I'm back from long California trip. Here's the scoop:

Good news:

  - The high amount of packet drops (I see 3 out of 10 packets drop
    from South Carolina) is not due to the host site, but to network
    problems at a high level ISP. (probably at MAE-East) Apparently a
    lot of people, including international folks, have really good
    connections. Even better, there appears to be some pressure to
    solve the problem, since we aren't the only service affected.

  - The host site (VAResearch) appears to be doing an excellent
    job. The host machine is on a switched 10 megabit ethernet and has
    some great neighbors. Best of all, it appears to be a high clue
    network.

Bad news:

  - Looks like two pieces of mail of the last 20,000 got misfiled
    because of -generous; looks like I'll have to turn that off (good
    thing it got logged) and do a manual cleanup.

  - I still haven't reached my goal of having nothing show up in the
    trouble log for a week. I think the record is around 48 hours.
 
Changes:

  * "rebuild" (a manual tool for cleaning up messes) was made slightly
    more user friendly. Nobody will ever see the effects.

  * The search engine indexing was enhanced (again) to be a bit more
    incremental. Indexing time dropped by 30%, and a pass just now
    took 2 hours, 23 minutes. Consequently, I switched to nightly
    indexing runs instead of semi-weekly ones. The search for a list
    engine should be a bit more up to date, plus we can back off if
    need arises.

  * I added a few minor sanity checks on the names of lists we
    archive; things like making sure there are no quotes in a
    listname, etc.

  * Ultra minor cosmetic code cleanup.


   

That's a wrap, tune in next time for "what's going on in the world
of mail-archive.com". I suspect we are getting ever so closer to
a critical mass judging by recent growth.

Jeff

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