-directories
20669 @noindent
20670 Simple, eh? Directory names must end with a @samp{/}. These
20671 directories are typically scanned only once during each Gnus session.
20672 If you feel the need to manually re-scan the remote directories, you can
20673 use the @code{gnus-score-search-global-directories} command.
20674
20675 Note that, at present, using this option will slow down group entry
20676 somewhat. (That is---a lot.)
20677
20678 If you want to start maintaining score files for other people to use,
20679 just put your score file up for anonymous ftp and announce it to the
20680 world. Become a retro-moderator! Participate in the retro-moderator
20681 wars sure to ensue, where retro-moderators battle it out for the
20682 sympathy of the people, luring them to use their score files on false
20683 premises! Yay! The net is saved!
20684
20685 Here are some tips for the would-be retro-moderator, off the top of my
20686 head:
20687
20688 @itemize @bullet
20689
20690 @item
20691 Articles heavily crossposted are probably junk.
20692 @item
20693 To lower a single inappropriate article, lower by @code{Message-ID}.
20694 @item
20695 Particularly brilliant authors can be raised on a permanent basis.
20696 @item
20697 Authors that repeatedly post off-charter for the group can safely be
20698 lowered out of existence.
20699 @item
20700 Set the @code{mark} and @code{expunge} atoms to obliterate the nastiest
20701 articles completely.
20702
20703 @item
20704 Use expiring score entries to keep the size of the file down. You
20705 should probably have a long expiry period, though, as some sites keep
20706 old articles for a long time.
20707 @end itemize
20708
20709 @dots{} I wonder whether other newsreaders will support global score files
20710 in the future. @emph{Snicker}. Yup, any day now, newsreaders like Blue
20711 Wave, xrn and 1stReader are bound to implement scoring. Should we start
20712 holding our breath yet?
20713
20714
20715 @node Kill Files
20716 @section Kill Files
20717 @cindex kill files
20718
20719 Gnus still supports those pesky old kill files. In fact, the kill file
20720 entries can now be expiring, which is something I wrote before Daniel
20721 Quinlan thought of doing score files, so I've left the code in there.
20722
20723 In short, kill processing is a lot slower (and I do mean @emph{a lot})
20724 than score processing, so it might be a good idea to rewrite your kill
20725 files into score files.
20726
20727 Anyway, a kill file is a normal @code{emacs-lisp} file. You can put any
20728 forms into this file, which means that you can use kill files as some
20729 sort of primitive hook function to be run on group entry, even though
20730 that isn't a very good idea.
20731
20732 Normal kill files look like this:
20733
20734 @lisp
20735 (gnus-kill "From" "Lars Ingebrigtsen")
20736 (gnus-kill "Subject" "ding")
20737 (gnus-expunge "X")
20738 @end lisp
20739
20740 This will mark every article written by me as read, and remove the
20741 marked articles from the summary buffer. Very useful, you'll agree.
20742
20743 Other programs use a totally different kill file syntax. If Gnus
20744 encounters what looks like a @code{rn} kill file, it will take a stab at
20745 interpreting it.
20746
20747 Two summary functions for editing a @sc{gnus} kill file:
20748
20749 @table @kbd
20750
20751 @item M-k
20752 @kindex M-k (Summary)
20753 @findex gnus-summary-edit-local-kill
20754 Edit this group's kill file (@code{gnus-summary-edit-local-kill}).
20755
20756 @item M-K
20757 @kindex M-K (Summary)
20758 @findex gnus-summary-edit-global-kill
20759 Edit the general kill file (@code{gnus-summary-edit-global-kill}).
20760 @end table
20761
20762 Two group mode functions for editing the kill files:
20763
20764 @table @kbd
20765
20766 @item M-k
20767 @kindex M-k (Group)
20768 @findex gnus-group-edit-local-kill
20769 Edit this group's kill file (@code{gnus-group-edit-local-kill}).
20770
20771 @item M-K
20772 @kindex M-K (Group)
20773 @findex gnus-group-edit-global-kill
20774 Edit the general kill file (@code{gnus-group-edit-global-kill}).
20775 @end table
20776
20777 Kill file variables:
20778
20779 @table @code
20780 @item gnus-kill-file-name
20781 @vindex gnus-kill-file-name
20782 A kill file for the group @samp{soc.motss} is normally called
20783 @file{soc.motss.KILL}. The suffix appended to the group name to get
20784 this file name is detailed by the @code{gnus-kill-file-name} variable.
20785 The ``global'' kill file (not in the score file sense of ``global'', of
20786 course) is just called @file{KILL}.
20787
20788 @vindex gnus-kill-save-kill-file
20789 @item gnus-kill-save-kill-file
20790 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, Gnus will save the
20791 kill file after processing, which is necessary if you use expiring
20792 kills.
20793
20794 @item gnus-apply-kill-hook
20795 @vindex gnus-apply-kill-hook
20796 @findex gnus-apply-kill-file-unless-scored
20797 @findex gnus-apply-kill-file
20798 A hook called to apply kill files to a group. It is
20799 @code{(gnus-apply-kill-file)} by default. If you want to ignore the
20800 kill file if you have a score file for the same group, you can set this
20801 hook to @code{(gnus-apply-kill-file-unless-scored)}. If you don't want
20802 kill files to be processed, you should set this variable to @code{nil}.
20803
20804 @item gnus-kill-file-mode-hook
20805 @vindex gnus-kill-file-mode-hook
20806 A hook called in kill-file mode buffers.
20807
20808 @end table
20809
20810
20811 @node Converting Kill Files
20812 @section Converting Kill Files
20813 @cindex kill files
20814 @cindex converting kill files
20815
20816 If you have loads of old kill files, you may want to convert them into
20817 score files. If they are ``regular'', you can use
20818 the @file{gnus-kill-to-score.el} package; if not, you'll have to do it
20819 by hand.
20820
20821 The kill to score conversion package isn't included in Emacs by default.
20822 You can fetch it from the contrib directory of the Gnus distribution or
20823 from
20824 @uref{http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~larsi/ding-various/gnus-kill-to-score.el}.
20825
20826 If your old kill files are very complex---if they contain more
20827 non-@code{gnus-kill} forms than not, you'll have to convert them by
20828 hand. Or just let them be as they are. Gnus will still use them as
20829 before.
20830
20831
20832 @node Advanced Scoring
20833 @section Advanced Scoring
20834
20835 Scoring on Subjects and From headers is nice enough, but what if you're
20836 really interested in what a person has to say only when she's talking
20837 about a particular subject? Or what if you really don't want to
20838 read what person A has to say when she's following up to person B, but
20839 want to read what she says when she's following up to person C?
20840
20841 By using advanced scoring rules you may create arbitrarily complex
20842 scoring patterns.
20843
20844 @menu
20845 * Advanced Scoring Syntax:: A definition.
20846 * Advanced Scoring Examples:: What they look like.
20847 * Advanced Scoring Tips:: Getting the most out of it.
20848 @end menu
20849
20850
20851 @node Advanced Scoring Syntax
20852 @subsection Advanced Scoring Syntax
20853
20854 Ordinary scoring rules have a string as the first element in the rule.
20855 Advanced scoring rules have a list as the first element. The second
20856 element is the score to be applied if the first element evaluated to a
20857 non-@code{nil} value.
20858
20859 These lists may consist of three logical operators, one redirection
20860 operator, and various match operators.
20861
20862 Logical operators:
20863
20864 @table @code
20865 @item &
20866 @itemx and
20867 This logical operator will evaluate each of its arguments until it finds
20868 one that evaluates to @code{false}, and then it'll stop. If all arguments
20869 evaluate to @code{true} values, then this operator will return
20870 @code{true}.
20871
20872 @item |
20873 @itemx or
20874 This logical operator will evaluate each of its arguments until it finds
20875 one that evaluates to @code{true}. If no arguments are @code{true},
20876 then this operator will return @code{false}.
20877
20878 @item !
20879 @itemx not
20880 @itemx ¬
20881 This logical operator only takes a single argument. It returns the
20882 logical negation of the value of its argument.
20883
20884 @end table
20885
20886 There is an @dfn{indirection operator} that will make its arguments
20887 apply to the ancestors of the current article being scored. For
20888 instance, @code{1-} will make score rules apply to the parent of the
20889 current article. @code{2-} will make score rules apply to the
20890 grandparent of the current article. Alternatively, you can write
20891 @code{^^}, where the number of @code{^}s (carets) says how far back into
20892 the ancestry you want to go.
20893
20894 Finally, we have the match operators. These are the ones that do the
20895 real work. Match operators are header name strings followed by a match
20896 and a match type. A typical match operator looks like @samp{("from"
20897 "Lars Ingebrigtsen" s)}. The header names are the same as when using
20898 simple scoring, and the match types are also the same.
20899
20900
20901 @node Advanced Scoring Examples
20902 @subsection Advanced Scoring Examples
20903
20904 Please note that the following examples are score file rules. To
20905 make a complete score file from them, surround them with another pair
20906 of parentheses.
20907
20908 Let's say you want to increase the score of articles written by Lars
20909 when he's talking about Gnus:
20910
20911 @example
20912 @group
20913 ((&
20914 ("from" "Lars Ingebrigtsen")
20915 ("subject" "Gnus"))
20916 1000)
20917 @end group
20918 @end example
20919
20920 Quite simple, huh?
20921
20922 When he writes long articles, he sometimes has something nice to say:
20923
20924 @example
20925 ((&
20926 ("from" "Lars Ingebrigtsen")
20927 (|
20928 ("subject" "Gnus")
20929 ("lines" 100 >)))
20930 1000)
20931 @end example
20932
20933 However, when he responds to things written by Reig Eigil Logge, you
20934 really don't want to read what he's written:
20935
20936 @example
20937 ((&
20938 ("from" "Lars Ingebrigtsen")
20939 (1- ("from" "Reig Eigil Logge")))
20940 -100000)
20941 @end example
20942
20943 Everybody that follows up Redmondo when he writes about disappearing
20944 socks should have their scores raised, but only when they talk about
20945 white socks. However, when Lars talks about socks, it's usually not
20946 very interesting:
20947
20948 @example
20949 ((&
20950 (1-
20951 (&
20952 ("from" "redmondo@@.*no" r)
20953 ("body" "disappearing.*socks" t)))
20954 (! ("from" "Lars Ingebrigtsen"))
20955 ("body" "white.*socks"))
20956 1000)
20957 @end example
20958
20959 Suppose you're reading a high volume group and you're only interested
20960 in replies. The plan is to score down all articles that don't have
20961 subject that begin with "Re:", "Fw:" or "Fwd:" and then score up all
20962 parents of articles that have subjects that begin with reply marks.
20963
20964 @example
20965 ((! ("subject" "re:\\|fwd?:" r))
20966 -200)
20967 ((1- ("subject" "re:\\|fwd?:" r))
20968 200)
20969 @end example
20970
20971 The possibilities are endless.
20972
20973 @node Advanced Scoring Tips
20974 @subsection Advanced Scoring Tips
20975
20976 The @code{&} and @code{|} logical operators do short-circuit logic.
20977 That is, they stop processing their arguments when it's clear what the
20978 result of the operation will be. For instance, if one of the arguments
20979 of an @code{&} evaluates to @code{false}, there's no point in evaluating
20980 the rest of the arguments. This means that you should put slow matches
20981 (@samp{body}, @samp{header}) last and quick matches (@samp{from},
20982 @samp{subject}) first.
20983
20984 The indirection arguments (@code{1-} and so on) will make their
20985 arguments work on previous generations of the thread. If you say
20986 something like:
20987
20988 @example
20989 ...
20990 (1-
20991 (1-
20992 ("from" "lars")))
20993 ...
20994 @end example
20995
20996 Then that means ``score on the from header of the grandparent of the
20997 current article''. An indirection is quite fast, but it's better to say:
20998
20999 @example
21000 (1-
21001 (&
21002 ("from" "Lars")
21003 ("subject" "Gnus")))
21004 @end example
21005
21006 than it is to say:
21007
21008 @example
21009 (&
21010 (1- ("from" "Lars"))
21011 (1- ("subject" "Gnus")))
21012 @end example
21013
21014
21015 @node Score Decays
21016 @section Score Decays
21017 @cindex score decays
21018 @cindex decays
21019
21020 You may find that your scores have a tendency to grow without
21021 bounds, especially if you're using adaptive scoring. If scores get too
21022 big, they lose all meaning---they simply max out and it's difficult to
21023 use them in any sensible way.
21024
21025 @vindex gnus-decay-scores
21026 @findex gnus-decay-score
21027 @vindex gnus-decay-score-function
21028 Gnus provides a mechanism for decaying scores to help with this problem.
21029 When score files are loaded and @code{gnus-decay-scores} is
21030 non-@code{nil}, Gnus will run the score files through the decaying
21031 mechanism thereby lowering the scores of all non-permanent score rules.
21032 If @code{gnus-decay-scores} is a regexp, only score files matching this
21033 regexp are treated. E.g., you may set it to @samp{\\.ADAPT\\'} if only
21034 @emph{adaptive} score files should be decayed. The decay itself if
21035 performed by the @code{gnus-decay-score-function} function, which is
21036 @code{gnus-decay-score} by default. Here's the definition of that
21037 function:
21038
21039 @lisp
21040 (defun gnus-decay-score (score)
21041 "Decay SCORE according to `gnus-score-decay-constant'
21042 and `gnus-score-decay-scale'."
21043 (let ((n (- score
21044 (* (if (< score 0) -1 1)
21045 (min (abs score)
21046 (max gnus-score-decay-constant
21047 (* (abs score)
21048 gnus-score-decay-scale)))))))
21049 (if (and (featurep 'xemacs)
21050 ;; XEmacs's floor can handle only the floating point
21051 ;; number below the half of the maximum integer.
21052 (> (abs n) (lsh -1 -2)))
21053 (string-to-number
21054 (car (split-string (number-to-string n) "\\.")))
21055 (floor n))))
21056 @end lisp
21057
21058 @vindex gnus-score-decay-scale
21059 @vindex gnus-score-decay-constant
21060 @code{gnus-score-decay-constant} is 3 by default and
21061 @code{gnus-score-decay-scale} is 0.05. This should cause the following:
21062
21063 @enumerate
21064 @item
21065 Scores between -3 and 3 will be set to 0 when this function is called.
21066
21067 @item
21068 Scores with magnitudes between 3 and 60 will be shrunk by 3.
21069
21070 @item
21071 Scores with magnitudes greater than 60 will be shrunk by 5% of the
21072 score.
21073 @end enumerate
21074
21075 If you don't like this decay function, write your own. It is called
21076 with the score to be decayed as its only parameter, and it should return
21077 the new score, which should be an integer.
21078
21079 Gnus will try to decay scores once a day. If you haven't run Gnus for
21080 four days, Gnus will decay the scores four times, for instance.
21081
21082 @node Searching
21083 @chapter Searching
21084 @cindex searching
21085
21086 FIXME: Add a brief overview of Gnus search capabilities. A brief
21087 comparison of nnir, nnmairix, contrib/gnus-namazu would be nice
21088 as well.
21089
21090 This chapter describes tools for searching groups and servers for
21091 articles matching a query and then retrieving those articles. Gnus
21092 provides a simpler mechanism for searching through articles in a summary buffer
21093 to find those matching a pattern. @xref{Searching for Articles}.
21094
21095 @menu
21096 * nnir:: Searching with various engines.
21097 * nnmairix:: Searching with Mairix.
21098 @end menu
21099
21100 @node nnir
21101 @section nnir
21102 @cindex nnir
21103
21104 This section describes how to use @code{nnir} to search for articles
21105 within gnus.
21106
21107 @menu
21108 * What is nnir?:: What does @code{nnir} do?
21109 * Basic Usage:: How to perform simple searches.
21110 * Setting up nnir:: How to set up @code{nnir}.
21111 @end menu
21112
21113 @node What is nnir?
21114 @subsection What is nnir?
21115
21116 @code{nnir} is a Gnus interface to a number of tools for searching
21117 through mail and news repositories. Different backends (like
21118 @code{nnimap} and @code{nntp}) work with different tools (called
21119 @dfn{engines} in @code{nnir} lingo), but all use the same basic search
21120 interface.
21121
21122 The @code{nnimap} and @code{gmane} search engines should work with no
21123 configuration. Other engines require a local index that needs to be
21124 created and maintained outside of Gnus.
21125
21126
21127 @node Basic Usage
21128 @subsection Basic Usage
21129
21130 In the group buffer typing @kbd{G G} will search the group on the
21131 current line by calling @code{gnus-group-make-nnir-group}. This prompts
21132 for a query string, creates an ephemeral @code{nnir} group containing
21133 the articles that match this query, and takes you to a summary buffer
21134 showing these articles. Articles may then be read, moved and deleted
21135 using the usual commands.
21136
21137 The @code{nnir} group made in this way is an @code{ephemeral} group,
21138 and some changes are not permanent: aside from reading, moving, and
21139 deleting, you can't act on the original article. But there is an
21140 alternative: you can @emph{warp} (i.e., jump) to the original group
21141 for the article on the current line with @kbd{A W}, aka
21142 @code{gnus-warp-to-article}. Even better, the function
21143 @code{gnus-summary-refer-thread}, bound by default in summary buffers
21144 to @kbd{A T}, will first warp to the original group before it works
21145 its magic and includes all the articles in the thread. From here you
21146 can read, move and delete articles, but also copy them, alter article
21147 marks, whatever. Go nuts.
21148
21149 You say you want to search more than just the group on the current line?
21150 No problem: just process-mark the groups you want to search. You want
21151 even more? Calling for an nnir search with the cursor on a topic heading
21152 will search all the groups under that heading.
21153
21154 Still not enough? OK, in the server buffer
21155 @code{gnus-group-make-nnir-group} (now bound to @kbd{G}) will search all
21156 groups from the server on the current line. Too much? Want to ignore
21157 certain groups when searching, like spam groups? Just customize
21158 @code{nnir-ignored-newsgroups}.
21159
21160 One more thing: individual search engines may have special search
21161 features. You can access these special features by giving a prefix-arg
21162 to @code{gnus-group-make-nnir-group}. If you are searching multiple
21163 groups with different search engines you will be prompted for the
21164 special search features for each engine separately.
21165
21166
21167 @node Setting up nnir
21168 @subsection Setting up nnir
21169
21170 To set up nnir you may need to do some prep work. Firstly, you may need
21171 to configure the search engines you plan to use. Some of them, like
21172 @code{imap} and @code{gmane}, need no special configuration. Others,
21173 like @code{namazu} and @code{swish}, require configuration as described
21174 below. Secondly, you need to associate a search engine with a server or
21175 a backend.
21176
21177 If you just want to use the @code{imap} engine to search @code{nnimap}
21178 servers, and the @code{gmane} engine to search @code{gmane} then you
21179 don't have to do anything. But you might want to read the details of the
21180 query language anyway.
21181
21182 @menu
21183 * Associating Engines:: How to associate engines.
21184 * The imap Engine:: Imap configuration and usage.
21185 * The gmane Engine:: Gmane configuration and usage.
21186 * The swish++ Engine:: Swish++ configuration and usage.
21187 * The swish-e Engine:: Swish-e configuration and usage.
21188 * The namazu Engine:: Namazu configuration and usage.
21189 * The notmuch Engine:: Notmuch configuration and usage.
21190 * The hyrex Engine:: Hyrex configuration and usage.
21191 * Customizations:: User customizable settings.
21192 @end menu
21193
21194 @node Associating Engines
21195 @subsubsection Associating Engines
21196
21197
21198 When searching a group, @code{nnir} needs to know which search engine to
21199 use. You can configure a given server to use a particular engine by
21200 setting the server variable @code{nnir-search-engine} to the engine
21201 name. For example to use the @code{namazu} engine to search the server
21202 named @code{home} you can use
21203
21204 @lisp
21205 (setq gnus-secondary-select-methods
21206 '((nnml "home"
21207 (nnimap-address "localhost")
21208 (nnir-search-engine namazu))))
21209 @end lisp
21210
21211 Alternatively you might want to use a particular engine for all servers
21212 with a given backend. For example, you might want to use the @code{imap}
21213 engine for all servers using the @code{nnimap} backend. In this case you
21214 can customize the variable @code{nnir-method-default-engines}. This is
21215 an alist of pairs of the form @code{(backend . engine)}. By default this
21216 variable is set to use the @code{imap} engine for all servers using the
21217 @code{nnimap} backend, and the @code{gmane} backend for @code{nntp}
21218 servers. (Don't worry, the @code{gmane} search engine won't actually try
21219 to search non-gmane @code{nntp} servers.) But if you wanted to use
21220 @code{namazu} for all your servers with an @code{nnimap} backend you
21221 could change this to
21222
21223 @lisp
21224 '((nnimap . namazu)
21225 (nntp . gmane))
21226 @end lisp
21227
21228 @node The imap Engine
21229 @subsubsection The imap Engine
21230
21231 The @code{imap} engine requires no configuration.
21232
21233 Queries using the @code{imap} engine follow a simple query language.
21234 The search is always case-insensitive and supports the following
21235 features (inspired by the Google search input language):
21236
21237 @table @samp
21238
21239 @item Boolean query operators
21240 AND, OR, and NOT are supported, and parentheses can be used to control
21241 operator precedence, e.g., (emacs OR xemacs) AND linux. Note that
21242 operators must be written with all capital letters to be
21243 recognized. Also preceding a term with a @minus{} sign is equivalent
21244 to NOT term.
21245
21246 @item Automatic AND queries
21247 If you specify multiple words then they will be treated as an AND
21248 expression intended to match all components.
21249
21250 @item Phrase searches
21251 If you wrap your query in double-quotes then it will be treated as a
21252 literal string.
21253
21254 @end table
21255
21256 By default the whole message will be searched. The query can be limited
21257 to a specific part of a message by using a prefix-arg. After inputting
21258 the query this will prompt (with completion) for a message part.
21259 Choices include ``Whole message'', ``Subject'', ``From'', and
21260 ``To''. Any unrecognized input is interpreted as a header name. For
21261 example, typing @kbd{Message-ID} in response to this prompt will limit
21262 the query to the Message-ID header.
21263
21264 Finally selecting ``Imap'' will interpret the query as a raw
21265 @acronym{IMAP} search query. The format of such queries can be found in
21266 RFC3501.
21267
21268 If you don't like the default of searching whole messages you can
21269 customize @code{nnir-imap-default-search-key}. For example to use
21270 @acronym{IMAP} queries by default
21271
21272 @lisp
21273 (setq nnir-imap-default-search-key "Imap")
21274 @end lisp
21275
21276 @node The gmane Engine
21277 @subsubsection The gmane Engine
21278
21279 The @code{gmane} engine requires no configuration.
21280
21281 Gmane queries follow a simple query language:
21282
21283 @table @samp
21284 @item Boolean query operators
21285 AND, OR, NOT (or AND NOT), and XOR are supported, and brackets can be
21286 used to control operator precedence, e.g., (emacs OR xemacs) AND linux.
21287 Note that operators must be written with all capital letters to be
21288 recognized.
21289
21290 @item Required and excluded terms
21291 + and @minus{} can be used to require or exclude terms, e.g., football
21292 @minus{}american
21293
21294 @item Unicode handling
21295 The search engine converts all text to utf-8, so searching should work
21296 in any language.
21297
21298 @item Stopwords
21299 Common English words (like 'the' and 'a') are ignored by default. You
21300 can override this by prefixing such words with a + (e.g., +the) or
21301 enclosing the word in quotes (e.g., "the").
21302
21303 @end table
21304
21305 The query can be limited to articles by a specific author using a
21306 prefix-arg. After inputting the query this will prompt for an author
21307 name (or part of a name) to match.
21308
21309 @node The swish++ Engine
21310 @subsubsection The swish++ Engine
21311
21312 FIXME: Say something more here.
21313
21314 Documentation for swish++ may be found at the swish++ sourceforge page:
21315 @uref{http://swishplusplus.sourceforge.net}
21316
21317 @table @code
21318
21319 @item nnir-swish++-program
21320 The name of the swish++ executable. Defaults to @code{search}
21321
21322 @item nnir-swish++-additional-switches
21323 A list of strings to be given as additional arguments to
21324 swish++. @code{nil} by default.
21325
21326 @item nnir-swish++-remove-prefix
21327 The prefix to remove from each file name returned by swish++ in order
21328 to get a group name. By default this is @code{$HOME/Mail}.
21329
21330 @end table
21331
21332 @node The swish-e Engine
21333 @subsubsection The swish-e Engine
21334
21335 FIXME: Say something more here.
21336
21337 Documentation for swish-e may be found at the swish-e homepage
21338 @uref{http://swish-e.org}
21339
21340 @table @code
21341
21342 @item nnir-swish-e-program
21343 The name of the swish-e search program. Defaults to @code{swish-e}.
21344
21345 @item nnir-swish-e-additional-switches
21346 A list of strings to be given as additional arguments to
21347 swish-e. @code{nil} by default.
21348
21349 @item nnir-swish-e-remove-prefix
21350 The prefix to remove from each file name returned by swish-e in order
21351 to get a group name. By default this is @code{$HOME/Mail}.
21352
21353 @end table
21354
21355 @node The namazu Engine
21356 @subsubsection The namazu Engine
21357
21358 Using the namazu engine requires creating and maintaining index files.
21359 One directory should contain all the index files, and nnir must be told
21360 where to find them by setting the @code{nnir-namazu-index-directory}
21361 variable.
21362
21363 To work correctly the @code{nnir-namazu-remove-prefix} variable must
21364 also be correct. This is the prefix to remove from each file name
21365 returned by Namazu in order to get a proper group name (albeit with @samp{/}
21366 instead of @samp{.}).
21367
21368 For example, suppose that Namazu returns file names such as
21369 @samp{/home/john/Mail/mail/misc/42}. For this example, use the
21370 following setting: @code{(setq nnir-namazu-remove-prefix
21371 "/home/john/Mail/")} Note the trailing slash. Removing this prefix from
21372 the directory gives @samp{mail/misc/42}. @code{nnir} knows to remove
21373 the @samp{/42} and to replace @samp{/} with @samp{.} to arrive at the
21374 correct group name @samp{mail.misc}.
21375
21376 Extra switches may be passed to the namazu search command by setting the
21377 variable @code{nnir-namazu-additional-switches}. It is particularly
21378 important not to pass any any switches to namazu that will change the
21379 output format. Good switches to use include @option{--sort},
21380 @option{--ascending}, @option{--early} and @option{--late}.
21381 Refer to the Namazu documentation for further
21382 information on valid switches.
21383
21384 Mail must first be indexed with the @command{mknmz} program. Read the
21385 documentation for namazu to create a configuration file. Here is an
21386 example:
21387
21388 @cartouche
21389 @example
21390 package conf; # Don't remove this line!
21391
21392 # Paths which will not be indexed. Don't use '^' or '$' anchors.
21393 $EXCLUDE_PATH = "spam|sent";
21394
21395 # Header fields which should be searchable. case-insensitive
21396 $REMAIN_HEADER = "from|date|message-id|subject";
21397
21398 # Searchable fields. case-insensitive
21399 $SEARCH_FIELD = "from|date|message-id|subject";
21400
21401 # The max length of a word.
21402 $WORD_LENG_MAX = 128;
21403
21404 # The max length of a field.
21405 $MAX_FIELD_LENGTH = 256;
21406 @end example
21407 @end cartouche
21408
21409 For this example, mail is stored in the directories @samp{~/Mail/mail/},
21410 @samp{~/Mail/lists/} and @samp{~/Mail/archive/}, so to index them go to
21411 the index directory set in @code{nnir-namazu-index-directory} and issue
21412 the following command:
21413
21414 @example
21415 mknmz --mailnews ~/Mail/archive/ ~/Mail/mail/ ~/Mail/lists/
21416 @end example
21417
21418 For maximum searching efficiency you might want to have a cron job run
21419 this command periodically, say every four hours.
21420
21421
21422 @node The notmuch Engine
21423 @subsubsection The notmuch Engine
21424
21425 @table @code
21426 @item nnir-notmuch-program
21427 The name of the notmuch search executable. Defaults to
21428 @samp{notmuch}.
21429
21430 @item nnir-notmuch-additional-switches
21431 A list of strings, to be given as additional arguments to notmuch.
21432
21433 @item nnir-notmuch-remove-prefix
21434 The prefix to remove from each file name returned by notmuch in order
21435 to get a group name (albeit with @samp{/} instead of @samp{.}). This
21436 is a regular expression.
21437
21438 @end table
21439
21440
21441 @node The hyrex Engine
21442 @subsubsection The hyrex Engine
21443 This engine is obsolete.
21444
21445 @node Customizations
21446 @subsubsection Customizations
21447
21448 @table @code
21449
21450 @item nnir-method-default-engines
21451 Alist of pairs of server backends and search engines. The default
21452 associations are
21453 @example
21454 (nnimap . imap)
21455 (nntp . gmane)
21456 @end example
21457
21458 @item nnir-ignored-newsgroups
21459 A regexp to match newsgroups in the active file that should be skipped
21460 when searching all groups on a server.
21461
21462 @item nnir-summary-line-format
21463 The format specification to be used for lines in an nnir summary buffer.
21464 All the items from @code{gnus-summary-line-format} are available, along with
21465 three items unique to nnir summary buffers:
21466
21467 @example
21468 %Z Search retrieval score value (integer)
21469 %G Article original full group name (string)
21470 %g Article original short group name (string)
21471 @end example
21472
21473 If @code{nil} (the default) this will use @code{gnus-summary-line-format}.
21474
21475 @item nnir-retrieve-headers-override-function
21476 If non-@code{nil}, a function that retrieves article headers rather than using
21477 the gnus built-in function. This function takes an article list and
21478 group as arguments and populates the @code{nntp-server-buffer} with the
21479 retrieved headers. It should then return either 'nov or 'headers
21480 indicating the retrieved header format. Failure to retrieve headers
21481 should return @code{nil}.
21482
21483 If this variable is @code{nil}, or if the provided function returns
21484 @code{nil} for a search result, @code{gnus-retrieve-headers} will be
21485 called instead."
21486
21487
21488 @end table
21489
21490
21491 @node nnmairix
21492 @section nnmairix
21493
21494 @cindex mairix
21495 @cindex nnmairix
21496 This paragraph describes how to set up mairix and the back end
21497 @code{nnmairix} for indexing and searching your mail from within
21498 Gnus. Additionally, you can create permanent ``smart'' groups which are
21499 bound to mairix searches and are automatically updated.
21500
21501 @menu
21502 * About mairix:: About the mairix mail search engine
21503 * nnmairix requirements:: What you will need for using nnmairix
21504 * What nnmairix does:: What does nnmairix actually do?
21505 * Setting up mairix:: Set up your mairix installation
21506 * Configuring nnmairix:: Set up the nnmairix back end
21507 * nnmairix keyboard shortcuts:: List of available keyboard shortcuts
21508 * Propagating marks:: How to propagate marks from nnmairix groups
21509 * nnmairix tips and tricks:: Some tips, tricks and examples
21510 * nnmairix caveats:: Some more stuff you might want to know
21511 @end menu
21512
21513 @c FIXME: The markup in this section might need improvement.
21514 @c E.g., adding @samp, @var, @file, @command, etc.
21515 @c Cf. (info "(texinfo)Indicating")
21516
21517 @node About mairix
21518 @subsection About mairix
21519
21520 Mairix is a tool for indexing and searching words in locally stored
21521 mail. It was written by Richard Curnow and is licensed under the
21522 GPL@. Mairix comes with most popular GNU/Linux distributions, but it also
21523 runs under Windows (with cygwin), Mac OS X and Solaris. The homepage can
21524 be found at
21525 @uref{http://www.rpcurnow.force9.co.uk/mairix/index.html}
21526
21527 Though mairix might not be as flexible as other search tools like
21528 swish++ or namazu, which you can use via the @code{nnir} back end, it
21529 has the prime advantage of being incredibly fast. On current systems, it
21530 can easily search through headers and message bodies of thousands and
21531 thousands of mails in well under a second. Building the database
21532 necessary for searching might take a minute or two, but only has to be
21533 done once fully. Afterwards, the updates are done incrementally and
21534 therefore are really fast, too. Additionally, mairix is very easy to set
21535 up.
21536
21537 For maximum speed though, mairix should be used with mails stored in
21538 @code{Maildir} or @code{MH} format (this includes the @code{nnml} back
21539 end), although it also works with mbox. Mairix presents the search
21540 results by populating a @emph{virtual} maildir/MH folder with symlinks
21541 which point to the ``real'' message files (if mbox is used, copies are
21542 made). Since mairix already presents search results in such a virtual
21543 mail folder, it is very well suited for using it as an external program
21544 for creating @emph{smart} mail folders, which represent certain mail
21545 searches.
21546
21547 @node nnmairix requirements
21548 @subsection nnmairix requirements
21549
21550 Mairix searches local mail---that means, mairix absolutely must have
21551 direct access to your mail folders. If your mail resides on another
21552 server (e.g., an @acronym{IMAP} server) and you happen to have shell
21553 access, @code{nnmairix} supports running mairix remotely, e.g., via ssh.
21554
21555 Additionally, @code{nnmairix} only supports the following Gnus back
21556 ends: @code{nnml}, @code{nnmaildir}, and @code{nnimap}. You must use
21557 one of these back ends for using @code{nnmairix}. Other back ends, like
21558 @code{nnmbox}, @code{nnfolder} or @code{nnmh}, won't work.
21559
21560 If you absolutely must use mbox and still want to use @code{nnmairix},
21561 you can set up a local @acronym{IMAP} server, which you then access via
21562 @code{nnimap}. This is a rather massive setup for accessing some mbox
21563 files, so just change to MH or Maildir already... However, if you're
21564 really, really passionate about using mbox, you might want to look into
21565 the package @file{mairix.el}, which comes with Emacs 23.
21566
21567 @node What nnmairix does
21568 @subsection What nnmairix does
21569
21570 The back end @code{nnmairix} enables you to call mairix from within Gnus,
21571 either to query mairix with a search term or to update the
21572 database. While visiting a message in the summary buffer, you can use
21573 several pre-defined shortcuts for calling mairix, e.g., to quickly
21574 search for all mails from the sender of the current message or to
21575 display the whole thread associated with the message, even if the
21576 mails are in different folders.
21577
21578 Additionally, you can create permanent @code{nnmairix} groups which are bound
21579 to certain mairix searches. This way, you can easily create a group
21580 containing mails from a certain sender, with a certain subject line or
21581 even for one specific thread based on the Message-ID@. If you check for
21582 new mail in these folders (e.g., by pressing @kbd{g} or @kbd{M-g}), they
21583 automatically update themselves by calling mairix.
21584
21585 You might ask why you need @code{nnmairix} at all, since mairix already
21586 creates the group, populates it with links to the mails so that you can
21587 then access it with Gnus, right? Well, this @emph{might} work, but often
21588 does not---at least not without problems. Most probably you will get
21589 strange article counts, and sometimes you might see mails which Gnus
21590 claims have already been canceled and are inaccessible. This is due to
21591 the fact that Gnus isn't really amused when things are happening behind
21592 its back. Another problem can be the mail back end itself, e.g., if you
21593 use mairix with an @acronym{IMAP} server (I had Dovecot complaining
21594 about corrupt index files when mairix changed the contents of the search
21595 group). Using @code{nnmairix} should circumvent these problems.
21596
21597 @code{nnmairix} is not really a mail back end---it's actually more like
21598 a wrapper, sitting between a ``real'' mail back end where mairix stores
21599 the searches and the Gnus front end. You can choose between three
21600 different mail back ends for the mairix folders: @code{nnml},
21601 @code{nnmaildir} or @code{nnimap}. @code{nnmairix} will call the mairix
21602 binary so that the search results are stored in folders named
21603 @code{zz_mairix-<NAME>-<NUMBER>} on this mail back end, but it will
21604 present these folders in the Gnus front end only with @code{<NAME>}.
21605 You can use an existing mail back end where you already store your mail,
21606 but if you're uncomfortable with @code{nnmairix} creating new mail
21607 groups alongside your other mail, you can also create, e.g., a new
21608 @code{nnmaildir} or @code{nnml} server exclusively for mairix, but then
21609 make sure those servers do not accidentally receive your new mail
21610 (@pxref{nnmairix caveats}). A special case exists if you want to use
21611 mairix remotely on an IMAP server with @code{nnimap}---here the mairix
21612 folders and your other mail must be on the same @code{nnimap} back end.
21613
21614 @node Setting up mairix
21615 @subsection Setting up mairix
21616
21617 First: create a backup of your mail folders (@pxref{nnmairix caveats}).
21618
21619 Setting up mairix is easy: simply create a @file{.mairixrc} file with
21620 (at least) the following entries:
21621
21622 @example
21623 # Your Maildir/MH base folder
21624 base=~/Maildir
21625 @end example
21626
21627 This is the base folder for your mails. All the following directories
21628 are relative to this base folder. If you want to use @code{nnmairix}
21629 with @code{nnimap}, this base directory has to point to the mail
21630 directory where the @acronym{IMAP} server stores the mail folders!
21631
21632 @example
21633 maildir= ... your maildir folders which should be indexed ...
21634 mh= ... your nnml/mh folders which should be indexed ...
21635 mbox = ... your mbox files which should be indexed ...
21636 @end example
21637
21638 This specifies all your mail folders and mbox files (relative to the
21639 base directory!) you want to index with mairix. Note that the
21640 @code{nnml} back end saves mails in MH format, so you have to put those
21641 directories in the @code{mh} line. See the example at the end of this
21642 section and mairixrc's man-page for further details.
21643
21644 @example
21645 omit=zz_mairix-*
21646 @end example
21647
21648 @vindex nnmairix-group-prefix
21649 This should make sure that you don't accidentally index the mairix
21650 search results. You can change the prefix of these folders with the
21651 variable @code{nnmairix-group-prefix}.
21652
21653 @example
21654 mformat= ... 'maildir' or 'mh' ...
21655 database= ... location of database file ...
21656 @end example
21657
21658 The @code{format} setting specifies the output format for the mairix
21659 search folder. Set this to @code{mh} if you want to access search results
21660 with @code{nnml}. Otherwise choose @code{maildir}.
21661
21662 To summarize, here is my shortened @file{.mairixrc} file as an example:
21663
21664 @example
21665 base=~/Maildir
21666 maildir=.personal:.work:.logcheck:.sent
21667 mh=../Mail/nnml/*...
21668 mbox=../mboxmail/mailarchive_year*
21669 mformat=maildir
21670 omit=zz_mairix-*
21671 database=~/.mairixdatabase
21672 @end example
21673
21674 In this case, the base directory is @file{~/Maildir}, where all my Maildir
21675 folders are stored. As you can see, the folders are separated by
21676 colons. If you wonder why every folder begins with a dot: this is
21677 because I use Dovecot as @acronym{IMAP} server, which again uses
21678 @code{Maildir++} folders. For testing nnmairix, I also have some
21679 @code{nnml} mail, which is saved in @file{~/Mail/nnml}. Since this has
21680 to be specified relative to the @code{base} directory, the @code{../Mail}
21681 notation is needed. Note that the line ends in @code{*...}, which means
21682 to recursively scan all files under this directory. Without the three
21683 dots, the wildcard @code{*} will not work recursively. I also have some
21684 old mbox files with archived mail lying around in @file{~/mboxmail}.
21685 The other lines should be obvious.
21686
21687 See the man page for @code{mairixrc} for details and further options,
21688 especially regarding wildcard usage, which may be a little different
21689 than you are used to.
21690
21691 Now simply call @code{mairix} to create the index for the first time.
21692 Note that this may take a few minutes, but every following index will do
21693 the updates incrementally and hence is very fast.
21694
21695 @node Configuring nnmairix
21696 @subsection Configuring nnmairix
21697
21698 In group mode, type @kbd{G b c}
21699 (@code{nnmairix-create-server-and-default-group}). This will ask you for all
21700 necessary information and create a @code{nnmairix} server as a foreign
21701 server. You will have to specify the following:
21702
21703 @itemize @bullet
21704
21705 @item
21706 The @strong{name} of the @code{nnmairix} server---choose whatever you
21707 want.
21708
21709 @item
21710 The name of the @strong{back end server} where mairix should store its
21711 searches. This must be a full server name, like @code{nnml:mymail}.
21712 Just hit @kbd{TAB} to see the available servers. Currently, servers
21713 which are accessed through @code{nnmaildir}, @code{nnimap} and
21714 @code{nnml} are supported. As explained above, for locally stored
21715 mails, this can be an existing server where you store your mails.
21716 However, you can also create, e.g., a new @code{nnmaildir} or @code{nnml}
21717 server exclusively for @code{nnmairix} in your secondary select methods
21718 (@pxref{Finding the News}). If you use a secondary @code{nnml} server
21719 just for mairix, make sure that you explicitly set the server variable
21720 @code{nnml-get-new-mail} to @code{nil}, or you might lose mail
21721 (@pxref{nnmairix caveats}). If you want to use mairix remotely on an
21722 @acronym{IMAP} server, you have to choose the corresponding
21723 @code{nnimap} server here.
21724
21725 @item
21726 @vindex nnmairix-mairix-search-options
21727 The @strong{command} to call the mairix binary. This will usually just
21728 be @code{mairix}, but you can also choose something like @code{ssh
21729 SERVER mairix} if you want to call mairix remotely, e.g., on your
21730 @acronym{IMAP} server. If you want to add some default options to
21731 mairix, you could do this here, but better use the variable
21732 @code{nnmairix-mairix-search-options} instead.
21733
21734 @item
21735 The name of the @strong{default search group}. This will be the group
21736 where all temporary mairix searches are stored, i.e., all searches which
21737 are not bound to permanent @code{nnmairix} groups. Choose whatever you
21738 like.
21739
21740 @item
21741 If the mail back end is @code{nnimap} or @code{nnmaildir}, you will be
21742 asked if you work with @strong{Maildir++}, i.e., with hidden maildir
21743 folders (=beginning with a dot). For example, you have to answer
21744 @samp{yes} here if you work with the Dovecot @acronym{IMAP}
21745 server. Otherwise, you should answer @samp{no} here.
21746
21747 @end itemize
21748
21749 @node nnmairix keyboard shortcuts
21750 @subsection nnmairix keyboard shortcuts
21751
21752 In group mode:
21753
21754 @table @kbd
21755
21756 @item G b c
21757 @kindex G b c (Group)
21758 @findex nnmairix-create-server-and-default-group
21759 Creates @code{nnmairix} server and default search group for this server
21760 (@code{nnmairix-create-server-and-default-group}). You should have done
21761 this by now (@pxref{Configuring nnmairix}).
21762
21763 @item G b s
21764 @kindex G b s (Group)
21765 @findex nnmairix-search
21766 Prompts for query which is then sent to the mairix binary. Search
21767 results are put into the default search group which is automatically
21768 displayed (@code{nnmairix-search}).
21769
21770 @item G b m
21771 @kindex G b m (Group)
21772 @findex nnmairix-widget-search
21773 Allows you to create a mairix search or a permanent group more
21774 comfortably using graphical widgets, similar to a customization
21775 group. Just try it to see how it works (@code{nnmairix-widget-search}).
21776
21777 @item G b i
21778 @kindex G b i (Group)
21779 @findex nnmairix-search-interactive
21780 Another command for creating a mairix query more comfortably, but uses
21781 only the minibuffer (@code{nnmairix-search-interactive}).
21782
21783 @item G b g
21784 @kindex G b g (Group)
21785 @findex nnmairix-create-search-group
21786 Creates a permanent group which is associated with a search query
21787 (@code{nnmairix-create-search-group}). The @code{nnmairix} back end
21788 automatically calls mairix when you update this group with @kbd{g} or
21789 @kbd{M-g}.
21790
21791 @item G b q
21792 @kindex G b q (Group)
21793 @findex nnmairix-group-change-query-this-group
21794 Changes the search query for the @code{nnmairix} group under cursor
21795 (@code{nnmairix-group-change-query-this-group}).
21796
21797 @item G b t
21798 @kindex G b t (Group)
21799 @findex nnmairix-group-toggle-threads-this-group
21800 Toggles the 'threads' parameter for the @code{nnmairix} group under cursor,
21801 i.e., if you want see the whole threads of the found messages
21802 (@code{nnmairix-group-toggle-threads-this-group}).
21803
21804 @item G b u
21805 @kindex G b u (Group)
21806 @findex nnmairix-update-database
21807 @vindex nnmairix-mairix-update-options
21808 Calls mairix binary for updating the database
21809 (@code{nnmairix-update-database}). The default parameters are @code{-F}
21810 and @code{-Q} for making this as fast as possible (see variable
21811 @code{nnmairix-mairix-update-options} for defining these default
21812 options).
21813
21814 @item G b r
21815 @kindex G b r (Group)
21816 @findex nnmairix-group-toggle-readmarks-this-group
21817 Keep articles in this @code{nnmairix} group always read or unread, or leave the
21818 marks unchanged (@code{nnmairix-group-toggle-readmarks-this-group}).
21819
21820 @item G b d
21821 @kindex G b d (Group)
21822 @findex nnmairix-group-delete-recreate-this-group
21823 Recreate @code{nnmairix} group on the ``real'' mail back end
21824 (@code{nnmairix-group-delete-recreate-this-group}). You can do this if
21825 you always get wrong article counts with a @code{nnmairix} group.
21826
21827 @item G b a
21828 @kindex G b a (Group)
21829 @findex nnmairix-group-toggle-allowfast-this-group
21830 Toggles the @code{allow-fast} parameters for group under cursor
21831 (@code{nnmairix-group-toggle-allowfast-this-group}). The default
21832 behavior of @code{nnmairix} is to do a mairix search every time you
21833 update or enter the group. With the @code{allow-fast} parameter set,
21834 mairix will only be called when you explicitly update the group, but not
21835 upon entering. This makes entering the group faster, but it may also
21836 lead to dangling symlinks if something changed between updating and
21837 entering the group which is not yet in the mairix database.
21838
21839 @item G b p
21840 @kindex G b p (Group)
21841 @findex nnmairix-group-toggle-propmarks-this-group
21842 Toggle marks propagation for this group
21843 (@code{nnmairix-group-toggle-propmarks-this-group}). (@pxref{Propagating
21844 marks}).
21845
21846 @item G b o
21847 @kindex G b o (Group)
21848 @findex nnmairix-propagate-marks
21849 Manually propagate marks (@code{nnmairix-propagate-marks}); needed only when
21850 @code{nnmairix-propagate-marks-upon-close} is set to @code{nil}.
21851
21852 @end table
21853
21854 In summary mode:
21855
21856 @table @kbd
21857
21858 @item $ m
21859 @kindex $ m (Summary)
21860 @findex nnmairix-widget-search-from-this-article
21861 Allows you to create a mairix query or group based on the current
21862 message using graphical widgets (same as @code{nnmairix-widget-search})
21863 (@code{nnmairix-widget-search-from-this-article}).
21864
21865 @item $ g
21866 @kindex $ g (Summary)
21867 @findex nnmairix-create-search-group-from-message
21868 Interactively creates a new search group with query based on the current
21869 message, but uses the minibuffer instead of graphical widgets
21870 (@code{nnmairix-create-search-group-from-message}).
21871
21872 @item $ t
21873 @kindex $ t (Summary)
21874 @findex nnmairix-search-thread-this-article
21875 Searches thread for the current article
21876 (@code{nnmairix-search-thread-this-article}). This is effectively a
21877 shortcut for calling @code{nnmairix-search} with @samp{m:msgid} of the
21878 current article and enabled threads.
21879
21880 @item $ f
21881 @kindex $ f (Summary)
21882 @findex nnmairix-search-from-this-article
21883 Searches all messages from sender of the current article
21884 (@code{nnmairix-search-from-this-article}). This is a shortcut for
21885 calling @code{nnmairix-search} with @samp{f:From}.
21886
21887 @item $ o
21888 @kindex $ o (Summary)
21889 @findex nnmairix-goto-original-article
21890 (Only in @code{nnmairix} groups!) Tries determine the group this article
21891 originally came from and displays the article in this group, so that,
21892 e.g., replying to this article the correct posting styles/group
21893 parameters are applied (@code{nnmairix-goto-original-article}). This
21894 function will use the registry if available, but can also parse the
21895 article file name as a fallback method.
21896
21897 @item $ u
21898 @kindex $ u (Summary)
21899 @findex nnmairix-remove-tick-mark-original-article
21900 Remove possibly existing tick mark from original article
21901 (@code{nnmairix-remove-tick-mark-original-article}). (@pxref{nnmairix
21902 tips and tricks}).
