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NNMASTER(8)                                                        NNMASTER(8)

NAME
       nnmaster - nn database manager

SYNOPSIS
       nnmaster -I [lmit]
       nnmaster -w
       nnmaster -v
       nnmaster -l [ "lock message" ]
       nnmaster [ options ] [ groups ]
       nnmaster -F [ options ] [ groups ]

DESCRIPTION
       nnmaster  is the daemon which is responsible for building and maintain-
       ing the database used by the nn(1) news reader.

       Normally, nnmaster is started when the system enters  multi-user  mode,
       and  runs  until system shutdown.  To facilitate this, you should place
       the following call in /etc/rc (or similar) to invoke the nnmaster  dae-
       mon:
            $master/nnmaster -l -r -C
       where  $master  is the MASTER_DIRECTORY defined during configuration of
       nn.

       When nnmaster is started as specified above, it will first  unlock  the
       database  in  case  it  was locked (-l), perform a thorough consistency
       check on the database (-C).

       Then, every 10 minutes (-r), it will look at the time-stamp of the news
       active  file to see whether new articles have arrived on the system (or
       whether articles have been expired). (See -U)

       If the active file has been modified, nnmaster will collect the  header
       information  from the new articles and enter them into the database (or
       remove the headers of the expired articles from the database).

       If it detects that some articles have been expired, it  will  automati-
       cally  remove  the  header information of the expired articles from the
       database.

ARTICLE COLLECTION OPTIONS
       Normally, nnmaster will collect all available news  groups  defined  in
       the  news  active  file.  The set of collected groups can be controlled
       via the argument line.  Groups can be either included or excluded:
       A group name, e.g. comp, will cause the group and all its subgroups  to
       be  collected.   Individual  groups, e.g. news.software.nn, can also be
       specified
       A group name preceded by an exclamation mark, e.g. !talk.politics, will
       cause the group and all its subgroups to be ignored.
       An  empty argument, i.e. "", will cause all groups that are not ignored
       to be collected.  For example, to collect everything but rec and  misc,
       use the following command:
            nnmaster -r !rec !misc ""
       If  the  empty  argument  had been omitted, nothing would be collected,
       since the presence of any groups arguments causes  nnmaster  to  ignore
       all groups which are not explicitly mentioned.
       Example  1:  The  following commands can be executed by cron to collect
       different sets of groups at different intervals or under different con-
       ditions:
            nnmaster -B -O14 rec misc sci -LBO -u
            nnmaster !rec !misc !sci "" -u
       Example  2: The group arguments are used in the given sequence, e.g. to
       leave out comp.sys, but still collect comp.sys.ibm.pc, use the command:
            nnmaster -r comp.sys.ibm.pc !comp.sys ""
       The use of the -u option in the first example is essential, since  each
       of  the commands will update the active file time stamp which will pre-
       vent the other command from detecting new articles that have arrived.
       Using this method to keep specific groups out of the database  must  be
       used  with  great caution; just a single invocation of nnmaster without
       any arguments will collect all the otherwise ignored groups!

COLLECTION OF ARTICLES
       The following options control how nnmaster performs the  collection  of
       new articles.

       -r [ min ]
              Daemon  mode.   The  nnmaster  will put itself in the background
              (unless -f is also specified), and will checks  for  arrival  of
              new  articles and expired articles every min minutes (and update
              the database accordingly).  If min is omitted, the default is to
              check every 10 minutes.
              Without  the  -r option, the nnmaster will just perform a single
              collection of new articles (if any) and then exit.  This can  be
              used  to  have the nnmaster started by cron(8) at regular inter-
              vals instead of having it  as  a  daemon  which  sleeps  between
              checking  for  new articles.  Since the nnmaster is a bit expen-
              sive to start up (it has to read a few files), it is up  to  you
              to decide which mode is best on your system.  (I have also heard
              that it works to call nnmaster without -r from inews(1).  I can-
              not  recommend  this  unless  you receive batched news; invoking
              nnmaster for every received article sounds too expensive to me.)

