* [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users @ 2021-04-04 22:17 Dale 2021-04-05 6:35 ` Hund 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-04 22:17 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Howdy, As some may know, I use Seamonkey for several things. Mostly for email but using it for email leads to it being used for other things, like clicking links in email and viewing the page in Seamonkey. I tried switching to Thunderbird, which is supposed to be about the same thing but I didn't like it at all. It's different and in a bad way. Thing is, some sites are no longer working as they should. It seems with each upgrade, Seamonkey has more issues with things not working correctly. I might add, most add-ons, adblock being a big one, no longer work. They haven't had updates in ages. With all this, it makes me wonder if Seamonkey is still viable or if it is something I have set wrong. Is anyone else who uses Seamonkey noticing the same problems with add-ons and sites not working right? I may start trying to make a list of sites that don't work right. Maybe someone else can see what it does for them. I know my financial sites act weird but without login info, no way to really test those. I might add, it seems that sites with security measures are the ones with the most issues. I use Firefox for most things now. I have different profiles and even use containers to help secure things. I really wish I liked Thunderbird and could use that and Firefox to replace Seamonkey. Sadly, Thunderbird just isn't for me last I checked. This is my Seamonkey info: [ebuild U ~] www-client/seamonkey-2.53.7::gentoo [2.53.7_beta1::gentoo] USE="chatzilla dbus gmp-autoupdate ipc roaming startup-notification system-av1 system-harfbuzz system-icu system-jpeg system-libevent system-libvpx system-sqlite -crypt -custom-cflags -custom-optimization -debug -jack (-lto) -minimal (-neon) -pulseaudio (-selinux) -test -wifi" L10N="-cs -de -en-GB -es-AR -es-ES -fr -hu -it -ja -lt -nl -pl -pt-PT -ru -sk -sv -zh-CN -zh-TW" Anyone else seeing this or am I the only Gentoo user using Seamonkey? Thanks. Dale :-) :_) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-04 22:17 [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users Dale @ 2021-04-05 6:35 ` Hund 2021-04-06 4:19 ` Dale 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Hund @ 2021-04-05 6:35 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On April 5, 2021 12:17:59 AM GMT+02:00, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote: >Howdy, > >As some may know, I use Seamonkey for several things. Mostly for email >but using it for email leads to it being used for other things, like >clicking links in email and viewing the page in Seamonkey. I tried >switching to Thunderbird, which is supposed to be about the same thing >but I didn't like it at all. It's different and in a bad way. > >Thing is, some sites are no longer working as they should. It seems >with each upgrade, Seamonkey has more issues with things not working >correctly. I might add, most add-ons, adblock being a big one, no >longer work. They haven't had updates in ages. With all this, it makes >me wonder if Seamonkey is still viable or if it is something I have set >wrong. Is anyone else who uses Seamonkey noticing the same problems >with add-ons and sites not working right? I may start trying to make a >list of sites that don't work right. Maybe someone else can see what it >does for them. I know my financial sites act weird but without login >info, no way to really test those. I might add, it seems that sites >with security measures are the ones with the most issues. I use Firefox >for most things now. I have different profiles and even use containers >to help secure things. I really wish I liked Thunderbird and could use >that and Firefox to replace Seamonkey. Sadly, Thunderbird just isn't >for me last I checked. > >This is my Seamonkey info: > > >[ebuild U ~] www-client/seamonkey-2.53.7::gentoo >[2.53.7_beta1::gentoo] USE="chatzilla dbus gmp-autoupdate ipc roaming >startup-notification system-av1 system-harfbuzz system-icu system-jpeg >system-libevent system-libvpx system-sqlite -crypt -custom-cflags >-custom-optimization -debug -jack (-lto) -minimal (-neon) -pulseaudio >(-selinux) -test -wifi" L10N="-cs -de -en-GB -es-AR -es-ES -fr -hu -it >-ja -lt -nl -pl -pt-PT -ru -sk -sv -zh-CN -zh-TW" > > > >Anyone else seeing this or am I the only Gentoo user using Seamonkey? > >Thanks. > >Dale > >:-) :_) > Have you considered something more modern like Neomutt? -- Hund ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-05 6:35 ` Hund @ 2021-04-06 4:19 ` Dale 2021-04-06 16:24 ` Wols Lists 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-06 4:19 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Hund wrote: > On April 5, 2021 12:17:59 AM GMT+02:00, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote: >> Howdy, >> >> As some may know, I use Seamonkey for several things. Mostly for email >> but using it for email leads to it being used for other things, like >> clicking links in email and viewing the page in Seamonkey. I tried >> switching to Thunderbird, which is supposed to be about the same thing >> but I didn't like it at all. It's different and in a bad way. >> >> Thing is, some sites are no longer working as they should. It seems >> with each upgrade, Seamonkey has more issues with things not working >> correctly. I might add, most add-ons, adblock being a big one, no >> longer work. They haven't had updates in ages. With all this, it makes >> me wonder if Seamonkey is still viable or if it is something I have set >> wrong. Is anyone else who uses Seamonkey noticing the same problems >> with add-ons and sites not working right? I may start trying to make a >> list of sites that don't work right. Maybe someone else can see what it >> does for them. I know my financial sites act weird but without login >> info, no way to really test those. I might add, it seems that sites >> with security measures are the ones with the most issues. I use Firefox >> for most things now. I have different profiles and even use containers >> to help secure things. I really wish I liked Thunderbird and could use >> that and Firefox to replace Seamonkey. Sadly, Thunderbird just isn't >> for me last I checked. >> >> This is my Seamonkey info: >> >> >> [ebuild U ~] www-client/seamonkey-2.53.7::gentoo >> [2.53.7_beta1::gentoo] USE="chatzilla dbus gmp-autoupdate ipc roaming >> startup-notification system-av1 system-harfbuzz system-icu system-jpeg >> system-libevent system-libvpx system-sqlite -crypt -custom-cflags >> -custom-optimization -debug -jack (-lto) -minimal (-neon) -pulseaudio >> (-selinux) -test -wifi" L10N="-cs -de -en-GB -es-AR -es-ES -fr -hu -it >> -ja -lt -nl -pl -pt-PT -ru -sk -sv -zh-CN -zh-TW" >> >> >> >> Anyone else seeing this or am I the only Gentoo user using Seamonkey? >> >> Thanks. >> >> Dale >> >> :-) :_) >> > Have you considered something more modern like Neomutt? > > -- > Hund > > I looked at some screenshots of it. My first question, does it handle HTML? I get a lot of emails that