Thanks, info on the config files is really helpful. I still have a 'folder guide' in my archive but I think it related to older versions of pmail and it's no longer 100% accurate.
I already fell into the trap of thinking I could text edit PMAIL.CFG and if you do it breaks the installation. I think I got to PCONFIG32.EXE via the GUI. But what I couldn't do was simply rename the Home mailbox in its location. I thought I could rename it in file explorer, then find a startup configuration file or .ini and edit the mailbox name. I've often wondered whether somebody has ever produced a script that can save a configuration of all the network settings mail aliases and settings etc to have them imported into a fresh install. It would save a lot of work.
I had to delete several years of mail leaving the last 2 years. When I tried to delete a mail sub folder, pmail told me to delete all the folder messages first? The then I wanted to do block deletes and usually the windowss context menu offers the file option to 'invert a selection' - i.e mark the first 2 years of mail after a date sort then invert to mark seven years that follow, because there are too many screen entries to scroll and highlight for deletion. The context menu within pmail under EDIT only allows 'Select all' without the inverse option.
I think I found a quicker way which is to search all mail folders for the 7 year date range, select all and delete leaving the last 2 years behind. In case any body reading this gets alarmed at aggressively deleting so much, I have the master pmail mailbox folders and structure saved and backed up on a desktop PC. One small nuisance is pmail dumps everything into its deleted folder, but that gets cleaned on exit, or you can delete again.
Housekeeping is becoming more important now because I've noticed my mailbox size getting bigger and with slower indexing. I used to think 2kb was about right for a message, but now with online auction sites and automated delivery tracking, messages with HTML content are about 75kb.
Thanks for reminding me of setting filtering rules to manage older messages. I think the reason I've not used it for automation is I've had occasional corruption crashes, usually if I hadn't spotted a huge attachment. Then after pmail lockout I've had to search the PMI/PMM files (Usually the last) and delete it to recover, maybe also use the re-index command. Minimising pmail activities seems to keep it reliable for me. In nearly 10 years of filling up my mailboxes I've never been unable to recover after a crash or corruption and I've only lost a few messages.
The reason I thought pmail couldn't run stand alone is it still creates files in C: even though I install on another partition away from the OS. There's a Pegasus Mail folder in Appdata\Roaming and I think temp folder space is also used?
Do you know if startup links created by the pmail installer contain hidden config data or switches? I can always start pmail from the Winpm exe, but after an install and reconfiguring a mailbox, the original link may not start anything, even though it appears to be pointing to the pmail exe? The same happens if I re-install pmail to a new location, changing the link properties to point to the new location exe doesn't work.
Thks again - vox
Thanks, info on the config files is really helpful. I still have a 'folder guide' in my archive but I think it related to older versions of pmail and it's no longer 100% accurate.
I already fell into the trap of thinking I could text edit PMAIL.CFG and if you do it breaks the installation. I think I got to PCONFIG32.EXE via the GUI. But what I couldn't do was simply rename the Home mailbox in its location. I thought I could rename it in file explorer, then find a startup configuration file or .ini and edit the mailbox name. I've often wondered whether somebody has ever produced a script that can save a configuration of all the network settings mail aliases and settings etc to have them imported into a fresh install. It would save a lot of work.
I had to delete several years of mail leaving the last 2 years. When I tried to delete a mail sub folder, pmail told me to delete all the folder messages first? The then I wanted to do block deletes and usually the windowss context menu offers the file option to 'invert a selection' - i.e mark the first 2 years of mail after a date sort then invert to mark seven years that follow, because there are too many screen entries to scroll and highlight for deletion. The context menu within pmail under EDIT only allows 'Select all' without the inverse option.
I think I found a quicker way which is to search all mail folders for the 7 year date range, select all and delete leaving the last 2 years behind. In case any body reading this gets alarmed at aggressively deleting so much, I have the master pmail mailbox folders and structure saved and backed up on a desktop PC. One small nuisance is pmail dumps everything into its deleted folder, but that gets cleaned on exit, or you can delete again.
Housekeeping is becoming more important now because I've noticed my mailbox size getting bigger and with slower indexing. I used to think 2kb was about right for a message, but now with online auction sites and automated delivery tracking, messages with HTML content are about 75kb.
Thanks for reminding me of setting filtering rules to manage older messages. I think the reason I've not used it for automation is I've had occasional corruption crashes, usually if I hadn't spotted a huge attachment. Then after pmail lockout I've had to search the PMI/PMM files (Usually the last) and delete it to recover, maybe also use the re-index command. Minimising pmail activities seems to keep it reliable for me. In nearly 10 years of filling up my mailboxes I've never been unable to recover after a crash or corruption and I've only lost a few messages.
The reason I thought pmail couldn't run stand alone is it still creates files in C: even though I install on another partition away from the OS. There's a Pegasus Mail folder in Appdata\Roaming and I think temp folder space is also used?
Do you know if startup links created by the pmail installer contain hidden config data or switches? I can always start pmail from the Winpm exe, but after an install and reconfiguring a mailbox, the original link may not start anything, even though it appears to be pointing to the pmail exe? The same happens if I re-install pmail to a new location, changing the link properties to point to the new location exe doesn't work.
Thks again - vox