Windows 10 reached EOS (end of support) on October 14, 2025. For more information, see this article.

Mozilla サポートの検索

サポート詐欺に注意してください。 私たちはあなたに通話やショートメッセージの送信、個人情報の共有を求めることはありません。疑わしい行為を見つけたら「迷惑行為を報告」からご報告ください。

詳しく学ぶ

このスレッドはアーカイブに保管されました。 必要であれば新たに質問してください。

old data in large archive folders should not be indexed unless needed

  • 返信なし
  • 1 人がこの問題に困っています
  • 2 回表示
more options

When a new account is created thunderbird indexes all the folders. I have several archive folders with 20+ email. There is no reason to index this data unless forced to by the user opening or searching the folder. On my PC this takes 25%+ of the CPU. I did not measure bandwidth.

Shutting thunderbird down seems to stop the indexing. Better would be to index the "current" data. IOS email does this as does claws-mail.

I'm running FreeBSD 11.2 on CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-6300HQ CPU @ 2.30GHz (2304.11-MHz K8-class CPU). As I am a system/network admin, no great strain for me. For a geologist, etc would/could be an issue. Anyway it's always more efficient to do nothing

When a new account is created thunderbird indexes all the folders. I have several archive folders with 20+ email. There is no reason to index this data unless forced to by the user opening or searching the folder. On my PC this takes 25%+ of the CPU. I did not measure bandwidth. Shutting thunderbird down seems to stop the indexing. Better would be to index the "current" data. IOS email does this as does claws-mail. I'm running FreeBSD 11.2 on CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-6300HQ CPU @ 2.30GHz (2304.11-MHz K8-class CPU). As I am a system/network admin, no great strain for me. For a geologist, etc would/could be an issue. Anyway it's always more efficient to do nothing