upports CRAM-MD5 out of the box.
> >
> > *Not* off-topic, the context being how best to configure Outlook
> > for use with FreeBSD IMAP. One hopes something more secure than
> > plain-text passwords can be made to work.
> >
> > My answer is "Don't use Out
>> > How do I use the Cram-MD5 passwords with Outlook?
>> > Or do I have to go plain text?
>>
>> Off-topic for FreeBSD-Questions but I don't believe
>> Outlook supports CRAM-MD5 out of the box.
>
> *Not* off-topic, the context being how best to conf
Steve Bertrand wrote:
anyway - outlook doesn't work well anytime, especially with imap.
simply don't use it, thunderbird for windows works good with imap.
This is not as feasible as stated. Changing 500 users from Outlook to
something they have likely never seen is always a nightmar
In response to Steve Bertrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > anyway - outlook doesn't work well anytime, especially with imap. simply
> > don't use it, thunderbird for windows works good with imap.
I've got to say, I don't know where this is coming from.
We have
anyway - outlook doesn't work well anytime, especially with imap. simply
don't use it, thunderbird for windows works good with imap.
This is not as feasible as stated. Changing 500 users from Outlook to
something they have likely never seen is always a nightmare, even if the
subt
*Not* off-topic, the context being how best to configure Outlook
for use with FreeBSD IMAP. One hopes something more secure than
plain-text passwords can be made to work.
My answer is "Don't use Outlook. For anything. Period."
as my answer. i have ca 500 users in my netwo
I am using the default FreeBSD IMAP server in FreeBSD. It works great with
what's the default FreeBSD IMAP server? i don't remember IMAP in base
FreeBSD distro?
thunderbird, but Outlook is not able to log in even though I have Secure
Authentication checked. Any ideas?
no
On 2/26/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
*Not* off-topic, the context being how best to configure Outlook
for use with FreeBSD IMAP. One hopes something more secure than
plain-text passwords can be made to work.
Uh, OK.
My answer is "Don't use Outlook. For a
> > How do I use the Cram-MD5 passwords with Outlook?
> > Or do I have to go plain text?
>
> Off-topic for FreeBSD-Questions but I don't believe
> Outlook supports CRAM-MD5 out of the box.
*Not* off-topic, the context being how best to configure Outlook
for use wit
On 2/26/07, Chris Maness <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do I use the Cram-MD5 passwords with Outlook? Or do I have to go
plain text?
Off-topic for FreeBSD-Questions but I don't believe Outlook supports
CRAM-MD5 out of the box.
--
Juha
http://www.geekzone.co.nz/juha
___
Juha Saarinen wrote:
On 2/26/07, Chris Maness <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am using the default FreeBSD IMAP server in FreeBSD. It works great
with thunderbird, but Outlook is not able to log in even though I have
Secure Authentication checked. Any ideas?
Do you mean Secure Pa
On 2/26/07, Chris Maness <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am using the default FreeBSD IMAP server in FreeBSD. It works great
with thunderbird, but Outlook is not able to log in even though I have
Secure Authentication checked. Any ideas?
Do you mean Secure Password Authentication or SPA?
I am using the default FreeBSD IMAP server in FreeBSD. It works great
with thunderbird, but Outlook is not able to log in even though I have
Secure Authentication checked. Any ideas?
--
Chris Maness
(909) 223-9179
http://www.chrismaness.com
> -Original Message-
> From: Mark Tinguely [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 11:39 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: imap-uw manuals - configuration
Supplementary
>
> Are there any messages in /var/log/debug.log ?
>
> /usr/li
> -Original Message-
> From: Mark Tinguely [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 11:39 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: imap-uw manuals - configuration
>
>
> Are there any messages in /var/log/debug.log ?
>
> Since telnet is
ready
QUIT
+OK Sayonara
/var/log/debug.log should have entries such as:
Jan 5 12:46:59 ccn imapd[10186]: imap service init from 127.0.0.1
Jan 5 12:47:44 ccn ipop3d[10257]: pop3 service init from 127.0.0.1
--Mark Tinguely.
