Michael Nguyen writes:
From: "Michael Nguyen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> From: "Sam Varshavchik" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >>Michael Nguyen writes:
[snip]
>ACL2 supports wildcards, so if you were using ACL2 commands you would've >done the right thing.
[snip]
Sam (or anyone else here), could someone point me to a resource where I can see the syntax for ACL2? If you recall the issue, I would like to give user
http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/04aug/I-D/draft-ietf-imapext-acl-10.txt
"postmaster" the ability to read and manipulate all user mail/folders. I asked comp.mail.imap about ACL2 but they said that it's still under development and didn't really give me a straight answer. Since I've firmly decided to go with Courier, I was wondering about Courier's implementation of ACL2, namely, what command would I run to give postmaster access to INBOX.* on a particular user's maildir (with the intention being to give the same access to postmaster on ALL maildirs).
Initially, only the owner of the mailbox has administrative access to the folders through IMAP. Therefore the owner of the mailbox has to grant administrative access to its folder to the postmaster account.
At this time Courier does not have a concept of a special administrator account or group that automatically receives admin rights on all folders. Therefore, the folder's owner has to explicitly grant admin rights to another account, first.
It's possible to implement an admin account in Courier, but I've yet had the time to do it.
The other alternative is to manually run maildiracl, outside of the IMAP context, for the account's folders. You will have to run the maildiracl once for each folder, including INBOX. maildiracl sets the ACLs for a single folder.
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