In the same vein, I have an IMAP::MUPDATE module I wrote. The code is not exactly pretty , but it work. I also have a modified Net::Sieve that work with STARTTLS and proxy auth, and a Net::FUD module I wrote from scratch. For those interested, I can share them.
On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 03:06:32PM +1100, Rob Mueller wrote: > A while ago I wrote an IMAP client interface in PERL for a project I was > working on. At the time I looked at Net::IMAP, Mail::IMAPClient and > Mail::Cclient, but they all had problems that made them annoying in some way > (broken literals in envelopes, non-structured bodystructure responses, etc). > Most of those modules have now improved to deal with the issues I had at the > time, so this module is now a bit redundant. > > Anyway, the result of my work was Mail::IMAPTalk (yes, silly name), which > basically did everything I wanted. I'm not sure if other people will find it > useful, but I decided it was about time I released it to CPAN, so feel free > to take a look and compare it to the other modules to see if it fits your > needs. > > http://search.cpan.org/~robm/Mail-IMAPTalk-1.00/ > > Rob -- Etienne Goyer Linux Québec Technologies Inc. http://www.LinuxQuebec.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] Kernel Preemption is a bad idea. Who are the users to think their trivial tasks are more important than the kernel's ?