___
freebsd-questions@freebs
> -Original Message-
> From: Mark Tinguely [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 10:52 AM
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: imap-uw manuals - configuration
>
>
>
> Stabbing some more into the dar
> -Original Message-
> From: Mark Tinguely [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 7:16 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: imap-uw manuals - configuration
>
>
> >
> > inetd.conf includes:
> > pop2 stream tcp nowai
Le 05/01/2007 à 07:00:37-0800, Vizion a écrit
> I am gaving some difficulty with my pop server -- There are no man pages for
> imap-uw -- can anyone point me to some guidance..
>
> Here are some details:
>
> /etc/rc.conf includes:
> inetd_enable="YES"
>
>
Le 05/01/2007 à 07:00:37-0800, Vizion a écrit
> I am gaving some difficulty with my pop server -- There are no man pages for
> imap-uw -- can anyone point me to some guidance..
>
> Here are some details:
>
> /etc/rc.conf includes:
> inetd_enable="YES"
>
>
I am gaving some difficulty with my pop server -- There are no man pages for
imap-uw -- can anyone point me to some guidance..
Here are some details:
/etc/rc.conf includes:
inetd_enable="YES"
inetd.conf includes:
pop2 stream tcp nowait root /usr/local/libexec/ipop2d ipop2d
pop3
In response to "张韡武" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hello. I would wish to have a tool that would do this kind of thing:
>
> 1. listen on imap port on localhost, connect to localhost with my
> email client;
> 2. forward the traffic from/to/between real i
On Mon, 11 Dec 2006, ~_ wrote:
Hello. I would wish to have a tool that would do this kind of thing:
1. listen on imap port on localhost, connect to localhost with my
email client;
2. forward the traffic from/to/between real imap server;
3. meanwhile, print everything
Hello. I would wish to have a tool that would do this kind of thing:
1. listen on imap port on localhost, connect to localhost with my
email client;
2. forward the traffic from/to/between real imap server;
3. meanwhile, print everything being transfer-ed, so that I can
List,
I have recently set up cyrus IMAP (from ports) and it seems to be
behaving itself:
% imtest localhost
S: * OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4 IMAP4rev1 LITERAL+ ID AUTH=DIGEST-MD5 SASL-IR]
example.com Cyrus IMAP4 v2.3.7 server ready
C: C01 CAPABILITY
S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4 IMAP4rev1 LITERAL+ ID AUTH
From: "Mark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I am using imap-uw and so I am familiar with the
"DON'T DELETE THIS MESSAGE" email which stays on the server.
I find this annoying, so my question is whether -all- imap servers
in the ports have th
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> David Banning
> Sent: zondag 15 oktober 2006 18:49
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: imap "DON'T DELETE THIS MESSAGE" question
>
>
> I am using im
On Sun, Oct 15, 2006, David Banning wrote:
>I am using imap-uw and so I am familiar with the
>"DON'T DELETE THIS MESSAGE" email which stays on the server.
>
>In my case, I read my mail -on- the server so I see this email all the
>time. Since I use imap as well, dele
I am using imap-uw and so I am familiar with the
"DON'T DELETE THIS MESSAGE" email which stays on the server.
In my case, I read my mail -on- the server so I see this email all the
time. Since I use imap as well, deleting it only causes it to come back,
I observe.
I find this
Garrett Cooper wrote:
I know this isn't really a FreeBSD question, but I was wondering if
there was a means available where I can expunge my email automatically
from my IMAP inboxes / folders (I have a wide variety of custom
folders). I just find it tedious logging in via SSH to each
I know this isn't really a FreeBSD question, but I was wondering if
there was a means available where I can expunge my email automatically
from my IMAP inboxes / folders (I have a wide variety of custom
folders). I just find it tedious logging in via SSH to each host with
pine and expu
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Jonathan Chen wrote:
On Mon, Sep 18, 2006 at 03:16:26PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Has anyone configure imap-uw to accept plaintext passwords? The options listed
in the doumentation do not work. I have tried various
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006, Jonathan Chen wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 18, 2006 at 03:16:26PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Has anyone configure imap-uw to accept plaintext passwords? The options
> > listed
> > in the doumentation do not work. I have tried various combinations of
&g
On Sep 18, 2006, at 3:16 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Has anyone configure imap-uw to accept plaintext passwords? The
options listed
in the doumentation do not work. I have tried various combinations of
PASSWDTYPE, SSLTYPE, and WITH_SSL_AND_PLAINTEXT with no success.
