On Fri, Feb 06, 2009 at 11:49:07AM +0100, Michael Monnerie wrote: > On Donnerstag 05 Februar 2009 Victor Duchovni wrote: > > Configure your Postgres database to use a LATIN-1 encoding. WIth this > > you get a single-byte per character encoding and all byte patterns > > are valid strings. > > The problem is IMAP and POP couldn't convert entries to the client's > charset of course. That's what we have UTF-8 for. >
If the Postfix client declares its encoding to be LATIN-1 and the database is UTF-8, what problem are you seeing? All LATIN-1 input is representable in UTF-8, so the database should be able to process all Postfix queries, and return ASCII answers without any issues. If not, complain to the Postgres developers... -- Viktor. Disclaimer: off-list followups get on-list replies or get ignored. Please do not ignore the "Reply-To" header. To unsubscribe from the postfix-users list, visit http://www.postfix.org/lists.html or click the link below: <mailto:majord...@postfix.org?body=unsubscribe%20postfix-users> If my response solves your problem, the best way to thank me is to not send an "it worked, thanks" follow-up. If you must respond, please put "It worked, thanks" in the "Subject" so I can delete these quickly.