On Friday 13 December 2019 16:05:18 William
Morder via trinity-users
wrote:
On Friday 13 December 2019 11:52:09 Gene Heskett
wrote:
Greetings all;
So I picked the largest cur dirs, and using mc have moved about
2 years worth of each to an outside of the ~/Mail view of kmail.
And nuked those index files, so it has to rebuild them. Its not
done with that yet, but we'll see. Damn this is getting old.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
The complete corpus of my Kmail (including nearly 20 years of
archives like yourself) is only about 4.5 gb, and my machine is
built out of spare parts, most of which are older than
Utnapishtim's Flood. And while my machine is a little slow
sometimes, I never experience anything like you keep describing.
I started a year ago with over 12GB but my moving of older stuff out
of the Mail directory has now reduced the "du -h Mail" to about
4.8GB. I've stopped kmail 4 or 5 times, but on the restart, and that
nearly always crashes once, but before it crashes, maybe 3 seconds
elapsed, it has pulled all the "index" files out of cache someplace
I haven't found. So I nuked ALL the index files 3 times. Then it
crashed about 2-3 seconds after startup each time.
A 4th or 5th restart has not crashed, and it updated the dates on
ALL index files twice, then has shut that off again. The largest
remaining directory now is "sent-mail" and its way bigger than any
of the rest by a factor of at least 2. So momentarily, its behaving
itself. 2 hours? a week, a year, the rapture? who knows???
Its a bit like asking, while concrete is being poured, if it will
crack? Wrong question, not if, its when, if properly formed as a
question. :)
I hope to get myself an SSD to install as my home
directory, which
ought to speed things up for me, at least.
Haveing done that to the boot drive in one of my milling machines, I
can testify that an old pentium powered Dell, pulling from the sata
SSD, is a good 10x faster than when it was loading from spinning
rust. Amazing.
It is a problem of diminishing returns: you want
to have those
archives available somewhere, to find information that you saved,
but now the size of those archives is making Kmail unusable. So I
would say, keep pruning until it stops misbehaving. You will still
have those old emails available, so long as they are removed to
where Kmail won't look. They can always be retrieved if you really
need them.
Bill
Take care Bill.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
Stupid question: Do you compact email folders? or does Kmail do that
for you automatically every so periodically often? Mine is a little of
both; if Kmail doesn't do it, then I compact them manually.
Bill