On 29/01/11 00:02, Reindl Harald wrote:
> Am 28.01.2011 23:44, schrieb Victor Duchovni:
>
>> On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 11:40:42PM +0100, Reindl Harald wrote:
>>
>>
>>> what i really not understand in this post is why the OP
>>> doens not change all his charset/collation to UTF8
>>> to avoid m
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 12:02:17AM +0100, Reindl Harald wrote:
> > The input may not be valid UTF8. Not all octet strings are valid
> > UTF8. Someone posted a solution using
>
> Yes but this seems not the problem as long the message is "mix of collations"
Fixing a tiny subset of use-cases is not
Am 28.01.2011 23:44, schrieb Victor Duchovni:
> On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 11:40:42PM +0100, Reindl Harald wrote:
>
>> what i really not understand in this post is why the OP
>> doens not change all his charset/collation to UTF8
>> to avoid mixing?
>
> The input may not be valid UTF8. Not all octet
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 11:40:42PM +0100, Reindl Harald wrote:
> what i really not understand in this post is why the OP
> doens not change all his charset/collation to UTF8
> to avoid mixing?
The input may not be valid UTF8. Not all octet strings are valid
UTF8. Someone posted a solution using
what i really not understand in this post is why the OP
doens not change all his charset/collation to UTF8
to avoid mixing?
Am 28.01.2011 23:37, schrieb John Fawcett:
> On 28/01/11 21:56, Wietse Venema wrote:
>> John Fawcett:
>>
>>> On 28/01/11 13:12, Wietse Venema wrote:
>>>
John Faw
On 28/01/11 21:56, Wietse Venema wrote:
> John Fawcett:
>
>> On 28/01/11 13:12, Wietse Venema wrote:
>>
>>> John Fawcett:
>>>
>>> If UTF8SMTP support is introduced in Postfix, what rules should Postfix
>>>
follow for interpreting email addresses? That if there is at least one
John Fawcett:
> On 28/01/11 13:12, Wietse Venema wrote:
> > John Fawcett:
> >
> > If UTF8SMTP support is introduced in Postfix, what rules should Postfix
> >> follow for interpreting email addresses? That if there is at least one
> >> non-ascii character, the string is treated as utf8 else it is
On 28/01/11 13:12, Wietse Venema wrote:
> John Fawcett:
>
> If UTF8SMTP support is introduced in Postfix, what rules should Postfix
>> follow for interpreting email addresses? That if there is at least one
>> non-ascii character, the string is treated as utf8 else it is treated as
>> ascii? What
John Fawcett:
> On 27/01/11 13:19, Wietse Venema wrote:
> > John Fawcett:
> >
> >> Claudio
> >> the problem is happening because your column definition for "domain"
> >> column has character set latin1 (which by default has collation
> >> latin_swedish_ci) and the data being passed from postfix
On 27/01/11 13:19, Wietse Venema wrote:
> John Fawcett:
>
>> Claudio
>> the problem is happening because your column definition for "domain"
>> column has character set latin1 (which by default has collation
>> latin_swedish_ci) and the data being passed from postfix is in utf8
>> (which by defa
John Fawcett:
> Claudio
> the problem is happening because your column definition for "domain"
> column has character set latin1 (which by default has collation
> latin_swedish_ci) and the data being passed from postfix is in utf8
> (which by default has collation utf8_general_ci).
Actually, there
On 26/01/11 12:05, Claudio Prono wrote:
> Uhm, i have another information about that case: the mail are sended to
> postfix from an antispam appliance (Symantec). Can be a problem of
> config of that antispam results illegal characters are sended to postfix?
>
> Anyway, here is my conf
>
> user = p
Claudio Prono wrote:
> Uhm, i have another information about that case: the mail are sended to
> postfix from an antispam appliance (Symantec). Can be a problem of
> config of that antispam results illegal characters are sended to postfix?
> Can i add something to solve that problem?
That is possi
Jeroen Geilman ha scritto:
> On 1/25/11 1:16 PM, Mark Martinec wrote:
>>> How does MySQL know that the query parameter(s) should be UTF-8
>>> and not ISO LATIN mumble or something else?
>> By a client executing a command:
>>SET NAMES 'utf8'
>> as far as I can tell.
>>
>> SET NAMES indicates w
On 1/25/11 1:16 PM, Mark Martinec wrote:
How does MySQL know that the query parameter(s) should be UTF-8
and not ISO LATIN mumble or something else?
By a client executing a command:
SET NAMES 'utf8'
as far as I can tell.
SET NAMES indicates what character set the client will use
to send SQL
> How does MySQL know that the query parameter(s) should be UTF-8
> and not ISO LATIN mumble or something else?
By a client executing a command:
SET NAMES 'utf8'
as far as I can tell.
SET NAMES indicates what character set the client will use
to send SQL statements to the server.
http://dev.mys
Claudio Prono:
>
>
> >> There is also an initiative to allow UTF-8 characters to appear in SMTP
> >> (RFC 5336 and related documents). A malformed UTF-8 could easily
> >> appear there, despite being prohibited. If an SQL database would
> >> declare an e-mail address field of an UTF-8 data type, a
>> There is also an initiative to allow UTF-8 characters to appear in SMTP
>> (RFC 5336 and related documents). A malformed UTF-8 could easily
>> appear there, despite being prohibited. If an SQL database would
>> declare an e-mail address field of an UTF-8 data type, a lookup could
>> abort when
On 1/24/11 8:07 PM, Mark Martinec wrote:
Jeroen Geilman wrote:
Urgh. Which RFC are you reading ?
I quote:
Systems MUST NOT define mailboxes in such a way as to require the use
in SMTP of non-ASCII characters
True (tell it to generators of malicious mail or just incompetent sending sw).
This
Mark Martinec:
> Jeroen Geilman wrote:
>
> > Urgh. Which RFC are you reading ?
> > I quote:
> > Systems MUST NOT define mailboxes in such a way as to require the use
> > in SMTP of non-ASCII characters
>
> True (tell it to generators of malicious mail or just incompetent sending sw).
> This does
On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 08:07:33PM +0100, Mark Martinec wrote:
> There is also an initiative to allow UTF-8 characters to appear in SMTP
> (RFC 5336 and related documents).
I looked at these RFCs, I am not encouraged by what I see. They look
deeply flawed...
--
Viktor.
Jeroen Geilman wrote:
> Urgh. Which RFC are you reading ?
> I quote:
> Systems MUST NOT define mailboxes in such a way as to require the use
> in SMTP of non-ASCII characters
True (tell it to generators of malicious mail or just incompetent sending sw).
This does not prevent illegal data to appe
On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 06:51:09PM +0100, Jeroen Geilman wrote:
>> Right, as it should be. Envelope addresses are not associated with any
>> character set according to RFC 5321, they are just strings of octets.
>
> Urgh. Which RFC are you reading ?
Pedantically correct, but useless. Mark is well
On 1/24/11 4:52 PM, Mark Martinec wrote:
What MySQL makes of such data is up to the MySQL client and server
libraries, but Postfix does not promise that the input will be well-formed
UTF-8, or ISO Latin or anything of the sort. Just an array of bytes.
Right, as it should be. Envelope addresses a
Mark Martinec ha scritto:
>> What MySQL makes of such data is up to the MySQL client and server
>> libraries, but Postfix does not promise that the input will be well-formed
>> UTF-8, or ISO Latin or anything of the sort. Just an array of bytes.
>>
>
> Right, as it should be. Envelope addres
> What MySQL makes of such data is up to the MySQL client and server
> libraries, but Postfix does not promise that the input will be well-formed
> UTF-8, or ISO Latin or anything of the sort. Just an array of bytes.
Right, as it should be. Envelope addresses are not associated with any
character
On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 10:17:25AM +0100, Claudio Prono wrote:
> On a postfix server i have some strange things in logs files, and i
> don't know what's happening.
>
> Jan 22 23:54:07 mail postfix/trivial-rewrite[10285]: warning: mysql
> query failed: Illegal mix of collations (latin1_swedish_ci,
Am 24.01.2011 14:17, schrieb Claudio Prono:
> - How i can force UTF8 for all the tables?
alter table will be your friend -> mysql manual
> - If i change all into UTF8, can be some data loss or some risk at all?
normally not because there is nothing in LATIN1 which is not supported
in UTF8, in
Reindl Harald ha scritto:
> I think this can be a problem and would recommend to
> force UTF8 for all tables, if there are only LATIN1 data
> they should not be touched in any way and if all is UTF8
> there is no point of mixing
>
> Well, normally we use LATIN1 historical for some thounsand
> tab
I think this can be a problem and would recommend to
force UTF8 for all tables, if there are only LATIN1 data
they should not be touched in any way and if all is UTF8
there is no point of mixing
Well, normally we use LATIN1 historical for some thounsand
tables but the whole database for postfix/do
Reindl Harald ha scritto:
> show create table tablename;
>
>
Ok, something strange is come out.
Here is the list of tables on postfix database:
+---+
| Tables_in_postfix |
+---+
| admin |
| alias |
| alias_domain
Am 24.01.2011 11:15, schrieb Claudio Prono:
>
>
> Reindl Harald ha scritto:
>> collation is normally a table property
>> your mysql-tables charset should be uTF8
>>
>>
> How i can check this?
show create table tablename;
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Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Reindl Harald ha scritto:
> collation is normally a table property
> your mysql-tables charset should be uTF8
>
>
How i can check this?
> Am 24.01.2011 10:17, schrieb Claudio Prono:
>
>> Hello all,
>>
>> On a postfix server i have some strange things in logs files, and i
>> don't know what'
collation is normally a table property
your mysql-tables charset should be uTF8
Am 24.01.2011 10:17, schrieb Claudio Prono:
> Hello all,
>
> On a postfix server i have some strange things in logs files, and i
> don't know what's happening.
>
> Jan 22 23:54:07 mail postfix/trivial-rewrite[10285]:
Hello all,
On a postfix server i have some strange things in logs files, and i
don't know what's happening.
Jan 22 23:54:07 mail postfix/trivial-rewrite[10285]: warning: mysql
query failed: Illegal mix of collations (latin1_swedish_ci,IMPLICIT) and
(utf8_unicode_ci,COERCIBLE) for operation '='
Ja
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