Man page - tin(1)
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Manual
TIN
NAMESYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
EXIT STATUS
OPTIONS
USAGE
NEWS ADMINISTRATION
SCREEN FORMAT
COMMON MOVING KEYS
COMMON EDITING COMMANDS
GLOBAL COMMANDS
NEWSGROUP SELECTION COMMANDS
GROUP INDEX COMMANDS
THREAD LISTING COMMANDS
ARTICLE VIEWER COMMANDS
URL LISTING
ATTACHMENT LISTING
POSTING HISTORY LISTING
GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES
ATTRIBUTES MENU AND GROUP ATTRIBUTES
SCOPES MENU
FILTERING ARTICLES
POSTING ARTICLES
CUSTOMIZING THE ARTICLE QUOTE STRING
MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES
AUTOMATIC MAILING AND SAVING NEW NEWS
RANGES
NEWSGROUP LISTS & WILDCARDS
SIGNATURES
CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT
TIPS AND TRICKS
XTERM BUTTONS
INDEX FILES
FILES
ENVIRONMENT
SIGNALS
SECURITY
CONFORMING TO
NOTES
CAVEATS
BUGS
HISTORY
CREDITS
AUTHOR
MAINTAINER
SEE ALSO
NAME
tin, rtin - Usenet newsreader
SYNOPSIS
tin [[ -h | -H | -V ]Β | [[ -a ] [ -dlnq | -Q ] [ -ACkrTzxX ]] [[ -R | -S ] -s News_dir ] [ -cuvZ ] [ -4 | -6 ] [ -o | -w | -N | -M address ] [ -D debug_level ] [ -F filter_file ] [ -G article_limit ] [ -f newsrc_file ] [ -g server [: port ]] [ -L Message-ID ] [ -m Mail_dir ] [ -p port ] [ -t timeout ] [ -I index_dir ]Β [ newsgroup [,...]]]
DESCRIPTION
tin is a full-screen easy to use Usenet newsreader. It can read news locally (e.g., /var/spool/news ) or remotely ( rtin or tin -r option) via an NNTP (Network News Transport Protocol, RFC3977 ) or NNTPS ( RFC8143 ) server. It will automatically utilize NOV newsoverview (5) style index files if available locally or via the NNTP [X]OVER command ( RFC2980 , RFC3977 ).
tin has four separate levels of operation: Selection level, Group level, Thread level and Article level. Use the Help (β h β) command to view a list of the commands available at a particular level.
On startup tin will show a list of the newsgroups found in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc . An arrow βββ or highlighted bar will point to the first newsgroup. Move to a group by using the terminal arrow keys (terminal dependent) or Down (β j β) and Up (β k β). Use PgUp/PgDn (terminal dependent) or PageUp (β ΛU β) (CTRL-U) and PageDown (β ΛD β) (CTRL-D) to page up/down. Enter a newsgroup by pressing β <CR> β.
The GroupNextUnreadArtOrGrp (β <TAB> β) key enters the next newsgroup with unread articles.
EXIT STATUS
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0 |
Successful program execution. No unread news available in batch mode. |
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1 |
Usage, syntax, configuration file or network error. |
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2 |
Unread news available (batch mode (ββ -Z ββ) only). |
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3 |
NNTP error. |
OPTIONS
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-4 |
Force connecting via IPv4 to the remote NNTP server. Only available when built with IPv6 support. |
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-6 |
Force connecting via IPv6 to the remote NNTP server. Only available when built with IPv6 support. |
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-a |
Toggle ANSI color (default is off). |
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-A |
Force authentication on initial connect. Only available when reading via NNTP. |
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-c |
Create/update index files for every group in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc or file specified by the ββ -f ββ option and mark all articles as read. |
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-C |
Use COMPRESS NNTP extension ( RFC8054 ) if available. See also nntp_read_timeout_secs , ββ -t ββ and the "SECURITY" and "BUGS" section. |
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-d |
Donβt load newsgroup descriptions and servers message of the day (interactive mode). |
-D debug-level
Enter debug-level, the levels can specified via number (should be avoided as it will be removed in the future) or name (case insensitive) as listed below. Use comma to give multiple levels, any combinations are allowed (e.g., ββ -D GNKSA,2,NNTP ββ). If removal is requested it will be performed at startup and on normal termination (that is the files are only available while tin is running).
For NNTP-level ββ -v ββ controls the verbosity of the output. Depending on the debug-level various files may be written to $TMPDIR and/or on screen output may be given. See also the "SECURITY" section!
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-f file |
Use the specified file of subscribed to newsgroups in place of ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc or a file specified via ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/newsrctable . |
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-F file |
Use the specified filter file instead of ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.filter . |
-g server [ : port ]
Use the server[:port] and newsrc specified in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/newsrctable . Only available when reading via NNTP. If you want to give a port with a plain IPv6 address, the address must be enclosed in square brackets.
-G article-limit
Limit the number of articles/group to retrieve from the server. If article-limit is > 0 not more than the last article-limit articles/group are fetched from the server. If article-limit is < 0 tin will start fetching articles from your first unread minus absolute value of article-limit . Default is 0, which means no limit.
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-h |
Help listing all command-line options. |
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-H |
Brief introduction to tin that is also shown the first time it is started. |
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-I dir |
Directory in which to store newsgroup index files. Default is ${TIN_INDEX_NEWSDIR:-"${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin"}/.news . This option has no effect if tin retrieves its index files via NNTP and cache_overview_files is turned off. |
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-k |
Skip the certificate verification step for NNTPS connections and proceed without checking. This option implies ββ -T ββ. See also the "SECURITY" section. |
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-l |
Get number of articles per group from the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file. If reading via NNTP this is done with the LIST command ( RFC3977 ). This might result in incorrect article counts but is usually faster than the default which is to read the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file (either directly or via LIST) and then check the article count via NNTP GROUP command ( RFC3977 ) ββ -ln ββ. If reading via NNTP and LIST COUNTS ( RFC6048 ) is available that is used instead as it gives more accurate article counts. |
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-L |
Show the message with the given Message-ID if available. Only available when reading via NNTP. |
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-m dir |
Mailbox directory to use. Default is ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/Mail . |
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-M user |
Mail unread articles to specified user for later reading. For more information read section "AUTOMATIC MAILING AND SAVING NEW NEWS". |
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-n |
Only load groups from the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file that are subscribed to in the userβs ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc . This allows a noticeable speedup when connecting via a slow line, but tin may not be able detect which groups are moderated. See also ββ -l ββ. |
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-N |
Mail unread articles to yourself for later reading. For more information read section "AUTOMATIC MAILING AND SAVING NEW NEWS". |
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-o |
Quick post all postponed articles and exit. In order for this to be really quick, it should be used with ββ -n ββ if possible. |
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-p port |
Port to use if reading via NNTP (default is 119 or 563 if NNTPS is enabled, see ββ -T ββ). This also overrides the environment variables $ NNTPPORT and $ NNTPSPORT if set. Only available when reading via NNTP. |
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-q |
Donβt check for new newsgroups and skip loading the servers message of the day. |
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-Q |
Quick start. Start tin as quickly as possible. Currently this is equivalent to ββ -dnq ββ. See also the ββ -C ββ and ββ -G ββ command-line options. |
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-r |
Read news remotely from the default NNTP server specified in the environment variable $ NNTPSERVER or contained in the file /etc/news/server . |
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-R |
Read news saved by the ββ -S ββ option. |
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-s dir |
Save/read articles to/in directory. Default is ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/News . |
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-S |
Save unread articles for later reading by the ββ -R ββ option. For more information read section "AUTOMATIC MAILING AND SAVING NEW NEWS". |
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-t timeout |
Override the nntp_read_timeout_secs setting. Default is 120 seconds, allowed maximum is 16383. |
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-T |
Enable NNTPS (NNTP over TLS). This also overrides the environment variable $ NNTPSPORT if set. Only available when reading via NNTP. |
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-u |
Create/update index files for every group in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc or file specified by the ββ -f ββ option. This option is disabled if tin retrieves its index files via an NNTP server and cache_overview_files is turned off. |
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-v |
Verbose mode for ββ -c ββ, ββ -D ββ, ββ -M ββ, ββ -N ββ, ββ -S ββ, ββ -u ββ, ββ -V ββ and ββ -Z ββ options. Can be used multiple times to increase verbosity. |
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-V |
Print version information and compilation options. |
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-w |
Quick mode to post an article and then exit. This option implies ββ -d ββ. In order for this to be really quick, it should be used with ββ -n ββ if possible. |
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-x |
No-posting mode. You cannot post articles if you use this option. |
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-X |
No overwrite mode. ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc and files in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin will not be overwritten but may be created if they donβt exist. Should be used with ββ -x ββ if possible. |
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-z |
Only start tin if there is any new/unread news. If there is news tin will position cursor at first group with unread news. Useful for putting in login file. |
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-Z |
Check if there is any new/unread news and exit with appropriate status. If ββ -v ββ option is specified the number of unread articles in each group is printed. An exit code 0 indicates no news, 1 that an error occurred and 2 that new/unread news exists. Useful for writing scripts. |
tin can also dynamically change its options by the OptionMenu (β M β) command. Any changes are written to ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/tinrc . For more information see section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES" and tin (5).
A list of groups can be specified after the other command-line options. This can be useful if you wish to yank in or subscribe to a hand-picked subset of the active newsgroups. See the section "NEWSGROUP LISTS & WILDCARDS" for the types of pattern that tin understands.
If you specify a single group-name, or a wildcard that matches a single group, then you will automatically enter that group. Otherwise the normal group selection screen will appear, but with all the matching groups present too, as though you had yanked just those groups in.
With the ββ -w ββ flag a given group-name is used as default group to post to. If more than one group or a wildcard is specified only the first group respectively the first group that matches is used.
Once you use SelectYankActive (β y β) to yank in all active groups, or SelectToggleReadDisplay (β r β) to toggle the read/unread status, then the command-line groups will be gone. You can use SelectSyncWithActive (β Y β) to reread the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file and get them back.
NB: With the ββ -n ββ flag, only unsubscribed groups in the ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc file (or the newsrc-file given by the ββ -f ββ command-line switch or via ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/newsrctable ) can be matched.
Command-line options have higher priority than attributes and tinrc options. Thus, command-line option takes precedence over configured values with the single exception that if a port is given for the newsserver in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/newsrctable it will override any port given on the command-line. The order of command-line options is not important. If they are mutual exclusive the one with the highest priority will be chosen and a warning may be given.
USAGE
NEWS ADMINISTRATION
Maintaining Netnews on large networks of machines can be a pretty time consuming job as I discovered when I was given the job of maintaining our news system and news users.
A user starting tin for the first time can be automatically subscribed to a list of newsgroups that are deemed appropriate by the news administrator. The subscriptions file should be created in your news lib directory (i.e., ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/subscriptions ) and should be world readable. If you read news via NNTP, then your news server must support the LIST SUBSCRIPTIONS command. It is part of the NNTP List Extensions ( RFC6048 ) and all modern servers should understand it.
SCREEN FORMAT
tin has four separate levels of operation: Selection level, Group level, Thread level and Article level.
At the Selection level the title displays (the name of the news server (with a "[T]"- or "[k]"-suffix if reading via NNTPS (insecurely)) and) the number of subscribed groups (containing new unread articles). The newsgroups are displayed in the middle of the screen usually with the number of unread articles displayed on the same line in front, but it can be customized via select_format .
βM 1 2
comp.security.announce Announcements from the CERT abou
M 2 1 news.admin.announce Announcements for news adminstra
3 22 news.software.misc News-related software other than
4 1475 news.software.nntp The Network News Transfer Protoc
X 5 124 news.software.readers Discussion of software used to
r
There may also be a character prefixing the line. An explanation follows:
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u |
This group is unsubscribed. To see only your subscribed groups use the SelectToggleReadDisplay (β r β) or SelectYankActive (β y β) toggle keys. |
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M |
This is a moderated group. Any posts you make will have to be approved by the group administrator before it will be made public. tin will ask for confirmation before you post to a moderated group. |
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N |
This is a new newsgroup which has been created since you last used tin . New newsgroups are not subscribed to by default (However, see the $ AUTOSUBSCRIBE / $ AUTOUNSUBSCRIBE environment variables). Subscribe to it in the normal way if you wish the group to continue to appear in your Selection Menu. Simply ignore new newsgroups and they will be gone the next time you start tin . You will have to yank in all the groups to find them in a later session. |
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D |
This group no longer exists. If you no longer wish to see this group then unsubscribe from it in the normal way. This flag will only appear if you have set strip_bogus to "Mark with D on selection screen" in the Options Menu. |
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X |
You may no longer make posts to this group. Often a group will be superseded by a more appropriately named one. |
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= |
This group has been renamed and you may no longer post to it. If you do, then you will receive an error from your news server telling you the correct group to post to. |
At the Group level the title contains the name of the group, the number of conversation threads, the abbreviated threading method ( thread_articles ), the limit of articles to get (if set; getart_limit ), the total number of (unread) articles ( art_marked_read or art_marked_unread ), the number of hot articles art_marked_selected , the number of read hot articles (if any; art_marked_read_selected ), the number of recent articles ( art_marked_recent ) and the number of killed articles ( art_marked_killed ). I.e.:
alt.sources (5B -50/23+ 0* 3o 0K)
The characters after the numbers are depending to the configuration and if your are in show_only_unread_arts mode or not. Some numbers could be missing if the specific option is not enabled. It might also contain an βMβ, βXβ or β=β (see above; doesnβt work with the ββ -n ββ command-line switch!) if the group is moderated, set to no posting or postings to it get redirected.
If a thread has unread articles it is marked with art_marked_unread in front of the total number of articles in the thread. If there are recent articles within the thread it might be marked with art_marked_recent in front of the total number of articles in the thread β this is controlled by the recent_time option. If a thread has hot articles in it (see also section "FILTERING ARTICLES") itβs marked with art_marked_selected in front of the total number of articles in the thread. The display can be customized via group_format .
de.admin.net-abuse.announce (11B 13+ 1* 1o 0K) M
β 1 + 3 108
bincancels in de.talk.sex Christopher Lueg <l
2 + 69 EMP/ECP gecancelt. xynx. BI= 10 Henning Weede
<hwee
3 o 93 EMP gecancelt. SouthBeach/Palms Henning Weede
<hwee
4 * 368 <1997-11-12> Fremdcancel-FAQ Thomas Roessler
<ro
At the Thread level the screen usually (depends on the threading method used) looks like this, but can be customized via thread_format :
β 1 [ 7]
What is this funny tree in the thr Robert F. Simmig
2 [ 12] +β Sephan Wagner <s
3 [ 230] | ββTin thread-level (was: What is Bob
Johnson <bob
4 [ 22] ββtin threading menu Brian Richardson
At the Article level the page header has the following format:
Sun, 28 Dec 1997
21:21:01 de.admin.news.groups Thread 20 of 86
Lines 50 Re: EINSPRUCH zu RESULT:de.comm.mobil.ALL Article
47 of 59
Urs Janssen <urs@akk.org> at Arbeitskreis Kultur und
Kommunikati
article-body
The look of the Selection, Group and Thread level can be customized. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT".
COMMON MOVING KEYS
This table shows the common keys used for moving around all levels within tin .
