I'm still not seeing emails from the list. With help from others, I
thought I had the IPs cleared since the change back in February, but
apparently not.
Can someone PM me and let me know what outgoing IP addresses the list is
using please?
steve campbell
On 3/6/2014 6:03 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 05.03.2014 21:37, schrieb Eugene R:
Got access denied for direct mail:
: host mailserver2.cnpapers.net[216.12.119.162] said:
550 5.7.1 Access denied (in reply to MAIL FROM command)
Well, this is now really off-topic for the list (local config er
I checked my settings on the dovecot mailman page, and although my
account was set to "disable" email, after changing it and attempting to
have the list resend my password, I'm still not seeing emails.
The last time I received emails, the outgoing server for the list was
sent from the IP 193.2
Is the list down or have I been blocked.
nd erase after you run it) and run the file. It should send
the output of "dovecot -an" to the email address y...@yourdomain.com with
a subject line of "Dovecot -an output". You might have to use a
different "/bin/mail" command depending on what your mail server is.
steve campbell
On 5/10/2013 10:53 AM, Michael Wessel wrote:
Did you have a look at this?
http://wiki2.dovecot.org/Authentication/RestrictAccess
On 5/10/2013 5:17 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
Is there a way using dovecot facilities to block an IP from
attempting POP3 connections (similar to the sendmail access
On 5/10/2013 10:05 AM, Oscar del Rio wrote:
On 05/10/13 08:17 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
Is there a way using dovecot facilities to block an IP from
attempting POP3 connections (similar to the sendmail access file for
smtp connections)? I usually do this at my border firewall, but if
there
On 5/10/2013 8:54 AM, Gilles Chauvin wrote:
On Friday 10 May 2013 08:17:50 Steve Campbell wrote:
Is there a way using dovecot facilities to block an IP from attempting
POP3 connections (similar to the sendmail access file for smtp
connections)? I usually do this at my border firewall, but if
.
Thanks
steve campbell
Does Dovecot have a facility to block pop3 and imap logins by IP
address. I usually do this by putting the IPs in my border firewall, but
it's in transition currently to a new one, and I'd like to end
connection fairly fast.
If it matters, I'm using 2.0.9.
Thanks
steve campbell
If you ever figure out how to do this, I've got an excellent name for
it: MailWatch
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mailwatch/
steve
On 10/3/2012 3:48 PM, Marc Perkel wrote:
Hi,
I'm looking for some advice to do a really advanced trick with
Dovecot. I'm not sure if this can be done. I need
On 7/23/2012 12:23 PM, e-frog wrote:
On 23.07.2012 18:07, wrote Steve Campbell:
On 7/23/2012 11:54 AM, e-frog wrote:
On 23.07.2012 17:31, wrote Steve Campbell:
The log entries for imap disconnection shows a "bytes = x/y" format
where the x equals bytes sent from client and y eq
On 7/23/2012 11:54 AM, e-frog wrote:
On 23.07.2012 17:31, wrote Steve Campbell:
The log entries for imap disconnection shows a "bytes = x/y" format
where the x equals bytes sent from client and y equals bytes received
from client.
Can someone explain that a little better to me, ple
would be appreciated in interpreting
the logs or suggesting how this might have happened.
thanks
steve campbell
ntil I get some experience under my belt and make this a truly "shared"
account, is there any way to resolve the corruption of the files
mentioned above? Maybe just delete them?
thanks
steve campbell
On 3/27/2012 10:40 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
We've got some users who are using Outlook Express version 6. The
client allows me to specify the root folder, but not a prefix or
namespace. I'm still struggling with some users on our new server that
have crazy imap folder layouts, so
We've got some users who are using Outlook Express version 6. The client
allows me to specify the root folder, but not a prefix or namespace. I'm
still struggling with some users on our new server that have crazy imap
folder layouts, so I've got a few questions.
When I specify the root folder,
On 3/16/2012 7:07 AM, Mauricio López Riffo wrote:
Hi,
We actually have a mail hosting solutions with aprox. 100 thousand
of email account, where about 90% of a customers use POP3 like email
configuration. About a few mounths (we perfomed a lot of migration
throught mbox email software
Quoting Jerry :
> On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 15:27:37 -0400
> Terry Carmen articulated:
>
> > On 03/15/2012 03:06 PM, Steve Campbell wrote:
> > > Firstly, this isn't meant to be critical, and I realize the subject
> > > line probably suggest criticism, so...
>
ng up, I find there's even more I don't know about.
Thanks for all the help I've received so far and I think I'm really
going to like dovecot. Once I get the hang of it, I'll probably reduce
the amount of noise on the list by half.
steve campbell
On 3/15/2012 6:29 AM, Timo Sirainen wrote:
On Wed, 2012-03-14 at 10:46 -0400, Steve Campbell wrote:
I've mostly finished a conversion from an old Centos 3 UW-Imap server to
a new Centos 6 dovecot server.
