Ok. Same thing... you must also assign Access Rights to individual users or allow SETACL to a privileged user who can then manage ACLs from their ACL-friendly MUA.

Share folder from DBMA User Account Window ..
Then go to Main screen and Select ACL....
Select the folder you just shared...
Type the user_idnr of the user you want to have access to that folder. Select radio button "new user" and press "Commit".
Alternatively read help para below... for a different approach.

Help is at: http://localhost/dbmailadministrator/DBMA_help.htm#acl
or:
http://library.mobrien.com/dbmailadministrator/DBMA_ACLs.htm

...from
Using ACLs and Shared Folders
a.. Sharing a Users' Folders This is normally done with an ACL-friendly MUA but DBMA can help you create much of what the user can do from their MUA if it is easier to do it for them than explain how; or in the event that your user has made a mistake and you are on a repair mission. In the drop-down display of available ACL-eligible folders in the User Account Window you will see all of the "#Public" folders plus all of the users folders. They are all eligible for sharing. Example for User Account Window for: Bob
           #Public/common
           bob/INBOX
           bob/Trash
           bob/Sent
           bob/shared
a.. If you select and add a set of Access Rights to "bob/shared", it will be available across the system under #Users but no one will be able to share it unless you assign Access Rights to additional users; or allow bob SETACL (Admin) rights for that folder and he can do it all for you. a.. You manage individual user rights from the User Account Window and manage #Public and #User rights from the global Access Control List Tools (select ACL on the Main Screen). Assigning rights to #Users/folder can be done with the DBMA Access Control List Tools after the #User/folder has been shared from the User Account Window. The first step is to go to the User Account Window, create the shared folder by assigning the owner full Access Rights. Next you return to the DBMA ACL Tools and select the new shared #User/folder you created and one after another add the users need ing acces rights on this folder.



----- Original Message ----- From: "A" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "DBMail mailinglist" <dbmail@dbmail.org>
Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2005 3:49 PM
Subject: Re: [Dbmail] DBMA+ACL problem


M. J. [Mike] O'Brien wrote:

Hi Aron:
Thunderbird works like a charm as a very IMAP_ACL-friendly MUA.

Hello,

In DBMA you need to give your intended users permission on #Public/folder, after you have created that folder, to allow them to at least lookup, read, see, write, insert and post (and create, delete, and/or administer if you like)

Oke, there is no problem with #Public/ but I wanted to ask for #Users/. If I share a folder of a user, there is nothing in the subscription list of thunderbird. I shared a folder of user1 and I gave sufficent rights for user2 but user2 has no new folder to subscribe in the list in thunderbird.

A.
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