ANSI/vt100 Other Terminals
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Beg. of list/article |
Home |
FirstPage ( Λ ) |
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End of list/article |
End |
LastPage ( $ ) |
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Page Up |
PgUp |
PageUp ( u , ΛU or ΛB ) |
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Page Down |
PgDn |
PageDown ( ΛD or ΛF or <SPACE> ) |
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Line Up |
Up arrow |
Up ( k or ΛP ) |
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Line Down |
Down arrow |
Down ( j or ΛN ) |
COMMON EDITING COMMANDS
An emacs (1) style editing package allows the easy editing of input strings. A history list allows the easy reuse of previously entered strings. In addition to the cursor keys, the following commands are available when editing a string:
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ΛA, ΛE |
move to beginning or end of line, respectively. |
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ΛF, ΛB |
non-destructive move forward or back one location, respectively. |
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ΛD |
delete the character currently under the cursor, or send EOF if no characters in the buffer. |
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ΛH, <DEL> |
delete character left of the cursor. |
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ΛK |
delete from cursor to end of line. |
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ΛP, ΛN |
move through history, previous and next, respectively. |
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ΛL, ΛR |
redraw the current line. |
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<CR> |
places line on history list if non-blank, appends newline and returns to the caller. |
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<ESC> |
aborts the present editing operation. |
GLOBAL COMMANDS
The following
commands are available at all 4 menu levels and always have
the same effect.
ShellEscape β!β
Shell escape. ShellEscape by itself will launch a shell, ShellEscape <command> will run an external <command>. This facility may have been disabled by the System Administrator.
ToggleColor β&β
Toggle use of ANSI color.
RedrawScr βΛLβ
Redraw the current screen.
ScrollUp β<β
Scroll screen up by one line.
ScrollDown β>β
Scroll screen down by one line.
Postponed βOβ βΛOβ
Reload postponed article. If your system blocks the Postponed key you must quote it by pressing β ΛV β (CTRL-V) first. The postpone-menu offers the following actions: PromptYes (β y β) = reload and spawn editor; PostponeOverride (β Y β) = post article (without spawning editor); PostponeAll (β A β) = post all postponed articles (without spawning editor); PromptNo (β n β) = skip this article; Quit (β q β) = quit postponed menu. Currently there is no βsimpleβ way to delete a postponed article from the postponed-file, you have to use the following command sequence instead: reload it with Postponed , enter editor with PromptYes (β y β), quit editor, discard posting with Quit (β ΛO ββ y ββ q β). See also ββ -o ββ command-line switch.
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Help βhβ |
Help screen of commands available on the current menu. You can use SearchSubjF (β / β), SearchSubjB (β ? β) and SearchRepeat (β \ β) to search on this screen. Quit (β q β) returns to the menu. |
ToggleHelpDisplay βHβ
Toggle the display of help mini menu at the bottom of the screen and posting etiquette after composing an article ( beginner_level ).
DisplayPostHist βWβ
List articles posted by user. The date posted, the newsgroup and the subject are listed. See the section "POSTING HISTORY LISTING" for more information.
Version βvβ
Print tin version information.
NEWSGROUP SELECTION COMMANDS
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4 |
Select group 4. |
SelectResetNewsrc βΛRβ
Reset ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc file. This will destroy all records of which articles have been read, so use this carefully.
SetRange β#β
Choose a range of articles to be affected by the next command. See the section "RANGES" for more information.
SelectSortActive β.β
Sort the list of newsgroups.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
SearchSubjF β/β
Search for a group by name and description (if displayed).
SearchSubjB β?β
Backward search through the group names and descriptions.
SelectReadGrp βΛJβ β<CR>β
Read current group.
SelectEnterNextUnreadGrp β<TAB>β βnβ
Enter next group with unread news. Will wrap around to the beginning of the group selection list looking for unread groups.
Catchup βcβ
Make current group as all read [after confirmation] and move to the next group in the group selection list.
CatchupNextUnread βCβ
Mark current group as all read [after confirmation] and enter the next unread group in the group selection list.
SelectToggleDescriptions βdβ
Toggle display to show just the group name or the group name and the group descriptions.
EditFilter βEβ
Edit the filter file and reload it afterward.
SelectGoto βgβ
Choose a new group by name. This command can be used to access any group, even those not currently yanked in.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Toggle the display of the description of the current newsgroup in the last line. This will not be available if tin was started with the ββ -d ββ option.
ToggleInverseVideo βIβ
Toggle inverse video.
ConnectionInfo βJβ
Show details about current connection.
LookupMessage βLβ
Look up article by ββMessage-ID:ββ. If none of the groups listed in the ββNewsgroups:ββ-header of the referenced article is available, just the contents of the ββNewsgroups:ββ-header will be displayed in the last line. At this level this command only works if reading via NNTP and the server supports [X]HDR ( RFC2980 , RFC3977 ) or XPAT ( RFC- 2980 ).
SelectMoveGrp βmβ
Move the current group within the group selection list. By entering β1β the group will become the first displayed group in the list, by entering β8β the eighth group in the list etc. By entering β$β the group will be the last group displayed.
OptionMenu βMβ
User configurable options menu (for more information see section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES").
SelectNextUnreadGrp βNβ
Positions the cursor on the next group with unread articles in it.
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Quit βqβ |
Quit tin β ask the user to confirm if confirm_choice is set accordingly. |
QuitTin βQβ
Quit tin β donβt ask the user to confirm.
SelectToggleReadDisplay βrβ
Toggle display of all subscribed to groups and just those groups containing unread articles. Command has no effect if groups were specified on the command-line when tin was started.
BugReport βRβ
Mail a bug report or comment to <tin-bugs@tin.org>. This is the best way of getting bugs fixed and features added/changed.
SelectSubscribe βsβ
Subscribe to current group.
SelectSubscribePat βSβ
Subscribe to groups matching user specified pattern. See the section "NEWSGROUP LISTS & WILDCARDS" for the types of pattern that tin understands.
SelectUnsubscribe βuβ
Unsubscribe to current group. This can be used to remove bogus groups. See strip_bogus in the "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES" section.
SelectUnsubscribePat βUβ
Unsubscribe to groups matching user specified pattern. See the section "NEWSGROUP LISTS & WILDCARDS" for the types of pattern that tin understands.
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Post βwβ |
Post an article to current group. If posting fails for some reason, youβll get the chance to PostEdit (β e β) the article again, PostPostpone (β o β) it for later processing (see also ββ -o ββ command-line switch) or discard it via Quit (β q β). |
SelectQuitNoWrite βXβ
Quit tin without saving any changes to the configuration.
SelectYankActive βyβ
Yanks in all groups. Toggles the displayed groups between all the groups in the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file and just those that are subscribed to in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc .
SelectSyncWithActive βYβ
Reread the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file to see if any new news has arrived since starting tin .
SelectMarkGrpUnread βzβ βZβ
Mark all articles in the current group as unread.
GROUP INDEX COMMANDS
All searches in this level are limited to unread articles if in show_only_unread_arts mode. GroupToggleReadUnread (β r β) can be use toggle the setting right before/after the search.
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4 |
Select article 4. |
MenuFilterSelect βΛAβ
Auto select article(s) using a menu. Read the section "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information.
MenuFilterKill βΛKβ
Kill article(s) using a menu. Read the section "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information.
MarkFeedRead βΛXβ
Mark current article, thread, range, auto-selected (hot) articles, articles matching pattern or tagged articles as read. A prompt asks which type should be marked.
MarkFeedUnread βΛWβ
Mark current article, thread, range, auto-selected (hot) articles, articles matching pattern or tagged articles as unread. A prompt asks which type should be marked.
SetRange β#β
Choose a range of articles to be affected by the next command. See the section "RANGES" for more information.
LastViewed β-β
Re-enter the last message that was viewed.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
SearchSubjF β/β
Search forward for specified subject.
SearchSubjB β?β
Search backward for specified subject.
GroupSelThd β*β
Select current thread for later processing.
GroupDoAutoSel β+β
Selects all threads in current group. It is a shortcut for calling GroupSelPattern with a pattern of ββ*ββ.
GroupToggleThdSel β.β
Toggle selection of current thread. If at least one unread article, (but not every unread article) in the current thread is selected, then all unread articles become selected.
GroupSelThdIfUnreadSelected β;β
For each thread in current group, if it at least one unread article is selected, all unread articles become selected. This is useful for auto-selection on author where reader wants to see entire thread.
GroupSelPattern β=β
Prompts for a pattern with which to match on. All threads whose subjects match the pattern will be marked selected. A pattern of ββ*ββ will match all subjects. Entering just β <CR> β will reuse the last pattern that was entered.
GroupReverseSel β@β
Reverse all selections on all articles.
GroupUndoSel βΛβ
Undo all selections on all articles. It clears the toggle effect of GroupMarkUnselArtRead (β X β) command. Thus after first doing a GroupMarkUnselArtRead , one can then do GroupUndoSel to reset articles. Thus, one can iteratively whittle down uninteresting threads.
|
Pipe β|β |
Pipe current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles into command. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information. |
QuickFilterSelect β[β
Auto select article(s) with a single key [after confirmation]. The defaults used for selection are based upon the following four tinrc config variables: default_filter_select_case , default_filter_select_expire , default_filter_select_global and default_filter_select_header . Read the section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES" for a full explanation of these variables and "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information on filtering.
QuickFilterKill β]β
Kill article(s) with a single key [after confirmation]. The defaults used for killing are based upon the following four tinrc config variables: default_filter_kill_case , default_filter_kill_expire , default_filter_kill_global and default_filter_kill_header . Read the section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES" for a full explanation of these variables and "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information on filtering.
GroupReadBasenote βΛJβ β<CR>β
Read current article.
GroupNextUnreadArtOrGrp β<TAB>β
View next unread article or group.
SearchAuthF βaβ
Author forward search. This searches for articles with a specific ββFrom:ββ line.
SearchAuthB βAβ
Author backward search. Otherwise, see SearchAuthF (β a β) above.
SearchBody βBβ
Search the body of all articles in group (can be slow). You can abort the search using Quit (β q β).
Catchup βcβ
Mark all articles as read [after confirmation] then return to the group selection list. Move cursor to next group.
CatchupNextUnread βCβ
Mark all articles as read [after confirmation] and enter the next group with unread news.
GroupToggleSubjDisplay βdβ
Cycle the display of the author through all the possible options for the tinrc variable show_author .
GroupCancel βDβ
Cancel (delete) or supersede (overwrite) the current article. It must have been posted by the same user. The cancel message can be seen in the newsgroup βcontrolβ or βcontrol.cancelβ.
EditFilter βEβ
Edit the filter file and reload it afterward.
GroupGoto βgβ
Choose a new group by name. This command can be used to access any group, even those not currently yanked in.
GroupToggleGetartLimit βGβ
Toggle article/group limit.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Display the subject of the first article in the current thread in the last line.
ToggleInverseVideo βIβ
Toggle inverse video.
ConnectionInfo βJβ
Show details about current connection.
GroupMarkThdRead βKβ
Mark article/thread as read and move onto the next unread article/thread. If a range of articles/threads is set, the range will be marked as read instead of the current article/thread. When tagged articles/threads are present, a prompt asks how to proceed.
GroupListThd βlβ
Open the thread under the current cursor position.
LookupMessage βLβ
Look up article by ββMessage-ID:ββ. If not reading via NNTP or the server neither supports [X]HDR ( RFC2980 , RFC3977 ) nor XPAT ( RFC2980 ), only the IDs in the current group are searched.
GroupMail βmβ
Mail current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to someone. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information.
OptionMenu βMβ
User configurable options menu (for more information see section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES").
GroupNextGroup βnβ
Go to next group.
GroupNextUnreadArt βNβ
Go to the next unread article.
|
Print βoβ |
Send current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to printer. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information. |
GroupPrevGroup βpβ
Go to previous group.
GroupPrevUnreadArt βPβ
Go to previous unread article.
|
Quit βqβ |
Return to previous level. |
QuitTin βQβ
Quit tin β donβt ask the user to confirm.
GroupToggleReadUnread βrβ
Toggle the display between all articles and unread articles.
BugReport βRβ
Mail a bug report or comment to <tin-bugs@tin.org>. This is the best way of getting bugs fixed and features added/changed.
GroupSave βsβ
Save current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information.
GroupAutoSave βSβ
Save marked articles automatically without further prompting.
GroupTag βtβ
Toggle tag-status of current article / thread for GroupMail (β m β) / Pipe (β | β) / Print (β o β) / GroupSave (β s β) / GroupRepost (β x β).
GroupTagParts βTβ
Automatically tag/untag all the parts of the current multi-part message in order.
GroupToggleThreading βuβ
Cycle the threading mode through no threading, threading by subject, threading by references, threading on both subject and references, group multipart articles into a thread (ββSubject:ββ based).
GroupUntag βUβ
Untag all articles that were tagged.
|
Post βwβ |
Post an article to the current group. If posting fails for some reason, youβll get the chance to edit the article again via PostEdit (β e β), postpone it for later processing via PostPostpone (β o β) (see also ββ -o ββ command-line switch) or discard it via Quit (β q β). |
GroupRepost βxβ
Repost an already posted article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to another newsgroup(s). Useful for reposting from global to local newsgroups. Do not use this to crosspost your own articles.
GroupMarkUnselArtRead βXβ
Mark all unread articles that have not been selected as read, redraw screen to reflect changes and put index at the first thread to begin reading. Pressing GroupMarkUnselArtRead (β X β) again will toggle back to the way it was before. See GroupUndoSel (β Λ β) command for clearing the toggle effect, leaving the group will also clear the toggle effect and make the changes permanent.
MarkArtUnread βzβ
Mark current article as unread.
MarkThdUnread βZβ
Mark current thread as unread. If a range of threads is set, the range will be marked as unread instead of the current thread. When tagged threads are present, a prompt asks how to proceed.
THREAD LISTING COMMANDS
|
4 |
Select article 4 within thread. |
MenuFilterSelect βΛAβ
Auto select article(s) using a menu. Read the section "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information.
MenuFilterKill βΛKβ
Kill article(s) using a menu. Read the section "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information.
MarkFeedRead βΛXβ
Mark current article, thread, range, auto-selected (hot) articles, articles matching pattern or tagged articles as read. A prompt asks which type should be marked.
MarkFeedUnread βΛWβ
Mark current article, thread, range, auto-selected (hot) articles, articles matching pattern or tagged articles as unread. A prompt asks which type should be marked.
SetRange β#β
Choose a range of articles to be affected by the next command. See the section "RANGES" for more information.
LastViewed β-β
Re-enter the last message that was viewed.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
SearchSubjF β/β
Search forward for specified subject.
SearchSubjB β?β
Search backward for specified subject.
ThreadSelArt β*β
Select current thread for later processing.
ThreadToggleArtSel β.β
Toggle selection of current article.
ThreadReverseSel β@β
Reverse article selections.
ThreadUndoSel βΛβ
Undo all selections on current thread.
|
Pipe β|β |
Pipe current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles into command. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information. |
ThreadReadArt βΛJβ β<CR>β
Read current article within thread.
ThreadReadNextArtOrThread β<TAB>β
View next unread article within thread.
SearchAuthF βaβ
Author forward search. This searches for articles with a specific ββFrom:ββ line. The search will wrap over into the next thread if nothing is found in the current one.
