Since you already mentioned in another post, that you managed to get Evo into a sane state again by reverting to a recent backup, this issue kind of is resolved already.
Anyway, I'd like to take the opportunity to write up some details about issues like these. On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 21:26 +0100, Peter Barnes wrote: [...] > I put in the account the details and got back to normal. The email is > in Trash so I guess it may be possible to let you have it - but I've > gone and got myself back into the problem again! To see if the > offending email was there, in the View menu I switched off Preview and > switched on Message headers, then opened the Trash folder. > > It was there and I clicked it once - no problem. Clicked it twice to > view it and got the warning message and could only close Evo. Of course. Displaying the mail caused the crash before -- and you just opened the mail in an external window, displaying it, by the double click. > I opened Evo again and decided the best thing was to ask you what to > do with the message. But that's when I went wrong - I guess I'm > getting tired. To revert to normal, I went to the View menu and > switched Preview on and Message headers off. But I forgot I still had > the Trash folder set and the "bad" email was still selected in the > list! > > I've used the commands again as above: [...] > > but they don't work now. When I start Evo, the Preview pane is still > open and the warning message appears and freezes everything. Do I need > different commands because the Trash folder is open? > > When I get Evo back to normal I will forward the offending email if > you can explain the best (safest!) way to do it. There is no special command needed for the Trash folder. The issue is, that this option now is stored on a per folder basis, rather than globally only. Recovering from a mail causing Evo to crash =========================================== As has been mentioned before, the first step is to disable the global (pre)view option. With the (pre)view pane disabled, Evo will not render (display) the currently selected mail when started, thus avoiding displaying the mail that crashes Evo. $ gconftool-2 --set /apps/evolution/mail/display/show_preview --type bool 0 However, this will *not* solve this always, unfortunately. When toggling the (pre)view pane, Evo can get into a state where it maintains this information on a per folder basis [1]. If this is the case, you can find the per folder setting being stored in the .cmeta file accompanying the mail folder. Local mails are stored in the ~/.evolution/mail/local/ directory, which is pretty much what you see under the "On This Computer" node. Every mail folder (like Inbox) got a file there named exactly as the folder. Note: This file holds your actual mails! Be careful with those files. Beside that, there are a couple of files with added extensions, like the Inbox.* ones. Those files hold meta and indexing data only, the latter being recreated if missing. In this case, we are interested in the *.cmeta files, which hold per folder states like a saved search or this (pre)view setting we are after. If the FOLDER.cmeta file for a mail folder named FOLDER maintains such a per folder state, the *.cmeta file will contain the string "show_preview", which you can check for if you like. Now, where to find those files exactly? As already mentioned, for the average local mail folder, these .cmeta files can be found in the ~/.evolution/mail/local/ directory. If you are looking for a particular folder that is a subfolder, just dig deeper into the SUBFOLDER.sbd/ directory, for any subfolder named SUBFOLDER... In case of the Search Folders (vFolder), this is slightly different. For your tree of custom Search Folders, you can find them in the directory ~/.evolution/mail/vfolder/. The (system internal) special Trash and Junk vFolders are a little different yet again: Their meta data is stored in ~/.evolution/mail/local/.#evolution.sbd/ Now that's where we want to go. You can find the Trash.cmeta file in there. If the global disabling of the (pre)view pane does not work, we need to disable the global option again (see the gconftool-2 command above) and get rid of the .cmeta file which is in our way. (That should be the .cmeta file for the mail folder that was last opened.) Starting Evo after doing both, should result in the (pre)view pane now finally disabled. Since I was talking about recovering from a crashing mail in general: Now is the time to save (File / Save Message) the offending mail for later autopsy, and deleting it -- and probably emptying the trash (File / Empty Trash) to really get rid of the little bugger that caused so much trouble. I hope this will be helpful for others, too. Man, I need to find some time to collect and review all those articles I have written in the past. Plus some that still are on my todo list... ...guenther [1] Which really is useful when dealing with a lot of mail folders and mails, but this is quite off-topic here. ;) -- 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