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If you recall how to subscribe to servers (see section Finding the News)
you will remember that gnus-secondary-select-methods
and
gnus-select-method
let you write a definition in Emacs Lisp of
what servers you want to see when you start up. The alternate
approach is to use foreign servers and groups. “Foreign” here means
they are not coming from the select methods. All foreign server
configuration and subscriptions are stored only in the
‘~/.newsrc.eld’ file.
Below are some group mode commands for making and editing general foreign
groups, as well as commands to ease the creation of a few
special-purpose groups. All these commands insert the newly created
groups under point—gnus-subscribe-newsgroup-method
is not
consulted.
Changes from the group editing commands are stored in
‘~/.newsrc.eld’ (gnus-startup-file
). An alternative is the
variable gnus-parameters
, See section Group Parameters.
Make a new group (gnus-group-make-group
). Gnus will prompt you
for a name, a method and possibly an address. For an easier way
to subscribe to NNTP groups (see section Browse Foreign Server).
Make an ephemeral group (gnus-group-read-ephemeral-group
). Gnus
will prompt you for a name, a method and an address.
Rename the current group to something else
(gnus-group-rename-group
). This is valid only on some
groups—mail groups mostly. This command might very well be quite slow
on some back ends.
Customize the group parameters (gnus-group-customize
).
Enter a buffer where you can edit the select method of the current
group (gnus-group-edit-group-method
).
Enter a buffer where you can edit the group parameters
(gnus-group-edit-group-parameters
).
Enter a buffer where you can edit the group info
(gnus-group-edit-group
).
Make a directory group (see section Directory Groups). You will be prompted
for a directory name (gnus-group-make-directory-group
).
Make the Gnus help group (gnus-group-make-help-group
).
Read an arbitrary directory as if it were a newsgroup with the
nneething
back end (gnus-group-enter-directory
).
See section Anything Groups.
Make a group based on some file or other
(gnus-group-make-doc-group
). If you give a prefix to this
command, you will be prompted for a file name and a file type.
Currently supported types are mbox
, babyl
,
digest
, news
, rnews
, mmdf
, forward
,
rfc934
, rfc822-forward
, mime-parts
,
standard-digest
, slack-digest
, clari-briefs
,
nsmail
, outlook
, oe-dbx
, and mailman
. If
you run this command without a prefix, Gnus will guess at the file
type. See section Document Groups.
Create one of the groups mentioned in gnus-useful-groups
(gnus-group-make-useful-group
).
Make an ephemeral group based on a web search
(gnus-group-make-web-group
). If you give a prefix to this
command, make a solid group instead. You will be prompted for the
search engine type and the search string. Valid search engine types
include google
, dejanews
, and gmane
.
See section Web Searches.
If you use the google
search engine, you can limit the search
to a particular group by using a match string like
‘shaving group:alt.sysadmin.recovery’.
Make a group based on an RSS feed
(gnus-group-make-rss-group
). You will be prompted for an URL.
See section RSS.
This function will delete the current group
(gnus-group-delete-group
). If given a prefix, this function will
actually delete all the articles in the group, and forcibly remove the
group itself from the face of the Earth. Use a prefix only if you are
absolutely sure of what you are doing. This command can’t be used on
read-only groups (like nntp
groups), though.
Make a new, fresh, empty nnvirtual
group
(gnus-group-make-empty-virtual
). See section Virtual Groups.
Add the current group to an nnvirtual
group
(gnus-group-add-to-virtual
). Uses the process/prefix convention.
See section Select Methods, for more information on the various select methods.
If gnus-activate-foreign-newsgroups
is a positive number,
Gnus will check all foreign groups with this level or lower at startup.
This might take quite a while, especially if you subscribe to lots of
groups from different NNTP servers. Also see section Group Levels;
gnus-activate-level
also affects activation of foreign
newsgroups.
The following commands create ephemeral groups. They can be called not only from the Group buffer, but in any Gnus buffer.
gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group
Read an ephemeral group on Gmane.org. The articles are downloaded via
HTTP using the URL specified by gnus-gmane-group-download-format
.
Gnus will prompt you for a group name, the start article number and an
the article range.
gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group-url
This command is similar to gnus-read-ephemeral-gmane-group
, but
the group name and the article number and range are constructed from a
given URL. Supported URL formats include:
<http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12300/focus=12399
>,
<http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12345/
>,
<http://article.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12345/
>,
<http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.foo.bar/12345/
>, and
<http://news.gmane.org/group/gmane.foo.bar/thread=12345
>.
gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group
Read an Emacs bug report in an ephemeral group. Gnus will prompt for a
bug number. The default is the number at point. The URL is
specified in gnus-bug-group-download-format-alist
.
gnus-read-ephemeral-debian-bug-group
Read a Debian bug report in an ephemeral group. Analog to
gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group
.
Some of these command are also useful for article buttons, See section Article Buttons.
Here is an example:
(require 'gnus-art) (add-to-list 'gnus-button-alist '("#\\([0-9]+\\)\\>" 1 (string-match "\\<emacs\\>" (or gnus-newsgroup-name "")) gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group 1)) |
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