SearchAuthB βAβ
Author backward search. Otherwise, see SearchAuthF (β a β) above.
SearchBody βBβ
Search the body of all articles in group (can be slow). You can abort the search using Quit (β q β).
Catchup βcβ
Mark thread as read [after confirmation] and return to the group index page. Move cursor to next thread.
CatchupNextUnread βCβ
Mark thread as read [after confirmation] and enter the next thread containing unread news.
ThreadToggleSubjDisplay βdβ
Cycle the display of the author through all the possible options for the tinrc variable show_author .
ThreadCancel βDβ
Cancel (delete) or supersede (overwrite) the current article. It must have been posted by the same user. The cancel message can be seen in the newsgroup βcontrolβ or βcontrol.cancelβ.
EditFilter βEβ
Edit the filter file and reload it afterward.
ThreadFollowupQuote βfβ
Post a followup to the current article with a copy of the article included.
ThreadFollowup βFβ
Post a followup to the current article without a copy of the article included.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Display the subject of the current article in the last line.
ToggleInverseVideo βIβ
Toggle inverse video.
ConnectionInfo βJβ
Show details about current connection.
ThreadMarkArtRead βKβ
Mark article as read and move onto the next unread article. If a range of articles is set, the range will be marked as read instead of the current article. When tagged articles are present, a prompt asks how to proceed.
LookupMessage βLβ
Look up article by ββMessage-ID:ββ. If not reading via NNTP or the server neither supports [X]HDR ( RFC2980 , RFC3977 ) nor XPAT ( RFC2980 ), only the IDs in the current group are searched.
ThreadMail βmβ
Mail current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to someone. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information.
|
Print βoβ |
Send current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to printer. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information. |
||
|
Quit βqβ |
Return to previous level. |
QuitTin βQβ
Quit tin β donβt ask the user to confirm.
BugReport βRβ
Mail a bug report or comment to <tin-bugs@tin.org>. This is the best way of getting bugs fixed and features added/changed.
ThreadSave βsβ
Save current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information.
ThreadAutoSave βSβ
Save marked articles automatically without further prompting.
ThreadTag βtβ
Toggle tag status of current article for mailing, piping, printing, saving or reposting.
ThreadTagParts βTβ
Automatically tag/untag all the parts of the current multi-part message in order.
ThreadUntag βUβ
Untag all tagged threads.
|
Post βwβ |
Post an article to the current group. If posting fails for some reason, youβll get the chance to edit the article again via PostEdit (β e β), postpone it for later processing via PostPostpone (β o β) (see also ββ -o ββ command-line switch) or discard it via Quit (β q β). |
MarkArtUnread βzβ
Mark current article in thread as unread. If a range of articles is set, the range will be marked as unread instead of the current article. When tagged articles are present, a prompt asks how to proceed.
MarkThdUnread βZβ
Mark all articles in thread as unread.
ARTICLE VIEWER COMMANDS
|
0 |
Read the first (base) article in this thread. |
|||
|
4 |
Read response 4 in this thread. |
MenuFilterSelect βΛAβ
Auto select article(s) using a menu. Read the section "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information.
PageReplyQuoteHeaders βΛEβ
Reply through mail to the author of the current article with a copy of the article with all headers included.
PagePGPCheckArticle βΛGβ
Perform pgp (1) / gpg (1) operations on article. This expects inline pgp ( RFC4880 ) and not MIME pgp ( RFC3156 ).
PageToggleRaw βΛHβ
Toggles the display mode (raw including all headers vs. cooked).
MenuFilterKill βΛKβ
Kill article(s) using a menu. Read the section "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information.
PageToggleTabs βΛTβ
Toggle the TAB width between 4 and 8 characters.
PageFollowupQuoteHeaders βΛWβ
Post a followup to the current article with a copy of the article with all headers included.
PageToggleTex2iso β"β
Toggle TeX to ISO decoding for current article. The default behavior is taken from the tex2iso_conv variable in the tinrc file.
PageToggleAllHeaders β*β
Toggles the display of all headers vs. headers in news_headers_to_display .
PageArticleInfo βββ
Detailed MIME information of the article.
PageToggleRot β%β
Toggle ROT-13 decoding for this article.
PageToggleUue β(β
Toggle the display of uuencoded sections. The default behavior is taken from the hide_uue variable in the tinrc file.
PageReveal β)β
The form feed character (ΛL) is often used to hide βspoilersβ that the reader may not initially wish to see when viewing an article. Any text after a form feed is not displayed. This key-press acts like a reveal key and turns the hidden text back on. Scrolling down will also reveal the text, scrolling up will hide it again.
LastViewed β-β
Re-enter the last message that was viewed.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
SearchSubjF β/β
Forward search the text of this article.
SearchSubjB β?β
Backward search the text of this article.
PageSkipIncludedText β:β
Skip to the end of the next quoted text-block in this article. Quoted text is everything which matches quote_regex , quote_regex2 or quote_regex3 .
PageTopThd β<β
Go to the first article in the current thread.
PageBotThd β>β
Go to the last article in the current thread.
PageToggleHighlight β_β
Toggle word highlighting on/off.
PageToggleVerbatim β,β
Cycle through the various options of verbatim_handling.
|
Pipe β|β |
Pipe current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles into command. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information. |
QuickFilterSelect β[β
Auto select article(s) with a single key. The defaults used for selection are set based upon the following four tinrc config variables: default_filter_select_case , default_filter_select_expire , default_filter_select_global and default_filter_select_header Read the section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES" for a full explanation of these variables and "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information on filtering.
QuickFilterKill β]β
Kill article(s) with a single key. The defaults used for killing are based upon the following four tinrc config variables: default_filter_kill_case , default_filter_kill_expire , default_filter_kill_global and default_filter_kill_header . Read the section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES" for a full explanation of these variables and "FILTERING ARTICLES" for more information on filtering.
PageNextThd βΛJβ β<CR>β
Go to next base article.
PageNextUnread β<TAB>β
Go to next unread article. If the tinrc variable goto_next_unread doesnβt contain PageNextUnread, then this key will first page through the current article.
SearchAuthF βaβ
Author forward search.
SearchAuthB βAβ
Author backward search.
SearchBody βBβ
Search the body of all articles in group (can be slow). You can abort the search using Quit (β q β).
Catchup βcβ
Mark the current thread as read [after confirmation] and return to the previous menu. Move cursor to next item.
CatchupNextUnread βCβ
Mark the rest of the current thread as read [after confirmation] and enter the next thread with unread articles.
PageCancel βDβ
Cancel (delete) or supersede (overwrite) the current article. It must have been posted by the same user. The cancel message can be seen in the newsgroup βcontrolβ or βcontrol.cancelβ.
PageEditArticle βeβ
Edit the current article. This is restricted to mailgroups and saved news.
EditFilter βEβ
Edit the filter file and reload it afterward.
PageFollowupQuote βfβ
Post a followup to the current article with a copy of the article included.
PageFollowup βFβ
Post a followup to the current article without including a copy of the article.
PageFirstPage βgβ
Go to the start of the article.
PageLastPage βGβ
Go to the end of the article.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Display the subject of the current article in the last line.
ToggleInverseVideo βIβ
Toggle inverse video.
ConnectionInfo βJβ
Show details about current connection.
PageKillThd βKβ
Mark rest of thread as read and move onto the next unread thread.
PageListThd βlβ
Show the thread menu that the current article is a part of.
LookupMessage βLβ
Look up article by ββMessage-ID:ββ. If not reading via NNTP or the server neither supports [X]HDR ( RFC2980 , RFC3977 ) nor XPAT ( RFC2980 ), only the IDs in the current group are searched.
PageMail βmβ
Mail current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to someone. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information.
OptionMenu βMβ
User configurable options menu (for more information see section "GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES").
PageNextArt βnβ
Go to the next article.
PageNextUnreadArt βNβ
Go to the next unread article.
|
Print βoβ |
Send current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to printer. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information. |
PagePrevArt βpβ
Go to the previous article.
PagePrevUnreadArt βPβ
Go to the previous unread article.
|
Quit βqβ |
Return to the previous level. |
QuitTin βQβ
Quit tin β donβt ask the user to confirm.
PageReplyQuote βrβ
Reply through mail to the author of the current article with a copy of the article included.
PageReply βRβ
Reply through mail to the author of the current article without including the original article.
PageSave βsβ
Save current article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information.
PageAutoSave βSβ
Save marked articles automatically without further prompting.
PageTag βtβ
Toggle tag status of current article for mailing, piping, printing, saving or reposting.
PageGroupSel βTβ
Return to group selection level.
PageGotoParent βuβ
Go to parent article.
PageViewUrl βUβ
Display a list of URLs in the current article. See the section "URL LISTING" for more information.
PageViewAttach βVβ
Display a list of attachments of the current article. See the section "ATTACHMENT LISTING" for more information.
|
Post βwβ |
Post an article to the current group. If posting fails for some reason, youβll get the chance to edit the article again via PostEdit (β e β), postpone it for later processing via PostPostpone (β o β) (see also ββ -o ββ command-line switch) or discard it via Quit (β q β). |
PageRepost βxβ
Repost an already posted article / thread / auto-selected (hot) articles / articles matching pattern / tagged articles to another newsgroup(s). Useful for reposting from global to local newsgroups. Do not use this to crosspost your own articles.
MarkArtUnread βzβ
Mark article as unread.
MarkThdUnread βZβ
Mark the current thread as unread.
URL LISTING
PageViewUrl (β U β) displays a list of URLs in the current article. Besides the common moving keys, the following commands are available:
UrlSelect βΛJβ β<CR>β
The current URL will be prompted and opened using the url_handler . β <ESC> β or no input will skip the URL.
SearchSubjF β/β
URL forward search.
SearchSubjB β?β
URL backward search.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
ShellEscape β!β
Shell escape.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Toggle the display of the current URL in the last line.
|
Help βhβ |
Help screen of commands available. |
ToggleHelpDisplay βHβ
Toggle the display of help mini menu at the bottom of the screen and posting etiquette after composing an article ( beginner_level ).
ATTACHMENT LISTING
PageViewAttach (β V β) displays a list of attachments of the current article. Besides the common moving keys, the following commands are available:
AttachPipe βpβ
Pipe attachment into command.
AttachSave βsβ
Save current attachment / tagged attachments to disk.
AttachSelect βΛJβ β<CR>β
View attachment.
AttachTag βtβ
Tag one or more attachments for saving.
AttachTagPattern β=β
Prompts for a pattern to match. All attachments whose name/description or content type/transfer encoding match the pattern will be tagged.
AttachToggleTagged β@β
Reverse tagging of all attachments.
AttachUntag βUβ
Untag all tagged attachments.
SearchSubjF β/β
Attachment forward search.
SearchSubjB β?β
Attachment backward search.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
GlobalPipe β|β
Pipe attachment into command. Uses the raw attachment, no decoding is done.
ShellEscape β!β
Shell escape.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Toggle the display of the name/description of the current attachment in the last line.
|
Help βhβ |
Help screen of commands available. |
ToggleHelpDisplay βHβ
Toggle the display of help mini menu at the bottom of the screen and posting etiquette after composing an article ( beginner_level ).
POSTING HISTORY LISTING
DisplayPostHist (β W β) displays a list of all previous posted articles stored in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/posted . The following information is shown: a time stamp in "dd-mm-yy"-format, a single letter indicating the action which initiated the message, the group names (eventually shortened, see also abbreviate_groupname ) or a mail address the message was sent to and the subject of the message. Besides the common moving keys, the following commands are available:
PostedArticlesSelect βΛJβ β<CR>β
The article with the current ββMessage-ID:ββ will be opened if available. Note that this requires that the ββMessage-ID:ββ of the article was recorded in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/posted which may not always be the case. If using NNTP and the internal inews ( inews_prog set to "--internal") and either the server proposes a ββMessage-ID:ββ during the POST ( RFC3977 ) command or tin is built to generate ββMessage-ID:ββ this should be the case. With an external inews (and reading from local spool) it is not.
SearchSubjF β/β
URL forward search.
SearchSubjB β?β
URL backward search.
SearchRepeat β\β
Repeat the previous search.
ShellEscape β!β
Shell escape.
ToggleInfoLastLine βiβ
Toggle the display of the current ββMessage-ID:ββ in the last line.
|
Help βhβ |
Help screen of commands available. |
ToggleHelpDisplay βHβ
Toggle the display of help mini menu at the bottom of the screen and posting etiquette after composing an article ( beginner_level ).
GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU AND TINRC CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES
At startup, tin reads in the configuration files (see also tin (5)). They contain a list of variables that can be used to configure the way tin works. If it exists, the global configuration file, /etc/tin/tinrc is read. After that, the userβs own configuration file is read from ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/tinrc . The global file is useful for distributing system-wide defaults to new users who have no private tinrc yet.
The variables are user configurable by editing ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/tinrc directly. Most of them can also be set in the GLOBAL OPTIONS MENU which is accessed by pressing OptionMenu (β M β) at all levels. It allows the user to customize the behavior of tin . The options are saved to the file ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/tinrc when you exit tin so donβt edit the file directly whilst tin is running.
In the options menu use the cursor keys in the usual way to move around. Use ConfigSelect (β ΛJ β or β <CR> β) to βopenβ the option you wish to change. You will need to enter a new value or use β <SPACE> β to toggle the available options. ConfigSelect will save the new value, β <ESC> β will abort without saving changes.
As with the other menus, RedrawScr (β ΛL β) will redraw the screen. You can use SearchSubjF (β / β), SearchSubjB (β ? β) and SearchRepeat (β \ β) to search for a specific option. Use Quit (β q β) to exit the option menu and keep your changes. Use QuitTin (β Q β) to exit without keeping your changes.
The options menu provides access to the attributes menu for the current group by the ConfigToggleAttrib (β <TAB> β) command. Pressing ConfigToggleAttrib again toggles back to the options menu. For more information see section "ATTRIBUTES MENU AND GROUP ATTRIBUTES".
The ConfigScopeMenu (β S β) command brings up the scopes menu. For more information see section "SCOPES MENU".
Here is a full
list of all the available variables. The name in braces is
the name of the corresponding setting in
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/tinrc
.
Abbreviate long newsgroup names
(abbreviate_groupname)
If ON abbreviate long newsgroup names at group selection level and article level (if necessary) like this: news.software.readers β n.software.readers β n.s.readers β n.s.r. Default is OFF.
Add posted articles to filter (add_posted_to_filter)
If ON add posted articles which start a new thread to filter for highlighting follow-ups. Default is ON.
Insert ββUser-Agent:ββ-header (advertising)
Turn ON advertising in header (ββUser-Agent:ββ). Default is ON.
Skip multipart/alternative parts (alternative_handling)
If ON strip multipart/alternative messages automatically. Default is ON.
Character to show deleted articles (art_marked_deleted)
The character used to show that an article was deleted. Default is βDβ.
Character to show inrange articles (art_marked_inrange)
The character used to show that an article is in a range. Default is β#β.
Character to show returning arts (art_marked_return)
The character used to show that an article will return as an unread article when the group is next entered. Default is β-β.
Character to show selected articles (art_marked_selected)
The character used to show that an article/thread is auto-selected (hot). Default is β*β.
Character to show recent articles (art_marked_recent)
The character used to show that an article/thread is recent (not older than X days). See also recent_time . Default is βoβ.
