(nnchoke-retrieve-groups GROUPS &optional SERVER)
groups is a list of groups, and this function should request data on all those groups. How it does it is of no concern to Gnus, but it should attempt to do this in a speedy fashion.
The return value of this function can be either active
or
group
, which says what the format of the result data is. The
former is in the same format as the data from
nnchoke-request-list
, while the latter is a buffer full of lines
in the same format as nnchoke-request-group
gives.
group-buffer = *active-line / *group-status
(nnchoke-request-update-info GROUP INFO &optional SERVER)
A Gnus group info (see Group Info) is handed to the back end for
alterations. This comes in handy if the back end really carries all
the information (as is the case with virtual and imap groups). This
function should destructively alter the info to suit its needs, and
should return a non-nil
value (exceptionally,
nntp-request-update-info
always returns nil
not to waste
the network resources).
There should be no result data from this function.
(nnchoke-request-type GROUP &optional ARTICLE)
When the user issues commands for “sending news” (F in the
summary buffer, for instance), Gnus has to know whether the article the
user is following up on is news or mail. This function should return
news
if article in group is news, mail
if it
is mail and unknown
if the type can’t be decided. (The
article parameter is necessary in nnvirtual
groups which
might very well combine mail groups and news groups.) Both group
and article may be nil
.
There should be no result data from this function.
(nnchoke-request-set-mark GROUP ACTION &optional SERVER)
Set/remove/add marks on articles. Normally Gnus handles the article marks (such as read, ticked, expired etc.) internally, and store them in ~/.newsrc.eld. Some back ends (such as IMAP) however carry all information about the articles on the server, so Gnus need to propagate the mark information to the server.
action is a list of mark setting requests, having this format:
(RANGE ACTION MARK)
range is a range of articles you wish to update marks on.
action is add
or del
, used to add marks or remove
marks (preserving all marks not mentioned). mark is a list of
marks; where each mark is a symbol. Currently used marks are
read
, tick
, reply
, expire
, killed
,
dormant
, save
, download
, unsend
, and
forward
, but your back end should, if possible, not limit
itself to these.
Given contradictory actions, the last action in the list should be the
effective one. That is, if your action contains a request to add the
tick
mark on article 1 and, later in the list, a request to
remove the mark on the same article, the mark should in fact be removed.
An example action list:
(((5 12 30) 'del '(tick)) ((10 . 90) 'add '(read expire)) ((92 94) 'del '(read)))
The function should return a range of articles it wasn’t able to set the mark on (currently not used for anything).
There should be no result data from this function.
(nnchoke-request-update-mark GROUP ARTICLE MARK)
If the user tries to set a mark that the back end doesn’t like, this
function may change the mark. Gnus will use whatever this function
returns as the mark for article instead of the original
mark. If the back end doesn’t care, it must return the original
mark, and not nil
or any other type of garbage.
The only use for this I can see is what nnvirtual
does with
it—if a component group is auto-expirable, marking an article as read
in the virtual group should result in the article being marked as
expirable.
There should be no result data from this function.
(nnchoke-request-scan &optional GROUP SERVER)
This function may be called at any time (by Gnus or anything else) to request that the back end check for incoming articles, in one way or another. A mail back end will typically read the spool file or query the POP server when this function is invoked. The group doesn’t have to be heeded—if the back end decides that it is too much work just scanning for a single group, it may do a total scan of all groups. It would be nice, however, to keep things local if that’s practical.
There should be no result data from this function.
(nnchoke-request-group-description GROUP &optional SERVER)
The result data from this function should be a description of group.
description-line = name <TAB> description eol name = <string> description = <text>
(nnchoke-request-list-newsgroups &optional SERVER)
The result data from this function should be the description of all groups available on the server.
description-buffer = *description-line
(nnchoke-request-newgroups DATE &optional SERVER)
The result data from this function should be all groups that were
created after ‘date’, which is in normal human-readable date format
(i.e., the date format used in mail and news headers, and returned by
the function message-make-date
by default). The data should be
in the active buffer format.
It is okay for this function to return “too many” groups; some back ends
might find it cheaper to return the full list of groups, rather than
just the new groups. But don’t do this for back ends with many groups.
Normally, if the user creates the groups herself, there won’t be too
many groups, so nnml
and the like are probably safe. But for
back ends like nntp
, where the groups have been created by the
server, it is quite likely that there can be many groups.
(nnchoke-request-create-group GROUP &optional SERVER)
This function should create an empty group with name group.
There should be no return data.
(nnchoke-request-expire-articles ARTICLES &optional GROUP SERVER FORCE)
This function should run the expiry process on all articles in the
articles range (which is currently a simple list of article
numbers.) It is left up to the back end to decide how old articles
should be before they are removed by this function. If force is
non-nil
, all articles should be deleted, no matter how new
they are.
This function should return a list of articles that it did not/was not able to delete.
There should be no result data returned.
(nnchoke-request-move-article ARTICLE GROUP SERVER ACCEPT-FORM &optional LAST)
This function should move article (which is a number) from group by calling accept-form.
This function should ready the article in question for moving by
removing any header lines it has added to the article, and generally
should “tidy up” the article. Then it should eval
accept-form in the buffer where the “tidy” article is. This
will do the actual copying. If this eval
returns a
non-nil
value, the article should be removed.
If last is nil
, that means that there is a high likelihood
that there will be more requests issued shortly, so that allows some
optimizations.
The function should return a cons where the car
is the group name and
the cdr
is the article number that the article was entered as.
There should be no data returned.
(nnchoke-request-accept-article GROUP &optional SERVER LAST)
This function takes the current buffer and inserts it into group.
If last in nil
, that means that there will be more calls to
this function in short order.
The function should return a cons where the car
is the group name and
the cdr
is the article number that the article was entered as.
The group should exist before the back end is asked to accept the article for that group.
There should be no data returned.
(nnchoke-request-replace-article ARTICLE GROUP BUFFER)
This function should remove article (which is a number) from group and insert buffer there instead.
There should be no data returned.
(nnchoke-request-delete-group GROUP FORCE &optional SERVER)
This function should delete group. If force, it should really delete all the articles in the group, and then delete the group itself. (If there is such a thing as “the group itself”.)
There should be no data returned.
(nnchoke-request-rename-group GROUP NEW-NAME &optional SERVER)
This function should rename group into new-name. All articles in group should move to new-name.
There should be no data returned.