21903
21904 @end table
21905
21906 @node Propagating marks
21907 @subsection Propagating marks
21908
21909 First of: you really need a patched mairix binary for using the marks
21910 propagation feature efficiently. Otherwise, you would have to update
21911 the mairix database all the time. You can get the patch at
21912
21913 @uref{http://www.randomsample.de/mairix-maildir-patch.tar}
21914
21915 You need the mairix v0.21 source code for this patch; everything else
21916 is explained in the accompanied readme file. If you don't want to use
21917 marks propagation, you don't have to apply these patches, but they also
21918 fix some annoyances regarding changing maildir flags, so it might still
21919 be useful to you.
21920
21921 With the patched mairix binary, you can use @code{nnmairix} as an
21922 alternative to mail splitting (@pxref{Fancy Mail Splitting}). For
21923 example, instead of splitting all mails from @samp{david@@foobar.com}
21924 into a group, you can simply create a search group with the query
21925 @samp{f:david@@foobar.com}. This is actually what ``smart folders'' are
21926 all about: simply put everything in one mail folder and dynamically
21927 create searches instead of splitting. This is more flexible, since you
21928 can dynamically change your folders any time you want to. This also
21929 implies that you will usually read your mails in the @code{nnmairix}
21930 groups instead of your ``real'' mail groups.
21931
21932 There is one problem, though: say you got a new mail from
21933 @samp{david@@foobar.com}; it will now show up in two groups, the
21934 ``real'' group (your INBOX, for example) and in the @code{nnmairix}
21935 search group (provided you have updated the mairix database). Now you
21936 enter the @code{nnmairix} group and read the mail. The mail will be
21937 marked as read, but only in the @code{nnmairix} group---in the ``real''
21938 mail group it will be still shown as unread.
21939
21940 You could now catch up the mail group (@pxref{Group Data}), but this is
21941 tedious and error prone, since you may overlook mails you don't have
21942 created @code{nnmairix} groups for. Of course, you could first use
21943 @code{nnmairix-goto-original-article} (@pxref{nnmairix keyboard
21944 shortcuts}) and then read the mail in the original group, but that's
21945 even more cumbersome.
21946
21947 Clearly, the easiest way would be if marks could somehow be
21948 automatically set for the original article. This is exactly what
21949 @emph{marks propagation} is about.
21950
21951 Marks propagation is inactive by default. You can activate it for a
21952 certain @code{nnmairix} group with
21953 @code{nnmairix-group-toggle-propmarks-this-group} (bound to @kbd{G b
21954 p}). This function will warn you if you try to use it with your default
21955 search group; the reason is that the default search group is used for
21956 temporary searches, and it's easy to accidentally propagate marks from
21957 this group. However, you can ignore this warning if you really want to.
21958
21959 With marks propagation enabled, all the marks you set in a @code{nnmairix}
21960 group should now be propagated to the original article. For example,
21961 you can now tick an article (by default with @kbd{!}) and this mark should
21962 magically be set for the original article, too.
21963
21964 A few more remarks which you may or may not want to know:
21965
21966 @vindex nnmairix-propagate-marks-upon-close
21967 Marks will not be set immediately, but only upon closing a group. This
21968 not only makes marks propagation faster, it also avoids problems with
21969 dangling symlinks when dealing with maildir files (since changing flags
21970 will change the file name). You can also control when to propagate marks
21971 via @code{nnmairix-propagate-marks-upon-close} (see the doc-string for
21972 details).
21973
21974 Obviously, @code{nnmairix} will have to look up the original group for every
21975 article you want to set marks for. If available, @code{nnmairix} will first
21976 use the registry for determining the original group. The registry is very
21977 fast, hence you should really, really enable the registry when using
21978 marks propagation. If you don't have to worry about RAM and disc space,
21979 set @code{gnus-registry-max-entries} to a large enough value; to be on
21980 the safe side, choose roughly the amount of mails you index with mairix.
21981
21982 @vindex nnmairix-only-use-registry
21983 If you don't want to use the registry or the registry hasn't seen the
21984 original article yet, @code{nnmairix} will use an additional mairix
21985 search for determining the file name of the article. This, of course, is
21986 way slower than the registry---if you set hundreds or even thousands of
21987 marks this way, it might take some time. You can avoid this situation by
21988 setting @code{nnmairix-only-use-registry} to @code{t}.
21989
21990 Maybe you also want to propagate marks the other way round, i.e., if you
21991 tick an article in a "real" mail group, you'd like to have the same
21992 article in a @code{nnmairix} group ticked, too. For several good
21993 reasons, this can only be done efficiently if you use maildir. To
21994 immediately contradict myself, let me mention that it WON'T work with
21995 @code{nnmaildir}, since @code{nnmaildir} stores the marks externally and
21996 not in the file name. Therefore, propagating marks to @code{nnmairix}
21997 groups will usually only work if you use an IMAP server which uses
21998 maildir as its file format.
21999
22000 @vindex nnmairix-propagate-marks-to-nnmairix-groups
22001 If you work with this setup, just set
22002 @code{nnmairix-propagate-marks-to-nnmairix-groups} to @code{t} and see what
22003 happens. If you don't like what you see, just set it to @code{nil} again.
22004 One problem might be that you get a wrong number of unread articles; this
22005 usually happens when you delete or expire articles in the original
22006 groups. When this happens, you can recreate the @code{nnmairix} group on
22007 the back end using @kbd{G b d}.
22008
22009 @node nnmairix tips and tricks
22010 @subsection nnmairix tips and tricks
22011
22012 @itemize
22013 @item
22014 Checking Mail
22015
22016 @findex nnmairix-update-groups
22017 I put all my important mail groups at group level 1. The mairix groups
22018 have group level 5, so they do not get checked at start up (@pxref{Group
22019 Levels}).
22020
22021 I use the following to check for mails:
22022
22023 @lisp
22024 (defun my-check-mail-mairix-update (level)
22025 (interactive "P")
22026 ;; if no prefix given, set level=1
22027 (gnus-group-get-new-news (or level 1))
22028 (nnmairix-update-groups "mairixsearch" t t)
22029 (gnus-group-list-groups))
22030
22031 (define-key gnus-group-mode-map "g" 'my-check-mail-mairix-update)
22032 @end lisp
22033
22034 Instead of @samp{"mairixsearch"} use the name of your @code{nnmairix}
22035 server. See the doc string for @code{nnmairix-update-groups} for
22036 details.
22037
22038 @item
22039 Example: search group for ticked articles
22040
22041 For example, you can create a group for all ticked articles, where the
22042 articles always stay unread:
22043
22044 Hit @kbd{G b g}, enter group name (e.g., @samp{important}), use
22045 @samp{F:f} as query and do not include threads.
22046
22047 Now activate marks propagation for this group by using @kbd{G b p}. Then
22048 activate the always-unread feature by using @kbd{G b r} twice.
22049
22050 So far so good---but how do you remove the tick marks in the @code{nnmairix}
22051 group? There are two options: You may simply use
22052 @code{nnmairix-remove-tick-mark-original-article} (bound to @kbd{$ u}) to remove
22053 tick marks from the original article. The other possibility is to set
22054 @code{nnmairix-propagate-marks-to-nnmairix-groups} to @code{t}, but see the above
22055 comments about this option. If it works for you, the tick marks should
22056 also exist in the @code{nnmairix} group and you can remove them as usual,
22057 e.g., by marking an article as read.
22058
22059 When you have removed a tick mark from the original article, this
22060 article should vanish from the @code{nnmairix} group after you have updated the
22061 mairix database and updated the group. Fortunately, there is a function
22062 for doing exactly that: @code{nnmairix-update-groups}. See the previous code
22063 snippet and the doc string for details.
22064
22065 @item
22066 Dealing with auto-subscription of mail groups
22067
22068 As described before, all @code{nnmairix} groups are in fact stored on
22069 the mail back end in the form @samp{zz_mairix-<NAME>-<NUMBER>}. You can
22070 see them when you enter the back end server in the server buffer. You
22071 should not subscribe these groups! Unfortunately, these groups will
22072 usually get @emph{auto-subscribed} when you use @code{nnmaildir} or
22073 @code{nnml}, i.e., you will suddenly see groups of the form
22074 @samp{zz_mairix*} pop up in your group buffer. If this happens to you,
22075 simply kill these groups with C-k. For avoiding this, turn off
22076 auto-subscription completely by setting the variable
22077 @code{gnus-auto-subscribed-groups} to @code{nil} (@pxref{Filtering New
22078 Groups}), or if you like to keep this feature use the following kludge
22079 for turning it off for all groups beginning with @samp{zz_}:
22080
22081 @lisp
22082 (setq gnus-auto-subscribed-groups
22083 "^\\(nnml\\|nnfolder\\|nnmbox\\|nnmh\\|nnbabyl\\|nnmaildir\\).*:\\([^z]\\|z$\\|\\z[^z]\\|zz$\\|zz[^_]\\|zz_$\\).*")
22084 @end lisp
22085
22086 @end itemize
22087
22088 @node nnmairix caveats
22089 @subsection nnmairix caveats
22090
22091 @itemize
22092 @item
22093 You can create a secondary @code{nnml} server just for nnmairix, but then
22094 you have to explicitly set the corresponding server variable
22095 @code{nnml-get-new-mail} to @code{nil}. Otherwise, new mail might get
22096 put into this secondary server (and would never show up again). Here's
22097 an example server definition:
22098
22099 @lisp
22100 (nnml "mairix" (nnml-directory "mairix") (nnml-get-new-mail nil))
22101 @end lisp
22102
22103 (The @code{nnmaildir} back end also has a server variable
22104 @code{get-new-mail}, but its default value is @code{nil}, so you don't
22105 have to explicitly set it if you use a @code{nnmaildir} server just for
22106 mairix.)
22107
22108 @item
22109 If you use the Gnus registry: don't use the registry with
22110 @code{nnmairix} groups (put them in
22111 @code{gnus-registry-unfollowed-groups}; this is the default). Be
22112 @emph{extra careful} if you use
22113 @code{gnus-registry-split-fancy-with-parent}; mails which are split
22114 into @code{nnmairix} groups are usually gone for good as soon as you
22115 check the group for new mail (yes, it has happened to me...).
22116
22117 @item
22118 Therefore: @emph{Never ever} put ``real'' mails into @code{nnmairix}
22119 groups (you shouldn't be able to, anyway).
22120
22121 @item
22122 If you use the Gnus agent (@pxref{Gnus Unplugged}): don't agentize
22123 @code{nnmairix} groups (though I have no idea what happens if you do).
22124
22125 @item
22126 mairix does only support us-ascii characters.
22127
22128 @item
22129 @code{nnmairix} uses a rather brute force method to force Gnus to
22130 completely reread the group on the mail back end after mairix was
22131 called---it simply deletes and re-creates the group on the mail
22132 back end. So far, this has worked for me without any problems, and I
22133 don't see how @code{nnmairix} could delete other mail groups than its
22134 own, but anyway: you really should have a backup of your mail
22135 folders.
22136
22137 @item
22138 All necessary information is stored in the group parameters
22139 (@pxref{Group Parameters}). This has the advantage that no active file
22140 is needed, but also implies that when you kill a @code{nnmairix} group,
22141 it is gone for good.
22142
22143 @item
22144 @findex nnmairix-purge-old-groups
22145 If you create and kill a lot of @code{nnmairix} groups, the
22146 ``zz_mairix-*'' groups will accumulate on the mail back end server. To
22147 delete old groups which are no longer needed, call
22148 @code{nnmairix-purge-old-groups}. Note that this assumes that you don't
22149 save any ``real'' mail in folders of the form
22150 @code{zz_mairix-<NAME>-<NUMBER>}. You can change the prefix of
22151 @code{nnmairix} groups by changing the variable
22152 @code{nnmairix-group-prefix}.
22153
22154 @item
22155 The following only applies if you @emph{don't} use the mentioned patch
22156 for mairix (@pxref{Propagating marks}):
22157
22158 A problem can occur when using @code{nnmairix} with maildir folders and
22159 comes with the fact that maildir stores mail flags like @samp{Seen} or
22160 @samp{Replied} by appending chars @samp{S} and @samp{R} to the message
22161 file name, respectively. This implies that currently you would have to
22162 update the mairix database not only when new mail arrives, but also when
22163 mail flags are changing. The same applies to new mails which are indexed
22164 while they are still in the @samp{new} folder but then get moved to
22165 @samp{cur} when Gnus has seen the mail. If you don't update the database
22166 after this has happened, a mairix query can lead to symlinks pointing to
22167 non-existing files. In Gnus, these messages will usually appear with
22168 ``(none)'' entries in the header and can't be accessed. If this happens
22169 to you, using @kbd{G b u} and updating the group will usually fix this.
22170
22171 @end itemize
22172
22173 @iftex
22174 @iflatex
22175 @chapter Message
22176 @include message.texi
22177 @chapter Emacs MIME
22178 @include emacs-mime.texi
22179 @chapter Sieve
22180 @include sieve.texi
22181 @chapter EasyPG
22182 @include epa.texi
22183 @chapter SASL
22184 @include sasl.texi
22185 @end iflatex
22186 @end iftex
22187
22188 @node Various
22189 @chapter Various
22190
22191 @menu
22192 * Process/Prefix:: A convention used by many treatment commands.
22193 * Interactive:: Making Gnus ask you many questions.
22194 * Symbolic Prefixes:: How to supply some Gnus functions with options.
22195 * Formatting Variables:: You can specify what buffers should look like.
22196 * Window Layout:: Configuring the Gnus buffer windows.
22197 * Faces and Fonts:: How to change how faces look.
22198 * Mode Lines:: Displaying information in the mode lines.
22199 * Highlighting and Menus:: Making buffers look all nice and cozy.
22200 * Daemons:: Gnus can do things behind your back.
22201 * Undo:: Some actions can be undone.
22202 * Predicate Specifiers:: Specifying predicates.
22203 * Moderation:: What to do if you're a moderator.
22204 * Fetching a Group:: Starting Gnus just to read a group.
22205 * Image Enhancements:: Modern versions of Emacs/XEmacs can display images.
22206 * Fuzzy Matching:: What's the big fuzz?
22207 * Thwarting Email Spam:: Simple ways to avoid unsolicited commercial email.
22208 * Spam Package:: A package for filtering and processing spam.
22209 * The Gnus Registry:: A package for tracking messages by Message-ID.
22210 * Other modes:: Interaction with other modes.
22211 * Various Various:: Things that are really various.
22212 @end menu
22213
22214
22215 @node Process/Prefix
22216 @section Process/Prefix
22217 @cindex process/prefix convention
22218
22219 Many functions, among them functions for moving, decoding and saving
22220 articles, use what is known as the @dfn{Process/Prefix convention}.
22221
22222 This is a method for figuring out what articles the user wants the
22223 command to be performed on.
22224
22225 It goes like this:
22226
22227 If the numeric prefix is N, perform the operation on the next N
22228 articles, starting with the current one. If the numeric prefix is
22229 negative, perform the operation on the previous N articles, starting
22230 with the current one.
22231
22232 @vindex transient-mark-mode
22233 If @code{transient-mark-mode} in non-@code{nil} and the region is
22234 active, all articles in the region will be worked upon.
22235
22236 If there is no numeric prefix, but some articles are marked with the
22237 process mark, perform the operation on the articles marked with
22238 the process mark.
22239
22240 If there is neither a numeric prefix nor any articles marked with the
22241 process mark, just perform the operation on the current article.
22242
22243 Quite simple, really, but it needs to be made clear so that surprises
22244 are avoided.
22245
22246 Commands that react to the process mark will push the current list of
22247 process marked articles onto a stack and will then clear all process
22248 marked articles. You can restore the previous configuration with the
22249 @kbd{M P y} command (@pxref{Setting Process Marks}).
22250
22251 @vindex gnus-summary-goto-unread
22252 One thing that seems to shock & horrify lots of people is that, for
22253 instance, @kbd{3 d} does exactly the same as @kbd{d} @kbd{d} @kbd{d}.
22254 Since each @kbd{d} (which marks the current article as read) by default
22255 goes to the next unread article after marking, this means that @kbd{3 d}
22256 will mark the next three unread articles as read, no matter what the
22257 summary buffer looks like. Set @code{gnus-summary-goto-unread} to
22258 @code{nil} for a more straightforward action.
22259
22260 Many commands do not use the process/prefix convention. All commands
22261 that do explicitly say so in this manual. To apply the process/prefix
22262 convention to commands that do not use it, you can use the @kbd{M-&}
22263 command. For instance, to mark all the articles in the group as
22264 expirable, you could say @kbd{M P b M-& E}.
22265
22266
22267 @node Interactive
22268 @section Interactive
22269 @cindex interaction
22270
22271 @table @code
22272
22273 @item gnus-novice-user
22274 @vindex gnus-novice-user
22275 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, you are either a newcomer to the
22276 World of Usenet, or you are very cautious, which is a nice thing to be,
22277 really. You will be given questions of the type ``Are you sure you want
22278 to do this?'' before doing anything dangerous. This is @code{t} by
22279 default.
22280
22281 @item gnus-expert-user
22282 @vindex gnus-expert-user
22283 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, you will seldom be asked any
22284 questions by Gnus. It will simply assume you know what you're doing,
22285 no matter how strange. For example, quitting Gnus, exiting a group
22286 without an update, catching up with a group, deleting expired
22287 articles, and replying by mail to a news message will not require
22288 confirmation.
22289
22290 @item gnus-interactive-catchup
22291 @vindex gnus-interactive-catchup
22292 Require confirmation before catching up a group if non-@code{nil}. It
22293 is @code{t} by default.
22294
22295 @item gnus-interactive-exit
22296 @vindex gnus-interactive-exit
22297 If non-@code{nil}, require a confirmation when exiting Gnus. If
22298 @code{quiet}, update any active summary buffers automatically without
22299 querying. The default value is @code{t}.
22300 @end table
22301
22302
22303 @node Symbolic Prefixes
22304 @section Symbolic Prefixes
22305 @cindex symbolic prefixes
22306
22307 Quite a lot of Emacs commands react to the (numeric) prefix. For
22308 instance, @kbd{C-u 4 C-f} moves point four characters forward, and
22309 @kbd{C-u 9 0 0 I s s p} adds a permanent @code{Subject} substring score
22310 rule of 900 to the current article.
22311
22312 This is all nice and well, but what if you want to give a command some
22313 additional information? Well, what most commands do is interpret the
22314 ``raw'' prefix in some special way. @kbd{C-u 0 C-x C-s} means that one
22315 doesn't want a backup file to be created when saving the current buffer,
22316 for instance. But what if you want to save without making a backup
22317 file, and you want Emacs to flash lights and play a nice tune at the
22318 same time? You can't, and you're probably perfectly happy that way.
22319
22320 @kindex M-i (Summary)
22321 @findex gnus-symbolic-argument
22322 I'm not, so I've added a second prefix---the @dfn{symbolic prefix}. The
22323 prefix key is @kbd{M-i} (@code{gnus-symbolic-argument}), and the next
22324 character typed in is the value. You can stack as many @kbd{M-i}
22325 prefixes as you want. @kbd{M-i a C-M-u} means ``feed the @kbd{C-M-u}
22326 command the symbolic prefix @code{a}''. @kbd{M-i a M-i b C-M-u} means
22327 ``feed the @kbd{C-M-u} command the symbolic prefixes @code{a} and
22328 @code{b}''. You get the drift.
22329
22330 Typing in symbolic prefixes to commands that don't accept them doesn't
22331 hurt, but it doesn't do any good either. Currently not many Gnus
22332 functions make use of the symbolic prefix.
22333
22334 If you're interested in how Gnus implements this, @pxref{Extended
22335 Interactive}.
22336
22337
22338 @node Formatting Variables
22339 @section Formatting Variables
22340 @cindex formatting variables
22341
22342 Throughout this manual you've probably noticed lots of variables called
22343 things like @code{gnus-group-line-format} and
22344 @code{gnus-summary-mode-line-format}. These control how Gnus is to
22345 output lines in the various buffers. There's quite a lot of them.
22346 Fortunately, they all use the same syntax, so there's not that much to
22347 be annoyed by.
22348
22349 Here's an example format spec (from the group buffer): @samp{%M%S%5y:
22350 %(%g%)\n}. We see that it is indeed extremely ugly, and that there are
22351 lots of percentages everywhere.
22352
22353 @menu
22354 * Formatting Basics:: A formatting variable is basically a format string.
22355 * Mode Line Formatting:: Some rules about mode line formatting variables.
22356 * Advanced Formatting:: Modifying output in various ways.
22357 * User-Defined Specs:: Having Gnus call your own functions.
22358 * Formatting Fonts:: Making the formatting look colorful and nice.
22359 * Positioning Point:: Moving point to a position after an operation.
22360 * Tabulation:: Tabulating your output.
22361 * Wide Characters:: Dealing with wide characters.
22362 @end menu
22363
22364 Currently Gnus uses the following formatting variables:
22365 @code{gnus-group-line-format}, @code{gnus-summary-line-format},
22366 @code{gnus-server-line-format}, @code{gnus-topic-line-format},
22367 @code{gnus-group-mode-line-format},
22368 @code{gnus-summary-mode-line-format},
22369 @code{gnus-article-mode-line-format},
22370 @code{gnus-server-mode-line-format}, and
22371 @code{gnus-summary-pick-line-format}.
22372
22373 All these format variables can also be arbitrary elisp forms. In that
22374 case, they will be @code{eval}ed to insert the required lines.
22375
22376 @kindex M-x gnus-update-format
22377 @findex gnus-update-format
22378 Gnus includes a command to help you while creating your own format
22379 specs. @kbd{M-x gnus-update-format} will @code{eval} the current form,
22380 update the spec in question and pop you to a buffer where you can
22381 examine the resulting Lisp code to be run to generate the line.
22382
22383
22384
22385 @node Formatting Basics
22386 @subsection Formatting Basics
22387
22388 Each @samp{%} element will be replaced by some string or other when the
22389 buffer in question is generated. @samp{%5y} means ``insert the @samp{y}
22390 spec, and pad with spaces to get a 5-character field''.
22391
22392 As with normal C and Emacs Lisp formatting strings, the numerical
22393 modifier between the @samp{%} and the formatting type character will
22394 @dfn{pad} the output so that it is always at least that long.
22395 @samp{%5y} will make the field always (at least) five characters wide by
22396 padding with spaces to the left. If you say @samp{%-5y}, it will pad to
22397 the right instead.
22398
22399 You may also wish to limit the length of the field to protect against
22400 particularly wide values. For that you can say @samp{%4,6y}, which
22401 means that the field will never be more than 6 characters wide and never
22402 less than 4 characters wide.
22403
22404 Also Gnus supports some extended format specifications, such as
22405 @samp{%&user-date;}.
22406
22407
22408 @node Mode Line Formatting
22409 @subsection Mode Line Formatting
22410
22411 Mode line formatting variables (e.g.,
22412 @code{gnus-summary-mode-line-format}) follow the same rules as other,
22413 buffer line oriented formatting variables (@pxref{Formatting Basics})
22414 with the following two differences:
22415
22416 @enumerate
22417
22418 @item
22419 There must be no newline (@samp{\n}) at the end.
22420
22421 @item
22422 The special @samp{%%b} spec can be used to display the buffer name.
22423 Well, it's no spec at all, really---@samp{%%} is just a way to quote
22424 @samp{%} to allow it to pass through the formatting machinery unmangled,
22425 so that Emacs receives @samp{%b}, which is something the Emacs mode line
22426 display interprets to mean ``show the buffer name''. For a full list of
22427 mode line specs Emacs understands, see the documentation of the
22428 @code{mode-line-format} variable.
22429
22430 @end enumerate
22431
22432
22433 @node Advanced Formatting
22434 @subsection Advanced Formatting
22435
22436 It is frequently useful to post-process the fields in some way.
22437 Padding, limiting, cutting off parts and suppressing certain values can
22438 be achieved by using @dfn{tilde modifiers}. A typical tilde spec might
22439 look like @samp{%~(cut 3)~(ignore "0")y}.
22440
22441 These are the valid modifiers:
22442
22443 @table @code
22444 @item pad
22445 @itemx pad-left
22446 Pad the field to the left with spaces until it reaches the required
22447 length.
22448
22449 @item pad-right
22450 Pad the field to the right with spaces until it reaches the required
22451 length.
22452
22453 @item max
22454 @itemx max-left
22455 Cut off characters from the left until it reaches the specified length.
22456
22457 @item max-right
22458 Cut off characters from the right until it reaches the specified
22459 length.
22460
22461 @item cut
22462 @itemx cut-left
22463 Cut off the specified number of characters from the left.
22464
22465 @item cut-right
22466 Cut off the specified number of characters from the right.
22467
22468 @item ignore
22469 Return an empty string if the field is equal to the specified value.
22470
22471 @item form
22472 Use the specified form as the field value when the @samp{@@} spec is
22473 used.
22474
22475 Here's an example:
22476
22477 @lisp
22478 "~(form (current-time-string))@@"
22479 @end lisp
22480
22481 @end table
22482
22483 Let's take an example. The @samp{%o} spec in the summary mode lines
22484 will return a date in compact ISO8601 format---@samp{19960809T230410}.
22485 This is quite a mouthful, so we want to shave off the century number and
22486 the time, leaving us with a six-character date. That would be
22487 @samp{%~(cut-left 2)~(max-right 6)~(pad 6)o}. (Cutting is done before
22488 maxing, and we need the padding to ensure that the date is never less
22489 than 6 characters to make it look nice in columns.)
22490
22491 Ignoring is done first; then cutting; then maxing; and then as the very
22492 last operation, padding.
22493
22494
22495 @node User-Defined Specs
22496 @subsection User-Defined Specs
22497
22498 All the specs allow for inserting user defined specifiers---@samp{u}.
22499 The next character in the format string should be a letter. Gnus
22500 will call the function @code{gnus-user-format-function-}@samp{X}, where
22501 @samp{X} is the letter following @samp{%u}. The function will be passed
22502 a single parameter---what the parameter means depends on what buffer
22503 it's being called from. The function should return a string, which will
22504 be inserted into the buffer just like information from any other
22505 specifier. This function may also be called with dummy values, so it
22506 should protect against that.
22507
22508 Also Gnus supports extended user-defined specs, such as @samp{%u&foo;}.
22509 Gnus will call the function @code{gnus-user-format-function-}@samp{foo}.
22510
22511 You can also use tilde modifiers (@pxref{Advanced Formatting} to achieve
22512 much the same without defining new functions. Here's an example:
22513 @samp{%~(form (count-lines (point-min) (point)))@@}. The form
22514 given here will be evaluated to yield the current line number, and then
22515 inserted.
22516
22517
22518 @node Formatting Fonts
22519 @subsection Formatting Fonts
22520
22521 @cindex %(, %)
22522 @vindex gnus-mouse-face
22523 There are specs for highlighting, and these are shared by all the format
22524 variables. Text inside the @samp{%(} and @samp{%)} specifiers will get
22525 the special @code{mouse-face} property set, which means that it will be
22526 highlighted (with @code{gnus-mouse-face}) when you put the mouse pointer
22527 over it.
22528
22529 @cindex %@{, %@}
22530 @vindex gnus-face-0
22531 Text inside the @samp{%@{} and @samp{%@}} specifiers will have their
22532 normal faces set using @code{gnus-face-0}, which is @code{bold} by
22533 default. If you say @samp{%1@{}, you'll get @code{gnus-face-1} instead,
22534 and so on. Create as many faces as you wish. The same goes for the
22535 @code{mouse-face} specs---you can say @samp{%3(hello%)} to have
22536 @samp{hello} mouse-highlighted with @code{gnus-mouse-face-3}.
22537
22538 @cindex %<<, %>>, guillemets
22539 @c @cindex %<<, %>>, %«, %», guillemets
22540 @vindex gnus-balloon-face-0
22541 Text inside the @samp{%<<} and @samp{%>>} specifiers will get the
22542 special @code{balloon-help} property set to
22543 @code{gnus-balloon-face-0}. If you say @samp{%1<<}, you'll get
22544 @code{gnus-balloon-face-1} and so on. The @code{gnus-balloon-face-*}
22545 variables should be either strings or symbols naming functions that
22546 return a string. When the mouse passes over text with this property
22547 set, a balloon window will appear and display the string. Please
22548 refer to @ref{Tooltips, ,Tooltips, emacs, The Emacs Manual},
22549 (in Emacs) or the doc string of @code{balloon-help-mode} (in
22550 XEmacs) for more information on this. (For technical reasons, the
22551 guillemets have been approximated as @samp{<<} and @samp{>>} in this
22552 paragraph.)
22553
22554 Here's an alternative recipe for the group buffer:
22555
22556 @lisp
22557 ;; @r{Create three face types.}
22558 (setq gnus-face-1 'bold)
22559 (setq gnus-face-3 'italic)
22560
22561 ;; @r{We want the article count to be in}
22562 ;; @r{a bold and green face. So we create}
22563 ;; @r{a new face called @code{my-green-bold}.}
22564 (copy-face 'bold 'my-green-bold)
22565 ;; @r{Set the color.}
22566 (set-face-foreground 'my-green-bold "ForestGreen")
22567 (setq gnus-face-2 'my-green-bold)
22568
22569 ;; @r{Set the new & fancy format.}
22570 (setq gnus-group-line-format
22571 "%M%S%3@{%5y%@}%2[:%] %(%1@{%g%@}%)\n")
22572 @end lisp
22573
22574 I'm sure you'll be able to use this scheme to create totally unreadable
22575 and extremely vulgar displays. Have fun!
22576
22577 Note that the @samp{%(} specs (and friends) do not make any sense on the
22578 mode-line variables.
22579
22580 @node Positioning Point
22581 @subsection Positioning Point
22582
22583 Gnus usually moves point to a pre-defined place on each line in most
22584 buffers. By default, point move to the first colon character on the
22585 line. You can customize this behavior in three different ways.
22586
22587 You can move the colon character to somewhere else on the line.
22588
22589 @findex gnus-goto-colon
22590 You can redefine the function that moves the point to the colon. The
22591 function is called @code{gnus-goto-colon}.
22592
22593 But perhaps the most convenient way to deal with this, if you don't want
22594 to have a colon in your line, is to use the @samp{%*} specifier. If you
22595 put a @samp{%*} somewhere in your format line definition, Gnus will
22596 place point there.
22597
22598
22599 @node Tabulation
22600 @subsection Tabulation
22601
22602 You can usually line up your displays by padding and cutting your
22603 strings. However, when combining various strings of different size, it
22604 can often be more convenient to just output the strings, and then worry
22605 about lining up the following text afterwards.
22606
22607 To do that, Gnus supplies tabulator specs---@samp{%=}. There are two
22608 different types---@dfn{hard tabulators} and @dfn{soft tabulators}.
22609
22610 @samp{%50=} will insert space characters to pad the line up to column
22611 50. If the text is already past column 50, nothing will be inserted.
22612 This is the soft tabulator.
22613
22614 @samp{%-50=} will insert space characters to pad the line up to column
22615 50. If the text is already past column 50, the excess text past column
22616 50 will be removed. This is the hard tabulator.
22617
22618
22619 @node Wide Characters
22620 @subsection Wide Characters
22621
22622 Fixed width fonts in most countries have characters of the same width.
22623 Some countries, however, use Latin characters mixed with wider
22624 characters---most notable East Asian countries.
22625
22626 The problem is that when formatting, Gnus assumes that if a string is 10
22627 characters wide, it'll be 10 Latin characters wide on the screen. In
22628 these countries, that's not true.
22629
22630 @vindex gnus-use-correct-string-widths
22631 To help fix this, you can set @code{gnus-use-correct-string-widths} to
22632 @code{t}. This makes buffer generation slower, but the results will be
22633 prettier. The default value under XEmacs is @code{t} but @code{nil}
22634 for Emacs.
22635
22636
22637 @node Window Layout
22638 @section Window Layout
22639 @cindex window layout
22640
22641 No, there's nothing here about X, so be quiet.
22642
22643 @vindex gnus-use-full-window
22644 If @code{gnus-use-full-window} non-@code{nil}, Gnus will delete all
22645 other windows and occupy the entire Emacs screen by itself. It is
22646 @code{t} by default.
22647
22648 Setting this variable to @code{nil} kinda works, but there are
22649 glitches. Use at your own peril.
22650
22651 @vindex gnus-buffer-configuration
22652 @code{gnus-buffer-configuration} describes how much space each Gnus
22653 buffer should be given. Here's an excerpt of this variable:
22654
22655 @lisp
22656 ((group (vertical 1.0 (group 1.0 point)))
22657 (article (vertical 1.0 (summary 0.25 point)
22658 (article 1.0))))
22659 @end lisp
22660
22661 This is an alist. The @dfn{key} is a symbol that names some action or
22662 other. For instance, when displaying the group buffer, the window
22663 configuration function will use @code{group} as the key. A full list of
22664 possible names is listed below.
22665
22666 The @dfn{value} (i.e., the @dfn{split}) says how much space each buffer
22667 should occupy. To take the @code{article} split as an example:
22668
22669 @lisp
22670 (article (vertical 1.0 (summary 0.25 point)
22671 (article 1.0)))
22672 @end lisp
22673
22674 This @dfn{split} says that the summary buffer should occupy 25% of upper
22675 half of the screen, and that it is placed over the article buffer. As
22676 you may have noticed, 100% + 25% is actually 125% (yup, I saw y'all
22677 reaching for that calculator there). However, the special number
22678 @code{1.0} is used to signal that this buffer should soak up all the
22679 rest of the space available after the rest of the buffers have taken
22680 whatever they need. There should be only one buffer with the @code{1.0}
22681 size spec per split.
22682
22683 Point will be put in the buffer that has the optional third element
22684 @code{point}. In a @code{frame} split, the last subsplit having a leaf
22685 split where the tag @code{frame-focus} is a member (i.e., is the third or
22686 fourth element in the list, depending on whether the @code{point} tag is
22687 present) gets focus.
22688
22689 Here's a more complicated example:
22690
22691 @lisp
22692 (article (vertical 1.0 (group 4)
22693 (summary 0.25 point)
22694 (article 1.0)))
22695 @end lisp
22696
22697 If the size spec is an integer instead of a floating point number,
22698 then that number will be used to say how many lines a buffer should
22699 occupy, not a percentage.
22700
22701 If the @dfn{split} looks like something that can be @code{eval}ed (to be
22702 precise---if the @code{car} of the split is a function or a subr), this
22703 split will be @code{eval}ed. If the result is non-@code{nil}, it will
22704 be used as a split.
22705
22706 Not complicated enough for you? Well, try this on for size:
22707
22708 @lisp
22709 (article (horizontal 1.0
22710 (vertical 0.5
22711 (group 1.0))
22712 (vertical 1.0
22713 (summary 0.25 point)
22714 (article 1.0))))
22715 @end lisp
22716
22717 Whoops. Two buffers with the mystery 100% tag. And what's that
22718 @code{horizontal} thingie?
22719
22720 If the first element in one of the split is @code{horizontal}, Gnus will
22721 split the window horizontally, giving you two windows side-by-side.
22722 Inside each of these strips you may carry on all you like in the normal
22723 fashion. The number following @code{horizontal} says what percentage of
22724 the screen is to be given to this strip.
22725
22726 For each split, there @emph{must} be one element that has the 100% tag.
22727 The splitting is never accurate, and this buffer will eat any leftover
22728 lines from the splits.
22729
22730 To be slightly more formal, here's a definition of what a valid split
22731 may look like:
22732
22733 @example
22734 @group
22735 split = frame | horizontal | vertical | buffer | form
22736 frame = "(frame " size *split ")"
22737 horizontal = "(horizontal " size *split ")"
22738 vertical = "(vertical " size *split ")"
22739 buffer = "(" buf-name " " size *[ "point" ] *[ "frame-focus"] ")"
22740 size = number | frame-params
22741 buf-name = group | article | summary ...
22742 @end group
22743 @end example
22744
22745 The limitations are that the @code{frame} split can only appear as the
22746 top-level split. @var{form} should be an Emacs Lisp form that should
22747 return a valid split. We see that each split is fully recursive, and
22748 may contain any number of @code{vertical} and @code{horizontal} splits.
22749
22750 @vindex gnus-window-min-width
22751 @vindex gnus-window-min-height
22752 @cindex window height
22753 @cindex window width
22754 Finding the right sizes can be a bit complicated. No window may be less
22755 than @code{gnus-window-min-height} (default 1) characters high, and all
22756 windows must be at least @code{gnus-window-min-width} (default 1)
22757 characters wide. Gnus will try to enforce this before applying the
22758 splits. If you want to use the normal Emacs window width/height limit,
22759 you can just set these two variables to @code{nil}.
22760
22761 If you're not familiar with Emacs terminology, @code{horizontal} and
22762 @code{vertical} splits may work the opposite way of what you'd expect.
22763 Windows inside a @code{horizontal} split are shown side-by-side, and
22764 windows within a @code{vertical} split are shown above each other.
22765
22766 @findex gnus-configure-frame
22767 If you want to experiment with window placement, a good tip is to call
22768 @code{gnus-configure-frame} directly with a split. This is the function
22769 that does all the real work when splitting buffers. Below is a pretty
22770 nonsensical configuration with 5 windows; two for the group buffer and
22771 three for the article buffer. (I said it was nonsensical.) If you
22772 @code{eval} the statement below, you can get an idea of how that would
22773 look straight away, without going through the normal Gnus channels.
22774 Play with it until you're satisfied, and then use
22775 @code{gnus-add-configuration} to add your new creation to the buffer
22776 configuration list.
22777
22778 @lisp
22779 (gnus-configure-frame
22780 '(horizontal 1.0
22781 (vertical 10
22782 (group 1.0)
22783 (article 0.3 point))
22784 (vertical 1.0
22785 (article 1.0)
22786 (horizontal 4
22787 (group 1.0)
22788 (article 10)))))
22789 @end lisp
22790
22791 You might want to have several frames as well. No prob---just use the
22792 @code{frame} split:
22793
22794 @lisp
22795 (gnus-configure-frame
22796 '(frame 1.0
22797 (vertical 1.0
22798 (summary 0.25 point frame-focus)
22799 (article 1.0))
22800 (vertical ((height . 5) (width . 15)
22801 (user-position . t)
22802 (left . -1) (top . 1))
22803 (picon 1.0))))
22804
22805 @end lisp
22806
22807 This split will result in the familiar summary/article window
22808 configuration in the first (or ``main'') frame, while a small additional
22809 frame will be created where picons will be shown. As you can see,
22810 instead of the normal @code{1.0} top-level spec, each additional split
22811 should have a frame parameter alist as the size spec.
22812 @xref{Frame Parameters, , Frame Parameters, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
22813 Reference Manual}. Under XEmacs, a frame property list will be
22814 accepted, too---for instance, @code{(height 5 width 15 left -1 top 1)}
22815 is such a plist.
22816 The list of all possible keys for @code{gnus-buffer-configuration} can
22817 be found in its default value.
22818
22819 Note that the @code{message} key is used for both
22820 @code{gnus-group-mail} and @code{gnus-summary-mail-other-window}. If
22821 it is desirable to distinguish between the two, something like this
22822 might be used:
22823
22824 @lisp
22825 (message (horizontal 1.0
22826 (vertical 1.0 (message 1.0 point))
22827 (vertical 0.24
22828 (if (buffer-live-p gnus-summary-buffer)
22829 '(summary 0.5))
22830 (group 1.0))))
22831 @end lisp
22832
22833 One common desire for a multiple frame split is to have a separate frame
22834 for composing mail and news while leaving the original frame intact. To
22835 accomplish that, something like the following can be done:
22836
22837 @lisp
22838 (message
22839 (frame 1.0
22840 (if (not (buffer-live-p gnus-summary-buffer))
22841 (car (cdr (assoc 'group gnus-buffer-configuration)))
22842 (car (cdr (assoc 'summary gnus-buffer-configuration))))
22843 (vertical ((user-position . t) (top . 1) (left . 1)
22844 (name . "Message"))
22845 (message 1.0 point))))
22846 @end lisp
22847
22848 @findex gnus-add-configuration
22849 Since the @code{gnus-buffer-configuration} variable is so long and
22850 complicated, there's a function you can use to ease changing the config
22851 of a single setting: @code{gnus-add-configuration}. If, for instance,
22852 you want to change the @code{article} setting, you could say:
22853
22854 @lisp
22855 (gnus-add-configuration
22856 '(article (vertical 1.0
22857 (group 4)
22858 (summary .25 point)
22859 (article 1.0))))
22860 @end lisp
22861
22862 You'd typically stick these @code{gnus-add-configuration} calls in your
22863 @file{~/.gnus.el} file or in some startup hook---they should be run after
22864 Gnus has been loaded.
22865
22866 @vindex gnus-always-force-window-configuration
22867 If all windows mentioned in the configuration are already visible, Gnus
22868 won't change the window configuration. If you always want to force the
22869 ``right'' window configuration, you can set
22870 @code{gnus-always-force-window-configuration} to non-@code{nil}.
22871
22872 If you're using tree displays (@pxref{Tree Display}), and the tree
22873 window is displayed vertically next to another window, you may also want
22874 to fiddle with @code{gnus-tree-minimize-window} to avoid having the
22875 windows resized.
22876
22877 @subsection Window Configuration Names
22878
22879 Here's a list of most of the currently known window configurations,
22880 and when they're used:
22881
22882 @table @code
22883 @item group
22884 The group buffer.
22885
22886 @item summary
22887 Entering a group and showing only the summary.
22888
22889 @item article
22890 Selecting an article.
22891
22892 @item server
22893 The server buffer.
22894
22895 @item browse
22896 Browsing groups from the server buffer.
22897
22898 @item message
22899 Composing a (new) message.
22900
22901 @item only-article
22902 Showing only the article buffer.
22903
22904 @item edit-article
22905 Editing an article.
22906
22907 @item edit-form
22908 Editing group parameters and the like.
22909
22910 @item edit-score
22911 Editing a server definition.
22912
22913 @item post
22914 Composing a news message.
22915
22916 @item reply
22917 Replying or following up an article without yanking the text.
22918
22919 @item forward
22920 Forwarding a message.
22921
22922 @item reply-yank
22923 Replying or following up an article with yanking the text.
22924
22925 @item mail-bound
22926 Bouncing a message.
22927
22928 @item pipe
22929 Sending an article to an external process.
22930
22931 @item bug
22932 Sending a bug report.
22933
22934 @item score-trace
22935 Displaying the score trace.
22936
22937 @item score-words
22938 Displaying the score words.
22939
22940 @item split-trace
22941 Displaying the split trace.
22942
22943 @item compose-bounce
22944 Composing a bounce message.
22945
22946 @item mml-preview
22947 Previewing a @acronym{MIME} part.
22948
22949 @end table
22950
22951
22952 @subsection Example Window Configurations
22953
22954 @itemize @bullet
22955 @item
22956 Narrow left hand side occupied by group buffer. Right hand side split
22957 between summary buffer (top one-sixth) and article buffer (bottom).
22958
22959 @ifinfo
22960 @example
22961 +---+---------+
22962 | G | Summary |
22963 | r +---------+
22964 | o | |
22965 | u | Article |
22966 | p | |
22967 +---+---------+
22968 @end example
22969 @end ifinfo
22970
22971 @lisp
22972 (gnus-add-configuration
22973 '(article
22974 (horizontal 1.0
22975 (vertical 25 (group 1.0))
22976 (vertical 1.0
22977 (summary 0.16 point)
22978 (article 1.0)))))
22979
22980 (gnus-add-configuration
22981 '(summary
22982 (horizontal 1.0
22983 (vertical 25 (group 1.0))
22984 (vertical 1.0 (summary 1.0 point)))))
22985 @end lisp
22986
22987 @end itemize
22988
22989
22990 @node Faces and Fonts
22991 @section Faces and Fonts
22992 @cindex faces
22993 @cindex fonts
22994 @cindex colors
22995
22996 Fiddling with fonts and faces used to be very difficult, but these days
22997 it is very simple. You simply say @kbd{M-x customize-face}, pick out
22998 the face you want to alter, and alter it via the standard Customize
22999 interface.
23000
23001
23002 @node Mode Lines
23003 @section Mode Lines
23004 @cindex mode lines
23005
23006 @vindex gnus-updated-mode-lines
23007 @code{gnus-updated-mode-lines} says what buffers should keep their mode
23008 lines updated. It is a list of symbols. Supported symbols include
23009 @code{group}, @code{article}, @code{summary}, @code{server},
23010 @code{browse}, and @code{tree}. If the corresponding symbol is present,
23011 Gnus will keep that mode line updated with information that may be
23012 pertinent. If this variable is @code{nil}, screen refresh may be
23013 quicker.
23014
23015 @cindex display-time
23016
23017 @vindex gnus-mode-non-string-length
23018 By default, Gnus displays information on the current article in the mode
23019 lines of the summary and article buffers. The information Gnus wishes
23020 to display (e.g., the subject of the article) is often longer than the
23021 mode lines, and therefore have to be cut off at some point. The
23022 @code{gnus-mode-non-string-length} variable says how long the other
23023 elements on the line is (i.e., the non-info part). If you put
23024 additional elements on the mode line (e.g., a clock), you should modify
23025 this variable:
23026
23027 @c Hook written by Francesco Potortì <pot@cnuce.cnr.it>
23028 @lisp
23029 (add-hook 'display-time-hook
23030 (lambda () (setq gnus-mode-non-string-length
23031 (+ 21
23032 (if line-number-mode 5 0)
23033 (if column-number-mode 4 0)
23034 (length display-time-string)))))
23035 @end lisp
23036
23037 If this variable is @code{nil} (which is the default), the mode line
23038 strings won't be chopped off, and they won't be padded either. Note
23039 that the default is unlikely to be desirable, as even the percentage
23040 complete in the buffer may be crowded off the mode line; the user should
23041 configure this variable appropriately for her configuration.
23042
23043
23044 @node Highlighting and Menus
23045 @section Highlighting and Menus
23046 @cindex visual
23047 @cindex highlighting
23048 @cindex menus
23049
23050 @vindex gnus-visual
23051 The @code{gnus-visual} variable controls most of the Gnus-prettifying
23052 aspects. If @code{nil}, Gnus won't attempt to create menus or use fancy
23053 colors or fonts. This will also inhibit loading the @file{gnus-vis.el}
23054 file.
23055
23056 This variable can be a list of visual properties that are enabled. The
23057 following elements are valid, and are all included by default:
23058
23059 @table @code
23060 @item group-highlight
23061 Do highlights in the group buffer.
23062 @item summary-highlight
23063 Do highlights in the summary buffer.
23064 @item article-highlight
23065 Do highlights in the article buffer.
23066 @item highlight
23067 Turn on highlighting in all buffers.
23068 @item group-menu
23069 Create menus in the group buffer.
23070 @item summary-menu
23071 Create menus in the summary buffers.
23072 @item article-menu
23073 Create menus in the article buffer.
23074 @item browse-menu
23075 Create menus in the browse buffer.
23076 @item server-menu
23077 Create menus in the server buffer.
23078 @item score-menu
23079 Create menus in the score buffers.
23080 @item menu
23081 Create menus in all buffers.
23082 @end table
23083
23084 So if you only want highlighting in the article buffer and menus in all
23085 buffers, you could say something like:
23086
23087 @lisp
23088 (setq gnus-visual '(article-highlight menu))
23089 @end lisp
23090
23091 If you want highlighting only and no menus whatsoever, you'd say:
23092
23093 @lisp
23094 (setq gnus-visual '(highlight))
23095 @end lisp
23096
23097 If @code{gnus-visual} is @code{t}, highlighting and menus will be used
23098 in all Gnus buffers.
23099
23100 Other general variables that influence the look of all buffers include:
23101
23102 @table @code
23103 @item gnus-mouse-face
23104 @vindex gnus-mouse-face
23105 This is the face (i.e., font) used for mouse highlighting in Gnus. No
23106 mouse highlights will be done if @code{gnus-visual} is @code{nil}.
23107
23108 @end table
23109
23110 There are hooks associated with the creation of all the different menus:
23111
23112 @table @code
23113
23114 @item gnus-article-menu-hook
23115 @vindex gnus-article-menu-hook
23116 Hook called after creating the article mode menu.
23117
23118 @item gnus-group-menu-hook
23119 @vindex gnus-group-menu-hook
23120 Hook called after creating the group mode menu.
23121
23122 @item gnus-summary-menu-hook
23123 @vindex gnus-summary-menu-hook
23124 Hook called after creating the summary mode menu.
23125
23126 @item gnus-server-menu-hook
23127 @vindex gnus-server-menu-hook
23128 Hook called after creating the server mode menu.
23129
23130 @item gnus-browse-menu-hook
23131 @vindex gnus-browse-menu-hook
23132 Hook called after creating the browse mode menu.
23133
23134 @item gnus-score-menu-hook
23135 @vindex gnus-score-menu-hook
23136 Hook called after creating the score mode menu.
23137
23138 @end table
23139
23140
23141 @node Daemons
23142 @section Daemons
23143 @cindex demons
23144 @cindex daemons
23145
23146 Gnus, being larger than any program ever written (allegedly), does lots
23147 of strange stuff that you may wish to have done while you're not
23148 present. For instance, you may want it to check for new mail once in a
23149 while. Or you may want it to close down all connections to all servers
23150 when you leave Emacs idle. And stuff like that.
