dovecot/dovecot-REDHAT-FAQ.txt
John Dennis 299eec03b3 postgres & mysql now conditional build options, add FAQ to doc remove
execute bit on example scripts so perl modules don't become rpm
    dependencies
2005-01-13 20:24:42 +00:00

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Q. We used to use University of Washington IMAP (UW IMAP), in the Red
Hat distribution, the rpm was named "imap". We would now like to use
dovecot and take advantage of its support for Maildir format, but
we have existing user mail files in the old mbox format we need to
migrate. How can we do this?
A. Read the documentation in
/usr/share/doc/dovecot-*/UW-to-Dovecot-Migration. You will also
find scripts there to help you.
Q. I'm getting errors in /var/log/maillog for dotlock failed,
permission denied. The actual error probably looks like this with
user replaced by a user name on your system.
imap(user): file_lock_dotlock() failed with mbox file /var/spool/mail/user: Permission denied
A. This is occuring because:
1) The user INBOX is in the system spool directory which is:
"drwxrwxr-x root mail"
2) Dovecot is configured to create "dotlock" locking files.
3) After an imap user logs in the imap process runs as that user
and the spool directory permissions does not allow that user to
creat new files (e.g. dot lock files).
The possible solutions are:
1) Don't locate the user's INBOX in the system spool directory,
have mail delivered to another location, for instance his home
directory (this may not be possible to change for existing
systems). This is an MTA configuration.
2) In the dovecot configuration file set the variable
mail_extra_groups to "mail". This will add the mail group to the
list of groups that the logged in imap user will have permission
for. His imap process can then create files in the mail spool
file. However the user's imap process now has mail group
privileges, you will have to evaluate the extent of the security
threat this poses for your site.
3) Disable the use of dotlocks by setting dovecots config parameter
mbox_locks to a value that does not include dotlock, for
example, fcntl. However, note dotlocks are considered robust,
especially for NFS.