search for: lelion

Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "lelion".

Did you mean: legion
2012 Feb 14
2
R: Re: LMTP : Can't handle mixed proxy/non-proxy destinations
...args = /usr/local/etc/dovecot/dovecot-ldap.conf driver = ldap } protocol imap { mail_plugins = quota imap_quota } protocol lmtp { postmaster_address = info at amm2.miur.it } Regards Cinzia >----Messaggio originale---- >Da: tss at iki.fi >Data: 28-gen-2012 18.32 >A: "Alexis Lelion"<alexis.lelion at gmail.com> >Cc: "Dovecot Mailing List"<dovecot at dovecot.org> >Ogg: Re: [Dovecot] LMTP : Can&#39;t handle mixed proxy/non-proxy destinations > >On 27.1.2012, at 12.59, Alexis Lelion wrote: > >> Jan 25 09:05:12 mail01 postfix/lmt...
2012 Jan 27
1
LMTP : Can't handle mixed proxy/non-proxy destinations
Hello, In my current setup, I uses two mailservers to handle the users connections, and my emails are stored on a distant server using NFS (maildir architecture) Dovecot is both my IMAP server and the delivery agent (LMTP via postfix) To avoid indexing issues related to NFS, proxying is enabled both on IMAP and LMTP. But when a mail is sent to users that are shared between the servers, I got the
2012 Mar 15
1
sieve.before script is taking preceedence over user defined rules
Hello, In my current setup, I have a spam filter upstream that adds a specific header - X-Spam-Level on every incoming mail. Based on this level, the mail will be moved to the user spam folder using sieve by doing "fileinto :create 'spam';" Unfortunately, some legitimate email may end up in this spam folder, so I have kind of a whitelist that performs an explicit keep over
2012 Jan 06
1
ACL with IMAP proxying
Hello, I'm trying to use ACLs to restrict subscription on public mailboxes, but I went into trouble. My setup is made of two servers, and users are shared between them via a proxy. User authentication is done with LDAP, and credentials aren't shared between the mailservers. Instead, the proxies are using master password. The thing is that when the ACLs are checked, it actually doesn't