This is messy stuff to do. There are ways you could make Dovecot behave
identical
On 3/14/2012 7:33 PM, Joseph Tam wrote:
Steve Campbell writes:
Their imap folders, the ones that they create using an imap client or
webmail, are either in ~ or ~/mail. Their original .mailboxlist is
always in ~. Based on that, I should probably copy any imap folders not
in ~/mail to that
On 3/14/2012 1:00 PM, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 2012-03-14 10:46 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
Over the years, some imap accounts had their folders directly in their
home directory and the contents of the .mailboxlist file would have an
entry with just the name of the folder in it (Trash, eg
On 3/14/2012 10:46 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
One last question, please.
Over the years, some imap accounts had their folders directly in their
home directory and the contents of the .mailboxlist file would have an
entry with just the name of the folder in it (Trash, eg), and most had
the
han the old imap application.
There's so much more that can be done with dovecot, whereas the old imap
server was mostly just load-and-go. Seems like no matter how much I
read, the more I discovered I didn't know.
Anyway, thanks for all the past help and any opinions anyone might
decide to offer on this post.
steve campbell
On 3/7/2012 3:47 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 3/6/2012 3:01 PM, Steve Campbell wrote:
I've experienced that type of locked mailbox before on the old server.
Users insist on accessing their email account as a pop account on their
desktop with the "check for new mail every so ma
On 3/6/2012 3:17 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 3/6/2012 8:28 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
http://wiki.dovecot.org/SharedMailboxes
That's where most of my questions originated, but thanks for the reply.
Steve, all the information you need is behind that link.
I've gone over that se
On 3/5/2012 6:16 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 3/5/2012 1:30 PM, Steve Campbell wrote:
I've been looking at some documentation on shared mail accounts. But I'm
getting mixed thoughts on how this can or should be done.
I use mbox for all my pop and imap folders since I've conv
ut figured if I could get the above straight, I might be able
to fuddle my way through it.
Help would be truly appreciated.
steve campbell
's home directory and copying the old .mailboxlist to a new
.subscriptions file and ensuring the imap folders are in ~/mail will do
this. Does this sound resonable?
Thanks for any help. The learning curve is getting less steep, but it's
still a ways off to the top of the hill.
steve campbell
On 2/23/2012 11:33 AM, /dev/rob0 wrote:
On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 10:16:34AM -0500, Steve Campbell wrote:
I've been trying to get smtp auth set up for days. All my sendmail
and sasl2 stuff seems to be proper, but the user can't use the
system on port 587, which is where I require aut
On 2/23/2012 11:23 AM, Peter A. Giessel wrote:
I've been trying to get smtp auth set up for days. All my sendmail and sasl2
stuff seems to be proper, but the user can't use the system on port 587, which
is where I require authorization.
My guess is that your sasl2 configuration is configured
On 2/23/2012 10:47 AM, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 2012-02-23 10:16 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:
Why is dovecot involved in my smtp processes
Because you told it to?
Where did I tell it to do this.
and how do I fix this.
Depends on what your intent is - what MTA you use - how it is
On 2/23/2012 10:30 AM, Adam Szpakowski wrote:
On 23.02.2012 16:16, Steve Campbell wrote:
I've been trying to get smtp auth set up for days. All my sendmail
and sasl2 stuff seems to be proper, but the user can't use the system
on port 587, which is where I require authorization.
entication failure
Why is dovecot involved in my smtp processes and how do I fix this. I've
got some very mad users. The 10-auth.conf file is pretty much stock
except for allowing plain text logins.
steve campbell
Quoting Joseph Tam :
>
> Steve Campbell writes:
>
> > > This was piped into a script that Email'd users about the changes
> > > that was going to happen, what they would expect to see, and a
> > > FAQ on how to set up a mail client correctly
On 2/20/2012 7:25 PM, Joseph Tam wrote:
Steve Campbell wrote:
The more I read about all of this, the more I'm thinking about moving
to maildir format. My switchover this weekend is full of holes due to
the way user's imap folders were laid out. Some had folders in their
home dir
On 2/20/2012 4:58 PM, Jim Lawson wrote:
On 2/20/12 3:36 PM, Steve Campbell wrote:
Thanks for that input. I still think I'm missing something since I
too used the compatibility link that you pointed to. Only thing is
that proceeding those namespaces, I used the first example of:
name
On 2/20/2012 1:28 PM, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 2012-02-20 1:10 PM, Steve Campbell wrote:
Our webmail is configured to read the inbox from /var/spool/mail and
their imap folders from /home or /home/mail.
I can't help with your specific problem, but I do know that having
mail s
on anything similar they've done and how many
pitfalls they ran into and what they were?
steve campbell
Quoting "Julio C. Ortega" :
> El 18/02/12 12:34, Steve Campbell escribió:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm new to the list and to dovecot. I'm having a strange situation that
> provides
> > no errors, so I'm having a little problem diagnosing what's
ght break the current users' ability. Most of the
accounts are set up as POP with the ability to see what's left on the server
using Horde, webmail, and IMAP.
Any help in tracing this down would really help. I think my biggest problem is I
don't understand the "namespa
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