23151
23152 Gnus will let you do stuff like that by defining various
23153 @dfn{handlers}. Each handler consists of three elements: A
23154 @var{function}, a @var{time}, and an @var{idle} parameter.
23155
23156 Here's an example of a handler that closes connections when Emacs has
23157 been idle for thirty minutes:
23158
23159 @lisp
23160 (gnus-demon-close-connections nil 30)
23161 @end lisp
23162
23163 Here's a handler that scans for @acronym{PGP} headers every hour when
23164 Emacs is idle:
23165
23166 @lisp
23167 (gnus-demon-scan-pgp 60 t)
23168 @end lisp
23169
23170 This @var{time} parameter and that @var{idle} parameter work together
23171 in a strange, but wonderful fashion. Basically, if @var{idle} is
23172 @code{nil}, then the function will be called every @var{time} minutes.
23173
23174 If @var{idle} is @code{t}, then the function will be called after
23175 @var{time} minutes only if Emacs is idle. So if Emacs is never idle,
23176 the function will never be called. But once Emacs goes idle, the
23177 function will be called every @var{time} minutes.
23178
23179 If @var{idle} is a number and @var{time} is a number, the function will
23180 be called every @var{time} minutes only when Emacs has been idle for
23181 @var{idle} minutes.
23182
23183 If @var{idle} is a number and @var{time} is @code{nil}, the function
23184 will be called once every time Emacs has been idle for @var{idle}
23185 minutes.
23186
23187 And if @var{time} is a string, it should look like @samp{07:31}, and
23188 the function will then be called once every day somewhere near that
23189 time. Modified by the @var{idle} parameter, of course.
23190
23191 @vindex gnus-demon-timestep
23192 (When I say ``minute'' here, I really mean @code{gnus-demon-timestep}
23193 seconds. This is 60 by default. If you change that variable,
23194 all the timings in the handlers will be affected.)
23195
23196 So, if you want to add a handler, you could put something like this in
23197 your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
23198
23199 @findex gnus-demon-add-handler
23200 @lisp
23201 (gnus-demon-add-handler 'gnus-demon-close-connections 30 t)
23202 @end lisp
23203
23204 @findex gnus-demon-add-scanmail
23205 @findex gnus-demon-add-rescan
23206 @findex gnus-demon-add-scan-timestamps
23207 @findex gnus-demon-add-disconnection
23208 Some ready-made functions to do this have been created:
23209 @code{gnus-demon-add-disconnection},
23210 @code{gnus-demon-add-nntp-close-connection},
23211 @code{gnus-demon-add-scan-timestamps}, @code{gnus-demon-add-rescan}, and
23212 @code{gnus-demon-add-scanmail}. Just put those functions in your
23213 @file{~/.gnus.el} if you want those abilities.
23214
23215 @findex gnus-demon-init
23216 @findex gnus-demon-cancel
23217 @vindex gnus-demon-handlers
23218 If you add handlers to @code{gnus-demon-handlers} directly, you should
23219 run @code{gnus-demon-init} to make the changes take hold. To cancel all
23220 daemons, you can use the @code{gnus-demon-cancel} function.
23221
23222 Note that adding daemons can be pretty naughty if you over do it. Adding
23223 functions that scan all news and mail from all servers every two seconds
23224 is a sure-fire way of getting booted off any respectable system. So
23225 behave.
23226
23227
23228 @node Undo
23229 @section Undo
23230 @cindex undo
23231
23232 It is very useful to be able to undo actions one has done. In normal
23233 Emacs buffers, it's easy enough---you just push the @code{undo} button.
23234 In Gnus buffers, however, it isn't that simple.
23235
23236 The things Gnus displays in its buffer is of no value whatsoever to
23237 Gnus---it's all just data designed to look nice to the user.
23238 Killing a group in the group buffer with @kbd{C-k} makes the line
23239 disappear, but that's just a side-effect of the real action---the
23240 removal of the group in question from the internal Gnus structures.
23241 Undoing something like that can't be done by the normal Emacs
23242 @code{undo} function.
23243
23244 Gnus tries to remedy this somewhat by keeping track of what the user
23245 does and coming up with actions that would reverse the actions the user
23246 takes. When the user then presses the @code{undo} key, Gnus will run
23247 the code to reverse the previous action, or the previous actions.
23248 However, not all actions are easily reversible, so Gnus currently offers
23249 a few key functions to be undoable. These include killing groups,
23250 yanking groups, and changing the list of read articles of groups.
23251 That's it, really. More functions may be added in the future, but each
23252 added function means an increase in data to be stored, so Gnus will
23253 never be totally undoable.
23254
23255 @findex gnus-undo-mode
23256 @vindex gnus-use-undo
23257 @findex gnus-undo
23258 The undoability is provided by the @code{gnus-undo-mode} minor mode. It
23259 is used if @code{gnus-use-undo} is non-@code{nil}, which is the
23260 default. The @kbd{C-M-_} key performs the @code{gnus-undo}
23261 command, which should feel kinda like the normal Emacs @code{undo}
23262 command.
23263
23264
23265 @node Predicate Specifiers
23266 @section Predicate Specifiers
23267 @cindex predicate specifiers
23268
23269 Some Gnus variables are @dfn{predicate specifiers}. This is a special
23270 form that allows flexible specification of predicates without having
23271 to type all that much.
23272
23273 These specifiers are lists consisting of functions, symbols and lists.
23274
23275 Here's an example:
23276
23277 @lisp
23278 (or gnus-article-unseen-p
23279 gnus-article-unread-p)
23280 @end lisp
23281
23282 The available symbols are @code{or}, @code{and} and @code{not}. The
23283 functions all take one parameter.
23284
23285 @findex gnus-make-predicate
23286 Internally, Gnus calls @code{gnus-make-predicate} on these specifiers
23287 to create a function that can be called. This input parameter to this
23288 function will be passed along to all the functions in the predicate
23289 specifier.
23290
23291
23292 @node Moderation
23293 @section Moderation
23294 @cindex moderation
23295
23296 If you are a moderator, you can use the @file{gnus-mdrtn.el} package.
23297 It is not included in the standard Gnus package. Write a mail to
23298 @samp{larsi@@gnus.org} and state what group you moderate, and you'll
23299 get a copy.
23300
23301 The moderation package is implemented as a minor mode for summary
23302 buffers. Put
23303
23304 @lisp
23305 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-mode-hook 'gnus-moderate)
23306 @end lisp
23307
23308 in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file.
23309
23310 If you are the moderator of @samp{rec.zoofle}, this is how it's
23311 supposed to work:
23312
23313 @enumerate
23314 @item
23315 You split your incoming mail by matching on
23316 @samp{Newsgroups:.*rec.zoofle}, which will put all the to-be-posted
23317 articles in some mail group---for instance, @samp{nnml:rec.zoofle}.
23318
23319 @item
23320 You enter that group once in a while and post articles using the @kbd{e}
23321 (edit-and-post) or @kbd{s} (just send unedited) commands.
23322
23323 @item
23324 If, while reading the @samp{rec.zoofle} newsgroup, you happen upon some
23325 articles that weren't approved by you, you can cancel them with the
23326 @kbd{c} command.
23327 @end enumerate
23328
23329 To use moderation mode in these two groups, say:
23330
23331 @lisp
23332 (setq gnus-moderated-list
23333 "^nnml:rec.zoofle$\\|^rec.zoofle$")
23334 @end lisp
23335
23336
23337 @node Fetching a Group
23338 @section Fetching a Group
23339 @cindex fetching a group
23340
23341 @findex gnus-fetch-group
23342 It is sometimes convenient to be able to just say ``I want to read this
23343 group and I don't care whether Gnus has been started or not''. This is
23344 perhaps more useful for people who write code than for users, but the
23345 command @code{gnus-fetch-group} provides this functionality in any case.
23346 It takes the group name as a parameter.
23347
23348
23349 @node Image Enhancements
23350 @section Image Enhancements
23351
23352 XEmacs, as well as Emacs 21@footnote{Emacs 21 on MS Windows doesn't
23353 support images, Emacs 22 does.} and up, are able to display pictures and
23354 stuff, so Gnus has taken advantage of that.
23355
23356 @menu
23357 * X-Face:: Display a funky, teensy black-and-white image.
23358 * Face:: Display a funkier, teensier colored image.
23359 * Smileys:: Show all those happy faces the way they were meant to be shown.
23360 * Picons:: How to display pictures of what you're reading.
23361 * Gravatars:: Display the avatar of people you read.
23362 * XVarious:: Other XEmacsy Gnusey variables.
23363 @end menu
23364
23365
23366 @node X-Face
23367 @subsection X-Face
23368 @cindex x-face
23369
23370 @code{X-Face} headers describe a 48x48 pixel black-and-white (1 bit
23371 depth) image that's supposed to represent the author of the message.
23372 It seems to be supported by an ever-growing number of mail and news
23373 readers.
23374
23375 @cindex x-face
23376 @findex gnus-article-display-x-face
23377 @vindex gnus-article-x-face-command
23378 @vindex gnus-article-x-face-too-ugly
23379 @iftex
23380 @iflatex
23381 \include{xface}
23382 @end iflatex
23383 @end iftex
23384 @c @anchor{X-Face}
23385
23386 Viewing an @code{X-Face} header either requires an Emacs that has
23387 @samp{compface} support (which most XEmacs versions have), or that you
23388 have suitable conversion or display programs installed. If your Emacs
23389 has image support the default action is to display the face before the
23390 @code{From} header. If there's no native @code{X-Face} support, Gnus
23391 will try to convert the @code{X-Face} header using external programs
23392 from the @code{pbmplus} package and friends, see below. For XEmacs it's
23393 faster if XEmacs has been compiled with @code{X-Face} support. The
23394 default action under Emacs without image support is to fork off the
23395 @code{display} program.
23396
23397 On a GNU/Linux system, the @code{display} program is included in the
23398 ImageMagick package. For external conversion programs look for packages
23399 with names like @code{netpbm}, @code{libgr-progs} and @code{compface}.
23400 On Windows, you may use the packages @code{netpbm} and @code{compface}
23401 from @url{http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net}. You need to add the
23402 @code{bin} directory to your @code{PATH} environment variable.
23403 @c In fact only the following DLLs and binaries seem to be required:
23404 @c compface1.dll uncompface.exe libnetpbm10.dll icontopbm.exe
23405
23406 The variable @code{gnus-article-x-face-command} controls which programs
23407 are used to display the @code{X-Face} header. If this variable is a
23408 string, this string will be executed in a sub-shell. If it is a
23409 function, this function will be called with the face as the argument.
23410 If @code{gnus-article-x-face-too-ugly} (which is a regexp) matches the
23411 @code{From} header, the face will not be shown.
23412
23413 (Note: @code{x-face} is used in the variable/function names, not
23414 @code{xface}).
23415
23416 @noindent
23417 Face and variable:
23418
23419 @table @code
23420 @item gnus-x-face
23421 @vindex gnus-x-face
23422 Face to show X-Face. The colors from this face are used as the
23423 foreground and background colors of the displayed X-Faces. The
23424 default colors are black and white.
23425
23426 @item gnus-face-properties-alist
23427 @vindex gnus-face-properties-alist
23428 Alist of image types and properties applied to Face (@pxref{Face}) and
23429 X-Face images. The default value is @code{((pbm . (:face gnus-x-face))
23430 (png . nil))} for Emacs or @code{((xface . (:face gnus-x-face)))} for
23431 XEmacs. Here are examples:
23432
23433 @lisp
23434 ;; Specify the altitude of Face and X-Face images in the From header.
23435 (setq gnus-face-properties-alist
23436 '((pbm . (:face gnus-x-face :ascent 80))
23437 (png . (:ascent 80))))
23438
23439 ;; Show Face and X-Face images as pressed buttons.
23440 (setq gnus-face-properties-alist
23441 '((pbm . (:face gnus-x-face :relief -2))
23442 (png . (:relief -2))))
23443 @end lisp
23444
23445 @pxref{Image Descriptors, ,Image Descriptors, elisp, The Emacs Lisp
23446 Reference Manual} for the valid properties for various image types.
23447 Currently, @code{pbm} is used for X-Face images and @code{png} is used
23448 for Face images in Emacs. Only the @code{:face} property is effective
23449 on the @code{xface} image type in XEmacs if it is built with the
23450 @samp{libcompface} library.
23451 @end table
23452
23453 If you use posting styles, you can use an @code{x-face-file} entry in
23454 @code{gnus-posting-styles}, @xref{Posting Styles}. If you don't, Gnus
23455 provides a few convenience functions and variables to allow easier
23456 insertion of X-Face headers in outgoing messages. You also need the
23457 above mentioned ImageMagick, netpbm or other image conversion packages
23458 (depending the values of the variables below) for these functions.
23459
23460 @findex gnus-random-x-face
23461 @vindex gnus-convert-pbm-to-x-face-command
23462 @vindex gnus-x-face-directory
23463 @code{gnus-random-x-face} goes through all the @samp{pbm} files in
23464 @code{gnus-x-face-directory} and picks one at random, and then
23465 converts it to the X-Face format by using the
23466 @code{gnus-convert-pbm-to-x-face-command} shell command. The
23467 @samp{pbm} files should be 48x48 pixels big. It returns the X-Face
23468 header data as a string.
23469
23470 @findex gnus-insert-random-x-face-header
23471 @code{gnus-insert-random-x-face-header} calls
23472 @code{gnus-random-x-face} and inserts a @samp{X-Face} header with the
23473 randomly generated data.
23474
23475 @findex gnus-x-face-from-file
23476 @vindex gnus-convert-image-to-x-face-command
23477 @code{gnus-x-face-from-file} takes a GIF file as the parameter, and then
23478 converts the file to X-Face format by using the
23479 @code{gnus-convert-image-to-x-face-command} shell command.
23480
23481 Here's how you would typically use the first function. Put something
23482 like the following in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
23483
23484 @lisp
23485 (setq message-required-news-headers
23486 (nconc message-required-news-headers
23487 (list '(X-Face . gnus-random-x-face))))
23488 @end lisp
23489
23490 Using the last function would be something like this:
23491
23492 @lisp
23493 (setq message-required-news-headers
23494 (nconc message-required-news-headers
23495 (list '(X-Face . (lambda ()
23496 (gnus-x-face-from-file
23497 "~/My-face.gif"))))))
23498 @end lisp
23499
23500
23501 @node Face
23502 @subsection Face
23503 @cindex face
23504
23505 @c #### FIXME: faces and x-faces' implementations should really be harmonized.
23506
23507 @code{Face} headers are essentially a funkier version of @code{X-Face}
23508 ones. They describe a 48x48 pixel colored image that's supposed to
23509 represent the author of the message.
23510
23511 @cindex face
23512 @findex gnus-article-display-face
23513 The contents of a @code{Face} header must be a base64 encoded PNG image.
23514 See @uref{http://quimby.gnus.org/circus/face/} for the precise
23515 specifications.
23516
23517 The @code{gnus-face-properties-alist} variable affects the appearance of
23518 displayed Face images. @xref{X-Face}.
23519
23520 Viewing a @code{Face} header requires an Emacs that is able to display
23521 PNG images.
23522 @c Maybe add this:
23523 @c (if (featurep 'xemacs)
23524 @c (featurep 'png)
23525 @c (image-type-available-p 'png))
23526
23527 Gnus provides a few convenience functions and variables to allow
23528 easier insertion of Face headers in outgoing messages.
23529
23530 @findex gnus-convert-png-to-face
23531 @code{gnus-convert-png-to-face} takes a 48x48 PNG image, no longer than
23532 726 bytes long, and converts it to a face.
23533
23534 @findex gnus-face-from-file
23535 @vindex gnus-convert-image-to-face-command
23536 @code{gnus-face-from-file} takes a JPEG file as the parameter, and then
23537 converts the file to Face format by using the
23538 @code{gnus-convert-image-to-face-command} shell command.
23539
23540 Here's how you would typically use this function. Put something like the
23541 following in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
23542
23543 @lisp
23544 (setq message-required-news-headers
23545 (nconc message-required-news-headers
23546 (list '(Face . (lambda ()
23547 (gnus-face-from-file "~/face.jpg"))))))
23548 @end lisp
23549
23550
23551 @node Smileys
23552 @subsection Smileys
23553 @cindex smileys
23554
23555 @iftex
23556 @iflatex
23557 \gnusfig{-3cm}{0.5cm}{\epsfig{figure=ps/BigFace,height=20cm}}
23558 \input{smiley}
23559 @end iflatex
23560 @end iftex
23561
23562 @dfn{Smiley} is a package separate from Gnus, but since Gnus is
23563 currently the only package that uses Smiley, it is documented here.
23564
23565 In short---to use Smiley in Gnus, put the following in your
23566 @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
23567
23568 @lisp
23569 (setq gnus-treat-display-smileys t)
23570 @end lisp
23571
23572 Smiley maps text smiley faces---@samp{:-)}, @samp{8-)}, @samp{:-(} and
23573 the like---to pictures and displays those instead of the text smiley
23574 faces. The conversion is controlled by a list of regexps that matches
23575 text and maps that to file names.
23576
23577 @vindex smiley-regexp-alist
23578 The alist used is specified by the @code{smiley-regexp-alist}
23579 variable. The first item in each element is the regexp to be matched;
23580 the second element is the regexp match group that is to be replaced by
23581 the picture; and the third element is the name of the file to be
23582 displayed.
23583
23584 The following variables customize the appearance of the smileys:
23585
23586 @table @code
23587
23588 @item smiley-style
23589 @vindex smiley-style
23590 Specifies the smiley style. Predefined smiley styles include
23591 @code{low-color} (small 13x14 pixel, three-color images), @code{medium}
23592 (more colorful images, 16x16 pixel), and @code{grayscale} (grayscale
23593 images, 14x14 pixel). The default depends on the height of the default
23594 face.
23595
23596 @item smiley-data-directory
23597 @vindex smiley-data-directory
23598 Where Smiley will look for smiley faces files. You shouldn't set this
23599 variable anymore. Customize @code{smiley-style} instead.
23600
23601 @item gnus-smiley-file-types
23602 @vindex gnus-smiley-file-types
23603 List of suffixes on smiley file names to try.
23604
23605 @end table
23606
23607
23608 @node Picons
23609 @subsection Picons
23610
23611 @iftex
23612 @iflatex
23613 \include{picons}
23614 @end iflatex
23615 @end iftex
23616
23617 So@dots{} You want to slow down your news reader even more! This is a
23618 good way to do so. It's also a great way to impress people staring
23619 over your shoulder as you read news.
23620
23621 What are Picons? To quote directly from the Picons Web site:
23622
23623 @iftex
23624 @iflatex
23625 \margindex{}
23626 @end iflatex
23627 @end iftex
23628
23629 @quotation
23630 @dfn{Picons} is short for ``personal icons''. They're small,
23631 constrained images used to represent users and domains on the net,
23632 organized into databases so that the appropriate image for a given
23633 e-mail address can be found. Besides users and domains, there are picon
23634 databases for Usenet newsgroups and weather forecasts. The picons are
23635 in either monochrome @code{XBM} format or color @code{XPM} and
23636 @code{GIF} formats.
23637 @end quotation
23638
23639 @vindex gnus-picon-databases
23640 For instructions on obtaining and installing the picons databases,
23641 point your Web browser at
23642 @uref{http://www.cs.indiana.edu/picons/ftp/index.html}.
23643
23644 If you are using Debian GNU/Linux, saying @samp{apt-get install
23645 picons.*} will install the picons where Gnus can find them.
23646
23647 To enable displaying picons, simply make sure that
23648 @code{gnus-picon-databases} points to the directory containing the
23649 Picons databases.
23650
23651 @vindex gnus-picon-style
23652 The variable @code{gnus-picon-style} controls how picons are displayed.
23653 If @code{inline}, the textual representation is replaced. If
23654 @code{right}, picons are added right to the textual representation.
23655
23656 @vindex gnus-picon-properties
23657 The value of the variable @code{gnus-picon-properties} is a list of
23658 properties applied to picons.
23659
23660 The following variables offer control over where things are located.
23661
23662 @table @code
23663
23664 @item gnus-picon-databases
23665 @vindex gnus-picon-databases
23666 The location of the picons database. This is a list of directories
23667 containing the @file{news}, @file{domains}, @file{users} (and so on)
23668 subdirectories. Defaults to @code{("/usr/lib/picon"
23669 "/usr/local/faces")}.
23670
23671 @item gnus-picon-news-directories
23672 @vindex gnus-picon-news-directories
23673 List of subdirectories to search in @code{gnus-picon-databases} for
23674 newsgroups faces. @code{("news")} is the default.
23675
23676 @item gnus-picon-user-directories
23677 @vindex gnus-picon-user-directories
23678 List of subdirectories to search in @code{gnus-picon-databases} for user
23679 faces. @code{("users" "usenix" "local" "misc")} is the default.
23680
23681 @item gnus-picon-domain-directories
23682 @vindex gnus-picon-domain-directories
23683 List of subdirectories to search in @code{gnus-picon-databases} for
23684 domain name faces. Defaults to @code{("domains")}. Some people may
23685 want to add @samp{"unknown"} to this list.
23686
23687 @item gnus-picon-file-types
23688 @vindex gnus-picon-file-types
23689 Ordered list of suffixes on picon file names to try. Defaults to
23690 @code{("xpm" "gif" "xbm")} minus those not built-in your Emacs.
23691
23692 @item gnus-picon-inhibit-top-level-domains
23693 @vindex gnus-picon-inhibit-top-level-domains
23694 If non-@code{nil} (which is the default), don't display picons for
23695 things like @samp{.net} and @samp{.de}, which aren't usually very
23696 interesting.
23697
23698 @end table
23699
23700 @node Gravatars
23701 @subsection Gravatars
23702
23703 @iftex
23704 @iflatex
23705 \include{gravatars}
23706 @end iflatex
23707 @end iftex
23708
23709 A gravatar is an image registered to an e-mail address.
23710
23711 You can submit yours on-line at @uref{http://www.gravatar.com}.
23712
23713 The following variables offer control over how things are displayed.
23714
23715 @table @code
23716
23717 @item gnus-gravatar-size
23718 @vindex gnus-gravatar-size
23719 The size in pixels of gravatars. Gravatars are always square, so one
23720 number for the size is enough.
23721
23722 @item gnus-gravatar-properties
23723 @vindex gnus-gravatar-properties
23724 List of image properties applied to Gravatar images.
23725
23726 @item gnus-gravatar-too-ugly
23727 @vindex gnus-gravatar-too-ugly
23728 Regexp that matches mail addresses or names of people of which avatars
23729 should not be displayed, or @code{nil}. It default to the value of
23730 @code{gnus-article-x-face-too-ugly} (@pxref{X-Face}).
23731
23732 @end table
23733
23734 If you want to see them in the From field, set:
23735 @lisp
23736 (setq gnus-treat-from-gravatar 'head)
23737 @end lisp
23738
23739 If you want to see them in the Cc and To fields, set:
23740
23741 @lisp
23742 (setq gnus-treat-mail-gravatar 'head)
23743 @end lisp
23744
23745
23746 @node XVarious
23747 @subsection Various XEmacs Variables
23748
23749 @table @code
23750 @item gnus-xmas-glyph-directory
23751 @vindex gnus-xmas-glyph-directory
23752 This is where Gnus will look for pictures. Gnus will normally
23753 auto-detect this directory, but you may set it manually if you have an
23754 unusual directory structure.
23755
23756 @item gnus-xmas-modeline-glyph
23757 @vindex gnus-xmas-modeline-glyph
23758 A glyph displayed in all Gnus mode lines. It is a tiny gnu head by
23759 default.
23760
23761 @end table
23762
23763 @subsubsection Toolbar
23764
23765 @table @code
23766
23767 @item gnus-use-toolbar
23768 @vindex gnus-use-toolbar
23769 This variable specifies the position to display the toolbar. If
23770 @code{nil}, don't display toolbars. If it is non-@code{nil}, it should
23771 be one of the symbols @code{default}, @code{top}, @code{bottom},
23772 @code{right}, and @code{left}. @code{default} means to use the default
23773 toolbar, the rest mean to display the toolbar on the place which those
23774 names show. The default is @code{default}.
23775
23776 @item gnus-toolbar-thickness
23777 @vindex gnus-toolbar-thickness
23778 Cons of the height and the width specifying the thickness of a toolbar.
23779 The height is used for the toolbar displayed on the top or the bottom,
23780 the width is used for the toolbar displayed on the right or the left.
23781 The default is that of the default toolbar.
23782
23783 @item gnus-group-toolbar
23784 @vindex gnus-group-toolbar
23785 The toolbar in the group buffer.
23786
23787 @item gnus-summary-toolbar
23788 @vindex gnus-summary-toolbar
23789 The toolbar in the summary buffer.
23790
23791 @item gnus-summary-mail-toolbar
23792 @vindex gnus-summary-mail-toolbar
23793 The toolbar in the summary buffer of mail groups.
23794
23795 @end table
23796
23797 @iftex
23798 @iflatex
23799 \margindex{}
23800 @end iflatex
23801 @end iftex
23802
23803
23804 @node Fuzzy Matching
23805 @section Fuzzy Matching
23806 @cindex fuzzy matching
23807
23808 Gnus provides @dfn{fuzzy matching} of @code{Subject} lines when doing
23809 things like scoring, thread gathering and thread comparison.
23810
23811 As opposed to regular expression matching, fuzzy matching is very fuzzy.
23812 It's so fuzzy that there's not even a definition of what @dfn{fuzziness}
23813 means, and the implementation has changed over time.
23814
23815 Basically, it tries to remove all noise from lines before comparing.
23816 @samp{Re: }, parenthetical remarks, white space, and so on, are filtered
23817 out of the strings before comparing the results. This often leads to
23818 adequate results---even when faced with strings generated by text
23819 manglers masquerading as newsreaders.
23820
23821
23822 @node Thwarting Email Spam
23823 @section Thwarting Email Spam
23824 @cindex email spam
23825 @cindex spam
23826 @cindex UCE
23827 @cindex unsolicited commercial email
23828
23829 In these last days of the Usenet, commercial vultures are hanging about
23830 and grepping through news like crazy to find email addresses they can
23831 foist off their scams and products to. As a reaction to this, many
23832 people have started putting nonsense addresses into their @code{From}
23833 lines. I think this is counterproductive---it makes it difficult for
23834 people to send you legitimate mail in response to things you write, as
23835 well as making it difficult to see who wrote what. This rewriting may
23836 perhaps be a bigger menace than the unsolicited commercial email itself
23837 in the end.
23838
23839 The biggest problem I have with email spam is that it comes in under
23840 false pretenses. I press @kbd{g} and Gnus merrily informs me that I
23841 have 10 new emails. I say ``Golly gee! Happy is me!'' and select the
23842 mail group, only to find two pyramid schemes, seven advertisements
23843 (``New! Miracle tonic for growing full, lustrous hair on your toes!'')
23844 and one mail asking me to repent and find some god.
23845
23846 This is annoying. Here's what you can do about it.
23847
23848 @menu
23849 * The problem of spam:: Some background, and some solutions
23850 * Anti-Spam Basics:: Simple steps to reduce the amount of spam.
23851 * SpamAssassin:: How to use external anti-spam tools.
23852 * Hashcash:: Reduce spam by burning CPU time.
23853 @end menu
23854
23855 @node The problem of spam
23856 @subsection The problem of spam
23857 @cindex email spam
23858 @cindex spam filtering approaches
23859 @cindex filtering approaches, spam
23860 @cindex UCE
23861 @cindex unsolicited commercial email
23862
23863 First, some background on spam.
23864
23865 If you have access to e-mail, you are familiar with spam (technically
23866 termed @acronym{UCE}, Unsolicited Commercial E-mail). Simply put, it
23867 exists because e-mail delivery is very cheap compared to paper mail,
23868 so only a very small percentage of people need to respond to an UCE to
23869 make it worthwhile to the advertiser. Ironically, one of the most
23870 common spams is the one offering a database of e-mail addresses for
23871 further spamming. Senders of spam are usually called @emph{spammers},
23872 but terms like @emph{vermin}, @emph{scum}, @emph{sociopaths}, and
23873 @emph{morons} are in common use as well.
23874
23875 Spam comes from a wide variety of sources. It is simply impossible to
23876 dispose of all spam without discarding useful messages. A good
23877 example is the TMDA system, which requires senders
23878 unknown to you to confirm themselves as legitimate senders before
23879 their e-mail can reach you. Without getting into the technical side
23880 of TMDA, a downside is clearly that e-mail from legitimate sources may
23881 be discarded if those sources can't or won't confirm themselves
23882 through the TMDA system. Another problem with TMDA is that it
23883 requires its users to have a basic understanding of e-mail delivery
23884 and processing.
23885
23886 The simplest approach to filtering spam is filtering, at the mail
23887 server or when you sort through incoming mail. If you get 200 spam
23888 messages per day from @samp{random-address@@vmadmin.com}, you block
23889 @samp{vmadmin.com}. If you get 200 messages about @samp{VIAGRA}, you
23890 discard all messages with @samp{VIAGRA} in the message. If you get
23891 lots of spam from Bulgaria, for example, you try to filter all mail
23892 from Bulgarian IPs.
23893
23894 This, unfortunately, is a great way to discard legitimate e-mail. The
23895 risks of blocking a whole country (Bulgaria, Norway, Nigeria, China,
23896 etc.)@: or even a continent (Asia, Africa, Europe, etc.)@: from contacting
23897 you should be obvious, so don't do it if you have the choice.
23898
23899 In another instance, the very informative and useful RISKS digest has
23900 been blocked by overzealous mail filters because it @strong{contained}
23901 words that were common in spam messages. Nevertheless, in isolated
23902 cases, with great care, direct filtering of mail can be useful.
23903
23904 Another approach to filtering e-mail is the distributed spam
23905 processing, for instance DCC implements such a system. In essence,
23906 @var{N} systems around the world agree that a machine @var{X} in
23907 Ghana, Estonia, or California is sending out spam e-mail, and these
23908 @var{N} systems enter @var{X} or the spam e-mail from @var{X} into a
23909 database. The criteria for spam detection vary---it may be the number
23910 of messages sent, the content of the messages, and so on. When a user
23911 of the distributed processing system wants to find out if a message is
23912 spam, he consults one of those @var{N} systems.
23913
23914 Distributed spam processing works very well against spammers that send
23915 a large number of messages at once, but it requires the user to set up
23916 fairly complicated checks. There are commercial and free distributed
23917 spam processing systems. Distributed spam processing has its risks as
23918 well. For instance legitimate e-mail senders have been accused of
23919 sending spam, and their web sites and mailing lists have been shut
23920 down for some time because of the incident.
23921
23922 The statistical approach to spam filtering is also popular. It is
23923 based on a statistical analysis of previous spam messages. Usually
23924 the analysis is a simple word frequency count, with perhaps pairs of
23925 words or 3-word combinations thrown into the mix. Statistical
23926 analysis of spam works very well in most of the cases, but it can
23927 classify legitimate e-mail as spam in some cases. It takes time to
23928 run the analysis, the full message must be analyzed, and the user has
23929 to store the database of spam analysis. Statistical analysis on the
23930 server is gaining popularity. This has the advantage of letting the
23931 user Just Read Mail, but has the disadvantage that it's harder to tell
23932 the server that it has misclassified mail.
23933
23934 Fighting spam is not easy, no matter what anyone says. There is no
23935 magic switch that will distinguish Viagra ads from Mom's e-mails.
23936 Even people are having a hard time telling spam apart from non-spam,
23937 because spammers are actively looking to fool us into thinking they
23938 are Mom, essentially. Spamming is irritating, irresponsible, and
23939 idiotic behavior from a bunch of people who think the world owes them
23940 a favor. We hope the following sections will help you in fighting the
23941 spam plague.
23942
23943 @node Anti-Spam Basics
23944 @subsection Anti-Spam Basics
23945 @cindex email spam
23946 @cindex spam
23947 @cindex UCE
23948 @cindex unsolicited commercial email
23949
23950 One way of dealing with spam is having Gnus split out all spam into a
23951 @samp{spam} mail group (@pxref{Splitting Mail}).
23952
23953 First, pick one (1) valid mail address that you can be reached at, and
23954 put it in your @code{From} header of all your news articles. (I've
23955 chosen @samp{larsi@@trym.ifi.uio.no}, but for many addresses on the form
23956 @samp{larsi+usenet@@ifi.uio.no} will be a better choice. Ask your
23957 sysadmin whether your sendmail installation accepts keywords in the local
23958 part of the mail address.)
23959
23960 @lisp
23961 (setq message-default-news-headers
23962 "From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen <larsi@@trym.ifi.uio.no>\n")
23963 @end lisp
23964
23965 Then put the following split rule in @code{nnmail-split-fancy}
23966 (@pxref{Fancy Mail Splitting}):
23967
23968 @lisp
23969 (...
23970 (to "larsi@@trym.ifi.uio.no"
23971 (| ("subject" "re:.*" "misc")
23972 ("references" ".*@@.*" "misc")
23973 "spam"))
23974 ...)
23975 @end lisp
23976
23977 This says that all mail to this address is suspect, but if it has a
23978 @code{Subject} that starts with a @samp{Re:} or has a @code{References}
23979 header, it's probably ok. All the rest goes to the @samp{spam} group.
23980 (This idea probably comes from Tim Pierce.)
23981
23982 In addition, many mail spammers talk directly to your @acronym{SMTP} server
23983 and do not include your email address explicitly in the @code{To}
23984 header. Why they do this is unknown---perhaps it's to thwart this
23985 thwarting scheme? In any case, this is trivial to deal with---you just
23986 put anything not addressed to you in the @samp{spam} group by ending
23987 your fancy split rule in this way:
23988
23989 @lisp
23990 (
23991 ...
23992 (to "larsi" "misc")
23993 "spam")
23994 @end lisp
23995
23996 In my experience, this will sort virtually everything into the right
23997 group. You still have to check the @samp{spam} group from time to time to
23998 check for legitimate mail, though. If you feel like being a good net
23999 citizen, you can even send off complaints to the proper authorities on
24000 each unsolicited commercial email---at your leisure.
24001
24002 This works for me. It allows people an easy way to contact me (they can
24003 just press @kbd{r} in the usual way), and I'm not bothered at all with
24004 spam. It's a win-win situation. Forging @code{From} headers to point
24005 to non-existent domains is yucky, in my opinion.
24006
24007 Be careful with this approach. Spammers are wise to it.
24008
24009
24010 @node SpamAssassin
24011 @subsection SpamAssassin, Vipul's Razor, DCC, etc
24012 @cindex SpamAssassin
24013 @cindex Vipul's Razor
24014 @cindex DCC
24015
24016 The days where the hints in the previous section were sufficient in
24017 avoiding spam are coming to an end. There are many tools out there
24018 that claim to reduce the amount of spam you get. This section could
24019 easily become outdated fast, as new products replace old, but
24020 fortunately most of these tools seem to have similar interfaces. Even
24021 though this section will use SpamAssassin as an example, it should be
24022 easy to adapt it to most other tools.
24023
24024 Note that this section does not involve the @code{spam.el} package,
24025 which is discussed in the next section. If you don't care for all
24026 the features of @code{spam.el}, you can make do with these simple
24027 recipes.
24028
24029 If the tool you are using is not installed on the mail server, you
24030 need to invoke it yourself. Ideas on how to use the
24031 @code{:postscript} mail source parameter (@pxref{Mail Source
24032 Specifiers}) follow.
24033
24034 @lisp
24035 (setq mail-sources
24036 '((file :prescript "formail -bs spamassassin < /var/mail/%u")
24037 (pop :user "jrl"
24038 :server "pophost"
24039 :postscript
24040 "mv %t /tmp/foo; formail -bs spamc < /tmp/foo > %t")))
24041 @end lisp
24042
24043 Once you manage to process your incoming spool somehow, thus making
24044 the mail contain, e.g., a header indicating it is spam, you are ready to
24045 filter it out. Using normal split methods (@pxref{Splitting Mail}):
24046
24047 @lisp
24048 (setq nnmail-split-methods '(("spam" "^X-Spam-Flag: YES")
24049 ...))
24050 @end lisp
24051
24052 Or using fancy split methods (@pxref{Fancy Mail Splitting}):
24053
24054 @lisp
24055 (setq nnmail-split-methods 'nnmail-split-fancy
24056 nnmail-split-fancy '(| ("X-Spam-Flag" "YES" "spam")
24057 ...))
24058 @end lisp
24059
24060 Some people might not like the idea of piping the mail through various
24061 programs using a @code{:prescript} (if some program is buggy, you
24062 might lose all mail). If you are one of them, another solution is to
24063 call the external tools during splitting. Example fancy split method:
24064
24065 @lisp
24066 (setq nnmail-split-fancy '(| (: kevin-spamassassin)
24067 ...))
24068 (defun kevin-spamassassin ()
24069 (save-excursion
24070 (save-restriction
24071 (widen)
24072 (if (eq 1 (call-process-region (point-min) (point-max)
24073 "spamc" nil nil nil "-c"))
24074 "spam"))))
24075 @end lisp
24076
24077 Note that with the nnimap back end, message bodies will not be
24078 downloaded by default. You need to set
24079 @code{nnimap-split-download-body} to @code{t} to do that
24080 (@pxref{Client-Side IMAP Splitting}).
24081
24082 That is about it. As some spam is likely to get through anyway, you
24083 might want to have a nifty function to call when you happen to read
24084 spam. And here is the nifty function:
24085
24086 @lisp
24087 (defun my-gnus-raze-spam ()
24088 "Submit SPAM to Vipul's Razor, then mark it as expirable."
24089 (interactive)
24090 (gnus-summary-save-in-pipe "razor-report -f -d" t)
24091 (gnus-summary-mark-as-expirable 1))
24092 @end lisp
24093
24094 @node Hashcash
24095 @subsection Hashcash
24096 @cindex hashcash
24097
24098 A novel technique to fight spam is to require senders to do something
24099 costly and demonstrably unique for each message they send. This has
24100 the obvious drawback that you cannot rely on everyone in the world
24101 using this technique, since it is not part of the Internet standards,
24102 but it may be useful in smaller communities.
24103
24104 While the tools in the previous section work well in practice, they
24105 work only because the tools are constantly maintained and updated as
24106 new form of spam appears. This means that a small percentage of spam
24107 will always get through. It also means that somewhere, someone needs
24108 to read lots of spam to update these tools. Hashcash avoids that, but
24109 instead prefers that everyone you contact through e-mail supports the
24110 scheme. You can view the two approaches as pragmatic vs dogmatic.
24111 The approaches have their own advantages and disadvantages, but as
24112 often in the real world, a combination of them is stronger than either
24113 one of them separately.
24114
24115 @cindex X-Hashcash
24116 The ``something costly'' is to burn CPU time, more specifically to
24117 compute a hash collision up to a certain number of bits. The
24118 resulting hashcash cookie is inserted in a @samp{X-Hashcash:} header.
24119 For more details, and for the external application @code{hashcash} you
24120 need to install to use this feature, see
24121 @uref{http://www.hashcash.org/}. Even more information can be found
24122 at @uref{http://www.camram.org/}.
24123
24124 If you wish to generate hashcash for each message you send, you can
24125 customize @code{message-generate-hashcash} (@pxref{Mail Headers, ,Mail
24126 Headers,message, The Message Manual}), as in:
24127
24128 @lisp
24129 (setq message-generate-hashcash t)
24130 @end lisp
24131
24132 You will need to set up some additional variables as well:
24133
24134 @table @code
24135
24136 @item hashcash-default-payment
24137 @vindex hashcash-default-payment
24138 This variable indicates the default number of bits the hash collision
24139 should consist of. By default this is 20. Suggested useful values
24140 include 17 to 29.
24141
24142 @item hashcash-payment-alist
24143 @vindex hashcash-payment-alist
24144 Some receivers may require you to spend burn more CPU time than the
24145 default. This variable contains a list of @samp{(@var{addr}
24146 @var{amount})} cells, where @var{addr} is the receiver (email address
24147 or newsgroup) and @var{amount} is the number of bits in the collision
24148 that is needed. It can also contain @samp{(@var{addr} @var{string}
24149 @var{amount})} cells, where the @var{string} is the string to use
24150 (normally the email address or newsgroup name is used).
24151
24152 @item hashcash-path
24153 @vindex hashcash-path
24154 Where the @code{hashcash} binary is installed. This variable should
24155 be automatically set by @code{executable-find}, but if it's @code{nil}
24156 (usually because the @code{hashcash} binary is not in your path)
24157 you'll get a warning when you check hashcash payments and an error
24158 when you generate hashcash payments.
24159
24160 @end table
24161
24162 Gnus can verify hashcash cookies, although this can also be done by
24163 hand customized mail filtering scripts. To verify a hashcash cookie
24164 in a message, use the @code{mail-check-payment} function in the
24165 @code{hashcash.el} library. You can also use the @code{spam.el}
24166 package with the @code{spam-use-hashcash} back end to validate hashcash
24167 cookies in incoming mail and filter mail accordingly (@pxref{Anti-spam
24168 Hashcash Payments}).
24169
24170 @node Spam Package
24171 @section Spam Package
24172 @cindex spam filtering
24173 @cindex spam
24174
24175 The Spam package provides Gnus with a centralized mechanism for
24176 detecting and filtering spam. It filters new mail, and processes
24177 messages according to whether they are spam or ham. (@dfn{Ham} is the
24178 name used throughout this manual to indicate non-spam messages.)
24179
24180 @menu
24181 * Spam Package Introduction::
24182 * Filtering Incoming Mail::
24183 * Detecting Spam in Groups::
24184 * Spam and Ham Processors::
24185 * Spam Package Configuration Examples::
24186 * Spam Back Ends::
24187 * Extending the Spam package::
24188 * Spam Statistics Package::
24189 @end menu
24190
24191 @node Spam Package Introduction
24192 @subsection Spam Package Introduction
24193 @cindex spam filtering
24194 @cindex spam filtering sequence of events
24195 @cindex spam
24196
24197 You must read this section to understand how the Spam package works.
24198 Do not skip, speed-read, or glance through this section.
24199
24200 Make sure you read the section on the @code{spam.el} sequence of
24201 events. See @xref{Extending the Spam package}.
24202
24203 @cindex spam-initialize
24204 @vindex spam-use-stat
24205 To use the Spam package, you @strong{must} first run the function
24206 @code{spam-initialize}:
24207
24208 @example
24209 (spam-initialize)
24210 @end example
24211
24212 This autoloads @code{spam.el} and installs the various hooks necessary
24213 to let the Spam package do its job. In order to make use of the Spam
24214 package, you have to set up certain group parameters and variables,
24215 which we will describe below. All of the variables controlling the
24216 Spam package can be found in the @samp{spam} customization group.
24217
24218 There are two ``contact points'' between the Spam package and the rest
24219 of Gnus: checking new mail for spam, and leaving a group.
24220
24221 Checking new mail for spam is done in one of two ways: while splitting
24222 incoming mail, or when you enter a group.
24223
24224 The first way, checking for spam while splitting incoming mail, is
24225 suited to mail back ends such as @code{nnml} or @code{nnimap}, where
24226 new mail appears in a single spool file. The Spam package processes
24227 incoming mail, and sends mail considered to be spam to a designated
24228 ``spam'' group. @xref{Filtering Incoming Mail}.
24229
24230 The second way is suited to back ends such as @code{nntp}, which have
24231 no incoming mail spool, or back ends where the server is in charge of
24232 splitting incoming mail. In this case, when you enter a Gnus group,
24233 the unseen or unread messages in that group are checked for spam.
24234 Detected spam messages are marked as spam. @xref{Detecting Spam in
24235 Groups}.
24236
24237 @cindex spam back ends
24238 In either case, you have to tell the Spam package what method to use
24239 to detect spam messages. There are several methods, or @dfn{spam back
24240 ends} (not to be confused with Gnus back ends!) to choose from: spam
24241 ``blacklists'' and ``whitelists'', dictionary-based filters, and so
24242 forth. @xref{Spam Back Ends}.
24243
24244 In the Gnus summary buffer, messages that have been identified as spam
24245 always appear with a @samp{$} symbol.
24246
24247 The Spam package divides Gnus groups into three categories: ham
24248 groups, spam groups, and unclassified groups. You should mark each of
24249 the groups you subscribe to as either a ham group or a spam group,
24250 using the @code{spam-contents} group parameter (@pxref{Group
24251 Parameters}). Spam groups have a special property: when you enter a
24252 spam group, all unseen articles are marked as spam. Thus, mail split
24253 into a spam group is automatically marked as spam.
24254
24255 Identifying spam messages is only half of the Spam package's job. The
24256 second half comes into play whenever you exit a group buffer. At this
24257 point, the Spam package does several things:
24258
24259 First, it calls @dfn{spam and ham processors} to process the articles
24260 according to whether they are spam or ham. There is a pair of spam
24261 and ham processors associated with each spam back end, and what the
24262 processors do depends on the back end. At present, the main role of
24263 spam and ham processors is for dictionary-based spam filters: they add
24264 the contents of the messages in the group to the filter's dictionary,
24265 to improve its ability to detect future spam. The @code{spam-process}
24266 group parameter specifies what spam processors to use. @xref{Spam and
24267 Ham Processors}.
24268
24269 If the spam filter failed to mark a spam message, you can mark it
24270 yourself, so that the message is processed as spam when you exit the
24271 group:
24272
24273 @table @kbd
24274 @item $
24275 @itemx M-d
24276 @itemx M s x
24277 @itemx S x
24278 @kindex $ (Summary)
24279 @kindex M-d (Summary)
24280 @kindex S x (Summary)
24281 @kindex M s x (Summary)
24282 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-spam
24283 @findex gnus-summary-mark-as-spam
24284 Mark current article as spam, showing it with the @samp{$} mark
24285 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-spam}).
24286 @end table
24287
24288 @noindent
24289 Similarly, you can unmark an article if it has been erroneously marked
24290 as spam. @xref{Setting Marks}.
24291
24292 Normally, a ham message found in a non-ham group is not processed as
24293 ham---the rationale is that it should be moved into a ham group for
24294 further processing (see below). However, you can force these articles
24295 to be processed as ham by setting
24296 @code{spam-process-ham-in-spam-groups} and
24297 @code{spam-process-ham-in-nonham-groups}.
24298
24299 @vindex gnus-ham-process-destinations
24300 @vindex gnus-spam-process-destinations
24301 The second thing that the Spam package does when you exit a group is
24302 to move ham articles out of spam groups, and spam articles out of ham
24303 groups. Ham in a spam group is moved to the group specified by the
24304 variable @code{gnus-ham-process-destinations}, or the group parameter
24305 @code{ham-process-destination}. Spam in a ham group is moved to the
24306 group specified by the variable @code{gnus-spam-process-destinations},
24307 or the group parameter @code{spam-process-destination}. If these
24308 variables are not set, the articles are left in their current group.
24309 If an article cannot be moved (e.g., with a read-only backend such
24310 as @acronym{NNTP}), it is copied.
24311
24312 If an article is moved to another group, it is processed again when
24313 you visit the new group. Normally, this is not a problem, but if you
24314 want each article to be processed only once, load the
24315 @code{gnus-registry.el} package and set the variable
24316 @code{spam-log-to-registry} to @code{t}. @xref{Spam Package
24317 Configuration Examples}.
24318
24319 Normally, spam groups ignore @code{gnus-spam-process-destinations}.
24320 However, if you set @code{spam-move-spam-nonspam-groups-only} to
24321 @code{nil}, spam will also be moved out of spam groups, depending on
24322 the @code{spam-process-destination} parameter.
24323
24324 The final thing the Spam package does is to mark spam articles as
24325 expired, which is usually the right thing to do.
24326
24327 If all this seems confusing, don't worry. Soon it will be as natural
24328 as typing Lisp one-liners on a neural interface@dots{} err, sorry, that's
24329 50 years in the future yet. Just trust us, it's not so bad.
