I am looking for a way to locate a message in any folder.
Of course I could examine all folders in turn for a given message id,
but the way cyrus does duplicate elimination across folders suggests that
there might be a more efficient way.
Intended purpose: record message-id of certain mails outside
Hi,
it seems that replication fails if a new account gets mail before the user
opens the mailbox
for the first time and creates the seen-db
At least in imap 2.3.0,
in function do_seen
r = seen_open(&m, user, 0, &seendb);
changing 0 into 1 seems to help
r = seen_open(&m, user, 1, &seendb)
so far I am happyly running a 2.1.12 cyrus with virtualdomains
Now one user demands a [EMAIL PROTECTED] address.
Is there any way to achieve this without touching unixhierarchysep - I am not
sure whether
all of the soft that accesses the server (there are some custom scripts to scan
mail folder
>> I want to lower my hits required to 3.5
>> I tried changing /var/mail/spamassassin/local.cf
>>
>> required_hits 3
>>
>> But the mail coming in still says required 5, is this the wrong file?
>> Do I have to restart something?
>>
maybe it is required_score with your SA ... the required_hits wa
Hi,
are yousure you want to create [EMAIL PROTECTED] - rather than [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Wolfgang Hamann
Heiko Garrelfs wrote:
Hi,
I'm new to this List, so firstly: hello everyone.
And as you might suspect: I need some help :-)
I read the archives, tried this and that but didn't get it
Balthasar Cevc wrote:
1. Is it possible to have a server be master and client at the same
time - with the effect of being able to use 2 servers at the same time
for IMAP connections?
Hi Balthasar,
the setup at David Carter's site uses two machines: one acting as master for
half of the users,
I am trying to set up remote deliveries with cyrus 2.2.12 but no fun:
regardless of whether I use lmtpd or lmtpd -a on the imap machine, deliver
tries to auth
and fails. In fact, it does not seem to be made for authing; the first problem
is calling
sasl_client_new without sasl_client_init
On p