Hello,
We are using the mbx format for about 3 years. I reported earlier some
problems with RHEL4 64-bit and POP3 that the option 'leave mail on server'
on the clients was not working in imap 2006. But it seems fixed in the
2007 version.
The person who has this problem is using an older eu
There is no such thing as "seen" status in POP3.
POP3 determines what is a new message or not via unique identifiers (UID)
assigned to each message. A message with a UID not previously seen by the
POP3 client is considered to be "new" and is downloaded.
Some very old POP3 clients (e.g., anci
Thank you for reporting this problem. You are correct that cross-format
COPY returns a COPYUID response in APPENDUID format. I do not yet have a
fix for this problem, but will let you know when one is available.
On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
When copying a message from a unix
Bob,
No I haven't, we are using a 'stock' RHEL4 server with php and it's so
modules. But this is not the cause of the problem.
I can reproduce this also with a server only running imap2004 or
imap2007 and one outlook client with 2 accounts, one pop3 one imap.
I send an e-mail to my test ac
Andres,
Have you re-linked your webmail app (I presume php based) with the 2007
libc-client library? If not, then I would expect the type of weird
issues that you your seeing.
FYI, Mark - this is one of the reasons that we create a shared
libc-client so that we don't find ourselves having to
When copying a message from a unix mailbox to a mbx mailbox the COPYUID
response code is missing the destination message set. See this example
session:
imapd
* PREAUTH [CAPABILITY IMAP4REV1 LITERAL+ IDLE UIDPLUS NAMESPACE CHILDREN
* MAILBOX-REFERRALS BINARY UNSELECT ESEARCH WITHIN SCAN SORT
* THR
Hello,
We noticed some strang behaviour when using imap 2007.
When we used imap 2004 a client could read his e-mail externally with a
webmail application (it's using an imap connection), when he came to his
desk to download his e-mail with pop3, the e-mails that he already had seen
in the webmail