24330
24331 @node Filtering Incoming Mail
24332 @subsection Filtering Incoming Mail
24333 @cindex spam filtering
24334 @cindex spam filtering incoming mail
24335 @cindex spam
24336
24337 To use the Spam package to filter incoming mail, you must first set up
24338 fancy mail splitting. @xref{Fancy Mail Splitting}. The Spam package
24339 defines a special splitting function that you can add to your fancy
24340 split variable (either @code{nnmail-split-fancy} or
24341 @code{nnimap-split-fancy}, depending on your mail back end):
24342
24343 @example
24344 (: spam-split)
24345 @end example
24346
24347 @vindex spam-split-group
24348 @noindent
24349 The @code{spam-split} function scans incoming mail according to your
24350 chosen spam back end(s), and sends messages identified as spam to a
24351 spam group. By default, the spam group is a group named @samp{spam},
24352 but you can change this by customizing @code{spam-split-group}. Make
24353 sure the contents of @code{spam-split-group} are an unqualified group
24354 name. For instance, in an @code{nnimap} server @samp{your-server},
24355 the value @samp{spam} means @samp{nnimap+your-server:spam}. The value
24356 @samp{nnimap+server:spam} is therefore wrong---it gives the group
24357 @samp{nnimap+your-server:nnimap+server:spam}.
24358
24359 @code{spam-split} does not modify the contents of messages in any way.
24360
24361 @vindex nnimap-split-download-body
24362 Note for IMAP users: if you use the @code{spam-check-bogofilter},
24363 @code{spam-check-ifile}, and @code{spam-check-stat} spam back ends,
24364 you should also set the variable @code{nnimap-split-download-body} to
24365 @code{t}. These spam back ends are most useful when they can ``scan''
24366 the full message body. By default, the nnimap back end only retrieves
24367 the message headers; @code{nnimap-split-download-body} tells it to
24368 retrieve the message bodies as well. We don't set this by default
24369 because it will slow @acronym{IMAP} down, and that is not an
24370 appropriate decision to make on behalf of the user. @xref{Client-Side
24371 IMAP Splitting}.
24372
24373 You have to specify one or more spam back ends for @code{spam-split}
24374 to use, by setting the @code{spam-use-*} variables. @xref{Spam Back
24375 Ends}. Normally, @code{spam-split} simply uses all the spam back ends
24376 you enabled in this way. However, you can tell @code{spam-split} to
24377 use only some of them. Why this is useful? Suppose you are using the
24378 @code{spam-use-regex-headers} and @code{spam-use-blackholes} spam back
24379 ends, and the following split rule:
24380
24381 @example
24382 nnimap-split-fancy '(|
24383 (any "ding" "ding")
24384 (: spam-split)
24385 ;; @r{default mailbox}
24386 "mail")
24387 @end example
24388
24389 @noindent
24390 The problem is that you want all ding messages to make it to the ding
24391 folder. But that will let obvious spam (for example, spam detected by
24392 SpamAssassin, and @code{spam-use-regex-headers}) through, when it's
24393 sent to the ding list. On the other hand, some messages to the ding
24394 list are from a mail server in the blackhole list, so the invocation
24395 of @code{spam-split} can't be before the ding rule.
24396
24397 The solution is to let SpamAssassin headers supersede ding rules, and
24398 perform the other @code{spam-split} rules (including a second
24399 invocation of the regex-headers check) after the ding rule. This is
24400 done by passing a parameter to @code{spam-split}:
24401
24402 @example
24403 nnimap-split-fancy
24404 '(|
24405 ;; @r{spam detected by @code{spam-use-regex-headers} goes to @samp{regex-spam}}
24406 (: spam-split "regex-spam" 'spam-use-regex-headers)
24407 (any "ding" "ding")
24408 ;; @r{all other spam detected by spam-split goes to @code{spam-split-group}}
24409 (: spam-split)
24410 ;; @r{default mailbox}
24411 "mail")
24412 @end example
24413
24414 @noindent
24415 This lets you invoke specific @code{spam-split} checks depending on
24416 your particular needs, and target the results of those checks to a
24417 particular spam group. You don't have to throw all mail into all the
24418 spam tests. Another reason why this is nice is that messages to
24419 mailing lists you have rules for don't have to have resource-intensive
24420 blackhole checks performed on them. You could also specify different
24421 spam checks for your nnmail split vs. your nnimap split. Go crazy.
24422
24423 You should set the @code{spam-use-*} variables for whatever spam back
24424 ends you intend to use. The reason is that when loading
24425 @file{spam.el}, some conditional loading is done depending on what
24426 @code{spam-use-xyz} variables you have set. @xref{Spam Back Ends}.
24427
24428 @c @emph{TODO: spam.el needs to provide a uniform way of training all the
24429 @c statistical databases. Some have that functionality built-in, others
24430 @c don't.}
24431
24432 @node Detecting Spam in Groups
24433 @subsection Detecting Spam in Groups
24434
24435 To detect spam when visiting a group, set the group's
24436 @code{spam-autodetect} and @code{spam-autodetect-methods} group
24437 parameters. These are accessible with @kbd{G c} or @kbd{G p}, as
24438 usual (@pxref{Group Parameters}).
24439
24440 You should set the @code{spam-use-*} variables for whatever spam back
24441 ends you intend to use. The reason is that when loading
24442 @file{spam.el}, some conditional loading is done depending on what
24443 @code{spam-use-xyz} variables you have set.
24444
24445 By default, only unseen articles are processed for spam. You can
24446 force Gnus to recheck all messages in the group by setting the
24447 variable @code{spam-autodetect-recheck-messages} to @code{t}.
24448
24449 If you use the @code{spam-autodetect} method of checking for spam, you
24450 can specify different spam detection methods for different groups.
24451 For instance, the @samp{ding} group may have @code{spam-use-BBDB} as
24452 the autodetection method, while the @samp{suspect} group may have the
24453 @code{spam-use-blacklist} and @code{spam-use-bogofilter} methods
24454 enabled. Unlike with @code{spam-split}, you don't have any control
24455 over the @emph{sequence} of checks, but this is probably unimportant.
24456
24457 @node Spam and Ham Processors
24458 @subsection Spam and Ham Processors
24459 @cindex spam filtering
24460 @cindex spam filtering variables
24461 @cindex spam variables
24462 @cindex spam
24463
24464 @vindex gnus-spam-process-newsgroups
24465 Spam and ham processors specify special actions to take when you exit
24466 a group buffer. Spam processors act on spam messages, and ham
24467 processors on ham messages. At present, the main role of these
24468 processors is to update the dictionaries of dictionary-based spam back
24469 ends such as Bogofilter (@pxref{Bogofilter}) and the Spam Statistics
24470 package (@pxref{Spam Statistics Filtering}).
24471
24472 The spam and ham processors that apply to each group are determined by
24473 the group's@code{spam-process} group parameter. If this group
24474 parameter is not defined, they are determined by the variable
24475 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups}.
24476
24477 @vindex gnus-spam-newsgroup-contents
24478 Gnus learns from the spam you get. You have to collect your spam in
24479 one or more spam groups, and set or customize the variable
24480 @code{spam-junk-mailgroups} as appropriate. You can also declare
24481 groups to contain spam by setting their group parameter
24482 @code{spam-contents} to @code{gnus-group-spam-classification-spam}, or
24483 by customizing the corresponding variable
24484 @code{gnus-spam-newsgroup-contents}. The @code{spam-contents} group
24485 parameter and the @code{gnus-spam-newsgroup-contents} variable can
24486 also be used to declare groups as @emph{ham} groups if you set their
24487 classification to @code{gnus-group-spam-classification-ham}. If
24488 groups are not classified by means of @code{spam-junk-mailgroups},
24489 @code{spam-contents}, or @code{gnus-spam-newsgroup-contents}, they are
24490 considered @emph{unclassified}. All groups are unclassified by
24491 default.
24492
24493 @vindex gnus-spam-mark
24494 @cindex $
24495 In spam groups, all messages are considered to be spam by default:
24496 they get the @samp{$} mark (@code{gnus-spam-mark}) when you enter the
24497 group. If you have seen a message, had it marked as spam, then
24498 unmarked it, it won't be marked as spam when you enter the group
24499 thereafter. You can disable that behavior, so all unread messages
24500 will get the @samp{$} mark, if you set the
24501 @code{spam-mark-only-unseen-as-spam} parameter to @code{nil}. You
24502 should remove the @samp{$} mark when you are in the group summary
24503 buffer for every message that is not spam after all. To remove the
24504 @samp{$} mark, you can use @kbd{M-u} to ``unread'' the article, or
24505 @kbd{d} for declaring it read the non-spam way. When you leave a
24506 group, all spam-marked (@samp{$}) articles are sent to a spam
24507 processor which will study them as spam samples.
24508
24509 Messages may also be deleted in various other ways, and unless
24510 @code{ham-marks} group parameter gets overridden below, marks @samp{R}
24511 and @samp{r} for default read or explicit delete, marks @samp{X} and
24512 @samp{K} for automatic or explicit kills, as well as mark @samp{Y} for
24513 low scores, are all considered to be associated with articles which
24514 are not spam. This assumption might be false, in particular if you
24515 use kill files or score files as means for detecting genuine spam, you
24516 should then adjust the @code{ham-marks} group parameter.
24517
24518 @defvar ham-marks
24519 You can customize this group or topic parameter to be the list of
24520 marks you want to consider ham. By default, the list contains the
24521 deleted, read, killed, kill-filed, and low-score marks (the idea is
24522 that these articles have been read, but are not spam). It can be
24523 useful to also include the tick mark in the ham marks. It is not
24524 recommended to make the unread mark a ham mark, because it normally
24525 indicates a lack of classification. But you can do it, and we'll be
24526 happy for you.
24527 @end defvar
24528
24529 @defvar spam-marks
24530 You can customize this group or topic parameter to be the list of
24531 marks you want to consider spam. By default, the list contains only
24532 the spam mark. It is not recommended to change that, but you can if
24533 you really want to.
24534 @end defvar
24535
24536 When you leave @emph{any} group, regardless of its
24537 @code{spam-contents} classification, all spam-marked articles are sent
24538 to a spam processor, which will study these as spam samples. If you
24539 explicit kill a lot, you might sometimes end up with articles marked
24540 @samp{K} which you never saw, and which might accidentally contain
24541 spam. Best is to make sure that real spam is marked with @samp{$},
24542 and nothing else.
24543
24544 @vindex gnus-ham-process-destinations
24545 When you leave a @emph{spam} group, all spam-marked articles are
24546 marked as expired after processing with the spam processor. This is
24547 not done for @emph{unclassified} or @emph{ham} groups. Also, any
24548 @strong{ham} articles in a spam group will be moved to a location
24549 determined by either the @code{ham-process-destination} group
24550 parameter or a match in the @code{gnus-ham-process-destinations}
24551 variable, which is a list of regular expressions matched with group
24552 names (it's easiest to customize this variable with @kbd{M-x
24553 customize-variable @key{RET} gnus-ham-process-destinations}). Each
24554 group name list is a standard Lisp list, if you prefer to customize
24555 the variable manually. If the @code{ham-process-destination}
24556 parameter is not set, ham articles are left in place. If the
24557 @code{spam-mark-ham-unread-before-move-from-spam-group} parameter is
24558 set, the ham articles are marked as unread before being moved.
24559
24560 If ham can not be moved---because of a read-only back end such as
24561 @acronym{NNTP}, for example, it will be copied.
24562
24563 Note that you can use multiples destinations per group or regular
24564 expression! This enables you to send your ham to a regular mail
24565 group and to a @emph{ham training} group.
24566
24567 When you leave a @emph{ham} group, all ham-marked articles are sent to
24568 a ham processor, which will study these as non-spam samples.
24569
24570 @vindex spam-process-ham-in-spam-groups
24571 By default the variable @code{spam-process-ham-in-spam-groups} is
24572 @code{nil}. Set it to @code{t} if you want ham found in spam groups
24573 to be processed. Normally this is not done, you are expected instead
24574 to send your ham to a ham group and process it there.
24575
24576 @vindex spam-process-ham-in-nonham-groups
24577 By default the variable @code{spam-process-ham-in-nonham-groups} is
24578 @code{nil}. Set it to @code{t} if you want ham found in non-ham (spam
24579 or unclassified) groups to be processed. Normally this is not done,
24580 you are expected instead to send your ham to a ham group and process
24581 it there.
24582
24583 @vindex gnus-spam-process-destinations
24584 When you leave a @emph{ham} or @emph{unclassified} group, all
24585 @strong{spam} articles are moved to a location determined by either
24586 the @code{spam-process-destination} group parameter or a match in the
24587 @code{gnus-spam-process-destinations} variable, which is a list of
24588 regular expressions matched with group names (it's easiest to
24589 customize this variable with @kbd{M-x customize-variable @key{RET}
24590 gnus-spam-process-destinations}). Each group name list is a standard
24591 Lisp list, if you prefer to customize the variable manually. If the
24592 @code{spam-process-destination} parameter is not set, the spam
24593 articles are only expired. The group name is fully qualified, meaning
24594 that if you see @samp{nntp:servername} before the group name in the
24595 group buffer then you need it here as well.
24596
24597 If spam can not be moved---because of a read-only back end such as
24598 @acronym{NNTP}, for example, it will be copied.
24599
24600 Note that you can use multiples destinations per group or regular
24601 expression! This enables you to send your spam to multiple @emph{spam
24602 training} groups.
24603
24604 @vindex spam-log-to-registry
24605 The problem with processing ham and spam is that Gnus doesn't track
24606 this processing by default. Enable the @code{spam-log-to-registry}
24607 variable so @code{spam.el} will use @code{gnus-registry.el} to track
24608 what articles have been processed, and avoid processing articles
24609 multiple times. Keep in mind that if you limit the number of registry
24610 entries, this won't work as well as it does without a limit.
24611
24612 @vindex spam-mark-only-unseen-as-spam
24613 Set this variable if you want only unseen articles in spam groups to
24614 be marked as spam. By default, it is set. If you set it to
24615 @code{nil}, unread articles will also be marked as spam.
24616
24617 @vindex spam-mark-ham-unread-before-move-from-spam-group
24618 Set this variable if you want ham to be unmarked before it is moved
24619 out of the spam group. This is very useful when you use something
24620 like the tick mark @samp{!} to mark ham---the article will be placed
24621 in your @code{ham-process-destination}, unmarked as if it came fresh
24622 from the mail server.
24623
24624 @vindex spam-autodetect-recheck-messages
24625 When autodetecting spam, this variable tells @code{spam.el} whether
24626 only unseen articles or all unread articles should be checked for
24627 spam. It is recommended that you leave it off.
24628
24629 @node Spam Package Configuration Examples
24630 @subsection Spam Package Configuration Examples
24631 @cindex spam filtering
24632 @cindex spam filtering configuration examples
24633 @cindex spam configuration examples
24634 @cindex spam
24635
24636 @subsubheading Ted's setup
24637
24638 From Ted Zlatanov <tzz@@lifelogs.com>.
24639 @example
24640 ;; @r{for @code{gnus-registry-split-fancy-with-parent} and spam autodetection}
24641 ;; @r{see @file{gnus-registry.el} for more information}
24642 (gnus-registry-initialize)
24643 (spam-initialize)
24644
24645 (setq
24646 spam-log-to-registry t ; @r{for spam autodetection}
24647 spam-use-BBDB t
24648 spam-use-regex-headers t ; @r{catch X-Spam-Flag (SpamAssassin)}
24649 ;; @r{all groups with @samp{spam} in the name contain spam}
24650 gnus-spam-newsgroup-contents
24651 '(("spam" gnus-group-spam-classification-spam))
24652 ;; @r{see documentation for these}
24653 spam-move-spam-nonspam-groups-only nil
24654 spam-mark-only-unseen-as-spam t
24655 spam-mark-ham-unread-before-move-from-spam-group t
24656 ;; @r{understand what this does before you copy it to your own setup!}
24657 ;; @r{for nnimap you'll probably want to set nnimap-split-methods, see the manual}
24658 nnimap-split-fancy '(|
24659 ;; @r{trace references to parents and put in their group}
24660 (: gnus-registry-split-fancy-with-parent)
24661 ;; @r{this will catch server-side SpamAssassin tags}
24662 (: spam-split 'spam-use-regex-headers)
24663 (any "ding" "ding")
24664 ;; @r{note that spam by default will go to @samp{spam}}
24665 (: spam-split)
24666 ;; @r{default mailbox}
24667 "mail"))
24668
24669 ;; @r{my parameters, set with @kbd{G p}}
24670
24671 ;; @r{all nnml groups, and all nnimap groups except}
24672 ;; @r{@samp{nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:train} and}
24673 ;; @r{@samp{nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:spam}: any spam goes to nnimap training,}
24674 ;; @r{because it must have been detected manually}
24675
24676 ((spam-process-destination . "nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:train"))
24677
24678 ;; @r{all @acronym{NNTP} groups}
24679 ;; @r{autodetect spam with the blacklist and ham with the BBDB}
24680 ((spam-autodetect-methods spam-use-blacklist spam-use-BBDB)
24681 ;; @r{send all spam to the training group}
24682 (spam-process-destination . "nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:train"))
24683
24684 ;; @r{only some @acronym{NNTP} groups, where I want to autodetect spam}
24685 ((spam-autodetect . t))
24686
24687 ;; @r{my nnimap @samp{nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:spam} group}
24688
24689 ;; @r{this is a spam group}
24690 ((spam-contents gnus-group-spam-classification-spam)
24691
24692 ;; @r{any spam (which happens when I enter for all unseen messages,}
24693 ;; @r{because of the @code{gnus-spam-newsgroup-contents} setting above), goes to}
24694 ;; @r{@samp{nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:train} unless I mark it as ham}
24695
24696 (spam-process-destination "nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:train")
24697
24698 ;; @r{any ham goes to my @samp{nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:mail} folder, but}
24699 ;; @r{also to my @samp{nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:trainham} folder for training}
24700
24701 (ham-process-destination "nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:mail"
24702 "nnimap+mail.lifelogs.com:trainham")
24703 ;; @r{in this group, only @samp{!} marks are ham}
24704 (ham-marks
24705 (gnus-ticked-mark))
24706 ;; @r{remembers senders in the blacklist on the way out---this is}
24707 ;; @r{definitely not needed, it just makes me feel better}
24708 (spam-process (gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-blacklist)))
24709
24710 ;; @r{Later, on the @acronym{IMAP} server I use the @samp{train} group for training}
24711 ;; @r{SpamAssassin to recognize spam, and the @samp{trainham} group fora}
24712 ;; @r{recognizing ham---but Gnus has nothing to do with it.}
24713
24714 @end example
24715
24716 @subsubheading Using @code{spam.el} on an IMAP server with a statistical filter on the server
24717 From Reiner Steib <reiner.steib@@gmx.de>.
24718
24719 My provider has set up bogofilter (in combination with @acronym{DCC}) on
24720 the mail server (@acronym{IMAP}). Recognized spam goes to
24721 @samp{spam.detected}, the rest goes through the normal filter rules,
24722 i.e., to @samp{some.folder} or to @samp{INBOX}. Training on false
24723 positives or negatives is done by copying or moving the article to
24724 @samp{training.ham} or @samp{training.spam} respectively. A cron job on
24725 the server feeds those to bogofilter with the suitable ham or spam
24726 options and deletes them from the @samp{training.ham} and
24727 @samp{training.spam} folders.
24728
24729 With the following entries in @code{gnus-parameters}, @code{spam.el}
24730 does most of the job for me:
24731
24732 @lisp
24733 ("nnimap:spam\\.detected"
24734 (gnus-article-sort-functions '(gnus-article-sort-by-chars))
24735 (ham-process-destination "nnimap:INBOX" "nnimap:training.ham")
24736 (spam-contents gnus-group-spam-classification-spam))
24737 ("nnimap:\\(INBOX\\|other-folders\\)"
24738 (spam-process-destination . "nnimap:training.spam")
24739 (spam-contents gnus-group-spam-classification-ham))
24740 @end lisp
24741
24742 @itemize
24743
24744 @item @b{The Spam folder:}
24745
24746 In the folder @samp{spam.detected}, I have to check for false positives
24747 (i.e., legitimate mails, that were wrongly judged as spam by
24748 bogofilter or DCC).
24749
24750 Because of the @code{gnus-group-spam-classification-spam} entry, all
24751 messages are marked as spam (with @code{$}). When I find a false
24752 positive, I mark the message with some other ham mark
24753 (@code{ham-marks}, @ref{Spam and Ham Processors}). On group exit,
24754 those messages are copied to both groups, @samp{INBOX} (where I want
24755 to have the article) and @samp{training.ham} (for training bogofilter)
24756 and deleted from the @samp{spam.detected} folder.
24757
24758 The @code{gnus-article-sort-by-chars} entry simplifies detection of
24759 false positives for me. I receive lots of worms (sweN, @dots{}), that all
24760 have a similar size. Grouping them by size (i.e., chars) makes finding
24761 other false positives easier. (Of course worms aren't @i{spam}
24762 (@acronym{UCE}, @acronym{UBE}) strictly speaking. Anyhow, bogofilter is
24763 an excellent tool for filtering those unwanted mails for me.)
24764
24765 @item @b{Ham folders:}
24766
24767 In my ham folders, I just hit @kbd{S x}
24768 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-spam}) whenever I see an unrecognized spam
24769 mail (false negative). On group exit, those messages are moved to
24770 @samp{training.spam}.
24771 @end itemize
24772
24773 @subsubheading Reporting spam articles in Gmane groups with @code{spam-report.el}
24774
24775 From Reiner Steib <reiner.steib@@gmx.de>.
24776
24777 With following entry in @code{gnus-parameters}, @kbd{S x}
24778 (@code{gnus-summary-mark-as-spam}) marks articles in @code{gmane.*}
24779 groups as spam and reports the to Gmane at group exit:
24780
24781 @lisp
24782 ("^gmane\\."
24783 (spam-process (gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-report-gmane)))
24784 @end lisp
24785
24786 Additionally, I use @code{(setq spam-report-gmane-use-article-number nil)}
24787 because I don't read the groups directly from news.gmane.org, but
24788 through my local news server (leafnode). I.e., the article numbers are
24789 not the same as on news.gmane.org, thus @code{spam-report.el} has to check
24790 the @code{X-Report-Spam} header to find the correct number.
24791
24792 @node Spam Back Ends
24793 @subsection Spam Back Ends
24794 @cindex spam back ends
24795
24796 The spam package offers a variety of back ends for detecting spam.
24797 Each back end defines a set of methods for detecting spam
24798 (@pxref{Filtering Incoming Mail}, @pxref{Detecting Spam in Groups}),
24799 and a pair of spam and ham processors (@pxref{Spam and Ham
24800 Processors}).
24801
24802 @menu
24803 * Blacklists and Whitelists::
24804 * BBDB Whitelists::
24805 * Gmane Spam Reporting::
24806 * Anti-spam Hashcash Payments::
24807 * Blackholes::
24808 * Regular Expressions Header Matching::
24809 * Bogofilter::
24810 * SpamAssassin back end::
24811 * ifile spam filtering::
24812 * Spam Statistics Filtering::
24813 * SpamOracle::
24814 @end menu
24815
24816 @node Blacklists and Whitelists
24817 @subsubsection Blacklists and Whitelists
24818 @cindex spam filtering
24819 @cindex whitelists, spam filtering
24820 @cindex blacklists, spam filtering
24821 @cindex spam
24822
24823 @defvar spam-use-blacklist
24824
24825 Set this variable to @code{t} if you want to use blacklists when
24826 splitting incoming mail. Messages whose senders are in the blacklist
24827 will be sent to the @code{spam-split-group}. This is an explicit
24828 filter, meaning that it acts only on mail senders @emph{declared} to
24829 be spammers.
24830
24831 @end defvar
24832
24833 @defvar spam-use-whitelist
24834
24835 Set this variable to @code{t} if you want to use whitelists when
24836 splitting incoming mail. Messages whose senders are not in the
24837 whitelist will be sent to the next spam-split rule. This is an
24838 explicit filter, meaning that unless someone is in the whitelist, their
24839 messages are not assumed to be spam or ham.
24840
24841 @end defvar
24842
24843 @defvar spam-use-whitelist-exclusive
24844
24845 Set this variable to @code{t} if you want to use whitelists as an
24846 implicit filter, meaning that every message will be considered spam
24847 unless the sender is in the whitelist. Use with care.
24848
24849 @end defvar
24850
24851 @defvar gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-blacklist
24852
24853 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
24854 customizing the group parameters or the
24855 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
24856 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the senders of
24857 spam-marked articles will be added to the blacklist.
24858
24859 @emph{WARNING}
24860
24861 Instead of the obsolete
24862 @code{gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-blacklist}, it is recommended
24863 that you use @code{(spam spam-use-blacklist)}. Everything will work
24864 the same way, we promise.
24865
24866 @end defvar
24867
24868 @defvar gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-whitelist
24869
24870 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
24871 customizing the group parameters or the
24872 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
24873 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the senders of
24874 ham-marked articles in @emph{ham} groups will be added to the
24875 whitelist.
24876
24877 @emph{WARNING}
24878
24879 Instead of the obsolete
24880 @code{gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-whitelist}, it is recommended
24881 that you use @code{(ham spam-use-whitelist)}. Everything will work
24882 the same way, we promise.
24883
24884 @end defvar
24885
24886 Blacklists are lists of regular expressions matching addresses you
24887 consider to be spam senders. For instance, to block mail from any
24888 sender at @samp{vmadmin.com}, you can put @samp{vmadmin.com} in your
24889 blacklist. You start out with an empty blacklist. Blacklist entries
24890 use the Emacs regular expression syntax.
24891
24892 Conversely, whitelists tell Gnus what addresses are considered
24893 legitimate. All messages from whitelisted addresses are considered
24894 non-spam. Also see @ref{BBDB Whitelists}. Whitelist entries use the
24895 Emacs regular expression syntax.
24896
24897 The blacklist and whitelist file locations can be customized with the
24898 @code{spam-directory} variable (@file{~/News/spam} by default), or
24899 the @code{spam-whitelist} and @code{spam-blacklist} variables
24900 directly. The whitelist and blacklist files will by default be in the
24901 @code{spam-directory} directory, named @file{whitelist} and
24902 @file{blacklist} respectively.
24903
24904 @node BBDB Whitelists
24905 @subsubsection BBDB Whitelists
24906 @cindex spam filtering
24907 @cindex BBDB whitelists, spam filtering
24908 @cindex BBDB, spam filtering
24909 @cindex spam
24910
24911 @defvar spam-use-BBDB
24912
24913 Analogous to @code{spam-use-whitelist} (@pxref{Blacklists and
24914 Whitelists}), but uses the BBDB as the source of whitelisted
24915 addresses, without regular expressions. You must have the BBDB loaded
24916 for @code{spam-use-BBDB} to work properly. Messages whose senders are
24917 not in the BBDB will be sent to the next spam-split rule. This is an
24918 explicit filter, meaning that unless someone is in the BBDB, their
24919 messages are not assumed to be spam or ham.
24920
24921 @end defvar
24922
24923 @defvar spam-use-BBDB-exclusive
24924
24925 Set this variable to @code{t} if you want to use the BBDB as an
24926 implicit filter, meaning that every message will be considered spam
24927 unless the sender is in the BBDB@. Use with care. Only sender
24928 addresses in the BBDB will be allowed through; all others will be
24929 classified as spammers.
24930
24931 While @code{spam-use-BBDB-exclusive} @emph{can} be used as an alias
24932 for @code{spam-use-BBDB} as far as @code{spam.el} is concerned, it is
24933 @emph{not} a separate back end. If you set
24934 @code{spam-use-BBDB-exclusive} to @code{t}, @emph{all} your BBDB splitting
24935 will be exclusive.
24936
24937 @end defvar
24938
24939 @defvar gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-BBDB
24940
24941 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
24942 customizing the group parameters or the
24943 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
24944 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the senders of
24945 ham-marked articles in @emph{ham} groups will be added to the
24946 BBDB.
24947
24948 @emph{WARNING}
24949
24950 Instead of the obsolete
24951 @code{gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-BBDB}, it is recommended
24952 that you use @code{(ham spam-use-BBDB)}. Everything will work
24953 the same way, we promise.
24954
24955 @end defvar
24956
24957 @node Gmane Spam Reporting
24958 @subsubsection Gmane Spam Reporting
24959 @cindex spam reporting
24960 @cindex Gmane, spam reporting
24961 @cindex Gmane, spam reporting
24962 @cindex spam
24963
24964 @defvar gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-report-gmane
24965
24966 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
24967 customizing the group parameters or the
24968 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
24969 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the spam-marked
24970 articles groups will be reported to the Gmane administrators via a
24971 HTTP request.
24972
24973 Gmane can be found at @uref{http://gmane.org}.
24974
24975 @emph{WARNING}
24976
24977 Instead of the obsolete
24978 @code{gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-report-gmane}, it is recommended
24979 that you use @code{(spam spam-use-gmane)}. Everything will work the
24980 same way, we promise.
24981
24982 @end defvar
24983
24984 @defvar spam-report-gmane-use-article-number
24985
24986 This variable is @code{t} by default. Set it to @code{nil} if you are
24987 running your own news server, for instance, and the local article
24988 numbers don't correspond to the Gmane article numbers. When
24989 @code{spam-report-gmane-use-article-number} is @code{nil},
24990 @code{spam-report.el} will fetch the number from the article headers.
24991
24992 @end defvar
24993
24994 @defvar spam-report-user-mail-address
24995
24996 Mail address exposed in the User-Agent spam reports to Gmane. It allows
24997 the Gmane administrators to contact you in case of misreports. The
24998 default is @code{user-mail-address}.
24999
25000 @end defvar
25001
25002 @node Anti-spam Hashcash Payments
25003 @subsubsection Anti-spam Hashcash Payments
25004 @cindex spam filtering
25005 @cindex hashcash, spam filtering
25006 @cindex spam
25007
25008 @defvar spam-use-hashcash
25009
25010 Similar to @code{spam-use-whitelist} (@pxref{Blacklists and
25011 Whitelists}), but uses hashcash tokens for whitelisting messages
25012 instead of the sender address. Messages without a hashcash payment
25013 token will be sent to the next spam-split rule. This is an explicit
25014 filter, meaning that unless a hashcash token is found, the messages
25015 are not assumed to be spam or ham.
25016
25017 @end defvar
25018
25019 @node Blackholes
25020 @subsubsection Blackholes
25021 @cindex spam filtering
25022 @cindex blackholes, spam filtering
25023 @cindex spam
25024
25025 @defvar spam-use-blackholes
25026
25027 This option is disabled by default. You can let Gnus consult the
25028 blackhole-type distributed spam processing systems (DCC, for instance)
25029 when you set this option. The variable @code{spam-blackhole-servers}
25030 holds the list of blackhole servers Gnus will consult. The current
25031 list is fairly comprehensive, but make sure to let us know if it
25032 contains outdated servers.
25033
25034 The blackhole check uses the @code{dig.el} package, but you can tell
25035 @code{spam.el} to use @code{dns.el} instead for better performance if
25036 you set @code{spam-use-dig} to @code{nil}. It is not recommended at
25037 this time to set @code{spam-use-dig} to @code{nil} despite the
25038 possible performance improvements, because some users may be unable to
25039 use it, but you can try it and see if it works for you.
25040
25041 @end defvar
25042
25043 @defvar spam-blackhole-servers
25044
25045 The list of servers to consult for blackhole checks.
25046
25047 @end defvar
25048
25049 @defvar spam-blackhole-good-server-regex
25050
25051 A regular expression for IPs that should not be checked against the
25052 blackhole server list. When set to @code{nil}, it has no effect.
25053
25054 @end defvar
25055
25056 @defvar spam-use-dig
25057
25058 Use the @code{dig.el} package instead of the @code{dns.el} package.
25059 The default setting of @code{t} is recommended.
25060
25061 @end defvar
25062
25063 Blackhole checks are done only on incoming mail. There is no spam or
25064 ham processor for blackholes.
25065
25066 @node Regular Expressions Header Matching
25067 @subsubsection Regular Expressions Header Matching
25068 @cindex spam filtering
25069 @cindex regular expressions header matching, spam filtering
25070 @cindex spam
25071
25072 @defvar spam-use-regex-headers
25073
25074 This option is disabled by default. You can let Gnus check the
25075 message headers against lists of regular expressions when you set this
25076 option. The variables @code{spam-regex-headers-spam} and
25077 @code{spam-regex-headers-ham} hold the list of regular expressions.
25078 Gnus will check against the message headers to determine if the
25079 message is spam or ham, respectively.
25080
25081 @end defvar
25082
25083 @defvar spam-regex-headers-spam
25084
25085 The list of regular expressions that, when matched in the headers of
25086 the message, positively identify it as spam.
25087
25088 @end defvar
25089
25090 @defvar spam-regex-headers-ham
25091
25092 The list of regular expressions that, when matched in the headers of
25093 the message, positively identify it as ham.
25094
25095 @end defvar
25096
25097 Regular expression header checks are done only on incoming mail.
25098 There is no specific spam or ham processor for regular expressions.
25099
25100 @node Bogofilter
25101 @subsubsection Bogofilter
25102 @cindex spam filtering
25103 @cindex bogofilter, spam filtering
25104 @cindex spam
25105
25106 @defvar spam-use-bogofilter
25107
25108 Set this variable if you want @code{spam-split} to use Eric Raymond's
25109 speedy Bogofilter.
25110
25111 With a minimum of care for associating the @samp{$} mark for spam
25112 articles only, Bogofilter training all gets fairly automatic. You
25113 should do this until you get a few hundreds of articles in each
25114 category, spam or not. The command @kbd{S t} in summary mode, either
25115 for debugging or for curiosity, shows the @emph{spamicity} score of
25116 the current article (between 0.0 and 1.0).
25117
25118 Bogofilter determines if a message is spam based on a specific
25119 threshold. That threshold can be customized, consult the Bogofilter
25120 documentation.
25121
25122 If the @code{bogofilter} executable is not in your path, Bogofilter
25123 processing will be turned off.
25124
25125 You should not enable this if you use @code{spam-use-bogofilter-headers}.
25126
25127 @end defvar
25128
25129 @table @kbd
25130 @item M s t
25131 @itemx S t
25132 @kindex M s t
25133 @kindex S t
25134 @findex spam-bogofilter-score
25135 Get the Bogofilter spamicity score (@code{spam-bogofilter-score}).
25136 @end table
25137
25138 @defvar spam-use-bogofilter-headers
25139
25140 Set this variable if you want @code{spam-split} to use Eric Raymond's
25141 speedy Bogofilter, looking only at the message headers. It works
25142 similarly to @code{spam-use-bogofilter}, but the @code{X-Bogosity} header
25143 must be in the message already. Normally you would do this with a
25144 procmail recipe or something similar; consult the Bogofilter
25145 installation documents for details.
25146
25147 You should not enable this if you use @code{spam-use-bogofilter}.
25148
25149 @end defvar
25150
25151 @defvar gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-bogofilter
25152 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
25153 customizing the group parameters or the
25154 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
25155 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, spam-marked articles
25156 will be added to the Bogofilter spam database.
25157
25158 @emph{WARNING}
25159
25160 Instead of the obsolete
25161 @code{gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-bogofilter}, it is recommended
25162 that you use @code{(spam spam-use-bogofilter)}. Everything will work
25163 the same way, we promise.
25164 @end defvar
25165
25166 @defvar gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-bogofilter
25167 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
25168 customizing the group parameters or the
25169 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
25170 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the ham-marked
25171 articles in @emph{ham} groups will be added to the Bogofilter database
25172 of non-spam messages.
25173
25174 @emph{WARNING}
25175
25176 Instead of the obsolete
25177 @code{gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-bogofilter}, it is recommended
25178 that you use @code{(ham spam-use-bogofilter)}. Everything will work
25179 the same way, we promise.
25180 @end defvar
25181
25182 @defvar spam-bogofilter-database-directory
25183
25184 This is the directory where Bogofilter will store its databases. It
25185 is not specified by default, so Bogofilter will use its own default
25186 database directory.
25187
25188 @end defvar
25189
25190 The Bogofilter mail classifier is similar to @command{ifile} in intent and
25191 purpose. A ham and a spam processor are provided, plus the
25192 @code{spam-use-bogofilter} and @code{spam-use-bogofilter-headers}
25193 variables to indicate to spam-split that Bogofilter should either be
25194 used, or has already been used on the article. The 0.9.2.1 version of
25195 Bogofilter was used to test this functionality.
25196
25197 @node SpamAssassin back end
25198 @subsubsection SpamAssassin back end
25199 @cindex spam filtering
25200 @cindex spamassassin, spam filtering
25201 @cindex spam
25202
25203 @defvar spam-use-spamassassin
25204
25205 Set this variable if you want @code{spam-split} to use SpamAssassin.
25206
25207 SpamAssassin assigns a score to each article based on a set of rules
25208 and tests, including a Bayesian filter. The Bayesian filter can be
25209 trained by associating the @samp{$} mark for spam articles. The
25210 spam score can be viewed by using the command @kbd{S t} in summary
25211 mode.
25212
25213 If you set this variable, each article will be processed by
25214 SpamAssassin when @code{spam-split} is called. If your mail is
25215 preprocessed by SpamAssassin, and you want to just use the
25216 SpamAssassin headers, set @code{spam-use-spamassassin-headers}
25217 instead.
25218
25219 You should not enable this if you use
25220 @code{spam-use-spamassassin-headers}.
25221
25222 @end defvar
25223
25224 @defvar spam-use-spamassassin-headers
25225
25226 Set this variable if your mail is preprocessed by SpamAssassin and
25227 want @code{spam-split} to split based on the SpamAssassin headers.
25228
25229 You should not enable this if you use @code{spam-use-spamassassin}.
25230
25231 @end defvar
25232
25233 @defvar spam-spamassassin-program
25234
25235 This variable points to the SpamAssassin executable. If you have
25236 @code{spamd} running, you can set this variable to the @code{spamc}
25237 executable for faster processing. See the SpamAssassin documentation
25238 for more information on @code{spamd}/@code{spamc}.
25239
25240 @end defvar
25241
25242 SpamAssassin is a powerful and flexible spam filter that uses a wide
25243 variety of tests to identify spam. A ham and a spam processors are
25244 provided, plus the @code{spam-use-spamassassin} and
25245 @code{spam-use-spamassassin-headers} variables to indicate to
25246 spam-split that SpamAssassin should be either used, or has already
25247 been used on the article. The 2.63 version of SpamAssassin was used
25248 to test this functionality.
25249
25250 @node ifile spam filtering
25251 @subsubsection ifile spam filtering
25252 @cindex spam filtering
25253 @cindex ifile, spam filtering
25254 @cindex spam
25255
25256 @defvar spam-use-ifile
25257
25258 Enable this variable if you want @code{spam-split} to use @command{ifile}, a
25259 statistical analyzer similar to Bogofilter.
25260
25261 @end defvar
25262
25263 @defvar spam-ifile-all-categories
25264
25265 Enable this variable if you want @code{spam-use-ifile} to give you all
25266 the ifile categories, not just spam/non-spam. If you use this, make
25267 sure you train ifile as described in its documentation.
25268
25269 @end defvar
25270
25271 @defvar spam-ifile-spam-category
25272
25273 This is the category of spam messages as far as ifile is concerned.
25274 The actual string used is irrelevant, but you probably want to leave
25275 the default value of @samp{spam}.
25276 @end defvar
25277
25278 @defvar spam-ifile-database
25279
25280 This is the filename for the ifile database. It is not specified by
25281 default, so ifile will use its own default database name.
25282
25283 @end defvar
25284
25285 The ifile mail classifier is similar to Bogofilter in intent and
25286 purpose. A ham and a spam processor are provided, plus the
25287 @code{spam-use-ifile} variable to indicate to spam-split that ifile
25288 should be used. The 1.2.1 version of ifile was used to test this
25289 functionality.
25290
25291 @node Spam Statistics Filtering
25292 @subsubsection Spam Statistics Filtering
25293 @cindex spam filtering
25294 @cindex spam-stat, spam filtering
25295 @cindex spam-stat
25296 @cindex spam
25297
25298 This back end uses the Spam Statistics Emacs Lisp package to perform
25299 statistics-based filtering (@pxref{Spam Statistics Package}). Before
25300 using this, you may want to perform some additional steps to
25301 initialize your Spam Statistics dictionary. @xref{Creating a
25302 spam-stat dictionary}.
25303
25304 @defvar spam-use-stat
25305
25306 @end defvar
25307
25308 @defvar gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-stat
25309 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
25310 customizing the group parameters or the
25311 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
25312 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the spam-marked
25313 articles will be added to the spam-stat database of spam messages.
25314
25315 @emph{WARNING}
25316
25317 Instead of the obsolete
25318 @code{gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-stat}, it is recommended
25319 that you use @code{(spam spam-use-stat)}. Everything will work
25320 the same way, we promise.
25321 @end defvar
25322
25323 @defvar gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-stat
25324 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
25325 customizing the group parameters or the
25326 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is
25327 added to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the ham-marked
25328 articles in @emph{ham} groups will be added to the spam-stat database
25329 of non-spam messages.
25330
25331 @emph{WARNING}
25332
25333 Instead of the obsolete
25334 @code{gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-stat}, it is recommended
25335 that you use @code{(ham spam-use-stat)}. Everything will work
25336 the same way, we promise.
25337 @end defvar
25338
25339 This enables @code{spam.el} to cooperate with @file{spam-stat.el}.
25340 @file{spam-stat.el} provides an internal (Lisp-only) spam database,
25341 which unlike ifile or Bogofilter does not require external programs.
25342 A spam and a ham processor, and the @code{spam-use-stat} variable for
25343 @code{spam-split} are provided.
25344
25345 @node SpamOracle
25346 @subsubsection Using SpamOracle with Gnus
25347 @cindex spam filtering
25348 @cindex SpamOracle
25349 @cindex spam
25350
25351 An easy way to filter out spam is to use SpamOracle. SpamOracle is an
25352 statistical mail filtering tool written by Xavier Leroy and needs to be
25353 installed separately.
25354
25355 There are several ways to use SpamOracle with Gnus. In all cases, your
25356 mail is piped through SpamOracle in its @emph{mark} mode. SpamOracle will
25357 then enter an @samp{X-Spam} header indicating whether it regards the
25358 mail as a spam mail or not.
25359
25360 One possibility is to run SpamOracle as a @code{:prescript} from the
25361 @xref{Mail Source Specifiers}, (@pxref{SpamAssassin}). This method has
25362 the advantage that the user can see the @emph{X-Spam} headers.
25363
25364 The easiest method is to make @file{spam.el} (@pxref{Spam Package})
25365 call SpamOracle.
25366
25367 @vindex spam-use-spamoracle
25368 To enable SpamOracle usage by @code{spam.el}, set the variable
25369 @code{spam-use-spamoracle} to @code{t} and configure the
25370 @code{nnmail-split-fancy} or @code{nnimap-split-fancy}. @xref{Spam
25371 Package}. In this example the @samp{INBOX} of an nnimap server is
25372 filtered using SpamOracle. Mails recognized as spam mails will be
25373 moved to @code{spam-split-group}, @samp{Junk} in this case. Ham
25374 messages stay in @samp{INBOX}:
25375
25376 @example
25377 (setq spam-use-spamoracle t
25378 spam-split-group "Junk"
25379 ;; @r{for nnimap you'll probably want to set nnimap-split-methods, see the manual}
25380 nnimap-split-inbox '("INBOX")
25381 nnimap-split-fancy '(| (: spam-split) "INBOX"))
25382 @end example
25383
25384 @defvar spam-use-spamoracle
25385 Set to @code{t} if you want Gnus to enable spam filtering using
25386 SpamOracle.
25387 @end defvar
25388
25389 @defvar spam-spamoracle-binary
25390 Gnus uses the SpamOracle binary called @file{spamoracle} found in the
25391 user's PATH@. Using the variable @code{spam-spamoracle-binary}, this
25392 can be customized.
25393 @end defvar
25394
25395 @defvar spam-spamoracle-database
25396 By default, SpamOracle uses the file @file{~/.spamoracle.db} as a database to
25397 store its analysis. This is controlled by the variable
25398 @code{spam-spamoracle-database} which defaults to @code{nil}. That means
25399 the default SpamOracle database will be used. In case you want your
25400 database to live somewhere special, set
25401 @code{spam-spamoracle-database} to this path.
25402 @end defvar
25403
25404 SpamOracle employs a statistical algorithm to determine whether a
25405 message is spam or ham. In order to get good results, meaning few
25406 false hits or misses, SpamOracle needs training. SpamOracle learns
25407 the characteristics of your spam mails. Using the @emph{add} mode
25408 (training mode) one has to feed good (ham) and spam mails to
25409 SpamOracle. This can be done by pressing @kbd{|} in the Summary
25410 buffer and pipe the mail to a SpamOracle process or using
25411 @file{spam.el}'s spam- and ham-processors, which is much more
25412 convenient. For a detailed description of spam- and ham-processors,
25413 @xref{Spam Package}.
25414
25415 @defvar gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-spamoracle
25416 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
25417 customizing the group parameter or the
25418 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is added
25419 to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, spam-marked articles will be
25420 sent to SpamOracle as spam samples.
25421
25422 @emph{WARNING}
25423
25424 Instead of the obsolete
25425 @code{gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-spamoracle}, it is recommended
25426 that you use @code{(spam spam-use-spamoracle)}. Everything will work
25427 the same way, we promise.
25428 @end defvar
25429
25430 @defvar gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-spamoracle
25431 Add this symbol to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter by
25432 customizing the group parameter or the
25433 @code{gnus-spam-process-newsgroups} variable. When this symbol is added
25434 to a group's @code{spam-process} parameter, the ham-marked articles in
25435 @emph{ham} groups will be sent to the SpamOracle as samples of ham
25436 messages.
25437
25438 @emph{WARNING}
25439
25440 Instead of the obsolete
25441 @code{gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-spamoracle}, it is recommended
25442 that you use @code{(ham spam-use-spamoracle)}. Everything will work
25443 the same way, we promise.
25444 @end defvar
25445
25446 @emph{Example:} These are the Group Parameters of a group that has been
25447 classified as a ham group, meaning that it should only contain ham
25448 messages.
25449 @example
25450 ((spam-contents gnus-group-spam-classification-ham)
25451 (spam-process ((ham spam-use-spamoracle)
25452 (spam spam-use-spamoracle))))
25453 @end example
25454 For this group the @code{spam-use-spamoracle} is installed for both
25455 ham and spam processing. If the group contains spam message
25456 (e.g., because SpamOracle has not had enough sample messages yet) and
25457 the user marks some messages as spam messages, these messages will be
25458 processed by SpamOracle. The processor sends the messages to
25459 SpamOracle as new samples for spam.
25460
25461 @node Extending the Spam package
25462 @subsection Extending the Spam package
25463 @cindex spam filtering
25464 @cindex spam elisp package, extending
25465 @cindex extending the spam elisp package
25466
25467 Say you want to add a new back end called blackbox. For filtering
25468 incoming mail, provide the following:
25469
25470 @enumerate
25471
25472 @item
25473 Code
25474
25475 @lisp
25476 (defvar spam-use-blackbox nil
25477 "True if blackbox should be used.")
25478 @end lisp
25479
25480 Write @code{spam-check-blackbox} if Blackbox can check incoming mail.
25481
25482 Write @code{spam-blackbox-register-routine} and
25483 @code{spam-blackbox-unregister-routine} using the bogofilter
25484 register/unregister routines as a start, or other register/unregister
25485 routines more appropriate to Blackbox, if Blackbox can
25486 register/unregister spam and ham.
25487
25488 @item
25489 Functionality
25490
25491 The @code{spam-check-blackbox} function should return @samp{nil} or
25492 @code{spam-split-group}, observing the other conventions. See the
25493 existing @code{spam-check-*} functions for examples of what you can
25494 do, and stick to the template unless you fully understand the reasons
25495 why you aren't.
25496
25497 @end enumerate
25498
25499 For processing spam and ham messages, provide the following:
25500
25501 @enumerate
25502
25503 @item
25504 Code
25505
25506 Note you don't have to provide a spam or a ham processor. Only
25507 provide them if Blackbox supports spam or ham processing.
25508
25509 Also, ham and spam processors are being phased out as single
25510 variables. Instead the form @code{(spam spam-use-blackbox)} or
25511 @code{(ham spam-use-blackbox)} is favored. For now, spam/ham
25512 processor variables are still around but they won't be for long.
25513
25514 @lisp
25515 (defvar gnus-group-spam-exit-processor-blackbox "blackbox-spam"
25516 "The Blackbox summary exit spam processor.
25517 Only applicable to spam groups.")
25518
25519 (defvar gnus-group-ham-exit-processor-blackbox "blackbox-ham"
25520 "The whitelist summary exit ham processor.