Or is there a better
On Mon, Sep 18, 2006 at 03:16:26PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Has anyone configure imap-uw to accept plaintext passwords? The options listed
> in the doumentation do not work. I have tried various combinations of
> PASSWDTYPE, SSLTYPE, and WITH_SSL_AND_PLAINTEXT with no success.
&
Has anyone configure imap-uw to accept plaintext passwords? The options listed
in the doumentation do not work. I have tried various combinations of
PASSWDTYPE, SSLTYPE, and WITH_SSL_AND_PLAINTEXT with no success.
Or is there a better imap/pop daemon to use? Thanks for any help.
_
Douglas
sasl2/html/options.html
There's two advantages of doing things that way: (i) you aren't reliant
on saslauthd which can be a SPOF and (ii) you make the *non* password
authentication mechanisms available to your application -- so you can
use GSSAPI or even SSL certs to authenticate users.
I'm having trouble setting up imap/sasl. Here's what I have:
# pkg_info | grep cyrus
cyrus-imapd-2.3.7 The cyrus mail server, supporting POP3 and IMAP4
protocols
cyrus-sasl-2.1.22 RFC SASL (Simple Authentication and Security
Layer)
cyrus-sasl-saslauthd-2.1.22 SASL auth
Matthias Apitz wrote:
Hello,
Our central mail server is Exchange (please no comments :-))
On my FreeBSD notebook I'm using as MUA mutt, fetchmail with
IMAP to get the e-mail and sendmail to send mail over to the
Exchange, so far so good and I'm happy with it.
Btw: one could even
On 8/9/06, Matthias Apitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello,
Our central mail server is Exchange (please no comments :-))
In my experiece MS Exchange support for IMAP is very poor, even when
using MS Outlook. (Especially when using MS Outlook?)
The only problem is access to common a
Hello,
Our central mail server is Exchange (please no comments :-))
On my FreeBSD notebook I'm using as MUA mutt, fetchmail with
IMAP to get the e-mail and sendmail to send mail over to the
Exchange, so far so good and I'm happy with it.
Btw: one could even access the INBOX with some
If I may ask, out of curiosity. Why imap-uw and not something else that
supports maildir format instead of mbox? For instance, courier-imap or
dovecot are far better options.
Well, I don't normally work with Imap, so I was experimenting to
find out which client would work best f
Steven Lake wrote:
>> You're forgetting to assign values to your variables.
>>
>>
>> # make -E WITHOUT_SSL=yes
>>
>> or
>>
>> # make -E WITH_SSL_AND_PLAINTEXT=yes
>
> Ok, tried that and I got this at compile time:
>
&g
You're forgetting to assign values to your variables.
# make -E WITHOUT_SSL=yes
or
# make -E WITH_SSL_AND_PLAINTEXT=yes
Ok, tried that and I got this at compile time:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] imap-uw]# make -E WITH_SSL_AND_PLAINTEXT=yes
===> Vulnerability check disabled, data
Steven Lake wrote:
> Looking for some help in this rather baffling issue. I'm trying to get a new
> mail server setup with webmail capabilities (via squirrelmail) and I'm
> hitting a little snag. Squirrelmail says that the imap server won't accept
> plain text pas
Looking for some help in this rather baffling issue. I'm trying to get a new
mail server setup with webmail capabilities (via squirrelmail) and I'm hitting
a little snag. Squirrelmail says that the imap server won't accept plain text
passwords, yet I compiled from source for
db format so I can then browse it using cyrus imap
using and and an imap client?
And BTW I am currently reading documentation but any suggestions would
be helpful.
Thank You
Chris
Will fetchmail work for you?
- Micah
___
freebsd-questions
then browse it using cyrus imap
using and and an imap client?
And BTW I am currently reading documentation but any suggestions would
be helpful.
Thank You
Chris
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman
hi All!
i'd like to show pop3 statistics(bytes per user), is there some
scripts to generate this statistics?
___
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http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMA
maybe its
similar, but cyrus-imapd is a black-box mail spool ... mailbox != password
entry, and the mail spool is *only* accessible through imap/pop3, no "local
mail" ... it was designed to handle systems where needing >65536 mailboxes
was a requirement, as well as security ...
