On 09/09/13 10:37, Basil Chupin wrote:
On 09/09/13 19:07, Bob Williams wrote:
Move .thunderbird to a different name and see if a new config fixes the problem. Good suggestion. It seemed to work initially, in that the Inbox repopulated itself, as well as several other folders, but not all of
On 08/09/13 21:42, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote: them. The empty ones had nothing in the message list pane. I thought it was simply a lack of filters, so I copied over my original msgFilterRules.dat and re-opened Thunderbird, but the filters failed with the message "Applying filter: XYZ failed. Would you like to continue applying filters?"
I'm also still unable to see the list of subscribed folders. Right clicking on the Account and choosing 'Subscribe' shows an empty list. Clicking 'Refresh' does nothing - well, a message flashes past at the bottom of the dialog, but too fast to read.
I shall try again, this time without adding in my old filters.
Unlike the Daily, which I run (currently v 26.0a1), the version you have hasn't changed for zonks so any changes in its behaviour are caused by something in your system.
As I said, I run the Daily version and a couple of nights ago it suddenly went "beresk" sending back at me every couple of minutes copies of messages I had just sent to various lists. I traced the problem to the Settings (Server) where an update done a few ago (at that time, that is) some altered the setting and told my ISP server to hold all the mail until I deleted it. So, check your Settings to see if all are as they should be.
The other thing, execute 'thunderbird %u' form a command line in a terminal and this will show any error messages which you just said you saw but they disappeared too quickly for you to see them.
BC
You are quite correct in claiming that the cause of the problem is local. After several restarts with new configurations, I eventually narrowed it down to an experiment with SSL, in which I had created my own certificate according to an article by Klaus Knopper in Linux Magazine. Evidently, my ISP did not like my 'roll your own' certificate. I have therefore removed it, especially as it is probably useless in offering me protection from the NSA or GCHQ. I'll stick to PGP/GPG in future. Bob -- Bob Williams System: Linux 3.7.10-1.16-desktop Distro: openSUSE 12.3 (x86_64) with KDE Development Platform: 4.10.5 "release 4" Uptime: 06:00am up 1 day 22:11, 3 users, load average: 0.14, 0.21, 0.18 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org