had
the benefit of being able to search for it.
--
Ben Winslow
coding is optional.
So far as UTF-8 on the filesystem is concerned, I've been using UTF-8
in filenames on my personal systems for years now without any real
issues.
--
Ben Winslow
new messages in one request for a single folder.
--
Ben Winslow
sed to be immutable? If the actual message
is changed, it should reappear as a new file/message, and therefore be
backed up because it didn't exist in the previous backup run.
--
Ben Winslow
elope from, since it's usually always the
same or in a fixed format. If none of your rules filter on the
envelope from/to, you should be fine running deliver without that info.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
messages in an mbox file, you could
use formail from procmail in place of your for loop (e.g. formail -s
deliver < mboxfile.)
> Thanks,
> Neil.
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Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
bash, you can close fd 2 with 'exec 2>&-'.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
orage _type_) wouldn't eventually be supported? (I
guess that the big problem is making cross-type renames appear atomic
to clients.) Is there a better way to do what I'm trying to do?
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ses backticks (`foo`), PostgreSQL uses double quotes
("foo"), and MS's DB products use square brackets ([foo]).
It's probably not worth the trouble to have dovecot escape them as long
as it's possible to quote items this way in the config file.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Peter Eriksson wrote:
Just upgraded my home mail server from version 1.0 to 1.1.1
and now I noticed that Thunderbird has started showing the
'hidden' namespaces (albeit "greyed") for that server (see
the attached JPG image)...
>
What can I change to really make them hidden again?
Try adding l
Hans Wunsch wrote:
I'm looking for some help with an nfs error that is filling our logs. I
get a constant stream of these messages:
Jul 8 10:47:08 servername dovecot: [ID 107833 mail.error]
IMAP(username): nfs_flush_file_handle_cache_dir: rmdir(/var/mail)
failed: Device busy
What OS are
read and applied by pam_limits.so, which tells the kernel
about the limits with setrlimit(2).
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
could be added.
> >
> Do know any you'd recommend?
Take a look at socat: http://www.dest-unreach.org/socat/
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
.
C: A01 AUTHENTICATE PLAIN
S: +
Please enter your password:
C: cmFpbgByYWluAGhlbGxvLGRvdmVjb3Qh
S: A01 OK Logged in.
Authenticated.
Security strength factor: 0
0 logout
* BYE Logging out
0 OK Logout completed.
Connection closed.
HTH,
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
signature.asc
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ned a little bit below?
IIRC, the difference is intentional -- I believe the stated reason was
that the mail UID (%u) is more unique than UIDVALIDITY (%v), so the
default format has the UID at the beginning just in case the client
truncates the UIDL.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
si
oke the list entirely. :)
Success! You've broken my procmail rule for the list. ;)
Jul 3 08:30:02 spock postfix/qmgr[2102]: AB0063953CE:
from=<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, size=3460,
nrcpt=1 (queue active)
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Attached is a trivial patch to document the fact one can use variable
modifiers in pop3_uidl_format.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
# HG changeset patch
# User Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
# Date 1183149610 14400
# Node ID f3022d5d6b3fe673b9682190e1dea2f6c29e5
didn't provide the correct
captcha. Use the browser's Back button and try again, or register an
account to avoid this." [sic]
It took a few minutes for me to realize what was going on and simply
enter "Dovecot" for the capcha...
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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dware or the power going out at *just* the right
time), though performance wasn't that great either.
All the systems I mention were/are using Maildir, and this is somewhat
contrary to many benchmarks, but it's been working well for me. YMMV
and all that rot.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
signature.asc
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ncommon, and 4-6 seconds/day (50-75 PPM) is about the norm for PC
hardware in my experience.
Of course, this is exactly the reason why you should run ntpd instead
of ntpdate on a cron job (especially a once-per-day cron job...)
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
pgpnpNGpF3cyV.pgp
Description: PGP signature
rse-compatible files to boot.) I
haven't looked at the actual code to see how hairy it is or how
tightly it's intertwined with the rest of dictd, though.
The manual page for dictzip has some details on the implementation.
--
Ben Winslow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
pgpbzoHlsVIaO.pgp
Description: PGP signature
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