are HTML, and maybe only HTML. I can't control them either. Some are large financial type companies or other large companies. I confess tho, Seamonkey blocks most tracking type stuff and images unless I make exceptions. Well, it does until it breaks anyway. Since adblock is broke, it may break soon too. When it comes to emails, I'm pretty much a GUI with the bells and whistles type. My second question, can I make it work well with multiple profiles of Firefox running? I have profiles that have certain add-ons installed for certain tasks. For example, I have one that I only use to deal with videos. I have another that I use for banking and such. I also use it for ordering sites and use containers to separate those by task. If I click on a link, I'd need to tell it somehow what profile to open it in. When I tried Thunderbird, I had trouble getting it to open in Firefox, which I found odd. I tried just having one profile but some add-ons don't play well with others and it gets very memory hungry. It's better to have different profiles for different types of uses. Another question, can I just copy my current emails over and "import" them? I think Seamonkey uses mbox type setup. I know I could with Thunderbird but it was a bit fussy. It did work tho. It also made it easier to switch back. In a way, I don't want to switch. Thing is, I may have to. At the rate Seamonkey is going, it may become a door stop. It's getting updates but I have no clue how well maintained it really is. I see new features added to Firefox all the time but Seamonkey can't even keep the most popular add-on working anymore. Adblock was last updated in Seamonkey in 2017. It's still installed but one can't even add filter subscriptions anymore. Switching is going to cause all sorts of havoc. Can I just go see the dentist? :/ Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 4:19 ` Dale @ 2021-04-06 16:24 ` Wols Lists 2021-04-06 17:30 ` Dale 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Wols Lists @ 2021-04-06 16:24 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 06/04/21 05:19, Dale wrote: > Another question, can I just copy my current emails over and "import" > them? I think Seamonkey uses mbox type setup. I know I could with > Thunderbird but it was a bit fussy. It did work tho. It also made it > easier to switch back. Consider setting up a local imap server. Do all email clients do imap nowadays? I use thunderbird, and since fetchmail broke, I just use rules to pull everything down from the net, sort it, and copy it to local folders on my imap server. You could then use mutt, or neomutt, or pine, or alpine, or whatever, to read (most of) your mail. And any html garbage they couldn't handle, you could use thunderbird or seamonkey or whatever. No need to move mail between different clients. And as for moving your current stuff over, you just move it from Seamonkey's local store to the imap server and it'll appear for all the other clients. Because I move around between home computers, having my mail like this exposed on an imap server is brilliant ... Cheers, Wol ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 16:24 ` Wols Lists @ 2021-04-06 17:30 ` Dale 2021-04-06 18:19 ` antlists 2021-04-06 18:45 ` Neil Bothwick 0 siblings, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-06 17:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Wols Lists wrote: > On 06/04/21 05:19, Dale wrote: >> Another question, can I just copy my current emails over and "import" >> them? I think Seamonkey uses mbox type setup. I know I could with >> Thunderbird but it was a bit fussy. It did work tho. It also made it >> easier to switch back. > Consider setting up a local imap server. Do all email clients do imap > nowadays? > > I use thunderbird, and since fetchmail broke, I just use rules to pull > everything down from the net, sort it, and copy it to local folders on > my imap server. > > You could then use mutt, or neomutt, or pine, or alpine, or whatever, to > read (most of) your mail. And any html garbage they couldn't handle, you > could use thunderbird or seamonkey or whatever. > > No need to move mail between different clients. And as for moving your > current stuff over, you just move it from Seamonkey's local store to the > imap server and it'll appear for all the other clients. > > Because I move around between home computers, having my mail like this > exposed on an imap server is brilliant ... > > Cheers, > Wol > > If I understand this correctly, that could be a good idea. I use gmail, want to switch so bad I can taste it, and pop access to download all emails to my hard drive. I do that because if I run into trouble with my network, I have emails just in case I can find a mailing list post that will help. IMAP requires the internet from my understanding. From my understanding of your idea, I'd use a email program to download and store the emails for me here on my system and then use any frontend, Seamonkey, Thunderbird or whatever to read, reply etc. It would still give me a local copy I can access without a network connection but I can use whatever tool I want to see them. Interesting. That sounds like a awesome idea. Once moved, I'd never have to move it again if I change what I use to view emails. One thing, among others, I like about Seamonkey, folders and automatic sorting. For example, your reply went to a folder where all Gentoo user mailing list emails go. It also shows them by thread. I like the thread option for mailing lists but can disable it in other folders where threads don't do well. I repeat that for other mailing lists, -dev for example, but also for my bank, online retailers like ebay or Amazon etc. Each has their own place to go. One reason I do that, my filters are set up in such a way that if a email is made to look like one of those but comes from somewhere else, a scam or phishing, it doesn't filter. It stays in the inbox and that tells me to be suspicious. If I were to use IMAP, could I still do that? Does IMAP use folders and filters? I admit, I don't think I've ever used IMAP. This sounds like a interesting idea. I've read where people on this list set up such a thing and it doesn't seem to complicated. I might could handle that with a good howto. Thanks much for thinking outside the box a bit here. This could give me lots of good options. