On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 21:04 -0500, Jesse Lazar wrote: > On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 19:08 -0430, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 17:46 -0500, Jesse Lazar wrote: > > > I am a happy evolution user, but I recently encountered a problem. > > > > > > The problem is that in the last two weeks I have missed a series of > > > emails, from a specific sender, in such a way that evolution simply > > > marked the messages as read but did not download the local copy. I use > > > POP access through gmail. > > > > > > I finally figured out that the messages were sent to me because I can > > > see them if I use the gmail web interface and look in my email > > > "archive". The thing is I use evolution so I don't often use the gmail > > > web interface, plus the messages were marked as read, and moved from my > > > inbox. > > > > What's moving them from the Inbox? > > > I have it set up so that once my messages are downloaded they are marked > read, so I guess gmail moves them from the Inbox folder.
Gmail will definitely not do this by default, only if you explicitly tell it to do so using a filter. The exact behaviour will depend on whether the filter is in Gmail or in Evo. If it's in Gmail, my understanding is that it will fire as soon as the message arrives in the Inbox, which is before Evo gets a chance to see it. That could explain what you're seeing, but I would expect it to apply to every message, not just some. OTOH if the filter is in Evo itself, it will fire only when Evo sees a message it regards as new (which is *not* the same as "Unread", see below). > In addition, if I mark a message as unread (including these) and move it > back to the inbox (in gmail) then evolution still skips the message... Remember that Gmail doesn't really have folders, just labels, i.e. "moving" a message to Inbox is just changing a label. It's not a new message even if it's marked as unread, and I'm guessing it doesn't have a new UID (Unique IDentifier). Using POP, Evo will only consider as new messages whose UIDs it hasn't already seen. (This is hypothetical as I don't actually know how Gmail handles UIDs.) The question then is "why does Evo think it has already seen these UIDs?". That might depend on exactly what your filters are doing. poc _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