       -h [ sec ]
              Hold collection of new articles until next scan if new  articles
              have  arrived withing the last sec [60] seconds.  This is useful
              to prevent nnmaster from competing for disk i/o  with  an  rnews
              process  which  is unbatching incoming news, or a running expire
              process.  It will have the side effect of limiting the number of
              C: entries in the log, since collection of incoming batches will
              typically be done in larger thunks.

       -f     Run nnmaster in foreground in daemon mode (see -r).   Useful  if
              nnmaster  is  invoked  from  inittab.  (Notice that if you use a
              respawn entry in inittab, you will not be able to stop  nnmaster
              using  the  -k option, since init will immediately start another
              master.)

       -C     Perform a consistency check on the  database  on  start-up,  and
              rebuild  corrupted  database files.  This operation can be quite
              time-consuming since it reads through all the database files.

       -b     Normally, articles without a proper news header (no  Newsgroups:
              line)  are ignored.  Specifying the -b option causes these `bad'
              articles to be included in the database (normally with no sender
              or subject).

       -B     Remove  `bad'  articles.   Sometimes,  articles without a header
              ends up in the news spool directory.   These  articles  have  no
              article  id,  and  therefore,  they  will  never  be  expired by
              expire(8).  This option will  allow  the  nnmaster  to  silently
              remove these articles (a `B' entry will occur in the log file).

       -O days
              Ignore  articles  which are older than the given number of days.
              This may help keep old 'stray' articles out of the database.  If
              the  -B  options  is  also  specified,  the old articles will be
              removed from the news spool directories.  Old ignored or removed
              articles  will  be  reported  with an `O' entry in the log file.
              This option can be disable for individual groups by the  O  flag
              in the GROUPS file (see below).

       -R N   Specifies  how  the auto-recollect operation is performed on the
              groups having this option set in the GROUPS  file  (see  below).
              Four methods are available (default is method 1):
              1:  Run expire on the group when new articles arrive.
              2:  Run expire on the group on every scan.
              3:  Recollect all articles when new articles arrive.
              4:  Recollect all articles on every scan.

       -M mode
              Normally,  nnmaster  will  send  a  message via mail to the news
              administrator (OWNER) when an error or potential problems  (pri-
              marily  nntp  related)  occur.   This  can be restricted to only
              fatal errors (nnmaster terminated) if mode is  1,  and  disabled
              completely if mode is 0.

       -Q     Normally, nnmaster will print a message on the system console or
              in the syslog if a fatal error happens.  This option  will  pre-
              vent this, so only a type 'E' entry is written to the Log file.

DATABASE EXPIRATION
       Since  articles  does not stay forever in the news system, the database
       must be cleaned up regularly  to  remove  the  information  stored  for
       expired  articles.   Expiration  of  the database is normally scheduled
       using the nnadmin(1M) command executed by cron at a suitable time  when
       expire  on the news articles has completed.  The following command will
       send a message to the nnmaster and cause it to initiate expire  on  all
       news groups:
            nnadmin =EYW

       Selective  expiration  of  individual  groups  can be done from nnadmin
       (interactive mode).  It can also be done by invoking nnmaster with  the
       -F  option.   For example, the following command will run expire on all
       groups except the `rec' groups:
            nnmaster -F -k !rec ""
       The -k option is required to terminate  the  currently  running  master
       since  two  daemons  cannot  be  running at the same time.  Thus to run
       expire (on all groups) in this way from cron,  the  following  commands
       must be used:      nnmaster -Fk "" ; nnmaster -r ...

       It  is  also  possible to have nnmaster detect expiration automatically
       (see -e).  This requires that the min  field  in  the  active  file  is
       updated  by the news expire (this is not the default case when Cnews is
       used).  However, this is not always a safe indication since  the  first
       article  may  not have been expired, while a lot of other articles have
       been deleted.

