On 27/12/06, Magnus Holmgren holmgren@lysator.liu.se wrote:
UTF-7, like UTF-8 and UTF-16, encodes all of the Unicode repertoire. You don't need to understand RFC 2060 completely unless you're going to write your own IMAP-compatible software. What I meant by "yes and no" was that you can't use UTF-8-encoded folder names as arguments to maildirmake or deliver, or in Sieve scripts - you have to use a MUA (such as Thunderbird) or other program that can encode the folder name properly.
Ah, I personally cannot, but Tbird or Kmail can. That's the way that I was planning on doing it anyway. Excellent.
Also, I've seen that some MUAs (such as Thunderbird) use the slash instead of the dot as the seperator. Will this be a problem in Dovecot if I decide to try out Thunderbird?
Thunderbird will use the separator that the IMAP server tells it to when talking to the IMAP server. However, Dovecot doesn't encode slashes or dots in any special way, so neither can be used in folder names regardless of wether slash or dot is the separator.
(If "/" is the separator and you try to create a folder called "Foo.Bar", Dovecot will (with a common configuration) create ~/Maildir/.Foo.Bar, which looks like a folder Foo with a subfolder Bar. If the separator is "." and you try to create a folder called "Foo/Bar", then Dovecot will or will not try to create ~/Maildir/.Foo/Bar, which in any case won't work.)
Although we are guilty of using spaces in file and folder names (and thus not upsetting the delicate wife/linux balance of my household), we know better than to use slashes, dots, dollar signs and the like. But thank you fro the warning, we will be careful.
Dotan Cohen
http://lyricslist.com/lyrics/artist_albums/281/joel_billy.php http://what-is-what.com/what_is/webpage.html