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 17:30 ` Dale @ 2021-04-06 18:19 ` antlists 2021-04-06 18:30 ` Matt Connell (Gmail) 2021-04-07 4:41 ` [gentoo-user] " Dale 2021-04-06 18:45 ` Neil Bothwick 1 sibling, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: antlists @ 2021-04-06 18:19 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 06/04/2021 18:30, Dale wrote: > Wols Lists wrote: >> On 06/04/21 05:19, Dale wrote: >>> Another question, can I just copy my current emails over and "import" >>> them? I think Seamonkey uses mbox type setup. I know I could with >>> Thunderbird but it was a bit fussy. It did work tho. It also made it >>> easier to switch back. >> Consider setting up a local imap server. Do all email clients do imap >> nowadays? >> >> I use thunderbird, and since fetchmail broke, I just use rules to pull >> everything down from the net, sort it, and copy it to local folders on >> my imap server. >> >> You could then use mutt, or neomutt, or pine, or alpine, or whatever, to >> read (most of) your mail. And any html garbage they couldn't handle, you >> could use thunderbird or seamonkey or whatever. >> >> No need to move mail between different clients. And as for moving your >> current stuff over, you just move it from Seamonkey's local store to the >> imap server and it'll appear for all the other clients. >> >> Because I move around between home computers, having my mail like this >> exposed on an imap server is brilliant ... >> >> Cheers, >> Wol >> >> > > > If I understand this correctly, that could be a good idea. I use gmail, > want to switch so bad I can taste it, and pop access to download all > emails to my hard drive. I do that because if I run into trouble with > my network, I have emails just in case I can find a mailing list post > that will help. IMAP requires the internet from my understanding. From > my understanding of your idea, I'd use a email program to download and > store the emails for me here on my system and then use any frontend, > Seamonkey, Thunderbird or whatever to read, reply etc. It would still > give me a local copy I can access without a network connection but I can > use whatever tool I want to see them. Interesting. That sounds like a > awesome idea. Once moved, I'd never have to move it again if I change > what I use to view emails. All imap requires is an imap server. The ISPs run them, Google runs them, and why can't you run one? I run Courier-imap, most people seem to swear by Dovecote. Just do a bit of reading up. > > One thing, among others, I like about Seamonkey, folders and automatic > sorting. For example, your reply went to a folder where all Gentoo user > mailing list emails go. It also shows them by thread. I like the > thread option for mailing lists but can disable it in other folders > where threads don't do well. I repeat that for other mailing lists, > -dev for example, but also for my bank, online retailers like ebay or > Amazon etc. Each has their own place to go. One reason I do that, my > filters are set up in such a way that if a email is made to look like > one of those but comes from somewhere else, a scam or phishing, it > doesn't filter. It stays in the inbox and that tells me to be > suspicious. If I were to use IMAP, could I still do that? Does IMAP > use folders and filters? I admit, I don't think I've ever used IMAP. Imap is quite happy with folders. Google let you create folders, IMAP lets you access them. No problem. > > This sounds like a interesting idea. I've read where people on this > list set up such a thing and it doesn't seem to complicated. I might > could handle that with a good howto. > > Thanks much for thinking outside the box a bit here. This could give me > lots of good options. > Read up on Courier and Dovecot. I'm sure people here will help you set it up. Once you've got it working, point Seamonkey at it and see if you can create folders. Then just point your existing rules to move your emails into your imap folders. You can keep Gmail, but all your folders and emails will be stored locally. And then, just like you can use any old client to access Gmail, you can use any old client to access your local imap server! Cheers, Wol ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 18:19 ` antlists @ 2021-04-06 18:30 ` Matt Connell (Gmail) 2021-04-06 19:58 ` antlists 2021-04-07 4:41 ` [gentoo-user] " Dale 1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Matt Connell (Gmail) @ 2021-04-06 18:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Tue, 2021-04-06 at 19:19 +0100, antlists wrote: > Imap is quite happy with folders. Google let you create folders, IMAP > lets you access them. No problem. Disclaimer: I haven't used Gmail in a few years. Interjection: Gmail does *not* support folders. Gmail uses *labels*, which mail clients will treat as folders. This can result in unexpected behavior, such as the same message appearing in different folders because it is labeled in two different ways, if you are not aware of this and expecting it to happen. One less reason to use Gmail. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 18:30 ` Matt Connell (Gmail) @ 2021-04-06 19:58 ` antlists 2021-04-06 20:04 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: antlists @ 2021-04-06 19:58 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 06/04/2021 19:30, Matt Connell (Gmail) wrote: > On Tue, 2021-04-06 at 19:19 +0100, antlists wrote: >> Imap is quite happy with folders. Google let you create folders, IMAP >> lets you access them. No problem. > Disclaimer: I haven't used Gmail in a few years. > > Interjection: Gmail does*not* support folders. Gmail uses*labels*, > which mail clients will treat as folders. True. But I believe that's a recent change. Google is moving to labels for everything, and it's driving me nuts in more ways than one ... I think of Google as using folders, because not that long ago that's exactly what they did. Cheers, Wol ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 19:58 ` antlists @ 2021-04-06 20:04 ` Grant Edwards 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Grant Edwards @ 2021-04-06 20:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 2021-04-06, antlists <antlists@youngman.org.uk> wrote: > On 06/04/2021 19:30, Matt Connell (Gmail) wrote: >> On Tue, 2021-04-06 at 19:19 +0100, antlists wrote: >>> Imap is quite happy with folders. Google let you create folders, IMAP >>> lets you access them. No problem. >> Disclaimer: I haven't used Gmail in a few years. >> >> Interjection: Gmail does*not* support folders. Gmail uses*labels*, >> which mail clients will treat as folders. > > True. But I believe that's a recent change. No, it's always been that way -- at least for all of my GMail accounts. > Google is moving to labels for everything, and it's driving me nuts > in more ways than one ... > > I think of Google as using folders, because not that long ago that's > exactly what they did. Everything I've read, and all my experience since I started using mutt with Gmail many years ago has been that GMail's IMAP server has always implemented folders using the normal GMAIL label mechanism. And I've always been perfectly content with that implementation. -- Grant ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 18:19 ` antlists 2021-04-06 18:30 ` Matt Connell (Gmail) @ 2021-04-07 4:41 ` Dale 2021-04-07 7:36 ` Neil Bothwick ` (3 more replies) 1 sibling, 4 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-07 4:41 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user antlists wrote: > On 06/04/2021 18:30, Dale wrote: >> Wols Lists wrote: >>> On 06/04/21 05:19, Dale wrote: >>>> Another question, can I just copy my current emails over and "import" >>>> them? I think Seamonkey uses mbox type setup. I know I could with >>>> Thunderbird but it was a bit fussy. It did work tho. It also made it >>>> easier to switch back. >>> Consider