I fully agree. Yesterday Thomas supported me and found out some things that 
cause these endless loops and that need to be fixed. Meanwhile I was advices to 
set up the account as activesync but don't set it to push but to pull (15 
minutes). This seem to work. Hope that we will soon get a fix ...



> Am 23.01.2015 um 12:28 schrieb Petr Mandelík <p...@mandelik.com>:
> 
> 1) Works. But I have another mailbox on MS Exchange server with Push enables 
> and it nevers falls in endless loop. Therefore there must be something wrong 
> with SOGo.
> 2) It was me who wrote about NAT. Now after many days of testing and many 
> other combinations of  SOGo parameters I must say the problem with endless 
> loop is much more complex and unpredictable. It is just my personal empirical 
> observation but definitely there is no direct relation between parameters and 
> endless loop. Sometimes it falls to endless loop even after another action. 
> For example after adding new entry to calendar on my laptop. I think I found 
> following workaround...if I switch off task syncing on my iPhone for a while 
> and again switch it on, the communication "heartbeat" will slow down and goes 
> back to the limits according SOGo parameters. In my opinion there must be 
> something wrong in sogo deamon. Meaning how sogo server handles changes and 
> pushing them to EAS device. Nevertheless even the setup of my iPhone has an 
> impact on it. Maybe...just my hypothesis...when I re-enable syncing of 
> tasks...SOGo will do some kind of initial sync which synchronize correct way 
> my iPhone. After this action it works for a while.
> 3) EAS brings very significant advantage to common users...easy setup.
> 
> PM
> 
> 
> 
>>> 
>>> I tried different iOs devices, different servers (debian, Ubuntu), the 
>>> latest
>>> nighty build of SOGo, nginx and apache, all without success. That makes SOGo
>>> Activesync unusable for me.
>>> 
>>> Any ideas concerning the reason?
>> 
>> There have been quite a lot of suggestions regarding this on mailing list, 
>> try searching the Archives.
>> 
>> My advice would be:
>> 
>> 1. Disable Push and use Fetch as email retrieval method (every 15 min). This 
>> should improve your battery life dramatically
>> 2. There has been someone on mailing list mentioning that if there is 
>> another device behind the same NAT taking to your IMAP server (e.g. 
>> Thunderbird) at the the same time as your EAS client it’ll fool the server 
>> into the endless loop (some can confirm this?)
>> 3. Don’t use EAS on iOS. Since iOS has built in IMAP, CalDAV and CardDAV 
>> support I see no reason to use EAS at all (other then ease of initial 
>> configuration). You can achieve the same results with separate mail, 
>> calendar and contacts account, EAS on iOS does not bring any advantage over 
>> that (quite the opposite).
>> 
>> Best Regards
>> Martin.--
>> users@sogo.nu
>> https://inverse.ca/sogo/lists
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> users@sogo.nu
> https://inverse.ca/sogo/lists
-- 
users@sogo.nu
https://inverse.ca/sogo/lists

Reply via email to