11-15-2011
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Multiple users at my work are connecting to a UNIX IMAP e-
mail server via Outlook 2003 that is creating a small
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Discussion started by: arkady
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2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I've got UW-IMAP installed on Gentoo. I'm using EXIM as the transfer agent.
EXIM is working fine (I think)... all incoming mail - external and internal goes to /var/mail/username file. I can verifiy this by reading this file directly with nano.
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Hi, I'm new here an dlearning a lot from this forum. i didnt find any solution for this in the forum.
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4. Ubuntu
Hi All,
I am new to Forums, as i am struggling for one script i am launched here.
I need to move more than 60,000+ folders in 1,00,000 folders to another server. I have the list of folders which should be moved. can anybody help me in sharing with the script for the above requirement.
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5. Red Hat
I'm new at this, so bare with me.
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I have a more than 10 K files in a folder. They are accumulated in a period of more than an year (Say from 13th July 2010 to 4th June 2011). I need to perform housekeeping on this. The requirement is to create a folder like 13Jul2010,14July2010,......3June2011,4June2010 and then from the main... (2 Replies)
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Hello!
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Discussion started by: krustytherusty
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8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello, I'm new to this forum. Did a search but I didn't quite find what I was looking for. This is probably a fairly easy request but I'm just not sure how to accomplish this.
I have a folder structure that looks something like this:/names/company1/archive
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Discussion started by: vipertech
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I recently bought Synology server and realised it can run scripts. I would need fairly simple script which moves all files and folders from ARCHIVE folder to WORKING folder. I would also need to maintain folder structure as each of the folders may contain subfolders. How would I go about it as I am... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ###
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
cyrus::imap::imsp
IMAP::IMSP(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation IMAP::IMSP(3)
NAME
Cyrus::IMAP::IMSP - Perl module for Cyrus IMSP user options
SYNOPSIS
use Cyrus::IMAP::IMSP;
my $client = Cyrus::IMAP::IMSP->new('imsphost'[, $port[, $flags]]);
$rc = $client->set('mailreader.window.size', '200x300');
%options = $client->get('mailreader.*')
$rc = $client->unset('mailreader.window.size');
DESCRIPTION
This module is a Perl interface to the Cyrus IMSP functions that relate to user options (preferences). Only three IMSP operations are
implemented: set, unset, and get.
METHODS
new($server[, $port[, $flags]])
Instantiates a Cyrus::IMAP::IMSP object. This is in fact a Cyrus::IMAP object with a few additional methods, so all Cyrus::IMAP
methods are available if needed. (In particular, you will always want to use the "authenticate" method.)
error
Return the last error that occurred, or undef if the last operation was successful. This is in some cases (such as "get") the only way
to distinguish between a successful return of an empty list and an error return.
Calling "error" does not reset the error state, so it is legal to write:
%options = $client->get($option);
print STDERR "Error: ", $client->error if $client->error;
set($option, $value)
Sets the option named by $option to the value in $value.
There are no restrictions or quoting rules needed to protect special characters in the value argument. (The Cyrus::IMAP layer will take
care those details by adding double quotes or a literal introducer.)
If successful, returns 1. Otherwise, returns undef and makes an error message available through the "error" function.
unset($option)
Removes the option named by $option. The option is completely removed from the user's name space but will revert to a site-wide default
if one has been set. Note that this is different from assigning an option the null value with set($option, '').
If you try to unset an option that does not exist, an error is returned saying that the option was already unset.
If successful, returns 1. Otherwise, returns undef and makes an error message available through the "error" function.
get($option_pattern)
Get takes either an option name or a pattern of names to fetch. The pattern can contain either "*" or "%" wildcards anywhere in the
string. The usual IMAP wildcard semantics apply.
The return value is a hash of options with each key being an option name and each value being the option's value string. If an empty
hash is returned, it's either because there were no matching options or because some error happened. Check the "error" function to see
which was the case.
The IMSP protocol also returns an access flag of "[READ-WRITE]" or "[READ-ONLY]" but that information is discarded by this function. A
more complicated function that returns both the value and the access flag could be added later if needed.
AUTHOR
Brandon S. Allbery, allbery@ece.cmu.edu IMSP modifications by Joseph Jackson, jackson@CMU.EDU
SEE ALSO
Cyrus::IMAP perl(1), cyradm(1), imapd(8).
perl v5.12.1 2002-05-25 IMAP::IMSP(3)