setting up a local imap server. Do all email clients do imap >>> nowadays? >>> >>> I use thunderbird, and since fetchmail broke, I just use rules to pull >>> everything down from the net, sort it, and copy it to local folders on >>> my imap server. >>> >>> You could then use mutt, or neomutt, or pine, or alpine, or >>> whatever, to >>> read (most of) your mail. And any html garbage they couldn't handle, >>> you >>> could use thunderbird or seamonkey or whatever. >>> >>> No need to move mail between different clients. And as for moving your >>> current stuff over, you just move it from Seamonkey's local store to >>> the >>> imap server and it'll appear for all the other clients. >>> >>> Because I move around between home computers, having my mail like this >>> exposed on an imap server is brilliant ... >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Wol >>> >>> >> >> >> If I understand this correctly, that could be a good idea. I use gmail, >> want to switch so bad I can taste it, and pop access to download all >> emails to my hard drive. I do that because if I run into trouble with >> my network, I have emails just in case I can find a mailing list post >> that will help. IMAP requires the internet from my understanding. From >> my understanding of your idea, I'd use a email program to download and >> store the emails for me here on my system and then use any frontend, >> Seamonkey, Thunderbird or whatever to read, reply etc. It would still >> give me a local copy I can access without a network connection but I can >> use whatever tool I want to see them. Interesting. That sounds like a >> awesome idea. Once moved, I'd never have to move it again if I change >> what I use to view emails. > > All imap requires is an imap server. The ISPs run them, Google runs > them, and why can't you run one? > > I run Courier-imap, most people seem to swear by Dovecote. Just do a > bit of reading up. >> >> One thing, among others, I like about Seamonkey, folders and automatic >> sorting. For example, your reply went to a folder where all Gentoo user >> mailing list emails go. It also shows them by thread. I like the >> thread option for mailing lists but can disable it in other folders >> where threads don't do well. I repeat that for other mailing lists, >> -dev for example, but also for my bank, online retailers like ebay or >> Amazon etc. Each has their own place to go. One reason I do that, my >> filters are set up in such a way that if a email is made to look like >> one of those but comes from somewhere else, a scam or phishing, it >> doesn't filter. It stays in the inbox and that tells me to be >> suspicious. If I were to use IMAP, could I still do that? Does IMAP >> use folders and filters? I admit, I don't think I've ever used IMAP. > > Imap is quite happy with folders. Google let you create folders, IMAP > lets you access them. No problem. >> >> This sounds like a interesting idea. I've read where people on this >> list set up such a thing and it doesn't seem to complicated. I might >> could handle that with a good howto. >> >> Thanks much for thinking outside the box a bit here. This could give me >> lots of good options. >> > Read up on Courier and Dovecot. I'm sure people here will help you set > it up. Once you've got it working, point Seamonkey at it and see if > you can create folders. > > Then just point your existing rules to move your emails into your imap > folders. You can keep Gmail, but all your folders and emails will be > stored locally. > > And then, just like you can use any old client to access Gmail, you > can use any old client to access your local imap server! > > Cheers, > Wol > > I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the comparison is here. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a guide here: http://www.wikigentoo.ksiezyc.pl/Dovecot.htm So far, it is Gentoo based. I found another one but it is Ubuntu based. May work but commands are different. Trying to go by a Gentoo based one. If anyone has a better one, please share links. May start new thread in a day or so if no one shouts nooooo. Dale :-) :-) P. S. One howto mentions a squirrel. I like squirrels. ROFL ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 4:41 ` [gentoo-user] " Dale @ 2021-04-07 7:36 ` Neil Bothwick 2021-04-07 7:44 ` William Kenworthy 2021-04-07 8:14 ` Dan Egli ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2021-04-07 7:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 935 bytes --] On Tue, 6 Apr 2021 23:41:50 -0500, Dale wrote: > I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox > and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't > but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the > comparison is here. > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers > > The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey > uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. You are better off with maildir, mbox is far more susceptible to date loss through file damage. There is a script to convert an mbox file to maildir, but you should also be able to just set up a new account in Seamonkey using the local server and copy all your mails across. The server will then take care of everything. -- Neil Bothwick If bankers can count, how come they have eight windows and only four tellers? [-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 7:36 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2021-04-07 7:44 ` William Kenworthy 2021-04-07 8:25 ` Dale 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: William Kenworthy @ 2021-04-07 7:44 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 7/4/21 3:36 pm, Neil Bothwick wrote: > On Tue, 6 Apr 2021 23:41:50 -0500, Dale wrote: > >> I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox >> and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't >> but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the >> comparison is here. >> >> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers >> >> The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey >> uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. > You are better off with maildir, mbox is far more susceptible to date > loss through file damage. There is a script to convert an mbox file to > maildir, but you should also be able to just set up a new account in > Seamonkey using the local server and copy all your mails across. The > server will then take care of everything. > > seconded. I use courier and maildir. MUCH more reliable and less chance of losing mail - there was a I time when I used mbox - no longer the case ... speaking from personal experience ... after losing mail :) BillK ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 7:44 ` William Kenworthy @ 2021-04-07 8:25 ` Dale 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-07 8:25 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user William Kenworthy wrote: > On 7/4/21 3:36 pm, Neil Bothwick wrote: >> On Tue, 6 Apr 2021 23:41:50 -0500, Dale wrote: >> >>> I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox >>> and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't >>> but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the >>> comparison is here. >>> >>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers >>> >>> The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey >>> uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. >> You are better off with maildir, mbox is far more susceptible to date >> loss through file damage. There is a script to convert an mbox file to >> maildir, but you should also be able to just set up a new account in >> Seamonkey using the local server and copy all your mails across. The >> server will then take care of everything. >> >> > seconded. I use courier and maildir. MUCH more reliable and less > chance of losing mail - there was a I time when I used mbox - no longer > the case ... speaking from personal experience ... after losing mail :) > > > BillK > > > > I think Dovecot can use a few formats. I think. I just want a way I can revert back easily to if needed. So far, I've never lost a email. So far. Today is a new day tho. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 4:41 ` [gentoo-user] " Dale 2021-04-07 7:36 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2021-04-07 8:14 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-07 8:34 ` Dale [not found] ` <d70aa4be-070c-fdf7-66bd-d1f1f300471a@newideatest.site> 2021-04-07 14:57 ` antlists 3 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dan Egli @ 2021-04-07 8:14 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, Dale On 4/6/2021 10:41 PM, Dale wrote: > I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox > and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't > but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the > comparison is here. > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers > > The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey > uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least > gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a > new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a > guide here: > Seamonkey is a web browser. Therefore, mbox vs maildir is meaningless to it. All it knows it it talks to the imap server and the imap server replies and sends a message. Having said that, AVOID mbox like the plague! It is only a matter of time before mbox mail files get corrupted. Maildir is INFINITELY safer. And in the event of corruption in maildir, you loose ONLY the corrupted messages. Corrupt your mbox file and you're likely to loose the whole folder! As far as moving from one to another, both mbox and maildir are standards. So if imap server X and Y both use Maildir, then swapping between them is easy, and POINTLESS, due to the fact that imap maintains the files on your server. So, if you move to a different mail CLIENT (thunderbird for example) then the new client only needs to take the time to re-download the messages from the server. It's the same way webmail and a client can work together. Neither is doing the actual work with the files. Each is only sending commands to a separate server program to work with the files. > http://www.wikigentoo.ksiezyc.pl/Dovecot.htm > > So far, it is Gentoo based. I found another one but it is Ubuntu > based. May work but commands are different. Trying to go by a Gentoo > based one. If anyone has a better one, please share links. > > May start new thread in a day or so if no one shouts nooooo. Consider this the shout. I can't stop you from using mbox, but I can shout at the top of my lungs that it's a BAD IDEA. And I can say over and over that changing your imap SERVER will have ZERO impact on what Seamonkey does. The only exception would be if you have a mail server (original or new) that doesn't fully follow the imap protocol. And in that case, who knows what the change will do. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 8:14 ` Dan Egli @ 2021-04-07 8:34 ` Dale 2021-04-07 8:40 ` Dan Egli 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-07 8:34 UTC (permalink / raw To: Gentoo User Dan Egli wrote: > On 4/6/2021 10:41 PM, Dale wrote: >> I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox >> and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't >> but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the >> comparison is here. >> >> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers >> >> The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey >> uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least >> gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a >> new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a >> guide here: >> > Seamonkey is a web browser. Therefore, mbox vs maildir is meaningless > to it. All it knows it it talks to the imap server and the imap server > replies and sends a message. > > Having said that, AVOID mbox like the plague! It is only a matter of > time before mbox mail files get corrupted. Maildir is INFINITELY > safer. And in the event of corruption in maildir, you loose ONLY the > corrupted messages. Corrupt your mbox file and you're likely to loose > the whole folder! > > As far as moving from one to another, both mbox and maildir are > standards. So if imap server X and Y both use Maildir, then swapping > between them is easy, and POINTLESS, due to the fact that imap > maintains the files on your server. So, if you move to a different > mail CLIENT (thunderbird for example) then the new client only needs > to take the time to re-download the messages from the server. It's the > same way webmail and a client can work together. Neither is doing the > actual work with the files. Each is only sending commands to a > separate server program to work with the files. > >> http://www.wikigentoo.ksiezyc.pl/Dovecot.htm >> >> So far, it is Gentoo based. I found another one but it is Ubuntu >> based. May work but commands are different. Trying to go by a Gentoo >> based one. If anyone has a better one, please share links. >> >> May start new thread in a day or so if no one shouts nooooo. > Consider this the shout. I can't stop you from using mbox, but I can > shout at the top of my lungs that it's a BAD IDEA. And I can say over > and over that changing your imap SERVER will have ZERO impact on what > Seamonkey does. The only exception would be if you have a mail server > (original or new) that doesn't fully follow the imap protocol. And in > that case, who knows what the change will do. > I looked, Dovecot can use either mbox or maildir. Can Dovecot convert those to or must I use a different tool? To anyone using Dovecot, just what all had to be installed? This is what emerge gives me right now. root@fireball / # emerge -av dovecot These are the packages that would be merged, in order: Calculating dependencies... done! [ebuild N ] acct-group/dovecot-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB [ebuild N ] acct-group/dovenull-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB [ebuild N ] acct-user/dovecot-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB [ebuild N ] acct-user/dovenull-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB [ebuild N ] net-mail/dovecot-2.3.13-r100::gentoo USE="bzip2 ipv6 lzma mysql pam sqlite tcpd zlib -argon2 -caps -doc -kerberos -ldap (-libressl) -lua -lucene -lz4 -managesieve -postgres -rpc (-selinux) -sieve -solr -static-libs -suid -textcat -unwind -zstd" LUA_SINGLE_TARGET="lua5-1 -lua5-2 -lua5-3" 7,282 KiB Total: 5 packages (5 new), Size of downloads: 7,282 KiB Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] I suspect I need to install some other packages to make certain things work. Then again, maybe they already installed?? Some may recall that cron jobs sent emails so it has to have packages installed for that. The guide I linked to elsewhere has USE flags not listed above. It may be out of date. It does say not to use it for older 1.