Character to show unread articles (art_marked_unread)
The character used to show that an article has not been read. Default is β+β.
Character to show read articles (art_marked_read)
The character used to show that an article was read. Default is β β.
Character to show killed articles (art_marked_killed)
The character used to show that an article was killed. Default is βKβ. kill_level must be set accordingly.
Character to show read selected arts (art_marked_read_selected)
The character used to show that an article was hot before it was read. Default is β:β. kill_level must be set accordingly.
Ask before using MIME viewer (ask_for_metamail)
If ON tin will ask before using a MIME viewer ( metamail_prog ) to display MIME messages. This only occurs if a MIME viewer is set. Default is OFF.
Format string for the Attachment level (attachment_format)
Format string tin uses for Attachment level representation. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT". Default is "%t%s%e%c%d".
Send you a cc and/or bcc automatically (auto_cc_bcc)
Automatically put your name in the ββCc:ββ and/or ββBcc:ββ field when mailing an article. Default is No.
List thread using right arrow key (auto_list_thread)
If ON automatically list thread when entering it using right arrow key. Default is ON.
Reconnect to server automatically (auto_reconnect)
Default is OFF.
Save articles in batch mode (batch_save)
If set ON articles/threads will be saved in batch mode when save ββ -S ββ or mail ββ -M , -N ββ is specified on the command line. Default is ON.
Show mini menu & posting etiquette (beginner_level)
If set ON a mini menu of the most useful commands will be displayed at the bottom of the screen for each level. Also a short posting etiquette will be displayed after composing an article. Default is ON.
Cache NNTP overview files locally (cache_overview_files)
If ON, create local copies of NNTP overview files. This can be used to considerably speed up accessing large groups when using a slow connection. See also "INDEX FILES". Default is OFF.
Compress locally cached NNTP overview files (compress_overview_files)
If ON, locally cached NNTP overview files ( cache_overview_files ) are saved in compressed form ( RFC1952 ). Useful to reduce local disk space used. Default is OFF.
Hash algorithm for cancel-locks (cancel_lock_algo)
Use this hash algorithm for cancel-locks. Only available when built with cancel-lock support. none disables the generation of cancel-locks. Valid values are none, sha1, sha256 and sha512. Default is sha1. See also ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.cancelsecret in tin (5).
Catchup read groups when quitting (catchup_read_groups)
If set ON the user is asked when quitting if all groups read during the current session should be marked read. Default is OFF.
Standard background color (col_back)
Standard background color
Color of quoted text from external sources (col_extquote)
Color of quoted text from external sources
Color of sender (From:) (col_from)
Color of sender (From:)
Color of article header lines (col_head)
Color of header-lines
Color of help text (col_help)
Color of help pages
Color for inverse text (background) (col_invers_bg)
Color of background for inverse text
Color for inverse text (foreground) (col_invers_fg)
Color of foreground for inverse text
Color of status messages (col_message)
Color of status messages in last line
Color of highlighting with _dash_ (col_markdash)
Color of words emphasized like _this_. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Color of highlighting with /slash/ (col_markslash)
Color of words emphasized like /this/. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Color of highlighting with *stars* (col_markstar)
Color of words emphasized like *this*. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Color of highlighting with -stroke- (col_markstroke)
Color of words emphasized like -this-. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Color of mini help menu (col_minihelp)
Color of mini help menu
Color of actual news header fields (col_newsheaders)
Color of actual news header fields
Standard foreground color (col_normal)
Standard foreground color
Color of quoted lines (col_quote)
Color of quoted lines
Color of twice quoted line (col_quote2)
Color of twice quoted lines
Color of >=3 times quoted line (col_quote3)
Color of >=3 times quoted lines
Color of response counter (col_response)
Color of response counter. This is the text that says "Response x of y" in the article viewer.
Color of signatures (col_signature)
Color of signatures
Color of negative score (col_score_neg)
Color of negative score
Color of positive score (col_score_pos)
Color of positive score
Color of urls highlight (col_urls)
Color of urls highlight
Color of verbatim blocks (col_verbatim)
Color of verbatim blocks
Color of article subject lines (col_subject)
Color of article subject
Color of text lines (col_text)
Color of text-lines
Color of help/mail sign (col_title)
Color of help/mail sign
Which actions require confirmation (confirm_choice)
Ask for manual confirmation to protect the user.
|
β’ |
commands Ask for confirmation before executing certain dangerous commands (e.g., Catchup (β c β)). Commands that this affects are marked in this manual with β[after confirmation]β. Default is commands & quit. |
||
|
β’ |
quit Youβll be asked to confirm that you wish to exit tin when you use the Quit (β q β) command. |
||
|
β’ |
select Ask for confirmation before marking all not selected (with GroupMarkUnselArtRead (β X β) command) articles as read. |
Format string for display of dates (date_format)
Format string used for date representation. A description of the different format options can be found at strftime (3). tin uses strftime (3) when available and supports most format options in his fallback code. Default is "%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S".
(default_art_search)
(default_author_search)
(default_config_search)
The last article/author/config option that was searched for.
(default_filter_days)
Default is 28.
(default_filter_kill_case)
Default for quick (1 key) kill filter case. ON = filter case sensitive, OFF = ignore case. Default is OFF.
(default_filter_kill_expire)
Default for quick (1 key) kill filter expire. ON = limit to default_filter_days , OFF = donβt ever expire. Default is OFF.
(default_filter_kill_global)
Default for quick (1 key) kill filter global. ON=apply to all groups, OFF=apply to current group. Default is ON.
(default_filter_kill_header)
Default for quick (1 key) kill filter header.
|
0 |
ββSubject:ββ (case sensitive) |
|||
|
1 |
ββSubject:ββ (ignore case) |
|||
|
2 |
ββFrom:ββ (case sensitive) |
|||
|
3 |
ββFrom:ββ (ignore case) |
|||
|
4 |
ββMessage-ID:ββ & full ββReferences:ββ line |
|||
|
5 |
ββMessage-ID:ββ & last ββReferences:ββ entry only |
|||
|
6 |
ββMessage-ID:ββ entry only |
|||
|
7 |
ββLines:ββ |
(default_filter_select_case)
Default for quick (1 key) auto-selection filter case. ON=filter case sensitive, OFF=ignore case. Default is OFF.
(default_filter_select_expire)
Default for quick (1 key) auto-selection filter expire. ON = limit to default_filter_days , OFF = donβt ever expire. Default is OFF.
(default_filter_select_global)
Default for quick (1 key) auto-selection filter global. ON=apply to all groups, OFF=apply to current group. Default is ON.
(default_filter_select_header)
Default for quick (1 key) auto-selection filter header.
|
0 |
ββSubject:ββ (case sensitive) |
|||
|
1 |
ββSubject:ββ (ignore case) |
|||
|
2 |
ββFrom:ββ (case sensitive) |
|||
|
3 |
ββFrom:ββ (ignore case) |
|||
|
4 |
ββMessage-ID:ββ & full ββReferences:ββ line |
|||
|
5 |
ββMessage-ID:ββ & last ββReferences:ββ entry only |
|||
|
6 |
ββMessage-ID:ββ entry only |
|||
|
7 |
ββLines:ββ |
(default_goto_group)
(default_group_search)
(default_mail_address)
(default_move_group)
(default_pattern)
(default_pipe_command)
(default_post_newsgroups)
(default_post_subject)
(default_range_group)
(default_range_select)
(default_range_thread)
(default_repost_group)
(default_save_file)
(default_save_mode)
(default_select_pattern)
(default_shell_command)
(default_subject_search)
Donβt break words when wrapping
(dont_break_words)
Do not break long lines inside a word. This applies to the body except for verbatim blocks. See also wrap_column . Default is OFF.
Draw β instead of highlighted bar (draw_arrow)
Allows groups/articles to be selected by an arrow βββ if set ON or by a highlighted bar if set OFF. Default is OFF.
Invocation of your editor (editor_format)
The format string used to create the editor start command with parameters. Default is β%E +%N %Fβ with %E=Editor, %N=Linenumber and %F=Filename (e.g., /bin/vi +7 .article). See also $ VISUAL and $ EDITOR under "ENVIRONMENT".
Detection of external quotes (extquote_handling)
If ON quotes from external sources will be detected. Default is OFF.
Regex used to show external quotes (extquote_regex)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching lines are shown in col_extquote . If extquote_regex is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Force redraw after certain commands (force_screen_redraw)
Specifies whether a screen redraw should always be done after certain external commands. Default is OFF.
Number of articles to get (getart_limit)
If getart_limit is > 0 not more than the last getart_limit articles/group are fetched from the server. If getart_limit is < 0 tin will start fetching articles from your first unread minus absolute value of getart_limit . Default is 0, which means no limit.
Catchup group using left key (group_catchup_on_exit)
If ON catchup group when leaving with the left arrow key. Default is ON.
Format string for the Group level (group_format)
Format string tin uses for Group level representation. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT". Default is "%nΒ %mΒ %RΒ %LΒ Β %sΒ Β %F".
Go to the next unread article with (goto_next_unread)
Which keys tin should accept to jump to the next unread article. Possible is any combination of PageDown and PageNextUnread . When PageDown is set tin jumps to the next article at the end of the current one. When PageNextUnread is set tin jumps immediately to the next article when PageNextUnread (β <TAB> β) is pressed. Default is PageNextUnread .
Display uue data as an attachment (hide_uue)
If set to βNoβ then raw uuencoded data is displayed. If set to βYesβ then sections of uuencoded data will be shown with a single tag line showing the size and filename (much the same as a MIME attachment). If set to βHide allβ then any line that looks like uuencoded data will be folded into a tag line. This is useful when uuencoded data is split across more than one article but can also lead to false positives. This setting can also be toggled in the article viewer. Default is βNoβ.
External inews (inews_prog)
Path, name and options of external inews (1). If you are reading via NNTP the default value is "--internal" (use built-in NNTP inews), else it is "inews -h". The article is passed to inews_prog on STDIN via β< articleβ.
(info_in_last_line)
If ON, show current group description or article subject in the last line (not in the pager and global menu) β ToggleInfoLastLine (β i β) toggles setting. This facility is useful as the full width of the screen is available to display long subjects. Default is OFF.
Use interactive mail reader (interactive_mailer)
Interactive mailreader: if greater than 0 your mailreader will be invoked earlier for reply so you can use more of its features (e.g., MIME, pgp, ...). 1 means include headers, 2 means donβt include headers (old use_mailreader_i=ON option). 0 turns off usage. This option has to suit mailer_format . Default is 0.
Use inverse video for page headers (inverse_okay)
If ON use inverse video for page headers and URL highlighting. Default is ON.
Keep failed arts in Λ/dead.articles (keep_dead_articles)
If ON keep all failed postings in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/dead.articles besides keeping the last failed posting in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/dead.article . Default is ON.
Filter which articles (kill_level)
This option controls the processing and display of articles that are killed. There are 3 options:
|
0 |
Kill only unread arts is the βtraditionalβ behavior of tin . Only unread articles are killed once only by marking them read. As filtering only happens on unread articles with kill_level set to 0, art_marked_killed and art_marked_read_selected are only shown once. When you reenter the group the mark will be gone. |
||
|
1 |
Kill all arts & show with K will process all articles in the group and therefore there is a processing overhead when using this option. Killed articles are threaded as normal but they will be marked with art_marked_killed . |
||
|
2 |
Kill all arts and never show will process all articles in the group and therefore there is a processing overhead when using this option. Killed articles simply does not get displayed at all. |
Default is 0 (
Kill only
unread arts
).
Use 8-bit characters in mail headers
(mail_8bit_header)
Allows 8-bit characters unencoded in the header of mail message. Default is OFF. Turning it ON is effective only if mail_mime_encoding is also set to 8bit. Leaving it OFF is safe for most users and compliant to Internet Mail Standard ( RFC5322 and RFC2047 ). Default is OFF.
Mail address (mail_address)
Userβs mail address (and full name), if not username@host. This is used when creating articles, sending mail and when pgp (1) / gpg (1) signing ( RFC4880 ).
MIME encoding in mail messages (mail_mime_encoding)
MIME encoding of the body in mail message, if necessary (8bit, base64, quoted-printable, 7bit). Default is quoted-printable.
Quote line when mailing (mail_quote_format)
Format of quote line when replying (via mail) to an article (%A=Address, %D=Date, %F=Fullname+Address, %G=Groupname, %M=Message-ID, %N=Fullname, %C=Firstname, %I=Initials). If the article has multiple addresses only the first is evaluated. Default is "In article %M you wrote:"
Format of the mailbox (mailbox_format)
Select one of the following mailbox-formats: MBOXO (default, except on SCO), MBOXRD or MMDF (default on SCO). See mbox (5) and RFC4155 for more details on MBOXO and MBOXRD and mmdf (5) for more details about MMDF.
Mail directory (maildir)
The directory where articles/threads are to be saved in mbox (5) format. This feature is mainly for use with the mutt (1) mail program. It allows the user to save articles/threads/groups simply by giving β=β as the filename to save to. Default is ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/Mail .
Invocation of your mail command (mailer_format)
The format string used to create the mailer command with parameters that is used for mailing articles to other people. Default is β%M "%T" < %Fβ (e.g., /bin/mail "iain" < Λ/.article). The flexible format allows other mailers with different command line parameters to be used such as
sendmail -oem -t < %F
mutt -H %F
claws-mail --compose
"mailto:%T?subject=%S&insert=%F"
interactive_mailer must be set adequate. The following substitutions are supported:
|
%F |
filename |
||
|
%M |
default_mailer |
||
|
%S |
subject-field |
||
|
%T |
to-filed |
||
|
%U |
username |
||
|
%% |
% |
βMark as (un)readβ ignores tags (mark_ignore_tags)
When this is ON, the GroupMarkThdRead (β K β), ThreadMarkArtRead (β K β), MarkThdUnread (β Z β) at Group level and MarkArtUnread (β z β) at Thread level functions mark just the current article or thread, ignoring other tagged, (un)read articles. When OFF, the same function presents a menu with choices of the current thread or article, all tagged, unread articles, or nothing.
Mark saved articles/threads as read (mark_saved_read)
If ON mark articles that are saved as read. Default is ON.
Viewer program for MIME articles (metamail_prog)
Path, name and options of external metamail (1) program used to view non-textual parts of articles. To use the built-in viewer, set to --internal. This is the default value when metamail (1) is not installed. Leave it blank if you donβt want any automatic viewing of non-textual attachments. The PageViewAttach (β V β) command can always be used to manually view any attachments. See also ask_for_metamail .
MM_CHARSET (mm_charset)
Charset supported locally, which is also used for MIME header (charset parameter and charset name in header encoding) in mail and news postings. If MIME_STRICT_CHARSET is defined at compile time, text in charset other than the value of this parameter is considered not displayable and represented as β?β. Otherwise, all character sets are regarded as compatible with the display. If itβs not set, the value of the environment variable $ MM_CHARSET is used. US-ASCII or compile-time default is used in case neither of them is defined. If your system supports iconv (3) or ucnv_* (), this option is disabled and you should use mm_network_charset instead.
