"Travis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> posted [EMAIL PROTECTED], excerpted below, on Mon, 09 Oct 2006 09:16:49 -0700:
> No worries about what is on my computer. > ;-) > > Is a larger cache advantageous? It depends on how you use pan. The way I use it for binary groups, definitely, altho I'm fine with a 10 MB cache for my text group instance, and many even highly active binary users find pan's defaults just fine, because they work differently than I do. There are also heavy text users that prefer to keep an archive of the messages in the groups they participate in, going back years in some cases. These text group archive users will also want a far larger cache -- and will be regularly backing it up as one would back up any data considered valuable, as well. For binary group users that save attachments directly on download, pan's 10 MB cache is fine, as it'll keep all the parts necessary to rebuild and save the binary file actively being downloaded until it can save it or encounters a fetch error. I work rather differently, preferring to download multiple gigs of data to cache while online, then go offline to actually sort thru it and decide what I want to save and what I don't value enough to save before deleting it. I prefer this for several reasons, including the fact that the downloads take time, so setting them up to download to cache then doing something else instead of impatiently waiting for them to save is nice on that end, and then when I come back, everything's local, so I get immediate response without having to wait for the download. Additionally, I like having all the metadata from the posts, who posted it, when, what their subject line and any comments were, and what others said about the posts if anything, available to be used when I decide on where I'm going to put the files. Users that save immediately, to some temp dir and then go back and decide what to do with the files separate from pan, don't have all that extra metadata available to them when they do so. If you do primarily still image (jpeg) groups, 4 gig cache should be a reasonable size for doing it my way. If you do a lot of multimedia, short mpegs and the like, try about a 10 gig cache. If you do a lot of longer format ISOs, full size CDs and DVDs, or are a heavy trader in say TV programs or the like, something more on the order of 20 gig or even more mey be needed to do it my way. However, traders in such large files are far more likely to know what they want up front and thus be able to save directly, instead of using my download-to-cache and process-from-there method. FWIW, mixed jpeg to short format (half-hour-ish) multi-media, plus mp3s, is my mix, and I have my binary pan instance caching to a dedicated 12 gig partition used for nothing else. ("pan instance" refers to the new-pan ability to have entirely separate pan configurations, by making use of the $PAN_HOME environmental variable to point pan at the appropriate one. I have in my home directory a general pan subdir, with subdirs in turn for each of my instances. Here, I have text, test, and binary. Others may separate their instances otherwise, for instance, the music/mp3 groups might be one instance, the pr0n jpeg groups another, the pr0n multmedia groups a third, the TV program trading groups a fourth, their general text groups a fifth, their gmane mailing lists (like this one) as newsgroups a sixth, their Linux or MSWormOS or whatever tech groups a seventh... You get the idea.) > How do I increase the size of my cache if needed? Again, I don't know where the default config/cache location is on MSWormOS, but presume you can find a pan2 or the like directory located somewhere, with a bunch of files including preferences.xml, and a bin-cache or similarly named subdir. That'd be what you are looking for. The cache setting is in the preferences.xml file. With pan closed, open the file in your favorite text editor (example notepad on MSWormOS) and do a search for "cache-size-megs" (w/o the quotes). Change the number as desired. As I said, my binary instance cache is on its own dedicated partition of 12 gigs, so I have that instance set to 12500 megs, slightly larger than the partition. If it ever gets full, pan will quit downloading and protest, and I'll know I have to process what's there and empty the cache before I continue. However, 12 gigs is multiple download sessions for me, and I normally process what's there and delete the cache well before I hit 12 gigs (6-8 gigs is the usual, I think I hit 10 gig once), so it's not a problem. My other two instances are set to five gigs a piece, altho the entire text instance easily fits with room to grow in 100 MB at this point (the cache is ~24 MB, the entire config is ~31 MB). -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list Pan-users@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users