Rodrigo Severo writes:
James Baker believes the problem is that Courier keeps some kind of map of the message (MIME parts, headers, etc) in memory and so any rewrite might break this map.
Mr. Sam, could you please enlighten us?
This is correct. The message is parsed as it's being received. Changing the message's contents invalidates the parsed data.
Is there some part of this data that isn't written in either the main message file or in the control file(s)?
I am asking this because if the answer is no, it probably won't be hard to recreate such data from the rewritten files. What do you think Mr. Sam?
There would certainly be a performance penalty for such a feature but there could be a way to separate the filters that rewrite messages from the ones that never do such a thing so only the people that really uses global filters that rewrite messages would be impacted ("There is no free meal").
BTW, there are a few lines in the control file that I don't understand. I'm talking about the e, t, R and N lines. What are they? Mine are empty.
Rodrigo Severo
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