burst man page on Cygwin

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BURST(1)							      BURST(1)

NAME
       burst - explode digests into messages

SYNOPSIS
       burst [+folder] [msgs] [-inplace | -noinplace] [-quiet | -noquiet]
	    [-verbose | -noverbose] [-version] [-help]

DESCRIPTION
       Burst considers the specified messages in the named folder to be Inter‐
       net digests, and explodes them in that folder.

       If  -inplace  is	 given,	 each digest is replaced by the “table of con‐
       tents” for the digest (the original digest  is  removed).   Burst  then
       renumbers  all  of  the	messages following the digest in the folder to
       make room for each of the messages contained within the digest.	 These
       messages are placed immediately after the digest.

       If  -noinplace is given, each digest is preserved, no table of contents
       is produced, and the messages contained within the digest are placed at
       the  end	 of  the  folder.  Other messages are not tampered with in any
       way.

       The -quiet switch directs burst to be silent about  reporting  messages
       that are not in digest format.

       The  -verbose switch directs burst to tell the user the general actions
       that it is taking to explode the digest.

       It turns out that burst works equally well on  forwarded	 messages  and
       blind-carbon-copies  as	on  Internet digests, provided that the former
       two were generated by forw or send.

FILES
       $HOME/.mh_profile	  The user profile

PROFILE COMPONENTS
       Path:		    To determine the user's nmh directory
       Current-Folder:	    To find the default current folder
       Msg-Protect:	    To set mode when creating a new message

SEE ALSO
       inc(1), msh(1), pack(1)

       Proposed Standard for Message Encapsulation (RFC-934)

DEFAULTS
       `+folder' defaults to the current folder
       `msgs' defaults to cur
       `-noinplace'
       `-noquiet'
       `-noverbose'

CONTEXT
       If a folder is given, it will become the current folder.	  If  -inplace
       is  given,  then	 the  first message burst becomes the current message.
       This leaves the context ready for a show of the table  of  contents  of
       the  digest,  and  a  next  to  see the first message of the digest. If
       -noinplace is given, then the first message extracted  from  the	 first
       digest burst becomes the current message.  This leaves the context in a
       similar, but not identical, state to the context	 achieved  when	 using
       -inplace.

BUGS
       The  burst program enforces a limit on the number of messages which may
       be burst from a single message.	This number is on the  order  of  1000
       messages.   There  is  usually no limit on the number of messages which
       may reside in the folder after the bursting.

       Although burst uses a sophisticated algorithm to	 determine  where  one
       encapsulated message ends and another begins, not all digestifying pro‐
       grams use an encapsulation algorithm.  In degenerate cases,  this  usu‐
       ally results in burst finding an encapsulation boundary prematurely and
       splitting a single encapsulated message	into  two  or  more  messages.
       These erroneous digestifying programs should be fixed.

       Furthermore, any text which appears after the last encapsulated message
       is not placed in a separate message by burst.  In the case of  digesti‐
       fied  messages,	this  text is usually an “End of digest” string.  As a
       result of this possibly un-friendly behavior on the part of burst, note
       that  when  the	-inplace  option is used, this trailing information is
       lost.  In practice, this is not a problem since correspondents  usually
       place remarks in text prior to the first encapsulated message, and this
       information is not lost.

nmh-1.5-2			January 1, 2001			      BURST(1)
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