Jacob S. wrote:
Has anybody seen this before?
I have not experienced this problem before, but I have seen several
threads here on Debian-user that resolved it by uninstalling the
php4-imap package.
Alternatively, you should be able to simply disable php4-imap in your
php.ini file to see if it is t
On Wed, 16 Jun 2004 09:18:07 +0800, Jason Lim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Dear Gilles ,
>
> I'll try as well... hope we can find a solution.
>
> I have a few Redhat Linux 9 servers with Hyperthreading CPUs, and no
> problem whatsoever. I think they run Apache 2, so maybe that is the
> solutio
On Wed, 16 Jun 2004 09:18:07 +0800, Jason Lim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Dear Gilles ,
>
> I'll try as well... hope we can find a solution.
>
> I have a few Redhat Linux 9 servers with Hyperthreading CPUs, and no
> problem whatsoever. I think they run Apache 2, so maybe that is the
> solutio
Johannes Formann wrote:
Franz Georg Köhler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I bett exim can't read /etc/shadow, make it readable to exim, oder
compile and install pam_exim.
IIRC, you need to run Exim as root to enable PAM functionality.
Regards,
Maarten
Johannes Formann wrote:
Franz Georg Köhler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I bett exim can't read /etc/shadow, make it readable to exim, oder
compile and install pam_exim.
IIRC, you need to run Exim as root to enable PAM functionality.
Regards,
Maarten
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Joe Emenaker wrote:
Yeah... well... I've already moved every other machine I deal with over
to Courier. I like it because it's one-stop-shopping for all of my mail
needs (ie, smtp, pop, and imap modules as well as an ssl version of
each), because it supports authenticated smtp (which I understa
Joe Emenaker wrote:
Yeah... well... I've already moved every other machine I deal with over
to Courier. I like it because it's one-stop-shopping for all of my mail
needs (ie, smtp, pop, and imap modules as well as an ssl version of
each), because it supports authenticated smtp (which I underst
Tarragon Allen wrote:
On Tuesday 21 October 2003 13:43, Rod Rodolico wrote:
Guess is boils down to this. When I update the address of
mail.dailydata.net, it can take up to 72 hours for that change to perculate
throughout the net, so I'm assuming some places will still try to send to
the old IP and,
Tarragon Allen wrote:
On Tuesday 21 October 2003 13:43, Rod Rodolico wrote:
Guess is boils down to this. When I update the address of
mail.dailydata.net, it can take up to 72 hours for that change to perculate
throughout the net, so I'm assuming some places will still try to send to
the old IP and
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