Me three. Has anybody figured this problem out? Like Rusty, I'm willing to set somebody up with a test account.
I'm using the current stable version (0.1beta?), hMailServer is the mail server, firefox/IE both have the blank display problem. I've examined the page using firefox's dom inspector, the place where the email should be is entirely empty. There are no JavaScript errors.
Thunderbird reads the HTML emails just fine.
I'm also having issues with dragging and dropping emails into folders. It works half the time, and the other half they're right back where they were when you open the inbox again. Caching is turned off since the server is on localhost, if that matters at all.
On 2/10/06, Jason random.numbers@gmail.com wrote:
Just to let you know this isn't a fluke, I also appear to be having
this problem.
Jason
On 2/10/06, rustymunson@reachingafrika.org
<rustymunson@reachingafrika.org> wrote:
> Whenever I open up roundcube and log in, I can click on any message
and as long as it is plain text, I can view and see it fine. Once it is HTML though, or if it is a forwarded copy of an HTML e-mail, I just get a blank page. No e-mail content, no attachment, nothing. I have tried it on the stable version and even on the newest packaged CVS version, but nothing seems to work. > > I can even give someone a dummy login on my server so you can see what I'm talking about if anyone can help me. > > Sincerely, > > -- > Rusty Munson > PJD Hosting & Design
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To add to the list, here's what I've been experiencing with 1.0b with both patches applied, and caching set to FALSE:
Ctrl-Select Multiple emails, drag and drop to trash folder: Okay Ctrl-Select Multiple emails, click on the delete icon: sporadicly working Highligh single message: Both drag and drop, and delete icon work.
Things that I have noticed, if I don't allow enough time after deleting or doing a drag and drop, I get a javascript error referencing a table row non-existant error. (Of course, I'm unable to replicate the situation to grab the exact error now that I need it.)
Also, I have a few of the following entries in my logs:
[17-Mar-2006 15:30:09 -0800] IMAP Error: Authentication failed (LOGIN):<br>"a001 NO Login failed." in on line 0
As with the rest, dummy account is available, as well as full debug logs with access to full logs if required.
I do notice sometimes on the page refresh, not all the message status indicator icons load, which I attribute to latency/load on the http server.
If I'm patient, and wait a few seconds between actions, like deleting or mailing, things run smooth.
On 3/17/06, Caleb Harrelson atrophic@gmail.com wrote:
Me three. Has anybody figured this problem out? Like Rusty, I'm willing to set somebody up with a test account.
I'm using the current stable version (0.1beta?), hMailServer is the mail server, firefox/IE both have the blank display problem. I've examined the
page using firefox's dom inspector, the place where the email should be is entirely empty. There are no JavaScript errors.
Thunderbird reads the HTML emails just fine.
I'm also having issues with dragging and dropping emails into folders. It works half the time, and the other half they're right back where they were when you open the inbox again. Caching is turned off since the server is on localhost, if that matters at all.
- Caleb
On 2/10/06, Jason random.numbers@gmail.com wrote:
Just to let you know this isn't a fluke, I also appear to be having this problem. Jason On 2/10/06, rustymunson@reachingafrika.org <rustymunson@reachingafrika.org> wrote: > Whenever I open up roundcube and log in, I can click on any message
and as long as it is plain text, I can view and see it fine. Once it is HTML though, or if it is a forwarded copy of an HTML e-mail, I just get a blank page. No e-mail content, no attachment, nothing. I have tried it on the stable version and even on the newest packaged CVS version, but nothing seems to work. > > I can even give someone a dummy login on my server so you can see what I'm talking about if anyone can help me. > > Sincerely, > > -- > Rusty Munson > PJD Hosting & Design
--
-- Dan Schaper