Package: kmail Version: 4:3.2.1-1 Dear Riku,
Martin Tsachev sent a rather terse error message. Allow me to elaborate, for I have seen this problem rather consistently after upgrading KMail and on a new KMail installation. The situation seems to occur when SMTP is the outward protocol AND "Allow 8-bit" is selected. I have tried this on two completely separate systems (having completely separate SMTP servers); one system allows TLS-encrypted SMTP, the other does not. In both cases, sending a mail with "Allow 8-bit" generates the following dialog box message: Sending failed: Unknown error code 50 Your server does not support sending of 8-bit messages. Please use base64 or quoted-printable encoding. Please send a full bug report at http://bugs.kde.org. The message will stay in the 'outbox' folder until you either fix the problem (e.g. a broken address) or remove the message from the 'outbox' folder. A few comments: 1. I am in charge of the SMTP server, with full access to the logs. I can confirm Martin's observation that KMail does not even try to contact the SMTP server. 2. I have selected "us-ascii" and "utf-8" as my charsets (Settings >> Configure KMail dialog box, Composer icon, Charset tab), in that order. 3. Once the message is in the outbox, go to the Settings >> Configure KMail dialog box, Network icon, Sending tab. Change Message Property to "MIME Compliant (Quoted Printable)", then try resending the message. The message will NOT be changed to Quoted Printable, but WILL be sent successfully! 4. Compose a new message (eg, to yourself) with Quoted Printable still enabled, but do NOT send it---queue it. Change the Message Property back to 8-bit. View the source to the message in the outbox; it should still read "Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable" (you may need to include some internation characters, eg, Cyrillic or French). Now, try sending: it will fail. 5. I have tried this on two separate systems, one which had an upgrade to KMail, the other which had a fresh KMail config file. The same problem occurred on both systems. I am happy to supply additional information, or to try other suggestions you might have. I suspect that this bug needs to be reported upstream; I think it was a regression introduced in KMail 3.2.1 as I used previous versions quite happily. Using 8-bit UTF-8 mail is important to me; there are many applications in which using quoted-printable mail is not an option. I will try to have a quick look at the source code to KMail to see if I can narrow the problem down a little. Yours truly, John Zaitseff -- John Zaitseff ,--_|\ The ZAP Group Phone: +61 2 9643 7737 / \ Sydney, Australia E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] \_,--._* http://www.zap.org.au/ Finger: [EMAIL PROTECTED] v GnuPG fingerprint: 8FD2 8962 7768 2546 FE07 DE7C 61A8 4486 C9A6 69B0