OL 2007 leave messages on server: all mail each retrieval

J

J

Monday

2 computers in an office: Vista business, with OL 2007, all updates

Both computers access the same mail box on the smtp server.

Both computers are set to "Leave Messages on Server"

One is the "master" in that it is also set to delete after 5 days, and when
deleted

The "slave" machine gets ALL email at each retrieval.

I have deleted all messages from server,...

And so on.

Suggestions?

J
 
D

Diane Poremsky [MVP]

They each have their own pst file, correct?
How frequently does each one check for new mail? If under 5 min, set it to
10 and see if it helps.
Do you have an antivirus scanner scanning your email? If so, disable it.

--

Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]



Outlook Tips by email:
mailto:[email protected]

EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange:
mailto:[email protected]

Let's Really Fix Outlook 2010
http://forums.slipstick.com/forumdisplay.php?f=34
 
J

J

thank you for you response.

Separate PST files.

None of the computers in the office is set to auto-retrieve.

Only this one computer gets duplicates.

ESET is the AV for all comps.

And: another account is accessed by these 2 computers, and an XP machine.

The same problem computer also gets all the mail each time from this
account.

The other 2 computers do not have this symptom.


Diane Poremsky said:
They each have their own pst file, correct?
How frequently does each one check for new mail? If under 5 min, set it to
10 and see if it helps.
Do you have an antivirus scanner scanning your email? If so, disable it.

--

Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]



Outlook Tips by email:
mailto:[email protected]

EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange:
mailto:[email protected]

Let's Really Fix Outlook 2010
http://forums.slipstick.com/forumdisplay.php?f=34

J said:
Monday

2 computers in an office: Vista business, with OL 2007, all updates

Both computers access the same mail box on the smtp server.

Both computers are set to "Leave Messages on Server"

One is the "master" in that it is also set to delete after 5 days, and
when deleted

The "slave" machine gets ALL email at each retrieval.

I have deleted all messages from server,...

And so on.

Suggestions?

J
 
V

VanguardLH

J said:
2 computers in an office: Vista business, with OL 2007, all updates

Both computers access the same mail box on the smtp server. Both
computers are set to "Leave Messages on Server" One is the "master"
in that it is also set to delete after 5 days, and when deleted The
"slave" machine gets ALL email at each retrieval. I have deleted all
messages from server,... And so on. Suggestions?

Suggestions for WHAT? Just WHAT is your problem? You described your
setup. You never mentioned what behavior you expected or wanted.
 
V

VanguardLH

Diane said:
Um, he expects outlook to only download new mail, not ALL the mail.

Perhaps but he didn't say that was a problem, just a condition.

Now I see why you mention lengthening the mail poll interval. If a
current mail poll gets stepped on by a subsequent mail poll (i.e.,
Outlook is still retrieving messages when the next scheduled poll time
tells Outlook to start it all over again), its UID list might not get
updated. As I recall, Outlook retrieves all new messages before it
deletes them and only after deleting them does it update its UID list to
record which messages it has previously retrieved.

If an item is really large and makes Outlook take too long to retrieve
it, that retrieval gets aborted so the UID list does get updated. Then
in the next mail poll, and because those messages weren't recorded, they
all still look new.

This could also happen if one of the items in the mailbox is corrupted.
The mail server can't manage to deliver it and Outlook tries to retrieve
but keeps waiting and, boom, the next mail poll occurs and Outlook
starts all over again. You have to use the webmail interface (few users
get a console mode login to their mail server) to delete or move out all
the items from the Inbox (if using POP). Thereafter the mail server can
handle all the non-corrupted items okay.

So upping the mail poll interval to something non-abusive, like 10
minutes, or longer, might solve the problem. It might take cleaning out
the Inbox using the webmail client to eliminate the problem.
 
D

Diane Poremsky [MVP]

V

VanguardLH

Diane said:
Duplicates may not be a problem for you, but to everyone else, they are a
problem, not a condition.

But it is a separate e-mail client that will be maintaining its own UID
list. So it WILL duplicate e-mails that were downloaded to another
e-mail client (when the "leave messages on server" option is enabled).
You obviously understood better what the OP wanted than I.
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]

2 computers in an office: Vista business, with OL 2007, all updates
Both computers access the same mail box on the smtp server.
Both computers are set to "Leave Messages on Server"
One is the "master" in that it is also set to delete after 5 days, and when
deleted
The "slave" machine gets ALL email at each retrieval.

This can often be fixed with a new mail profile on the machine retrieving all
messages each time.
 
J

J

Thank you all for your help.

I will recreate all the email profiles on the problem machine.

I prefer fixing stuff like this without resorting to destruction. More to
learn when solving the crime than just fixing the "problem," don't ya know.

Had a problem this week with a vista comp losing connection to a network
fax. Resolved the "problem" by removing all the fax/printer software and
reinstalling. But this process did not clarify why this happened. Hence, not
much learning.

And so on

J
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]

I will recreate all the email profiles on the problem machine.

After creating the new profile, you will get one more complete download of all
the messages on the server and then it should remember after that. Make sure
you configure the account(s) you add to the profile to leave messages on the
server, if that's what you need.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top