I'll note that the whole idea of a "email archive" interface might be a very good "advocacy" project as well. AOX might not be a perfect fit, but it could be a good learning experience... Really, all the PG mail archives need is:
1) A nice normalized DB schema representing mail messages and their relations to other message and "recipients" (or "folders") 2) A "injector" that can parse an email message, and de-compose it into the various parts/tables of the DB schema, and insert it 3) A nice set of SQL queries to return message, parts, threads, folders based on $criteria (search, id, folder, etc) 4) A web interface to view the messages/thread/parts #3 returns The largest part of this is #1, but a good schema would be a very good candidate to show of some of PG's more powerful features in a way that "others" could see (like the movie store sample somewhere) , such as: 1) full text search 2) text vs bytea handling (thinking of all the mime parts, and encoding, etc) 3) CTEs, ltree, recursion, etc, for threading/searching 4) Triggers for "materialized views" (for quick threading/folder queries) 5) expression indexes a. * Matteo Beccati <p...@beccati.com> [100112 14:56]: > Having played with it, here's my feedback about AOX: > > pros: > - seemed to be working reliably; > - does most of the dirty job of parsing emails, splitting parts, etc > - highly normalized schema > - thread support (partial?) > > cons: > - directly publishing the live email feed might not be desirable > - queries might end up being a bit complicate for simple tasks > - might be not easy to add additional processing in the workflow > If there isn't a fully usable thread hierarchy I was more thinking to > ltree, mainly because I've successfully used it in past and I haven't > had enough time yet to look at CTEs. But if performance is comparable I > don't see a reason why we shouldn't use them. > With all that said, I can't promise anything as it all depends on how > much spare time I have, but I can proceed with the evaluation if you > think it's useful. I have a feeling that AOX is not truly the right tool > for the job, but we might be able to customise it to suit our needs. Are > there any other requirements that weren't specified? -- Aidan Van Dyk Create like a god, ai...@highrise.ca command like a king, http://www.highrise.ca/ work like a slave.
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