>>>>> "MM" == Michael Meltzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
MM> Actually I "reusing" the code from Scrubber.py in MimeDel.py MM> to turn attachments into links :-) I hardwired it for image MM> types but it is generic enough. Some sample output from my MM> "staging": MM> Name: beach.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 18853 bytes Desc: MM> not_available Url: MM> http://www.michaelmeltzer.com/pipermail/meltzer-list/attachments/200208/12/beach.jpg-0005.jpe Cool. I'm using a slightly different naming algorithm for the path. MM> It turned out to be a 4 line hack to filter_parts, 1 line at MM> the top and 10 lines to reformat the payload, the reset came MM> from save_attachment, very handle :-) Can you try to update it to current cvs? If it's really a 4 line hack, you've got to post it. :) I tried to write the Scrubber.py updates with you in mind, by factoring out some other functionality you might need. MM> I have to admit environment is nice to work in. :) MM> I am not sure my code it upto patch quality :-) The next step MM> would be a modification to the content filter page for the MM> type it should react to. MM> I would also subject(Scrubber.py needs this too) that the MM> filter pages list the extensions that it is allow to write. Or MM> the converse the extensions it should not write, MM> http://office.microsoft.com/Assistance/2000/Out2ksecFAQ.aspx. would MM> be my start :-), save the masses someday :-) I've been thinking about this. I vaguely remember that someone did a patch to support pass-or-block semantics to the filter, but I can't put my finger on it now. I want to link Dan Mick's name to that, but does this ring a bell with anyone? MM> The issue with the directory is the number of files, not a MM> name clash Yep, I know. MM> , `ls -d archives/private/listname/attachments/* | MM> wc -l` > 1000 I think system performance will be MM> effected. Above 10,000 I know it would(it would also be a MM> problem for the http server on access). I can understand that MM> keeping the attachment from each email in it own directory, MM> but this way the "files version control" :-) groups them MM> together for access(assuming least regency theory) and make MM> cleaning out for space/inodes simple. it was just strftime MM> wielded on. I'm not sure I followed all that, but the current Scrubber.py does add the date directory to the path, so I think we're good here. -Barry _______________________________________________ Mailman-Developers mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman-21/listinfo/mailman-developers