On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 07:16:57PM +0100, Rocco Rutte wrote:
* Michelle Konzack wrote:
Am 2007-11-21 11:49:13, schrieb Nicolas KOWALSKI:
On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 09:37:22AM +0100, Rocco Rutte wrote:
* Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
I have noticed that the headers databases are always growing, even
Am 2007-11-21 11:49:13, schrieb Nicolas KOWALSKI:
On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 09:37:22AM +0100, Rocco Rutte wrote:
Hi,
* Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
I have noticed that the headers databases are always growing, even if
I delete mails.
Here it's important from where you delete them. When
Hi,
* Michelle Konzack wrote:
Am 2007-11-21 11:49:13, schrieb Nicolas KOWALSKI:
On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 09:37:22AM +0100, Rocco Rutte wrote:
* Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
I have noticed that the headers databases are always growing, even if
I delete mails.
Here it's important from where
Hi,
* Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
I have noticed that the headers databases are always growing, even if I
delete mails.
Here it's important from where you delete them. When you delete them
within mutt using that header cache, it should remove those entries
(mutt doesn't sync the hcache to
On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 09:37:22AM +0100, Rocco Rutte wrote:
Hi,
* Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
I have noticed that the headers databases are always growing, even if
I delete mails.
Here it's important from where you delete them. When you delete them
within mutt using that header cache, it
Hello,
I am using the header_cache feature, for speeding up access to my imap
folders. I defined it in my ~/.muttrc with:
set header_cache=~/.hcache
The ~/.hcache is a directory.
I have noticed that the headers databases are always growing, even if I
delete mails.
For example, my INBOX