25521 Only applicable to non-spam (unclassified and ham) groups.")
25522
25523 @end lisp
25524
25525 @item
25526 Gnus parameters
25527
25528 Add
25529 @lisp
25530 (const :tag "Spam: Blackbox" (spam spam-use-blackbox))
25531 (const :tag "Ham: Blackbox" (ham spam-use-blackbox))
25532 @end lisp
25533 to the @code{spam-process} group parameter in @code{gnus.el}. Make
25534 sure you do it twice, once for the parameter and once for the
25535 variable customization.
25536
25537 Add
25538 @lisp
25539 (variable-item spam-use-blackbox)
25540 @end lisp
25541 to the @code{spam-autodetect-methods} group parameter in
25542 @code{gnus.el} if Blackbox can check incoming mail for spam contents.
25543
25544 Finally, use the appropriate @code{spam-install-*-backend} function in
25545 @code{spam.el}. Here are the available functions.
25546
25547
25548 @enumerate
25549
25550 @item
25551 @code{spam-install-backend-alias}
25552
25553 This function will simply install an alias for a back end that does
25554 everything like the original back end. It is currently only used to
25555 make @code{spam-use-BBDB-exclusive} act like @code{spam-use-BBDB}.
25556
25557 @item
25558 @code{spam-install-nocheck-backend}
25559
25560 This function installs a back end that has no check function, but can
25561 register/unregister ham or spam. The @code{spam-use-gmane} back end is
25562 such a back end.
25563
25564 @item
25565 @code{spam-install-checkonly-backend}
25566
25567 This function will install a back end that can only check incoming mail
25568 for spam contents. It can't register or unregister messages.
25569 @code{spam-use-blackholes} and @code{spam-use-hashcash} are such
25570 back ends.
25571
25572 @item
25573 @code{spam-install-statistical-checkonly-backend}
25574
25575 This function installs a statistical back end (one which requires the
25576 full body of a message to check it) that can only check incoming mail
25577 for contents. @code{spam-use-regex-body} is such a filter.
25578
25579 @item
25580 @code{spam-install-statistical-backend}
25581
25582 This function install a statistical back end with incoming checks and
25583 registration/unregistration routines. @code{spam-use-bogofilter} is
25584 set up this way.
25585
25586 @item
25587 @code{spam-install-backend}
25588
25589 This is the most normal back end installation, where a back end that can
25590 check and register/unregister messages is set up without statistical
25591 abilities. The @code{spam-use-BBDB} is such a back end.
25592
25593 @item
25594 @code{spam-install-mover-backend}
25595
25596 Mover back ends are internal to @code{spam.el} and specifically move
25597 articles around when the summary is exited. You will very probably
25598 never install such a back end.
25599 @end enumerate
25600
25601 @end enumerate
25602
25603 @node Spam Statistics Package
25604 @subsection Spam Statistics Package
25605 @cindex Paul Graham
25606 @cindex Graham, Paul
25607 @cindex naive Bayesian spam filtering
25608 @cindex Bayesian spam filtering, naive
25609 @cindex spam filtering, naive Bayesian
25610
25611 Paul Graham has written an excellent essay about spam filtering using
25612 statistics: @uref{http://www.paulgraham.com/spam.html,A Plan for
25613 Spam}. In it he describes the inherent deficiency of rule-based
25614 filtering as used by SpamAssassin, for example: Somebody has to write
25615 the rules, and everybody else has to install these rules. You are
25616 always late. It would be much better, he argues, to filter mail based
25617 on whether it somehow resembles spam or non-spam. One way to measure
25618 this is word distribution. He then goes on to describe a solution
25619 that checks whether a new mail resembles any of your other spam mails
25620 or not.
25621
25622 The basic idea is this: Create a two collections of your mail, one
25623 with spam, one with non-spam. Count how often each word appears in
25624 either collection, weight this by the total number of mails in the
25625 collections, and store this information in a dictionary. For every
25626 word in a new mail, determine its probability to belong to a spam or a
25627 non-spam mail. Use the 15 most conspicuous words, compute the total
25628 probability of the mail being spam. If this probability is higher
25629 than a certain threshold, the mail is considered to be spam.
25630
25631 The Spam Statistics package adds support to Gnus for this kind of
25632 filtering. It can be used as one of the back ends of the Spam package
25633 (@pxref{Spam Package}), or by itself.
25634
25635 Before using the Spam Statistics package, you need to set it up.
25636 First, you need two collections of your mail, one with spam, one with
25637 non-spam. Then you need to create a dictionary using these two
25638 collections, and save it. And last but not least, you need to use
25639 this dictionary in your fancy mail splitting rules.
25640
25641 @menu
25642 * Creating a spam-stat dictionary::
25643 * Splitting mail using spam-stat::
25644 * Low-level interface to the spam-stat dictionary::
25645 @end menu
25646
25647 @node Creating a spam-stat dictionary
25648 @subsubsection Creating a spam-stat dictionary
25649
25650 Before you can begin to filter spam based on statistics, you must
25651 create these statistics based on two mail collections, one with spam,
25652 one with non-spam. These statistics are then stored in a dictionary
25653 for later use. In order for these statistics to be meaningful, you
25654 need several hundred emails in both collections.
25655
25656 Gnus currently supports only the nnml back end for automated dictionary
25657 creation. The nnml back end stores all mails in a directory, one file
25658 per mail. Use the following:
25659
25660 @defun spam-stat-process-spam-directory
25661 Create spam statistics for every file in this directory. Every file
25662 is treated as one spam mail.
25663 @end defun
25664
25665 @defun spam-stat-process-non-spam-directory
25666 Create non-spam statistics for every file in this directory. Every
25667 file is treated as one non-spam mail.
25668 @end defun
25669
25670 Usually you would call @code{spam-stat-process-spam-directory} on a
25671 directory such as @file{~/Mail/mail/spam} (this usually corresponds to
25672 the group @samp{nnml:mail.spam}), and you would call
25673 @code{spam-stat-process-non-spam-directory} on a directory such as
25674 @file{~/Mail/mail/misc} (this usually corresponds to the group
25675 @samp{nnml:mail.misc}).
25676
25677 When you are using @acronym{IMAP}, you won't have the mails available
25678 locally, so that will not work. One solution is to use the Gnus Agent
25679 to cache the articles. Then you can use directories such as
25680 @file{"~/News/agent/nnimap/mail.yourisp.com/personal_spam"} for
25681 @code{spam-stat-process-spam-directory}. @xref{Agent as Cache}.
25682
25683 @defvar spam-stat
25684 This variable holds the hash-table with all the statistics---the
25685 dictionary we have been talking about. For every word in either
25686 collection, this hash-table stores a vector describing how often the
25687 word appeared in spam and often it appeared in non-spam mails.
25688 @end defvar
25689
25690 If you want to regenerate the statistics from scratch, you need to
25691 reset the dictionary.
25692
25693 @defun spam-stat-reset
25694 Reset the @code{spam-stat} hash-table, deleting all the statistics.
25695 @end defun
25696
25697 When you are done, you must save the dictionary. The dictionary may
25698 be rather large. If you will not update the dictionary incrementally
25699 (instead, you will recreate it once a month, for example), then you
25700 can reduce the size of the dictionary by deleting all words that did
25701 not appear often enough or that do not clearly belong to only spam or
25702 only non-spam mails.
25703
25704 @defun spam-stat-reduce-size
25705 Reduce the size of the dictionary. Use this only if you do not want
25706 to update the dictionary incrementally.
25707 @end defun
25708
25709 @defun spam-stat-save
25710 Save the dictionary.
25711 @end defun
25712
25713 @defvar spam-stat-file
25714 The filename used to store the dictionary. This defaults to
25715 @file{~/.spam-stat.el}.
25716 @end defvar
25717
25718 @node Splitting mail using spam-stat
25719 @subsubsection Splitting mail using spam-stat
25720
25721 This section describes how to use the Spam statistics
25722 @emph{independently} of the @xref{Spam Package}.
25723
25724 First, add the following to your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
25725
25726 @lisp
25727 (require 'spam-stat)
25728 (spam-stat-load)
25729 @end lisp
25730
25731 This will load the necessary Gnus code, and the dictionary you
25732 created.
25733
25734 Next, you need to adapt your fancy splitting rules: You need to
25735 determine how to use @code{spam-stat}. The following examples are for
25736 the nnml back end. Using the nnimap back end works just as well. Just
25737 use @code{nnimap-split-fancy} instead of @code{nnmail-split-fancy}.
25738
25739 In the simplest case, you only have two groups, @samp{mail.misc} and
25740 @samp{mail.spam}. The following expression says that mail is either
25741 spam or it should go into @samp{mail.misc}. If it is spam, then
25742 @code{spam-stat-split-fancy} will return @samp{mail.spam}.
25743
25744 @lisp
25745 (setq nnmail-split-fancy
25746 `(| (: spam-stat-split-fancy)
25747 "mail.misc"))
25748 @end lisp
25749
25750 @defvar spam-stat-split-fancy-spam-group
25751 The group to use for spam. Default is @samp{mail.spam}.
25752 @end defvar
25753
25754 If you also filter mail with specific subjects into other groups, use
25755 the following expression. Only mails not matching the regular
25756 expression are considered potential spam.
25757
25758 @lisp
25759 (setq nnmail-split-fancy
25760 `(| ("Subject" "\\bspam-stat\\b" "mail.emacs")
25761 (: spam-stat-split-fancy)
25762 "mail.misc"))
25763 @end lisp
25764
25765 If you want to filter for spam first, then you must be careful when
25766 creating the dictionary. Note that @code{spam-stat-split-fancy} must
25767 consider both mails in @samp{mail.emacs} and in @samp{mail.misc} as
25768 non-spam, therefore both should be in your collection of non-spam
25769 mails, when creating the dictionary!
25770
25771 @lisp
25772 (setq nnmail-split-fancy
25773 `(| (: spam-stat-split-fancy)
25774 ("Subject" "\\bspam-stat\\b" "mail.emacs")
25775 "mail.misc"))
25776 @end lisp
25777
25778 You can combine this with traditional filtering. Here, we move all
25779 HTML-only mails into the @samp{mail.spam.filtered} group. Note that since
25780 @code{spam-stat-split-fancy} will never see them, the mails in
25781 @samp{mail.spam.filtered} should be neither in your collection of spam mails,
25782 nor in your collection of non-spam mails, when creating the
25783 dictionary!
25784
25785 @lisp
25786 (setq nnmail-split-fancy
25787 `(| ("Content-Type" "text/html" "mail.spam.filtered")
25788 (: spam-stat-split-fancy)
25789 ("Subject" "\\bspam-stat\\b" "mail.emacs")
25790 "mail.misc"))
25791 @end lisp
25792
25793
25794 @node Low-level interface to the spam-stat dictionary
25795 @subsubsection Low-level interface to the spam-stat dictionary
25796
25797 The main interface to using @code{spam-stat}, are the following functions:
25798
25799 @defun spam-stat-buffer-is-spam
25800 Called in a buffer, that buffer is considered to be a new spam mail.
25801 Use this for new mail that has not been processed before.
25802 @end defun
25803
25804 @defun spam-stat-buffer-is-no-spam
25805 Called in a buffer, that buffer is considered to be a new non-spam
25806 mail. Use this for new mail that has not been processed before.
25807 @end defun
25808
25809 @defun spam-stat-buffer-change-to-spam
25810 Called in a buffer, that buffer is no longer considered to be normal
25811 mail but spam. Use this to change the status of a mail that has
25812 already been processed as non-spam.
25813 @end defun
25814
25815 @defun spam-stat-buffer-change-to-non-spam
25816 Called in a buffer, that buffer is no longer considered to be spam but
25817 normal mail. Use this to change the status of a mail that has already
25818 been processed as spam.
25819 @end defun
25820
25821 @defun spam-stat-save
25822 Save the hash table to the file. The filename used is stored in the
25823 variable @code{spam-stat-file}.
25824 @end defun
25825
25826 @defun spam-stat-load
25827 Load the hash table from a file. The filename used is stored in the
25828 variable @code{spam-stat-file}.
25829 @end defun
25830
25831 @defun spam-stat-score-word
25832 Return the spam score for a word.
25833 @end defun
25834
25835 @defun spam-stat-score-buffer
25836 Return the spam score for a buffer.
25837 @end defun
25838
25839 @defun spam-stat-split-fancy
25840 Use this function for fancy mail splitting. Add the rule @samp{(:
25841 spam-stat-split-fancy)} to @code{nnmail-split-fancy}
25842 @end defun
25843
25844 Make sure you load the dictionary before using it. This requires the
25845 following in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file:
25846
25847 @lisp
25848 (require 'spam-stat)
25849 (spam-stat-load)
25850 @end lisp
25851
25852 Typical test will involve calls to the following functions:
25853
25854 @smallexample
25855 Reset: (setq spam-stat (make-hash-table :test 'equal))
25856 Learn spam: (spam-stat-process-spam-directory "~/Mail/mail/spam")
25857 Learn non-spam: (spam-stat-process-non-spam-directory "~/Mail/mail/misc")
25858 Save table: (spam-stat-save)
25859 File size: (nth 7 (file-attributes spam-stat-file))
25860 Number of words: (hash-table-count spam-stat)
25861 Test spam: (spam-stat-test-directory "~/Mail/mail/spam")
25862 Test non-spam: (spam-stat-test-directory "~/Mail/mail/misc")
25863 Reduce table size: (spam-stat-reduce-size)
25864 Save table: (spam-stat-save)
25865 File size: (nth 7 (file-attributes spam-stat-file))
25866 Number of words: (hash-table-count spam-stat)
25867 Test spam: (spam-stat-test-directory "~/Mail/mail/spam")
25868 Test non-spam: (spam-stat-test-directory "~/Mail/mail/misc")
25869 @end smallexample
25870
25871 Here is how you would create your dictionary:
25872
25873 @smallexample
25874 Reset: (setq spam-stat (make-hash-table :test 'equal))
25875 Learn spam: (spam-stat-process-spam-directory "~/Mail/mail/spam")
25876 Learn non-spam: (spam-stat-process-non-spam-directory "~/Mail/mail/misc")
25877 Repeat for any other non-spam group you need...
25878 Reduce table size: (spam-stat-reduce-size)
25879 Save table: (spam-stat-save)
25880 @end smallexample
25881
25882 @node The Gnus Registry
25883 @section The Gnus Registry
25884 @cindex registry
25885 @cindex split
25886 @cindex track
25887
25888 The Gnus registry is a package that tracks messages by their
25889 Message-ID across all backends. This allows Gnus users to do several
25890 cool things, be the envy of the locals, get free haircuts, and be
25891 experts on world issues. Well, maybe not all of those, but the
25892 features are pretty cool.
25893
25894 Although they will be explained in detail shortly, here's a quick list
25895 of said features in case your attention span is... never mind.
25896
25897 @enumerate
25898 @item
25899 Split messages to their parent
25900
25901 This keeps discussions in the same group. You can use the subject and
25902 the sender in addition to the Message-ID@. Several strategies are
25903 available.
25904
25905 @item
25906 Refer to messages by ID
25907
25908 Commands like @code{gnus-summary-refer-parent-article} can take
25909 advantage of the registry to jump to the referred article, regardless
25910 of the group the message is in.
25911
25912 @item
25913 Store custom flags and keywords
25914
25915 The registry can store custom flags and keywords for a message. For
25916 instance, you can mark a message ``To-Do'' this way and the flag will
25917 persist whether the message is in the nnimap, nnml, nnmaildir,
25918 etc.@: backends.
25919
25920 @item
25921 Store arbitrary data
25922
25923 Through a simple ELisp API, the registry can remember any data for a
25924 message. A built-in inverse map, when activated, allows quick lookups
25925 of all messages matching a particular set of criteria.
25926 @end enumerate
25927
25928 @menu
25929 * Gnus Registry Setup::
25930 * Registry Article Refer Method::
25931 * Fancy splitting to parent::
25932 * Store custom flags and keywords::
25933 * Store arbitrary data::
25934 @end menu
25935
25936 @node Gnus Registry Setup
25937 @subsection Gnus Registry Setup
25938
25939 Fortunately, setting up the Gnus registry is pretty easy:
25940
25941 @lisp
25942 (setq gnus-registry-max-entries 2500)
25943
25944 (gnus-registry-initialize)
25945 @end lisp
25946
25947 This adds registry saves to Gnus newsrc saves (which happen on exit
25948 and when you press @kbd{s} from the @file{*Group*} buffer. It also
25949 adds registry calls to article actions in Gnus (copy, move, etc.)@: so
25950 it's not easy to undo the initialization. See
25951 @code{gnus-registry-initialize} for the gory details.
25952
25953 Here are other settings used by the author of the registry (understand
25954 what they do before you copy them blindly).
25955
25956 @lisp
25957 (setq
25958 gnus-registry-split-strategy 'majority
25959 gnus-registry-ignored-groups '(("nntp" t)
25960 ("nnrss" t)
25961 ("spam" t)
25962 ("train" t))
25963 gnus-registry-max-entries 500000
25964 ;; this is the default
25965 gnus-registry-track-extra '(sender subject))
25966 @end lisp
25967
25968 They say: keep a lot of messages around, track messages by sender and
25969 subject (not just parent Message-ID), and when the registry splits
25970 incoming mail, use a majority rule to decide where messages should go
25971 if there's more than one possibility. In addition, the registry
25972 should ignore messages in groups that match ``nntp'', ``nnrss'',
25973 ``spam'', or ``train.''
25974
25975 You are doubtless impressed by all this, but you ask: ``I am a Gnus
25976 user, I customize to live. Give me more.'' Here you go, these are
25977 the general settings.
25978
25979 @defvar gnus-registry-unfollowed-groups
25980 The groups that will not be followed by
25981 @code{gnus-registry-split-fancy-with-parent}. They will still be
25982 remembered by the registry. This is a list of regular expressions.
25983 By default any group name that ends with ``delayed'', ``drafts'',
25984 ``queue'', or ``INBOX'', belongs to the nnmairix backend, or contains
25985 the word ``archive'' is not followed.
25986 @end defvar
25987
25988 @defvar gnus-registry-max-entries
25989 The number (an integer or @code{nil} for unlimited) of entries the
25990 registry will keep. If the registry has reached or exceeded this
25991 size, it will reject insertion of new entries.
25992 @end defvar
25993
25994 @defvar gnus-registry-prune-factor
25995 This option (a float between 0 and 1) controls how much the registry
25996 is cut back during pruning. In order to prevent constant pruning, the
25997 registry will be pruned back to less than
25998 @code{gnus-registry-max-entries}. This option controls exactly how
25999 much less: the target is calculated as the maximum number of entries
26000 minus the maximum number times this factor. The default is 0.1:
26001 i.e., if your registry is limited to 50000 entries, pruning will try to
26002 cut back to 45000 entries. Entries with keys marked as precious will
26003 not be pruned.
26004 @end defvar
26005
26006 @defvar gnus-registry-default-sort-function
26007 This option specifies how registry entries are sorted during pruning.
26008 If a function is given, it should sort least valuable entries first,
26009 as pruning starts from the beginning of the list. The default value
26010 is @code{gnus-registry-sort-by-creation-time}, which proposes the
26011 oldest entries for pruning. Set to nil to perform no sorting, which
26012 will speed up the pruning process.
26013 @end defvar
26014
26015 @defvar gnus-registry-cache-file
26016 The file where the registry will be stored between Gnus sessions. By
26017 default the file name is @code{.gnus.registry.eieio} in the same
26018 directory as your @code{.newsrc.eld}.
26019 @end defvar
26020
26021 @node Registry Article Refer Method
26022 @subsection Fetching by @code{Message-ID} Using the Registry
26023
26024 The registry knows how to map each @code{Message-ID} to the group it's
26025 in. This can be leveraged to enhance the ``article refer method'',
26026 the thing that tells Gnus how to look up an article given its
26027 Message-ID (@pxref{Finding the Parent}).
26028
26029 @vindex nnregistry
26030 @vindex gnus-refer-article-method
26031
26032 The @code{nnregistry} refer method does exactly that. It has the
26033 advantage that an article may be found regardless of the group it's
26034 in---provided its @code{Message-ID} is known to the registry. It can
26035 be enabled by augmenting the start-up file with something along these
26036 lines:
26037
26038 @example
26039 ;; Keep enough entries to have a good hit rate when referring to an
26040 ;; article using the registry. Use long group names so that Gnus
26041 ;; knows where the article is.
26042 (setq gnus-registry-max-entries 2500)
26043
26044 (gnus-registry-initialize)
26045
26046 (setq gnus-refer-article-method
26047 '(current
26048 (nnregistry)
26049 (nnweb "gmane" (nnweb-type gmane))))
26050 @end example
26051
26052 The example above instructs Gnus to first look up the article in the
26053 current group, or, alternatively, using the registry, and finally, if
26054 all else fails, using Gmane.
26055
26056 @node Fancy splitting to parent
26057 @subsection Fancy splitting to parent
26058
26059 Simply put, this lets you put followup e-mail where it belongs.
26060
26061 Every message has a Message-ID, which is unique, and the registry
26062 remembers it. When the message is moved or copied, the registry will
26063 notice this and offer the new group as a choice to the splitting
26064 strategy.
26065
26066 When a followup is made, usually it mentions the original message's
26067 Message-ID in the headers. The registry knows this and uses that
26068 mention to find the group where the original message lives. You only
26069 have to put a rule like this:
26070
26071 @lisp
26072 (setq nnimap-my-split-fancy '(|
26073
26074 ;; split to parent: you need this
26075 (: gnus-registry-split-fancy-with-parent)
26076
26077 ;; other rules, as an example
26078 (: spam-split)
26079 ;; default mailbox
26080 "mail")
26081 @end lisp
26082
26083 in your fancy split setup. In addition, you may want to customize the
26084 following variables.
26085
26086 @defvar gnus-registry-track-extra
26087 This is a list of symbols, so it's best to change it from the
26088 Customize interface. By default it's @code{(subject sender recipient)},
26089 which may work for you. It can be annoying if your mail flow is large
26090 and people don't stick to the same groups.
26091
26092 When you decide to stop tracking any of those extra data, you can use
26093 the command @code{gnus-registry-remove-extra-data} to purge it from
26094 the existing registry entries.
26095 @end defvar
26096
26097 @defvar gnus-registry-split-strategy
26098 This is a symbol, so it's best to change it from the Customize
26099 interface. By default it's @code{nil}, but you may want to set it to
26100 @code{majority} or @code{first} to split by sender or subject based on
26101 the majority of matches or on the first found. I find @code{majority}
26102 works best.
26103 @end defvar
26104
26105 @node Store custom flags and keywords
26106 @subsection Store custom flags and keywords
26107
26108 The registry lets you set custom flags and keywords per message. You
26109 can use the Gnus->Registry Marks menu or the @kbd{M M x} keyboard
26110 shortcuts, where @code{x} is the first letter of the mark's name.
26111
26112 @defvar gnus-registry-marks
26113 The custom marks that the registry can use. You can modify the
26114 default list, if you like. If you do, you'll have to exit Emacs
26115 before they take effect (you can also unload the registry and reload
26116 it or evaluate the specific macros you'll need, but you probably don't
26117 want to bother). Use the Customize interface to modify the list.
26118
26119 By default this list has the @code{Important}, @code{Work},
26120 @code{Personal}, @code{To-Do}, and @code{Later} marks. They all have
26121 keyboard shortcuts like @kbd{M M i} for Important, using the first
26122 letter.
26123 @end defvar
26124
26125 @defun gnus-registry-mark-article
26126 Call this function to mark an article with a custom registry mark. It
26127 will offer the available marks for completion.
26128 @end defun
26129
26130 You can use @code{defalias} to install a summary line formatting
26131 function that will show the registry marks. There are two flavors of
26132 this function, either showing the marks as single characters, using
26133 their @code{:char} property, or showing the marks as full strings.
26134
26135 @lisp
26136 ;; show the marks as single characters (see the :char property in
26137 ;; 'gnus-registry-marks'):
26138 ;; (defalias 'gnus-user-format-function-M 'gnus-registry-article-marks-to-chars)
26139
26140 ;; show the marks by name (see 'gnus-registry-marks'):
26141 ;; (defalias 'gnus-user-format-function-M 'gnus-registry-article-marks-to-names)
26142 @end lisp
26143
26144
26145 @node Store arbitrary data
26146 @subsection Store arbitrary data
26147
26148 The registry has a simple API that uses a Message-ID as the key to
26149 store arbitrary data (as long as it can be converted to a list for
26150 storage).
26151
26152 @defun gnus-registry-set-id-key (id key value)
26153 Store @code{value} under @code{key} for message @code{id}.
26154 @end defun
26155
26156 @defun gnus-registry-get-id-key (id key)
26157 Get the data under @code{key} for message @code{id}.
26158 @end defun
26159
26160 @defvar gnus-registry-extra-entries-precious
26161 If any extra entries are precious, their presence will make the
26162 registry keep the whole entry forever, even if there are no groups for
26163 the Message-ID and if the size limit of the registry is reached. By
26164 default this is just @code{(marks)} so the custom registry marks are
26165 precious.
26166 @end defvar
26167
26168 @node Other modes
26169 @section Interaction with other modes
26170
26171 @subsection Dired
26172 @cindex dired
26173
26174 @code{gnus-dired-minor-mode} provides some useful functions for dired
26175 buffers. It is enabled with
26176 @lisp
26177 (add-hook 'dired-mode-hook 'turn-on-gnus-dired-mode)
26178 @end lisp
26179
26180 @table @kbd
26181 @item C-c C-m C-a
26182 @findex gnus-dired-attach
26183 @cindex attachments, selection via dired
26184 Send dired's marked files as an attachment (@code{gnus-dired-attach}).
26185 You will be prompted for a message buffer.
26186
26187 @item C-c C-m C-l
26188 @findex gnus-dired-find-file-mailcap
26189 Visit a file according to the appropriate mailcap entry
26190 (@code{gnus-dired-find-file-mailcap}). With prefix, open file in a new
26191 buffer.
26192
26193 @item C-c C-m C-p
26194 @findex gnus-dired-print
26195 Print file according to the mailcap entry (@code{gnus-dired-print}). If
26196 there is no print command, print in a PostScript image.
26197 @end table
26198
26199 @node Various Various
26200 @section Various Various
26201 @cindex mode lines
26202 @cindex highlights
26203
26204 @table @code
26205
26206 @item gnus-home-directory
26207 @vindex gnus-home-directory
26208 All Gnus file and directory variables will be initialized from this
26209 variable, which defaults to @file{~/}.
26210
26211 @item gnus-directory
26212 @vindex gnus-directory
26213 Most Gnus storage file and directory variables will be initialized from
26214 this variable, which defaults to the @env{SAVEDIR} environment
26215 variable, or @file{~/News/} if that variable isn't set.
26216
26217 Note that Gnus is mostly loaded when the @file{~/.gnus.el} file is read.
26218 This means that other directory variables that are initialized from this
26219 variable won't be set properly if you set this variable in
26220 @file{~/.gnus.el}. Set this variable in @file{.emacs} instead.
26221
26222 @item gnus-default-directory
26223 @vindex gnus-default-directory
26224 Not related to the above variable at all---this variable says what the
26225 default directory of all Gnus buffers should be. If you issue commands
26226 like @kbd{C-x C-f}, the prompt you'll get starts in the current buffer's
26227 default directory. If this variable is @code{nil} (which is the
26228 default), the default directory will be the default directory of the
26229 buffer you were in when you started Gnus.
26230
26231 @item gnus-verbose
26232 @vindex gnus-verbose
26233 This variable is an integer between zero and ten. The higher the value,
26234 the more messages will be displayed. If this variable is zero, Gnus
26235 will never flash any messages, if it is seven (which is the default),
26236 most important messages will be shown, and if it is ten, Gnus won't ever
26237 shut up, but will flash so many messages it will make your head swim.
26238
26239 @item gnus-verbose-backends
26240 @vindex gnus-verbose-backends
26241 This variable works the same way as @code{gnus-verbose}, but it applies
26242 to the Gnus back ends instead of Gnus proper.
26243
26244 @item gnus-add-timestamp-to-message
26245 @vindex gnus-add-timestamp-to-message
26246 This variable controls whether to add timestamps to messages that are
26247 controlled by @code{gnus-verbose} and @code{gnus-verbose-backends} and
26248 are issued. The default value is @code{nil} which means never to add
26249 timestamp. If it is @code{log}, add timestamps to only the messages
26250 that go into the @file{*Messages*} buffer (in XEmacs, it is the
26251 @w{@file{ *Message-Log*}} buffer). If it is neither @code{nil} nor
26252 @code{log}, add timestamps not only to log messages but also to the ones
26253 displayed in the echo area.
26254
26255 @item nnheader-max-head-length
26256 @vindex nnheader-max-head-length
26257 When the back ends read straight heads of articles, they all try to read
26258 as little as possible. This variable (default 8192) specifies
26259 the absolute max length the back ends will try to read before giving up
26260 on finding a separator line between the head and the body. If this
26261 variable is @code{nil}, there is no upper read bound. If it is
26262 @code{t}, the back ends won't try to read the articles piece by piece,
26263 but read the entire articles. This makes sense with some versions of
26264 @code{ange-ftp} or @code{efs}.
26265
26266 @item nnheader-head-chop-length
26267 @vindex nnheader-head-chop-length
26268 This variable (default 2048) says how big a piece of each article to
26269 read when doing the operation described above.
26270
26271 @item nnheader-file-name-translation-alist
26272 @vindex nnheader-file-name-translation-alist
26273 @cindex file names
26274 @cindex invalid characters in file names
26275 @cindex characters in file names
26276 This is an alist that says how to translate characters in file names.
26277 For instance, if @samp{:} is invalid as a file character in file names
26278 on your system (you OS/2 user you), you could say something like:
26279
26280 @lisp
26281 @group
26282 (setq nnheader-file-name-translation-alist
26283 '((?: . ?_)))
26284 @end group
26285 @end lisp
26286
26287 In fact, this is the default value for this variable on OS/2 and MS
26288 Windows (phooey) systems.
26289
26290 @item gnus-hidden-properties
26291 @vindex gnus-hidden-properties
26292 This is a list of properties to use to hide ``invisible'' text. It is
26293 @code{(invisible t intangible t)} by default on most systems, which
26294 makes invisible text invisible and intangible.
26295
26296 @item gnus-parse-headers-hook
26297 @vindex gnus-parse-headers-hook
26298 A hook called before parsing headers. It can be used, for instance, to
26299 gather statistics on the headers fetched, or perhaps you'd like to prune
26300 some headers. I don't see why you'd want that, though.
26301
26302 @item gnus-shell-command-separator
26303 @vindex gnus-shell-command-separator
26304 String used to separate two shell commands. The default is @samp{;}.
26305
26306 @item gnus-invalid-group-regexp
26307 @vindex gnus-invalid-group-regexp
26308
26309 Regexp to match ``invalid'' group names when querying user for a group
26310 name. The default value catches some @strong{really} invalid group
26311 names who could possibly mess up Gnus internally (like allowing
26312 @samp{:} in a group name, which is normally used to delimit method and
26313 group).
26314
26315 @acronym{IMAP} users might want to allow @samp{/} in group names though.
26316
26317 @item gnus-safe-html-newsgroups
26318 @vindex gnus-safe-html-newsgroups
26319 Groups in which links in html articles are considered all safe. The
26320 value may be a regexp matching those groups, a list of group names, or
26321 @code{nil}. This overrides @code{mm-w3m-safe-url-regexp}. The default
26322 value is @code{"\\`nnrss[+:]"}. This is effective only when emacs-w3m
26323 renders html articles, i.e., in the case @code{mm-text-html-renderer} is
26324 set to @code{w3m}. @xref{Display Customization, ,Display Customization,
26325 emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME Manual}.
26326
26327 @end table
26328
26329 @node The End
26330 @chapter The End
26331
26332 Well, that's the manual---you can get on with your life now. Keep in
26333 touch. Say hello to your cats from me.
26334
26335 My @strong{ghod}---I just can't stand goodbyes. Sniffle.
26336
26337 Ol' Charles Reznikoff said it pretty well, so I leave the floor to him:
26338
26339 @quotation
26340 @strong{Te Deum}
26341
26342 @sp 1
26343 Not because of victories @*
26344 I sing,@*
26345 having none,@*
26346 but for the common sunshine,@*
26347 the breeze,@*
26348 the largess of the spring.
26349
26350 @sp 1
26351 Not for victory@*
26352 but for the day's work done@*
26353 as well as I was able;@*
26354 not for a seat upon the dais@*
26355 but at the common table.@*
26356 @end quotation
26357
26358
26359 @node Appendices
26360 @chapter Appendices
26361
26362 @menu
26363 * XEmacs:: Requirements for installing under XEmacs.
26364 * History:: How Gnus got where it is today.
26365 * On Writing Manuals:: Why this is not a beginner's guide.
26366 * Terminology:: We use really difficult, like, words here.
26367 * Customization:: Tailoring Gnus to your needs.
26368 * Troubleshooting:: What you might try if things do not work.
26369 * Gnus Reference Guide:: Rilly, rilly technical stuff.
26370 * Emacs for Heathens:: A short introduction to Emacsian terms.
26371 * Frequently Asked Questions:: The Gnus FAQ
26372 @end menu
26373
26374
26375 @node XEmacs
26376 @section XEmacs
26377 @cindex XEmacs
26378 @cindex installing under XEmacs
26379
26380 XEmacs is distributed as a collection of packages. You should install
26381 whatever packages the Gnus XEmacs package requires. The current
26382 requirements are @samp{gnus}, @samp{mail-lib}, @samp{xemacs-base},
26383 @samp{eterm}, @samp{sh-script}, @samp{net-utils}, @samp{os-utils},
26384 @samp{dired}, @samp{mh-e}, @samp{sieve}, @samp{ps-print},
26385 @samp{pgg}, @samp{mailcrypt}, @samp{ecrypto}, and @samp{sasl}.
26386
26387
26388 @node History
26389 @section History
26390
26391 @cindex history
26392 @sc{gnus} was written by Masanobu @sc{Umeda}. When autumn crept up in
26393 '94, Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen grew bored and decided to rewrite Gnus.
26394
26395 If you want to investigate the person responsible for this outrage,
26396 you can point your (feh!) web browser to
26397 @uref{http://quimby.gnus.org/}. This is also the primary
26398 distribution point for the new and spiffy versions of Gnus, and is
26399 known as The Site That Destroys Newsrcs And Drives People Mad.
26400
26401 During the first extended alpha period of development, the new Gnus was
26402 called ``(ding) Gnus''. @dfn{(ding)} is, of course, short for
26403 @dfn{ding is not Gnus}, which is a total and utter lie, but who cares?
26404 (Besides, the ``Gnus'' in this abbreviation should probably be
26405 pronounced ``news'' as @sc{Umeda} intended, which makes it a more
26406 appropriate name, don't you think?)
26407
26408 In any case, after spending all that energy on coming up with a new and
26409 spunky name, we decided that the name was @emph{too} spunky, so we
26410 renamed it back again to ``Gnus''. But in mixed case. ``Gnus'' vs.
26411 ``@sc{gnus}''. New vs. old.
26412
26413 @menu
26414 * Gnus Versions:: What Gnus versions have been released.
26415 * Why?:: What's the point of Gnus?
26416 * Compatibility:: Just how compatible is Gnus with @sc{gnus}?
26417 * Conformity:: Gnus tries to conform to all standards.
26418 * Emacsen:: Gnus can be run on a few modern Emacsen.
26419 * Gnus Development:: How Gnus is developed.
26420 * Contributors:: Oodles of people.
26421 * New Features:: Pointers to some of the new stuff in Gnus.
26422 @end menu
26423
26424
26425 @node Gnus Versions
26426 @subsection Gnus Versions
26427 @cindex ding Gnus
26428 @cindex September Gnus
26429 @cindex Red Gnus
26430 @cindex Quassia Gnus
26431 @cindex Pterodactyl Gnus
26432 @cindex Oort Gnus
26433 @cindex No Gnus
26434 @cindex Ma Gnus
26435 @cindex Gnus versions
26436
26437 The first ``proper'' release of Gnus 5 was done in November 1995 when it
26438 was included in the Emacs 19.30 distribution (132 (ding) Gnus releases
26439 plus 15 Gnus 5.0 releases).
26440
26441 In May 1996 the next Gnus generation (aka. ``September Gnus'' (after 99
26442 releases)) was released under the name ``Gnus 5.2'' (40 releases).
26443
26444 On July 28th 1996 work on Red Gnus was begun, and it was released on
26445 January 25th 1997 (after 84 releases) as ``Gnus 5.4'' (67 releases).
26446
26447 On September 13th 1997, Quassia Gnus was started and lasted 37 releases.
26448 It was released as ``Gnus 5.6'' on March 8th 1998 (46 releases).
26449
26450 Gnus 5.6 begat Pterodactyl Gnus on August 29th 1998 and was released as
26451 ``Gnus 5.8'' (after 99 releases and a CVS repository) on December 3rd
26452 1999.
26453
26454 On the 26th of October 2000, Oort Gnus was begun and was released as
26455 Gnus 5.10 on May 1st 2003 (24 releases).
26456
26457 On the January 4th 2004, No Gnus was begun.
26458
26459 On April 19, 2010 Gnus development was moved to Git. See
26460 http://git.gnus.org for details (http://www.gnus.org will be updated
26461 with the information when possible).
26462
26463 On the January 31th 2012, Ma Gnus was begun.
26464
26465 If you happen upon a version of Gnus that has a prefixed name---``(ding)
26466 Gnus'', ``September Gnus'', ``Red Gnus'', ``Quassia Gnus'',
26467 ``Pterodactyl Gnus'', ``Oort Gnus'', ``No Gnus'', ``Ma Gnus''---don't
26468 panic. Don't let it know that you're frightened. Back away. Slowly.
26469 Whatever you do, don't run. Walk away, calmly, until you're out of
26470 its reach. Find a proper released version of Gnus and snuggle up to
26471 that instead.
26472
26473
26474 @node Why?
26475 @subsection Why?
26476
26477 What's the point of Gnus?
26478
26479 I want to provide a ``rad'', ``happening'', ``way cool'' and ``hep''
26480 newsreader, that lets you do anything you can think of. That was my
26481 original motivation, but while working on Gnus, it has become clear to
26482 me that this generation of newsreaders really belong in the stone age.
26483 Newsreaders haven't developed much since the infancy of the net. If the
26484 volume continues to rise with the current rate of increase, all current
26485 newsreaders will be pretty much useless. How do you deal with
26486 newsgroups that have thousands of new articles each day? How do you
26487 keep track of millions of people who post?
26488
26489 Gnus offers no real solutions to these questions, but I would very much
26490 like to see Gnus being used as a testing ground for new methods of
26491 reading and fetching news. Expanding on @sc{Umeda}-san's wise decision
26492 to separate the newsreader from the back ends, Gnus now offers a simple
26493 interface for anybody who wants to write new back ends for fetching mail
26494 and news from different sources. I have added hooks for customizations
26495 everywhere I could imagine it being useful. By doing so, I'm inviting
26496 every one of you to explore and invent.
26497
26498 May Gnus never be complete. @kbd{C-u 100 M-x all-hail-emacs} and
26499 @kbd{C-u 100 M-x all-hail-xemacs}.
26500
26501
26502 @node Compatibility
26503 @subsection Compatibility
26504
26505 @cindex compatibility
26506 Gnus was designed to be fully compatible with @sc{gnus}. Almost all key
26507 bindings have been kept. More key bindings have been added, of course,
26508 but only in one or two obscure cases have old bindings been changed.
26509
26510 Our motto is:
26511 @quotation
26512 @cartouche
26513 @center In a cloud bones of steel.
26514 @end cartouche
26515 @end quotation
26516
26517 All commands have kept their names. Some internal functions have changed
26518 their names.
26519
26520 The @code{gnus-uu} package has changed drastically. @xref{Decoding
26521 Articles}.
26522
26523 One major compatibility question is the presence of several summary
26524 buffers. All variables relevant while reading a group are
26525 buffer-local to the summary buffer they belong in. Although many
26526 important variables have their values copied into their global
26527 counterparts whenever a command is executed in the summary buffer, this
26528 change might lead to incorrect values being used unless you are careful.
26529
26530 All code that relies on knowledge of @sc{gnus} internals will probably
26531 fail. To take two examples: Sorting @code{gnus-newsrc-alist} (or
26532 changing it in any way, as a matter of fact) is strictly verboten. Gnus
26533 maintains a hash table that points to the entries in this alist (which
26534 speeds up many functions), and changing the alist directly will lead to
26535 peculiar results.
26536
26537 @cindex hilit19
26538 @cindex highlighting
26539 Old hilit19 code does not work at all. In fact, you should probably
26540 remove all hilit code from all Gnus hooks
26541 (@code{gnus-group-prepare-hook} and @code{gnus-summary-prepare-hook}).
26542 Gnus provides various integrated functions for highlighting. These are
26543 faster and more accurate. To make life easier for everybody, Gnus will
26544 by default remove all hilit calls from all hilit hooks. Uncleanliness!
26545 Away!
26546
26547 Packages like @code{expire-kill} will no longer work. As a matter of
26548 fact, you should probably remove all old @sc{gnus} packages (and other
26549 code) when you start using Gnus. More likely than not, Gnus already
26550 does what you have written code to make @sc{gnus} do. (Snicker.)
26551
26552 Even though old methods of doing things are still supported, only the
26553 new methods are documented in this manual. If you detect a new method of
26554 doing something while reading this manual, that does not mean you have
26555 to stop doing it the old way.
26556
26557 Gnus understands all @sc{gnus} startup files.
26558
26559 @kindex M-x gnus-bug
26560 @findex gnus-bug
26561 @cindex reporting bugs
26562 @cindex bugs
26563 Overall, a casual user who hasn't written much code that depends on
26564 @sc{gnus} internals should suffer no problems. If problems occur,
26565 please let me know by issuing that magic command @kbd{M-x gnus-bug}.
26566
26567 @vindex gnus-bug-create-help-buffer
26568 If you are in the habit of sending bug reports @emph{very} often, you
26569 may find the helpful help buffer annoying after a while. If so, set
26570 @code{gnus-bug-create-help-buffer} to @code{nil} to avoid having it pop
26571 up at you.
26572
26573
26574 @node Conformity
26575 @subsection Conformity
26576
26577 No rebels without a clue here, ma'am. We conform to all standards known
26578 to (wo)man. Except for those standards and/or conventions we disagree
26579 with, of course.
26580
26581 @table @strong
26582
26583 @item RFC (2)822
26584 @cindex RFC 822
26585 @cindex RFC 2822
26586 There are no known breaches of this standard.
26587
26588 @item RFC 1036
26589 @cindex RFC 1036
26590 There are no known breaches of this standard, either.
26591
26592 @item Son-of-RFC 1036
26593 @cindex Son-of-RFC 1036
26594 We do have some breaches to this one.
26595
26596 @table @emph
26597
26598 @item X-Newsreader
26599 @itemx User-Agent
26600 These are considered to be ``vanity headers'', while I consider them
26601 to be consumer information. After seeing so many badly formatted
26602 articles coming from @code{tin} and @code{Netscape} I know not to use
26603 either of those for posting articles. I would not have known that if
26604 it wasn't for the @code{X-Newsreader} header.
26605 @end table
26606
26607 @item USEFOR
26608 @cindex USEFOR
26609 USEFOR is an IETF working group writing a successor to RFC 1036, based
26610 on Son-of-RFC 1036. They have produced a number of drafts proposing
26611 various changes to the format of news articles. The Gnus towers will
26612 look into implementing the changes when the draft is accepted as an RFC.
26613
26614 @item MIME---RFC 2045--2049 etc
26615 @cindex @acronym{MIME}
26616 All the various @acronym{MIME} RFCs are supported.
26617
26618 @item Disposition Notifications---RFC 2298
26619 Message Mode is able to request notifications from the receiver.
26620
26621 @item PGP---RFC 1991 and RFC 2440
26622 @cindex RFC 1991
26623 @cindex RFC 2440
26624 RFC 1991 is the original @acronym{PGP} message specification,
26625 published as an informational RFC@. RFC 2440 was the follow-up, now
26626 called Open PGP, and put on the Standards Track. Both document a
26627 non-@acronym{MIME} aware @acronym{PGP} format. Gnus supports both
26628 encoding (signing and encryption) and decoding (verification and
26629 decryption).
26630
26631 @item PGP/MIME---RFC 2015/3156
26632 RFC 2015 (superseded by 3156 which references RFC 2440 instead of RFC
26633 1991) describes the @acronym{MIME}-wrapping around the RFC 1991/2440 format.
26634 Gnus supports both encoding and decoding.
26635
26636 @item S/MIME---RFC 2633
26637 RFC 2633 describes the @acronym{S/MIME} format.
26638
26639 @item IMAP---RFC 1730/2060, RFC 2195, RFC 2086, RFC 2359, RFC 2595, RFC 1731
26640 RFC 1730 is @acronym{IMAP} version 4, updated somewhat by RFC 2060
26641 (@acronym{IMAP} 4 revision 1). RFC 2195 describes CRAM-MD5
26642 authentication for @acronym{IMAP}. RFC 2086 describes access control
26643 lists (ACLs) for @acronym{IMAP}. RFC 2359 describes a @acronym{IMAP}
26644 protocol enhancement. RFC 2595 describes the proper @acronym{TLS}
26645 integration (STARTTLS) with @acronym{IMAP}. RFC 1731 describes the
26646 GSSAPI/Kerberos4 mechanisms for @acronym{IMAP}.
26647
26648 @end table
26649
26650 If you ever notice Gnus acting non-compliant with regards to the texts
26651 mentioned above, don't hesitate to drop a note to Gnus Towers and let us
26652 know.
26653
26654
26655 @node Emacsen
26656 @subsection Emacsen
26657 @cindex Emacsen
26658 @cindex XEmacs
26659 @cindex Mule
26660 @cindex Emacs
26661
26662 This version of Gnus should work on:
26663
26664 @itemize @bullet
26665
26666 @item
26667 Emacs 23.1 and up.
26668
26669 @item
26670 XEmacs 21.4 and up.
26671
26672 @end itemize
26673
26674 This Gnus version will absolutely not work on any Emacsen older than
26675 that. Not reliably, at least. Older versions of Gnus may work on older
26676 Emacs versions. Particularly, Gnus 5.10.8 should also work on Emacs
26677 20.7 and XEmacs 21.1.
26678
26679 @c No-merge comment: The paragraph added in v5-10 here must not be
26680 @c synced here!
26681
26682 @node Gnus Development
26683 @subsection Gnus Development
26684
26685 Gnus is developed in a two-phased cycle. The first phase involves much
26686 discussion on the development mailing list @samp{ding@@gnus.org}, where people
26687 propose changes and new features, post patches and new back ends. This
26688 phase is called the @dfn{alpha} phase, since the Gnusae released in this
26689 phase are @dfn{alpha releases}, or (perhaps more commonly in other
26690 circles) @dfn{snapshots}. During this phase, Gnus is assumed to be
26691 unstable and should not be used by casual users. Gnus alpha releases
26692 have names like ``Oort Gnus'' and ``No Gnus''. @xref{Gnus Versions}.
26693
26694 After futzing around for 10--100 alpha releases, Gnus is declared
26695 @dfn{frozen}, and only bug fixes are applied. Gnus loses the prefix,
26696 and is called things like ``Gnus 5.10.1'' instead. Normal people are
26697 supposed to be able to use these, and these are mostly discussed on the
26698 @samp{gnu.emacs.gnus} newsgroup. This newgroup is mirrored to the
26699 mailing list @samp{info-gnus-english@@gnu.org} which is carried on Gmane
26700 as @samp{gmane.emacs.gnus.user}. These releases are finally integrated
26701 in Emacs.
26702
26703 @cindex Incoming*
26704 @vindex mail-source-delete-incoming
26705 Some variable defaults differ between alpha Gnusae and released Gnusae,
26706 in particular, @code{mail-source-delete-incoming}. This is to prevent
26707 lossage of mail if an alpha release hiccups while handling the mail.
26708 @xref{Mail Source Customization}.
26709
26710 The division of discussion between the ding mailing list and the Gnus
26711 newsgroup is not purely based on publicity concerns. It's true that
26712 having people write about the horrible things that an alpha Gnus release
26713 can do (sometimes) in a public forum may scare people off, but more
26714 importantly, talking about new experimental features that have been
26715 introduced may confuse casual users. New features are frequently
26716 introduced, fiddled with, and judged to be found wanting, and then
26717 either discarded or totally rewritten. People reading the mailing list
26718 usually keep up with these rapid changes, while people on the newsgroup
26719 can't be assumed to do so.
