On Mon, 2003-09-15 at 21:08, Darron Froese wrote:
On Monday, September 15, 2003, at 09:38 AM, Ramprasad A Padmanabhan
wrote:
> So Does that mean That I have to use procmail and .procmailrc
You have to use procmail to do it this way - but you don't have to use
.procmailrc.
You could put th
Hello List,
I have some problems to get compiled sendmail-8.12.9 with SALS2.0.9.
First, my POP and IMAP users (cyrus-imap) are authenticating against sasldb2
database, using saslauthd and master daemon, that i mean is that sasl is
working fine.
Second, sendmail compiling proccess don´t fail whi
Hi all!
Finally I've succeded installing cyrus imapd.
Now, I want to realize the following:
Normally, when sending a mail, a copy of that mail is kept locally on
my pc in Sent-Folder.
What I'd like to realize is, that a copy of that sent mail is stored
in a subfolder 'Sent' of my imap-mailbox on
--On Wednesday, September 17, 2003 00:29:03 +0200 "Oliver Demetz -
Hardware-XPress.de" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Normally, when sending a mail, a copy of that mail is kept locally on
my pc in Sent-Folder.
What I'd like to realize is, that a copy of that sent mail is stored
in a subfolder 'Sent'
Hey fellas -
so I've seen some confusion about shared folders and thought I'd check
out what the fuss was all about. ;)
I've used shared folders very happily and successfully in the past, but
on slightly older installations of Cyrus (this particular installation
is 2.2.1), and obviously never in
Hi,
I've used shared folders very happily and successfully in the past, but
on slightly older installations of Cyrus (this particular installation
is 2.2.1), and obviously never in a virtual domains environment.
What's your postfix version?
Tarjei
Ok, so what I did was:
localhost.freebsd.se
On Tue, 2003-09-16 at 23:16, Tarjei Huse wrote:
> Hi,
>
> >I've used shared folders very happily and successfully in the past, but
> >on slightly older installations of Cyrus (this particular installation
> >is 2.2.1), and obviously never in a virtual domains environment.
> >
> >
> What's your