On Wed, 2017-11-15 at 21:53 +0000, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > Unfortunately the problem has returned. I'll send you the .config files > privately anyway.
Hi, thanks, you can delete them now. Te only difference with respect of the server configuration is with the USB account SMTP, it currently is STARTTLS on port 25, while it used to be TLS on port 465. Otherwise the server settings are the same. That means that the problem will be somewhere else. Would you mind to open a bug in GNOME bugzilla? I'd start with Evolution and we'll move it elsewhere, if needed. A live debugging session on IRC [1] would be also useful, that might speed things up for sure. It would require having preinstalled debuginfo packages, something like: # dnf install evolution-debuginfo evolution-data-server-debuginfo \ glib2-debuginfo glib-networking-debuginfo \ --enablerepo=fedora-debuginfo --enablerepo=updates-debuginfo Only make sure the installed binary package version matches the version of the debuginfo packages. Then I would start with: $ export G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all $ CAMEL_DEBUG=imapx evolution &>log.txt Then I'd be interested in the screen shot of the evolution window, mainly part of the folder tree and there the connection icons on the right of the account names. Everything else can be hidden/missing, that's not interesting to me. You can try similarly with the Calendar view, where you might see your Google calendars and their connectivity state. I'm wondering whether anything did not get stuck in a dedicated thread, thus also checking backtrace of the evolution process after a bit of time, especially when the status bar will be empty, might be useful. You can get the backtrace with command like this: $ gdb --batch --ex "t a a bt" -pid=`pidof evolution` &>bt.txt Please check the bt.txt for any private information, like passwords, email address, server addresses,... I usually search for "pass" at least (quotes for clarity only). The imapx log.txt can also contain plenty of private information, including your folder names and eventually messages you receive, thus be careful before sharing. I think that's it for the starter. I can also provide a little test program to see what GNetworkMonitor does on your machine, but let's wait with it for now. Bye, Milan [1] https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Evolution#Online_Support _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list