On 1/2/2010 7:16 AM, Philip Chee wrote:
> On Sat, 02 Jan 2010 09:17:14 -0500, Phillip Jones wrote:
> 
>> For users that are not techno nerds. what exactly does this procedure 
>> do. and does it damage anything you have setup in SM to make it work 
>> like you want. ? I've saved the code to try after I find out exactly 
>> what it does.
> 
> Follow the links, Luke?
> 
> <http://mozillalinks.org/wp/2009/07/vacuum-your-firefox-databases-for-better-performance/>
> 
> "Since Firefox 3.0, bookmarks, history and most storage is kept in
> SQLite databases. Also, the default history time span was raised from 9
> to 90 days as it became more discoverable and useful thanks to the
> awesome bar, so depending on your browsing habits it could represent
> some pretty large databases."
> 
> "As any other database, SQLite databases become fragmented over time and
> empty spaces appear all around. But, since there are no managing
> processes checking and optimizing the database, these factors eventually
> result in a performance hit. So, a good way to improve startup and some
> other bookmarks and history related tasks is to defragment and trim
> unused space from these databases."
> 
> Phil
> 

With SeaMonkey 2.0.x, bookmarks are not yet in sqlite.

-- 
David E. Ross
<http://www.rossde.com/>

Go to Mozdev at <http://www.mozdev.org/> for quick access to
extensions for Firefox, Thunderbird, SeaMonkey, and other
Mozilla-related applications.  You can access Mozdev much
more quickly than you can Mozilla Add-Ons.
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