If you're not convinced try to...
You are correct. It is indeed very difficult to get the client to even
use TCP/IP on a local machine any more, which I could only do by setting
the host to 127.0.0.1. The word "localhost" now seems to exclusively
mean unix socket for mysql.
Thank-you,
After running dpkg-reconfigure roundcube-core I find that
/etc/dbconfig-common/roundcube.conf remains unchanged, with the relevant
bits as follows:
# dbc_dbserver: database host.
#leave unset to use localhost (or a more efficient local method
#if it exists).
dbc_dbserver='localhost'
#
On Sun, 09 May 2021 at 11:39:16 -0300, Kurt Fitzner wrote:
> After running dpkg-reconfigure roundcube-core I find that
> /etc/dbconfig-common/roundcube.conf remains unchanged, with the relevant
> bits as follows:
>
> # dbc_dbserver: database host.
> #leave unset to use localhost (or a more
Control: tag -1 moreinfo
On Sun, 09 May 2021 at 01:48:16 -0300, Kurt Fitzner via
Pkg-roundcube-maintainers wrote:
> If you manually run dpkg-reconfigure roundcube-core, then the full
> installation
> script is run and you are asked to specify the connection method. The default
> method
Package: roundcube
Version: 1.4.11+dfsg.1-3
Severity: normal
Background:
When roundcube is installed, the configuration script at that time only asks
what password you want for the roundcube mysql database user. This then
causes a default database connection settings file to be created as
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