On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 11:07:41AM +0200, Thomas Roessler wrote:
> On 2001-09-06 00:51:56 -0400, Derek Martin wrote:
> 
> >On some systems where I run mutt, it works as you would expect. 
> >On others, after I read all the new messages in a folder which it 
> >marked as having new mail, and then try to change to the next 
> >folder with new mail, but it would send me back into the same 
> >folder, thinking that there was still new mail there.  Going back 
> >out to the index also reveals that mutt thinks there's still new 
> >mail in the folder, but re-entering the folder shows that there 
> >isn't any new mail.
> 
> Are the clocks on all computers involved synchronized using ntp?

Well... from my original post:

On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 12:51:56AM -0400, Derek Martin wrote:
> Hey all,
[SNIP]
> All machines are running with the same binary from NFS, accessing the
> same IMAP server.  No two clients are started at the same time, so
> it's not a locking problem.  All machines are synchronized via NTP, so
> the system time on all 5 machines is within about 10 ms.


On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 07:51:41AM -0400, Brendan Cully wrote:
> First of all, for anything IMAP-related I'd strongly recommend you pick
> up the latest mutt beta (currently 1.3.22.1), since that code has
> changed quite a lot.

Thanks.   I'll give that a shot...  How do I get it though?  I only see links
for the stable 1.2 tree.

> Second, what do you mean by 'shared data'? 

I mean stuff that mutt's "make install" would ordinarily put in /etc
is in /nfs/etc (shared), and anything it would usually put in
/usr/share is in /nfs/share (shared).

> Are the mailboxes you're accessing all on IMAP?

Yes.


> And finally, what server are you using? (you can find this out by
> telnetting to the host and port (143 by default) of your server and
> reading the welcome line).

UW IMAP.  Or, if the actual welcome line makes a difference to you,
it's here:

  * OK myhostname IMAP4rev1 v12.264 server ready


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Derek Martin          |   Unix/Linux geek
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-- 
---------------------------------------------------
Derek Martin          |   Unix/Linux geek
[EMAIL PROTECTED]    |   GnuPG Key ID: 0x81CFE75D
Retrieve my public key at http://pgp.mit.edu

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