On Sat, 2006-04-08 at 14:32 +0200, Magnus Holmgren wrote:
According to http://www.courier-mta.org/?maildir.html, the period and the forward slash can (should?) be represented using modified UTF-7, just like non-ascii characters.
Well, Courier-IMAP itself doesn't do that, instead it just gives "Invalid mailbox name" if I try to give '/' character to it. Probably other Courier products are able to do that.
By the way, if I try to create a folder "foo.bar", Kmail says "Your IMAP server does not allow the character '.'; please choose another folder name.", but with Thunderbird a folder foo with a subfolder bar is created, with foo
greyed out and italic to signify that it can't contain mail. What gives?
Because if you have namespace's hierarchy separator declared as '.' (which is the default) then "foo.bar" means that you want to create a "bar" mailbox under "foo" directory.
If you changed hierarchy separator to '/', then Dovecot could in theory encode '.' characters in some special way to the mailbox name, but I don't know if it's worth it..