duplicate default domain entries on murder backends

2010-09-08 Thread Stephen Ingram
I'm wondering if it's possible to use the same default domain entries on various murder backends. I'm using a virtual domain setup, and, as I'm using the full email address for all domain users, I'm guessing that the default domain can be an unused or a fake domain. If so, can this fake domain be

lmtp crashing

2010-09-08 Thread Michael Plate
Hi, after upgrading some parts of our server (Gentoo Linux), cyrus 2.3.14 is crashing with lmtp deliver *only* on Shared Folders. Using lmtptest, the server dies when RCPT TO: +any-shared-folder-mail-address by closing the connection. dmesg tells: lmtpd[5838]: segfault at 16ce eip

patches for cyrus murder/aggregator honor serverlist and defaultserver options on Debian

2010-09-08 Thread Andre Felipe Machado
Hello, I have been testing a cyrus murder/aggregator setup on Debian Lenny. After some ddd debugging sessions I found the need for 3 patches at Debian cyrus 2.3.16 hmh branch in order to frontend honor the serverlist and defaultserver options when working in a cyrus murder/aggregator setup.

Re: Basic question about Cyrus replication

2010-09-08 Thread Matt Selsky
On Tue, 7 Sep 2010, Shuvam Misra wrote: Thanks, that's clear now. BTW, what's ptloader? ptloader loads authorization groups from ldap or AFS. -- Matt Cyrus Home Page: http://www.cyrusimap.org/ List Archives/Info: http://lists.andrew.cmu.edu/pipermail/info-cyrus/

Re: lmtp crashing

2010-09-08 Thread Duncan Gibb
On 08/09/10 10:43, Michael Plate wrote: MP after upgrading some parts of our server (Gentoo Linux), cyrus 2.3.14 is MP crashing with lmtp deliver *only* on Shared Folders. Is it a 32-bit system? If so, you may be hitting a known problem caused by a parameter size disagreement wrt quota_t

Re: shared \seen flags on shared folders

2010-09-08 Thread Gavin McCullagh
Hi, On Thu, 02 Sep 2010, Gavin McCullagh wrote: sharedseen Enables the use of a shared \Seen flag on messages rather than a per-user \Seen flag. The ’s’ right in the mailbox ACL still controls whether a user can set the shared \Seen

duplicate default domain entries on murder backends

2010-09-08 Thread Stephen Ingram
I'm wondering if it's possible to use the same default domain entries on various murder backends. I'm using a virtual domain setup, and, as I'm using the full email address for all domain users, I'm guessing that the default domain can be an unused or a fake domain. If so, can this fake domain be

A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Shuvam Misra
Dear all, If I have, say, three IMAP servers each hosting a few thousand mailboxes, and I want to aggregate all of them for the IMAP client, I'll run Murder on one of the servers. 1. Can I run Murder on one of the back-end servers? If yes, it will act as an aggregator for incoming

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Andre Felipe Machado
Hello, The cyrus murder/aggregator finds its machines by their names, not ip. You have to have dns records or all /etc/hosts configured. You may use virtual machines for the mupdate master, for example, at your servers. Regards. Andre Felipe Machado Cyrus Home Page:

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Andrew Morgan
On Thu, 9 Sep 2010, Shuvam Misra wrote: Dear all, If I have, say, three IMAP servers each hosting a few thousand mailboxes, and I want to aggregate all of them for the IMAP client, I'll run Murder on one of the servers. 1. Can I run Murder on one of the back-end servers? If yes, it will

Re: shared \seen flags on shared folders

2010-09-08 Thread Bron Gondwana
On Wed, Sep 08, 2010 at 06:10:44PM +0100, Gavin McCullagh wrote: If a folder has sharedseen=true set in the metadata from its creation and forever, I would expect shared seen flags. If a folder always has sharedseen=false for its entire life, I expect per-user \Seen flags. What happens if

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Bron Gondwana
On Wed, Sep 08, 2010 at 01:41:26PM -0700, Andrew Morgan wrote: Unfortunately, I've never setup a unified Murder, so I don't fully understand what the advantages and disadvantages of it compared to a traditional Murder. Maybe someone else can jump in here with their experiences. And while

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Bron Gondwana
On Wed, Sep 08, 2010 at 11:17:00PM +0200, Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems) wrote: - For autocreate/autosieve (patches for which Cyrus is not upstream but they are shipped with Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux packages), the frontend servers must be disabled for local direct delivery

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems)
Bron Gondwana wrote: On Wed, Sep 08, 2010 at 11:17:00PM +0200, Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems) wrote: - For autocreate/autosieve (patches for which Cyrus is not upstream but they are shipped with Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux packages), the frontend servers must be disabled for

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems)
Bron Gondwana wrote: On Wed, Sep 08, 2010 at 11:17:00PM +0200, Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems) wrote: - For autocreate/autosieve (patches for which Cyrus is not upstream but they are shipped with Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux packages), the frontend servers must be disabled for

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Clement Hermann (nodens)
Le 08/09/2010 23:17, Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems) a écrit : Andrew Morgan wrote: In a traditional Cyrus Murder (not a unified Murder), there are 3 roles: 1. backends - these store email 2. frontends - these proxy incoming connections to the correct backend 3. mupdate master -

Re: A beginner question about Murder

2010-09-08 Thread Jeroen van Meeuwen (Kolab Systems)
Clement Hermann (nodens) wrote: In traditional murder (no autocreate/autosieve patch), the murder process can run on a frontend. However, it cannot run on a backend. We have a webmail running on our murder (2.2.x) server, and it uses localhost as imap server, so it acts as a frontend.