Subscribing to lists ==================== .. note:: Most lists do not require subscribing in order to post a message, so you only need to subscribe if you are interested in receiving a copy of all mail messages sent to the list. Subscribing for email delivery ------------------------------ The mailing lists are managed by `mlmmj `_, so in order to subscribe to receive messages via email you will need to send a message to a special subscription address of the list. For example, if you want to subscribe to ``test@lists.linux.dev``: - to receive an **individual copy of every message sent to the list**, send an email to:: test+subscribe@lists.linux.dev - to receive a **daily digest of all messages sent to the list**, send an email to:: test+subscribe-digest@lists.linux.dev The subject or body of the message do not make a difference and can be left blank. .. warning:: If you use Gmail If you are a Gmail user, please do not subscribe to high-volume lists, because **this will almost certainly push you over Gmail's delivery quotas** (60 messages per minute, specifically). This may cause you to miss important mail not just from us, but from other senders as well. Please either subscribe to the digest version, or use alternative mechanisms of receiveing mail that are described below. Unsubscribing to stop receiving list mail ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To stop receiving mail from any list, send a message to the unsubscribe address of the list. For example, to unsubscribe from either the full or digest version of the test list, send a message to:: test+unsubscribe@lists.linux.dev Subscribing via NNTP -------------------- NNTP is an old but still popular mechanism for exchanging usenet forum messages. If a mailing list is configured to provide a message archive, you can subscribe to it via NNTP. In your usenet-capable client, provide the following NNTP server to use: - ``nntp://nntp.lore.kernel.org`` Once the connection is established, you can retrieve the list of groups and subscribe to the list you need. The group names are usually the list-id of the list in reverse order. For example, if the list address is ``patches@lists.linux.dev``, then the NNTP group will be ``dev.linux.lists.patches``.