X-Git-Url: https://git.llucax.com/software/mutt-debian.git/blobdiff_plain/14c29200cb58d3c4a0830265f2433849781858d0..939639fcf1dad1b8f3a85d641f41d11c49281f3c:/doc/tuning.html diff --git a/doc/tuning.html b/doc/tuning.html index 49ad4f3..26b0f17 100644 --- a/doc/tuning.html +++ b/doc/tuning.html @@ -1,60 +1,78 @@ -
Table of Contents
+
Table of Contents
Mutt's performance when reading mailboxes can be improved in two ways: +
+For remote folders (IMAP and POP) as well as folders using one-file-per +message storage (Maildir and MH), Mutt's performance can be greatly +improved using header caching. +using a single database per folder. +
+Mutt provides the $read_inc and $write_inc variables to specify at which rate +to update progress counters. If these values are too low, Mutt may spend +more time on updating the progress counter than it spends on actually +reading/writing folders.
-
-For remote folders (IMAP and POP) as well as folders using -one-file-per message storage (Maildir and MH), mutt's -performance can be greatly improved using -header caching. -Using a single database per folder may further increase -performance. -
-Mutt provides the $read_inc -and $write_inc -variables to specify at which rate to update progress -counters. If these values are too low, mutt may spend more -time on updating the progress counter than it spends on -actually reading/writing folders. -
-For example, when opening a maildir folder with a few -thousand messages, the default value for -$read_inc -may be too low. It can be tuned on on a folder-basis using -folder-hooks: - +For example, when opening a maildir folder with a few thousand messages, +the default value for $read_inc may be +too low. It can be tuned on on a folder-basis using folder-hooks:
-# use very high $read_inc to speed up reading hcache'd maildirs +# use very high $read_inc to speed up reading hcache'd maildirs folder-hook . 'set read_inc=1000' -# use lower value for reading slower remote IMAP folders +# use lower value for reading slower remote IMAP folders folder-hook ^imap 'set read_inc=100' -# use even lower value for reading even slower remote POP folders -folder-hook ^pop 'set read_inc=1'
-
-
These settings work on a per-message basis. However, as messages may -greatly differ in size and certain operations are much faster than others, -even per-folder settings of the increment variables may not be +# use even lower value for reading even slower remote POP folders +folder-hook ^pop 'set read_inc=1'
+These settings work on a per-message basis. However, as messages may +greatly differ in size and certain operations are much faster than +others, even per-folder settings of the increment variables may not be desirable as they produce either too few or too much progress updates. -Thus, Mutt allows to limit the number of progress updates per second it'll -actually send to the terminal using the -$time_inc variable.
-Reading messages from remote folders such as IMAP an POP can be -slow especially for large mailboxes since mutt only caches a very -limited number of recently viewed messages (usually 10) per -session (so that it will be gone for the next session.) +Thus, Mutt allows to limit the number of progress updates per second +it'll actually send to the terminal using the $time_inc variable. +
+Reading messages from remote folders such as IMAP an POP can be slow +especially for large mailboxes since Mutt only caches a very limited +number of recently viewed messages (usually 10) per session (so that it +will be gone for the next session.)
-To improve performance and permanently cache whole messages, -please refer to mutt's so-called -body caching for details. -
-When searching mailboxes either via a search or a limit action, for -some patterns mutt distinguishes between regular expression and string +To improve performance and permanently cache whole messages, please +refer to Mutt's so-called body +caching for details. +
+When searching mailboxes either via a search or a limit action, for some +patterns Mutt distinguishes between regular expression and string searches. For regular expressions, patterns are prefixed with -``Ë'' and with ``='' for string searches. +â~â and with â=â for string searches.
Even though a regular expression search is fast, it's several times
-slower than a pure string search which is noticable especially on large
+slower than a pure string search which is noticeable especially on large
folders. As a consequence, a string search should be used instead of a
regular expression search if the user already knows enough about the
search pattern.
@@ -62,10 +80,11 @@ search pattern.
For example, when limiting a large folder to all messages sent to or by
an author, it's much faster to search for the initial part of an e-mail
address via =Luser@
instead of
-ËLuser@
. This is especially true for searching
+~Luser@
. This is especially true for searching
message bodies since a larger amount of input has to be searched.
-Please note that string search is an exact case-sensitive search -while a regular expression search with only lower-case letters performs -a case-insensitive search. -