* versions of Dovecot tho. Just trying to see what I'm getting into here. I think this is a really good idea but want to see how deep the water is before jumping in. I can't swim, well, I do, like a lead rock. :/ Thanks. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 8:34 ` Dale @ 2021-04-07 8:40 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-08 22:58 ` Dale 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dan Egli @ 2021-04-07 8:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, Dale On 4/7/2021 2:34 AM, Dale wrote: > Dan Egli wrote: >> On 4/6/2021 10:41 PM, Dale wrote: >>> I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox >>> and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't >>> but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the >>> comparison is here. >>> >>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers >>> >>> The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey >>> uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least >>> gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a >>> new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a >>> guide here: >>> >> Seamonkey is a web browser. Therefore, mbox vs maildir is meaningless >> to it. All it knows it it talks to the imap server and the imap server >> replies and sends a message. >> >> Having said that, AVOID mbox like the plague! It is only a matter of >> time before mbox mail files get corrupted. Maildir is INFINITELY >> safer. And in the event of corruption in maildir, you loose ONLY the >> corrupted messages. Corrupt your mbox file and you're likely to loose >> the whole folder! >> >> As far as moving from one to another, both mbox and maildir are >> standards. So if imap server X and Y both use Maildir, then swapping >> between them is easy, and POINTLESS, due to the fact that imap >> maintains the files on your server. So, if you move to a different >> mail CLIENT (thunderbird for example) then the new client only needs >> to take the time to re-download the messages from the server. It's the >> same way webmail and a client can work together. Neither is doing the >> actual work with the files. Each is only sending commands to a >> separate server program to work with the files. >> >>> http://www.wikigentoo.ksiezyc.pl/Dovecot.htm >>> >>> So far, it is Gentoo based. I found another one but it is Ubuntu >>> based. May work but commands are different. Trying to go by a Gentoo >>> based one. If anyone has a better one, please share links. >>> >>> May start new thread in a day or so if no one shouts nooooo. >> Consider this the shout. I can't stop you from using mbox, but I can >> shout at the top of my lungs that it's a BAD IDEA. And I can say over >> and over that changing your imap SERVER will have ZERO impact on what >> Seamonkey does. The only exception would be if you have a mail server >> (original or new) that doesn't fully follow the imap protocol. And in >> that case, who knows what the change will do. >> > > I looked, Dovecot can use either mbox or maildir. Can Dovecot convert > those to or must I use a different tool? > > To anyone using Dovecot, just what all had to be installed? This is > what emerge gives me right now. > I use dovecot here. What you see is plenty for the standard install. the managesieve flag allows you to write custom scripts in the seieve language. But I don't recommend getting into that until you know the language. Other than that, the other disabled flags are fairly self-explanatory. As for converting, you would need to have two instances with two different configs running to do that. Then you'd use your mail client to move messages between accounts. But I __STILL__ say you should NOT use mbox format. If you happen to be using it now, then I recommend you convert! Converting TO maildir is not hard if you use formail. > root@fireball / # emerge -av dovecot > > These are the packages that would be merged, in order: > > Calculating dependencies... done! > [ebuild N ] acct-group/dovecot-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB > [ebuild N ] acct-group/dovenull-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB > [ebuild N ] acct-user/dovecot-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB > [ebuild N ] acct-user/dovenull-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB > [ebuild N ] net-mail/dovecot-2.3.13-r100::gentoo USE="bzip2 ipv6 > lzma mysql pam sqlite tcpd zlib -argon2 -caps -doc -kerberos -ldap > (-libressl) -lua -lucene -lz4 -managesieve -postgres -rpc (-selinux) > -sieve -solr -static-libs -suid -textcat -unwind -zstd" > LUA_SINGLE_TARGET="lua5-1 -lua5-2 -lua5-3" 7,282 KiB > > Total: 5 packages (5 new), Size of downloads: 7,282 KiB > > Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] > > > I suspect I need to install some other packages to make certain things > work. Then again, maybe they already installed?? Some may recall that > cron jobs sent emails so it has to have packages installed for that. > The guide I linked to elsewhere has USE flags not listed above. It may > be out of date. It does say not to use it for older 1.* versions of > Dovecot tho. Just trying to see what I'm getting into here. I think > this is a really good idea but want to see how deep the water is before > jumping in. I can't swim, well, I do, like a lead rock. :/ > My config is more advanced since my dovecot has to talk to both MySQL and LDAP databases, and to support compressed messages. So the use flags I put on for 2.3.13-r100 are: bzip2 doc ipv6 ldap lua lz4 lzma managesieve mysql pam rpc selinux sieve sqlite zlib ztd ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 8:40 ` Dan Egli @ 2021-04-08 22:58 ` Dale 2021-04-08 23:12 ` Neil Bothwick 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-08 22:58 UTC (permalink / raw To: Gentoo User Dan Egli wrote: > On 4/7/2021 2:34 AM, Dale wrote: > >> root@fireball / # emerge -av dovecot >> >> These are the packages that would be merged, in order: >> >> Calculating dependencies... done! >> [ebuild N ] acct-group/dovecot-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB >> [ebuild N ] acct-group/dovenull-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB >> [ebuild N ] acct-user/dovecot-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB >> [ebuild N ] acct-user/dovenull-0-r1::gentoo 0 KiB >> [ebuild N ] net-mail/dovecot-2.3.13-r100::gentoo USE="bzip2 ipv6 >> lzma mysql pam sqlite tcpd zlib -argon2 -caps -doc -kerberos -ldap >> (-libressl) -lua -lucene -lz4 -managesieve -postgres -rpc (-selinux) >> -sieve -solr -static-libs -suid -textcat -unwind -zstd" >> LUA_SINGLE_TARGET="lua5-1 -lua5-2 -lua5-3" 7,282 KiB >> >> Total: 5 packages (5 new), Size of downloads: 7,282 KiB >> >> Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] >> >> >> I suspect I need to install some other packages to make certain things >> work. Then again, maybe they already installed?? Some may recall that >> cron jobs sent emails so it has to have packages installed for that. >> The guide I linked to elsewhere has USE flags not listed above. It may >> be out of date. It does say not to use it for older 1.* versions of >> Dovecot tho. Just trying to see what I'm getting into here. I think >> this is a really good idea but want to see how deep the water is before >> jumping in. I can't swim, well, I do, like a lead rock. :/ >> > > My config is more advanced since my dovecot has to talk to both MySQL > and LDAP databases, and to support compressed messages. So the use > flags I put on for 2.3.13-r100 are: > bzip2 doc ipv6 ldap lua lz4 lzma managesieve mysql pam rpc selinux > sieve sqlite zlib ztd > > > I been trying to find a up to date guide on this. I'm not having much luck. I tried the Dovecot site but they seem to cater to people wanting a space ship going to Mars or something. Does anyone have a link to a simple guide I can follow? The ones I found talk about options that don't even exist. They are for the 2.* version but seem to be out of date never the less. Even the Gentoo wiki one I found has a part that is out of date, says so above it. I missed out on the squirrel. :/ I think I'm missing the part that I can access it with a GUI, like when I go to mail.google.com or something. Any links would be nice. At this point, it's emerged, I'm clueless from there. I don't even know how to access it to see if it is even running, other than ps showing it. Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-08 22:58 ` Dale @ 2021-04-08 23:12 ` Neil Bothwick 2021-04-08 23:56 ` Dan Egli 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2021-04-08 23:12 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1355 bytes --] On Thu, 8 Apr 2021 17:58:06 -0500, Dale wrote: > I been trying to find a up to date guide on this. I'm not having much > luck. I tried the Dovecot site but they seem to cater to people wanting > a space ship going to Mars or something. Does anyone have a link to a > simple guide I can follow? The ones I found talk about options that > don't even exist. They are for the 2.* version but seem to be out of > date never the less. Even the Gentoo wiki one I found has a part that > is out of date, says so above it. I missed out on the squirrel. :/ If you're accessing it locally only, the default settings should be fine. The only thing you may want to change is the location of the mail storage. Look for the mail_location setting at the top of /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf. Then fire up Seamonkey, create a new IMAP account and tell it to use localhost for the server. > I > think I'm missing the part that I can access it with a GUI, like when I > go to mail.google.com or something. Dovecot is an IMP server, it doesn't have a GUI. What you are thinking of is a webmail *client*. That's just another client, like Thunderbird or mutt, as far as Dovecot is concerned. There are a few webmail clients available, I use Roundcube. -- Neil Bothwick I'd tell you a UDP joke, but you may not get it. [-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-08 23:12 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2021-04-08 23:56 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-09 14:52 ` Michael 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Dan Egli @ 2021-04-08 23:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 4/8/2021 5:12 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote: >> I >> think I'm missing the part that I can access it with a GUI, like when I >> go to mail.google.com or something. > Dovecot is an IMP server, it doesn't have a GUI. What you are thinking of > is a webmail *client*. That's just another client, like Thunderbird or > mutt, as far as Dovecot is concerned. There are a few webmail clients > available, I use Roundcube. It all depends on what you want. I've not used Roundcube, although I hear it's good. I've used SquirrelMail, Horde, and SOGo. I personally prefer SOGo, but it's complicated to setup. SquirrelMail is easy, but lacks a lot of features that SOGo had. Horde is kind of in the middle. The only thing I'd watch out for is that if you use SOGo, the gentoo packages are WAY out of date. The most recent SOGo package in portage is 4.3.2, but you can get the sources for 5.1.0 from the SOGO.NU website. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-08 23:56 ` Dan Egli @ 2021-04-09 14:52 ` Michael 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Michael @ 2021-04-09 14:52 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1495 bytes --] On Friday, 9 April 2021 00:56:27 BST Dan Egli wrote: > On 4/8/2021 5:12 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote: > >> I > >> think I'm missing the part that I can access it with a GUI, like when I > >> go to mail.google.com or something. > > > > Dovecot is an IMP server, it doesn't have a GUI. What you are thinking of > > is a webmail *client*. That's just another client, like Thunderbird or > > mutt, as far as Dovecot is concerned. There are a few webmail clients > > available, I use Roundcube. > > It all depends on what you want. I've not used Roundcube, although I > hear it's good. I've used SquirrelMail, Horde, and SOGo. I personally > prefer SOGo, but it's complicated to setup. SquirrelMail is easy, but > lacks a lot of features that SOGo had. Horde is kind of in the middle. > The only thing I'd watch out for is that if you use SOGo, the gentoo > packages are WAY out of date. The most recent SOGo package in portage is > 4.3.2, but you can get the sources for 5.1.0 from the SOGO.NU website. Quick clarification: A webmail client is a web app, served by a webserver. Adding all these packages, complication and configuration, on what otherwise remains a desktop installation/use case, when the OP already uses a mail client application on localhost to access his emails, makes me think it's a bit of an overkill. Unless, instead of a mail client desktop application, a webmail interface is preferred and the burden of configuring and maintaining so many more packages is acceptable. [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
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* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users [not found] ` <d70aa4be-070c-fdf7-66bd-d1f1f300471a@newideatest.site> @ 2021-04-07 8:15 ` Dan Egli 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Dan Egli @ 2021-04-07 8:15 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, Dale Okay, how this one got posted, I have no idea. Sorry about the dupe. I didn't hit SEND except on the second one, so I guess thunderbird goofed up. On 4/7/2021 2:11 AM, Dan Egli wrote: > On 4/6/2021 10:41 PM, Dale wrote: >> I've done some research. It seems Dovecot is what I need. It uses mbox >> and has some features I might need one day already where Courier doesn't >> but there isn't much difference really. If anyone is curious, the >> comparison is here. >> >> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers >> >> The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey >> uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least >> gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a >> new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a >> guide here: >> > Seamonkey is a web browser. Therefore, mbox vs maildir is meaningless > to it. All it knows it it talks to the imap server and the imap server > replies and sends a message. > > Having said that, AVOID mbox like the plague! It is only a matter of > time before mbox mail files get corrupted. Maildir is INFINITELY > safer. And in the event of corruption in maildir, you loose ONLY the > corrupted messages. Corrupt your mbox file and you're likely to loose > the whole folder! > > As far as moving from one to another, both mbox and maildir are > standards. So if imap server X and Y both use Maildir, then swapping > between them is easy, and POINTLESS, due to the fact that i > >> http://www.wikigentoo.ksiezyc.pl/Dovecot.htm >> >> So far, it is Gentoo based. I found another one but it is Ubuntu >> based. May work but commands are different. Trying to go by a Gentoo >> based one. If anyone has a better one, please share links. >> >> May start new thread in a day or so if no one shouts nooooo. > Consider this the shout. I can't stop you from using mbox, but I can > shout at the top of my lungs that it's a BAD IDEA. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 4:41 ` [gentoo-user] " Dale ` (2 preceding siblings ...) [not found] ` <d70aa4be-070c-fdf7-66bd-d1f1f300471a@newideatest.site> @ 2021-04-07 14:57 ` antlists 2021-04-07 15:43 ` Dale 3 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: antlists @ 2021-04-07 14:57 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 07/04/2021 05:41, Dale wrote: > The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey > uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least > gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a > new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a > guide here: Stop thinking about importing. Point Seamonkey at Dovecot (I assume it can have multiple mail accounts like Thunderbird). Then just copy the emails across just like you'd move anything else around in Seamonkey (or Thunderbird). What format the backend stores the email in isn't really important. Unless (which may well be the case :-) you want easy access to back them up, and to understand how the backend works. Cheers, Wol ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-07 14:57 ` antlists @ 2021-04-07 15:43 ` Dale 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Dale @ 2021-04-07 15:43 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user antlists wrote: > On 07/04/2021 05:41, Dale wrote: >> The biggest thing, mbox. If I recall correctly that is what Seamonkey >> uses and I should be able to import those easy enough. It at least >> gives me a head start. Since this is a whole new deal, going to start a >> new thread if nobody pops up and says nooooooo to Dovecot. I found a >> guide here: > > Stop thinking about importing. > > Point Seamonkey at Dovecot (I assume it can have multiple mail > accounts like Thunderbird). Then just copy the emails across just like > you'd move anything else around in Seamonkey (or Thunderbird). > > What format the backend stores the email in isn't really important. > Unless (which may well be the case :-) you want easy access to back > them up, and to understand how the backend works. > > Cheers, > Wol > > That is likely doable to. I'm just used to copying the files over. I assume when I copy, it will convert from mbox to maildir as well? I've never seen or used maildir before so no idea what it looks like or how it works. That said, I've never had trouble with mbox either. Got a lot on plate today. Will reply to others later. Headed to town to pick up some MUCH needed supplies. Hope my antique car can handle this. o_O Dale :-) :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users 2021-04-06 17:30 ` Dale 2021-04-06 18:19 ` antlists @ 2021-04-06 18:45 ` Neil Bothwick 1 sibling, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2021-04-06 18:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1337 bytes --] On Tue, 6 Apr 2021 12:30:36 -0500, Dale wrote: > One thing, among others, I like about Seamonkey, folders and automatic > sorting. For example, your reply went to a folder where all Gentoo user > mailing list emails go. It also shows them by thread. I like the > thread option for mailing lists but can disable it in other folders > where threads don't do well. I repeat that for other mailing lists, > -dev for example, but also for my bank, online retailers like ebay or > Amazon etc. Each has their own place to go. One reason I do that, my > filters are set up in such a way that if a email is made to look like > one of those but comes from somewhere else, a scam or phishing, it > doesn't filter. It stays in the inbox and that tells me to be > suspicious. If I were to use IMAP, could I still do that? Does IMAP > use folders and filters? I admit, I don't think I've ever used IMAP. It does support folders. You can still do the sorting in Seamonkey and the results will be available to any other clients you use, but only if you run Seamonkey first. The alternative is to do the sorting when the mail is downloaded, using something like procmail. Then you mails will be sorted regardless of the client you use. -- Neil Bothwick WinErr 012: Window closed - Do not look inside [-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2021-04-09 14:52 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 24+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2021-04-04 22:17 [gentoo-user] Looking for other Seamonkey users Dale 2021-04-05 6:35 ` Hund 2021-04-06 4:19 ` Dale 2021-04-06 16:24 ` Wols Lists 2021-04-06 17:30 ` Dale 2021-04-06 18:19 ` antlists 2021-04-06 18:30 ` Matt Connell (Gmail) 2021-04-06 19:58 ` antlists 2021-04-06 20:04 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards 2021-04-07 4:41 ` [gentoo-user] " Dale 2021-04-07 7:36 ` Neil Bothwick 2021-04-07 7:44 ` William Kenworthy 2021-04-07 8:25 ` Dale 2021-04-07 8:14 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-07 8:34 ` Dale 2021-04-07 8:40 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-08 22:58 ` Dale 2021-04-08 23:12 ` Neil Bothwick 2021-04-08 23:56 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-09 14:52 ` Michael [not found] ` <d70aa4be-070c-fdf7-66bd-d1f1f300471a@newideatest.site> 2021-04-07 8:15 ` Dan Egli 2021-04-07 14:57 ` antlists 2021-04-07 15:43 ` Dale 2021-04-06 18:45 ` Neil Bothwick
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