Hi,
I am configuring a server with postfix and dovecot with virtual domains
and using quota. To implement quota followed the documentation of the
link http://wiki.dovecot.org/Quota/Dict, did not understand what you
mean the field "where_field = path" would be the path on the filesystem
of you
This is probably not the best place to ask this question; however, I
figured I had to start somewhere.
I want to write a sieve script that can sort incoming mail into
specific locations.
EXAMPLE:
require ["fileinto"];
if header :contains "X-Virus-Status" "Infected" {fileinto "SPAM"; stop;}
elsif
On 2010-03-23 9:17 AM, Timo Sirainen wrote:
> On 23.3.2010, at 11.42, Charles Marcus wrote:
>> On 2010-03-22 9:31 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>>> Dovecot has built in locking support for NFS storage.
>> But it has always been problematic, according to Timo. I think 2.0 is
>> supposed to help consider
Hi:
the problem was due to some links from openssl, but now I have the
following message:
Mar 23 10:55:17 mailer dovecot: [ID 583,609 mail.warning] imap-login:
Waiting for SSL parameter file ssl-parameters.dat
¿what is the meaning of that?
--
On 03/23/10 07:43, Brian Candler wrote:
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 05:42:02AM -0400, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 2010-03-22 9:31 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
Dovecot has built in locking support for NFS storage.
But it has always been problematic, according to Timo.
Have you got any references on thi
On 3/7/2010 2:43 PM, Timo Sirainen wrote:
> On 8.3.2010, at 0.39, Mark Sapiro wrote:
>
>> Mar 6 07:06:20 sbh16 postfix/smtpd[30273]: warning: SASL: Connect to
>> private/auth failed: Resource temporarily unavailable
>
>
> A bug most likely. I fixed several related issues already, maybe it's gon
Hi everyone:
when I try to run dovecot after modifying the dovecot.conf file I have
the following error messages:
Mar 23 09:56:52 mailer dovecot: [ID 583609 mail.info] Dovecot v1.2.10
starting up
Mar 23 09:56:52 mailer dovecot: [ID 583609 mail.info] Generating
Diffie-Hellman parameters for
On 14 Mar 2010, at 11:41, Leonardo Rodrigues wrote:
Em 14/03/2010 08:21, Sabahattin Gucukoglu escreveu:
>> I am starting fresh with a local repository of mails, which almost certainly
>> have duplicates in them. I am going to use maildirs, and ensure all mails
>> are input with CRLFs.
>>
>> The
On 23.3.2010, at 13.43, Brian Candler wrote:
> I have done some small-scale testing and it looks fine.
Stress testing by running imaptest for same user's same mailbox in 2+ different
servers (i.e. two NFS clients reading/writing same mailbox files) should show
up quickly what kind of errors you
On 23.3.2010, at 11.42, Charles Marcus wrote:
> On 2010-03-22 9:31 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>> Dovecot has built in locking support for NFS storage.
>
> But it has always been problematic, according to Timo. I think 2.0 is
> supposed to help considerably with NFS issues though,
No, v2.0 won't he
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 05:42:02AM -0400, Charles Marcus wrote:
> On 2010-03-22 9:31 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> > Dovecot has built in locking support for NFS storage.
>
> But it has always been problematic, according to Timo.
Have you got any references on this, apart from http://wiki.dovecot.or
Sabahattin Gucukoglu ha scritto:
> Hi all,
>
> Speaking of Debian, what relative position are the Debian Unstable
> (Sid) packages in to the latest "Bleeding edge" builds of RCS-based
> releases from the Wiki? If using Unstable is it recommended to stay
> or use the newer ones? I'd say it was pr
On 2010-03-22 9:31 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> Dovecot has built in locking support for NFS storage.
But it has always been problematic, according to Timo. I think 2.0 is
supposed to help considerably with NFS issues though, so if you choose
this route, I'd highly recommend you do your testing with
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010, Thomas Leuxner wrote:
--exec-mail is no longer needed. If you want for example start a imap
session, just enter the command: /usr/local/libexec/dovecot/imap
And you will see:
* PREAUTH [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 … Logged in as $USER
14 matches
Mail list logo