attached is the compressed .seen file if anyone can salvage it.
David Lang
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
A corrupted seen file is the only thing that makes
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
A corrupted seen file is the only thing that makes sense to me. If other
users can open the same folder, then the cyrus.header and cyrus.index
files must be sane.
As
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
A corrupted seen file is the only thing that makes sense to me. If other
users can open the same folder, then the cyrus.header and cyrus.index files
must be sane.
As an experiment, you could move your seen fil
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
> A corrupted seen file is the only thing that makes sense to me. If other
> users can open the same folder, then the cyrus.header and cyrus.index files
> must be sane.
>
> As an experiment, you could move your seen file from lang.seen (or whatever
> i
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
> On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
>>
>>> I has my home mail server crash, and after the crash, one user (me) is
>>> unable to
>>> acess any folders.
>>>
>>> When I manually telnet to the IMAP port, I ca
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, Andrew Morgan wrote:
> On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
>
>> I has my home mail server crash, and after the crash, one user (me) is
>> unable to
>> acess any folders.
>>
>> When I manually telnet to the IMAP port, I can login, I can list and run
>> other
>> commands,
On Thu, 10 Jan 2013, David Lang wrote:
> I has my home mail server crash, and after the crash, one user (me) is unable
> to
> acess any folders.
>
> When I manually telnet to the IMAP port, I can login, I can list and run other
> commands, but as soon as I do a select of any folder (mine or any o
I has my home mail server crash, and after the crash, one user (me) is unable
to
acess any folders.
When I manually telnet to the IMAP port, I can login, I can list and run other
commands, but as soon as I do a select of any folder (mine or any other shared
folder) I get disconnected.
Other u