       There are several strategies available  in  the  nnmaster  to  do  this
       clean-up, each having their strengths and weaknesses.

       Method  1  (default):  Rebuilds the database from the existing database
       information by comparing the current database contents  with  the  con-
       tents  of the news group directories, eliminating entries whose file no
       longer exists.  This method is  guaranteed  to  eliminate  all  expired
       articles  from  the database, and it is reasonably fast because it only
       has to read the directories, not each article file.
         If news is accessed remotely via nntp, the list of existing  articles
       cannot efficiently be fetched by reading a local directory.  Instead an
       XHDR request is sent to the nntp server to get a list of articles.

       Method 2:  Eliminates only the expired articles before the first  arti-
       cle in the group.  This is very fast since only the active file and the
       database itself is accessed, but it will obviously leave  some  expired
       articles  in  the database.  This method requires that the min field in
       the active file is updated by expire.

       Method 3:  Discard the current database information and recollects  all
       articles.   This  is obviously very time consuming, and it is therefore
       not recommended, especially not with nntp.

       The options related to database expiration are:

       -E N   Select expire method N.  (If N is omitted, the default method is
              used).

       -e [N] Automatically run expire in the database on groups where the min
              number in the active file has increased  by  N  (1  if  omitted)
              articles.   This  is disabled by default (since the min field is
              often unreliable).

       -F     Run expire once and exit.  If a list of groups is  specified  on
              the  command line, the matched groups (see the rules above) will
              be marked for expiration.  If no groups are specified, only  the
              groups  already  scheduled  for  expire will be expired.  Conse-
              quently, to expire all groups, a blank argument "" (matching all
              groups) must be specified.

DATABASE LOCKING
       The  database can be locked centrally, which will normally disallow all
       access to the database, and even block nnmaster  from  being  (acciden-
       tally) started.  When a lock is set on the database, all currently run-
       ning clients will terminate the next time they try to access the  data-
       base.   Setting  a  lock on the database can thus also be used to force
       running clients to terminate.

       The following options set and clear locks on the database:

       -l message
              Locks the database with the given message.  The message will  be
              displayed every time a program tries to access the database.

       -l     Unlock the database if it was locked.

       -i     Ignore  a  possible lock and continue.  This can be used to have
              nnmaster operate on a database which is blocked from normal user
              access.

       Since  only one nnmaster can operate on the database at any one time, a
       running nnmaster daemon must be stopped before a lock can be set on the
       database.   If  neither  -f  nor -r is specified with the -l option (in
       both forms), nnmaster will terminate  after  setting  or  clearing  the
       lock.

DATABASE INITIALIZATION
       The  following  options  are  used to initialize and update the central
       database files:

       -I [limit]
              Initialize database.  This option will erase an  existing  data-
              base,  and  create  an empty database containing entries for the
              currently known groups.  nnmaster  will  offer  you  to  use  an
              existing GROUPS file when initializing the database.
              The  optional  limit can be used to put a limit on the number of
              articles that will be collected in each group during  the  first
              collection  of  articles  following the database initialization.
              This is useful on systems where the 'min' field  in  the  active
              file  is  unreliable  or not maintained (Cnews doesn't) to limit
              the work done to do the initial collection  of  news  after  the
              initialization  of  the  database.  If news is accessed remotely
              from an NNTP server, this is even more important!  If  limit  is
              omitted,  or is zero, nnmaster will trust the min field and col-
              lect all articles in the range min..last.

       -G     Reread the GROUPS file.  This option is used to instruct  nnmas-
              ter  to parse the GROUPS file after it has been edited.  See the
              section on the GROUPS file below.

MISCELLANEOUS OPTIONS
       The following options controls various details of the nnmaster's behav-
       iour:

       -D [ N ]
              Run  nnmaster  in "debug mode".  If N is omitted, or equals 1 or
              3, this will produce a compact but still very informative  trace
              of  the  collection  or expire process directly on the terminal.
              This is most useful when doing the first collection of  articles
              after  initializing  the  database  with  -I.  If N is 2 or 3, a
              trace of the NNTP traffic is written to a file  nnmaster.log  in
              the TMP directory. This option disables -r.

