Attila Kinali writes:
> > Lastly, you could unpack each queue file in turn and simply rm the
> > ones you don't want to approve, although I would imagine this to be
> > quite a time-consuming process.
>
> This is about what i want to achieve.
> Could you give me a pointer on how to do this?
At 2:37 PM +0200 2006-08-30, Attila Kinali wrote:
> I've read about discard and that i can just delete everything
> in the queue. But i'd rather like to go trough the list
> and be able to aprove some of the held mails. Is there any
> way i can work on the queue? Another possibility would be
>
On Wed, 30 Aug 2006 09:20:38 -0500
"Patrick Bogen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Most of the mails in the queue are probably so old that it doesn't
> even make sense to approve them. That said, you can probably convince
> 'find' to remove all of the queue files older than a certain date,
> which sh
On 8/30/06, Attila Kinali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've read about discard and that i can just delete everything
> in the queue. But i'd rather like to go trough the list
> and be able to aprove some of the held mails. Is there any
> way i can work on the queue? Another possibility would be
Mo
Moin,
I recently took the administration of an mailinglist over.
It was quite a shock to find out that it had over 8000(!)
mails waiting in its moderation queue. The problem with this
is of course that the webinterface times out before giving
anything back and returns a 500 server internal error f