Something like this has to be written for a specific BBS and one that
can support mods like this. You can't just write this that works with
all systems like a BBS door can.
Why not? It would just need to be passed a directory and resd the files.bbs from that directory. Can't all bbs's do that?
withSomething like this has to be written for a specific BBS and one that can support mods like this. You can't just write this that works
all systems like a BBS door can.
Why not? It would just need to be passed a directory and resd thefiles.bbs
from that directory. Can't all bbs's do that?
Many older DOS BBSes could, but I think others keep a lot of the file info in databases that may or may not be of a standard type -- i.e. they don't use the old-fashioned "files.bbs in separate directories" way of keeping track of their file bases.
For example...
While SBBS keeps each file base in a separate directory, IIRC the actual file info you used to find in the files.bbs files is now all kept in a database.
Mike
* SLMR 2.1a * "I never met a chocolate I didn't like." --Deanna Troi
--- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
* Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
withSomething like this has to be written for a specific BBS and one that
can support mods like this. You can't just write this that works
all systems like a BBS door can.
Why not? It would just need to be passed a directory and resd thefiles.bbs
from that directory. Can't all bbs's do that?
Many older DOS BBSes could, but I think others keep a lot of the file info in databases that may or may not be of a standard type -- i.e. they don't use the old-fashioned "files.bbs in separate directories" way of keeping track of their file bases.
For example...
While SBBS keeps each file base in a separate directory, IIRC the actual file info you used to find in the files.bbs files is now all kept in a database.
| Sysop: | Ragnarok |
|---|---|
| Location: | Dock Sud, Bs As, Argentina |
| Users: | 137 |
| Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
| Uptime: | 116:27:18 |
| Calls: | 15,363 |
| Calls today: | 1 |
| Files: | 20,059 |
| D/L today: |
3 files (239K bytes) |
| Messages: | 1,798,762 |