       -H     Identifies  the  host  which nnmaster is running on as the nntp-
              server for its clients, i.e. that it can access the  news  spool
              directory  locally  without using NNTP.  Normally, nnmaster will
              detect this by itself by comparing the host name to the contents
              of  the nntp_server file, so this option should really be super-
              fluous.

       -y retries
              In some networked environment, opening an article  (shared  from
              another  machine via NFS) may fail for no obvious reason.  Using
              this option, it is possible to cause nnmaster to perform retries
              attempts  to  open an article before marking the article as non-
              existing in the database.

       -L types
              Exclude the specified entry types from the log  file.   This  is
              normally  used  to exclude the 'C'ollecting and e'X'pire entries
              (-LCXO).

       -t     Trace the collection process.  This will place a lot of informa-
              tion into the log file (T: entries).

       -u     Normally,  nnmaster  will  just  compare  the  time-stamp on the
              active file with a time-stamp saved in the database  to  see  if
              new articles have arrived.  The -u option forces the nnmaster to
              read the active file on start-up to see  if  new  articles  have
              arrived.

       -U     Some  SVR4  systems  (and  maybe SunOS) have a useful "feature".
              Writing files with mmap() may not update the last-changed  time-
              stamp on the file.  Since INN uses mmap() for writing the active
              file, this becomes a problem for nnmaster.  The -U option causes
              nnmaster  to  unconditionally read the active file each time the
              repeat delay (-r) time expires.

       -v     Print the release and version identification for  nnmaster,  and
              exit.

       -w     Wakeup  the real nnmaster.  Send a signal to the nnmaster daemon
              to have it check for new articles immediately.

       -k     Kill the already running nnmaster daemon before proceeding  with
              the operation specified by the other options (or terminate if no
              other operation is requested).

THE GROUPS FILE
       The primary purpose of the GROUPS file is to store  the  names  of  the
       news  groups represented in the database.  Each line in the file corre-
       sponds to an entry in the (binary) MASTER file, and the sequence of the
       lines  in  the GROUPS file must never be changed unless the database is
       reinitialized afterwards.

       However, the contents of the lines in the GROUPS file can be edited  to
       control how the nnmaster should handle each individual group.

       The format of each line is:
            news.group.name [ timestamp ] [ flags ]

       The  news  group name is the name of the group, and must not be changed
       in any way.  If the group is no longer in the  news  active  file,  and
       consequently the group does no longer exist, group name can be replaced
       by a `@' character which will instruct nnmaster to  ignore  this  entry
       without having to rebuild the entire database.

       The optional time stamp indicates when the line was added to the GROUPS
       file and is used by nn to detect new groups.  When the GROUPS  file  is
       built initially from the active file, the time stamps are omitted which
       simply means that they are "old".

       One or more of the following flags can be added to the GROUPS  line  to
       control nnmaster's handling of the group:

       D      Causes  nnmaster  to treat all articles in the group as digests,
              even when they don't  initially  look  like  digests.   Articles
              which  are  found  not  to  be  digests after all, are still not
              digested.

       N      Instructs nnmaster to never digest any articles in the group.

       O      Disables the -O option for this group, i.e. all  existing  arti-
              cles  will  be  included  in  the database (and they will not be
              removed if the -B option is specified).  This flag should be set
              on  groups  which  you  never expire, or have a very long expire
              time!

       R      Causes nnmaster to recollect all available articles in the group
              whenever  a  new article is received.  This is said to be useful
              is some high-traffic clarinet groups with many  cancelled  arti-
              cles.

       >file  Instructs  nnmaster  to append all new articles to the specified
              file.  This makes it possible to keep specific groups out of the
              way of expire.  The archive file can be access directly from the
              nn client using the goto-group command.  The file name must be a
              full path name to a file in an existing, writeable directory.

