Followup: Logging a POP3 session

2000-05-25 Thread Daniel Quinlan
Gerard MacNeil wrote: On Wed, 17 May 2000, Chris Wagner wrote: CuCiPOP tells you how many messages were downloaded by default. :) With Qpopper, you need to use the '-s' command line switch to log statistics at the daemon.notice level. I went with qpopper -s as this box is one of 25

Re: Followup: Logging a POP3 session

2000-05-25 Thread Chris Wagner
Changing mail clients won't make a difference. Just tell him what you found, that everything went out that came in. Then tell him to look to the sender, because there's a five nine probability that she's screwing up and nuking messages. At 05:02 PM 5/25/00 +1000, Daniel Quinlan wrote: after a

Re: Logging a POP3 session

2000-05-18 Thread Gerard MacNeil
On Wed, 17 May 2000, Chris Wagner wrote: CuCiPOP tells you how many messages were downloaded by default. :) With Qpopper, you need to use the '-s' command line switch to log statistics at the daemon.notice level. ---

Logging a POP3 session

2000-05-17 Thread Daniel Quinlan
hi, we have a client who is claiming he's not receiving all his email. people are apparently sending him messages and he's not receiving it. oh, and his PA is reading his mail as well, but she 'swears she never deletes anything' I've checked the exim logs and all the mail is delivered

Re: Logging a POP3 session

2000-05-17 Thread Chris Wagner
At 02:11 AM 5/18/00 GMT, Daniel Quinlan wrote: system: Debian 2.1 exim 2.05-2 qpopper 2.3-4 CuCiPOP tells you how many messages were downloaded by default. :) If that log says 10 messages were pulled, then HE DID download 10 messages. If that number syncs up with what exim says it