Short: Deletes unneeded 0-byte outbound files Author: c8345041@cc.newcastle.edu.au Uploader: c8345041 cc newcastle edu au Type: comm/fido Architecture: m68k-amigaos PlutPurge is a small utility for users of TrapToss 1.50 or higher to keep the number of files in the outbound directory down to a manageable level by deleting un-needed empty arcmail bundles. In TT 1.23 and below, any outbound files produced were simply based on the last echomail bundle you had sent the node. EG a node might pick up the .MO0 bundle this time, and TrapDoor will truncate the .MO0 file to zero bytes when sent. Next time Traptoss created a bundle for that node it would see the .MO0 0-byte file in outbound, and then bump the number by 1 so that it would create a .MO1 bundle. This led to confusion among users, normally the prefix added to echomail bundles actually MATCHED the day number. A bundle made on a Wednesday would be called .WE-something. So TrapToss was brought into line with other echomail tossers, and used the day name for arcmail bundles from about V1.40 onwards. As a result, the existence of many 0-byte files became pointless. The only time you actually ever need to keep a 0-byte file is if it was TODAY'S. IE if a .WE3 file existed, then if mail was tossed on Wednesday, a .WE4 file would be made up. But if mail was tossed on any other day, the 0-byte file just would play no part in determination of the name AT ALL, and (say) a .FR0 file would be made up (given that it was Friday). So PlutPurge is just the program for you to kill off all unwanted 0-byte files, automatically. It's particularly useful in a multi-net situation because each node you feed might accumulate half a dozen truncated arcmail bundles per pickup. Why kill off the unwanted files? Mainly for increased speed in scanning the outbound directory. Many programs you run will scan the outbound (eg TrapDoor/TrapToss), and so leaving them fewer files in the outbound simply speeds things up slightly. Mea Culpa, Peter Deane c8345041@cc.newcastle.edu.au