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===Transit server=== Modern transit servers usually use [[Network News Transfer Protocol|NNTP]] to exchange news continually over the [[Internet]] and similar always-on connections. In the past, servers normally employed the [[UUCP]] protocol, which was designed for intermittent dial-up connections. Other ''ad hoc'' protocols, including [[e-mail]], are less commonly seen. News servers normally connect with multiple peers, with the redundancy helping to spread loads and ensure that articles are not lost. Smaller sites, called ''leaf nodes'', are connected to one other major server.<ref name="Administering Usenet" /> Articles are routed based on information found in the header lines defined in RFC 1036.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} Of particular interest to a transit server are: *''[[Message-ID]]'' β a [[globally unique key]] *''Newsgroups'' β a list of one or more [[newsgroup]]s where the article is intended to appear *''Distribution'' β (optional) a supplement to Newsgroups, used to restrict circulation of articles. *''Date'' β the time when the article was created *''Path'' β a list of the servers an article passed through on its way to the local server *''Expires'' β (optional) the time when it is requested that the article be deleted *''Approved'' β (optional) indicates an article that has been accepted for a [[moderated newsgroup]] *''Control'' β (optional) contains [[Control message|command requests]] In most cases, the sending server controls the article transfer process. It compares the Newsgroups and Distribution of each newly arrived article against a set of patterns called ''newsfeeds'', listing each remote server and the newsgroups its operator wishes to receive. Some senders also examine the Path; if the receiving server appears in this line, it is not offered. Other local rules may also be added. The sender transmits matching articles' Message-IDs to the receiving server. The receiver indicates which Message-IDs it has not yet stored locally, and those articles are sent.<ref name="Administering Usenet" /> The receiving server examines the incoming articles. A message is normally discarded if the Message-ID is duplicated by an article already received (i.e., another server sent it in the meantime), the Date or Expires lines indicate that the article is too old, the header syntax appears to be invalid, the Approved header is missing for a moderated newsgroup, or additional local rules disallow it.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} Most servers also maintain a list of active newsgroups. If the Newsgroups header of a new article does not match the active list, it may be discarded or placed in a special "junk" newsgroup. Once the article is stored, the server attempts to retransmit it to any servers in its own newsfeed list.<ref name="Administering Usenet" /> Articles with Control lines are given special handling. They are typically filed in special "control" newsgroups and may cause the server to automatically carry out exceptional actions. The ''<code>newgroup</code>'' and ''<code>rmgroup</code>'' commands can cause newsgroups to be created or removed; ''<code>checkgroups</code>'' can be used to reconcile the local active list with a commonly accepted set; and ''<code>cancel</code>'' commands are used to request the deletion of a specific article. ''<code>ihave</code>'' and ''<code>sendme</code>'' are sometimes used with UUCP to transmit lists of offered and wanted Message-IDs. Other commands (''<code>version</code>'', ''<code>sendsys</code>'', and ''<code>uuname</code>'') are requests for server configuration details. Once used to create network maps, they now are generally obsolete.<ref name="Administering Usenet" />
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