MM_NETWORK_CHARSET (mm_network_charset)
Charset used for posting and MIME headers; replaces mm_charset . Conversion between mm_network_charset and local charset (determined via nl_langinfo (3)) is done via iconv (3) or ucnv_* (). If none of these functions are available on your system this option is disabled and you have to use mm_charset instead. mm_network_charset is limited to one of the following charsets:
US-ASCII, ISO-8859-{1,2,3,4,5,7,9,10,13,14,15,16}, KOI8-{R,U,RU} EUC-{CN,JP,KR,TW}, ISO-2022-{CN,CN-EXT,JP,JP-1,JP-2}, Big5, UTF-8
Not all values might work on your system, see iconv_open (3) for more details. If itβs not set, the value of the environment variable $ MM_CHARSET is used. US-ASCII or compile-time default is used in case neither of them is defined.
Attribute of highlighting with _dash_ (mono_markdash)
Character attribute of words emphasized like _this_. It depends on your terminal which attributes are usable. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Attribute of highlighting with /slash/ (mono_markslash)
Character attribute of words emphasized like /this/. It depends on your terminal which attributes are usable. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Attribute of highlighting with *stars* (mono_markstar)
Character attribute of words emphasized like *this*. It depends on your terminal which attributes are usable. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
Attribute of highlighting with -stroke- (mono_markstroke)
Character attribute of words emphasized like -this-. It depends on your terminal which attributes are usable. See also word_h_display_marks and word_highlight .
(newnews)
These are internal timers used by tin to keep track of new newsgroups. Do not change them unless you understand what they are for.
Display these header fields (or *) (news_headers_to_display)
Which news headers you wish to see. If you want to see _all_ the headers, place an β*β as this value. This is the only way a wildcard can be used. If you enter βX-β as the value, you will see all headers beginning with βX-β (like X-Alan or X-Pape). You can list more than one by delimiting with spaces. Not defining anything turns off this option.
Do not display these header fields (news_headers_to_not_display)
Same as news_headers_to_display except it denotes the opposite. An example of using both options might be if you thought βX-β headers were A Good Thing(tm), but thought Alan and Pape were miscreants... well then you would do something like this: news_headers_to_display=X- news_headers_to_not_display=X-Alan X-Pape Not defining anything turns off this option.
Quote line when following up (news_quote_format)
Format of quote line when posting/following up an article (%A=Address, %D=Date, %F=Fullname+Address, %G=Groupname, %M=Message-ID, %N=Fullname, %C=Firstname, %I=Initials). If the article has multiple addresses only the first is evaluated. Default is "%F wrote:".
NNTP read timeout in seconds (nntp_read_timeout_secs)
Time in seconds to wait for a response from the server. Default is 120. Setting this to 0 means no timeout. As if you use the " -C " option in conjunction with a low value for nntp_read_timeout_secs may result in a timeout (and disconnect in batch mode) when connecting to large servers or entering large groups, because the timer is set when the command is sent to the server and that needs some time to compress the large response, the value should not be set too small.
Unicode normalization form (normalization_form)
The normalization form tin should use to normalize unicode input. The possible values are:
|
0 |
None : no normalization |
||
|
1 |
NFKC : Compatibility Decomposition, followed by Canonical Composition |
||
|
2 |
NFKD : Compatibility Decomposition |
||
|
3 |
NFC : Canonical Decomposition, followed by Canonical Composition |
||
|
4 |
NFD : Canonical Decomposition |
||
|
5 |
NFKC_CF : Compatibility Decomposition, followed by Canonical Composition and Case Folding |
Some normalization modes are
only available if they are supported by the library
tin
uses to do the normalization. NFC should be used
if possible (
RFC5198
).
Format string for the display of mime header at Article
level
(page_mime_format)
Format string tin uses for mime header at Page level. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT". Default is "[-- %T%S%*n%z%*l%!c%!d%*e --]".
Format string for the display
of uue header at Article level
(page_uue_format)
Format string tin uses for uue header at Page level. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT". Default is "[-- %T%S%*n%I%!d%*e --]".
Go to first unread article in group (pos_first_unread)
If ON put cursor at first unread article in group otherwise at last article. Default is ON.
Use 8-bit characters in news headers (post_8bit_header)
Allows 8-bit characters unencoded in the header of a news article, if set this also disables the generation of MIME-headers when they are usually required. Default is OFF. Only enacted if post_mime_encoding is also set to 8bit. In a number of local hierarchies where 8-bit characters are used, using unencoded (raw) 8-bit characters in header is acceptable and sometimes even recommended so that you need to check the convention adopted in the local hierarchy of your interest to determine what to do with this and post_mime_encoding .
MIME encoding in news messages (post_mime_encoding)
MIME encoding of the body in news message, if necessary. (8bit, base64, quoted-printable, 7bit). Default is 8bit, which leads to no encoding. base64 and quoted-printable are usually undesired on usenet.
View post-processed files (post_process_view)
If ON, then tin will start an appropriate viewer program to display any files that were post processed and uudecoded. The program is determined using the mailcap (5) file. Default is ON.
Post process saved articles (post_process_type)
This specifies whether to perform post processing on saved articles. Because the shell archive may contain commands you may not want to be executed, be careful when extracting shell archives. The following values are allowed:
|
0 |
No (default), no post processing is done. |
|||
|
1 |
Shell archives , unpacking of multi-part shar (1) files only. |
|||
|
2 |
Yes , binary attachments and data will be decoded and saved. |
Filename to be used for storing posted articles (posted_articles_file)
Keep posted articles in given file. If the given filename does not contain any expandable strings it will be prefixed with ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/Mail/ . If no filename is set then postings will not be saved. See the section "MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES" for more information about the various expansion characters. Default is βpostedβ.
Print all headers when printing (print_header)
If ON, then the full article header is sent to the printer. Otherwise only the ββSubject:ββ and ββFrom:ββ fields are output. Default is OFF.
Printer program with options (printer)
The printer program with options that is to be used to print articles. The default is lpr (1) for BSD machines and lp (1) for SysV machines. Printing from tin may have been disabled by the System Administrator.
Process only unread articles (process_only_unread)
If ON only save/print/pipe/mail unread articles (tagged articles excepted). Default is OFF.
Show empty Followup-To in editor (prompt_followupto)
If ON show empty ββFollowup-To:ββ header when editing an article. Default is OFF.
Characters used as quote-marks (quote_chars)
The character used in quoting included text to article followups and mail replies. The β_β character represents a blank character and is replaced with β β when read, %I is replaced by authorβs initials. If the article has multiple addresses only the first is evaluated. Default is β>_β.
Quoting behavior (quote_style)
How articles should be quoted
when following up or replying to them. There are a number of
things that can be done: empty lines can be quoted,
signatures can be quoted and quote_chars can be compressed
when quoting multiple times (for example, β> >
>β will be turned into β>>>β).
The default is to compress quotes, and to quote empty lines.
When you are viewing an article in raw mode
(β
ΛH
β), and follow up or reply to
it, the signature will be quoted even if it would otherwise
not be. If
show_signatures
is off, then the signature
will never be quoted.
Regex used to show quoted lines (quote_regex)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching lines are shown in col_quote . If quote_regex is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Regex used to show twice quoted l. (quote_regex2)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching lines are shown in col_quote2 . If quote_regex2 is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Regex used to show >= 3 times q.l. (quote_regex3)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching lines are shown in col_quote3 . If quote_regex3 is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Article recentness time limit (recent_time)
If set to 0, this feature is deactivated, otherwise it means the number of days. Default is 2.
Render BiDi (render_bidi)
If ON tin does the rendering of bi-directional text. If OFF tin leaves the rendering of bi-directional text to the terminal. Default is OFF.
Interval in seconds to reread active (reread_active_file_secs)
The news ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file is reread at regular intervals to show if any new news has arrived. Default is 1200. Setting this to 0 will disable this feature.
Directory to save arts/threads in (savedir)
Directory where articles/threads are saved. Default is ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/News .
Score limit (kill) (score_limit_kill)
If the score of an article is below or equal this value the article gets marked as killed.
Score limit (select) (score_limit_select)
If the score of an article is above or equal this value the article gets marked as hot.
Default score to kill articles (score_kill)
Score of an article which should be killed, this must be <= score_limit_kill .
Default score to select articles (score_select)
Score of an article which should be marked hot, this must be >= score_limit_select .
Number of lines to scroll in pager (scroll_lines)
The number of lines that will be scrolled up/down in the article pager when using cursor-up/down. The default is 1 (line-by-line). Set to 0 to get traditional tin page-by-page scrolling. Set to -1 to get page-by-page scrolling where the top/bottom line is carried over onto the next page. This setting supersedes show_last_line_prev_page=ON. Set to -2 to get half-page scrolling. This setting supersedes full_page_scroll =OFF.
Format string for the Selection level (select_format)
Format string tin uses for Selection level representation. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT". Default is "%fΒ %nΒ %UΒ Β %GΒ Β %d".
In group and thread level, show author by (show_author)
Which information about the author should be shown. Default is 2, authors full name.
|
0 |
None , only the ββSubject:ββ line will be displayed. |
||
|
1 |
Address , ββSubject:ββ line & the address part of the ββFrom:ββ line are displayed. |
||
|
2 |
Full Name , ββSubject:ββ line & the authors full name part of the ββFrom:ββ line are displayed (default). |
||
|
3 |
Address and Name , ββSubject:ββ line & all of the ββFrom:ββ line are displayed. |
Show description of each newsgroup (show_description)
If ON show a short group description text after newsgroup name at the group selection level. The ββ -d ββ command-line flag will override the setting and turn descriptions off. The text used is taken from the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/newsgroups file and if supported (requires tin to be built with mh-mail-handling support) from ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/mailgroups for mailgroups. Default is ON.
Function for sorting articles (sort_function)
Function used for sorting articles. Default is 0.
|
0 |
Use qsort (3) for sorting. |
||
|
1 |
Use heapsort (3) for sorting. This might be faster in large groups with long threads (somewhat presorted data). |
Show help/mail sign in level titles (show_help_mail_sign)
Allows you to select whether tin shows a help indication, a new mail indication, both, or neither in the various level titles. Default is 3.
|
0 |
Donβt show help or mail sign . |
||
|
1 |
Show only help sign . |
||
|
2 |
Show only mail sign if new mail , show only the mail sign, and only if new mail has arrived. |
||
|
3 |
Show mail if new mail else help s. , show mail sign if new mail has arrived otherwise show help sign. |
Show only unread articles (show_only_unread_arts)
If ON show only new/unread articles otherwise show all articles. Default is ON.
Show only groups with unread arts (show_only_unread_groups)
If ON show only subscribed groups that contain unread articles. Default is OFF.
Display signatures (show_signatures)
If OFF donβt show signatures when displaying articles. Default is ON.
Display score (show_art_score)
If ON show article score in the lower left corner when displaying articles. Default is OFF. See also col_score_neg and col_score_pos .
Prepend signature with β\n-- \nβ (sigdashes)
If ON prepend the signature with sigdashes. Default is ON.
Create signature from path/command (sigfile)
The path that specifies the signature file to use when posting, following up to or replying to an article. If the path is a directory then the signature will be randomly generated from files that are in the specified directory. If the path starts with a ! the program the path points to will be executed to generate a signature. In order to pass the group name to the program, %G can be specified. This will be replaced by the name of the current newsgroup. --none will suppress any signature. Default is ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.Sig .
Add signature when reposting (signature_repost)
If ON add signature to reposted articles. Default is ON.
Regex used to highlight /slashes/ (slashes_regex)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching words are shown in col_markslash or mono_markslash . If slashes_regex is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Sort articles by (sort_article_type)
This specifies how articles should be sorted. Sort by ascending Date (6) is the default. The following sort types are allowed:
|
0 |
Nothing , donβt sort articles. |
||
|
1 |
Subject: (descending) , sort articles by ββSubject:ββ field descending. |
||
|
2 |
Subject: (ascending) , sort articles by ββSubject:ββ field ascending. |
||
|
3 |
From: (descending) , sort articles by ββFrom:ββ field descending. |
||
|
4 |
From: (ascending) , sort articles by ββFrom:ββ field ascending. |
||
|
5 |
Date: (descending) , sort articles by ββDate:ββ field descending. |
||
|
6 |
Date: (ascending) , sort articles by ββDate:ββ field ascending (default). |
||
|
7 |
Score (descending) , sort articles by filtering score descending. |
||
|
8 |
Score (ascending) , sort articles by filtering score ascending. |
||
|
9 |
Lines: (descending) , sort articles by ββLines:ββ field descending. |
||
|
10 |
Lines: (ascending) , sort articles by ββLines:ββ field ascending. |
Sort threads by (sort_threads_type)
This specifies how threads will be sorted. Sort by descending Score (1) is the default. The following sort types are allowed:
|
0 |
Nothing , donβt sort threads. |
||
|
1 |
Score (descending) , sort threads by filtering score descending (default). |
||
|
2 |
Score (ascending) , sort threads by filtering score ascending. |
||
|
3 |
Last posting date (descending) , sort threads by date of last posting descending. |
||
|
4 |
Last posting date (ascending) , sort threads by date of last posting ascending. |
Spamtrap warning address parts (spamtrap_warning_addresses)
Set this option to a list of comma-separated strings to be warned if you are replying to an article by mail where the e-mail address contains one of these strings. The matching is case-insensitive. Example:
spam,delete,remove
Regex used to highlight *stars* (stars_regex)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching words are shown in col_markstar or mono_markstar . If stars_regex is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Strip blanks of end of lines (strip_blanks)
Strips the blanks from the end of each line therefore speeding up the display when reading on a slow terminal or via modem. Default is ON.
Remove bogus groups from newsrc (strip_bogus)
Bogus groups are groups that are present in your ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc file that no longer exist on the news server. There are 3 options. 0 means do nothing & always keep bogus groups. 1 means bogus groups will be permanently removed. 2 means that bogus groups will appear on the Group Selection Menu, prefixed with a βDβ. This allows you to unsubscribe from them as and when you wish. Default is 0 (Always Keep).
No unsubscribed groups in newsrc (strip_newsrc)
If ON, then unsubscribed groups will be permanently removed from your ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc file. Default is OFF.
Regex with Subject prefixes (strip_re_regex)
A regular expression to find Subject prefixes like "Re:" to remove. If strip_re_regex is blank, then tin (1) uses a built-in default.
Regex with Subject suffixes (strip_was_regex)
A regular expression to find Subject suffixes like "(was:" to remove. If strip_was_regex is blank, then tin (1) uses a built-in default.
Regex used to highlight -strokes- (strokes_regex)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching words are shown in col_markstroke or mono_markstroke . If strokes_regex is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Wrap around threads on next unread (wrap_on_next_unread)
If enabled a search for the next unread article will wrap around all articles to find also previous unread articles. If disabled the search stops at the end of the thread list. Default is ON.
Display "a as Umlaut-a (tex2iso_conv)
If ON, show "a as Umlaut-a, etc. Default is OFF. This behavior can also be toggled in the article viewer via PageToggleTex2iso (β " β).
Thread articles by (thread_articles)
Defines which threading method to use. Itβs possible to set the threading type on a per group basis by setting the group attribute variable thread_arts to 0 β 4 in the file ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/attributes . (See also "GROUP ATTRIBUTES".) The default is Both Subject and References. The choices are:
|
0 |
None , donβt thread. |
||
|
1 |
Subject , thread on ββSubject:ββ only. |
||
|
2 |
References , thread on ββReferences:ββ only. |
||
|
3 |
Both Subject and References , thread on ββReferences:ββ then ββSubject:ββ (default). |
||
|
4 |
Multipart Subject , thread multipart articles on ββSubject:ββ. |
||
|
5 |
Percentage Match , thread base upon a partial character match on ββSubject:ββ. |
Catchup thread by using left key (thread_catchup_on_exit)
If ON catchup group/thread when leaving with the left arrow key. Default is ON.
