Mark de Vries schreef: > Roel Schroeven wrote:
>> Mark de Vries schreef:
>>> Roel Schroeven wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> We currently have a setup where exim delivers to Maildir, and each user
>>>> has a .forward with an exim filter. Users access their mail using
>>>> Thunderbird via IMAP (using dovecot). So far, everything is working fine.
>>>>
>>>> Now I'm looking for a way to automatically label all new mails in one
>>>> specific account so they appear as 'to do' in Thunderbird (I can't do
>>>> that in Thunderbird itself since it's a shared account that's used from
>>>> different client machines). As far as I can see, that cannot be done in
>>>> an exim filter, but it can be done in a sieve filter using addflag
>>>> "$label4".
>>> So, to avoid confusion, you are using a sieve filter in dovecot, and not
>>> the exim sieve filter capabilities, right? If so...
>> No, I'm trying to use a the sieve filter from exim, not from dovecot.
>> Though I'm starting to think that it might be best to switch to dovecot
>> for delivering and filtering mail.
>
> Hmm, the reason I assumed dovecot is because the sieve filter in exim
> can't "addflag"... So if that's what you want to do then I think you
> don't have much choice but to do the sieve filtering in dovecot.
Ah, I didn't know that. The docs state
"A Sieve filter contains instructions in the Sieve format that is
defined by RFC 3028. As this is a standard format, Sieve filter files
may already be familiar to some users. Sieve files should also be
portable between different environments. However, the Exim filtering
facility contains more features [...]"
and
"However, for Sieve filters, only issues that relate to the Exim
implementation are discussed, since Sieve itself is described elsewhere."
which made me think that Exim would support addflag; Now that I look
better I see that RFC 3028 doesn't mention addflag.
One more reason to use dovecot deliver for Sieve filtering :)
--
The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge
faster than society gathers wisdom.
-- Isaac Asimov