Subj : Filefind file limit
To   : mark lewis
From : Vince Coen
Date : Tue Oct 31 2017 05:47 pm

Hello mark!

Wednesday October 25 2017 11:10, you wrote to me:

Mbse has a fixed limit of 60 and 64, so short of changing the code I am stuck.

It was only an idea any way of reducing resources.


>  On 2017 Oct 25 14:36:30, you wrote to Andrew Leary:

AL>>> In the future, I can look at possibly splitting large replies
AL>>> into multiple messages.

VC>> In mbse there is a 60/64k message limit does this still apply in
VC>> fido land these days with internet comms used for most if not all
VC>> sysops ?

> there never was a limit on message size... what everyone has been
> seeing is arbitrary limits placed by ""lazy"" coders*... the tech
> standard states that message bodies are unbounded which means there is
> no limit set... this leaves plenty of room for expansion as technology
> grows... we can see this by this very 64k barrier... it used to be
> 32k... these days, memory is accessed differently and the barrier is
> much much larger... effectively, each system is limited by drive
> space*N where N is the number of copies of the message a system makes
> when processing the message... copies because of sending to other
> systems in a distribution system (eg: fidonet)...


> * ""lazy"" coders: those who didn't implement some sort of disk-based
> overflow system so they could process messages too large to fit into
> the memory allocation scheme of the time... sure, the larger messages
> would be processed slower but they would be processed and passed on...
> no need for splitting... splitting should be done only when the
> messages are stored in a local message base that has arbitrary message
> size limits in place... split the message when initially stored...
> reassemble it into one when exporting it to other systems (eg: they
> rescanned the area)... the ^ASPLIT spec is perfect for this but some
> chose to use it at another point in the process...


Vince

--- Mageia Linux v5/Mbse v1.0.7.2/GoldED+/LNX 1.1.501-b20150715
* Origin: Air Applewood, The Linux Gateway to the UK & Eire (2:250/1)