From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Jason Molenda To: Gerald Pfeifer Cc: overseers@sourceware.cygnus.com Subject: Re: RE2: Re: Why have the prior 2 "gcc Digest" emails *not* been digests? (fwd) Date: Wed, 31 May 2000 13:52:00 -0000 Message-ID: <20000531135132.A16989@shell17.ba.best.com> References: X-SW-Source: 2000-q2/msg00296.html Message-ID: <20000531135200.i6Dw2OEpSNrtm_xfkM5IdP4fLIej_0qgZem8FHLJzK8@z> On Tue, May 30, 2000 at 10:03:38PM +0200, Gerald Pfeifer wrote: > A few days ago I forwarded another message by David, which Jason and/or > Jeff were so kind to have a look at; perhaps the following provides the > crucial hint? > I'll be honest - I don't have a clue. I know next to nothing about how ezmlm constructs its digests. Maybe it has something to do with the messages in the archive? I don't know. ezmlm-get(1) says the following. No -f option is being specified for the gcc list, so the default (m) should be the one used. From /qmail/lists-gcc/gcc/editor: |/qmail/ezmlm/ezmlm-get '/qmail/lists-gcc/gcc' || exit 0 >From the man page: -f is an optional format specifier for -get, -thread, and -dig requests. It is allowed, but ignored for -index requests. Currently, the following are allowed: r rfc1153. This is a ``plain'' non-MIME format for dumb clients. m (Default.) MIME multipart/digest with a subset of ordered headers sorted. Currently, the following headers are included in the order listed: Date:, To:, From:, Reply-To:, Cc:, MIME-Version:, Content- Type:, Message-ID:, and Keywords:. This can be customized with the optional file dir/digheaders, which should contain the desired headers up to but not including the colon. The format is no longer compliant with rfc1153, as the rfc1153 format is incompatible with rfc2046, which which the format is (should be) compatible. x MIXED: This is the same as the default MIME format, except that the Content-Type is multipart/mixed. This helps circumnavigate a Pine bug: when the digest is content-transfer-encoded, Pine will refuse to display the initial text/plain part of a multipart/digest message, but display the same part of a multipart/mixed message. Some MUAs for some strange reason treat the two multipart formats differently. In some cases, ``x'' works better than ``m''. v VIRGIN: This is MIME multipart/digest with messages returned without any header filtering. n NATIVE: This is VIRGIN format without threading, i.e. messages are presented in numerical order and the message index is suppressed.