Format string for the Thread level (thread_format)
Format string tin uses for Thread level representation. See the section "CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT". Default is "%nΒ %mΒ Β [%L]Β Β %TΒ Β %F".
Matchingness of a thread (thread_perc)
How closely the subjects must match for two threads to be considered part of the same thread. This is a percentage and the default is 75%.
Score of a thread (thread_score)
How the total score of a thread is computed. Default is 0, the maximum score in this thread.
|
0 |
Max , the maximum score in this thread. |
|||
|
1 |
Sum , the sum of all scores in this thread. |
|||
|
2 |
Average , the average score in this thread. |
CA certificate file (tls_ca_cert_file)
The name of file containing all trusted CA certificates used for NNTPS ( RFC8143 ) connections. If left empty the system default will be used.
Transliteration (translit)
If ON append //TRANSLIT to the first argument of iconv_open (3) to enable transliteration. This means that when a character cannot be represented in the target character set, it can be approximated through one or several similarly looking characters. On systems where this extension doesnβt exist, this option is disabled. Default is OFF.
How to treat blank lines (trim_article_body)
Allows you to select how tin treats blank lines in article bodies. Default is 0. This option does not affect lines within verbatim blocks.
|
0 |
Donβt trim article body , do nothing. |
||
|
1 |
Skip leading blank lines . |
||
|
2 |
Skip trailing blank lines . |
||
|
3 |
Skip leading and trailing blank l. , skip leading and trailing blank lines. |
||
|
4 |
Compact multiple between text , replace multiple blank lines between text blocks with one blank line. |
||
|
5 |
Compact multiple and skip leading , 4 + 1 |
||
|
6 |
Compact multiple and skip trailing , 4 + 2 |
||
|
7 |
Compact mltpl., skip lead. & trai. , 4 + 3 |
Suppress soft hyphens (suppress_soft_hyphens)
If ON remove soft hyphens in non verbatim blocks of articles when they are displayed in a UTF-8 locale. The character SOFT HYPHEN (U+00AD) is an invisible format character that merely indicates a preferred intraword line break position. However, some terminal emulators display a space or a hyphen, for example, in the place of the soft hyphen. This setting can be used to improve the display of those articles. Default is OFF.
Regex used to highlight _underline_ (underscores_regex)
A regular expression that will be applied when reading articles. All matching words are shown in col_markdash or mono_markdash . If underscores_regex is blank, then tin uses a built-in default.
Remove Λ/.article after posting (unlink_article)
If ON remove Λ/.article after posting. Default is ON.
Program that opens URLs (url_handler)
The program that will be run when launching URLs in the article viewer using PageViewUrl (β U β). The actual URL will be appended. Default is url_handler.pl .
URL highlighting in message body (url_highlight)
Enable highlighting URLs in message body. Default is ON.
Use ANSI color (use_color)
If enabled tin uses ANSI-colors. Default is OFF.
Use scroll keys on keypad (use_keypad)
Default is OFF.
Use mouse in xterm (use_mouse)
Allows the mouse button support in an xterm (1x) to be enabled/disabled. Default is OFF.
Use slrnface to show ββX-Face:ββs (use_slrnface)
If enabled tin uses slrnface (1) to interpret the ββX-Face:ββ header. For this option to have any effect, tin must be running in an xterm (1x) and slrnface (1) must be in your $ PATH . Default is OFF.
Use UTF-8 graphics (utf8_graphics)
If ON use UTF-8 characters for indicator (βββ), thread/attachment tree and ellipsis (β...β). Default is OFF.
Regex for begin of a verbatim block (verbatim_begin_regex)
A regular expression that tin will use to find the begin of a verbatim block.
Regex for end of a verbatim block (verbatim_end_regex)
A regular expression that tin will use to find the end of a verbatim block.
Detection and display of verbatim blocks (verbatim_handling)
Allows you to select how tin treats verbatim blocks in article bodies. Default is 1.
|
0 |
Donβt detect verbatim blocks . Do nothing. |
||
|
1 |
Detect and show verbatim blocks . Detect and show verbatim blocks, including begin and end marks. |
||
|
2 |
Detect, hide begin and end marks . Detect and show verbatim blocks, hide begin and end marks. |
||
|
3 |
Donβt show verbatim blocks . Detect verbatim blocks and hide them completely. |
Wildcard matching (wildcard)
Allows you to select how tin matches strings. The default is 0 and uses the wildmat (3) notation, which is how this has traditionally been handled. Setting this to 1 allows you to use perl (1) compatible regular expressions pcre (3) or pcre2 (3) (see also perlre (1) and pcrepattern (3) or pcre2pattern (3)). You will probably want to update your filter file if you use this regularly. NB: Newsgroup names will always be matched using the wildmat (3) notation.
What to display instead of mark (word_h_display_marks)
Should the leading and ending stars, slashes, strokes and dashes also be displayed, even when they are highlighting marks?
|
0 |
no |
|||
|
1 |
yes, display mark |
|||
|
2 |
print a space instead |
Word highlighting in message body (word_highlight)
Enable word highlighting. See word_h_display_marks for the options available. If use_color is enabled the colors specified in col_markdash , col_markslash , col_markstar and col_markstroke are used for word highlighting else the character attributes specified in mono_markdash , mono_markslash , mono_markstar and mono_markstroke are used. Default is ON.
Page line wrap column (wrap_column)
Sets the column at which a displayed article body should be wrapped. If this value is equal to 0, it defaults to the current screen width. If this value is greater than your current screen width and dont_break_words is unset the part off-screen is not displayed. Thus setting this option to a large value can be used to disable wrapping. If this value is negative the wrap margin is the current screen width plus the given value (as long as the result is still positive, otherwise it will fall back to the current screen width). Default is 0, wrapping at the current screen width.
Quote line when crossposting (xpost_quote_format)
Format is the same as for news_quote_format , this is used when answering to a crossposting to several groups with no ββFollowup-To:ββ set.
ATTRIBUTES MENU AND GROUP ATTRIBUTES
tin allows certain attributes to be set on a per group basis. If it exists, the global attributes file, ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/attributes is read. After that, the userβs own attributes file ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/attributes is read. The global attributes file is useful for distributing system-wide defaults to new users who have no private attributes file yet.
Note that the scope=<grouplist> line has to be specified before the attributes are specified for that list. All attributes are set to a reasonable default so you only have to specify the attribute that you want to change (e.g., savedir ). All toggle attributes are set by specifying ON/OFF. Otherwise, these function exactly the same as their global equivalents. For more details see tin (5).
Attributes can also be changed from the attributes menu which can be accessed by ConfigToggleAttrib (β <TAB> β) from the options menu or ScopeSelect (β ΛJ β or β <CR> β) from the scopes menu. The attributes menu looks and behaves very similar to the options menu. The title shows the current scope. Attributes set in the current scope are marked with β+β to the left of the attributes number.
Besides the keys for moving around and changing values known from the options menu the attributes menu provides the following command: ConfigResetAttrib (β r β) which resets an attribute to a default value.
SCOPES MENU
The scopes menu (accessible from the options menu with ConfigScopeMenu (β S β)) shows all scopes read from the global and local attributes file. Scopes from the global attributes file are marked with β!β to the left of the scope number. Delete/rename/move are not possible with those scopes.
In addition to the common moving keys the following commands are available: ScopeSelect (β ΛJ β or β <CR> β) enter the attributes menu for the current scope, ScopeEditAttributesFile (β E β) edit the local attributes file, ScopeAdd (β a β) add a new scope, ScopeDelete (β d β) delete the current scope, ScopeMove (β m β) move the current scope to a new position, ScopeRename (β r β) rename the current scope. ToggleHelpDisplay (β H β) toggles the help mini menu at the bottom of the screen and posting etiquette after composing an article ( beginner_level ).
FILTERING ARTICLES
When there is a subject or an author which you are either very interested in, or find completely uninteresting, you can easily instruct tin to auto-select or auto-kill articles that match rules that you specify. This can be anything from the name of the author to the number of lines in an article.
When tin starts up the userβs kill-file ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/filter or the file specified via ββ -F ββ is read (see also tin (5) ). Each time a newsgroup is entered the rules are applied and articles killed or selected when they meet certain criteria.
The degree to which rules are applied depend on the kill_level tinrc setting. By default killed articles will only be marked read. Adjust kill_level for more aggressive processing. Articles that match an auto-selection rule are marked with a ββ*ββ.
Filtering rules can be manually entered into ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/filter (but donβt do this whilst running tin else you will lose your changes) or by using an on-screen menu within tin .
The filtering
capabilities of
tin
have been significantly enhanced
over previous versions to include scoring and better pattern
matching. It is recommended that you read the file
filtering
in the
tin
documentation directory.
This file can also be read online at
<http://bzr.tin.org/doc/filtering>.
The on-screen filtering menu is accessed by pressing MenuFilterKill (β ΛK β) or MenuFilterSelect (β ΛA β) at the Group and Article levels. It allows the user to kill or select an article that matches the current ββSubject:ββ line, ββFrom:ββ line or a string entered by the user. The user entered string can be applied to the ββSubject:ββ or ββFrom:ββ line of an article. The filter can be limited to the current newsgroup or it can apply to all newsgroups. Once entered the user can abort the command and not save the new filter, edit the full filter file or save filter.
POSTING ARTICLES
tin allows posting of articles, follow-up to already posted articles and replying direct through mail to the author of an article.
Use the Post (β w β) command to post an article to a newsgroup. After entering the post subject the default editor (i.e., vi (1)) or the editor specified by the $ VISUAL or $ EDITOR environment variable will be started and the article can be entered. To crosspost articles simply add a comma and the name of the newsgroup(s) to the end of the ββNewsgroups:ββ line at the beginning of the article. After saving and exiting the editor you are asked if you wish to a)bort posting the article, e)dit the article again or p)ost the article to the specified newsgroup(s).
Use the DisplayPostHist (β W β) command to display a history of the articles you have posted. The date the article was posted, which newsgroups the article was posted to and the articles subject line are displayed. See the section "POSTING HISTORY LISTING" for more information.
Use the PageFollowupQuote (β f β), PageFollowup (β F β) or PageFollowupQuoteHeaders (β ΛW β) command to post a follow-up article to an already posted article. The PageFollowupQuote command will copy the text of the original article into the editor. The PageFollowupQuoteHeaders command will copy the text and all headers of the original article into the editor. The editing procedure is the same as when posting an article with the Post (β w β) command.
Use the PageReplyQuote (β r β), PageReply (β R β) or PageReplyQuoteHeaders (β ΛE β) command to reply direct through mail to the author of an already posted article. The PageReplyQuote command will copy the text of the original article into the editor. The PageReplyQuoteHeaders command will copy the text and all headers of the original article into the editor. The editing procedure is the same as when posting an article with the Post (β w β) command. After saving and exiting the editor you are asked if you wish to abort sending the article via PostAbort (β a β), edit the article again via PostEdit (β e β) or send the article to the author via PostSend (β s β).
CUSTOMIZING THE ARTICLE QUOTE STRING
When posting a followup to an article or replying direct to the author of an article via email the text of the article can be quoted. The beginning of the quoted text can contain information about the quoted article (e.g., Name and the Message-ID of the article). If the article has multiple addresses only the first is evaluated. To allow for different situations certain information from the article can be used in the quoted string. The following variables are expanded if found in the tinrc variables mail_quote_format , news_quote_format or xpost_quote_format :
%A Address (Email)
|
%D |
|||
|
Date (uses date_format ) |
|||
|
%F |
|||
|
Full address (%N <%A>) |
|||
|
%G |
|||
|
Groupname |
|||
|
%M |
|||
|
Message-ID |
|||
|
%N |
|||
|
Fullname of author |
|||
|
%C |
|||
|
Firstname of author |
|||
|
%I |
|||
|
Initials of author |
e.g.,
mail_quote_format=On %D in %G
you wrote:
news_quote_format=In %M, %F wrote:
would expand to:
On 21 Sep 1993 09:45:51 -0400
in alt.sources you wrote:
In <abcINN123@example.org>, Joe Bar
<joe@example.org> wrote:
The quoted text section of an article is marked by a preceding quote string at the beginning of each quoted line. The default quote string is set to β>_β. The default can be changed by setting the tinrc variable quote_chars to ones own preference. (Note that β_β underline is used to represent a space).
MAILING PIPING PRINTING REPOSTING AND SAVING ARTICLES
The command interface to GroupMail , PageMail , PostMail or ThreadMail (β m β), Pipe (β | β), Print (β o β), PageRepost or GroupRepost (β x β) and GroupSave , PageSave or ThreadSave (β s β and GroupAutoSave , PageAutoSave or ThreadAutoSave β S β) articles is the same for ease of use.
Auto-saving with *AutoSave (β S β) is a special case and operates only on marked articles. They will processed without any further prompting according to the default save parameters defined in tinrc or by any attributes set for the current group.
Otherwise, the initial prompt will ask you to select which article, thread, hot (auto-selected), regular expression pattern, tagged articles you wish to mail, pipe etc.
Tagged articles must have already been tagged with a *Tag (β t β) command. All tagged articles can be untagged by a *Untag (β U β) untag command.
If a regular expression pattern is selected you are asked to enter a pattern (e.g., to match all articles subject lines containing βnet Newsβ you enter "net News"). Any articles that match the entered expression will be mailed, piped etc. See also the wildcard tinrc variable for advanced pattern matching options.
Various expansion characters are recognized when entering the directory and file to save to. Environment variables (prefixed with β$β) and user home directories (prefixed by βΛβ or βΛusernameβ) can be specified. Environment variables can themselves contain other special characters.
To save articles to a mailbox enter β=<mailbox name>β when asked for the save filename. If you enter just β=β then articles will be saved to a mailbox with the name of the current newsgroup (eg, alt.sources). See maildir .
To save in savedir/<news.group.name>/<filename> format enter β+<filename>β. See savedir . Like β+β %G is expanded to the current news.group.name but without savedir prefixed. %P is expanded to the news.group.name with all β.β replaced by β/β.
If saving multiple files at once the filename (if not referring to a mailbox) will be extended by ".num" where "num" is at least 3 digit number counting up from 1. Environment variables are allowed within a filename (e.g., $SOURCES/dir/filename ).
When saving articles you can specify whether the saved files should be post processed. A default process type can be set via post_process_type .
AUTOMATIC MAILING AND SAVING NEW NEWS
tin allows new/unread news articles to be mailed (ββ -M ββ and ββ -N ββ option) or saved (ββ -S ββ option) in batch mode for later reading. Useful when going on holiday and you donβt want to return and find that expire has removed a whole load of unread articles. Best to run via cron (8) everyday while away, after which you will be mailed a report of which articles were mailed/saved from which newsgroups and the total number of articles mailed/saved. Articles are saved in a private news structure under your savedir directory (default is ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/News ). Be careful of using this option if you read a lot of groups because you could overflow your file system.
When using ββ -S ββ together with a given directory to save to (ββ -s ββ option), the same directory must be specified when reading the articles by ββ -R ββ.
