Forgotten one thing:
if you move the files into /new/ with the file extension ":2,S" then it
will be automaticaly maked as read. Using no extension, let them show
up as new.
Thanks, Greetings and nice Day/Evening
Michelle Konzack
Systemadministrator
Tamay Dogan Network
Debian
Am 2009-11-26 12:59:00, schrieb Thomas Seilund:
> Michelle Konzack wrote:
> > You have to copy the files into /new/ and the next time you use an
> > imap/Webmail client, courier-imap move the files from itself into /cur/
> > and register the files in /courierimapuiddb correctly to show up.
>
Michelle Konzack wrote:
> Hello Thomas,
>
> Am 2009-11-26 08:32:56, schrieb Thomas Seilund:
>
>> Dear All
>>
>> I have 195 files in $HOME/.Sent/cur and I see that I have 195 messages
>> in the Sent folder when looking at the folder overview screen in SqWebMail.
>>
>> But when I open the Sent fo
Hello Thomas,
Am 2009-11-26 08:32:56, schrieb Thomas Seilund:
> Dear All
>
> I have 195 files in $HOME/.Sent/cur and I see that I have 195 messages
> in the Sent folder when looking at the folder overview screen in SqWebMail.
>
> But when I open the Sent folder in SqWebMail I only see 2 mails.
Bijan Soleymani wrote:
> Hey Thomas,
>
> Are they proper maildir mail messages? Generally I think you're supposed
> to have software handle delivering messages into Maildirs. Just copying
> random files into the cur directory might not work. They have to follow
> the Maildir naming conventions, etc
Hey Thomas,
Are they proper maildir mail messages? Generally I think you're supposed
to have software handle delivering messages into Maildirs. Just copying
random files into the cur directory might not work. They have to follow
the Maildir naming conventions, etc.
This is probably not the proble
Dear All
I have 195 files in $HOME/.Sent/cur and I see that I have 195 messages
in the Sent folder when looking at the folder overview screen in SqWebMail.
But when I open the Sent folder in SqWebMail I only see 2 mails.
I copied mail files from a backup into the users $HOME/.Sent/cur and it
s