On 6/19/06, Jesse Norell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Actually disregard these comments.... I've been searching some myself and I can't find anything that lines up with this other than the one you already found (ie. early troubleshooting steps were looking at file permissions/etc. ... but in the end reinstalling libgmime is what fixed it).
Reinstalling libgmime2.1 didn't do any good, I also tried going back to libgmime2 as suggested in one thread but I can't dbmail depends on 2.1 # apt-get --reinstall install libgmime2.1 Reading Package Lists... Done Building Dependency Tree... Done 0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 1 reinstalled, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded. Need to get 177kB of archives. After unpacking 0B of additional disk space will be used. Do you want to continue? [Y/n] Get:1 ftp://ftp.us.debian.org testing/main libgmime2.1 2.1.19-1 [177kB] Fetched 177kB in 2s (83.3kB/s) /bin/sh: line 1: /usr/bin/apt-listchanges: No such file or directory (Reading database ... 34840 files and directories currently installed.) Preparing to replace libgmime2.1 2.1.19-1 (using .../libgmime2.1_2.1.19-1_i386.deb) ... Unpacking replacement libgmime2.1 ... Setting up libgmime2.1 (2.1.19-1) ... safe:/etc/dbmail# /etc/init.d/dbmail start /etc/init.d/dbmail: line 183: 30100 Segmentation fault /usr/sbin/dbmail-users -l >/dev/null 2>&1 Dbmail cannot connect to the database server. Please make sure /etc/dbmail/dbmail.conf is correct, the database-server is running, the database for dbmail exists, and the dbmail user exists with all necessary permissions. To re-configure /etc/dbmail/dbmail.conf run 'dpkg-reconfigure dbmail'. -- Demi
