+++ /dev/null
-## $Revision: 7143 $
-## expire.ctl - expire control file
-## Format:
-## /remember/:<keep>
-## <class>:<min>:<default>:<max>
-## <wildmat>:<flag>:<min>:<default>:<max>
-## First line gives history retention; second line specifies expiration
-## for classes; third line specifies expiration for group if groupbaseexpiry
-## is true
-## <class> class specified in storage.conf
-## <wildmat> wildmat-style patterns for the newsgroups
-## <min> Mininum number of days to keep article
-## <default> Default number of days to keep the article
-## <max> Flush article after this many days
-## <min>, <default>, and <max> can be floating-point numbers or the
-## word "never." Times are based on when received unless -p is used;
-## see expire.8
-
-## If article expires before 10 days, we still remember it for 10 days in
-## case we get offered it again. Depending on what you use for the innd
-## -c flag and how paranoid you are about old news, you might want to
-## make this 28, 30, etc, but it's probably safe to reduce it to 7 in most
-## cases if you want to keep your history file smaller.
-/remember/:10
-
-## Keep for 1-10 days, allow Expires headers to work. This entry uses
-## the syntax appropriate when groupbaseexpiry is true in inn.conf.
-*:A:1:10:never
-
-## Keep for 1-10 days, allow Expires headers to work. This is an entry
-## based on storage class, used when groupbaseexpiry is false.
-#0:1:10:never