Timo Sirainen wrote:
On Sun, 2007-09-09 at 23:52 +0200, Bernd Kuhls wrote:
# cat 20070909-234323-10517.in
...
DONE
13 list "" "Drafts"
14 create "Drafts"
15 subscribe "Drafts"
16 list "" "Drafts"
17 IDLE
There is no APPEND command, so Thunderbird doesn't even try to save the
message to Drafts.
On Sun, 2007-09-09 at 23:52 +0200, Bernd Kuhls wrote:
> > # cat 20070909-234323-10517.in
> > ...
> > DONE
> > 13 list "" "Drafts"
> > 14 create "Drafts"
> > 15 subscribe "Drafts"
> > 16 list "" "Drafts"
> > 17 IDLE
There is no APPEND command, so Thunderbird doesn't even try to save the
message to
Hi,
Timo Sirainen wrote:
On Tue, 2007-08-07 at 12:21 +0200, Bernd Kuhls wrote:
Now I create a new message in Thunderbird and save it as draft. A zero
byte file "Drafts" is created in /home/$user/.imap_mail/ but the message
I wanted to save got _lost_, /home/$user/.imap_mail/Drafts stays at zero
Hi,
Timo Sirainen wrote:
On Tue, 2007-08-07 at 12:21 +0200, Bernd Kuhls wrote:
Now I create a new message in Thunderbird and save it as draft. A zero
byte file "Drafts" is created in /home/$user/.imap_mail/ but the message
I wanted to save got _lost_, /home/$user/.imap_mail/Drafts stays at zero
On Tue, 2007-08-07 at 12:21 +0200, Bernd Kuhls wrote:
> Now I create a new message in Thunderbird and save it as draft. A zero
> byte file "Drafts" is created in /home/$user/.imap_mail/ but the message
> I wanted to save got _lost_, /home/$user/.imap_mail/Drafts stays at zero
> bytes. The next mess
Bernd Kuhls wrote:
Now I create a new message in Thunderbird and save it as draft. A zero
byte file "Drafts" is created in /home/$user/.imap_mail/ but the message
I wanted to save got _lost_, /home/$user/.imap_mail/Drafts stays at zero
bytes. The next message I try to save as draft finds its way
Hi,
I am having problems with Dovecot 1.0.3 and Thunderbird 2.0.0.6 when
using a new user account without any mbox files present.
Directory /home/$user/.imap_mail/ does not exist when Thunderbird first
tries to login using IMAP to the account. On login this directory is
created with a zero byte