Roel Rozendaal - IC&S wrote:
cool :-) if you find it working, would you consider it posting to the
list? We might include it as a utility as long as the problem isn't
solved.
regards roel
Op 26-feb-04 om 18:33 heeft Ronny Walter het volgende geschreven:
Hello,
of course, i can post it to
I encountered this very problem ages ago. At the time, my users were
running Cyrus.
To solve the problem, I wrote a program in C that took the Cyrus files
and pushed them over to DBMail (www.itoperations.com.au), setting
internal_date such that the Outlook and Outlook Express clients saw the
cool :-) if you find it working, would you consider it posting to the
list? We might include it as a utility as long as the problem isn't
solved.
regards roel
Op 26-feb-04 om 18:33 heeft Ronny Walter het volgende geschreven:
Hello Roel,
thanks for your answer. I'll write a little tool for t
Hello Roel,
thanks for your answer. I'll write a little tool for that in the
evening. I am not a Perl Expert, so it will be a small java-program. :-)
I've tested some things with the Java-Mail API and DBMail IMAP(getting
Received_date and Date of Email-Header). So the Update won't be a hard
t
that's probably a design flaw :$ i don't know what the rfc's say about
the internal date of a message when copying it, we'll check this out if
none on this list knows the answer :) For the time being, you might
create a simple perl script fixing this issue; you could use something
like:
* con
Hello DBMail users,
I installed DBMail (1.2.3) on my server and copied a lot of emails to an
folder in dbmail. Problem is the "received date", that is shown by
email-clients. When using clients like thunderbird or kmail everything
works fine. But some users still use Outlook as email-client. I