On Thu, 2004-05-27 at 07:02 -0400, Jeffrey Stedfast wrote: > On Thu, 2004-05-27 at 07:03, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > I also am getting occasional dups, not in a recognizable pattern but > > they're definitely there: > > it's *very* recognisable
I don't know what you mean. Obviously the dups are recognizable but since the problem only occurs sporadically the precise cause is not recognizable so far. > > > > * The message appears both in my Inbox and in a List-specific folder. > > you got one from the list and one was cc'd to you. No, that's not it. If that were the case the two copies would not be bit-for-bit identical due to different delivery paths and headers. The message I'm looking at was sent *only* to the list in question (not this list). > > I'm not saying this is necessarily an Evo bug, but there's clearly an > > unwanted interaction going on which I'd like to track down. > > it's not anything to do with evolution. I don't assert that it is. I do assert that it happens intermittently and only when I use Evo as a client. This may be because Evo excercises the Cyrus IMAP implementation in a way that other clients don't, which doesn't mean it's a bug in Evo. No matter. It happens and I would like to find out why. Let me also rephrase a question which wasn't answered: does the filtering happen in evolution-data-server? If so, this could be hint, since as I already said I'm usually running two instances of EDS (*not* the Evo frontend, note!), one from home and one at the office. If this is frowned upon, it would be helpful to know it, given that the only way to avoid it is by explicitly doing a "--force-shutdown" (or logging out, which I don't do either). poc poc _______________________________________________ evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution
