On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 02:59:31PM -0500, David T-G wrote: > ...and then Paul Brannan said... > % This solves #2, but not #1 :( > > Interesting. What does > > mutt -v > > show you? Do you have dotlocking available? It looks to me as though > mutt can only use fcntl locks but they are not supported on your system; > mutt is usually pretty good at figuring out how it should lock.
The relevant portion of mutt -v indicates: -HOMESPOOL +USE_SETGID +USE_DOTLOCK +USE_FCNTL -USE_FLOCK I tried using mutt_dotlock on a test file in my home directory (as suggested in the other thread), and it successfully created testfile.lock; mutt_dotlock -u testfile successfully removed the file as well. I've never used fcntl before, but a simple test application yields: fcntl: No locks available The program looks like this: int main() { int fd = open("foo", O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_WRONLY); struct flock l; l.l_type = F_WRLCK; l.l_whence = 0; l.l_start = 0; l.l_len = 0; l.l_pid = getpid(); if(fcntl(fd, F_SETLKW, &l) == -1) { perror("fcntl wr"); exit(1); } return 0; } This same program works in /tmp (which is non-nfs; the first run the program produces no output, and the second run the call to open() fails). Perhaps this is a problem of the client being able to lock over nfs but the server not? > If you want the messages to be deleted when you sync, set it to "yes" in > your macro; if not, leave it at "no" and forget about the macro. If you > want to be asked then just set it to ask-no and forget about the macro, > and when you usually don't want to delete (like when you change folders, > IIRC) just hit return twice (once when you find and choose your mailbox > and once to take the default "no"). That seems like such a hack, and is awfully inconvenient. How do most other mutt users handle deleting and purging messages? Does anyone else actually use delete=no? Paul