Vineet Kumar wrote: > > * Michael D. Schleif ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030209 19:32]: > > > > Jeff wrote: > > > I've not used mh mail boxes before, only maildir and mbox. I use > > > maildir for my active mailboxes for it's ability to keep messages from > > > getting messed up on delivery (sorry for the non-tech reason). For > > > mail boxes that I use for archive and are non-active, I use mbox for > > > it's ease in backing up. > > > > This is interesting -- is it possible to use two (2) mailbox formats at > > once? > > > > Can mutt be used to review incoming mail under maildir, and also to > > browse my archived mail under mbox? How? > > Yes. You don't need to do anything special; when you open a mailbox, it > figures out what type it is. > > > > Performance-wise, I don't think you'll notice a difference in loading > > > the mail box on a modern machine. On older, slower machines, you > > > might see the mbox loading faster than the maildir folders. > > > > > > If I had an archive mail box that size, I'd leave it as an mbox so I > > > can back it up easier since it's a single file as opposed to a > > > directory. > > > > My biggest concern is number of inodes. > > Well, you can tar and compress a maildir, and then it only takes 1, same > as an mbox. That works fine for archiving, though is not as convenient > for active mailboxes. I also don't really buy that a maildir is > difficult to back up (especially if you tar.(gz|bz2) it). I like using > maildirs mostly because mbox feels like a dirty hack, with the whole > "From " thing. I also like the increased scriptability using standard > GNU tools like grep to find and process individual messages, instead of > having to use some sort of mbox-parsing perl module.
Under netscrape I have directory hierarchies such as: Lists |__debian | |__debian-users | |__debian-devel |__tomcat-users With many lists and so many old mails, a flat list of _all_ Maildirs will quickly become difficult to navigate . . . How can this be done with Maildir? -- Best Regards, mds mds resource 888.250.3987 Dare to fix things before they break . . . Our capacity for understanding is inversely proportional to how much we think we know. The more I know, the more I know I don't know . . . -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]