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1992-04-05
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Bundle Size
Moves Echomail Bundles XXX bytes at a Time
The Disclaimers and Distribution Rules:
I hope you find this utility useful. Bundle Size may be used in any
non-commercial environment free of licensing charges. It may be freely
distributed so long as there is no charge for it and it is distributed
only in the original archive.
There is NO warranty with this product (express or implied), and I assume
no responsibility for any damages it might do to your system, nor any
consequential damages.
In other words, you assume all risks should you decide to use it. It is
working well on my system, and on the systems of the brave sysops who
have helped me beta test it.
What does Bunder Size do?
Bundle Size is written for systems that receive many bundles of mail but
whose unpackers unpack all those bundles before processing rather than one
at a time... On a few systems this causes space problems. So... Bundle
size lets you move inbound bundles over 'x' bytes at a time... if there is
only one bundle and its size exceeds 'x' then it gets moved anyways.
Bundle Size is not overly sophisticated... it only moves files in disk
order... Meaning that it won't perform a best-fit analysis or anything...
Bundle Size will create a Logfile in the current directory named
BNDLSIZE.LOG
Bundle Size will move files by the naming conventions of *.MO?, *.TU?,
*.WE?, *.TH?, *.FR?, *.SA? and *.SU?.
The command line is simple... If no parameters are given, then help will
be given on the command line format...
The command line parameters are:
BNDLSIZE <Source Dir> <Destination Dir> <Max Size in bytes>
ie: BNDLSIZE E:\File\Net E:\Inbound\ 12000000
This will move the bundles from E:\File\Net to E:\Inbound in chunks of
1.2 Megs per run...
<END of BundleSize.Doc>