TODO list for agedu =================== - we could still be using more of the information coming from autoconf. Our config.h is defining a whole bunch of HAVE_FOOs for particular functions (e.g. HAVE_INET_NTOA, HAVE_MEMCHR, HAVE_FNMATCH). We could usefully supply alternatives for some of these functions (e.g. cannibalise the PuTTY wildcard matcher for use in the absence of fnmatch, switch to vanilla truncate() in the absence of ftruncate); where we don't have alternative code, it would perhaps be polite to throw an error at configure time rather than allowing the subsequent build to fail. + however, I don't see anything here that looks very controversial; IIRC it's all in POSIX, for one thing. So more likely this should simply wait until somebody complains. - it would be useful to support a choice of indexing strategies. The current system's tradeoff of taking O(N log N) space in order to be able to support any age cutoff you like is not going to be ideal for everybody. A second more conventional mechanism which allows the user to specify a number of fixed cutoffs and just indexes each directory on those alone would undoubtedly be a useful thing for large-scale users. This will require considerable thought about how to make the indexers pluggable at both index-generation time and query time. - IPv6 support in the HTTP server * of course, Linux magic auth can still work in this context; we merely have to be prepared to open one of /proc/net/tcp or /proc/net/tcp6 as appropriate. - run-time configuration in the HTTP server * I think this probably works by having a configuration form, or a link pointing to one, somewhere on the report page. If you want to reconfigure anything, you fill in and submit the form; the web server receives HTTP GET with parameters and a referer, adjusts its internal configuration, and returns an HTTP redirect back to the referring page - which it then re-renders in accordance with the change. * All the same options should have their starting states configurable on the command line too. - curses-ish equivalent of the web output + try using xterm 256-colour mode. Can (n)curses handle that? If not, try doing it manually. + I think my current best idea is to bypass ncurses and go straight to terminfo: generate lines of attribute-interleaved text and display them, so we only really need the sequences "go here and display stuff", "scroll up", "scroll down". + Infrastructure work before doing any of this would be to split html.c into two: one part to prepare an abstract data structure describing an HTML-like report (in particular, all the index lookups, percentage calculation, vector arithmetic and line sorting), and another part to generate the literal HTML. Then the former can be reused to produce very similar reports in coloured plain text. - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms724290.aspx suggest modern Windowses support atime-equivalents, so a Windows port is possible in principle. + For a full Windows port, would need to modify the current structure a lot, to abstract away (at least) memory-mapping of files, details of disk scan procedure, networking for httpd. Unclear what the right UI would be on Windows, too; command-line exactly as now might be considered just a _little_ unfriendly. Or perhaps not. + Alternatively, a much easier approach would be to write a Windows version of just the --scan-dump mode, which does a filesystem scan via the Windows API and generates a valid agedu dump file on standard output. Then one would simply feed that over the network connection of one's choice to the rest of agedu running on Unix as usual.