When Pmail is creating a new pmail.ini then this will overwriting the existing ini automatically without promting me?
Automatically since this is the same as a new user starting without a pmail.ini in place.
Yes, there is a a-v software running on each client machine. But the
a-v software checks only those files which are just loaded into the
Client RAM. That means the client has already red the file or is
presently reading the file. Furthermore we are using this configuration
since many years without such problems.
If the a-v is running it will grab any file touched by the mail program on any mapped drive. If it locks out the mail client when it's trying to open the pmail.ini then that's when the client will create a new file since it did not find the old one.
FWIW, your anti-virus software is being changed and updated almost daily and you can never tell when one of these will break your system. Turn it off or do not allow it to scan any of the Pegasus Mail folders or config files. If you do not one of these days it's going to find what it thinks is a virus in a PMM file and delete it. This in fact just happened with one of the Pegasus Mail beta tester using AVG 8. You can do what you want but a-v software actually causes a lot more problems than it solves when it comes to Mercury and Pegasus Mail.
<blockquote><p>When Pmail is creating a new pmail.ini then this will overwriting the existing ini automatically without promting me?</p></blockquote><p>Automatically since this is the same as a new user starting without a pmail.ini in place.</p><blockquote><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Yes, there is a a-v software running on each client machine. But the
a-v software checks only those files which are just loaded into the
Client RAM. That means the client has already red the file or is
presently reading the file. Furthermore we are using this configuration
since many years without such problems.</p></blockquote><p>If the a-v is running it will grab any file touched by the mail program on any mapped drive. &nbsp; If it locks out the mail client when it's trying to open the pmail.ini then that's when the client will create a new file since it did not find the old one.&nbsp; </p><p>FWIW, your anti-virus software is being changed and updated almost daily and you can never tell when one of these will break your system.&nbsp; Turn it off or do not allow it to scan any of the Pegasus Mail folders or config files.&nbsp; If you do not one of these days it's going to find what it thinks is a virus in a PMM file and delete it. &nbsp; This in fact just happened with one of the Pegasus Mail beta tester using AVG 8.&nbsp; You can do what you want but a-v software actually causes a lot more problems than it solves when it comes to Mercury and Pegasus Mail.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><blockquote><p>&nbsp;</p></blockquote><p>&nbsp;</p>