Hi,
./imap -O -o mail=maildir:/tmp/vmail/domain/user:LAYOUT=fs
Wow, thats a really cool way to debug/test mailboxes, is this documented
somewhere?
What does -O do, any other interesting options?
Micha Krause
Hello all,
I had a quick look at the horde site and noticed that
horde is being advertised as, let's say, "smartphone friendly".
Does anyone know if the newest horde version can "talk" to
smart phones in regards to e-mails ?
In other words, can a user owning a smartphone get his/her
e-mails on
Am 05.10.2012 14:00, schrieb Spyros Tsiolis:
> Hello all,
>
> I had a quick look at the horde site and noticed that
> horde is being advertised as, let's say, "smartphone friendly".
>
> Does anyone know if the newest horde version can "talk" to
> smart phones in regards to e-mails ?
>
> In ot
Quoting Reindl Harald :
Am 05.10.2012 14:00, schrieb Spyros Tsiolis:
Hello all,
I had a quick look at the horde site and noticed that
horde is being advertised as, let's say, "smartphone friendly".
Does anyone know if the newest horde version can "talk" to
smart phones in regards to e-mails
On 5.10.2012, at 10.45, Micha Krause wrote:
>> ./imap -O -o mail=maildir:/tmp/vmail/domain/user:LAYOUT=fs
>
> Wow, thats a really cool way to debug/test mailboxes, is this documented
> somewhere?
No. The -O, -o, -k and some other options should be put into some new
global.inc where it gets inc
Am 05.10.2012 16:17, schrieb Patrick Domack:
>> each smartphone these days has a mail-client like K9 on
>> android and can access imap/exchange directly - why should
>> horde be involved here als additional layer?
>
> Many reasons for this, I personally use it for contact and calender sync, and
Am 05.10.2012 14:00, schrieb Spyros Tsiolis:
> Hello all,
>
> I had a quick look at the horde site and noticed that
> horde is being advertised as, let's say, "smartphone friendly".
>
> Does anyone know if the newest horde version can "talk" to
> smart phones in regards to e-mails ?
yes since v
Hello list,
I've just finished to install Dovecot and things seems to work so far. After
some little efforts though.
My version is 2.0.20
Question 1:
I'm trying to tighten the security a little bit and added in dovecot.conf
login_trusted_networks = 192.168.1.0/30
Then restarted Dovecot
My c
Hi,
> I
> 'm trying to tighten the security a little bit and added in dovecot.conf
> login_trusted_networks = 192.168.1.0/30
> Then restarted Dovecot
>
>
> My client has the IP 192.168.1.20 and it's still able to retrieve emails. I
> expected it to be forbidden. Am I missing something ?
My int
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi,
I have a dual stack server with Dovecot 2.1.10 listening on v4 and v6
Dovecot has a Comodo SSL certificate issued via NameCheap that works as
expected with IPv4
in 10-ssl.conf I have enabled these configuraction directives:
ssl = yes
ssl_cert =
On 05/10/2012 15:56, Robert Schetterer wrote:
Am 05.10.2012 14:00, schrieb Spyros Tsiolis:
In other words, can a user owning a smartphone get his/her
e-mails on it apart from the webpage ?
horde 5 acts as active-sync server
for mail , calendar, adressbook ,tasks ,notes
syncml with funambol
Timo Sirainen wrote:
> -i changes to dovecot.conf used by the given instance name
This does not seem to work, at least not with version 2.1.10:
mail01:~# doveadm instance list
path
name last
Luigi Rosa wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi,
I have a dual stack server with Dovecot 2.1.10 listening on v4 and v6
Dovecot has a Comodo SSL certificate issued via NameCheap that works as
expected with IPv4
in 10-ssl.conf I have enabled these configuraction directives:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Nick Rosier said the following on 05/10/12 22:47:
>> How do you enable this in Thunderbird? If by "enabling IPv6" you mean you
>> put in the IPv6 address in stead of the hostname, that's probably where
>> you're wrong. The certificate contains your ho
On Oct 5, 2012, at 10:20 PM, Luigi Rosa wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Nick Rosier said the following on 05/10/12 22:47:
>
>>> How do you enable this in Thunderbird? If by "enabling IPv6" you mean you
>>> put in the IPv6 address in stead of the hostname, that's pr
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Sean Kamath said the following on 06/10/12 07:44:
>> Oct 6 07:13:44 mail dovecot: imap-login: Login:
>> user=, method=CRAM-MD5, rip=10.0.0.155,
>> lip=10.0.0.254, mpid=17812, TLS, session=
>
> And do you have a PTR record for 10.0.0.254?
No, no PTR
16 matches
Mail list logo