On Sat, Aug 20, 2016 at 09:36:31PM -0700, W. Trevor King wrote: > [2]: git://tremily.us/notmuch-archives.git This is the ssoma archive (with the data in it). I just set up a basic HTTP archive (following [1]) based on a Docker image [2] (Gentoo doesn't package all the Perl dependencies public-inbox needs). Dockerfile for rebuilding the image is in [2]. I'm currently hosting the archives (HTTP only) at [3]. Spinning that up from the Docker image looks like: $ mkdir srv $ git clone --bare git://tremily.us/notmuch-archives.git srv/notmuch $ echo 'Notmuch -- Just an email system' >srv/notmuch.git/description $ git config -f srv/notmuch.git/config publicinbox.http http://tremily.us $ git config -f srv/notmuch.git/config publicinbox.email notmuch@notmuchmail.org $ docker run --name notmuch-archives -d -p 80:8080 -v ${PWD}/srv/:/srv/ wking/public-inbox (although I'm using -p ###:8080 and have an Nginx reverse-proxy in front). It's not updating automatically yet, but that will probably look like: 1. Pull new mbox [4]. 2. Import into notmuch-archives [5]. 3. Re-run public-inbox-index (this could probably be via ‘docker exec …’. But I'll have to test that to confirm. And ideally we'd be using ssoma-mda or similar directly, instead of going through mbox, but I'd rather get the official headers on the stored mail than be efficient ;). One shift from Gmane's mid.gmane.org/… is that the public-inbox UI Message-ID lookup is per-bucket, and public-inbox seems to be encouraging per-list buckets. And while I feel like I had a good grasp of the ssoma format two years ago, I know very little about Perl and public-inbox. I'm sure you could setup a public-inbox host that is more efficient than what's currently in my Docker image. Cheers, Trevor [1]: http://public-inbox.org/INSTALL [2]: https://hub.docker.com/r/wking/public-inbox/ [3]: http://tremily.us/notmuch/ [4]: https://notmuchmail.org/archives/notmuch.mbox [5]: id:20160821043631.GA2338@odin.tremily.us -- This email may be signed or encrypted with GnuPG (http://www.gnupg.org). For more information, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy