On Sat, 2014-04-19 at 23:30 -0400, Swarup wrote: > On Sat, 2014-04-19 at 09:56 +0100, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > On Fri, 2014-04-18 at 20:59 -0400, Swarup wrote: > > > 2) Here is another method, if the above won't work for any reason. > > > This > > > method details how to save every mailbox folder separately. > > > > > > http://www.stchman.com/export_evolution.html > > > > > > This method was detailed by a fellow running Evolution 2.10.1, which > > > is > > > even older than mine. So I guess it should work for me as well. A bit > > > tedious, doing each mailbox folder separately-- but if I have to do it > > > then that is another option. > > > > Better would be to move existing mail folders onto an IMAP server (e.g. > > Gmail or Fastmail). For modest amounts of mail, Evo can do this with > > drag and drop. For large mailboxes it's probably more convenient to use > > ImapSync (http://imapsync.lamiral.info/). Note that you still have to > > transfer contact information and filter rules separately. > > 1. What about creating the compressed backup file, > "evolution-backup.tar.gz"? I thought that was looking like a wonderful > approach. The new evo won't be able to import that? > > 2. Re your suggestion above, do you mean just drag the mail folders one > at a time and literally drop them into my gmail account? Where in the > gmail account window do I drop them? > > As for the size of the mail folders, most may contain around 150-200 > emails. A few have 500-700 mails, still fewer have ~1500 mails. My > outbox, on the other hand has 14,600 emails in it. > > Once I have them in the gmail account, the new evo will import them from > there? Is it that one selects something like "Import from IMAP server"?
I think you misunderstood what I was getting at. I mentioned Gmail simply as an example of an email provider that supports IMAP (as long as you configure it according to Gmail's recommendations). I do *not* mean you can drag and drop between Evo and a browser window pointed at Gmail. Once you configure your Gmail account for IMAP (using Gmail's web interface), you then set it up in Evo as an IMAP account and then move your mail across. There is no "import from IMAP" action in Evo, you just see the mail on the server directly. Of course you can move it somewhere else if you just want to use Gmail as a holding area for the conversion. Or keep using it as your IMAP store if you prefer. I've been using Gmail with IMAP via Evo for years, a) because it's free and has a large capacity, and b) because it has great spam filtering, and c) I can easily get to my mail from another computer which may not have Evo or even be running Linux. However that's up to you. I mentioned the ImapSync alternative because in the past some people have had problems when dragging and dropping very large folders to IMAP servers (or maybe the servers haven't collaborated, I forget), and ImapSync helps by maintaining local state so you can stop, start, retry etc. without losing mail. Note that Google does throttle traffic to your account so copying a large amount of mail can take time, which makes it convenient to run ImapSync overnight and not have to keep an interactive session open. It's also easier to see what it's doing than it would be with Evo. poc _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list [email protected] To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
