Subj : New test.. To : Wilfred van Velzen From : Paul Quinn Date : Thu Aug 17 2017 17:33:59 Hi! Wilfred, On 08/17/2017 04:39 PM, you wrote: WV>>> It would be easier if you confirmed it's working, otherwise you can WV>>> come back about this next year, when I completely forgot about the WV>>> details... ;) NB>> In that case, it's working just fine now. Thank you for the WvV> hotfix! ;) WvV> Thanks for the confirmation... WvV> Btw: If Paul wants/needs a 32 bit version with this fix, I can provide one? If it's send-related (aka fmail scan) then not at this time, thanks. I'm quietly watching just the tossing activity and monitoring the contents of the messagebase, while fine-tuning GoldEd... and, loving it. :) All the JAM message area paths in Linux form were successfully imported into FMail from an Areas.Bbs created by my Crashmail II tosser (on this Linux system). The netmail & HMB paths are converting correctly by 'fmail toss' using the "FMAIL_REPLACE_DRIVE" envar. GoldEd is set to use the same Areas.Bbs file that FConfigW32 imported, together with local handwritten converted paths for the netmail & HMB areas in its configuration file. GoldEd has even been config'd to use the same echo descriptions files as Fmail is supposed to use, so GoldEd looks normal again. OTOH, I have noticed a slight weirdness in a local area (but still of 'echomail' type). There's usually a batch of about 18-20 messages generated by FastEcho in the area over a period of about 5 seconds each morning. They're landing in the Fmail messagebase 'out of order'. I did go back to FConfigW32 and enable message sorting but the ordering still didn't seem normal compared with what I see tossed into the Crashmail messagebase... ermmm, just checking... nah, they check out with GoldEd (here) as being in the as-created order. I'll double-double check everything following tomorrow's activity, and advise formally if needed. Cheers, Paul. --- Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.4.0 * Origin: Quinn's Rock vBox - sunny side up on the bookcase (3:640/1384) .