After the ME and innfeed! entries, you need (Sri lanka web server)
After the ME and innfeed! entries, you need to add entries that define the actual news servers to which you will feed articles. You should have one entry for each news server that you feed. The general format of those entries is as follows: remote-peer.domain.com/name-in-header.domain.com :newsgroup-list :Tm:innfeed! You need to replace remote-peer.domain.com with the FQDN of the server that you are feeding the news to. Next, replace the name-in-header with any alias names that the remote news server uses. The aliases are names that the remote news server puts in the Path header of the articles it forwards. (If no aliases exist, leave off the entire /name-in-header part.) You need to enter a newsgroup-list only if you want to feed newsgroups that are different from the newsgroups that are set by default (in your ME entry). The last part of the entry (:Tm:innfeed!) should be left as it is. If your server has the controlchan feature turned on (usecontrolchan: true in the inn.conf file), you should create an entry for the controlchan program in the newsfeeds file. This entry is meant to reduce the load if, in a short period of time, many control messages arrive at your news server. This entry runs the /usr/bin/controlchan command. controlchan! :!*,control,control.*,!control.cancel :Tc,Wnsm:/usr/bin/controlchan You can use a mind-numbing number of options within the newsfeeds file. If you are interested in delving deeper, read the comments in the newsfeeds file and refer to the newsfeeds manual page (type man newsfeeds). That manual page will also point you to related man pages. Getting a list of active newsgroups The Internet Software Consortium (http://www.isc.org/) maintains a listing of all officially active newsgroups. ISC stores these newsgroups in two different files: newsgroups and active. The newsgroups file contains each newsgroup name and a short description of the newsgroup. The active file stores the newsgroups to indicate which newsgroups your computer will offer. You can download the latest copies of the active and newsgroups files from the ISC FTP server: ftp://ftp.isc.org/pub/usenet/CONFIG/. From that directory, you can download either uncompressed versions of those files (each is more than 1MB in size) or compressed versions. Choose the active.gz and newsgroups.gz files, which you can uncompress in Red Hat Linux by using the gunzip command (gunzip active.gz newsgroup.gz). Place both the active and newsgroups files in your /etc/news directory. The newsgroups file provides the names and descriptions of the newsgroups offered to the users of your news server. The active file is the official list of newsgroups that is read by the innd daemon so that it knows what newsgroups it should accept articles for. You can edit the active file manually. Choosing How Articles Are Stored Traditionally, news servers have stored newsgroup articles in a very simple format. In the news spool directory (such as /var/spool/news), each article was stored under a subdirectory named after the newsgroup. For example, articles for the comp.os.linux.x newsgroup would be stored in the directory comp/os/linux/x in the news spool directory. Each article would be named by its unique message number and placed in that directory.
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