26720
26721 So if you have problems with or questions about the alpha versions,
26722 direct those to the ding mailing list @samp{ding@@gnus.org}. This list
26723 is also available on Gmane as @samp{gmane.emacs.gnus.general}.
26724
26725 @cindex Incoming*
26726 @vindex mail-source-delete-incoming
26727 Some variable defaults differ between alpha Gnusae and released Gnusae,
26728 in particular, @code{mail-source-delete-incoming}. This is to prevent
26729 lossage of mail if an alpha release hiccups while handling the mail.
26730 @xref{Mail Source Customization}.
26731
26732 @node Contributors
26733 @subsection Contributors
26734 @cindex contributors
26735
26736 The new Gnus version couldn't have been done without the help of all the
26737 people on the (ding) mailing list. Every day for over a year I have
26738 gotten billions of nice bug reports from them, filling me with joy,
26739 every single one of them. Smooches. The people on the list have been
26740 tried beyond endurance, what with my ``oh, that's a neat idea <type
26741 type>, yup, I'll release it right away <ship off> no wait, that doesn't
26742 work at all <type type>, yup, I'll ship that one off right away <ship
26743 off> no, wait, that absolutely does not work'' policy for releases.
26744 Micro$oft---bah. Amateurs. I'm @emph{much} worse. (Or is that
26745 ``worser''? ``much worser''? ``worsest''?)
26746
26747 I would like to take this opportunity to thank the Academy for@dots{} oops,
26748 wrong show.
26749
26750 @itemize @bullet
26751
26752 @item
26753 Masanobu @sc{Umeda}---the writer of the original @sc{gnus}.
26754
26755 @item
26756 Shenghuo Zhu---uudecode.el, mm-uu.el, rfc1843.el,
26757 nnwarchive and many, many other things connected with @acronym{MIME} and
26758 other types of en/decoding, as well as general bug fixing, new
26759 functionality and stuff.
26760
26761 @item
26762 Per Abrahamsen---custom, scoring, highlighting and @sc{soup} code (as
26763 well as numerous other things).
26764
26765 @item
26766 Luis Fernandes---design and graphics.
26767
26768 @item
26769 Joe Reiss---creator of the smiley faces.
26770
26771 @item
26772 Justin Sheehy---the @acronym{FAQ} maintainer.
26773
26774 @item
26775 Erik Naggum---help, ideas, support, code and stuff.
26776
26777 @item
26778 Wes Hardaker---@file{gnus-picon.el} and the manual section on
26779 @dfn{picons} (@pxref{Picons}).
26780
26781 @item
26782 Kim-Minh Kaplan---further work on the picon code.
26783
26784 @item
26785 Brad Miller---@file{gnus-gl.el} and the GroupLens manual section.
26786
26787 @item
26788 Sudish Joseph---innumerable bug fixes.
26789
26790 @item
26791 Ilja Weis---@file{gnus-topic.el}.
26792
26793 @item
26794 Steven L. Baur---lots and lots and lots of bug detection and fixes.
26795
26796 @item
26797 Vladimir Alexiev---the refcard and reference booklets.
26798
26799 @item
26800 Felix Lee & Jamie Zawinski---I stole some pieces from the XGnus
26801 distribution by Felix Lee and JWZ.
26802
26803 @item
26804 Scott Byer---@file{nnfolder.el} enhancements & rewrite.
26805
26806 @item
26807 Peter Mutsaers---orphan article scoring code.
26808
26809 @item
26810 Ken Raeburn---POP mail support.
26811
26812 @item
26813 Hallvard B Furuseth---various bits and pieces, especially dealing with
26814 .newsrc files.
26815
26816 @item
26817 Brian Edmonds---@file{gnus-bbdb.el}.
26818
26819 @item
26820 David Moore---rewrite of @file{nnvirtual.el} and many other things.
26821
26822 @item
26823 Kevin Davidson---came up with the name @dfn{ding}, so blame him.
26824
26825 @item
26826 François Pinard---many, many interesting and thorough bug reports, as
26827 well as autoconf support.
26828
26829 @end itemize
26830
26831 This manual was proof-read by Adrian Aichner, with Ricardo Nassif, Mark
26832 Borges, and Jost Krieger proof-reading parts of the manual.
26833
26834 The following people have contributed many patches and suggestions:
26835
26836 Christopher Davis,
26837 Andrew Eskilsson,
26838 Kai Grossjohann,
26839 Kevin Greiner,
26840 Jesper Harder,
26841 Paul Jarc,
26842 Simon Josefsson,
26843 David K@aa{}gedal,
26844 Richard Pieri,
26845 Fabrice Popineau,
26846 Daniel Quinlan,
26847 Michael Shields,
26848 Reiner Steib,
26849 Jason L. Tibbitts, III,
26850 Jack Vinson,
26851 Katsumi Yamaoka, @c Yamaoka
26852 and
26853 Teodor Zlatanov.
26854
26855 Also thanks to the following for patches and stuff:
26856
26857 Jari Aalto,
26858 Adrian Aichner,
26859 Vladimir Alexiev,
26860 Russ Allbery,
26861 Peter Arius,
26862 Matt Armstrong,
26863 Marc Auslander,
26864 Miles Bader,
26865 Alexei V. Barantsev,
26866 Frank Bennett,
26867 Robert Bihlmeyer,
26868 Chris Bone,
26869 Mark Borges,
26870 Mark Boyns,
26871 Lance A. Brown,
26872 Rob Browning,
26873 Kees de Bruin,
26874 Martin Buchholz,
26875 Joe Buehler,
26876 Kevin Buhr,
26877 Alastair Burt,
26878 Joao Cachopo,
26879 Zlatko Calusic,
26880 Massimo Campostrini,
26881 Castor,
26882 David Charlap,
26883 Dan Christensen,
26884 Kevin Christian,
26885 Jae-you Chung, @c ?
26886 James H. Cloos, Jr.,
26887 Laura Conrad,
26888 Michael R. Cook,
26889 Glenn Coombs,
26890 Andrew J. Cosgriff,
26891 Neil Crellin,
26892 Frank D. Cringle,
26893 Geoffrey T. Dairiki,
26894 Andre Deparade,
26895 Ulrik Dickow,
26896 Dave Disser,
26897 Rui-Tao Dong, @c ?
26898 Joev Dubach,
26899 Michael Welsh Duggan,
26900 Dave Edmondson,
26901 Paul Eggert,
26902 Mark W. Eichin,
26903 Karl Eichwalder,
26904 Enami Tsugutomo, @c Enami
26905 Michael Ernst,
26906 Luc Van Eycken,
26907 Sam Falkner,
26908 Nelson Jose dos Santos Ferreira,
26909 Sigbjorn Finne,
26910 Sven Fischer,
26911 Paul Fisher,
26912 Decklin Foster,
26913 Gary D. Foster,
26914 Paul Franklin,
26915 Guy Geens,
26916 Arne Georg Gleditsch,
26917 David S. Goldberg,
26918 Michelangelo Grigni,
26919 Dale Hagglund,
26920 D. Hall,
26921 Magnus Hammerin,
26922 Kenichi Handa, @c Handa
26923 Raja R. Harinath,
26924 Yoshiki Hayashi, @c Hayashi
26925 P. E. Jareth Hein,
26926 Hisashige Kenji, @c Hisashige
26927 Scott Hofmann,
26928 Tassilo Horn,
26929 Marc Horowitz,
26930 Gunnar Horrigmo,
26931 Richard Hoskins,
26932 Brad Howes,
26933 Miguel de Icaza,
26934 François Felix Ingrand,
26935 Tatsuya Ichikawa, @c Ichikawa
26936 Ishikawa Ichiro, @c Ishikawa
26937 Lee Iverson,
26938 Iwamuro Motonori, @c Iwamuro
26939 Rajappa Iyer,
26940 Andreas Jaeger,
26941 Adam P. Jenkins,
26942 Randell Jesup,
26943 Fred Johansen,
26944 Gareth Jones,
26945 Greg Klanderman,
26946 Karl Kleinpaste,
26947 Michael Klingbeil,
26948 Peter Skov Knudsen,
26949 Shuhei Kobayashi, @c Kobayashi
26950 Petr Konecny,
26951 Koseki Yoshinori, @c Koseki
26952 Thor Kristoffersen,
26953 Jens Lautenbacher,
26954 Martin Larose,
26955 Seokchan Lee, @c Lee
26956 Joerg Lenneis,
26957 Carsten Leonhardt,
26958 James LewisMoss,
26959 Christian Limpach,
26960 Markus Linnala,
26961 Dave Love,
26962 Mike McEwan,
26963 Tonny Madsen,
26964 Shlomo Mahlab,
26965 Nat Makarevitch,
26966 Istvan Marko,
26967 David Martin,
26968 Jason R. Mastaler,
26969 Gordon Matzigkeit,
26970 Timo Metzemakers,
26971 Richard Mlynarik,
26972 Lantz Moore,
26973 Morioka Tomohiko, @c Morioka
26974 Erik Toubro Nielsen,
26975 Hrvoje Niksic,
26976 Andy Norman,
26977 Fred Oberhauser,
26978 C. R. Oldham,
26979 Alexandre Oliva,
26980 Ken Olstad,
26981 Masaharu Onishi, @c Onishi
26982 Hideki Ono, @c Ono
26983 Ettore Perazzoli,
26984 William Perry,
26985 Stephen Peters,
26986 Jens-Ulrik Holger Petersen,
26987 Ulrich Pfeifer,
26988 Matt Pharr,
26989 Andy Piper,
26990 John McClary Prevost,
26991 Bill Pringlemeir,
26992 Mike Pullen,
26993 Jim Radford,
26994 Colin Rafferty,
26995 Lasse Rasinen,
26996 Lars Balker Rasmussen,
26997 Joe Reiss,
26998 Renaud Rioboo,
26999 Roland B. Roberts,
27000 Bart Robinson,
27001 Christian von Roques,
27002 Markus Rost,
27003 Jason Rumney,
27004 Wolfgang Rupprecht,
27005 Jay Sachs,
27006 Dewey M. Sasser,
27007 Conrad Sauerwald,
27008 Loren Schall,
27009 Dan Schmidt,
27010 Ralph Schleicher,
27011 Philippe Schnoebelen,
27012 Andreas Schwab,
27013 Randal L. Schwartz,
27014 Danny Siu,
27015 Matt Simmons,
27016 Paul D. Smith,
27017 Jeff Sparkes,
27018 Toby Speight,
27019 Michael Sperber,
27020 Darren Stalder,
27021 Richard Stallman,
27022 Greg Stark,
27023 Sam Steingold,
27024 Paul Stevenson,
27025 Jonas Steverud,
27026 Paul Stodghill,
27027 Kiyokazu Suto, @c Suto
27028 Kurt Swanson,
27029 Samuel Tardieu,
27030 Teddy,
27031 Chuck Thompson,
27032 Tozawa Akihiko, @c Tozawa
27033 Philippe Troin,
27034 James Troup,
27035 Trung Tran-Duc,
27036 Jack Twilley,
27037 Aaron M. Ucko,
27038 Aki Vehtari,
27039 Didier Verna,
27040 Vladimir Volovich,
27041 Jan Vroonhof,
27042 Stefan Waldherr,
27043 Pete Ware,
27044 Barry A. Warsaw,
27045 Christoph Wedler,
27046 Joe Wells,
27047 Lee Willis,
27048 and
27049 Lloyd Zusman.
27050
27051
27052 For a full overview of what each person has done, the ChangeLogs
27053 included in the Gnus alpha distributions should give ample reading
27054 (550kB and counting).
27055
27056 Apologies to everybody that I've forgotten, of which there are many, I'm
27057 sure.
27058
27059 Gee, that's quite a list of people. I guess that must mean that there
27060 actually are people who are using Gnus. Who'd'a thunk it!
27061
27062
27063 @node New Features
27064 @subsection New Features
27065 @cindex new features
27066
27067 @menu
27068 * ding Gnus:: New things in Gnus 5.0/5.1, the first new Gnus.
27069 * September Gnus:: The Thing Formally Known As Gnus 5.2/5.3.
27070 * Red Gnus:: Third time best---Gnus 5.4/5.5.
27071 * Quassia Gnus:: Two times two is four, or Gnus 5.6/5.7.
27072 * Pterodactyl Gnus:: Pentad also starts with P, AKA Gnus 5.8/5.9.
27073 * Oort Gnus:: It's big. It's far out. Gnus 5.10/5.11.
27074 * No Gnus:: Very punny. Gnus 5.12/5.13.
27075 * Ma Gnus:: Celebrating 25 years of Gnus.
27076 @end menu
27077
27078 These lists are, of course, just @emph{short} overviews of the
27079 @emph{most} important new features. No, really. There are tons more.
27080 Yes, we have feeping creaturism in full effect.
27081
27082 @node ding Gnus
27083 @subsubsection (ding) Gnus
27084
27085 New features in Gnus 5.0/5.1:
27086
27087 @itemize @bullet
27088
27089 @item
27090 The look of all buffers can be changed by setting format-like variables
27091 (@pxref{Group Buffer Format} and @pxref{Summary Buffer Format}).
27092
27093 @item
27094 Local spool and several @acronym{NNTP} servers can be used at once
27095 (@pxref{Select Methods}).
27096
27097 @item
27098 You can combine groups into virtual groups (@pxref{Virtual Groups}).
27099
27100 @item
27101 You can read a number of different mail formats (@pxref{Getting Mail}).
27102 All the mail back ends implement a convenient mail expiry scheme
27103 (@pxref{Expiring Mail}).
27104
27105 @item
27106 Gnus can use various strategies for gathering threads that have lost
27107 their roots (thereby gathering loose sub-threads into one thread) or it
27108 can go back and retrieve enough headers to build a complete thread
27109 (@pxref{Customizing Threading}).
27110
27111 @item
27112 Killed groups can be displayed in the group buffer, and you can read
27113 them as well (@pxref{Listing Groups}).
27114
27115 @item
27116 Gnus can do partial group updates---you do not have to retrieve the
27117 entire active file just to check for new articles in a few groups
27118 (@pxref{The Active File}).
27119
27120 @item
27121 Gnus implements a sliding scale of subscribedness to groups
27122 (@pxref{Group Levels}).
27123
27124 @item
27125 You can score articles according to any number of criteria
27126 (@pxref{Scoring}). You can even get Gnus to find out how to score
27127 articles for you (@pxref{Adaptive Scoring}).
27128
27129 @item
27130 Gnus maintains a dribble buffer that is auto-saved the normal Emacs
27131 manner, so it should be difficult to lose much data on what you have
27132 read if your machine should go down (@pxref{Auto Save}).
27133
27134 @item
27135 Gnus now has its own startup file (@file{~/.gnus.el}) to avoid
27136 cluttering up the @file{.emacs} file.
27137
27138 @item
27139 You can set the process mark on both groups and articles and perform
27140 operations on all the marked items (@pxref{Process/Prefix}).
27141
27142 @item
27143 You can list subsets of groups according to, well, anything
27144 (@pxref{Listing Groups}).
27145
27146 @item
27147 You can browse foreign servers and subscribe to groups from those
27148 servers (@pxref{Browse Foreign Server}).
27149
27150 @item
27151 Gnus can fetch articles, asynchronously, on a second connection to the
27152 server (@pxref{Asynchronous Fetching}).
27153
27154 @item
27155 You can cache articles locally (@pxref{Article Caching}).
27156
27157 @item
27158 The uudecode functions have been expanded and generalized
27159 (@pxref{Decoding Articles}).
27160
27161 @item
27162 You can still post uuencoded articles, which was a little-known feature
27163 of @sc{gnus}' past (@pxref{Uuencoding and Posting}).
27164
27165 @item
27166 Fetching parents (and other articles) now actually works without
27167 glitches (@pxref{Finding the Parent}).
27168
27169 @item
27170 Gnus can fetch @acronym{FAQ}s and group descriptions (@pxref{Group Information}).
27171
27172 @item
27173 Digests (and other files) can be used as the basis for groups
27174 (@pxref{Document Groups}).
27175
27176 @item
27177 Articles can be highlighted and customized (@pxref{Customizing
27178 Articles}).
27179
27180 @item
27181 URLs and other external references can be buttonized (@pxref{Article
27182 Buttons}).
27183
27184 @item
27185 You can do lots of strange stuff with the Gnus window & frame
27186 configuration (@pxref{Window Layout}).
27187
27188 @end itemize
27189
27190
27191 @node September Gnus
27192 @subsubsection September Gnus
27193
27194 @iftex
27195 @iflatex
27196 \gnusfig{-28cm}{0cm}{\epsfig{figure=ps/september,height=20cm}}
27197 @end iflatex
27198 @end iftex
27199
27200 New features in Gnus 5.2/5.3:
27201
27202 @itemize @bullet
27203
27204 @item
27205 A new message composition mode is used. All old customization variables
27206 for @code{mail-mode}, @code{rnews-reply-mode} and @code{gnus-msg} are
27207 now obsolete.
27208
27209 @item
27210 Gnus is now able to generate @dfn{sparse} threads---threads where
27211 missing articles are represented by empty nodes (@pxref{Customizing
27212 Threading}).
27213
27214 @lisp
27215 (setq gnus-build-sparse-threads 'some)
27216 @end lisp
27217
27218 @item
27219 Outgoing articles are stored on a special archive server
27220 (@pxref{Archived Messages}).
27221
27222 @item
27223 Partial thread regeneration now happens when articles are
27224 referred.
27225
27226 @item
27227 Gnus can make use of GroupLens predictions.
27228
27229 @item
27230 Picons (personal icons) can be displayed under XEmacs (@pxref{Picons}).
27231
27232 @item
27233 A @code{trn}-like tree buffer can be displayed (@pxref{Tree Display}).
27234
27235 @lisp
27236 (setq gnus-use-trees t)
27237 @end lisp
27238
27239 @item
27240 An @code{nn}-like pick-and-read minor mode is available for the summary
27241 buffers (@pxref{Pick and Read}).
27242
27243 @lisp
27244 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-mode-hook 'gnus-pick-mode)
27245 @end lisp
27246
27247 @item
27248 In binary groups you can use a special binary minor mode (@pxref{Binary
27249 Groups}).
27250
27251 @item
27252 Groups can be grouped in a folding topic hierarchy (@pxref{Group
27253 Topics}).
27254
27255 @lisp
27256 (add-hook 'gnus-group-mode-hook 'gnus-topic-mode)
27257 @end lisp
27258
27259 @item
27260 Gnus can re-send and bounce mail (@pxref{Summary Mail Commands}).
27261
27262 @item
27263 Groups can now have a score, and bubbling based on entry frequency
27264 is possible (@pxref{Group Score}).
27265
27266 @lisp
27267 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-exit-hook 'gnus-summary-bubble-group)
27268 @end lisp
27269
27270 @item
27271 Groups can be process-marked, and commands can be performed on
27272 groups of groups (@pxref{Marking Groups}).
27273
27274 @item
27275 Caching is possible in virtual groups.
27276
27277 @item
27278 @code{nndoc} now understands all kinds of digests, mail boxes, rnews
27279 news batches, ClariNet briefs collections, and just about everything
27280 else (@pxref{Document Groups}).
27281
27282 @item
27283 Gnus has a new back end (@code{nnsoup}) to create/read SOUP packets.
27284
27285 @item
27286 The Gnus cache is much faster.
27287
27288 @item
27289 Groups can be sorted according to many criteria (@pxref{Sorting
27290 Groups}).
27291
27292 @item
27293 New group parameters have been introduced to set list-addresses and
27294 expiry times (@pxref{Group Parameters}).
27295
27296 @item
27297 All formatting specs allow specifying faces to be used
27298 (@pxref{Formatting Fonts}).
27299
27300 @item
27301 There are several more commands for setting/removing/acting on process
27302 marked articles on the @kbd{M P} submap (@pxref{Setting Process Marks}).
27303
27304 @item
27305 The summary buffer can be limited to show parts of the available
27306 articles based on a wide range of criteria. These commands have been
27307 bound to keys on the @kbd{/} submap (@pxref{Limiting}).
27308
27309 @item
27310 Articles can be made persistent with the @kbd{*} command
27311 (@pxref{Persistent Articles}).
27312
27313 @item
27314 All functions for hiding article elements are now toggles.
27315
27316 @item
27317 Article headers can be buttonized (@pxref{Article Washing}).
27318
27319 @item
27320 All mail back ends support fetching articles by @code{Message-ID}.
27321
27322 @item
27323 Duplicate mail can now be treated properly (@pxref{Duplicates}).
27324
27325 @item
27326 All summary mode commands are available directly from the article
27327 buffer (@pxref{Article Keymap}).
27328
27329 @item
27330 Frames can be part of @code{gnus-buffer-configuration} (@pxref{Window
27331 Layout}).
27332
27333 @item
27334 Mail can be re-scanned by a daemonic process (@pxref{Daemons}).
27335 @iftex
27336 @iflatex
27337 \marginpar[\mbox{}\hfill\epsfig{figure=ps/fseptember,height=5cm}]{\epsfig{figure=ps/fseptember,height=5cm}}
27338 @end iflatex
27339 @end iftex
27340
27341 @item
27342 Groups can be made permanently visible (@pxref{Listing Groups}).
27343
27344 @lisp
27345 (setq gnus-permanently-visible-groups "^nnml:")
27346 @end lisp
27347
27348 @item
27349 Many new hooks have been introduced to make customizing easier.
27350
27351 @item
27352 Gnus respects the @code{Mail-Copies-To} header.
27353
27354 @item
27355 Threads can be gathered by looking at the @code{References} header
27356 (@pxref{Customizing Threading}).
27357
27358 @lisp
27359 (setq gnus-summary-thread-gathering-function
27360 'gnus-gather-threads-by-references)
27361 @end lisp
27362
27363 @item
27364 Read articles can be stored in a special backlog buffer to avoid
27365 refetching (@pxref{Article Backlog}).
27366
27367 @lisp
27368 (setq gnus-keep-backlog 50)
27369 @end lisp
27370
27371 @item
27372 A clean copy of the current article is always stored in a separate
27373 buffer to allow easier treatment.
27374
27375 @item
27376 Gnus can suggest where to save articles (@pxref{Saving Articles}).
27377
27378 @item
27379 Gnus doesn't have to do as much prompting when saving (@pxref{Saving
27380 Articles}).
27381
27382 @lisp
27383 (setq gnus-prompt-before-saving t)
27384 @end lisp
27385
27386 @item
27387 @code{gnus-uu} can view decoded files asynchronously while fetching
27388 articles (@pxref{Other Decode Variables}).
27389
27390 @lisp
27391 (setq gnus-uu-grabbed-file-functions 'gnus-uu-grab-view)
27392 @end lisp
27393
27394 @item
27395 Filling in the article buffer now works properly on cited text
27396 (@pxref{Article Washing}).
27397
27398 @item
27399 Hiding cited text adds buttons to toggle hiding, and how much
27400 cited text to hide is now customizable (@pxref{Article Hiding}).
27401
27402 @lisp
27403 (setq gnus-cited-lines-visible 2)
27404 @end lisp
27405
27406 @item
27407 Boring headers can be hidden (@pxref{Article Hiding}).
27408
27409 @item
27410 Default scoring values can now be set from the menu bar.
27411
27412 @item
27413 Further syntax checking of outgoing articles have been added.
27414
27415 @end itemize
27416
27417
27418 @node Red Gnus
27419 @subsubsection Red Gnus
27420
27421 New features in Gnus 5.4/5.5:
27422
27423 @iftex
27424 @iflatex
27425 \gnusfig{-5.5cm}{-4cm}{\epsfig{figure=ps/red,height=20cm}}
27426 @end iflatex
27427 @end iftex
27428
27429 @itemize @bullet
27430
27431 @item
27432 @file{nntp.el} has been totally rewritten in an asynchronous fashion.
27433
27434 @item
27435 Article prefetching functionality has been moved up into
27436 Gnus (@pxref{Asynchronous Fetching}).
27437
27438 @item
27439 Scoring can now be performed with logical operators like @code{and},
27440 @code{or}, @code{not}, and parent redirection (@pxref{Advanced
27441 Scoring}).
27442
27443 @item
27444 Article washing status can be displayed in the
27445 article mode line (@pxref{Misc Article}).
27446
27447 @item
27448 @file{gnus.el} has been split into many smaller files.
27449
27450 @item
27451 Suppression of duplicate articles based on Message-ID can be done
27452 (@pxref{Duplicate Suppression}).
27453
27454 @lisp
27455 (setq gnus-suppress-duplicates t)
27456 @end lisp
27457
27458 @item
27459 New variables for specifying what score and adapt files are to be
27460 considered home score and adapt files (@pxref{Home Score File}) have
27461 been added.
27462
27463 @item
27464 @code{nndoc} was rewritten to be easily extensible (@pxref{Document
27465 Server Internals}).
27466
27467 @item
27468 Groups can inherit group parameters from parent topics (@pxref{Topic
27469 Parameters}).
27470
27471 @item
27472 Article editing has been revamped and is now actually usable.
27473
27474 @item
27475 Signatures can be recognized in more intelligent fashions
27476 (@pxref{Article Signature}).
27477
27478 @item
27479 Summary pick mode has been made to look more @code{nn}-like. Line
27480 numbers are displayed and the @kbd{.} command can be used to pick
27481 articles (@code{Pick and Read}).
27482
27483 @item
27484 Commands for moving the @file{.newsrc.eld} from one server to
27485 another have been added (@pxref{Changing Servers}).
27486
27487 @item
27488 There's a way now to specify that ``uninteresting'' fields be suppressed
27489 when generating lines in buffers (@pxref{Advanced Formatting}).
27490
27491 @item
27492 Several commands in the group buffer can be undone with @kbd{C-M-_}
27493 (@pxref{Undo}).
27494
27495 @item
27496 Scoring can be done on words using the new score type @code{w}
27497 (@pxref{Score File Format}).
27498
27499 @item
27500 Adaptive scoring can be done on a Subject word-by-word basis
27501 (@pxref{Adaptive Scoring}).
27502
27503 @lisp
27504 (setq gnus-use-adaptive-scoring '(word))
27505 @end lisp
27506
27507 @item
27508 Scores can be decayed (@pxref{Score Decays}).
27509
27510 @lisp
27511 (setq gnus-decay-scores t)
27512 @end lisp
27513
27514 @item
27515 Scoring can be performed using a regexp on the Date header. The Date is
27516 normalized to compact ISO 8601 format first (@pxref{Score File Format}).
27517
27518 @item
27519 A new command has been added to remove all data on articles from
27520 the native server (@pxref{Changing Servers}).
27521
27522 @item
27523 A new command for reading collections of documents
27524 (@code{nndoc} with @code{nnvirtual} on top) has been added---@kbd{C-M-d}
27525 (@pxref{Really Various Summary Commands}).
27526
27527 @item
27528 Process mark sets can be pushed and popped (@pxref{Setting Process
27529 Marks}).
27530
27531 @item
27532 A new mail-to-news back end makes it possible to post even when the @acronym{NNTP}
27533 server doesn't allow posting (@pxref{Mail-To-News Gateways}).
27534
27535 @item
27536 A new back end for reading searches from Web search engines
27537 (@dfn{DejaNews}, @dfn{Alta Vista}, @dfn{InReference}) has been added
27538 (@pxref{Web Searches}).
27539
27540 @item
27541 Groups inside topics can now be sorted using the standard sorting
27542 functions, and each topic can be sorted independently (@pxref{Topic
27543 Sorting}).
27544
27545 @item
27546 Subsets of the groups can be sorted independently (@code{Sorting
27547 Groups}).
27548
27549 @item
27550 Cached articles can be pulled into the groups (@pxref{Summary Generation
27551 Commands}).
27552 @iftex
27553 @iflatex
27554 \marginpar[\mbox{}\hfill\epsfig{figure=ps/fred,width=3cm}]{\epsfig{figure=ps/fred,width=3cm}}
27555 @end iflatex
27556 @end iftex
27557
27558 @item
27559 Score files are now applied in a more reliable order (@pxref{Score
27560 Variables}).
27561
27562 @item
27563 Reports on where mail messages end up can be generated (@pxref{Splitting
27564 Mail}).
27565
27566 @item
27567 More hooks and functions have been added to remove junk from incoming
27568 mail before saving the mail (@pxref{Washing Mail}).
27569
27570 @item
27571 Emphasized text can be properly fontisized:
27572
27573 @end itemize
27574
27575
27576 @node Quassia Gnus
27577 @subsubsection Quassia Gnus
27578
27579 New features in Gnus 5.6:
27580
27581 @itemize @bullet
27582
27583 @item
27584 New functionality for using Gnus as an offline newsreader has been
27585 added. A plethora of new commands and modes have been added.
27586 @xref{Gnus Unplugged}, for the full story.
27587
27588 @item
27589 The @code{nndraft} back end has returned, but works differently than
27590 before. All Message buffers are now also articles in the @code{nndraft}
27591 group, which is created automatically.
27592
27593 @item
27594 @code{gnus-alter-header-function} can now be used to alter header
27595 values.
27596
27597 @item
27598 @code{gnus-summary-goto-article} now accept Message-IDs.
27599
27600 @item
27601 A new Message command for deleting text in the body of a message
27602 outside the region: @kbd{C-c C-v}.
27603
27604 @item
27605 You can now post to component group in @code{nnvirtual} groups with
27606 @kbd{C-u C-c C-c}.
27607
27608 @item
27609 @code{nntp-rlogin-program}---new variable to ease customization.
27610
27611 @item
27612 @code{C-u C-c C-c} in @code{gnus-article-edit-mode} will now inhibit
27613 re-highlighting of the article buffer.
27614
27615 @item
27616 New element in @code{gnus-boring-article-headers}---@code{long-to}.
27617
27618 @item
27619 @kbd{M-i} symbolic prefix command. @xref{Symbolic Prefixes}, for
27620 details.
27621
27622 @item
27623 @kbd{L} and @kbd{I} in the summary buffer now take the symbolic prefix
27624 @kbd{a} to add the score rule to the @file{all.SCORE} file.
27625
27626 @item
27627 @code{gnus-simplify-subject-functions} variable to allow greater
27628 control over simplification.
27629
27630 @item
27631 @kbd{A T}---new command for fetching the current thread.
27632
27633 @item
27634 @kbd{/ T}---new command for including the current thread in the
27635 limit.
27636
27637 @item
27638 @kbd{M-RET} is a new Message command for breaking cited text.
27639
27640 @item
27641 @samp{\\1}-expressions are now valid in @code{nnmail-split-methods}.
27642
27643 @item
27644 The @code{custom-face-lookup} function has been removed.
27645 If you used this function in your initialization files, you must
27646 rewrite them to use @code{face-spec-set} instead.
27647
27648 @item
27649 Canceling now uses the current select method. Symbolic prefix
27650 @kbd{a} forces normal posting method.
27651
27652 @item
27653 New command to translate M******** sm*rtq**t*s into proper
27654 text---@kbd{W d}.
27655
27656 @item
27657 For easier debugging of @code{nntp}, you can set
27658 @code{nntp-record-commands} to a non-@code{nil} value.
27659
27660 @item
27661 @code{nntp} now uses @file{~/.authinfo}, a @file{.netrc}-like file, for
27662 controlling where and how to send @sc{authinfo} to @acronym{NNTP} servers.
27663
27664 @item
27665 A command for editing group parameters from the summary buffer
27666 has been added.
27667
27668 @item
27669 A history of where mails have been split is available.
27670
27671 @item
27672 A new article date command has been added---@code{article-date-iso8601}.
27673
27674 @item
27675 Subjects can be simplified when threading by setting
27676 @code{gnus-score-thread-simplify}.
27677
27678 @item
27679 A new function for citing in Message has been
27680 added---@code{message-cite-original-without-signature}.
27681
27682 @item
27683 @code{article-strip-all-blank-lines}---new article command.
27684
27685 @item
27686 A new Message command to kill to the end of the article has
27687 been added.
27688
27689 @item
27690 A minimum adaptive score can be specified by using the
27691 @code{gnus-adaptive-word-minimum} variable.
27692
27693 @item
27694 The ``lapsed date'' article header can be kept continually
27695 updated by the @code{gnus-start-date-timer} command.
27696
27697 @item
27698 Web listserv archives can be read with the @code{nnlistserv} back end.
27699
27700 @item
27701 Old dejanews archives can now be read by @code{nnweb}.
27702
27703 @end itemize
27704
27705 @node Pterodactyl Gnus
27706 @subsubsection Pterodactyl Gnus
27707
27708 New features in Gnus 5.8:
27709
27710 @itemize @bullet
27711
27712 @item
27713 The mail-fetching functions have changed. See the manual for the
27714 many details. In particular, all procmail fetching variables are gone.
27715
27716 If you used procmail like in
27717
27718 @lisp
27719 (setq nnmail-use-procmail t)
27720 (setq nnmail-spool-file 'procmail)
27721 (setq nnmail-procmail-directory "~/mail/incoming/")
27722 (setq nnmail-procmail-suffix "\\.in")
27723 @end lisp
27724
27725 this now has changed to
27726
27727 @lisp
27728 (setq mail-sources
27729 '((directory :path "~/mail/incoming/"
27730 :suffix ".in")))
27731 @end lisp
27732
27733 @xref{Mail Source Specifiers}.
27734
27735 @item
27736 Gnus is now a @acronym{MIME}-capable reader. This affects many parts of
27737 Gnus, and adds a slew of new commands. See the manual for details.
27738
27739 @item
27740 Gnus has also been multilingualized. This also affects too
27741 many parts of Gnus to summarize here, and adds many new variables.
27742
27743 @item
27744 @code{gnus-auto-select-first} can now be a function to be
27745 called to position point.
27746
27747 @item
27748 The user can now decide which extra headers should be included in
27749 summary buffers and @acronym{NOV} files.
27750
27751 @item
27752 @code{gnus-article-display-hook} has been removed. Instead, a number
27753 of variables starting with @code{gnus-treat-} have been added.
27754
27755 @item
27756 The Gnus posting styles have been redone again and now works in a
27757 subtly different manner.
27758
27759 @item
27760 New web-based back ends have been added: @code{nnslashdot},
27761 @code{nnwarchive} and @code{nnultimate}. nnweb has been revamped,
27762 again, to keep up with ever-changing layouts.
27763
27764 @item
27765 Gnus can now read @acronym{IMAP} mail via @code{nnimap}.
27766
27767 @end itemize
27768
27769 @node Oort Gnus
27770 @subsubsection Oort Gnus
27771 @cindex Oort Gnus
27772
27773 New features in Gnus 5.10:
27774
27775 @itemize @bullet
27776
27777 @item Installation changes
27778 @c ***********************
27779
27780 @itemize @bullet
27781 @item
27782 Upgrading from previous (stable) version if you have used Oort.
27783
27784 If you have tried Oort (the unstable Gnus branch leading to this
27785 release) but went back to a stable version, be careful when upgrading to
27786 this version. In particular, you will probably want to remove all
27787 @file{.marks} (nnml) and @file{.mrk} (nnfolder) files, so that flags are
27788 read from your @file{.newsrc.eld} instead of from the
27789 @file{.marks}/@file{.mrk} file where this release store flags. See a
27790 later entry for more information about marks. Note that downgrading
27791 isn't save in general.
27792
27793 @item
27794 Lisp files are now installed in @file{.../site-lisp/gnus/} by default.
27795 It defaulted to @file{.../site-lisp/} formerly. In addition to this,
27796 the new installer issues a warning if other Gnus installations which
27797 will shadow the latest one are detected. You can then remove those
27798 shadows manually or remove them using @code{make
27799 remove-installed-shadows}.
27800
27801 @item
27802 New @file{make.bat} for compiling and installing Gnus under MS Windows
27803
27804 Use @file{make.bat} if you want to install Gnus under MS Windows, the
27805 first argument to the batch-program should be the directory where
27806 @file{xemacs.exe} respectively @file{emacs.exe} is located, if you want
27807 to install Gnus after compiling it, give @file{make.bat} @code{/copy} as
27808 the second parameter.
27809
27810 @file{make.bat} has been rewritten from scratch, it now features
27811 automatic recognition of XEmacs and Emacs, generates
27812 @file{gnus-load.el}, checks if errors occur while compilation and
27813 generation of info files and reports them at the end of the build
27814 process. It now uses @code{makeinfo} if it is available and falls
27815 back to @file{infohack.el} otherwise. @file{make.bat} should now
27816 install all files which are necessary to run Gnus and be generally a
27817 complete replacement for the @code{configure; make; make install}
27818 cycle used under Unix systems.
27819
27820 The new @file{make.bat} makes @file{make-x.bat} and @file{xemacs.mak}
27821 superfluous, so they have been removed.
27822
27823 @item
27824 @file{~/News/overview/} not used.
27825
27826 As a result of the following change, the @file{~/News/overview/}
27827 directory is not used any more. You can safely delete the entire
27828 hierarchy.
27829
27830 @c FIXME: 'gnus-load' is mentioned in README, which is not included in
27831 @c the repository. We should find a better place for this item.
27832 @item
27833 @code{(require 'gnus-load)}
27834
27835 If you use a stand-alone Gnus distribution, you'd better add
27836 @code{(require 'gnus-load)} into your @file{~/.emacs} after adding the Gnus
27837 lisp directory into load-path.
27838
27839 File @file{gnus-load.el} contains autoload commands, functions and variables,
27840 some of which may not be included in distributions of Emacsen.
27841
27842 @end itemize
27843
27844 @item New packages and libraries within Gnus
27845 @c *****************************************
27846
27847 @itemize @bullet
27848
27849 @item
27850 The revised Gnus @acronym{FAQ} is included in the manual,
27851 @xref{Frequently Asked Questions}.
27852
27853 @item
27854 @acronym{TLS} wrapper shipped with Gnus
27855
27856 @acronym{TLS}/@acronym{SSL} is now supported in @acronym{IMAP} and
27857 @acronym{NNTP} via @file{tls.el} and GnuTLS.
27858
27859 @item
27860 Improved anti-spam features.
27861
27862 Gnus is now able to take out spam from your mail and news streams
27863 using a wide variety of programs and filter rules. Among the supported
27864 methods are RBL blocklists, bogofilter and white/blacklists. Hooks
27865 for easy use of external packages such as SpamAssassin and Hashcash
27866 are also new. @ref{Thwarting Email Spam} and @ref{Spam Package}.
27867 @c FIXME: @xref{Spam Package}?. Should this be under Misc?
27868
27869 @item
27870 Gnus supports server-side mail filtering using Sieve.
27871
27872 Sieve rules can be added as Group Parameters for groups, and the
27873 complete Sieve script is generated using @kbd{D g} from the Group
27874 buffer, and then uploaded to the server using @kbd{C-c C-l} in the
27875 generated Sieve buffer. @xref{Sieve Commands}, and the new Sieve
27876 manual @ref{Top, , Top, sieve, Emacs Sieve}.
27877
27878 @end itemize
27879
27880 @item Changes in group mode
27881 @c ************************
27882
27883 @itemize @bullet
27884
27885 @item
27886 @code{gnus-group-read-ephemeral-group} can be called interactively,
27887 using @kbd{G M}.
27888
27889 @item
27890 Retrieval of charters and control messages
27891
27892 There are new commands for fetching newsgroup charters (@kbd{H c}) and
27893 control messages (@kbd{H C}).
27894
27895 @item
27896 The new variable @code{gnus-parameters} can be used to set group parameters.
27897
27898 Earlier this was done only via @kbd{G p} (or @kbd{G c}), which stored
27899 the parameters in @file{~/.newsrc.eld}, but via this variable you can
27900 enjoy the powers of customize, and simplified backups since you set the
27901 variable in @file{~/.gnus.el} instead of @file{~/.newsrc.eld}. The
27902 variable maps regular expressions matching group names to group
27903 parameters, a'la:
27904 @lisp
27905 (setq gnus-parameters
27906 '(("mail\\..*"
27907 (gnus-show-threads nil)
27908 (gnus-use-scoring nil))
27909 ("^nnimap:\\(foo.bar\\)$"
27910 (to-group . "\\1"))))
27911 @end lisp
27912
27913 @item
27914 Unread count correct in nnimap groups.
27915
27916 The estimated number of unread articles in the group buffer should now
27917 be correct for nnimap groups. This is achieved by calling
27918 @code{nnimap-fixup-unread-after-getting-new-news} from the
27919 @code{gnus-setup-news-hook} (called on startup) and
27920 @code{gnus-after-getting-new-news-hook} (called after getting new
27921 mail). If you have modified those variables from the default, you may
27922 want to add @code{nnimap-fixup-unread-after-getting-new-news} again. If
27923 you were happy with the estimate and want to save some (minimal) time
27924 when getting new mail, remove the function.
27925
27926 @item
27927 Group names are treated as UTF-8 by default.
27928
27929 This is supposedly what USEFOR wanted to migrate to. See
27930 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-group-alist} and
27931 @code{gnus-group-name-charset-method-alist} for customization.
27932
27933 @item
27934 @code{gnus-group-charset-alist} and
27935 @code{gnus-group-ignored-charsets-alist}.
27936
27937 The regexps in these variables are compared with full group names
27938 instead of real group names in 5.8. Users who customize these
27939 variables should change those regexps accordingly. For example:
27940 @lisp
27941 ("^han\\>" euc-kr) -> ("\\(^\\|:\\)han\\>" euc-kr)
27942 @end lisp
27943
27944 @item
27945 Old intermediate incoming mail files (@file{Incoming*}) are deleted
27946 after a couple of days, not immediately. @xref{Mail Source
27947 Customization}. (New in Gnus 5.10.10 / Emacs 22.2)
27948
27949 @end itemize
27950
27951 @item Changes in summary and article mode
27952 @c **************************************
27953
27954 @itemize @bullet
27955
27956 @item
27957 @kbd{F} (@code{gnus-article-followup-with-original}) and @kbd{R}
27958 (@code{gnus-article-reply-with-original}) only yank the text in the
27959 region if the region is active.
27960
27961 @item
27962 In draft groups, @kbd{e} is now bound to @code{gnus-draft-edit-message}.
27963 Use @kbd{B w} for @code{gnus-summary-edit-article} instead.
27964
27965 @item
27966 Article Buttons
27967
27968 More buttons for URLs, mail addresses, Message-IDs, Info links, man
27969 pages and Emacs or Gnus related references. @xref{Article Buttons}. The
27970 variables @code{gnus-button-@var{*}-level} can be used to control the
27971 appearance of all article buttons. @xref{Article Button Levels}.
27972
27973 @item
27974 Single-part yenc encoded attachments can be decoded.
27975
27976 @item
27977 Picons
27978
27979 The picons code has been reimplemented to work in GNU Emacs---some of
27980 the previous options have been removed or renamed.
27981
27982 Picons are small ``personal icons'' representing users, domain and
27983 newsgroups, which can be displayed in the Article buffer.
27984 @xref{Picons}.
27985
27986 @item
27987 If the new option @code{gnus-treat-body-boundary} is non-@code{nil}, a
27988 boundary line is drawn at the end of the headers.
27989
27990 @item
27991 Signed article headers (X-PGP-Sig) can be verified with @kbd{W p}.
27992
27993 @item
27994 The Summary Buffer uses an arrow in the fringe to indicate the current
27995 article. Use @code{(setq gnus-summary-display-arrow nil)} to disable it.
27996
27997 @item
27998 Warn about email replies to news
27999
28000 Do you often find yourself replying to news by email by mistake? Then
28001 the new option @code{gnus-confirm-mail-reply-to-news} is just the thing for
28002 you.
28003
28004 @item
28005 If the new option @code{gnus-summary-display-while-building} is
28006 non-@code{nil}, the summary buffer is shown and updated as it's being
28007 built.
28008
28009 @item
28010 Gnus supports RFC 2369 mailing list headers, and adds a number of
28011 related commands in mailing list groups. @xref{Mailing List}.
28012
28013 @item
28014 The Date header can be displayed in a format that can be read aloud
28015 in English. @xref{Article Date}.
28016
28017 @item
28018 diffs are automatically highlighted in groups matching
28019 @code{mm-uu-diff-groups-regexp}
28020
28021 @item
28022 Better handling of Microsoft citation styles
28023
28024 Gnus now tries to recognize the mangled header block that some Microsoft
28025 mailers use to indicate that the rest of the message is a citation, even
28026 though it is not quoted in any way. The variable
28027 @code{gnus-cite-unsightly-citation-regexp} matches the start of these
28028 citations.
28029
28030 The new command @kbd{W Y f}
28031 (@code{gnus-article-outlook-deuglify-article}) allows deuglifying broken
28032 Outlook (Express) articles.
28033
28034 @item
28035 @code{gnus-article-skip-boring}
28036
28037 If you set @code{gnus-article-skip-boring} to @code{t}, then Gnus will
28038 not scroll down to show you a page that contains only boring text,
28039 which by default means cited text and signature. You can customize
28040 what is skippable using @code{gnus-article-boring-faces}.
28041
28042 This feature is especially useful if you read many articles that
28043 consist of a little new content at the top with a long, untrimmed
28044 message cited below.
28045
28046 @item
28047 Smileys (@samp{:-)}, @samp{;-)} etc.)@: are now displayed graphically in
28048 Emacs too.
28049
28050 Put @code{(setq gnus-treat-display-smileys nil)} in @file{~/.gnus.el} to
28051 disable it.
28052
28053 @item
28054 Face headers handling. @xref{Face}.
28055
28056 @item
28057 In the summary buffer, the new command @kbd{/ N} inserts new messages
28058 and @kbd{/ o} inserts old messages.
28059
28060 @item
28061 Gnus decodes morse encoded messages if you press @kbd{W m}.
28062
28063 @item
28064 @code{gnus-summary-line-format}
28065
28066 The default value changed to @samp{%U%R%z%I%(%[%4L: %-23,23f%]%)
28067 %s\n}. Moreover @code{gnus-extra-headers},
28068 @code{nnmail-extra-headers} and @code{gnus-ignored-from-addresses}
28069 changed their default so that the users name will be replaced by the
28070 recipient's name or the group name posting to for @acronym{NNTP}
28071 groups.
28072
28073 @item
28074 Deleting of attachments.
28075
28076 The command @code{gnus-mime-save-part-and-strip} (bound to @kbd{C-o}
28077 on @acronym{MIME} buttons) saves a part and replaces the part with an
28078 external one. @code{gnus-mime-delete-part} (bound to @kbd{d} on
28079 @acronym{MIME} buttons) removes a part. It works only on back ends
28080 that support editing.
28081
28082 @item
28083 @code{gnus-default-charset}
28084
28085 The default value is determined from the
28086 @code{current-language-environment} variable, instead of
28087 @code{iso-8859-1}. Also the @samp{.*} item in
28088 @code{gnus-group-charset-alist} is removed.
28089
28090 @item
28091 Printing capabilities are enhanced.
28092
28093 Gnus supports Muttprint natively with @kbd{O P} from the Summary and
28094 Article buffers. Also, each individual @acronym{MIME} part can be
28095 printed using @kbd{p} on the @acronym{MIME} button.
28096
28097 @item
28098 Extended format specs.
28099
28100 Format spec @samp{%&user-date;} is added into
28101 @code{gnus-summary-line-format-alist}. Also, user defined extended
28102 format specs are supported. The extended format specs look like
28103 @samp{%u&foo;}, which invokes function
28104 @code{gnus-user-format-function-@var{foo}}. Because @samp{&} is used as the
28105 escape character, old user defined format @samp{%u&} is no longer supported.
28106
28107 @item
28108 @kbd{/ *} (@code{gnus-summary-limit-include-cached}) is rewritten.
28109 @c FIXME: Was this a user-visible change?
28110
28111 It was aliased to @kbd{Y c}
28112 (@code{gnus-summary-insert-cached-articles}). The new function filters
28113 out other articles.
28114
28115 @item
28116 Some limiting commands accept a @kbd{C-u} prefix to negate the match.
28117
28118 If @kbd{C-u} is used on subject, author or extra headers, i.e., @kbd{/
28119 s}, @kbd{/ a}, and @kbd{/ x}
28120 (@code{gnus-summary-limit-to-@{subject,author,extra@}}) respectively, the
28121 result will be to display all articles that do not match the expression.
28122
28123 @item
28124 Gnus inlines external parts (message/external).
28125
28126 @end itemize
28127
28128 @item Changes in Message mode and related Gnus features
28129 @c ****************************************************
28130
28131 @itemize @bullet
28132
28133 @item
28134 Delayed articles
28135
28136 You can delay the sending of a message with @kbd{C-c C-j} in the Message
28137 buffer. The messages are delivered at specified time. This is useful
28138 for sending yourself reminders. @xref{Delayed Articles}.
28139
28140 @item
28141 If the new option @code{nnml-use-compressed-files} is non-@code{nil},
28142 the nnml back end allows compressed message files.
