> This sounds like that the timestamps have to be "recalculated" from the mail
> headers of the emails to get the correct timestamps back on them. I typically
> use imapsync for this and imapsync has a integrated option / switch for this
> to do this automatically.
Cyrus really recalculated the me
Quoting
> From what System (Cyrus / non-Cyrus, Version ) to what System (Version) did
> you migrate,
> and how was the migration done? (rsync, scp, cyrus replication, via imap).
>
> How are the mails sorted in roundcube (Date, UID)?
The old server is running cyrus-imap @2.2.13, and the new on
IMAP provides two kinds of timestamp: the time the message was placed into
the mailbox, and the time in the Date header line. In a typical inbox and
sent mailbox the two are the same order. In other folders it might not be
the same. I think Roundcube uses the first kind of timestamp, which for
cyru
Hi,
Quoting Hiago Prata :
Sorry, forgot to mention I'm using Roundcube as client.
Em 2018-02-05 11:26, Hiago Prata escreveu:
Hi!
After the migration of all users I was supposed to migrate to a new
server, some of them reported that in some of their mailboxes
subdirectories the display o
Am Montag, 5. Februar 2018, 15:26:59 CET schrieb Hiago Prata:
> After the migration of all users I was supposed to migrate to a new
> server, some of them reported that in some of their mailboxes
> subdirectories the display order of the messages is all messed up, with
> messages received or sent m
Sorry, forgot to mention I'm using Roundcube as client.
Em 2018-02-05 11:26, Hiago Prata escreveu:
> Hi!
>
> After the migration of all users I was supposed to migrate to a new server,
> some of them reported that in some of their mailboxes subdirectories the
> display order of the messages
Hi!
After the migration of all users I was supposed to migrate to a new
server, some of them reported that in some of their mailboxes
subdirectories the display order of the messages is all messed up, with
messages received or sent months ago being shown before them most recent
ones. I thought it