ls -l /proc/$(pidof evolution)/fd
>
> will show you every file Evo has open (many of which are sockets)
>
> There is a way to get "live" feedback on file activity using strace,
> but it's fairly hackish, e.g.
>
> strace -p $(pidof evolution) --trace=desc|grep write
>
> gives a flood of info
> Hi,
> can the received messages be large, like with some attachments or
> inline images? Check size of those directories under ~/.cache/, where
> the folders.db files are stored. Then you can check the size of the
> ~/.cache/evolution/http/, which is for the remote content, aka for data
On Tue, 2022-10-11 at 06:39 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
> On Mon, 2022-10-10 at 20:04 +0200, Pelle Windestam via evolution-list
> wrote:
> > Could the fact that there are lots of e-mails there be causing this?
>
> Hi,
> there is a folders.db
On Mon, 2022-10-10 at 09:59 -0500, Greg Oliver via evolution-list wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 10, 2022 at 5:46 AM Pelle Windestam via evolution-list
> wrote:
> > On Mon, 2022-10-10 at 11:36 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
> > > On Mon, 2022-10-10 at 10:55 +0200, Pelle Wi
On Mon, 2022-10-10 at 11:36 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
> On Mon, 2022-10-10 at 10:55 +0200, Pelle Windestam via evolution-list
> wrote:
> > when I by accident looked at my "System Monitor" tool I noticed that
> > it was writing huge amounts of data
Hi all,
I'm using Evolution for my work (Office365) and personal (IMAP) accounts, and
when I by accident looked at my "System Monitor" tool I noticed that it was
writing huge amounts of data to my disk. It seems to be writing ~1GB/day (it's
been up for a few days and now it has written a total of