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NAMEnewsdb - USENET network news database: article tree, history, active, active.timesDESCRIPTIONEach news article is stored in a separate file with one or more links, each a numeric name in a directory under /var/news corresponding to a newsgroup the article is (cross-)posted to. For example, an article posted to comp.unix.wizards might be stored in /var/news/comp/unix/wizards/4867.The file /var/lib/news/active defines the locally-valid news groups and contains one line per group. Each line consists of four blank-separated fields: newsgroup name, highest local article number assigned, lowest local article number in use (approximately), and a flag. Both article-number fields are at least five digits wide. (Some older news software may expect exactly five digits.) The current flag values are y (a normal unmoderated group), n (like y but local postings disallowed), m (a normal moderated group), x (a locally-disabled group, no articles will be filed here), and = (followed by the real group under which to file articles in this group; articles are treated exactly as if their Newsgroups: header specified the real group instead of the original one; highest and lowest fields are ignored). The file /var/lib/news/active.times is an extension of the active file that records the arrival of new newsgroups by time and creator. When a new newsgroup is created, the group name, time of group creation (as seconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00, GMT), and mail address of the creator are appended as a single line. The file must always be sorted in increasing order of the creation-time field. The news software only appends to the file, which normally suffices to ensure this. An initial active.times for already existing newsgroups, with all times equal to the time of its creation and all creators ``unknown'', can be built using act.to.times (see newsmaint(8CN)). Active.times provides a quick way for newsreaders to tell when new groups have arrived, without weird heuristics and expensive schemes like storing old lists of newsgroups and comparing them to the active file. The file /var/lib/news/history contains one line for each article received. Each line consists of three tab-separated fields: a Message-ID:, a complex middle field, and the list of links to this article. The links are separated by blanks and are given as pathnames relative to /var/news, except that all the `/'s except the last one (between the last component of the newsgroup name and the numeric article name) are replaced by `.'s. If an article has been expired or cancelled without being seen first, the list of links and the tab before it are omitted. The middle history field potentially has several subfields separated by tilde (~). Currently only three are defined: the arrival date, the expiry date, and an optional article size in bytes. The arrival date is a time_t (see time(2); in Unix a time_t is a count of seconds since the GMT beginning of 1970) expressed as a decimal integer. The expiry date is another decimal time_t, or the contents of the Expires: header from the message, or `-' indicating that there was no explicit expiry date given. There are also index files to permit rapid history lookup by message-id, typically called /var/lib/news/history.dir and /var/lib/news/history.pag. Also usually present now are overview files, one per newsgroup; see newsoverview(5) for more detail on them. EXAMPLESA trivial active file.
A trivial history file.
FILES/var/news/news/group/1234 /var/lib/news/active /var/lib/news/active.times /var/lib/news/history /var/lib/news/history.dir /var/lib/news/history.pag SEE ALSOdbz(1), readnews(1CN), rn(1), dbz(3Z), getabsdate(3), news(5), newsoverview(5), newssys(5), expire(8CN), newshist(8CN), newsmaint(8CN), relaynews(8CN), newsinvaders(9.1)HISTORYActive.times invented by Mark Moraes and Geoff Collyer as part of the C News project.BUGSReader implementors are warned that the various files mentioned here—the active file, the history file, the article tree itself, and the overview files—in general are not updated perfectly simultaneously. Nor are they necessarily updated in a predictable order.
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