On Thu, 2007-03-29 at 13:55 +0400, Oleg Lapshin wrote:
> Hello
>
> > Or I'd guess just upload a new sieve script every month / year / <insert
> > frequency here>, which of course could be a scripted task.
>
> I think, this is solution for now.
> There may be script, which download sieve scripts, analyze them, correct
> fields and upload back to server automatically.
>
> >
> > On Mon, 2007-03-26 at 19:41 +0200, Guido A.J. Stevens wrote:
> > > >> I want to put incoming messages into folders, based on current year
> > >
> > > and month
> > >
> > > You can do that with a procmail delivery.
> > >
> > > :0 c
> > >
> > > * ^From:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > {
> > > YEARFOLDER="Archive/foo-bar-`date +%Y`"
> > >
> > > :0: archive
> > > :
> > > | /usr/sbin/dbmail-smtp -u yourusername -m "$YEARFOLDER"
> > >
> > > }
>
> I don't have procmail and think, this is not the best solution.
> If mail server have 1k users, there must be 1k such procmail's configs. This
> is not good. Users don't have real accounts on system and can't manipulate
> such configs manually.
>
> Thanks for your attention.
Do you want to have a "system sieve script" that runs for *every* user
when they receive mail? I've heard that some other products, I think
Sun's Java Messaging in particular, have system scripts, group scripts,
and then user scripts. DBMail has only user scripts right now.
Aaron
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