Frequently asked questions for y'all, when I'm not being responsive for whatever reason.
Just issues surrounding quotas.
The quota breaks down (roughly) as the following:
There's quite a bit of variation within there (special cases and what have you), but that's the rough breakdown. The check quota link in your portfolio should give their actual real quota.
Future quotas will probably increase for all, but I don't have any numbers or timeframe in regards to that.
Common problems with email quota are…
Problem | Fix |
---|---|
User has a folder that is not subscribed to/can't find | Folders link in webmail lets you subscribe to it and manipulate it |
Certain users of older systems have junk data in their home directory | Send me an email to clean it |
Over quota even though INBOX is small | Check other folders, notably Spam and Trash |
Please check for everything before sending me an email.
There are warnings (typically quota-10MB) that go out at midnight, if the user is over quota, they receive an email saying they will be disabled within 24 hours. When the quota is lowered they will (within 5-10 minutes) receive an email confirming this. If they've not reduced their quota within this time all non-Wesleyan mail (Wesleyan mail defined as mail sent through our servers) will be immediately rejected.
Common webmail issues.
User probably has “Threaded View” on. Look for the link underneath “Move Message to” select box above main message list to toggle this off/on.
Typically, accidentally deleted all the mail using a POP client. Set up client to connect via IMAP and drag mail up or contact Operations for a restore.
Check personal options - the Reply-To should be a fully qualified email address. melson will not work - melson@gmail.com will.
Common spam issues.
We do not scan mail that is forwarded for spam at all unless you're clever, and since that cleverness is not officially supported, I'll not tell you how it's done.
General email thingies.
Folder name probably contains an illegal character, I'll get a list once I find them (- /.{}! are some)
Many large ISPs have fingered our forwarding mail servers as spammers. We try and keep on top, but it results in occasionally rejected/deferred mail to people who forward through us. AOL is probably the biggest name ISP who flags us.
Ugh, this is far more complicated than I would like.
Believe it or not, all these ports are standard - nothing quirky about them.
As far as how to tell if someone is on Cyrus? nslookup username.mail.wesleyan.edu - if it goes to mailproxies, you're Cyrus.
All outgoing and incoming email are scanned for viruses and inappropriate attachments. If a virus is detected and cleaned, an email goes to the recipient, not to the sender; same with attachments. The illegal attachments are as follows: