> First some background which may or may no be relevant. The way I handle > spam is for a server-side SpamAssassin process to file suspect messages > in a SPAM folder. For false negatives (i.e. undetected spam) I manually > move the offending messages to a subfolder of SPAM and periodically > process it by logging in to the server. > > Processing involves a little shell script on the server which calls > sa-learn on the contents of the subfolder. > > After that, I delete the contents of the subfolder using Evo. I then > expunge the subfolder to clean it out. > > For curiousity, I just checked on the server and the last bunch of spam > had not been deleted. Nevertheless, Evo shows the folder as empty. I > made sure Evo was set to Show Deleted Messages, and Show Hidden > Messages. I also made sure there was nothing in the Search box. > > I exited Evo and fired up Thunderbird. Sure enough, the messages are > still there. Go back to Evo and they don't appear. > > I've never seen this happen before and am not sure I can reproduce it, > which is why I'm giving so much detail. Probably this has nothing to do > with spam processing as such. (Note that Evo doesn't know I consider > these messages to be spam, as I don't use the Junk controls). > > It's worrying that an apparently deleted message is still present on the > server, *even after quitting and restarting Evo*. Is this another > caching bug or what?
Finally getting back to the original post... Puzzling. I never came across something like this. Sorry I can't tell you more, dude... :/ It would be great, if you can keep an eye on this. If this ever is reproducible, please file a bug report. ...guenther -- char *t="[EMAIL PROTECTED]"; main(){ char h,m=h=*t++,*x=t+2*h,c,i,l=*x,s=0; for (i=0;i<l;i++){ i%8? c<<=1: (c=*++x); c&128 && (s+=h); if (!(h>>=1)||!t[s+h]){ putchar(t[s]);h=m;s=0; }}} _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list Evolution-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list