If you only want
to save some of your groups use the
batch_save
tinrc
variable. Set to ON or OFF in tinrc to enable/disable saving
of all groups and then use the
batch_save
attribute
to fine tune which groups you want to have saved. For
example, if you want to save most of your groups, then set
batch_save
to ON in tinrc and selectively turn off
the ones you donβt want using attributes.
tin -M iain -c -f newsrc.mail
(mail any unread articles in newsgroups specified in file newsrc.mail to the local user iain and mark them as read)
tin -S -c -f newsrc.save
(save any unread articles in newsgroups specified in file newsrc.save and mark them as read)
|
tin -R |
(read any articles saved by tin -S ) |
RANGES
A range is simply a group of items marked using the SetRange ( β#β ) key. Certain tin commands will operate on a range if one exists rather than just the current item. A range is an expression of the form <min>β<max>, e.g., 10β15 will highlight items 10 through 15 on the current screen. Other than absolute numeric positions, β.β can be used in place of the current cursor position and β$β can be used to mean the highest number available. Entering β0β at the prompt undoes the previously entered range selection. Currently the only commands that understand ranges are GroupMarkThdRead (β K β), MarkArtUnread (β z β) and MarkThdUnread (β Z β).
NEWSGROUP LISTS & WILDCARDS
Several places in tin allow you to specify a list of newsgroups. These include command-line groups, (un)subscribe groups, the AUTO[UN]SUBSCRIBE mechanism. The scope= attributes file tag and the filter file group= tag also use the same syntax. tin interprets this variable similarly to rn (1). It contains a list of patterns, separated by commas and possibly prefixed with exclamation points. An exclamation point negates the meaning of a match on this pattern, and can be used to cancel certain matches. See wildmat (3) for details about the understood patterns. Some examples:
alt.config,news.*,!news.test
Matches alt.config and everything in the βnewsβ hierarchy except news.test
See the explanation for the $ AUTOSUBSCRIBE and $ AUTOUNSUBSCRIBE variables for further examples.
SIGNATURES
tin will recognize a signature in either ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.signature or ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.Sig . If ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.signature exists, then the signature will be pulled into the editor for mail commands only. A signature in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.signature will not be pulled into the editor for posting commands since inews (1) will append the signature itself.
A signature in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.Sig will be pulled into the editor for both posting and mailing commands.
The following is an example of a .Sig file:
NAMES Joe Bar
<joe@example.org>
SNAIL Musterweg 12, 99999 Notreal, Germany
tin also has the capability to generate random signatures on a per newsgroup basis if so desired. The way to accomplish this is to specify the default signature or the group attribute sigfile as a directory. If for example the sigfile path is /usr/iain/.sigs and .sigs is a directory then tin will select a random signature from any file that is in the directory .sigs (note: one signature per numbered file). A random signature can also consist of a fixed part signature that can contain your name, address etc. followed by the random sig. The fixed part of the random sig is read from the file $HOME/.sigfixed .
CUSTOMIZING THE SCREEN FORMAT
The look of the Selection, Group and Thread level can be customized via format strings. These format strings define the content and the position of each element on the screen. Variables are used within the format strings as placeholders. If the article has multiple addresses only the first is evaluated. The following variables are available:
|
%D |
|||
|
date |
|||
|
%F |
|||
|
from, name and/or address |
|||
|
%G |
|||
|
newsgroup name |
|||
|
%I |
|||
|
initials |
|||
|
%L |
|||
|
line count |
|||
|
%M |
|||
|
message-id |
|||
|
%R |
|||
|
number of responses in thread |
|||
|
%S |
|||
|
score |
|||
|
%T |
|||
|
thread tree |
|||
|
%U |
|||
|
unread count |
|||
|
%d |
|||
|
newsgroup description |
|||
|
%f |
|||
|
newsgroup flag |
|||
|
%m |
|||
|
article marks |
|||
|
%n |
|||
|
current group/thread/article number |
|||
|
%s |
|||
|
subject |
|||
|
%% |
|||
|
% |
Not all variables can be used in each level. The following table provides an overview:
|
select_format |
group_format |
thread_format |
|||
|
%D |
X |
X |
|||
|
%F |
X |
X |
|||
|
%G |
X |
||||
|
%I |
X |
X |
|||
|
%L |
X |
X |
|||
|
%M |
X |
X |
|||
|
%R |
X |
||||
|
%S |
X |
X |
|||
|
%T |
X |
||||
|
%U |
X |
||||
|
%d |
X |
||||
|
%f |
X |
||||
|
%m |
X |
X |
|||
|
%n |
X |
X |
X |
||
|
%s |
X |
||||
|
%% |
X |
X |
X |
Defaults for the format strings:
|
select_format : |
" %f %n %U %G %d " |
||
|
group_format : |
" %n %m %R %L %s %F " |
||
|
thread_format : |
" %n %m [%L] %T %F " |
show_description controls whether the newsgroup description is shown or not. The description can also be toggled with SelectToggleDescriptions (β d β).
The information displayed with β %F β depends on the value of show_author . GroupToggleSubjDisplay resp. ThreadToggleSubjDisplay (β d β) switches through all available options.
For date representation β %D β uses date_format . It is possible to specify a different date format in round brackets (e.g., β %(%d %b %y %H:%M)D β). See date_format for more details.
The length of each item (except β %% β) can be defined with a positive number after the β % β. The following example displays the score in the thread level 10 characters wide: β %10S β.
If the newsgroup name is displayed together with the newsgroup description, the width of the newsgroup name can be controlled via an optional comma separated second value (e.g., β %60,20G β). It is valid to omit the first value (e.g., (β %,20G β)). If no second value is given, tin uses a default value of 32.
Some variables do have a default width which may lead to truncation. Truncation for variables which contain only numbers happens by dividing the value with a sufficient power of ten and adding a SI suffix to the result, that is the variable holds a value of 54321 and the width for the variable is 4 the result will be "54 k". If thatβs undesired you have to specify a larger width manually, e.g., β %6n β. Here is an overview of the defaults:
|
Variable |
width |
||
|
%I |
3 |
||
|
%L |
4 |
||
|
%M |
10 |
||
|
%R |
3 |
||
|
%S |
6 |
||
|
%U |
5 |
||
|
%n |
4 |
If no length is given for β %D β, the length is determined by the format string for the date and the date of the current day. If the date format string contains weekdays or months names it may happen that the date is longer than determined in the first pass. In this case, the date is truncated before display. This occurs, for example, if the current month is May and the article to which the date is displayed was posted in December. In such cases it might useful to determine the maximum length manually and specify the length in the format string.
In case the format string contains β %G β and β %d β and no length are given, tin determines the longest newsgroup name and uses this length for β %G β. The remaining space will used for β %d β.
When the format string contains the specifier β %F β and β %s β resp. β %T β and no length are given, β %F β will use one third and β %s β resp. β %T β will use two third of the available space.
In addition, a minimum or a maximum screen width can be defined for each item (except β %% β). In this case, the item will only be displayed when the screen is wider resp. smaller than specified. This comes in handy to not overload a small screen but have maximum information on a large screen. The minimum screen width has to be specified by a positive number preceded by an β > β, the maximum screen width has to be specified by a positive number preceded by an β < β. In the following example tin will display the score only if the screen is wider than 100 characters: β %>100S β.
If both the length and the minimum or maximum screen width should be specified for an item, the length must be the first parameter and the minimum or maximum screen width must be the second one. The following example displays the score with a length of 10 characters only if the screen is wider than 100 characters: β %10>100S β. A second length can be specified for β %F β and β %s β resp. β %T β, separated by a colon, which is used if the minimum or maximum screen width is not reached. If no length is specified after the colon, the item is displayed even if the minimum screen width is not reached and the length is calculated as if no minimum (or maximum) screen width had been specified. In the following example tin will display the subject with a length of 60 characters if the screen is wider than 100 characters, otherwise a length of 40 characters is used: β %60>100:40s β.
The look of the Attachment level and the mime and uue header at Page level can be customized too via format strings. The following variables are available:
|
%C |
|||
|
Charset |
|||
|
%c |
|||
|
Like %C but with description |
|||
|
%D |
|||
|
Line count |
|||
|
%d |
|||
|
Like %D but with description |
|||
|
%E |
|||
|
Content encoding |
|||
|
%e |
|||
|
Like %E but with description |
|||
|
%I |
|||
|
Complete/incomplete UUE part indicator |
|||
|
%L |
|||
|
Language |
|||
|
%l |
|||
|
Like %L but with description |
|||
|
%N |
|||
|
Name |
|||
|
%n |
|||
|
Like %N but with description |
|||
|
%S |
|||
|
Content subtype |
|||
|
%s |
|||
|
Like %S but with description |
|||
|
%T |
|||
|
Content type |
|||
|
%t |
|||
|
Like %T but with description |
|||
|
%Z |
|||
|
Size in bytes |
|||
|
%z |
|||
|
Like %Z but with description |
|||
|
%% |
|||
|
% |
Not all items can be used in each variable. The following table provides an overview: attachment_format
|
page_mime_format |
page_uue_format |
||||
|
%C |
|||||
|
X |
X |
||||
|
%c |
|||||
|
X |
X |
||||
|
%D |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%d |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%E |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%e |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%I |
|||||
|
X |
|||||
|
%L |
|||||
|
X |
X |
||||
|
%l |
|||||
|
X |
X |
||||
|
%N |
|||||
|
X |
X |
||||
|
%n |
|||||
|
X |
X |
||||
|
%S |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%s |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%T |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%t |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%Z |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%z |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
|||
|
%% |
|||||
|
X |
X |
X |
By default, the string is not truncated. If it exceeds the screen width, it is wrapped. If the % sign is followed by an exclamation mark (β!β) for uppercase letters, the element is omitted if there is not enough space. If the % sign is followed by an asterisk (β*β) for a lowercase letter, the description is omitted if there is not enough space. If the % sign is followed by an exclamation mark (β!β) for a lowercase letter, the description is omitted first and then the content. The shortening is always from right to left, first the description is omitted and when no more description is displayed, the content is omitted. If %T and %S follow each other directly a β/β will be inserted in between. %Z will always have one decimal point and may have a one letter bi-suffix.
Defaults for the format strings:
|
attachment_format : |
" %T%S%E%C%d " |
||
|
page_mime_format : |
" [-- %T%S%*n%z%*l%!c%!d%*e --] " |
||
|
page_uue_format : |
" [-- %T%S%*n%I%!d%*e --] " |
TIPS AND TRICKS
tin can be pretty much be navigated by using the four cursor keys. The left arrow key goes up a level, the right arrow key goes down a level, the up arrow key goes up a line and the down arrow key goes down a line.
The following newsgroups provide useful information concerning news software:
βnews.software.readers
(info. about news user agents tin, rn, nn, slrn etc.)
βnews.software.nntp (info. about NNTP)
βnews.answers (Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about
many different themes)
Many prompts within tin offer a default choice that the cursor is positioned on. By pressing β <CR> β the default value is taken. Most prompts can be aborted by pressing β <ESC> β.
When tin is run in an xterm (1x) it will resize itself each time the xterm (1x) is resized.
tin will reread the ${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active} file at set intervals ( reread_active_file_secs ) to show any newly arrived news.
If you find large number of new newsgroups cluttering up your screen, pressing SelectToggleReadDisplay (β r β) will make them go away.
XTERM BUTTONS
If the environment variable $TERM is set to xterm (1x), then button pressing can be used to select groups and articles. In this discussion, the buttons are assumed to be assigned conventionally (i.e., Button1 is the left button).
In general
(i.e., for the group, thread and article menus),
Button1 (left)
enters next (lower) level if you click on an article, otherwise pages down.
Button2 (center)
returns to the previous (upper) level if you click on an article, otherwise pages up.
Button3 (right)
positions on the article line under mouse cursor, or pages down if youβve clicked outside the list of articles.
In the group
selection menu, if the mouse is pointing at a group then:
left button
moves to and selects the group pointed at, just like SelectReadGrp (β <CR> β).
center button
quits the program, just like Quit (β q β).
right button
moves to the group pointed at.
In the article
menu, if the mouse is pointing at an article (or thread)
then:
left button
reads the article pointed at, just like GroupReadBasenote (β <CR> β), or the thread, just like GroupListThd (β l β).
center button
exits the menu, catching up on the group if you have group_catchup_on_exit set in your configuration, just like Quit (β q β).
right button
moves to the article (or thread) pointed at.
In the thread
menu, if the mouse is pointing at an article then:
left button
reads article pointed at, just like ThreadReadArt (β <CR> β).
center button
exits the menu, catching up on the thread if you have thread_catchup_on_exit set in your configuration, just like Quit (β q β).
right button
moves to the article pointed at.
In other menus and areas button pressing reverts back to usual cut and paste of xterm (1x), but after one click of any button.
INDEX FILES
If your news server supports NOV index files (see newsoverview (5), most modern installations will) and you have a fast connection to your news server then this section can be ignored.
If your news server doesnβt support NOV index files or you have a very slow connection to your news server then tin can cache the index for each newsgroup if cache_overview_files is set to ON. Note that this cache can use up large amounts of disk space if you read a lot of groups and/or high traffic groups. To reduce the amount of disk space used, compress_overview_files can be set to ON.
Each user creates/updates his/her own index files that are stored in ${TIN_INDEX_NEWSDIR:-"${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin"}/.news/ . If you are reading via NNTP then the news server name will be appended to keep the indexes for different servers separate. If you are reading off the local spool and local overview files already exist then turning on caching will have no effect. Likewise unless you see significant delays entering a group when reading via NNTP then turning on caching will have little or no effect.
Entering a group the first time tends to be slow because the index file must be built from scratch. To alleviate the slowness start tin to create all index files for the groups you subscribe to with tin -u -v and go for a coffee. Subsequent readings of a group will only need to do incremental updating of the index file and will be much faster as only new articles will need to be cached.
As indexing might take some time you may want to run tin from the system batcher cron (8) with the ββ -u ββ option:
30 6 * * * /usr/local/bin/tin -u
If you are low on local disk space you should consider to manually purge cached data for groups you are not reading anymore with something like:
find
${TIN_INDEX_NEWSDIR:-"${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin"}/.news*
\
-type f -name "[0-9]*.[0-9]" -atime +28 | xargs rm
-f
FILES
For a detailed description see tin (5).
