tag | bf0d50d8be71dcf25d7b4ba3ccb1a51bc75b1e13 | |
---|---|---|
tagger | Francesco Chicchiriccò <ilgrosso@apache.org> | Mon Sep 26 11:52:27 2016 +0200 |
object | 116797982cec1e483349ed48a397e0b0cdad5b1d |
Tag for Pony Mail release 0.9
commit | 116797982cec1e483349ed48a397e0b0cdad5b1d | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Daniel Gruno <humbedooh@apache.org> | Wed Jul 13 13:36:19 2016 +0200 |
committer | Daniel Gruno <humbedooh@apache.org> | Wed Jul 13 13:36:19 2016 +0200 |
tree | cea15e03a81c9662fa729fbcd19da8c0010d88c6 | |
parent | 9881edb4ff13b88d231b5a069399a74d9550c2fe [diff] | |
parent | 205ce05bf89539803425d45facd46c44c9b9c6f3 [diff] |
Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into 0.9
Apache Pony Mail (Incubating) is a web-based mail archive browser licensed under the Apache License v/2.0 and built to scale to millions of archived messages with hundreds of requests per second.
Pony Mail allows you to browse and interact with mailing lists using Mozilla Persona or OAuth2 (Google, GitHub, Facebook etc) for authentication.
See https://lists.apache.org.org for a demo.
Pony Mail works in both public, private and mixed-mode, allowing you to have one unified place for all your communication, both public and private.
(Optionally see the detailed installation instructions for more information)
For a quick guide to installing Pony Mail, please see the guides for:
We'd LOVE if more people would contribute to Pony Mail! Any form of contribution is most welcome, whether it be programming, documentation, evangelism, marketing, or helping out other users.
To contribute to Pony Mail, follow these steps (also see this doc):
Pony Mail has been built for and tested with the mail archives of the Apache Software Foundation, which span more than 15 million emails sent across more than 20 years. To put things into perspective, importing all this on a modern machine (2xSSD with 64GB RAM) took around 12 hours and resulted in a performance at around 100 archive search requests per second per ES node, depending on mailing list size and available bandwidth.
This is a list of what we would love to get done: