From 1ac910bdd1187360cdd2c674b90c89fcd6c07347 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Francis Lachapelle Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2017 11:00:00 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] (doc) Precise SOGoVacationEnabled cron requirement --- Documentation/SOGoInstallationGuide.asciidoc | 17 +++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/SOGoInstallationGuide.asciidoc b/Documentation/SOGoInstallationGuide.asciidoc index fe8667b0f..5ebd35956 100644 --- a/Documentation/SOGoInstallationGuide.asciidoc +++ b/Documentation/SOGoInstallationGuide.asciidoc @@ -2044,12 +2044,12 @@ Requires Sieve script support on the IMAP host. Defaults to `NO` when unset. -When enabling this parameter, one must also enable the associated +When enabling this parameter, one may have to also enable the associated cronjob in `/etc/cron.d/sogo` in order to activate automatic vacation -message expiration. +message activation and expiration. -See the _Cronjob — Vacation messages expiration_ section below for -details. +See the _Cronjob — Vacation messages activation and expiration_ section +below for details. |D |SOGoVacationDefaultSubject |Parameter used to define a default vacation subject if user don't specify a @@ -2590,12 +2590,13 @@ using `-p /path/to/credFile`. This file should contain the username and password, separated by a colon (`username:password`) _Cronjob_ — Vacation messages activation and expiration -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When vacation messages are enabled (see the parameter -_SOGoVacationEnabled_), users can set an activation or expiration date to messages -auto-reply. For this feature to work, you must run a _cronjob_ under the -"sogo" user. +_SOGoVacationEnabled_), users can set an activation or expiration date +to messages auto-reply. For this feature to work, your Sieve server must +implement the date extension. Otherwise, you must run a _cronjob_ under +the "sogo" user. A commented out example should have been installed in `/etc/cron.d/sogo`. To work correctly this tool must login as an