D
me. :-)
One thing to note here, and I've never looked into dovecot, so maybe its
similar, but cyrus-imapd is a black-box mail spool ... mailbox != password
entry, and the mail spool is *only* accessible through imap/pop3, no
"local mail" ... it was designed to handle system
o not see answer to my question in its documentation.
The list I'm on is both fairly active, and definitely helpful:
Cyrus Mailing List
The newest version that is being worked on actually include replication
support, so you can have a backup IMAP server in real time ...
Marc G
ody answers. I do not see answer to my question in its
documentation.
Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
folders between users?
These are the ones I see:
bincimap -- only maildir, cannot sh
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 12 Jul 2006, Gábor Kövesdán wrote:
Jaime wrote:
Looking in /var/log/messages, I find lines like this:
Jul 11 21:28:47 atlas kernel: pid 81702 (imapd), uid 1001: exited on
signal 11
Are you using any CFLAGS in /etc/make.conf?
I don't remember chang
On Wed, 12 Jul 2006, Gábor Kövesdán wrote:
Jaime wrote:
Looking in /var/log/messages, I find lines like this:
Jul 11 21:28:47 atlas kernel: pid 81702 (imapd), uid 1001: exited on signal
11
Are you using any CFLAGS in /etc/make.conf?
I don't remember changing anything in there. Check
Jaime wrote:
When trying to move a message from my INBOX folder to another
folder, I usually (4 out of 5?) find that the imapd process has
crashed. SquirrelMail is nice enough to tell me this:
ERROR: Connection dropped by IMAP server.
Query: COPY 18238,18255 "mail/Trash"
When trying to move a message from my INBOX folder to another
folder, I usually (4 out of 5?) find that the imapd process has
crashed. SquirrelMail is nice enough to tell me this:
ERROR: Connection dropped by IMAP server.
Query: COPY 18238,18255 "mail/Trash"
Looking i
On Jul 11, 2006, at 12:35 PM, Erik Nørgaard wrote:
It seems that dovecot wins the votes - but does it support virtual
domains? Any tips on migration?
That all depends on how you store your user data. It is not dovecot
or courier issue. I have both courier and dovecot working in
paralle
x' in /var/mail in
mbox format. If a user connects via IMAP (Squirrelmail, etc.), folders
in /home/%u are created and stored in maildir format, but their inbox
stays in /var/mail in mbox format.
See Multiple Mailbox Locations: http://wiki.dovecot.org/Namespaces
Dovecot also comes with c
It seems that dovecot wins the votes - but does it support virtual domains?
I think it does not, but I do not need it. I can use postfix and
mydestination, virtual_maps. This is enough for me.
Any tips on migration?
Yes, it looks easy. I created these namespaces in dovecot.conf:
namespace
Javier Henderson wrote:
I saw a dramatic improvement in speed with both Thunderbird and
Squirrelmail after switching from mbox to maildir.
How did you handle the transition from mbox to maildir?
-jav
I just moved one of our mail servers over to postfix and dovecot using
maildir. There is a
Pete Slagle wrote:
> Nagy László wrote:
>
>> Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
>> working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
>> folders between users?
>
> I was a satisfied courier-imap user for sever
Thank you for your responses!
I tried to install cyrus-imapd, courier-imapd and dovecot, in this
order. :-)
Dovecot has my preference. I could install it in a few minutes, and it
was very easy to configure. At least it is easier than courier, for me. :-)
Thanks again.
Laszlo
Nagy László wrote:
> Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
> working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
> folders between users?
I was a satisfied courier-imap user for several years. A few months ago
I switched to dovecot beca
I saw a dramatic improvement in speed with both Thunderbird and
Squirrelmail after switching from mbox to maildir.
How did you handle the transition from mbox to maildir?
-jav
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freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org
On 7/11/2006 11:18 AM, Greg Groth wrote:
On 7/11/2006 9:29 AM, albi wrote:
Erik Norgaard wrote:
I would like to ask a couple more in depth questions pertaining to this
conversation. We recently switched from POP3 & Outlook Express to IMAP
using IMAP-UW & Thunderbird. Personall
On Tuesday 11 July 2006 11:07, Bill Moran wrote:
> In response to "Nagy László" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
> > working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
> > folders
ng to this
conversation. We recently switched from POP3 & Outlook Express to IMAP
using IMAP-UW & Thunderbird. Personally I have had no issues with
IMAP-UW, but the users in our office have had issues with the mbox
format itself. Specifically they cannot store messages & subfolders
within
You then need to make sure the server is running. The error message "cyradm:
cannot connect to server" can indicate that you don't have the imap service
running. You should be able to see something similar to:
# lsof -i | egrep 'PID|imap' | egrep 'PID|LIST'
ng. I found another mailing list
> but nobody answers. I do not see answer to my question in its documentation.
>
> Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
> working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
> folders between users?
>
Erik Norgaard wrote:
> Regarding cyrus documentation: I think they have stopped maintaining the
> documentation and moved to use the wiki - unfortunately, you don't
> stumble into the wiki first :(
i can happily recommend Dovecot, really easy to install (Cyrus really
isn't), supports both Maildir
Reko Turja wrote:
The downside of Cyrus is the abysmal documentation, but once you get
hang of it, it's one fine IMAP/POP server. And of course there's project
wiki at
http://cyruswiki.andrew.cmu.edu/
which definitely is updated after 2003 :)
I too can recommend cyrus-imap wh
- Original Message -
From: "Nagy László" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2006 4:29 PM
Subject: IMAP server alternatives
Hello,
I tried cyrus-imapd, but I'm unsatisfied. Their website was down for
a day. Now it is up, but the pages were not upd
n its
documentation.
Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
folders between users?
These are the ones I see:
bincimap -- only maildir, cannot share folders
courier -- uses the maildir format, and it sa
n its documentation.
Are there any alternative IMAP servers that have good support (e.g.
working mailing list, up-to-date documentation), and can share IMAP
folders between users?
These are the ones I see:
bincimap -- only maildir, cannot share folders
courier -- uses the maildir format, but I'
Hello,
I'm trying to install sasl2 + cyrus-imapd, using this article:
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2005/10/06/cyrus_imap.html?page=2
I found the article very helpful. I could do everything until the point
where I need to create a user in cyrus. There I have an error message:
#cyradm
There's some directions at
http://www.flatmtn.com/computer/Linux-Imap-UW.html (found by googling
uw imap shared folders) but I'm not sure I follow them. It looks like
it's just setting up another IMAP account that happens to be shared
I use cyrus-imap, and it seems
Nagy László Zsolt wrote:
Hello,
I would like to share some IMAP folders between users. I'm currently
using postfix and uw-imap. Is this possible? How should I do this? (Hard
links between IMAP files?)
The basic problem is this: we have a company and we have some employees,
doing
On Mon, Jul 10, 2006, Nagy László Zsolt wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
>I would like to share some IMAP folders between users. I'm currently
>using postfix and uw-imap. Is this possible? How should I do this? (Hard
>links between IMAP files?)
I don't know how one would do th
Hello,
I would like to share some IMAP folders between users. I'm currently
using postfix and uw-imap. Is this possible? How should I do this? (Hard
links between IMAP files?)
The basic problem is this: we have a company and we have some employees,
doing help desk service. Ther
59-15,utf-8 --without-ipv6
--enable-workarounds-for-imap-client-bugs
now...
$make check
Lots of complaints about FAM (which *is* installed, but "not
configured properly"). I browsed a few posts wrt FAM, which led me to
continue anyway, since it seems most applicable to many-user s
On 06/06/06, Juha Saarinen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Why not use courier-imap from the ports collection?
Juha,
Thank you for your prompt response.
As I mentioned, the port also *apparently* fails to find pcre:
conftest.c:33:23: pcre/pcre.h: No such file or directory
In additi
On 6/6/06, boink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Dear all,
I'm building a pop toaster, have qmail up and running, vpopmail too,
now trying to get courier-imap-4.1.1 working.
Platform: FreeBSD 6.0_RELEASE, GENERIC kernel.
Problem: when installing from source,
Why not use courier-im
Dear all,
I'm building a pop toaster, have qmail up and running, vpopmail too,
now trying to get courier-imap-4.1.1 working.
Platform: FreeBSD 6.0_RELEASE, GENERIC kernel.
Problem: when installing from source, ./configure works OK (non-root,
as advised):
$./configure --without-authd
Hi,
I almost get it. The new problem is I configured
the procmail to use maildir in the path
/usr/zdir/$LOGNAME/{cur/new/tmp}.