28143
28144 @item
28145 The new option @code{gnus-gcc-mark-as-read} automatically marks
28146 Gcc articles as read.
28147
28148 @item
28149 Externalizing of attachments
28150
28151 If @code{gnus-gcc-externalize-attachments} or
28152 @code{message-fcc-externalize-attachments} is non-@code{nil}, attach
28153 local files as external parts.
28154
28155 @item
28156 The envelope sender address can be customized when using Sendmail.
28157 @xref{Mail Variables, Mail Variables,, message, Message Manual}.
28158
28159 @item
28160 Gnus no longer generate the Sender: header automatically.
28161
28162 Earlier it was generated when the user configurable email address was
28163 different from the Gnus guessed default user address. As the guessing
28164 algorithm is rarely correct these days, and (more controversially) the
28165 only use of the Sender: header was to check if you are entitled to
28166 cancel/supersede news (which is now solved by Cancel Locks instead,
28167 see another entry), generation of the header has been disabled by
28168 default. See the variables @code{message-required-headers},
28169 @code{message-required-news-headers}, and
28170 @code{message-required-mail-headers}.
28171
28172 @item
28173 Features from third party @file{message-utils.el} added to @file{message.el}.
28174
28175 Message now asks if you wish to remove @samp{(was: <old subject>)} from
28176 subject lines (see @code{message-subject-trailing-was-query}). @kbd{C-c
28177 M-m} and @kbd{C-c M-f} inserts markers indicating included text.
28178 @kbd{C-c C-f a} adds a X-No-Archive: header. @kbd{C-c C-f x} inserts
28179 appropriate headers and a note in the body for cross-postings and
28180 followups (see the variables @code{message-cross-post-@var{*}}).
28181
28182 @item
28183 References and X-Draft-From headers are no longer generated when you
28184 start composing messages and @code{message-generate-headers-first} is
28185 @code{nil}.
28186
28187 @item
28188 Easy inclusion of X-Faces headers. @xref{X-Face}.
28189
28190 @item
28191 Group Carbon Copy (GCC) quoting
28192
28193 To support groups that contains SPC and other weird characters, groups
28194 are quoted before they are placed in the Gcc: header. This means
28195 variables such as @code{gnus-message-archive-group} should no longer
28196 contain quote characters to make groups containing SPC work. Also, if
28197 you are using the string @samp{nnml:foo, nnml:bar} (indicating Gcc
28198 into two groups) you must change it to return the list
28199 @code{("nnml:foo" "nnml:bar")}, otherwise the Gcc: line will be quoted
28200 incorrectly. Note that returning the string @samp{nnml:foo, nnml:bar}
28201 was incorrect earlier, it just didn't generate any problems since it
28202 was inserted directly.
28203
28204 @item
28205 @code{message-insinuate-rmail}
28206
28207 @c FIXME should that not be 'message-user-agent?
28208 Adding @code{(message-insinuate-rmail)} and @code{(setq
28209 mail-user-agent 'gnus-user-agent)} in @file{.emacs} convinces Rmail to
28210 compose, reply and forward messages in message-mode, where you can
28211 enjoy the power of @acronym{MML}.
28212
28213 @item
28214 @code{message-minibuffer-local-map}
28215
28216 The line below enables BBDB in resending a message:
28217 @lisp
28218 (define-key message-minibuffer-local-map [(tab)]
28219 'bbdb-complete-name)
28220 @end lisp
28221
28222 @item
28223 @code{gnus-posting-styles}
28224
28225 Add a new format of match like
28226 @lisp
28227 ((header "to" "larsi.*org")
28228 (Organization "Somewhere, Inc."))
28229 @end lisp
28230 The old format like the lines below is obsolete, but still accepted.
28231 @lisp
28232 (header "to" "larsi.*org"
28233 (Organization "Somewhere, Inc."))
28234 @end lisp
28235
28236 @item
28237 @code{message-ignored-news-headers} and @code{message-ignored-mail-headers}
28238
28239 @samp{X-Draft-From} and @samp{X-Gnus-Agent-Meta-Information} have been
28240 added into these two variables. If you customized those, perhaps you
28241 need add those two headers too.
28242
28243 @item
28244 Gnus supports the ``format=flowed'' (RFC 2646) parameter. On
28245 composing messages, it is enabled by @code{use-hard-newlines}.
28246 Decoding format=flowed was present but not documented in earlier
28247 versions.
28248
28249 @item
28250 The option @code{mm-fill-flowed} can be used to disable treatment of
28251 ``format=flowed'' messages. Also, flowed text is disabled when sending
28252 inline PGP signed messages. @xref{Flowed text, , Flowed text,
28253 emacs-mime, The Emacs MIME Manual}. (New in Gnus 5.10.7)
28254 @c This entry is also present in the node "No Gnus".
28255
28256 @item
28257 Gnus supports the generation of RFC 2298 Disposition Notification requests.
28258
28259 This is invoked with the @kbd{C-c M-n} key binding from message mode.
28260
28261 @item
28262 Message supports the Importance: (RFC 2156) header.
28263
28264 In the message buffer, @kbd{C-c C-f C-i} or @kbd{C-c C-u} cycles through
28265 the valid values.
28266
28267 @item
28268 Gnus supports Cancel Locks in News.
28269
28270 This means a header @samp{Cancel-Lock} is inserted in news posting. It is
28271 used to determine if you wrote an article or not (for canceling and
28272 superseding). Gnus generates a random password string the first time
28273 you post a message, and saves it in your @file{~/.emacs} using the Custom
28274 system. While the variable is called @code{canlock-password}, it is not
28275 security sensitive data. Publishing your canlock string on the web
28276 will not allow anyone to be able to anything she could not already do.
28277 The behavior can be changed by customizing @code{message-insert-canlock}.
28278
28279 @item
28280 Gnus supports @acronym{PGP} (RFC 1991/2440), @acronym{PGP/MIME} (RFC
28281 2015/3156) and @acronym{S/MIME} (RFC 2630--2633).
28282
28283 It needs an external @acronym{S/MIME} and OpenPGP implementation, but no
28284 additional Lisp libraries. This add several menu items to the
28285 Attachments menu, and @kbd{C-c RET} key bindings, when composing
28286 messages. This also obsoletes @code{gnus-article-hide-pgp-hook}.
28287
28288 @item
28289 @acronym{MML} (Mime compose) prefix changed from @kbd{M-m} to @kbd{C-c
28290 C-m}.
28291
28292 This change was made to avoid conflict with the standard binding of
28293 @code{back-to-indentation}, which is also useful in message mode.
28294
28295 @item
28296 The default for @code{message-forward-show-mml} changed to the symbol
28297 @code{best}.
28298
28299 The behavior for the @code{best} value is to show @acronym{MML} (i.e.,
28300 convert to @acronym{MIME}) when appropriate. @acronym{MML} will not be
28301 used when forwarding signed or encrypted messages, as the conversion
28302 invalidate the digital signature.
28303
28304 @item
28305 If @code{auto-compression-mode} is enabled, attachments are automatically
28306 decompressed when activated.
28307 @c FIXME: Does this affect article or message mode?
28308
28309 @item
28310 Support for non-@acronym{ASCII} domain names
28311
28312 Message supports non-@acronym{ASCII} domain names in From:, To: and
28313 Cc: and will query you whether to perform encoding when you try to
28314 send a message. The variable @code{message-use-idna} controls this.
28315 Gnus will also decode non-@acronym{ASCII} domain names in From:, To:
28316 and Cc: when you view a message. The variable @code{gnus-use-idna}
28317 controls this.
28318
28319 @item You can now drag and drop attachments to the Message buffer.
28320 See @code{mml-dnd-protocol-alist} and @code{mml-dnd-attach-options}.
28321 @xref{MIME, ,MIME, message, Message Manual}.
28322 @c New in 5.10.9 / 5.11 (Emacs 22.1)
28323
28324 @item @code{auto-fill-mode} is enabled by default in Message mode.
28325 See @code{message-fill-column}. @xref{Various Message Variables, ,
28326 Message Headers, message, Message Manual}.
28327 @c New in Gnus 5.10.12 / 5.11 (Emacs 22.3)
28328
28329 @end itemize
28330
28331 @item Changes in back ends
28332 @c ***********************
28333
28334 @itemize @bullet
28335 @item
28336 Gnus can display RSS newsfeeds as a newsgroup. @xref{RSS}.
28337
28338 @item
28339 The nndoc back end now supports mailman digests and exim bounces.
28340
28341 @item
28342 Gnus supports Maildir groups.
28343
28344 Gnus includes a new back end @file{nnmaildir.el}. @xref{Maildir}.
28345
28346 @item
28347 The nnml and nnfolder back ends store marks for each groups.
28348
28349 This makes it possible to take backup of nnml/nnfolder servers/groups
28350 separately of @file{~/.newsrc.eld}, while preserving marks. It also
28351 makes it possible to share articles and marks between users (without
28352 sharing the @file{~/.newsrc.eld} file) within, e.g., a department. It
28353 works by storing the marks stored in @file{~/.newsrc.eld} in a per-group
28354 file @file{.marks} (for nnml) and @file{@var{groupname}.mrk} (for
28355 nnfolder, named @var{groupname}). If the nnml/nnfolder is moved to
28356 another machine, Gnus will automatically use the @file{.marks} or
28357 @file{.mrk} file instead of the information in @file{~/.newsrc.eld}.
28358 The new server variables @code{nnml-marks-is-evil} and
28359 @code{nnfolder-marks-is-evil} can be used to disable this feature.
28360
28361 @end itemize
28362
28363 @item Appearance
28364 @c *************
28365
28366 @itemize @bullet
28367
28368 @item
28369 The menu bar item (in Group and Summary buffer) named ``Misc'' has
28370 been renamed to ``Gnus''.
28371
28372 @item
28373 The menu bar item (in Message mode) named ``@acronym{MML}'' has been
28374 renamed to ``Attachments''. Note that this menu also contains security
28375 related stuff, like signing and encryption (@pxref{Security, Security,,
28376 message, Message Manual}).
28377
28378 @item
28379 The tool bars have been updated to use GNOME icons in Group, Summary and
28380 Message mode. You can also customize the tool bars: @kbd{M-x
28381 customize-apropos RET -tool-bar$} should get you started. This is a new
28382 feature in Gnus 5.10.10. (Only for Emacs, not in XEmacs.)
28383
28384 @item The tool bar icons are now (de)activated correctly
28385 in the group buffer, see the variable @code{gnus-group-update-tool-bar}.
28386 Its default value depends on your Emacs version. This is a new feature
28387 in Gnus 5.10.9.
28388 @end itemize
28389
28390
28391 @item Miscellaneous changes
28392 @c ************************
28393
28394 @itemize @bullet
28395
28396 @item
28397 @code{gnus-agent}
28398
28399 The Gnus Agent has seen a major updated and is now enabled by default,
28400 and all nntp and nnimap servers from @code{gnus-select-method} and
28401 @code{gnus-secondary-select-method} are agentized by default. Earlier
28402 only the server in @code{gnus-select-method} was agentized by the
28403 default, and the agent was disabled by default. When the agent is
28404 enabled, headers are now also retrieved from the Agent cache instead
28405 of the back ends when possible. Earlier this only happened in the
28406 unplugged state. You can enroll or remove servers with @kbd{J a} and
28407 @kbd{J r} in the server buffer. Gnus will not download articles into
28408 the Agent cache, unless you instruct it to do so, though, by using
28409 @kbd{J u} or @kbd{J s} from the Group buffer. You revert to the old
28410 behavior of having the Agent disabled with @code{(setq gnus-agent
28411 nil)}. Note that putting @code{(gnus-agentize)} in @file{~/.gnus.el}
28412 is not needed any more.
28413
28414 @item
28415 Gnus reads the @acronym{NOV} and articles in the Agent if plugged.
28416
28417 If one reads an article while plugged, and the article already exists
28418 in the Agent, it won't get downloaded once more. @code{(setq
28419 gnus-agent-cache nil)} reverts to the old behavior.
28420
28421 @item
28422 Dired integration
28423
28424 @code{gnus-dired-minor-mode} (see @ref{Other modes}) installs key
28425 bindings in dired buffers to send a file as an attachment, open a file
28426 using the appropriate mailcap entry, and print a file using the mailcap
28427 entry.
28428
28429 @item
28430 The format spec @code{%C} for positioning point has changed to @code{%*}.
28431
28432 @item
28433 @code{gnus-slave-unplugged}
28434
28435 A new command which starts Gnus offline in slave mode.
28436
28437 @end itemize
28438
28439 @end itemize
28440
28441 @node No Gnus
28442 @subsubsection No Gnus
28443 @cindex No Gnus
28444
28445 New features in No Gnus:
28446 @c FIXME: Gnus 5.12?
28447
28448 @include gnus-news.texi
28449
28450 @node Ma Gnus
28451 @subsubsection Ma Gnus
28452 @cindex Ma Gnus
28453
28454 I'm sure there will be lots of text here. It's really spelled 真
28455 Gnus.
28456
28457 New features in Ma Gnus:
28458
28459 @itemize @bullet
28460
28461 @item Changes in summary and article mode
28462 @c **************************************
28463
28464 @itemize @bullet
28465
28466 @item
28467 By default, @acronym{MIME} part buttons for attachments (if any) will
28468 appear in the end of the article header in addition to the bottom of the
28469 article body, so you can easily find them without scrolling the article
28470 again and again. @xref{MIME Commands}.
28471
28472 @end itemize
28473
28474 @item Changes in Message mode and related Gnus features
28475 @c ****************************************************
28476
28477 @itemize @bullet
28478
28479 @item
28480 The new hooks @code{gnus-gcc-pre-body-encode-hook} and
28481 @code{gnus-gcc-post-body-encode-hook} are run before/after encoding
28482 the message body of the Gcc copy of a sent message. See
28483 @xref{Archived Messages}.
28484
28485 @end itemize
28486
28487 @end itemize
28488
28489 @iftex
28490
28491 @page
28492 @node The Manual
28493 @section The Manual
28494 @cindex colophon
28495 @cindex manual
28496
28497 This manual was generated from a TeXinfo file and then run through
28498 either @code{texi2dvi}
28499 @iflatex
28500 or my own home-brewed TeXinfo to \LaTeX\ transformer,
28501 and then run through @code{latex} and @code{dvips}
28502 @end iflatex
28503 to get what you hold in your hands now.
28504
28505 The following conventions have been used:
28506
28507 @enumerate
28508
28509 @item
28510 This is a @samp{string}
28511
28512 @item
28513 This is a @kbd{keystroke}
28514
28515 @item
28516 This is a @file{file}
28517
28518 @item
28519 This is a @code{symbol}
28520
28521 @end enumerate
28522
28523 So if I were to say ``set @code{flargnoze} to @samp{yes}'', that would
28524 mean:
28525
28526 @lisp
28527 (setq flargnoze "yes")
28528 @end lisp
28529
28530 If I say ``set @code{flumphel} to @code{yes}'', that would mean:
28531
28532 @lisp
28533 (setq flumphel 'yes)
28534 @end lisp
28535
28536 @samp{yes} and @code{yes} are two @emph{very} different things---don't
28537 ever get them confused.
28538
28539 @iflatex
28540 @c @head
28541 Of course, everything in this manual is of vital interest, so you should
28542 read it all. Several times. However, if you feel like skimming the
28543 manual, look for that gnu head you should see in the margin over
28544 there---it means that what's being discussed is of more importance than
28545 the rest of the stuff. (On the other hand, if everything is infinitely
28546 important, how can anything be more important than that? Just one more
28547 of the mysteries of this world, I guess.)
28548 @end iflatex
28549
28550 @end iftex
28551
28552
28553 @node On Writing Manuals
28554 @section On Writing Manuals
28555
28556 I guess most manuals are written after-the-fact; documenting a program
28557 that's already there. This is not how this manual is written. When
28558 implementing something, I write the manual entry for that something
28559 straight away. I then see that it's difficult to explain the
28560 functionality, so I write how it's supposed to be, and then I change the
28561 implementation. Writing the documentation and writing the code go hand
28562 in hand.
28563
28564 This, of course, means that this manual has no, or little, flow. It
28565 documents absolutely everything in Gnus, but often not where you're
28566 looking for it. It is a reference manual, and not a guide to how to get
28567 started with Gnus.
28568
28569 That would be a totally different book, that should be written using the
28570 reference manual as source material. It would look quite different.
28571
28572
28573 @page
28574 @node Terminology
28575 @section Terminology
28576
28577 @cindex terminology
28578 @table @dfn
28579
28580 @item news
28581 @cindex news
28582 This is what you are supposed to use this thing for---reading news.
28583 News is generally fetched from a nearby @acronym{NNTP} server, and is
28584 generally publicly available to everybody. If you post news, the entire
28585 world is likely to read just what you have written, and they'll all
28586 snigger mischievously. Behind your back.
28587
28588 @item mail
28589 @cindex mail
28590 Everything that's delivered to you personally is mail. Some news/mail
28591 readers (like Gnus) blur the distinction between mail and news, but
28592 there is a difference. Mail is private. News is public. Mailing is
28593 not posting, and replying is not following up.
28594
28595 @item reply
28596 @cindex reply
28597 Send a mail to the person who has written what you are reading.
28598
28599 @item follow up
28600 @cindex follow up
28601 Post an article to the current newsgroup responding to the article you
28602 are reading.
28603
28604 @item back end
28605 @cindex back end
28606 Gnus considers mail and news to be mostly the same, really. The only
28607 difference is how to access the actual articles. News articles are
28608 commonly fetched via the protocol @acronym{NNTP}, whereas mail
28609 messages could be read from a file on the local disk. The internal
28610 architecture of Gnus thus comprises a ``front end'' and a number of
28611 ``back ends''. Internally, when you enter a group (by hitting
28612 @key{RET}, say), you thereby invoke a function in the front end in
28613 Gnus. The front end then ``talks'' to a back end and says things like
28614 ``Give me the list of articles in the foo group'' or ``Show me article
28615 number 4711''.
28616
28617 So a back end mainly defines either a protocol (the @code{nntp} back
28618 end accesses news via @acronym{NNTP}, the @code{nnimap} back end
28619 accesses mail via @acronym{IMAP}) or a file format and directory
28620 layout (the @code{nnspool} back end accesses news via the common
28621 ``spool directory'' format, the @code{nnml} back end access mail via a
28622 file format and directory layout that's quite similar).
28623
28624 Gnus does not handle the underlying media, so to speak---this is all
28625 done by the back ends. A back end is a collection of functions to
28626 access the articles.
28627
28628 However, sometimes the term ``back end'' is also used where ``server''
28629 would have been more appropriate. And then there is the term ``select
28630 method'' which can mean either. The Gnus terminology can be quite
28631 confusing.
28632
28633 @item native
28634 @cindex native
28635 Gnus will always use one method (and back end) as the @dfn{native}, or
28636 default, way of getting news. Groups from the native select method
28637 have names like @samp{gnu.emacs.gnus}.
28638
28639 @item foreign
28640 @cindex foreign
28641 You can also have any number of foreign groups active at the same
28642 time. These are groups that use non-native non-secondary back ends
28643 for getting news. Foreign groups have names like
28644 @samp{nntp+news.gmane.org:gmane.emacs.gnus.devel}.
28645
28646 @item secondary
28647 @cindex secondary
28648 Secondary back ends are somewhere half-way between being native and
28649 being foreign, but they mostly act like they are native, but they, too
28650 have names like @samp{nntp+news.gmane.org:gmane.emacs.gnus.devel}.
28651
28652 @item article
28653 @cindex article
28654 A message that has been posted as news.
28655
28656 @item mail message
28657 @cindex mail message
28658 A message that has been mailed.
28659
28660 @item message
28661 @cindex message
28662 A mail message or news article
28663
28664 @item head
28665 @cindex head
28666 The top part of a message, where administrative information (etc.)@: is
28667 put.
28668
28669 @item body
28670 @cindex body
28671 The rest of an article. Everything not in the head is in the
28672 body.
28673
28674 @item header
28675 @cindex header
28676 A line from the head of an article.
28677
28678 @item headers
28679 @cindex headers
28680 A collection of such lines, or a collection of heads. Or even a
28681 collection of @acronym{NOV} lines.
28682
28683 @item @acronym{NOV}
28684 @cindex @acronym{NOV}
28685 @acronym{NOV} stands for News OverView, which is a type of news server
28686 header which provide datas containing the condensed header information
28687 of articles. They are produced by the server itself; in the @code{nntp}
28688 back end Gnus uses the ones that the @acronym{NNTP} server makes, but
28689 Gnus makes them by itself for some backends (in particular, @code{nnml}).
28690
28691 When Gnus enters a group, it asks the back end for the headers of all
28692 unread articles in the group. Most servers support the News OverView
28693 format, which is more compact and much faster to read and parse than the
28694 normal @sc{head} format.
28695
28696 The @acronym{NOV} data consist of one or more text lines (@pxref{Text
28697 Lines, ,Motion by Text Lines, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual})
28698 where each line has the header information of one article. The header
28699 information is a tab-separated series of the header's contents including
28700 an article number, a subject, an author, a date, a message-id,
28701 references, etc.
28702
28703 Those data enable Gnus to generate summary lines quickly. However, if
28704 the server does not support @acronym{NOV} or you disable it purposely or
28705 for some reason, Gnus will try to generate the header information by
28706 parsing each article's headers one by one. It will take time.
28707 Therefore, it is not usually a good idea to set nn*-nov-is-evil
28708 (@pxref{Slow/Expensive Connection}) to a non-@code{nil} value unless you
28709 know that the server makes wrong @acronym{NOV} data.
28710
28711 @item level
28712 @cindex levels
28713 Each group is subscribed at some @dfn{level} or other (1--9). The ones
28714 that have a lower level are ``more'' subscribed than the groups with a
28715 higher level. In fact, groups on levels 1--5 are considered
28716 @dfn{subscribed}; 6--7 are @dfn{unsubscribed}; 8 are @dfn{zombies}; and 9
28717 are @dfn{killed}. Commands for listing groups and scanning for new
28718 articles will all use the numeric prefix as @dfn{working level}.
28719
28720 @item killed groups
28721 @cindex killed groups
28722 No information on killed groups is stored or updated, which makes killed
28723 groups much easier to handle than subscribed groups.
28724
28725 @item zombie groups
28726 @cindex zombie groups
28727 Just like killed groups, only slightly less dead.
28728
28729 @item active file
28730 @cindex active file
28731 The news server has to keep track of what articles it carries, and what
28732 groups exist. All this information in stored in the active file, which
28733 is rather large, as you might surmise.
28734
28735 @item bogus groups
28736 @cindex bogus groups
28737 A group that exists in the @file{.newsrc} file, but isn't known to the
28738 server (i.e., it isn't in the active file), is a @emph{bogus group}.
28739 This means that the group probably doesn't exist (any more).
28740
28741 @item activating
28742 @cindex activating groups
28743 The act of asking the server for info on a group and computing the
28744 number of unread articles is called @dfn{activating the group}.
28745 Un-activated groups are listed with @samp{*} in the group buffer.
28746
28747 @item spool
28748 @cindex spool
28749 News servers store their articles locally in one fashion or other.
28750 One old-fashioned storage method is to have just one file per
28751 article. That's called a ``traditional spool''.
28752
28753 @item server
28754 @cindex server
28755 A machine one can connect to and get news (or mail) from.
28756
28757 @item select method
28758 @cindex select method
28759 A structure that specifies the back end, the server and the virtual
28760 server settings.
28761
28762 @item virtual server
28763 @cindex virtual server
28764 A named select method. Since a select method defines all there is to
28765 know about connecting to a (physical) server, taking the thing as a
28766 whole is a virtual server.
28767
28768 @item washing
28769 @cindex washing
28770 Taking a buffer and running it through a filter of some sort. The
28771 result will (more often than not) be cleaner and more pleasing than the
28772 original.
28773
28774 @item ephemeral groups
28775 @cindex ephemeral groups
28776 @cindex temporary groups
28777 Most groups store data on what articles you have read. @dfn{Ephemeral}
28778 groups are groups that will have no data stored---when you exit the
28779 group, it'll disappear into the aether.
28780
28781 @item solid groups
28782 @cindex solid groups
28783 This is the opposite of ephemeral groups. All groups listed in the
28784 group buffer are solid groups.
28785
28786 @item sparse articles
28787 @cindex sparse articles
28788 These are article placeholders shown in the summary buffer when
28789 @code{gnus-build-sparse-threads} has been switched on.
28790
28791 @item threading
28792 @cindex threading
28793 To put responses to articles directly after the articles they respond
28794 to---in a hierarchical fashion.
28795
28796 @item root
28797 @cindex root
28798 @cindex thread root
28799 The first article in a thread is the root. It is the ancestor of all
28800 articles in the thread.
28801
28802 @item parent
28803 @cindex parent
28804 An article that has responses.
28805
28806 @item child
28807 @cindex child
28808 An article that responds to a different article---its parent.
28809
28810 @item digest
28811 @cindex digest
28812 A collection of messages in one file. The most common digest format is
28813 specified by RFC 1153.
28814
28815 @item splitting
28816 @cindex splitting, terminology
28817 @cindex mail sorting
28818 @cindex mail filtering (splitting)
28819 The action of sorting your emails according to certain rules. Sometimes
28820 incorrectly called mail filtering.
28821
28822 @end table
28823
28824
28825 @page
28826 @node Customization
28827 @section Customization
28828 @cindex general customization
28829
28830 All variables are properly documented elsewhere in this manual. This
28831 section is designed to give general pointers on how to customize Gnus
28832 for some quite common situations.
28833
28834 @menu
28835 * Slow/Expensive Connection:: You run a local Emacs and get the news elsewhere.
28836 * Slow Terminal Connection:: You run a remote Emacs.
28837 * Little Disk Space:: You feel that having large setup files is icky.
28838 * Slow Machine:: You feel like buying a faster machine.
28839 @end menu
28840
28841
28842 @node Slow/Expensive Connection
28843 @subsection Slow/Expensive Connection
28844
28845 If you run Emacs on a machine locally, and get your news from a machine
28846 over some very thin strings, you want to cut down on the amount of data
28847 Gnus has to get from the server.
28848
28849 @table @code
28850
28851 @item gnus-read-active-file
28852 Set this to @code{nil}, which will inhibit Gnus from requesting the
28853 entire active file from the server. This file is often very large. You
28854 also have to set @code{gnus-check-new-newsgroups} and
28855 @code{gnus-check-bogus-newsgroups} to @code{nil} to make sure that Gnus
28856 doesn't suddenly decide to fetch the active file anyway.
28857
28858 @item gnus-nov-is-evil
28859 @vindex gnus-nov-is-evil
28860 Usually this one must @emph{always} be @code{nil} (which is the
28861 default). If, for example, you wish to not use @acronym{NOV}
28862 (@pxref{Terminology}) with the @code{nntp} back end (@pxref{Crosspost
28863 Handling}), set @code{nntp-nov-is-evil} to a non-@code{nil} value
28864 instead of setting this. But you normally do not need to set
28865 @code{nntp-nov-is-evil} since Gnus by itself will detect whether the
28866 @acronym{NNTP} server supports @acronym{NOV}. Anyway, grabbing article
28867 headers from the @acronym{NNTP} server will not be very fast if you tell
28868 Gnus not to use @acronym{NOV}.
28869
28870 As the variables for the other back ends, there are
28871 @code{nndiary-nov-is-evil}, @code{nndir-nov-is-evil},
28872 @code{nnfolder-nov-is-evil}, @code{nnimap-nov-is-evil},
28873 @code{nnml-nov-is-evil}, and @code{nnspool-nov-is-evil}. Note that a
28874 non-@code{nil} value for @code{gnus-nov-is-evil} overrides all those
28875 variables.
28876 @end table
28877
28878
28879 @node Slow Terminal Connection
28880 @subsection Slow Terminal Connection
28881
28882 Let's say you use your home computer for dialing up the system that runs
28883 Emacs and Gnus. If your modem is slow, you want to reduce (as much as
28884 possible) the amount of data sent over the wires.
28885
28886 @table @code
28887
28888 @item gnus-auto-center-summary
28889 Set this to @code{nil} to inhibit Gnus from re-centering the summary
28890 buffer all the time. If it is @code{vertical}, do only vertical
28891 re-centering. If it is neither @code{nil} nor @code{vertical}, do both
28892 horizontal and vertical recentering.
28893
28894 @item gnus-visible-headers
28895 Cut down on the headers included in the articles to the
28896 minimum. You can, in fact, make do without them altogether---most of the
28897 useful data is in the summary buffer, anyway. Set this variable to
28898 @samp{^NEVVVVER} or @samp{From:}, or whatever you feel you need.
28899
28900 Use the following to enable all the available hiding features:
28901 @lisp
28902 (setq gnus-treat-hide-headers 'head
28903 gnus-treat-hide-signature t
28904 gnus-treat-hide-citation t)
28905 @end lisp
28906
28907 @item gnus-use-full-window
28908 By setting this to @code{nil}, you can make all the windows smaller.
28909 While this doesn't really cut down much generally, it means that you
28910 have to see smaller portions of articles before deciding that you didn't
28911 want to read them anyway.
28912
28913 @item gnus-thread-hide-subtree
28914 If this is non-@code{nil}, all threads in the summary buffer will be
28915 hidden initially.
28916
28917
28918 @item gnus-updated-mode-lines
28919 If this is @code{nil}, Gnus will not put information in the buffer mode
28920 lines, which might save some time.
28921 @end table
28922
28923
28924 @node Little Disk Space
28925 @subsection Little Disk Space
28926 @cindex disk space
28927
28928 The startup files can get rather large, so you may want to cut their
28929 sizes a bit if you are running out of space.
28930
28931 @table @code
28932
28933 @item gnus-save-newsrc-file
28934 If this is @code{nil}, Gnus will never save @file{.newsrc}---it will
28935 only save @file{.newsrc.eld}. This means that you will not be able to
28936 use any other newsreaders than Gnus. This variable is @code{t} by
28937 default.
28938
28939 @item gnus-read-newsrc-file
28940 If this is @code{nil}, Gnus will never read @file{.newsrc}---it will
28941 only read @file{.newsrc.eld}. This means that you will not be able to
28942 use any other newsreaders than Gnus. This variable is @code{t} by
28943 default.
28944
28945 @item gnus-save-killed-list
28946 If this is @code{nil}, Gnus will not save the list of dead groups. You
28947 should also set @code{gnus-check-new-newsgroups} to @code{ask-server}
28948 and @code{gnus-check-bogus-newsgroups} to @code{nil} if you set this
28949 variable to @code{nil}. This variable is @code{t} by default.
28950
28951 @end table
28952
28953
28954 @node Slow Machine
28955 @subsection Slow Machine
28956 @cindex slow machine
28957
28958 If you have a slow machine, or are just really impatient, there are a
28959 few things you can do to make Gnus run faster.
28960
28961 Set @code{gnus-check-new-newsgroups} and
28962 @code{gnus-check-bogus-newsgroups} to @code{nil} to make startup faster.
28963
28964 Set @code{gnus-show-threads}, @code{gnus-use-cross-reference} and
28965 @code{gnus-nov-is-evil} to @code{nil} to make entering and exiting the
28966 summary buffer faster. Also @pxref{Slow/Expensive Connection}.
28967
28968
28969 @page
28970 @node Troubleshooting
28971 @section Troubleshooting
28972 @cindex troubleshooting
28973
28974 Gnus works @emph{so} well straight out of the box---I can't imagine any
28975 problems, really.
28976
28977 Ahem.
28978
28979 @enumerate
28980
28981 @item
28982 Make sure your computer is switched on.
28983
28984 @item
28985 Make sure that you really load the current Gnus version. If you have
28986 been running @sc{gnus}, you need to exit Emacs and start it up again before
28987 Gnus will work.
28988
28989 @item
28990 Try doing an @kbd{M-x gnus-version}. If you get something that looks
28991 like @c
28992 @samp{Gnus v5.13} @c Adjust ../Makefile.in if you change this line!
28993 @c
28994 you have the right files loaded. Otherwise you have some old @file{.el}
28995 files lying around. Delete these.
28996
28997 @item
28998 Read the help group (@kbd{G h} in the group buffer) for a
28999 @acronym{FAQ} and a how-to.
29000
29001 @item
29002 @vindex max-lisp-eval-depth
29003 Gnus works on many recursive structures, and in some extreme (and very
29004 rare) cases Gnus may recurse down ``too deeply'' and Emacs will beep at
29005 you. If this happens to you, set @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} to 500 or
29006 something like that.
29007 @end enumerate
29008
29009 If all else fails, report the problem as a bug.
29010
29011 @cindex bugs
29012 @cindex reporting bugs
29013
29014 @kindex M-x gnus-bug
29015 @findex gnus-bug
29016 If you find a bug in Gnus, you can report it with the @kbd{M-x gnus-bug}
29017 command. @kbd{M-x set-variable RET debug-on-error RET t RET}, and send
29018 me the backtrace. I will fix bugs, but I can only fix them if you send
29019 me a precise description as to how to reproduce the bug.
29020
29021 You really can never be too detailed in a bug report. Always use the
29022 @kbd{M-x gnus-bug} command when you make bug reports, even if it creates
29023 a 10Kb mail each time you use it, and even if you have sent me your
29024 environment 500 times before. I don't care. I want the full info each
29025 time.
29026
29027 It is also important to remember that I have no memory whatsoever. If
29028 you send a bug report, and I send you a reply, and then you just send
29029 back ``No, it's not! Moron!'', I will have no idea what you are
29030 insulting me about. Always over-explain everything. It's much easier
29031 for all of us---if I don't have all the information I need, I will just
29032 mail you and ask for more info, and everything takes more time.
29033
29034 If the problem you're seeing is very visual, and you can't quite explain
29035 it, copy the Emacs window to a file (with @code{xwd}, for instance), put
29036 it somewhere it can be reached, and include the URL of the picture in
29037 the bug report.
29038
29039 @cindex patches
29040 If you would like to contribute a patch to fix bugs or make
29041 improvements, please produce the patch using @samp{diff -u}.
29042
29043 @cindex edebug
29044 If you want to debug your problem further before reporting, possibly
29045 in order to solve the problem yourself and send a patch, you can use
29046 edebug. Debugging Lisp code is documented in the Elisp manual
29047 (@pxref{Debugging, , Debugging Lisp Programs, elisp, The GNU Emacs
29048 Lisp Reference Manual}). To get you started with edebug, consider if
29049 you discover some weird behavior when pressing @kbd{c}, the first
29050 step is to do @kbd{C-h k c} and click on the hyperlink (Emacs only) in
29051 the documentation buffer that leads you to the function definition,
29052 then press @kbd{M-x edebug-defun RET} with point inside that function,
29053 return to Gnus and press @kbd{c} to invoke the code. You will be
29054 placed in the lisp buffer and can single step using @kbd{SPC} and
29055 evaluate expressions using @kbd{M-:} or inspect variables using
29056 @kbd{C-h v}, abort execution with @kbd{q}, and resume execution with
29057 @kbd{c} or @kbd{g}.
29058
29059 @cindex elp
29060 @cindex profile
29061 @cindex slow
29062 Sometimes, a problem do not directly generate an elisp error but
29063 manifests itself by causing Gnus to be very slow. In these cases, you
29064 can use @kbd{M-x toggle-debug-on-quit} and press @kbd{C-g} when things are
29065 slow, and then try to analyze the backtrace (repeating the procedure
29066 helps isolating the real problem areas).
29067
29068 A fancier approach is to use the elisp profiler, ELP@. The profiler is
29069 (or should be) fully documented elsewhere, but to get you started
29070 there are a few steps that need to be followed. First, instrument the
29071 part of Gnus you are interested in for profiling, e.g., @kbd{M-x
29072 elp-instrument-package RET gnus} or @kbd{M-x elp-instrument-package
29073 RET message}. Then perform the operation that is slow and press
29074 @kbd{M-x elp-results}. You will then see which operations that takes
29075 time, and can debug them further. If the entire operation takes much
29076 longer than the time spent in the slowest function in the profiler
29077 output, you probably profiled the wrong part of Gnus. To reset
29078 profiling statistics, use @kbd{M-x elp-reset-all}. @kbd{M-x
29079 elp-restore-all} is supposed to remove profiling, but given the
29080 complexities and dynamic code generation in Gnus, it might not always
29081 work perfectly.
29082
29083 @cindex gnu.emacs.gnus
29084 @cindex ding mailing list
29085 If you just need help, you are better off asking on
29086 @samp{gnu.emacs.gnus}. I'm not very helpful. You can also ask on
29087 @email{ding@@gnus.org, the ding mailing list}. Write to
29088 @email{ding-request@@gnus.org} to subscribe.
29089
29090
29091 @page
29092 @node Gnus Reference Guide
29093 @section Gnus Reference Guide
29094
29095 It is my hope that other people will figure out smart stuff that Gnus
29096 can do, and that other people will write those smart things as well. To
29097 facilitate that I thought it would be a good idea to describe the inner
29098 workings of Gnus. And some of the not-so-inner workings, while I'm at
29099 it.
29100
29101 You can never expect the internals of a program not to change, but I
29102 will be defining (in some details) the interface between Gnus and its
29103 back ends (this is written in stone), the format of the score files
29104 (ditto), data structures (some are less likely to change than others)
29105 and general methods of operation.
29106
29107 @menu
29108 * Gnus Utility Functions:: Common functions and variable to use.
29109 * Back End Interface:: How Gnus communicates with the servers.
29110 * Score File Syntax:: A BNF definition of the score file standard.
29111 * Headers:: How Gnus stores headers internally.
29112 * Ranges:: A handy format for storing mucho numbers.
29113 * Group Info:: The group info format.
29114 * Extended Interactive:: Symbolic prefixes and stuff.
29115 * Emacs/XEmacs Code:: Gnus can be run under all modern Emacsen.
29116 * Various File Formats:: Formats of files that Gnus use.
29117 @end menu
29118
29119
29120 @node Gnus Utility Functions
29121 @subsection Gnus Utility Functions
29122 @cindex Gnus utility functions
29123 @cindex utility functions
29124 @cindex functions
29125 @cindex internal variables
29126
29127 When writing small functions to be run from hooks (and stuff), it's
29128 vital to have access to the Gnus internal functions and variables.
29129 Below is a list of the most common ones.
29130
29131 @table @code
29132
29133 @item gnus-newsgroup-name
29134 @vindex gnus-newsgroup-name
29135 This variable holds the name of the current newsgroup.
29136
29137 @item gnus-find-method-for-group
29138 @findex gnus-find-method-for-group
29139 A function that returns the select method for @var{group}.
29140
29141 @item gnus-group-real-name
29142 @findex gnus-group-real-name
29143 Takes a full (prefixed) Gnus group name, and returns the unprefixed
29144 name.
29145
29146 @item gnus-group-prefixed-name
29147 @findex gnus-group-prefixed-name
29148 Takes an unprefixed group name and a select method, and returns the full
29149 (prefixed) Gnus group name.
29150
29151 @item gnus-get-info
29152 @findex gnus-get-info
29153 Returns the group info list for @var{group} (@pxref{Group Info}).
29154
29155 @item gnus-group-unread
29156 @findex gnus-group-unread
29157 The number of unread articles in @var{group}, or @code{t} if that is
29158 unknown.
29159
29160 @item gnus-active
29161 @findex gnus-active
29162 The active entry (i.e., a cons cell containing the lowest and highest
29163 article numbers) for @var{group}.
29164
29165 @item gnus-set-active
29166 @findex gnus-set-active
29167 Set the active entry for @var{group}.
29168
29169 @item gnus-add-current-to-buffer-list
29170 @findex gnus-add-current-to-buffer-list
29171 Adds the current buffer to the list of buffers to be killed on Gnus
29172 exit.
29173
29174 @item gnus-continuum-version
29175 @findex gnus-continuum-version
29176 Takes a Gnus version string as a parameter and returns a floating point
29177 number. Earlier versions will always get a lower number than later
29178 versions.
29179
29180 @item gnus-group-read-only-p
29181 @findex gnus-group-read-only-p
29182 Says whether @var{group} is read-only or not.
29183
29184 @item gnus-news-group-p
29185 @findex gnus-news-group-p
29186 Says whether @var{group} came from a news back end.
29187
29188 @item gnus-ephemeral-group-p
29189 @findex gnus-ephemeral-group-p
29190 Says whether @var{group} is ephemeral or not.
29191
29192 @item gnus-server-to-method
29193 @findex gnus-server-to-method
29194 Returns the select method corresponding to @var{server}.
29195
29196 @item gnus-server-equal
29197 @findex gnus-server-equal
29198 Says whether two virtual servers are essentially equal. For instance,
29199 two virtual servers may have server parameters in different order, but
29200 this function will consider them equal.
29201
29202 @item gnus-group-native-p
29203 @findex gnus-group-native-p
29204 Says whether @var{group} is native or not.
29205
29206 @item gnus-group-secondary-p
29207 @findex gnus-group-secondary-p
29208 Says whether @var{group} is secondary or not.
29209
29210 @item gnus-group-foreign-p
29211 @findex gnus-group-foreign-p
29212 Says whether @var{group} is foreign or not.
29213
29214 @item gnus-group-find-parameter
29215 @findex gnus-group-find-parameter
29216 Returns the parameter list of @var{group} (@pxref{Group Parameters}).
29217 If given a second parameter, returns the value of that parameter for
29218 @var{group}.
29219
29220 @item gnus-group-set-parameter
29221 @findex gnus-group-set-parameter
29222 Takes three parameters; @var{group}, @var{parameter} and @var{value}.
29223
29224 @item gnus-narrow-to-body
29225 @findex gnus-narrow-to-body
29226 Narrows the current buffer to the body of the article.
29227
29228 @item gnus-check-backend-function
29229 @findex gnus-check-backend-function
29230 Takes two parameters, @var{function} and @var{group}. If the back end
29231 @var{group} comes from supports @var{function}, return non-@code{nil}.
29232
29233 @lisp
29234 (gnus-check-backend-function "request-scan" "nnml:misc")
29235 @result{} t
29236 @end lisp
29237
29238 @item gnus-read-method
29239 @findex gnus-read-method
29240 Prompts the user for a select method.
29241
29242 @end table
29243
29244
29245 @node Back End Interface
29246 @subsection Back End Interface
29247
29248 Gnus doesn't know anything about @acronym{NNTP}, spools, mail or virtual
29249 groups. It only knows how to talk to @dfn{virtual servers}. A virtual
29250 server is a @dfn{back end} and some @dfn{back end variables}. As examples
29251 of the first, we have @code{nntp}, @code{nnspool} and @code{nnmbox}. As
29252 examples of the latter we have @code{nntp-port-number} and
29253 @code{nnmbox-directory}.
29254
29255 When Gnus asks for information from a back end---say @code{nntp}---on
29256 something, it will normally include a virtual server name in the
29257 function parameters. (If not, the back end should use the ``current''
29258 virtual server.) For instance, @code{nntp-request-list} takes a virtual
29259 server as its only (optional) parameter. If this virtual server hasn't
29260 been opened, the function should fail.
29261
29262 Note that a virtual server name has no relation to some physical server
29263 name. Take this example:
29264
29265 @lisp
29266 (nntp "odd-one"
29267 (nntp-address "ifi.uio.no")
29268 (nntp-port-number 4324))
29269 @end lisp
29270
29271 Here the virtual server name is @samp{odd-one} while the name of
29272 the physical server is @samp{ifi.uio.no}.
29273
29274 The back ends should be able to switch between several virtual servers.
29275 The standard back ends implement this by keeping an alist of virtual
29276 server environments that they pull down/push up when needed.
29277
29278 There are two groups of interface functions: @dfn{required functions},
29279 which must be present, and @dfn{optional functions}, which Gnus will
29280 always check for presence before attempting to call 'em.
29281
29282 All these functions are expected to return data in the buffer
29283 @code{nntp-server-buffer} (@samp{ *nntpd*}), which is somewhat
29284 unfortunately named, but we'll have to live with it. When I talk about
29285 @dfn{resulting data}, I always refer to the data in that buffer. When I
29286 talk about @dfn{return value}, I talk about the function value returned by
29287 the function call. Functions that fail should return @code{nil} as the
29288 return value.
29289
29290 Some back ends could be said to be @dfn{server-forming} back ends, and
29291 some might be said not to be. The latter are back ends that generally
29292 only operate on one group at a time, and have no concept of ``server'';
29293 they have a group, and they deliver info on that group and nothing
29294 more.
29295
29296 Gnus identifies each message by way of group name and article number. A
29297 few remarks about these article numbers might be useful. First of all,
29298 the numbers are positive integers. Secondly, it is normally not
29299 possible for later articles to ``re-use'' older article numbers without
29300 confusing Gnus. That is, if a group has ever contained a message
29301 numbered 42, then no other message may get that number, or Gnus will get
29302 mightily confused.@footnote{See the function
29303 @code{nnchoke-request-update-info}, @ref{Optional Back End Functions}.}
29304 Third, article numbers must be assigned in order of arrival in the
29305 group; this is not necessarily the same as the date of the message.
29306
29307 The previous paragraph already mentions all the ``hard'' restrictions that
29308 article numbers must fulfill. But it seems that it might be useful to
29309 assign @emph{consecutive} article numbers, for Gnus gets quite confused
29310 if there are holes in the article numbering sequence. However, due to
29311 the ``no-reuse'' restriction, holes cannot be avoided altogether. It's
29312 also useful for the article numbers to start at 1 to avoid running out
29313 of numbers as long as possible.
29314
29315 Note that by convention, back ends are named @code{nnsomething}, but
29316 Gnus also comes with some @code{nnnotbackends}, such as
29317 @file{nnheader.el}, @file{nnmail.el} and @file{nnoo.el}.
29318
29319 In the examples and definitions I will refer to the imaginary back end
29320 @code{nnchoke}.
29321
29322 @cindex @code{nnchoke}
29323
29324 @menu
29325 * Required Back End Functions:: Functions that must be implemented.
29326 * Optional Back End Functions:: Functions that need not be implemented.
29327 * Error Messaging:: How to get messages and report errors.
29328 * Writing New Back Ends:: Extending old back ends.
29329 * Hooking New Back Ends Into Gnus:: What has to be done on the Gnus end.
29330 * Mail-like Back Ends:: Some tips on mail back ends.
29331 @end menu
29332
29333
29334 @node Required Back End Functions
29335 @subsubsection Required Back End Functions
29336
29337 @table @code
29338
29339 @item (nnchoke-retrieve-headers ARTICLES &optional GROUP SERVER FETCH-OLD)
29340
29341 @var{articles} is either a range of article numbers or a list of
29342 @code{Message-ID}s. Current back ends do not fully support either---only
29343 sequences (lists) of article numbers, and most back ends do not support
29344 retrieval of @code{Message-ID}s. But they should try for both.
29345
29346 The result data should either be HEADs or @acronym{NOV} lines, and the result
29347 value should either be @code{headers} or @code{nov} to reflect this.
29348 This might later be expanded to @code{various}, which will be a mixture
29349 of HEADs and @acronym{NOV} lines, but this is currently not supported by Gnus.
29350
29351 If @var{fetch-old} is non-@code{nil} it says to try fetching ``extra
29352 headers'', in some meaning of the word. This is generally done by
29353 fetching (at most) @var{fetch-old} extra headers less than the smallest
29354 article number in @code{articles}, and filling the gaps as well. The
29355 presence of this parameter can be ignored if the back end finds it
29356 cumbersome to follow the request. If this is non-@code{nil} and not a
29357 number, do maximum fetches.
29358
29359 Here's an example HEAD:
29360
29361 @example
29362 221 1056 Article retrieved.
29363 Path: ifi.uio.no!sturles
29364 From: sturles@@ifi.uio.no (Sturle Sunde)
29365 Newsgroups: ifi.discussion
29366 Subject: Re: Something very droll
29367 Date: 27 Oct 1994 14:02:57 +0100
29368 Organization: Dept. of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway
29369 Lines: 26
29370 Message-ID: <38o8e1$a0o@@holmenkollen.ifi.uio.no>
29371 References: <38jdmq$4qu@@visbur.ifi.uio.no>
29372 NNTP-Posting-Host: holmenkollen.ifi.uio.no
29373 .
29374 @end example
29375
29376 So a @code{headers} return value would imply that there's a number of
29377 these in the data buffer.
29378
29379 Here's a BNF definition of such a buffer:
29380
29381 @example
29382 headers = *head
29383 head = error / valid-head
29384 error-message = [ "4" / "5" ] 2number " " <error message> eol
29385 valid-head = valid-message *header "." eol
29386 valid-message = "221 " <number> " Article retrieved." eol
29387 header = <text> eol
29388 @end example
29389
29390 @cindex BNF
29391 (The version of BNF used here is the one used in RFC822.)
