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- Thunderbird email storage location update#
- Thunderbird email storage location Offline#
- Thunderbird email storage location download#
- Thunderbird email storage location free#
- Thunderbird email storage location windows#
> Ok, so, if you're so inclined, please feel free to add a vote for Bug 545243. Jotting of possible issues related to what gets put where: Move cache outside of the regular profile folderīreaking up the profile for roaming, sharing and performanceĪbility to split prefs into multiple files In November benb, asuth and others posted in hits some things mentioned today on IRC.
![thunderbird email storage location thunderbird email storage location](http://kb.mozillazine.org/images/Appdata.png)
Nothing found on mozillazine or getsatisfaction (take that with a grain of salt)
Thunderbird email storage location Offline#
Sure - that's a local machine state thing.īut just to be clear - you aren't meaning *cache*, you're meaning imap offline store.įollow up to IRC talk today, partly in the context of profiles on corporate networks (but there's nothing useful to summarize yet), some references.
Thunderbird email storage location update#
> update - TB will alternatingly encounter various incompletely updated states > of the cache. > various machines alternatingly, probably not waiting for the cache to fully > My other concern is: If the cache is in local settings, and users log on to I guess I'll find out, since I just opened bug 545243 for this. I agree that this should be configurable.
![thunderbird email storage location thunderbird email storage location](https://www.softwarepro.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/tbird.png)
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I think you are talking about the imap offline store, which is simply the location of the mail store. I do believe that the *cache* is in the Local Settings folder. > free to decide whether they want to explicitly put the cache into the roaming > There should be a prefs option, by which each admin is > (I even saw Outlook 2003 putting the pst file into local settings!) > The default location of the cache should be in local settings, which I thinkĪre e talking *cache* or IMAP offline storage? These are 2 different things to TB. that's why I opened bug 543963, please feel free to vote for it. > cache-type data - as Jesper suggested in comment 12.Īgree. > I second that its a good idea to separate config data (customizations) from Using redirected folders solves this problem nicely, it isn't a 'workaround'. The point of this bug is IMAP offline storage should be similar to 'cached data' - but, as I pointed out, this isn't entirely true. %AppData%, Desktop and MyDocs are the only folders I redirect. Why would anyone redirect cached data? I wouldn't. F.i., they might not want to waste disk (and backup) > instance in smaller businesses), administrators might not want to take that
Thunderbird email storage location windows#
> practice in a windows domain to redirect also the appdata folders. > I agree with Charles that in a "professional" environment, it might be good My other concern is: If the cache is in local settings, and users log on to various machines alternatingly, probably not waiting for the cache to fully update - TB will alternatingly encounter various incompletely updated states of the cache. (I even saw Outlook 2003 putting the pst file into local settings!) There should be a prefs option, by which each admin is free to decide whether they want to explicitly put the cache into the roaming profile. The default location of the cache should be in local settings, which I think would be what everyone expects. I second that its a good idea to separate config data (customizations) from cache-type data - as Jesper suggested in comment 12. F.i., they might not want to waste disk (and backup) space for cache data. Though (for instance in smaller businesses), administrators might not want to take that effort for some reasons. I agree with Charles that in a "professional" environment, it might be good practice in a windows domain to redirect also the appdata folders. Just see how Firefox does it from bug 291033: That is a lot more data for me to take backup of, which could be avoided if Thunderbird's cache and index files were correctly stored in the Local AppData folder.įixing this bug shouldn't be very hard. Thunderbird currently takes up 72% of my Roaming folder after just installing Thunderbird 3 recently. Also the whole point of all of this indexing by Thunderbird locally instead of querying the IMAP server each time, seems to be to speed things up, and constantly transferring gigabytes over the network doesn't seem like it would help.Īlso for me as a private person this is annoying.
Thunderbird email storage location download#
Some even run the two on the same server, in which case you download gigabytes of data, just to upload it again to the same server. I don't know the average company, but at least the few companies I know about run their IMAP servers from the same server room as their file servers.