Yes, you are right.  The problems are not of technical nature.  The reason 
seems to be some sort of fear (and "admins").
We have all we need.  We have the old dovecot config, we have the mdbox files 
and the complete directory structure.  We are simply not allowed to do all the 
stuff on the live system.  Even if dsync backup exists that does not modify 
anything.  Currently it is planned that the real conversion will take place on 
a weekend.  We are setting up an environment that enables us to do that (how 
well does it work, how long will it take).  They are only around 500 users and 
ca 4TB (incl public folders).  I don't see a problem with that.  And if they 
feel some sort of fear, then I can understand it (except the "admins" who 
should know better).  We do what the customer wants us to do.  And yes, they 
pay pretty well for working on weekends.

What I would like to do is set up the real new machine with everything - the 
new live system.  Put all the mdbox files/structures into a directory and run 
the conversion for each user.  So the first question is if the mdbox files can 
really be "simple files in folders" or if they have to be "hosted" by an imap 
server, too.  (As I understood, the destination can be our final imap server.)  
And I believe we can have the source in the filesystem (what would be mach 
faster).  The other question is if we can run some of these conversion in 
parallel?  I would say "why not".



> Gesendet: Sonntag, 14. August 2022 um 18:24 Uhr
> Von: "Steve Litt" <sl...@troubleshooters.com>
> An: dovecot@dovecot.org
> Betreff: Re: convert mdbox to maildir
>
> On Sat, 2022-08-13 at 18:36 +0200, lutz.niede...@gmx.net wrote:
> > 
> > The real problem is that we must not use the running, old dovecot 
> > installation. 
> > So we are not able to connect to the old server, pull all folders and mails 
> > and
> > create a new maildir structure.  Currently, we can't do anything against 
> > it.  What
> > we get are the users' mdbox files.
> 
> Why not? Is the old server broken beyond repair? If not, is there an actual 
> reason
> behind, or is it just a arbitrary decision capable of being swayed by facts? 
> Is the
> customer willing to pay for the large increase in time to rebuild the whole 
> thing?
> 
> Will they at least let you rsync the old server's entire mdbox structure to a
> machine where you can do your conversion? I don't know, to me their act of 
> giving
> you some files and saying "it's your problem now" seems arbitrary, and you 
> should
> charge them a lot of money.
> 
> 
> > 
> > Is there any way to convert mdbox files and structures to maildir directly 
> > from
> > filesystem?
> > Or do we have to build a copy of the old machine (dovecot only, or -maybe 
> > better-
> > a vm) and then use doveadm backup?
> > Or is it ok to just set up the completely new installation, set 
> > mail_location to
> > where the new Maildirs will be, like maildir:~/Maildir and then run 
> > something like
> > doveadm backup mdbox:/tmp/$user/mdbox -u $user?  Will this transfer all 
> > mails and
> > folders or do we have to keep an eye on some specific things?
> 
> All I know about mdbox comes from this document:
> https://doc.dovecot.org/admin_manual/mailbox_formats/dbox/
> 
> Quoting a specific sentence: "One of the main reasons for dbox’s high 
> performance is
> that it uses Dovecot’s index files as the only storage for message flags and
> keywords, so the indexes don’t have to be “synchronized”. Dovecot trusts that
> they’re always up-to-date (unless it sees that something is clearly broken). 
> This
> also means that you must not lose the dbox index files, as they can’t be 
> regenerated
> without data loss."
> 
> The quote says *dbox*, but it's in a section devoted to both dbox and mdbox, 
> so I'm
> thinking it might be true of both. Have they given you the index files? If 
> not, it
> sounds to me like any regeneration would be an approximation at best.
> 
> Do you have a way of accurately putting together the directory structure of 
> the
> former mdbox system?
> 
> My experience 10 years ago converting about a quarter million kmail emails to
> Dovecot Maildir is it takes about an hour to transfer between 25,000 and 
> 50,000
> emails, but of course that was on a much more anemic machine than I have 
> today. I'd
> guess that if you have both databases on the same machine, the way I did ten 
> years
> ago, the process will go pretty fast. Here's a count of my Dovecot Maildir 
> today:
> 
> [root@mydesk Maildir]# du -hs
> 16G     .
> [root@mydesk Maildir]# find . | wc -l
> 734906
> [root@mydesk Maildir]#
> 
> I don't know much about your particular situation, but it seems to me like the
> majority of your problem isn't technical.
> 
> SteveT
>

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