       @      Instructs  nnmaster  to  completely  ignore this group - this is
              equivalent to setting the group name to `@' as described above.

       ! or X Causes nnmaster to ignore the group and not collect the  group's
              articles in the database.

       Comments  (starting  with  `#'  and  continuing to the end of line) and
       empty lines are allow in the GROUPS file, but  it  is  strongly  recom-
       mended  to  keep  the  changes to the GROUPS file as small as possible,
       because of the implicit correspondence with the binary MASTER file.

       It is not recommended to edit the GROUPS file while nnmaster is running
       because  it  may  add new groups to the file.  After editing the GROUPS
       file, the command
            nnmaster -G
       must be run before restarting the nnmaster to parse and verify the  new
       GROUPS file.

NNTP SUPPORT
       The  nnmaster  can  access  the  news  articles from a local news spool
       directory as well as from an NNTP  server.   When  compiled  with  NNTP
       enabled, nnmaster will compare the name of the NNTP server and the name
       of the local host; if they are identical, nnmaster will bypass NNTP and
       access the articles directly.

       When  it has to access the news articles via NNTP, it cannot time-stamp
       the active file, so instead it transfers the entire  active  file  from
       the  NNTP  server  and compares it with a local copy of the last active
       file fetched from the NNTP server.  This is not very expensive in terms
       of  cpu-cycles,  disk-load,  or  net-bandwidth, but to stay on friendly
       terms with the NNTP server administrator, you should probably  not  use
       shorter update intervals than the standard 10 minutes.

       Setting  a  much higher update interval than the standard 10 minutes is
       not really recommended either, since an update normally implies  fetch-
       ing  a  burst  of  news  articles  from the NNTP server, so setting the
       interval too long may imply that the load on the NNTP  server  will  be
       more un-even.

       In  expire  method  1,  the  use of XHDR just to get a list of existing
       articles in a group is definitely a waste  of  resources  on  the  nntp
       server  (but  still  lower than using method 3).  Before using the XHDR
       request, nnmaster will send a non-standard "LISTGROUP" request; if  the
       nntp  server  supports this request, it should return an OK_HEAD status
       followed by an (unordered) list of article numbers (one per line)  ter-
       minated  by  a `.' line.  The nntp servers supporting this request will
       be much less loaded during expire.

       The -O option does not work with NNTP.  The -B option  will  only  work
       with NNTP if the nnmaster is running on the NNTP server.

FILES
       The  $db,  $master,  and  $news  names  used below are synonyms for the
       DB_DIRECTORY, MASTER_DIRECTORY, and NEWS_LIB_DIRECTORY  defined  during
       configuration.

       $db/MASTER          Database master index
       $db/GROUPS          News group names and flags in MASTER file order
       $db/DATA/nnn.[dx]   Database files for group number nnn
       .../.nn[dx]         Database files if located in the group directories
       $master/GATE        Message channel from nnadmin to nnmaster
       $master/MPID        The process id of the nnmaster daemon.
       $Log                The  log file (the location is configuration depen-
       dent)
       $news/active        Existing articles and groups
       /usr/lib/nntp_serverContains the name of the NNTP server.

       The MASTER file contains a record for each news group, occurring in the
       same sequence as the group names in the GROUPS file.  The sequence also
       defines the group numbers used to identify the files in the  database's
       DATA directory.

       The  GATE  file  will be created by nnadmin when needed, and removed by
       nnmaster when it has read it.  Therefore, to  send  a  message  to  the
       nnmaster  requires  that you are allowed to write in the $master direc-
       tory.

       The contents of the Log file are described in the nnadmin manual.

SEE ALSO
       nn(1), nncheck(1), nngrep(1), nntidy(1)
       nnadmin(1M), nnspew(8), nnusage(1M)

AUTHOR
       Kim F. Storm, Texas Instruments A/S, Denmark
       E-mail: storm@texas.dk

4th Berkeley Distribution         Release 6.6                      NNMASTER(8)

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