It WORKS!!! :-) Great, thanks! Best regards Volker Am 12.12.2021 um 13:00 schrieb Volker:> That?s a good message, thank you very much! > > I will try the patch! > > Kind regards > Volker > > Am 12.12.2021 um 12:48 schrieb Aki Tuomi: >>>> Hello! >>>> >>>> While searching for an explanation for the fact that after updating to >>>> Dovecot 2.3.17_1 (FreeBSD 12.2) I suddenly stopped receiving emails and >>>> following error messages appeared in the dovecot.log, >>>> >>>> /Error: lmtp-server: conn unix:uid=125 [1]: rcptuser at domain.tld: >>>> duplicate db: Useruser at domain.tld doesn't have home dir set, disabling >>>> duplicate database// >>>> // >>>> //Dec 12 08:42:54 lmtp(user at domain.tld)<80363><z7AxDf6ntWHrOQEAp6O1gg>: >>>> Panic: file imem.c: line 65 (i_strconcat): assertion failed: (str1 != NULL) >>>> >>>> /I found your answer here >>>> <https://www.mail-archive.com/dovecot at dovecot.org/msg84893.html>: >>>> >>>> /Problem confirmed. This is a 2.3.17 regression. Tracking internally as >>>> DOP-2659./ >>>> / >>>> Regards, >>>> Stephan./ >>>> >>>> >>>> But what exactly does your answer mean for those affected? >>>> >>>> That all users who use Dovecot and use the whole thing without >>>> "mail_home" and only with "mail_location", must wait until a BugFix >>>> appears to be able to receive emails again? >>>> >>>> >>>> Thanks in advance and have a nice advent sunday >>>> Volker >>>> >>>> P. S.: >>>> In my case dovecot -n shows >>>> >>>> /mail_location = maildir:/var/mail/vhosts/%d/%n// >>>> //mail_home = /var/mail/vhosts/%d/%n >>>> >>>> /so mail_home is even set!/ >>>> / >>>> >>> You can roll back to 2.3.16 as well? >>> >>> Aki >> After looking bit more, this issue is fixed and will be in 2.3.18. If you want, you can try applying >> >> https://github.com/dovecot/core/compare/98f709de%5E..d36d2c59.patch >> >> which should fix this issue. >> >> Aki >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <https://dovecot.org/pipermail/dovecot/attachments/20211213/634af6ee/attachment-0001.htm>