I've been using "netstat -anp" for checking the evolution connection state. And when the proxy is enabled evolution is trying to reach the SMTP/POP3 servers via proxy. If you need, I may send you these excerpts, but I'm not sure it will be useful. If you have any ideas what else I have/may to send you I'll do that with the pleasure.
Sincerely, Andrii Στις 01-04-2011, ημέρα Παρ, και ώρα 22:49 +0200, ο/η Yves-Alexis Perez έγραψε: > On ven., 2011-04-01 at 21:06 +0300, Andrii Borovyi wrote: > > I'm using GNOME as my Desktop Environment and different network profiles > > for enabling and disabling different proxies as well as switching > > between them. In all that cases my mail server (pop3 and smtp) is > > directly available to my PC (I don't need proxies to connect with them). > > Moreover, the only port that is available for proxy is HTTP. When, I'm > > behind the proxy (which one I'm using for web-surfing) and proxies are > > enabled in Gnome, Evolution is trying to reach the mail-servers via the > > proxies. It continues to do that even, when I'm selecting in Evolution > > settings that I'm directly connected to the Internet (therefore don't > > need any proxies). So I assume this is a bug, that appeared after the > > last upgrade, when evolution ALWAYS using proxies when they are > > available and DOESN'T CARE about it's own settings. > > There is no such thing as pop/smtp proxy in evolution so I fail to see > how this could be possible. Do you have traces of evolution “trying to > reach mail-server via proxies”? > > Regards, -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org