29392
29393 If the return value is @code{nov}, the data buffer should contain
29394 @dfn{network overview database} lines. These are basically fields
29395 separated by tabs.
29396
29397 @example
29398 nov-buffer = *nov-line
29399 nov-line = field 7*8[ <TAB> field ] eol
29400 field = <text except TAB>
29401 @end example
29402
29403 For a closer look at what should be in those fields,
29404 @pxref{Headers}.
29405
29406
29407 @item (nnchoke-open-server SERVER &optional DEFINITIONS)
29408
29409 @var{server} is here the virtual server name. @var{definitions} is a
29410 list of @code{(VARIABLE VALUE)} pairs that define this virtual server.
29411
29412 If the server can't be opened, no error should be signaled. The back end
29413 may then choose to refuse further attempts at connecting to this
29414 server. In fact, it should do so.
29415
29416 If the server is opened already, this function should return a
29417 non-@code{nil} value. There should be no data returned.
29418
29419
29420 @item (nnchoke-close-server &optional SERVER)
29421
29422 Close connection to @var{server} and free all resources connected
29423 to it. Return @code{nil} if the server couldn't be closed for some
29424 reason.
29425
29426 There should be no data returned.
29427
29428
29429 @item (nnchoke-request-close)
29430
29431 Close connection to all servers and free all resources that the back end
29432 have reserved. All buffers that have been created by that back end
29433 should be killed. (Not the @code{nntp-server-buffer}, though.) This
29434 function is generally only called when Gnus is shutting down.
29435
29436 There should be no data returned.
29437
29438
29439 @item (nnchoke-server-opened &optional SERVER)
29440
29441 If @var{server} is the current virtual server, and the connection to the
29442 physical server is alive, then this function should return a
29443 non-@code{nil} value. This function should under no circumstances
29444 attempt to reconnect to a server we have lost connection to.
29445
29446 There should be no data returned.
29447
29448
29449 @item (nnchoke-status-message &optional SERVER)
29450
29451 This function should return the last error message from @var{server}.
29452
29453 There should be no data returned.
29454
29455
29456 @item (nnchoke-request-article ARTICLE &optional GROUP SERVER TO-BUFFER)
29457
29458 The result data from this function should be the article specified by
29459 @var{article}. This might either be a @code{Message-ID} or a number.
29460 It is optional whether to implement retrieval by @code{Message-ID}, but
29461 it would be nice if that were possible.
29462
29463 If @var{to-buffer} is non-@code{nil}, the result data should be returned
29464 in this buffer instead of the normal data buffer. This is to make it
29465 possible to avoid copying large amounts of data from one buffer to
29466 another, while Gnus mainly requests articles to be inserted directly
29467 into its article buffer.
29468
29469 If it is at all possible, this function should return a cons cell where
29470 the @code{car} is the group name the article was fetched from, and the @code{cdr} is
29471 the article number. This will enable Gnus to find out what the real
29472 group and article numbers are when fetching articles by
29473 @code{Message-ID}. If this isn't possible, @code{t} should be returned
29474 on successful article retrieval.
29475
29476
29477 @item (nnchoke-request-group GROUP &optional SERVER FAST INFO)
29478
29479 Get data on @var{group}. This function also has the side effect of
29480 making @var{group} the current group.
29481
29482 If @var{fast}, don't bother to return useful data, just make @var{group}
29483 the current group.
29484
29485 If @var{info}, it allows the backend to update the group info
29486 structure.
29487
29488 Here's an example of some result data and a definition of the same:
29489
29490 @example
29491 211 56 1000 1059 ifi.discussion
29492 @end example
29493
29494 The first number is the status, which should be 211. Next is the
29495 total number of articles in the group, the lowest article number, the
29496 highest article number, and finally the group name. Note that the total
29497 number of articles may be less than one might think while just
29498 considering the highest and lowest article numbers, but some articles
29499 may have been canceled. Gnus just discards the total-number, so
29500 whether one should take the bother to generate it properly (if that is a
29501 problem) is left as an exercise to the reader. If the group contains no
29502 articles, the lowest article number should be reported as 1 and the
29503 highest as 0.
29504
29505 @example
29506 group-status = [ error / info ] eol
29507 error = [ "4" / "5" ] 2<number> " " <Error message>
29508 info = "211 " 3* [ <number> " " ] <string>
29509 @end example
29510
29511
29512 @item (nnchoke-close-group GROUP &optional SERVER)
29513
29514 Close @var{group} and free any resources connected to it. This will be
29515 a no-op on most back ends.
29516
29517 There should be no data returned.
29518
29519
29520 @item (nnchoke-request-list &optional SERVER)
29521
29522 Return a list of all groups available on @var{server}. And that means
29523 @emph{all}.
29524
29525 Here's an example from a server that only carries two groups:
29526
29527 @example
29528 ifi.test 0000002200 0000002000 y
29529 ifi.discussion 3324 3300 n
29530 @end example
29531
29532 On each line we have a group name, then the highest article number in
29533 that group, the lowest article number, and finally a flag. If the group
29534 contains no articles, the lowest article number should be reported as 1
29535 and the highest as 0.
29536
29537 @example
29538 active-file = *active-line
29539 active-line = name " " <number> " " <number> " " flags eol
29540 name = <string>
29541 flags = "n" / "y" / "m" / "x" / "j" / "=" name
29542 @end example
29543
29544 The flag says whether the group is read-only (@samp{n}), is moderated
29545 (@samp{m}), is dead (@samp{x}), is aliased to some other group
29546 (@samp{=other-group}) or none of the above (@samp{y}).
29547
29548
29549 @item (nnchoke-request-post &optional SERVER)
29550
29551 This function should post the current buffer. It might return whether
29552 the posting was successful or not, but that's not required. If, for
29553 instance, the posting is done asynchronously, it has generally not been
29554 completed by the time this function concludes. In that case, this
29555 function should set up some kind of sentinel to beep the user loud and
29556 clear if the posting could not be completed.
29557
29558 There should be no result data from this function.
29559
29560 @end table
29561
29562
29563 @node Optional Back End Functions
29564 @subsubsection Optional Back End Functions
29565
29566 @table @code
29567
29568 @item (nnchoke-retrieve-groups GROUPS &optional SERVER)
29569
29570 @var{groups} is a list of groups, and this function should request data
29571 on all those groups. How it does it is of no concern to Gnus, but it
29572 should attempt to do this in a speedy fashion.
29573
29574 The return value of this function can be either @code{active} or
29575 @code{group}, which says what the format of the result data is. The
29576 former is in the same format as the data from
29577 @code{nnchoke-request-list}, while the latter is a buffer full of lines
29578 in the same format as @code{nnchoke-request-group} gives.
29579
29580 @example
29581 group-buffer = *active-line / *group-status
29582 @end example
29583
29584
29585 @item (nnchoke-request-update-info GROUP INFO &optional SERVER)
29586
29587 A Gnus group info (@pxref{Group Info}) is handed to the back end for
29588 alterations. This comes in handy if the back end really carries all
29589 the information (as is the case with virtual and imap groups). This
29590 function should destructively alter the info to suit its needs, and
29591 should return a non-@code{nil} value (exceptionally,
29592 @code{nntp-request-update-info} always returns @code{nil} not to waste
29593 the network resources).
29594
29595 There should be no result data from this function.
29596
29597
29598 @item (nnchoke-request-type GROUP &optional ARTICLE)
29599
29600 When the user issues commands for ``sending news'' (@kbd{F} in the
29601 summary buffer, for instance), Gnus has to know whether the article the
29602 user is following up on is news or mail. This function should return
29603 @code{news} if @var{article} in @var{group} is news, @code{mail} if it
29604 is mail and @code{unknown} if the type can't be decided. (The
29605 @var{article} parameter is necessary in @code{nnvirtual} groups which
29606 might very well combine mail groups and news groups.) Both @var{group}
29607 and @var{article} may be @code{nil}.
29608
29609 There should be no result data from this function.
29610
29611
29612 @item (nnchoke-request-set-mark GROUP ACTION &optional SERVER)
29613
29614 Set/remove/add marks on articles. Normally Gnus handles the article
29615 marks (such as read, ticked, expired etc.)@: internally, and store them in
29616 @file{~/.newsrc.eld}. Some back ends (such as @acronym{IMAP}) however carry
29617 all information about the articles on the server, so Gnus need to
29618 propagate the mark information to the server.
29619
29620 @var{action} is a list of mark setting requests, having this format:
29621
29622 @example
29623 (RANGE ACTION MARK)
29624 @end example
29625
29626 @var{range} is a range of articles you wish to update marks on.
29627 @var{action} is @code{add} or @code{del}, used to add marks or remove
29628 marks (preserving all marks not mentioned). @var{mark} is a list of
29629 marks; where each mark is a symbol. Currently used marks are
29630 @code{read}, @code{tick}, @code{reply}, @code{expire}, @code{killed},
29631 @code{dormant}, @code{save}, @code{download}, @code{unsend}, and
29632 @code{forward}, but your back end should, if possible, not limit
29633 itself to these.
29634
29635 Given contradictory actions, the last action in the list should be the
29636 effective one. That is, if your action contains a request to add the
29637 @code{tick} mark on article 1 and, later in the list, a request to
29638 remove the mark on the same article, the mark should in fact be removed.
29639
29640 An example action list:
29641
29642 @example
29643 (((5 12 30) 'del '(tick))
29644 ((10 . 90) 'add '(read expire))
29645 ((92 94) 'del '(read)))
29646 @end example
29647
29648 The function should return a range of articles it wasn't able to set the
29649 mark on (currently not used for anything).
29650
29651 There should be no result data from this function.
29652
29653 @item (nnchoke-request-update-mark GROUP ARTICLE MARK)
29654
29655 If the user tries to set a mark that the back end doesn't like, this
29656 function may change the mark. Gnus will use whatever this function
29657 returns as the mark for @var{article} instead of the original
29658 @var{mark}. If the back end doesn't care, it must return the original
29659 @var{mark}, and not @code{nil} or any other type of garbage.
29660
29661 The only use for this I can see is what @code{nnvirtual} does with
29662 it---if a component group is auto-expirable, marking an article as read
29663 in the virtual group should result in the article being marked as
29664 expirable.
29665
29666 There should be no result data from this function.
29667
29668
29669 @item (nnchoke-request-scan &optional GROUP SERVER)
29670
29671 This function may be called at any time (by Gnus or anything else) to
29672 request that the back end check for incoming articles, in one way or
29673 another. A mail back end will typically read the spool file or query
29674 the @acronym{POP} server when this function is invoked. The
29675 @var{group} doesn't have to be heeded---if the back end decides that
29676 it is too much work just scanning for a single group, it may do a
29677 total scan of all groups. It would be nice, however, to keep things
29678 local if that's practical.
29679
29680 There should be no result data from this function.
29681
29682
29683 @item (nnchoke-request-group-description GROUP &optional SERVER)
29684
29685 The result data from this function should be a description of
29686 @var{group}.
29687
29688 @example
29689 description-line = name <TAB> description eol
29690 name = <string>
29691 description = <text>
29692 @end example
29693
29694 @item (nnchoke-request-list-newsgroups &optional SERVER)
29695
29696 The result data from this function should be the description of all
29697 groups available on the server.
29698
29699 @example
29700 description-buffer = *description-line
29701 @end example
29702
29703
29704 @item (nnchoke-request-newgroups DATE &optional SERVER)
29705
29706 The result data from this function should be all groups that were
29707 created after @samp{date}, which is in normal human-readable date format
29708 (i.e., the date format used in mail and news headers, and returned by
29709 the function @code{message-make-date} by default). The data should be
29710 in the active buffer format.
29711
29712 It is okay for this function to return ``too many'' groups; some back ends
29713 might find it cheaper to return the full list of groups, rather than
29714 just the new groups. But don't do this for back ends with many groups.
29715 Normally, if the user creates the groups herself, there won't be too
29716 many groups, so @code{nnml} and the like are probably safe. But for
29717 back ends like @code{nntp}, where the groups have been created by the
29718 server, it is quite likely that there can be many groups.
29719
29720
29721 @item (nnchoke-request-create-group GROUP &optional SERVER)
29722
29723 This function should create an empty group with name @var{group}.
29724
29725 There should be no return data.
29726
29727
29728 @item (nnchoke-request-expire-articles ARTICLES &optional GROUP SERVER FORCE)
29729
29730 This function should run the expiry process on all articles in the
29731 @var{articles} range (which is currently a simple list of article
29732 numbers.) It is left up to the back end to decide how old articles
29733 should be before they are removed by this function. If @var{force} is
29734 non-@code{nil}, all @var{articles} should be deleted, no matter how new
29735 they are.
29736
29737 This function should return a list of articles that it did not/was not
29738 able to delete.
29739
29740 There should be no result data returned.
29741
29742
29743 @item (nnchoke-request-move-article ARTICLE GROUP SERVER ACCEPT-FORM &optional LAST)
29744
29745 This function should move @var{article} (which is a number) from
29746 @var{group} by calling @var{accept-form}.
29747
29748 This function should ready the article in question for moving by
29749 removing any header lines it has added to the article, and generally
29750 should ``tidy up'' the article. Then it should @code{eval}
29751 @var{accept-form} in the buffer where the ``tidy'' article is. This
29752 will do the actual copying. If this @code{eval} returns a
29753 non-@code{nil} value, the article should be removed.
29754
29755 If @var{last} is @code{nil}, that means that there is a high likelihood
29756 that there will be more requests issued shortly, so that allows some
29757 optimizations.
29758
29759 The function should return a cons where the @code{car} is the group name and
29760 the @code{cdr} is the article number that the article was entered as.
29761
29762 There should be no data returned.
29763
29764
29765 @item (nnchoke-request-accept-article GROUP &optional SERVER LAST)
29766
29767 This function takes the current buffer and inserts it into @var{group}.
29768 If @var{last} in @code{nil}, that means that there will be more calls to
29769 this function in short order.
29770
29771 The function should return a cons where the @code{car} is the group name and
29772 the @code{cdr} is the article number that the article was entered as.
29773
29774 The group should exist before the back end is asked to accept the
29775 article for that group.
29776
29777 There should be no data returned.
29778
29779
29780 @item (nnchoke-request-replace-article ARTICLE GROUP BUFFER)
29781
29782 This function should remove @var{article} (which is a number) from
29783 @var{group} and insert @var{buffer} there instead.
29784
29785 There should be no data returned.
29786
29787
29788 @item (nnchoke-request-delete-group GROUP FORCE &optional SERVER)
29789
29790 This function should delete @var{group}. If @var{force}, it should
29791 really delete all the articles in the group, and then delete the group
29792 itself. (If there is such a thing as ``the group itself''.)
29793
29794 There should be no data returned.
29795
29796
29797 @item (nnchoke-request-rename-group GROUP NEW-NAME &optional SERVER)
29798
29799 This function should rename @var{group} into @var{new-name}. All
29800 articles in @var{group} should move to @var{new-name}.
29801
29802 There should be no data returned.
29803
29804 @end table
29805
29806
29807 @node Error Messaging
29808 @subsubsection Error Messaging
29809
29810 @findex nnheader-report
29811 @findex nnheader-get-report
29812 The back ends should use the function @code{nnheader-report} to report
29813 error conditions---they should not raise errors when they aren't able to
29814 perform a request. The first argument to this function is the back end
29815 symbol, and the rest are interpreted as arguments to @code{format} if
29816 there are multiple of them, or just a string if there is one of them.
29817 This function must always returns @code{nil}.
29818
29819 @lisp
29820 (nnheader-report 'nnchoke "You did something totally bogus")
29821
29822 (nnheader-report 'nnchoke "Could not request group %s" group)
29823 @end lisp
29824
29825 Gnus, in turn, will call @code{nnheader-get-report} when it gets a
29826 @code{nil} back from a server, and this function returns the most
29827 recently reported message for the back end in question. This function
29828 takes one argument---the server symbol.
29829
29830 Internally, these functions access @var{back-end}@code{-status-string},
29831 so the @code{nnchoke} back end will have its error message stored in
29832 @code{nnchoke-status-string}.
29833
29834
29835 @node Writing New Back Ends
29836 @subsubsection Writing New Back Ends
29837
29838 Many back ends are quite similar. @code{nnml} is just like
29839 @code{nnspool}, but it allows you to edit the articles on the server.
29840 @code{nnmh} is just like @code{nnml}, but it doesn't use an active file,
29841 and it doesn't maintain overview databases. @code{nndir} is just like
29842 @code{nnml}, but it has no concept of ``groups'', and it doesn't allow
29843 editing articles.
29844
29845 It would make sense if it were possible to ``inherit'' functions from
29846 back ends when writing new back ends. And, indeed, you can do that if you
29847 want to. (You don't have to if you don't want to, of course.)
29848
29849 All the back ends declare their public variables and functions by using a
29850 package called @code{nnoo}.
29851
29852 To inherit functions from other back ends (and allow other back ends to
29853 inherit functions from the current back end), you should use the
29854 following macros:
29855
29856 @table @code
29857
29858 @item nnoo-declare
29859 This macro declares the first parameter to be a child of the subsequent
29860 parameters. For instance:
29861
29862 @lisp
29863 (nnoo-declare nndir
29864 nnml nnmh)
29865 @end lisp
29866
29867 @code{nndir} has declared here that it intends to inherit functions from
29868 both @code{nnml} and @code{nnmh}.
29869
29870 @item defvoo
29871 This macro is equivalent to @code{defvar}, but registers the variable as
29872 a public server variable. Most state-oriented variables should be
29873 declared with @code{defvoo} instead of @code{defvar}.
29874
29875 In addition to the normal @code{defvar} parameters, it takes a list of
29876 variables in the parent back ends to map the variable to when executing
29877 a function in those back ends.
29878
29879 @lisp
29880 (defvoo nndir-directory nil
29881 "Where nndir will look for groups."
29882 nnml-current-directory nnmh-current-directory)
29883 @end lisp
29884
29885 This means that @code{nnml-current-directory} will be set to
29886 @code{nndir-directory} when an @code{nnml} function is called on behalf
29887 of @code{nndir}. (The same with @code{nnmh}.)
29888
29889 @item nnoo-define-basics
29890 This macro defines some common functions that almost all back ends should
29891 have.
29892
29893 @lisp
29894 (nnoo-define-basics nndir)
29895 @end lisp
29896
29897 @item deffoo
29898 This macro is just like @code{defun} and takes the same parameters. In
29899 addition to doing the normal @code{defun} things, it registers the
29900 function as being public so that other back ends can inherit it.
29901
29902 @item nnoo-map-functions
29903 This macro allows mapping of functions from the current back end to
29904 functions from the parent back ends.
29905
29906 @lisp
29907 (nnoo-map-functions nndir
29908 (nnml-retrieve-headers 0 nndir-current-group 0 0)
29909 (nnmh-request-article 0 nndir-current-group 0 0))
29910 @end lisp
29911
29912 This means that when @code{nndir-retrieve-headers} is called, the first,
29913 third, and fourth parameters will be passed on to
29914 @code{nnml-retrieve-headers}, while the second parameter is set to the
29915 value of @code{nndir-current-group}.
29916
29917 @item nnoo-import
29918 This macro allows importing functions from back ends. It should be the
29919 last thing in the source file, since it will only define functions that
29920 haven't already been defined.
29921
29922 @lisp
29923 (nnoo-import nndir
29924 (nnmh
29925 nnmh-request-list
29926 nnmh-request-newgroups)
29927 (nnml))
29928 @end lisp
29929
29930 This means that calls to @code{nndir-request-list} should just be passed
29931 on to @code{nnmh-request-list}, while all public functions from
29932 @code{nnml} that haven't been defined in @code{nndir} yet should be
29933 defined now.
29934
29935 @end table
29936
29937 Below is a slightly shortened version of the @code{nndir} back end.
29938
29939 @lisp
29940 ;;; @r{nndir.el --- single directory newsgroup access for Gnus}
29941 ;; @r{Copyright (C) 1995,1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc.}
29942
29943 ;;; @r{Code:}
29944
29945 (require 'nnheader)
29946 (require 'nnmh)
29947 (require 'nnml)
29948 (require 'nnoo)
29949 (eval-when-compile (require 'cl))
29950
29951 (nnoo-declare nndir
29952 nnml nnmh)
29953
29954 (defvoo nndir-directory nil
29955 "Where nndir will look for groups."
29956 nnml-current-directory nnmh-current-directory)
29957
29958 (defvoo nndir-nov-is-evil nil
29959 "*Non-nil means that nndir will never retrieve NOV headers."
29960 nnml-nov-is-evil)
29961
29962 (defvoo nndir-current-group ""
29963 nil
29964 nnml-current-group nnmh-current-group)
29965 (defvoo nndir-top-directory nil nil nnml-directory nnmh-directory)
29966 (defvoo nndir-get-new-mail nil nil nnml-get-new-mail nnmh-get-new-mail)
29967
29968 (defvoo nndir-status-string "" nil nnmh-status-string)
29969 (defconst nndir-version "nndir 1.0")
29970
29971 ;;; @r{Interface functions.}
29972
29973 (nnoo-define-basics nndir)
29974
29975 (deffoo nndir-open-server (server &optional defs)
29976 (setq nndir-directory
29977 (or (cadr (assq 'nndir-directory defs))
29978 server))
29979 (unless (assq 'nndir-directory defs)
29980 (push `(nndir-directory ,server) defs))
29981 (push `(nndir-current-group
29982 ,(file-name-nondirectory
29983 (directory-file-name nndir-directory)))
29984 defs)
29985 (push `(nndir-top-directory
29986 ,(file-name-directory (directory-file-name nndir-directory)))
29987 defs)
29988 (nnoo-change-server 'nndir server defs))
29989
29990 (nnoo-map-functions nndir
29991 (nnml-retrieve-headers 0 nndir-current-group 0 0)
29992 (nnmh-request-article 0 nndir-current-group 0 0)
29993 (nnmh-request-group nndir-current-group 0 0)
29994 (nnmh-close-group nndir-current-group 0))
29995
29996 (nnoo-import nndir
29997 (nnmh
29998 nnmh-status-message
29999 nnmh-request-list
30000 nnmh-request-newgroups))
30001
30002 (provide 'nndir)
30003 @end lisp
30004
30005
30006 @node Hooking New Back Ends Into Gnus
30007 @subsubsection Hooking New Back Ends Into Gnus
30008
30009 @vindex gnus-valid-select-methods
30010 @findex gnus-declare-backend
30011 Having Gnus start using your new back end is rather easy---you just
30012 declare it with the @code{gnus-declare-backend} functions. This will
30013 enter the back end into the @code{gnus-valid-select-methods} variable.
30014
30015 @code{gnus-declare-backend} takes two parameters---the back end name and
30016 an arbitrary number of @dfn{abilities}.
30017
30018 Here's an example:
30019
30020 @lisp
30021 (gnus-declare-backend "nnchoke" 'mail 'respool 'address)
30022 @end lisp
30023
30024 The above line would then go in the @file{nnchoke.el} file.
30025
30026 The abilities can be:
30027
30028 @table @code
30029 @item mail
30030 This is a mailish back end---followups should (probably) go via mail.
30031 @item post
30032 This is a newsish back end---followups should (probably) go via news.
30033 @item post-mail
30034 This back end supports both mail and news.
30035 @item none
30036 This is neither a post nor mail back end---it's something completely
30037 different.
30038 @item respool
30039 It supports respooling---or rather, it is able to modify its source
30040 articles and groups.
30041 @item address
30042 The name of the server should be in the virtual server name. This is
30043 true for almost all back ends.
30044 @item prompt-address
30045 The user should be prompted for an address when doing commands like
30046 @kbd{B} in the group buffer. This is true for back ends like
30047 @code{nntp}, but not @code{nnmbox}, for instance.
30048 @end table
30049
30050
30051 @node Mail-like Back Ends
30052 @subsubsection Mail-like Back Ends
30053
30054 One of the things that separate the mail back ends from the rest of the
30055 back ends is the heavy dependence by most of the mail back ends on
30056 common functions in @file{nnmail.el}. For instance, here's the
30057 definition of @code{nnml-request-scan}:
30058
30059 @lisp
30060 (deffoo nnml-request-scan (&optional group server)
30061 (setq nnml-article-file-alist nil)
30062 (nnmail-get-new-mail 'nnml 'nnml-save-nov nnml-directory group))
30063 @end lisp
30064
30065 It simply calls @code{nnmail-get-new-mail} with a few parameters,
30066 and @code{nnmail} takes care of all the moving and splitting of the
30067 mail.
30068
30069 This function takes four parameters.
30070
30071 @table @var
30072 @item method
30073 This should be a symbol to designate which back end is responsible for
30074 the call.
30075
30076 @item exit-function
30077 This function should be called after the splitting has been performed.
30078
30079 @item temp-directory
30080 Where the temporary files should be stored.
30081
30082 @item group
30083 This optional argument should be a group name if the splitting is to be
30084 performed for one group only.
30085 @end table
30086
30087 @code{nnmail-get-new-mail} will call @var{back-end}@code{-save-mail} to
30088 save each article. @var{back-end}@code{-active-number} will be called to
30089 find the article number assigned to this article.
30090
30091 The function also uses the following variables:
30092 @var{back-end}@code{-get-new-mail} (to see whether to get new mail for
30093 this back end); and @var{back-end}@code{-group-alist} and
30094 @var{back-end}@code{-active-file} to generate the new active file.
30095 @var{back-end}@code{-group-alist} should be a group-active alist, like
30096 this:
30097
30098 @example
30099 (("a-group" (1 . 10))
30100 ("some-group" (34 . 39)))
30101 @end example
30102
30103
30104 @node Score File Syntax
30105 @subsection Score File Syntax
30106
30107 Score files are meant to be easily parsable, but yet extremely
30108 malleable. It was decided that something that had the same read syntax
30109 as an Emacs Lisp list would fit that spec.
30110
30111 Here's a typical score file:
30112
30113 @lisp
30114 (("summary"
30115 ("Windows 95" -10000 nil s)
30116 ("Gnus"))
30117 ("from"
30118 ("Lars" -1000))
30119 (mark -100))
30120 @end lisp
30121
30122 BNF definition of a score file:
30123
30124 @example
30125 score-file = "" / "(" *element ")"
30126 element = rule / atom
30127 rule = string-rule / number-rule / date-rule
30128 string-rule = "(" quote string-header quote space *string-match ")"
30129 number-rule = "(" quote number-header quote space *number-match ")"
30130 date-rule = "(" quote date-header quote space *date-match ")"
30131 quote = <ascii 34>
30132 string-header = "subject" / "from" / "references" / "message-id" /
30133 "xref" / "body" / "head" / "all" / "followup"
30134 number-header = "lines" / "chars"
30135 date-header = "date"
30136 string-match = "(" quote <string> quote [ "" / [ space score [ "" /
30137 space date [ "" / [ space string-match-t ] ] ] ] ] ")"
30138 score = "nil" / <integer>
30139 date = "nil" / <natural number>
30140 string-match-t = "nil" / "s" / "substring" / "S" / "Substring" /
30141 "r" / "regex" / "R" / "Regex" /
30142 "e" / "exact" / "E" / "Exact" /
30143 "f" / "fuzzy" / "F" / "Fuzzy"
30144 number-match = "(" <integer> [ "" / [ space score [ "" /
30145 space date [ "" / [ space number-match-t ] ] ] ] ] ")"
30146 number-match-t = "nil" / "=" / "<" / ">" / ">=" / "<="
30147 date-match = "(" quote <string> quote [ "" / [ space score [ "" /
30148 space date [ "" / [ space date-match-t ] ] ] ] ")"
30149 date-match-t = "nil" / "at" / "before" / "after"
30150 atom = "(" [ required-atom / optional-atom ] ")"
30151 required-atom = mark / expunge / mark-and-expunge / files /
30152 exclude-files / read-only / touched
30153 optional-atom = adapt / local / eval
30154 mark = "mark" space nil-or-number
30155 nil-or-number = "nil" / <integer>
30156 expunge = "expunge" space nil-or-number
30157 mark-and-expunge = "mark-and-expunge" space nil-or-number
30158 files = "files" *[ space <string> ]
30159 exclude-files = "exclude-files" *[ space <string> ]
30160 read-only = "read-only" [ space "nil" / space "t" ]
30161 adapt = "adapt" [ space "ignore" / space "t" / space adapt-rule ]
30162 adapt-rule = "(" *[ <string> *[ "(" <string> <integer> ")" ] ")"
30163 local = "local" *[ space "(" <string> space <form> ")" ]
30164 eval = "eval" space <form>
30165 space = *[ " " / <TAB> / <NEWLINE> ]
30166 @end example
30167
30168 Any unrecognized elements in a score file should be ignored, but not
30169 discarded.
30170
30171 As you can see, white space is needed, but the type and amount of white
30172 space is irrelevant. This means that formatting of the score file is
30173 left up to the programmer---if it's simpler to just spew it all out on
30174 one looong line, then that's ok.
30175
30176 The meaning of the various atoms are explained elsewhere in this
30177 manual (@pxref{Score File Format}).
30178
30179
30180 @node Headers
30181 @subsection Headers
30182
30183 Internally Gnus uses a format for storing article headers that
30184 corresponds to the @acronym{NOV} format in a mysterious fashion. One could
30185 almost suspect that the author looked at the @acronym{NOV} specification and
30186 just shamelessly @emph{stole} the entire thing, and one would be right.
30187
30188 @dfn{Header} is a severely overloaded term. ``Header'' is used in
30189 RFC 1036 to talk about lines in the head of an article (e.g.,
30190 @code{From}). It is used by many people as a synonym for
30191 ``head''---``the header and the body''. (That should be avoided, in my
30192 opinion.) And Gnus uses a format internally that it calls ``header'',
30193 which is what I'm talking about here. This is a 9-element vector,
30194 basically, with each header (ouch) having one slot.
30195
30196 These slots are, in order: @code{number}, @code{subject}, @code{from},
30197 @code{date}, @code{id}, @code{references}, @code{chars}, @code{lines},
30198 @code{xref}, and @code{extra}. There are macros for accessing and
30199 setting these slots---they all have predictable names beginning with
30200 @code{mail-header-} and @code{mail-header-set-}, respectively.
30201
30202 All these slots contain strings, except the @code{extra} slot, which
30203 contains an alist of header/value pairs (@pxref{To From Newsgroups}).
30204
30205
30206 @node Ranges
30207 @subsection Ranges
30208
30209 @sc{gnus} introduced a concept that I found so useful that I've started
30210 using it a lot and have elaborated on it greatly.
30211
30212 The question is simple: If you have a large amount of objects that are
30213 identified by numbers (say, articles, to take a @emph{wild} example)
30214 that you want to qualify as being ``included'', a normal sequence isn't
30215 very useful. (A 200,000 length sequence is a bit long-winded.)
30216
30217 The solution is as simple as the question: You just collapse the
30218 sequence.
30219
30220 @example
30221 (1 2 3 4 5 6 10 11 12)
30222 @end example
30223
30224 is transformed into
30225
30226 @example
30227 ((1 . 6) (10 . 12))
30228 @end example
30229
30230 To avoid having those nasty @samp{(13 . 13)} elements to denote a
30231 lonesome object, a @samp{13} is a valid element:
30232
30233 @example
30234 ((1 . 6) 7 (10 . 12))
30235 @end example
30236
30237 This means that comparing two ranges to find out whether they are equal
30238 is slightly tricky:
30239
30240 @example
30241 ((1 . 5) 7 8 (10 . 12))
30242 @end example
30243
30244 and
30245
30246 @example
30247 ((1 . 5) (7 . 8) (10 . 12))
30248 @end example
30249
30250 are equal. In fact, any non-descending list is a range:
30251
30252 @example
30253 (1 2 3 4 5)
30254 @end example
30255
30256 is a perfectly valid range, although a pretty long-winded one. This is
30257 also valid:
30258
30259 @example
30260 (1 . 5)
30261 @end example
30262
30263 and is equal to the previous range.
30264
30265 Here's a BNF definition of ranges. Of course, one must remember the
30266 semantic requirement that the numbers are non-descending. (Any number
30267 of repetition of the same number is allowed, but apt to disappear in
30268 range handling.)
30269
30270 @example
30271 range = simple-range / normal-range
30272 simple-range = "(" number " . " number ")"
30273 normal-range = "(" start-contents ")"
30274 contents = "" / simple-range *[ " " contents ] /
30275 number *[ " " contents ]
30276 @end example
30277
30278 Gnus currently uses ranges to keep track of read articles and article
30279 marks. I plan on implementing a number of range operators in C if The
30280 Powers That Be are willing to let me. (I haven't asked yet, because I
30281 need to do some more thinking on what operators I need to make life
30282 totally range-based without ever having to convert back to normal
30283 sequences.)
30284
30285
30286 @node Group Info
30287 @subsection Group Info
30288
30289 Gnus stores all permanent info on groups in a @dfn{group info} list.
30290 This list is from three to six elements (or more) long and exhaustively
30291 describes the group.
30292
30293 Here are two example group infos; one is a very simple group while the
30294 second is a more complex one:
30295
30296 @example
30297 ("no.group" 5 ((1 . 54324)))
30298
30299 ("nnml:my.mail" 3 ((1 . 5) 9 (20 . 55))
30300 ((tick (15 . 19)) (replied 3 6 (19 . 3)))
30301 (nnml "")
30302 ((auto-expire . t) (to-address . "ding@@gnus.org")))
30303 @end example
30304
30305 The first element is the @dfn{group name}---as Gnus knows the group,
30306 anyway. The second element is the @dfn{subscription level}, which
30307 normally is a small integer. (It can also be the @dfn{rank}, which is a
30308 cons cell where the @code{car} is the level and the @code{cdr} is the
30309 score.) The third element is a list of ranges of read articles. The
30310 fourth element is a list of lists of article marks of various kinds.
30311 The fifth element is the select method (or virtual server, if you like).
30312 The sixth element is a list of @dfn{group parameters}, which is what
30313 this section is about.
30314
30315 Any of the last three elements may be missing if they are not required.
30316 In fact, the vast majority of groups will normally only have the first
30317 three elements, which saves quite a lot of cons cells.
30318
30319 Here's a BNF definition of the group info format:
30320
30321 @example
30322 info = "(" group space ralevel space read
30323 [ "" / [ space marks-list [ "" / [ space method [ "" /
30324 space parameters ] ] ] ] ] ")"
30325 group = quote <string> quote
30326 ralevel = rank / level
30327 level = <integer in the range of 1 to inf>
30328 rank = "(" level "." score ")"
30329 score = <integer in the range of 1 to inf>
30330 read = range
30331 marks-lists = nil / "(" *marks ")"
30332 marks = "(" <string> range ")"
30333 method = "(" <string> *elisp-forms ")"
30334 parameters = "(" *elisp-forms ")"
30335 @end example
30336
30337 Actually that @samp{marks} rule is a fib. A @samp{marks} is a
30338 @samp{<string>} consed on to a @samp{range}, but that's a bitch to say
30339 in pseudo-BNF.
30340
30341 If you have a Gnus info and want to access the elements, Gnus offers a
30342 series of macros for getting/setting these elements.
30343
30344 @table @code
30345 @item gnus-info-group
30346 @itemx gnus-info-set-group
30347 @findex gnus-info-group
30348 @findex gnus-info-set-group
30349 Get/set the group name.
30350
30351 @item gnus-info-rank
30352 @itemx gnus-info-set-rank
30353 @findex gnus-info-rank
30354 @findex gnus-info-set-rank
30355 Get/set the group rank (@pxref{Group Score}).
30356
30357 @item gnus-info-level
30358 @itemx gnus-info-set-level
30359 @findex gnus-info-level
30360 @findex gnus-info-set-level
30361 Get/set the group level.
30362
30363 @item gnus-info-score
30364 @itemx gnus-info-set-score
30365 @findex gnus-info-score
30366 @findex gnus-info-set-score
30367 Get/set the group score (@pxref{Group Score}).
30368
30369 @item gnus-info-read
30370 @itemx gnus-info-set-read
30371 @findex gnus-info-read
30372 @findex gnus-info-set-read
30373 Get/set the ranges of read articles.
30374
30375 @item gnus-info-marks
30376 @itemx gnus-info-set-marks
30377 @findex gnus-info-marks
30378 @findex gnus-info-set-marks
30379 Get/set the lists of ranges of marked articles.
30380
30381 @item gnus-info-method
30382 @itemx gnus-info-set-method
30383 @findex gnus-info-method
30384 @findex gnus-info-set-method
30385 Get/set the group select method.
30386
30387 @item gnus-info-params
30388 @itemx gnus-info-set-params
30389 @findex gnus-info-params
30390 @findex gnus-info-set-params
30391 Get/set the group parameters.
30392 @end table
30393
30394 All the getter functions take one parameter---the info list. The setter
30395 functions take two parameters---the info list and the new value.
30396
30397 The last three elements in the group info aren't mandatory, so it may be
30398 necessary to extend the group info before setting the element. If this
30399 is necessary, you can just pass on a non-@code{nil} third parameter to
30400 the three final setter functions to have this happen automatically.
30401
30402
30403 @node Extended Interactive
30404 @subsection Extended Interactive
30405 @cindex interactive
30406 @findex gnus-interactive
30407
30408 Gnus extends the standard Emacs @code{interactive} specification
30409 slightly to allow easy use of the symbolic prefix (@pxref{Symbolic
30410 Prefixes}). Here's an example of how this is used:
30411
30412 @lisp
30413 (defun gnus-summary-increase-score (&optional score symp)
30414 (interactive (gnus-interactive "P\ny"))
30415 ...
30416 )
30417 @end lisp
30418
30419 The best thing to do would have been to implement
30420 @code{gnus-interactive} as a macro which would have returned an
30421 @code{interactive} form, but this isn't possible since Emacs checks
30422 whether a function is interactive or not by simply doing an @code{assq}
30423 on the lambda form. So, instead we have @code{gnus-interactive}
30424 function that takes a string and returns values that are usable to
30425 @code{interactive}.
30426
30427 This function accepts (almost) all normal @code{interactive} specs, but
30428 adds a few more.
30429
30430 @table @samp
30431 @item y
30432 @vindex gnus-current-prefix-symbol
30433 The current symbolic prefix---the @code{gnus-current-prefix-symbol}
30434 variable.
30435
30436 @item Y
30437 @vindex gnus-current-prefix-symbols
30438 A list of the current symbolic prefixes---the
30439 @code{gnus-current-prefix-symbol} variable.
30440
30441 @item A
30442 The current article number---the @code{gnus-summary-article-number}
30443 function.
30444
30445 @item H
30446 The current article header---the @code{gnus-summary-article-header}
30447 function.
30448
30449 @item g
30450 The current group name---the @code{gnus-group-group-name}
30451 function.
30452
30453 @end table
30454
30455
30456 @node Emacs/XEmacs Code
30457 @subsection Emacs/XEmacs Code
30458 @cindex XEmacs
30459 @cindex Emacsen
30460
30461 While Gnus runs under Emacs, XEmacs and Mule, I decided that one of the
30462 platforms must be the primary one. I chose Emacs. Not because I don't
30463 like XEmacs or Mule, but because it comes first alphabetically.
30464
30465 This means that Gnus will byte-compile under Emacs with nary a warning,
30466 while XEmacs will pump out gigabytes of warnings while byte-compiling.
30467 As I use byte-compilation warnings to help me root out trivial errors in
30468 Gnus, that's very useful.
30469
30470 I've also consistently used Emacs function interfaces, but have used
30471 Gnusey aliases for the functions. To take an example: Emacs defines a
30472 @code{run-at-time} function while XEmacs defines a @code{start-itimer}
30473 function. I then define a function called @code{gnus-run-at-time} that
30474 takes the same parameters as the Emacs @code{run-at-time}. When running
30475 Gnus under Emacs, the former function is just an alias for the latter.
30476 However, when running under XEmacs, the former is an alias for the
30477 following function:
30478
30479 @lisp
30480 (defun gnus-xmas-run-at-time (time repeat function &rest args)
30481 (start-itimer
30482 "gnus-run-at-time"
30483 `(lambda ()
30484 (,function ,@@args))
30485 time repeat))
30486 @end lisp
30487
30488 This sort of thing has been done for bunches of functions. Gnus does
30489 not redefine any native Emacs functions while running under XEmacs---it
30490 does this @code{defalias} thing with Gnus equivalents instead. Cleaner
30491 all over.
30492
30493 In the cases where the XEmacs function interface was obviously cleaner,
30494 I used it instead. For example @code{gnus-region-active-p} is an alias
30495 for @code{region-active-p} in XEmacs, whereas in Emacs it is a function.
30496
30497 Of course, I could have chosen XEmacs as my native platform and done
30498 mapping functions the other way around. But I didn't. The performance
30499 hit these indirections impose on Gnus under XEmacs should be slight.
30500
30501
30502 @node Various File Formats
30503 @subsection Various File Formats
30504
30505 @menu
30506 * Active File Format:: Information on articles and groups available.
30507 * Newsgroups File Format:: Group descriptions.
30508 @end menu
30509
30510
30511 @node Active File Format
30512 @subsubsection Active File Format
30513
30514 The active file lists all groups available on the server in
30515 question. It also lists the highest and lowest current article numbers
30516 in each group.
30517
30518 Here's an excerpt from a typical active file:
30519
30520 @example
30521 soc.motss 296030 293865 y
30522 alt.binaries.pictures.fractals 3922 3913 n
30523 comp.sources.unix 1605 1593 m
30524 comp.binaries.ibm.pc 5097 5089 y
30525 no.general 1000 900 y
30526 @end example
30527
30528 Here's a pseudo-BNF definition of this file:
30529
30530 @example
30531 active = *group-line
30532 group-line = group spc high-number spc low-number spc flag <NEWLINE>
30533 group = <non-white-space string>
30534 spc = " "
30535 high-number = <non-negative integer>
30536 low-number = <positive integer>
30537 flag = "y" / "n" / "m" / "j" / "x" / "=" group
30538 @end example
30539
30540 For a full description of this file, see the manual pages for
30541 @samp{innd}, in particular @samp{active(5)}.
30542
30543
30544 @node Newsgroups File Format
30545 @subsubsection Newsgroups File Format
30546
30547 The newsgroups file lists groups along with their descriptions. Not all
30548 groups on the server have to be listed, and not all groups in the file
30549 have to exist on the server. The file is meant purely as information to
30550 the user.
30551
30552 The format is quite simple; a group name, a tab, and the description.
30553 Here's the definition:
30554
30555 @example
30556 newsgroups = *line
30557 line = group tab description <NEWLINE>
30558 group = <non-white-space string>
30559 tab = <TAB>
30560 description = <string>
30561 @end example
30562
30563
30564 @page
30565 @node Emacs for Heathens
30566 @section Emacs for Heathens
30567
30568 Believe it or not, but some people who use Gnus haven't really used
30569 Emacs much before they embarked on their journey on the Gnus Love Boat.
30570 If you are one of those unfortunates whom ``@kbd{C-M-a}'', ``kill the
30571 region'', and ``set @code{gnus-flargblossen} to an alist where the key
30572 is a regexp that is used for matching on the group name'' are magical
30573 phrases with little or no meaning, then this appendix is for you. If
30574 you are already familiar with Emacs, just ignore this and go fondle your
30575 cat instead.
30576
30577 @menu
30578 * Keystrokes:: Entering text and executing commands.
30579 * Emacs Lisp:: The built-in Emacs programming language.
30580 @end menu
30581
30582
30583 @node Keystrokes
30584 @subsection Keystrokes
30585
30586 @itemize @bullet
30587 @item
30588 Q: What is an experienced Emacs user?
30589
30590 @item
30591 A: A person who wishes that the terminal had pedals.
30592 @end itemize
30593
30594 Yes, when you use Emacs, you are apt to use the control key, the shift
30595 key and the meta key a lot. This is very annoying to some people
30596 (notably @code{vi}le users), and the rest of us just love the hell out
30597 of it. Just give up and submit. Emacs really does stand for
30598 ``Escape-Meta-Alt-Control-Shift'', and not ``Editing Macros'', as you
30599 may have heard from other disreputable sources (like the Emacs author).
30600
30601 The shift keys are normally located near your pinky fingers, and are
30602 normally used to get capital letters and stuff. You probably use it all
30603 the time. The control key is normally marked ``CTRL'' or something like
30604 that. The meta key is, funnily enough, never marked as such on any
30605 keyboard. The one I'm currently at has a key that's marked ``Alt'',
30606 which is the meta key on this keyboard. It's usually located somewhere
30607 to the left hand side of the keyboard, usually on the bottom row.
30608
30609 Now, us Emacs people don't say ``press the meta-control-m key'',
30610 because that's just too inconvenient. We say ``press the @kbd{C-M-m}
30611 key''. @kbd{M-} is the prefix that means ``meta'' and ``C-'' is the
30612 prefix that means ``control''. So ``press @kbd{C-k}'' means ``press
30613 down the control key, and hold it down while you press @kbd{k}''.
30614 ``Press @kbd{C-M-k}'' means ``press down and hold down the meta key and
30615 the control key and then press @kbd{k}''. Simple, ay?
30616
30617 This is somewhat complicated by the fact that not all keyboards have a
30618 meta key. In that case you can use the ``escape'' key. Then @kbd{M-k}
30619 means ``press escape, release escape, press @kbd{k}''. That's much more
30620 work than if you have a meta key, so if that's the case, I respectfully
30621 suggest you get a real keyboard with a meta key. You can't live without
30622 it.
30623
30624
30625
30626 @node Emacs Lisp
30627 @subsection Emacs Lisp
30628
30629 Emacs is the King of Editors because it's really a Lisp interpreter.
30630 Each and every key you tap runs some Emacs Lisp code snippet, and since
30631 Emacs Lisp is an interpreted language, that means that you can configure
30632 any key to run any arbitrary code. You just, like, do it.
30633
30634 Gnus is written in Emacs Lisp, and is run as a bunch of interpreted
30635 functions. (These are byte-compiled for speed, but it's still
30636 interpreted.) If you decide that you don't like the way Gnus does
30637 certain things, it's trivial to have it do something a different way.
30638 (Well, at least if you know how to write Lisp code.) However, that's
30639 beyond the scope of this manual, so we are simply going to talk about
30640 some common constructs that you normally use in your @file{~/.gnus.el}
30641 file to customize Gnus. (You can also use the @file{~/.emacs} file, but
30642 in order to set things of Gnus up, it is much better to use the
30643 @file{~/.gnus.el} file, @xref{Startup Files}.)
30644
30645 If you want to set the variable @code{gnus-florgbnize} to four (4), you
30646 write the following:
30647
30648 @lisp
30649 (setq gnus-florgbnize 4)
30650 @end lisp
30651
30652 This function (really ``special form'') @code{setq} is the one that can
30653 set a variable to some value. This is really all you need to know. Now
30654 you can go and fill your @file{~/.gnus.el} file with lots of these to
30655 change how Gnus works.
30656
30657 If you have put that thing in your @file{~/.gnus.el} file, it will be
30658 read and @code{eval}ed (which is Lisp-ese for ``run'') the next time you
30659 start Gnus. If you want to change the variable right away, simply say
30660 @kbd{C-x C-e} after the closing parenthesis. That will @code{eval} the
30661 previous ``form'', which is a simple @code{setq} statement here.
30662
30663 Go ahead---just try it, if you're located at your Emacs. After you
30664 @kbd{C-x C-e}, you will see @samp{4} appear in the echo area, which
30665 is the return value of the form you @code{eval}ed.
30666
30667 Some pitfalls:
30668
30669 If the manual says ``set @code{gnus-read-active-file} to @code{some}'',
30670 that means:
30671
30672 @lisp
30673 (setq gnus-read-active-file 'some)
30674 @end lisp
30675
30676 On the other hand, if the manual says ``set @code{gnus-nntp-server-file} to
30677 @samp{/etc/nntpserver}'', that means:
30678
30679 @lisp
30680 (setq gnus-nntp-server-file "/etc/nntpserver")
30681 @end lisp
30682
30683 So be careful not to mix up strings (the latter) with symbols (the
30684 former). The manual is unambiguous, but it can be confusing.
30685
30686 @page
30687 @include gnus-faq.texi
30688
30689 @node GNU Free Documentation License
30690 @chapter GNU Free Documentation License
30691 @include doclicense.texi
30692
30693 @node Index
30694 @chapter Index
30695 @printindex cp
30696
30697 @node Key Index
30698 @chapter Key Index
30699 @printindex ky
30700
30701 @bye
30702
30703 @iftex
30704 @iflatex
30705 \end{document}
30706 @end iflatex
30707 @end iftex
30708
30709 @c Local Variables:
30710 @c mode: texinfo
30711 @c coding: utf-8
30712 @c End: