Re: quota-warning: possible to have size also?

2017-03-06 Thread chaouche yacine
Good point Alex, there's no real advantage that script was there from courier's 
time and I still use it but doveadm quota command does the trick just as well.

Actual quota : 
root@messagerie[10.10.10.19] ~ # doveadm  quota  get  -u sec-...@domain.tld 
2>/dev/null | sed -n 1p | awk '{print $4}'
559728
root@messagerie[10.10.10.19] ~ #

Max quota :

root@messagerie[10.10.10.19] ~ # doveadm  quota  get  -u sec-...@domain.tld 
2>/dev/null | sed -n 1p | awk '{print $5}'
1048576
root@messagerie[10.10.10.19] ~ # 



  -- Yassine.


Re: quota-warning: possible to have size also?

2017-03-06 Thread Alex JOST

Am 06.03.2017 um 10:39 schrieb chaouche yacine:

Hi,

I'am using a Maildir++ based quota setting which creates a maildirsize file in 
every Maildir. The first two lines of this file are the maximum quota in bytes 
then the actual consumption in bytes and number of messages, like so :


1073741824S
379317999 5169



This means this user has a quota of 1Gb and he is using ~ 379 Mb (you have to 
divide by 1024 to be more precise)

Since the script receieves the user as second argument, you can deduce it's 
current quota size and restriction by reading the maildirsize file (if you have 
it). I think you can do the same if your quota is in the database (querying).


This a piece of script I wrote once that shows the value of quota used and 
quota max (both in megas and perecent) that might help you if you know your way 
through bash scripting :


I might be missing something but what's the advantage over doveadm?

doveadm quota get -A

--
Alex JOST


Re: quota-warning: possible to have size also?

2017-03-06 Thread chaouche yacine
Hi,

I'am using a Maildir++ based quota setting which creates a maildirsize file in 
every Maildir. The first two lines of this file are the maximum quota in bytes 
then the actual consumption in bytes and number of messages, like so : 


1073741824S
379317999 5169



This means this user has a quota of 1Gb and he is using ~ 379 Mb (you have to 
divide by 1024 to be more precise)

Since the script receieves the user as second argument, you can deduce it's 
current quota size and restriction by reading the maildirsize file (if you have 
it). I think you can do the same if your quota is in the database (querying).


This a piece of script I wrote once that shows the value of quota used and 
quota max (both in megas and perecent) that might help you if you know your way 
through bash scripting : 


root@messagerie[10.10.10.19] ~/SCRIPTS/MAIL # cat showquota.single

mega=$((1024*1024))
inbox="${1%@*}"
maildir="/var/vmail/domain.tld/$inbox"
backup="/var/vmail/backup.domain.tld/$inbox"
[ ! -e $maildir ] && echo "Boite email inexistante. Veuillez vérifier encore 
une fois l'orthogrape de $in...@domain.tld" && exit 1
function get_quota {
mailfolder="$1"
maildirsize="$mailfolder/maildirsize" 
fields=$(echo $(head -2 $maildirsize))
max="${fields%%S*}"
cur="$(echo $fields | cut -f2 -d ' ')"
ratio=$(echo "scale=2; $cur * 100 / $max" | bc)
cur=$(echo "scale=2; $cur / $mega" | bc)
max=$(echo "scale=2; $max / $mega" | bc)
echo "$cur Mo /  $max Mo ( $ratio% )"
}
echo Quota sur la boite aux lettres "$inbox"
get_quota "$maildir"
echo Quota sur les archives
get_quota "$backup"
echo "-"
root@messagerie[10.10.10.19] ~/SCRIPTS/MAIL # 



  --Yassine.


Re: quota-warning: possible to have size also?

2017-03-05 Thread Tom Sommer



On 2017-03-05 19:13, dovecot@avv.solutions wrote:


I have a questions though: when running the warning script, the
example foundis it possible to pass the *quota size *as argument also?
This would be useful with per-user quota.

e.g. /some/script xx% username *xxxbytes* (order is not relevant of 
course)


+1 and quota-limit as well.