Re: Keeping Track of An Email That Has Been Moved

2019-10-14 Thread Tellier Benoit
I agree organizing weddings is a hell of a mess, having been recently gone through this process myself... > (I have filmed over 600 weddings across nearly 18 years... so > the maildb is huge. Searching is not trivial) Well, scanning search sounds like a hell yes. However hopefully some other

Re: Keeping Track of An Email That Has Been Moved

2019-10-14 Thread Jerry Malcolm
Hi Benoit, When I'm talking with my own software clients, my standard line to the client is "don't tell me your recommended solution start with what the problem is that you want to solve, and we'll work together on the best solution."  And here I find myself telling you what I think the

Re: Keeping Track of An Email That Has Been Moved

2019-10-14 Thread Tellier Benoit
Hi Jerry, First I'd begin with a quick thought that might save you some consequent development and configuration time. What exactly are the features of your bookmark? Because it sounds to me search and custom flags might be enough. RFC-6237 "IMAP4 Multimailbox SEARCH Extension" might also be a

Re: Keeping Track of An Email That Has Been Moved

2019-10-14 Thread Jerry Malcolm
Hi Benoit, Thanks for the response.  I'm all for extensions mechanisms rather than using db schemas.  If I understand what you are describing, and I can make it work, it's going to be a much simpler solution than the hack I put together a few years ago for my v3b5 installation. Just to make

Re: Keeping Track of An Email That Has Been Moved

2019-10-13 Thread Tellier Benoit
Hi Jerry, Globally, we expect users to rely on extensions mechanisms James provides, and not on DB schemas (that might change in the future!) I would advise you to rely on MailboxListeners (that receives events from users mailboxes) The Added event is here the one that interest you. You can

Keeping Track of An Email That Has Been Moved

2019-10-11 Thread Jerry Malcolm
I need a little more education... I understand that fundamentally IMAP and all mail storage is pretty much 'top down'.  The user starts at the top folder and drills down through sub folders until they locate the email in question.   And there are search engines that basically do the same