Michael, Thanks for your response. When you say "IMAP is definitely the standard/preferred way of doing this," I assume you mean as a way of having access to the e-mail on two (or more) different systems at the same time -- not to synching my mail after I've already downloaded it, correct?
I had never looked at those files under pop/<account-name>/cache before. I had always assumed that all the downloaded mail just went into mail/local/ files and subdirectories. It seems then that mail that is pop'd is stored twice - in both those cache directories and in the local mbox's. Do you know if the cache directories/files have unique identifiers related to the messages? If so, I think it should work to rsync messages in those directories on one system to the other. For future reference (and forgive my ignorance -- I haven't used IMAP before) it seems that IMAP keeps all messages on the server, correct? Isn't that likely to eventually run me into problems with my ISP for using too much space. Does one lose access to ones old messages after a while? Jon On Fri, 2006-11-17 at 09:09 -0600, Michael Schurter wrote: > On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 12:50 -0500, Jonathan Slavin wrote: > > I have two systems at home on which I have received e-mail (POP'd from > > my ISP's mail server). I generally want to set the account on one of > > them to leave the messages on the server so that I get all the messages > > on my primary system. I noticed, however, that that setting was not > > correct for a while so I have some e-mail on one system and some on the > > other. So...my general question is the easiest way to synch the e-mail > > on the two systems. > > IMAP is definitely the standard/preferred way of doing this. However, I > understand that IMAP isn't always an option (and doesn't always perform > well). So you may want to try either the backup/restore plugin from the > evolution-plugins-experimental package (at least thats where Debian puts > it), or, alternatively, you could try copying files between your > ~/.evolution/mail/pop/<account-name>/cache folders. > > I've never used either option I just suggested, so make a backup copy of > your ~/.evolution folder before trying anything. > > Michael Schurter -- ______________________________________________________________ Jonathan D. Slavin Harvard-Smithsonian CfA [EMAIL PROTECTED] 60 Garden Street, MS 83 phone: (617) 496-7981 Cambridge, MA 02138-1516 fax: (617) 496-7969 USA ______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
