It turns that I had the timezone set incorrectly on the server, had it
set to "CST" instead of "US/Central." After re-linking /etc/localtime
to a timezone that actually exists, James started showing the correct
time for all users.
Interesting (but not too surprising) that Thunderbird handled this
properly. It was only the users who have Outlook as their client were
having a problem.
Thanks for the link -- it has a bunch of useful info, and ultimately led
me back to my error.
Stefano Bagnara wrote:
Can you post the full headers?
Email headers contain a full "localized" date and should be valid all
around the world.
What email client do your users use?
Furthermore, check this out: http://minaret.biz/tips/timezone.html
Marco Bartholomew wrote:
I recently migrated a James installation (2.2.0) to a different
server (both Linux) and all has gone well except that some users
report that their mail is arriving with a timestamp that is 5 hours
earlier than the actual time. My mail is arriving with the correct
timestamp.
I checked the server and the time is set correctly, but when I did a
tail on the James smtpserver log, I noticed that the entries were
coming in as five hours earlier.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]