$MAILCAPS
Λ/.mailcap
/etc/mailcap
/usr/etc/mailcap
/usr/local/etc/mailcap
/etc/mail/mailcap
/etc/news/server
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.cancelsecret
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.mime.types
/etc/mime.types
/etc/tin/mime.types
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsauth
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/$NNTPSERVER${NNTPPORT:+":$NNTPPORT"}/.oldnewsrc
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.signature
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.Sig
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.sigfixed
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/.inputhistory
${TIN_INDEX_MAILDIR:-"${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin"}/.mail/
${TIN_INDEX_NEWSDIR:-"${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin"}/.news${NNTPSERVER:+"-$NNTPSERVER"}/
${TIN_INDEX_SAVEDIR:-"${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin"}/.save/
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/active.mail
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/active.save
/etc/tin/attributes
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/attributes
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/filter
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/keymap${${LC_ALL:-"${LC_MESSAGES:-"${LC_CTYPE:-"$LANG"}"}"}:+".${LC_ALL:-"${LC_MESSAGES:-"${LC_CTYPE:-"$LANG"}"}"}"}
/etc/tin/keymap${${LC_ALL:-"${LC_MESSAGES:-"${LC_CTYPE:-"$LANG"}"}"}:+".${LC_ALL:-"${LC_MESSAGES:-"${LC_CTYPE:-"$LANG"}"}"}"}
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/mailgroups
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/newsrctable
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/posted
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/Mail/posted
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/postponed.articles
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/$NNTPSERVER${NNTPPORT:+":$NNTPPORT"}/motd
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/$NNTPSERVER${NNTPPORT:+":$NNTPPORT"}/msglog
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/$NNTPSERVER${NNTPPORT:+":$NNTPPORT"}/newsgroups
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/$NNTPSERVER${NNTPPORT:+":$NNTPPORT"}/serverrc
/etc/tin/tinrc
${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/tinrc
/etc/tin/tin.defaults
/usr/local/share/locale/${LC_MESSAGES}/LC_MESSAGES/tin.mo
${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}"/"${TIN_ACTIVEFILE:-active}
${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/active.times
${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/newsgroups
${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/organization
${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/overview.fmt
${TIN_LIBDIR:-NEWSLIBDIR}/subscriptions
ENVIRONMENT
|
TINRC |
Define this variable if you want to specify command-line options that tin should be started with to save typing them each time it is started. The contents of the environment variable are added to the front of the command-line options before it is parsed therefore allowing an option specified on the command-line to override the same option specified in the environment. |
TIN_HOMEDIR
Define this variable if you do not want the .tin directory in $HOME/ . E.g., if you want all tin βs private files in /tmp/.tin you would set $ TIN_HOMEDIR to /tmp .
TIN_INDEX_NEWSDIR
Define this variable if you do not want the .news directory in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/ . E.g., if you want all tin βs news index files in /tmp/.news you would set $ TIN_INDEX_NEWSDIR to /tmp .
TIN_INDEX_MAILDIR
Define this variable if you do not want the .mail directory in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/ . E.g., if you want all tin βs mail index files in /tmp/.mail you would set $ TIN_INDEX_MAILDIR to /tmp .
TIN_INDEX_SAVEDIR
Define this variable if you do not want the .save directory in ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.tin/ . E.g., if you want all tin βs save index files in /tmp/.save you would set $ TIN_INDEX_SAVEDIR to /tmp .
TIN_LIBDIR
Define this variable if you want to override the NEWSLIBDIR path that was compiled into the tin binary, default is /usr/lib/news . If tin is running in NNTP mode setting this variable has no effect.
TIN_SPOOLDIR
Define this variable if you want to override the SPOOLDIR path that was compiled into the tin binary, default is /var/spool/news . If tin is running in NNTP mode setting this variable has no effect.
TIN_NOVROOTDIR
Define this variable if you want to override the NOVROOTDIR path that was compiled into the tin binary, default is SPOOLDIR (see above). If tin is running in NNTP mode setting this variable has no effect.
TIN_NOVFILENAME
Define this variable if you want to override the OVERVIEW_FILE filename that was compiled into the tin binary, default is .overview . If tin is running in NNTP mode setting this variable has no effect.
TIN_ACTIVEFILE
Define this variable if you want to override the NEWSLIBDIR/active path that was compiled into the tin binary. If tin is running in NNTP mode setting this variable has no effect. If $ TIN_LIBDIR is set it is prepended to $ TIN_ACTIVEFILE .
NNTPSERVER
The default NNTP server to remotely read news from. This variable only needs to be set if the ββ -r ββ command-line option is specified and the file /etc/news/server does not exist. The ββ -g ββ command line option overrides $ NNTPSERVER .
NNTPPORT
The NNTP TCP-port to read news from. This variable only needs to be set if the TCP-port is not 119 (the default). The ββ -p ββ command-line option does override $ NNTPPORT .
NNTPSPORT
The NNTPS TCP-port to read news from. This variable only needs to be set if the TCP-port is not 563 (the default). The ββ -p ββ and ββ -T ββ command-line options do override $ NNTPSPORT .
DISTRIBUTION
Set the article header field ββDistribution:ββ to the contents of the variable instead of the system default.
ISO2ASC
Set the ISO to ASCII charset decoding table character to use in decoding an article text. Values can range from -1 to 5.
|
-1 |
no conversion |
||
|
0 |
universal table for many languages |
||
|
1 |
single-spacing universal table |
||
|
2 |
table for Danish, Dutch, German, Norwegian and Swedish |
||
|
3 |
table for Danish, Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish using the appropriate ISO 646 variant |
||
|
4 |
table with RFC1345 codes in brackets |
||
|
5 |
table for printers that allow overstriking with backspace |
ORGANIZATION
Set the article header field ββOrganization:ββ to the contents of the variable instead of the system default. If it points to a readable file a random line from that file will be used. If reading news on an Apollo DomainOS machine the environment variable $ NEWSORG has to be used instead of $ ORGANIZATION .
NEWSORG (DomainOS)
DomainOS specific, same as $ ORGANIZATION on other OSs (see above).
REPLYTO
Set the article header field ββReply-To:ββ to the return address specified by the variable. This is useful if you wish to receive replies at a different address.
|
NAME |
Overrides the full name given in the gecos-field in /etc/passwd , see also mail_address . |
REALNAME
Same as $ NAME .
|
HOME |
Pathname of the userβs home directory. See environ (5) for more info. |
||
|
MAILER |
This variable has precedence over the default mailer that is used in all mailing operations within tin . |
||
|
|
Full path to the userβs mailbox. |
MAILPATH
A colon-separated list of filenames which are checked for new mail. This overrides the $ MAIL variable.
|
VISUAL |
This variable has precedence over the default editor (i.e., vi (1)) that is used in all editing operations within tin (e.g., posting, replying, follow-ups, ...). Evaluation order is ${VISUAL:-"${EDITOR:-vi}"} . See environ (5) for more info. |
||
|
EDITOR |
If $ VISUAL is unset, then this variable is looked up for a default editor. If $ EDITOR and $ VISUAL are both unset, tin uses the systems default editor (i.e., vi (1) on UNIX-systems). See environ (5) for more info. |
AUTOSUBSCRIBE
A new group is checked against the list of patterns; if it matches, tin subscribes the user to the group without further query. See the section "NEWSGROUP LISTS & WILDCARDS" for an explanation of the valid syntax. For example, setting
AUTOSUBSCRIBE=comp.os.unix.*,talk.*,!talk.politics.*
will automatically subscribe the user to all new groups in the comp.os.unix hierarchy, and all talk groups other than talk.politics groups (which will be queried for as usual). Of course this does not work if tin is started with the ββ -X ββ command-line switch.
AUTOUNSUBSCRIBE
Is handled like the $ AUTOSUBSCRIBE variable, but groups matching the list are unsubscribed from without further query. For example, setting
AUTOUNSUBSCRIBE=alt.flame.*,u*,!uk.*
will automatically unsubscribe the user from all new alt.flame groups and all groups starting with u (university groups) other than UK groups (which will be queried for as usual).
|
TMPDIR |
A pathname of a directory made available for tin to create temporary files. |
MAILCAPS
This variable can be used to override the default path search for mailcap (5) files. See also tin (5).
NOMETAMAIL
Set this variable to disable the use of metamail (1) or a replacement (e.g., metamutt).
MM_CHARSET
MIME character set used if not configured via the tinrc variable mm_charset .
|
ISPELL |
Set this variable to point to ispell (1) or a replacement and its cmd-line options. |
PGPOPTS
Define any additional options that you wish to pass to your pgp (1) or gpg (1) program.
PGPPATH
Override the name of the pgp (1) directory in $HOME that holds your keys etc..
GNUPGHOME
Override the name of the gpg (1) directory in $HOME that holds your keys etc..
LC_CTYPE
This variable determines the locale (5) category for character handling functions. Usually it determines the character classes for pattern matching character classification and case conversion. Currently this is not true for tin (which temporary unsets $LC_CTYPE right before any match is done to avoid confusion). Its value should be of the form language [ _territory ][ .codeset ][ @modifier ]. See environ (5) for more information.
LC_MESSAGES
Formats of informative and diagnostic messages and interactive responses. Its value should be of the form language [ _territory ][ .codeset ][ @modifier ]. See locale (5) and environ (5) for more information.
LC_NUMERIC
Numeric value formats. Its value should be of the form language [ _territory ][ .codeset ][ @modifier ]. See locale (5) and environ (5) for more information.
LC_TIME
Date and time formats. Its value should be of the form language [ _territory ][ .codeset ][ @modifier ]. See locale (5) and environ (5) for more information.
|
LC_ALL |
This variable overrides the value of the $LANG variable and any other $LC_ variable. Its value should be of the form language [ _territory ][ .codeset ]. See locale (5) and environ (5) for more information. |
||
|
LANG |
This variable determines the locale (5) category for any category not specifically selected with a variable starting with $LC_ . Its value should be of the form language [ _territory ][ .codeset ]. See environ (5) for more information. |
LANGUAGE
This variable defines a priority list for translations. Whenever a translation is not available the next language from the list is tried. Its value should be of the form language:language[:language] . Requires $LC_ALL or $LANG to be set. See environ (5) for more information.
COLUMNS
A decimal integer > 0 used to indicate the userβs preferred width in column positions for the terminal screen or window. If this variable is unset or null, the implementation determines the number of columns, appropriate for the terminal or window. When $COLUMNS is set, any terminal-width information implied by $TERM will be overridden. Users and portable applications should not set $COLUMNS unless they wish to override the system selection and produce output unrelated to the terminal characteristics.
|
LINES |
A decimal integer > 0 used to indicate the userβs preferred number of lines on a page or the vertical screen or window size in lines. A line in this case is a vertical measure large enough to hold the tallest character in the character set being displayed. If this variable is unset or null, the implementation determines the number of lines, appropriate for the terminal or window. When $LINES is set, any terminal-height information implied by $TERM will be overridden. Users and portable applications should not set $LINES unless they wish to override the system selection. |
||
|
TERM |
The type of terminal in use. This is used when looking up termcap sequences. See environ (5) for more information. |
DISPLAY
Display name, pointing to the X server; required for xface.
WINDOWID
Used for determining terminalβs X window id; required for xface. Should be set by the terminal emulator.
|
SHELL |
The pathname of the userβs login shell. Used to set default_shell_command . |
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
The pathname of the userβs dir to put non-essential run time files into.
SIGNALS
tin handles a couple of signals:
|
SIGHUP |
Terminate gracefully. |
SIGTERM
Terminate gracefully.
SIGUSR1
Terminate gracefully but do not restore terminal (tty).
SIGUSR2
Write out ${TIN_HOMEDIR:-"$HOME"}/.newsrc -file.
SECURITY
If tin is started in debug mode (ββ -D n ββ) it will create world readable files in $TMPDIR which may contain sensitive data like the users NNTP password in clear text (if running verbose). On multiuser-systems $TMPDIR should be set to a safe location before starting tin in (verbose) debug mode (e.g., TMPDIR=$HOME tin -vD NNTP ).
Using the ββ -k ββ option to skip certificate verification makes the session insecure as the serverβs certificate is not checked; avoid this option whenever possible.
If the server does not initially require authentication but supports compression and compression is requested, tin will exit when authentication is required later on. Using the ββ -A ββ command line option in conjunction with ββ -C ββ circumvents this behavior.
CONFORMING TO
tin does conform to the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2008, Section 12, Utility Conventions (Utility Argument Syntax, Utility Syntax Guidelines).
NOTES
Regular
expression support is provided by the PCRE library package
pcre
(3) or
pcre2
(3) which is open source
software, written by Philip Hazel, and copyright Β© by
the University of Cambridge, England.
<https://www.pcre.org/>
CAVEATS
Any existing global configuration files in /etc/tin/ are not updated automatically, as an ordinary user normally has no write permission at that location.
BUGS
CNews NNTPd, noffle (1) (<= V1.0-pre5) and NewsCache (<= V1.1.91) canβt handle pipelined GROUP commands ( RFC3977 ). If you run into trouble with any of the mentioned historical servers define DISABLE_PIPELINING in include/autoconf.h and recompile.
Using the ββ -C ββ (COMPRESS) flag with INN nnrpd versions between 2.6.1 and 2.7.1 (both incl.) may cause tin to hang and later timeout when posting. This has been fixed in INN nnrpd version 2.7.2. As a workaround simply donβt use ββ -C ββ.
Before mailing a bug-report to <tin-bugs@tin.org> please check if you are using the latest (stable) release, and if not, please upgrade first! Have a look at the doc/TODO file for known bugs. If you still think youβve found a bug, please use the BugReport (β R β) function and write in English. Please do NOT enclose a core-file in your bug-report until we request it.
HISTORY
tin
is
based on the
tass
(1) newsreader that was developed by
Rich Skrenta and posted to alt.sources in March 1991; its
first version was released on August 23rd 1991.
tass
(1) itself was heavily influenced by notesfiles a
public domain UNIX version of PLATO Notes, developed at the
University of Illinois by Ray Essick and Rob Kolstad in
1982. For a version overview see
<http://www.tin.org/history.html>.
CREDITS
Rich Skrenta
author of tass (1) v3.2 which this newsreader used as its base.
Bill Davidsen
author of envarg.c environment variable reading routine.
Mike Gleason
author of sigfile.c random signature generation routines.
Markus Kuhn <Markus.Kuhn@cl.cam.ac.uk>
author of langinfo.c, charset.c and iso2asc.txt ISO-8859-1 documentation.
Arnold D. Robbins
author of strftime.c date formatting routine.
Rich Salz
author of wildmat.c pattern matching and parsdate.y date parsing routines.
Dave Taylor
author of curses.c from the elm (1) mailreader.
Chris Thewalt
author of getline.c emacs (1) style editing routine.
Steven Madsen
for adding pgp (1) (Pretty Good Privacy) support.
Philip Hazel <ph10@cam.ac.uk>
for pcre (3), pcre2 (3) (Perl-compatible regular expression library).
Mark Martinec <mark.martinec@ijs.si>
for snprintf (3) and vsnprintf (3) fallbacks.
AUTHOR
Iain Lea <iain@bricbrac.de>
MAINTAINER
Urs Janssen <urs@tin.org>
SEE ALSO
elm (1), emacs (1), gpg (1), inews (1), ispell (1), lp (1), lpr (1), metamail (1), mutt (1), noffle (1), perl (1), perlre (1), pgp (1), rn (1), sendmail (1), shar (1), slrnface (1), tass (1), unshar (1), uudecode (1), vi (1), xterm (1x), heapsort (3), iconv (3), iconv_open (3), nl_langinfo (3), pcre (3), pcre2 (3), pcrepattern (3), pcre2pattern (3), qsort (3), snprintf (3), strftime (3), vsnprintf (3), wildmat (3), environ (5), locale (5), mailcap (5), mbox (5), mmdf (5), newsoverview (5), tin (5), cron (8), RFC1345 , RFC1524 , RFC1952 , RFC2045 , RFC2046 , RFC2047 , RFC2231 , RFC2980 , RFC3156 , RFC3977 , RFC4155 , RFC4643 , RFC4880 , RFC5198 , RFC5322 , RFC5536 , RFC5537 , RFC6048 , RFC6838 , RFC8054 , RFC8143