/usr/local/etc/courier-imap/pop3d:
if MAILDIRPATH=/usr/zdir/ I get this error:
May 31 15:27:12 gw pop3d: scancur opendir("cur"):
No such file or dir
Hi,
I want to authenticate the client's user/pass
against the file /etc/passwd, for that reason I
put authmodulelist="authpwd" inside the file
/usr/local/etc/authlib/authdaemonrc but I get
only this error:
May 31 13:33:33 gw authdaemond:
modules="authpwd", daemons=5
May 31 13:33:33 gw authdaemond
--
Message: 29
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 19:23:47 -0800
From: "Noah" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Implementing IMAP advice for first timer
To: "freebsd-questions"
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=
Pete Slagle wrote:
> Eric wrote:
>
>> I recommend checking out dovecot as well. i switched from courier to
>> dovecot recently and couldnt be happier.
>
> What motivated you to switch, and how do you find that dovecot improves
> on courier-imap?
>
> Just curiou
Eric wrote:
I recommend checking out dovecot as well. i switched from courier to
dovecot recently and couldnt be happier.
What motivated you to switch, and how do you find that dovecot improves
on courier-imap?
Just curious, I have been considering trying dovecot, but courier works
well
On Wednesday 24 May 2006 02:55, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC wrote:
> On May 23, 2006, at 11:14 PM, Olivier Nicole wrote:
> >> Installing it from ports (/usr/ports/mail/courier-imap) is
> >> pretty straightforward, and most settings can be left at the
> >> default,
Noah wrote:
> FreeBSD-4.11
>
> Well I want to get IMAP running on my FreeBSD box and would like to have a
> safe, non service-interrupting strategy to implementing it. I am leaning
> toward installing cyrus imapd. I have some questions about how to get things
> working
On May 23, 2006, at 11:14 PM, Olivier Nicole wrote:
Installing it from ports (/usr/ports/mail/courier-imap) is pretty
straightforward, and most settings can be left at the default, at
least
True, except...
Courrier-imap is using maildir mailboxes, so unless the existing
system already
> Installing it from ports (/usr/ports/mail/courier-imap) is pretty
> straightforward, and most settings can be left at the default, at least
True, except...
Courrier-imap is using maildir mailboxes, so unless the existing
system already uses maildir, there will be some disturbance
Noah wrote:
Well I want to get IMAP running on my FreeBSD box and would like to have a
safe, non service-interrupting strategy to implementing it. I am leaning
toward installing cyrus imapd. I have some questions about how to get things
working.
I like courier-imap. The set-up is easy and
On May 23, 2006, at 9:37 PM, Olivier Nicole wrote:
4) I don’t completely understand how local mail delivery will
change – is there a good tutorial about this subject?
IMAP does not interract with mail delivery. Once mail is delivered
into your mailbox, IMAP allows you to read it.
This is
> Well I want to get IMAP running on my FreeBSD box and would like to have a
> safe, non service-interrupting strategy to implementing it.
What do you mean "non service-interrupting strategy"? If you have
already POP3 installed and running, there is good chance that
installing I
FreeBSD-4.11
Well I want to get IMAP running on my FreeBSD box and would like to have a
safe, non service-interrupting strategy to implementing it. I am leaning
toward installing cyrus imapd. I have some questions about how to get things
working.
1) Can somebody please recommend a good
et.html
man socket
http://bs.cs.tu-berlin.de/user-taipan/kraxel/gnuinfo/libc/File_Socket_Example.html
http://www.google.com/search?client=opera&rls=en&q=create+file+sockets&sourceid=opera&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
I think as a general rule, a prog should recreate its sockets, after
such operati
t;:
> >Hello
> >
> >I want move /var/imap to another place because not enough space (I did move
> >/var/spool/imap successfully). When I cp /var/imap cp says: "cp:
> >imap/socket/idle: Operation not supported" and "cp: imap/socket/lmtp:
> >Operation
Hello Chris
I was in the same situation as you. I installed during the past months two
mail server with sendmail/cyrus imap/apache ssl/squirrelmail. So if you need
more hints please send the questions.
Am Mon, May 08, 2006 at 10:21:22PM -0700 Chris Telting schrieb:
> I am confused as t
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