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Date:      Mon, 13 May 1996 14:53:47 -0600 (MDT)
From:      Stephen Fisher <lithium@cia-g.com>
To:        Jason Fesler <jfesler@calweb.com>
Cc:        Patrick Ferguson <patrick@chloe.dmv.com>, freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG, Bruce Bauman <boot@mosquito.com>
Subject:   Re: POP timeout
Message-ID:  <Pine.LNX.3.91.960513145318.12597A-100000@gallup.cia-g.com>
In-Reply-To: <2.2.32.19960510150634.006f8844@jpop.calweb.com>

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Hmmm.. how do other popd's handle large mailboxes without problems, or do 
they?

On Fri, 10 May 1996, Jason Fesler wrote:

> At 07:38 PM 5/9/96 -0600, Stephen Fisher wrote:
> >
> >Well, that's good to know, now how do we fix it?  Switch to another 
> >popd?  Change something in qpopper?
> 
> Changing the Eudora timeout settings to be more lenient *can* help, but
> it's still one of those no-win situations.  I'm presently developing a
> non-Berkeley mail system compatibile popmail box.  It would require
> popclient as a frontend for the unix folks to use, as the storage system
> would be similiar to a news system (index file, plus one file per message..
> *fast* response, but just as ugly as a news system would be).
> 
> May not be the brightest way to do it, but I can open a 20 meg mailbox in
> just a second or so :-)
> 
> Note that I am not ready to release it.  It's still a rough project, and I'm
> not ready in the least bit to support it in it's current state.  It's
> presently going through alpha testing with a few of the staff here.  I also
> have not yet addressed things like mail forwarding and remote administration
> by the user [the goal is to have the mail machine not to use NFS at all, but
> to be an autonomous system - it won't have access to ~user/.forward files ..]
> 
> --
>   Jason Fesler                            jfesler@calweb.com
>   Admin, CalWeb Internet Services          jfroot@calweb.com
>   I like my Usenet over ice, please.     http://www.gigo.com
>   Disclaimer:  My /dev/null can beat your /dev/null any day.
> 



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