makehistory - tools to recover Usenet history database.
makehistory [ -A oldtmp ] [ -a
active ] [ -b ] [ -f filename ] [ -i ] [
-n ] [ -o ] [ -r ] [ -s size ] [
-T tmpdir ] [ -u [ -v ] ]
Makehistory rebuilds the history(5) text file and
the associated dbz(3) database. The default name of the text file is
/var/lib/news/history; to specify a different name, use the
``-f'' flag. Makehistory scans the active(5) file to
determine which newsgroup directories within the spool directory,
/var/spool/news, should be scanned. (If a group is removed, but its
spool directory still exists, makehistory will ignore it.) The
program reads each file found and writes a history line for it.
After the text file is written, makehistory will build the
dbz database.
- -A
- If the ``-A'' flag is used then the argument given is the pathname
makehistory can use to store a copy of the history file as it's
being built. It will be appended to, so existing data will not be lost
(and so should be valid history entries).
- -a
- If the ``-a'' flag is given then the argument is the active file to
use rather than the default one of /var/lib/news/active.
- -b
- If the ``-b'' flag is used, then makehistory will remove any
articles that do not have valid Message-ID headers in them.
- -f
- If the ``-f'' flag is used, then the database files are named
file.dir and file.pag. If the ``-f'' flag is not
used, then a temporary link to the name history.n is made and the
database files are written as history.n.pag and
history.n.dir.
- -o
- If the ``-o'' flag is used, then the link is not made and any
existing history files are overwritten. If the old database exists,
makehistory will use it to determine the size of the new
database.
- -i
- To ignore the old database use the ``-i'' flag. Using the
``-o'' flag implies the ``-i'' flag.
- -s
- The program will also ignore any old database if the ``-s'' flag is
used to specify the approximate number of entries in the new database.
Accurately specifying the size is an optimization that will create a more
efficient database. (The size should be the estimated eventual size of the
file, typically the size of the old file.) For more information, see the
discussion of dbzfresh and dbzsize in dbz(3).
- -u
- If the ``-u'' flag is given, then makehistory assumes that
innd is running. It will pause the server while scanning, and then
send ``addhist'' commands (see ctlinnd(8)) to the server for any
article that is not found in the dbz database. The command
``makehistory -bu'' is useful after a system crash, to delete any
mangled articles and bring the article database back into a more
consistent state.
- -v
- If the ``-v'' flag is used with the ``-u'' flag, then
makehistory will put a copy of all added lines on its standard
output.
- -n
- To scan the spool directory without rebuilding the dbz files, use
the ``-n'' flag. If used with ``-u'', the server will not be
paused while scanning.
- -r
- To just build the dbz files from an existing text file, use the
``-r'' flag. The ``-i'' or ``-s'' flags can be useful
if there are no valid dbz files to use.
- -T
- Makehistory needs to create a temporary file that contains one line
for each article it finds, which can become very large. This file is
created in the /var/spool/news/in.coming/tmp directory. The
``TMPDIR'' environment variable may be used to specify a different
directory. Alternatively, the ``-T'' flag may be used to specify a
temporary directory. In addition, the sort(1) that is invoked
during the build writes large temporary files (often to /var/tmp
but see your system manpages). If the ``-T'' flag is used, then the
flag and its value will be passed to sort. On most systems this
will change the temporary directory that sort uses. if used, this
flag and its value will be passed on to the sort(1) command that is
invoked during the build.
A typical way to use this program is with the following
/bin/sh commands:
ctlinnd throttle "Rebuilding history file"
cd /var/lib/news
if makehistory -n -f history.n ; then
:
else
echo Error creating history file!
exit 1
fi
# The following line can be used to retain expired history
# It is not necessary for the history file to be sorted.
# awk 'NF==2 { print; }' <history >>history.n
# View history file for mistakes.
if makehistory -r -s `wc -l <history` -f history.n; then
mv history.n history
mv history.n.dir history.dir
mv history.n.pag history.pag
fi
ctlinnd go ''
Makehistory does not handle symbolic links. If the news
spool area is split across multiple partitions, the following commands
should probably be run before the database is regenerated:
cd /var/spool/news
find . -type l -name '[1-9]*' -print | xargs -t rm
Make sure to run the command on all the appropriate partitions!
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews.
This is revision 1.3, dated 1996/11/26.