On Sun, Jun 23, 2013 at 08:22:50PM -0400, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
> Bruce Momjian wrote:
> > On Sun, Jun 23, 2013 at 06:30:11PM +0200, Magnus Hagander wrote:
> > > > Agreed, and I don't think PgLife can be efficiently managed. PgLife
> > > > uses Perl, CPAN modules, Javascript, Procmail, and cron jobs, and these
> > > > would need to be maintained by the sysadmin team. Frankly, there
> > > > doesn't seem to be enough interest in even linking to PgLife, so I don't
> > > > see how having the sysadmin team maintain it makes any sense.
> > >
> > > IIRC, you explained it worked in part by pulling things from your
> > > personal mailbox. I don't see how that can ever be made to run
> > > anywhere else...
> >
> > You would need to subscribe an email address to the all our email lists,
> > and have procmail run for that user.
>
> As I told you privately, we have the list emails on a database already,
> threaded and tagged. I feel if we wanted something for the community to
> maintain, it should be based on that. The advantage is that it can
> implement something more insightful than just "subject of most recently
> received email", without going crazy with procmail rules and shell
> scripting. It can be done using just a few SQL queries; and I have the
> vague impression somebody around here knows that stuff.
>
> Also, there's no need for web-scraping. I didn't look in detail into
> your code but I'm fairly sure most of the stuff you're scraping for
> could be easily obtained by a handful of queries into the wwwmaster
> database.
I don't have access to wwwmaster, so I was unclear how I could pull from
there.
-- Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB
http://enterprisedb.com
+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +