On 22/09/2019 4:08 AM, @lbutlr via dovecot wrote:>> So while I was migrating the mail, I did try for a while to understand
the format of the UID files, but failed to do so in the available time, so the
client just had to deal with duplicate emails. But now the smoke has cleared,
I'd like to understand the problem a little better, and I was hoping someone
on this forum could explain it to me, and the changes I'd need to make to
the files so that the POP client DIDN'T download the duplicate emails.
>
> Did you check <https://wiki.dovecot.org/Migration>? It has a lot of
info on this.
I did see that page, but was unable to figure out which of the three UID related
files I needed to keep, and which to edit in order to 'trick' the email
client into not re-downloading the mails.
The migration was from dovecot 2.x to 2.x, so I don't think there was any
translation issue between servers. The POP clients were Outlook (my old
nemesis). The only information I could find is that the dovecot UIDL format is
pop3_uidl_format = %v.%u
But that didn't really take me anywhere. So its all a bit of a mystery. I
was hoping there would be a UID guru on this list who could walk me through it,
or point me to some reference.
> Don?t know, but dsync says it does this:
> "The pop3-migration plugin is used to preserve POP3 UIDLs. When dsync
is handling IMAP INBOX and requests a POP3 UIDL, the plugin connects to the POP3
server and figures out which IMAP messages match which POP3 messages and then
returns the appropriate POP3 UIDL.?
> Trouble is, if you are migrating POP and the server is not up, I am not
sure what you can do with dsync?
I did try to use dsync (aka doveadm sync) for a few hours, but couldn't get
a test account to migrate across. It seems like this would have been the
solution but I was unable to confirm. At times it seemed to login and complete
without error, but I could never find where it had put the mail! Other times it
refused to login or gave permission errors. I looked around for real life
examples, but wasn't able to find any.
Had I got it to work, I could maybe have figured out the UID problem. Maybe that
will be a project for me in the future, when I have a spare few hours!
Maybe if I gave a few details of the directory structure that would help. I was
migrating from a Cpanel installation to a standalone mail server.
In Cpanel, there was the admin account login, and under that
~/mail/domain1.com/mailbox1
~/mail/domain1.com/mailbox2
~/mail/domain2.com/mailbox1
~/mail/domain2.com/mailbox2
On the target server the same structure existed. One login, admin, and under
that account
~/mail/domain1.com/mailbox1
~/mail/domain1.com/mailbox2
~/mail/domain2.com/mailbox1
~/mail/domain2.com/mailbox2
All files and directories were chown admin:mail
The command I used was
doveadm sync -u test at domain.com ssh -i id_rsa -o
"StrictHostKeyChecking=no" admin at 100.110.120.130
I tried a few options to tell it where to put the mail, but dovecot on the
target server didn't seem to know where each account was located.
P.