Re: Append Difference between Netscape and Outlook

2002-07-01 Thread DINH Viet Hoa
Apparently Outlook Express and Outlook 2000 send the append command and wait for the + Ready response and I have that handled ok. The message and all its parts are brought down and written to a temp file. When I see the last four of a chunk equal to crlf + crlf or -- + crlf, I assume

re: Append Difference between Netscape and Outlook

2002-07-01 Thread Mark Crispin
On Mon, 01 Jul 2002 10:03:38 -0700, Mike Oliver wrote: When I see the last four of a chunk equal to crlf + crlf or -- + crlf, I assume the message is ended and parse the message into an object and store it and I send a tag SP OK APPEND Completed otherwise I send another + Ready and another

Re: Append Difference between Netscape and Outlook

2002-07-01 Thread Mike Oliver
In Kevin Johnson's book Internet Email Protocols, A developer's Guide, chapter 6 paragraph 6.3.3 A Client can sometimes send an incomplete command. When the server receives such a line, it sends a command continuation request response to the client, indicating it is ready to accept the

Re: Append Difference between Netscape and Outlook

2002-07-01 Thread Mike Oliver
Pete, From http://jakarta.apache.org/james/rfclist/imap4/rfc2088.txt When sending a literal from client to server, IMAP4 requires the client to wait for the server to send a command continuation request between sending the octet count and the string data. and The non-synchronizing literal

Re: Append Difference between Netscape and Outlook

2002-07-01 Thread Mark Crispin
On Mon, 01 Jul 2002 12:05:44 -0700, Mike Oliver wrote: In Kevin Johnson's book Internet Email Protocols, A developer's Guide, chapter 6 paragraph 6.3.3 Kevin Johnson's book is to be used to help you understand the specification. It is not the specification. The specification is RFC 2060. The