Curtis Maloney sent this message on 4/9/2008 5:54 AM:
Phan Thanh Diện wrote:
Hi,
We would like to switch from courier-imap to dovecot. I have installed dovecot on a machine running FreeBSD 6.3 and now testing it. My questions are below:
- Can I configure dovecot to delete all files that are older, say 10 days, from defined mail boxes (for example Trash or Spam).
Yes - take a look at the "expire" plugin: http://wiki.dovecot.org/Plugins
- After I access mail box (using web mail squirrel imap) all emails moved from 'new' directory to 'cur'. Then messages are not accessible for pop3. Such behavor doesn't occur with courier-imap. Can I force dovecot to behave like courier-imap?
That shouldn't be. If you're using Dovecot for both POP3 and IMAP, your mail client will be able to see all the mail no matter which protocol you access it with.
However, your mail client may be ignoring mail that's been "Seen".
I'm not sure why courier would behave differently with this.Have you read the migration guide? http://wiki.dovecot.org/Migration/Courier
Many thanks for help. Dien Phan
-- Curtis Maloney cmaloney@cardgate.net
Hello,
Thank you for your email. We have been using XMail (www.xmailserver.org) for smtp and pop3, courier-imap for imap. This works for many years and we don't want to change. The only change we would like is to switch from courier-imap to dovecot. So configuration must be unchange: xmail for pop3 and smtp, dovecot for imap. Unfortunately we are facing the problem I wrote about: after a user access mail box via web client (www.squirrel.org) he can not see emails any more via pop3. The reason is emails moved from 'new' to 'cur' although nothing done. Dovecot automatically moves. Currently with courier-imap, no matter we access via web mail or imap client (such as ThunderBird or Outlook) users can retrive emails via pop3. So my question is: does courier-imap behave abnormally or my dovecot mis-configured?
Dien Phan