Because not every email has one. RFC5322 doesn’t require them.
On Jan 15, 2021, at 6:30 PM, @lbutlr wrote:
> On 15 Jan 2021, at 10:57, Ron Garret wrote:
>> Is there any way to obtain the IMAP GUiD of a message that is being
>> processed by a sieve script? I’m writing a filter that needs to t
On 15 Jan 2021, at 10:57, Ron Garret wrote:
> Is there any way to obtain the IMAP GUiD of a message that is being processed
> by a sieve script? I’m writing a filter that needs to to keep track of
> message identities as they are moved around between folders. I could add my
> own id header, b
On 14 Jan 2021, at 08:30, Filidor Wiese wrote:
> When a user has a % sign in their password, the following error occurs:
Were you storing PLAIN TEXT passwords?
--
Some humans would do anything to see if it was possible to do it. If
you put a large switch in some cave somewhere, with a s
Hi all,
I'm trying to replace a shared NFS (rock solid, btw) with a replicated two-node
setup. However I've been
struggling with an issue connected in some way with the replication between the
two servers (master-master).
The issue is once a folder (say "aaa") is created one one account, it ca
Is there any way to obtain the IMAP GUiD of a message that is being processed
by a sieve script? I’m writing a filter that needs to to keep track of message
identities as they are moved around between folders. I could add my own id
header, but I’d rather not have to reinvent that wheel.
Thank
I guess I was indeed correct. As message body is the part of mail index dovecot
indeed sends all those binary messages as a part of message body:
> doveadm fetch -u test.u...@interpont.com "body" mailbox KS2 uid 2 | wc --bytes
> 21549696
This affects FTS indexing dramatically I guess…
> On 15.
I could find messages causing problems as solr log indeed shows the IMAP UID.
Reducing batch_size to a single message I could identify one of those messages
causing the problem.
Now I can confirm the following behaviour: there are some SINGLE messages where
60 seconds is NOT ENOUGH to index.