(Illustration by Gaich Muramatsu)
I checked the docs on cyrus and it stores messages individually in files, as does qmail maildir, and I checked the source to confirm that it does in fact use hardlinks extensivly.. Is there a clean way to allow hardlinks in coda between directories? As far as I know, the reason links are used for mail delivery is to make things reliable over nfs. Since we're taking nfs out of the picture, how about having a coda flag so that a directory hierachy could be set to 'move' files when unlink is called on files within it? On Mon, 10 Jan 2000, Mark Peglow wrote: > Hello: > > I'm looking at using coda with cyrus to build a redundant mail server. I > have > the easy part done (coda is installed, and running), but I am having a > problem with the way cyrus is running. > > The system is FreeBSD 3.4-STABLE (as of 01/05/2000) with CODA 5.3.4. The > system > was set up using the HOW-TOs on the website. > > When a message is sent, it does get delivered to the user (I can > see the message on the disk), and the cyrus files (cyrus.index and > cyrus.header) are updated, but the message will not appear to the end user > (I am using Netscape 4.7 for the POP and IMAP client) until I run the cyrus > utility "reconstruct". Also, with IMAP, messages will not delete, but with > POP > they will. > > First off, will this even work? If it is possible, what should I be looking > > at to get this working. Any pointers would be appreciated. > > Thanks in advance, > Mark. > -- > Mark Peglow, Network Administrator E-Mail: mark.peglow_at_cumulusmedia.com > Mail: Cumulus Media 111 E. Kilbourn Ave Suite 2700, Milwaukee, WI 53202 >Received on 2000-01-10 16:45:00