X-Git-Url: https://git.notmuchmail.org/git?p=notmuch;a=blobdiff_plain;f=test%2Fcorpus%2Fcur%2F28%3A2%2C;fp=test%2Fcorpus%2Fcur%2F28%3A2%2C;h=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hp=83ce01bd98452789a88363d33afb50d36edceb53;hb=ded713c39d8b0221a3b1b2b52a74966c20c3aba8;hpb=7630f300ba52f4aab22ee696fe1507d0ef9790bc diff --git a/test/corpus/cur/28:2, b/test/corpus/cur/28:2, deleted file mode 100644 index 83ce01bd..00000000 --- a/test/corpus/cur/28:2, +++ /dev/null @@ -1,38 +0,0 @@ -From: "Keith Packard" -To: notmuch@notmuchmail.org -Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2009 18:03:17 -0800 -Subject: [notmuch] Introducing myself -In-Reply-To: <20091118002059.067214ed@hikari> -References: <20091118002059.067214ed@hikari> -Message-ID: - -On Wed, 18 Nov 2009 00:20:59 +0100, Adrian Perez de Castro wrote: - -> Some time ago I thought -> about doing something like Not Much and in fact I played a bit with the -> Python+Xapian and the Python+Whoosh combinations, because I find relaxing -> to code things in Python when I am not working and also it is installed -> by default on most distribution. I got to have some mailboxes indexed and -> basic searching working a couple of months ago. - -Sup certainly started a lot of people thinking... - -> Also, I would like to share one idea I had in mind, that you might find -> interesting: One thing I have found very annoying is having to re-tag my -> mail when the indexes get b0rked (it happened a couple of times to me while -> using Sup), so I was planning to mails as read/unread and adding the tags -> not just to the index, but to the mail text itself, e.g. by adding a -> "X-Tags" header field or by reusing the "Keywords" one. - -Easier than that, notmuch (and sup too), provide a 'dump' command which -just lists all of the message IDs and their associated tags. Makes -saving tags easy and doesn't involve rewriting messages. I do this once -a day just before my computer is backed up to an external drive. - -If the index is destroyed, you can reindex the messages and then reapply -all of the tags with 'notmuch restore'. - --- -keith.packard at intel.com - -