Този сайт ще има ограничена функционалност, докато се извършва тече неговата поддръжка. Ако дадена статия не може реши проблема ви и искате да зададете въпрос, нашата общност е готова да ви помогне на @firefox в Twitter и /r/firefox в Reddit.

Търсене в помощните статии

Избягвайте измамите при поддръжката. Никога няма да ви помолим да се обадите или изпратите SMS на телефонен номер или да споделите лична информация. Моля, докладвайте подозрителна активност на "Докладване за злоупотреба".

Научете повече

Best way to create a selective backup

  • 6 отговора
  • 1 има този проблем
  • 1 изглед
  • Последен отговор от barbarian818

more options

I'm using Thunderbird 91.9.1 on Ubuntu. I have other issues going on that make me decide to just reinstall the OS. I want to back up Thunderbird and I already know how to do so by copying the relevant profile folder in .thunderbird. However, I have been dealing with the Inbox "A unique identity matching the from address was not found" bug. For others looking for that error, it does seem to be a known bug, using Ctrl-o to open the email is a workaround. This does not affect any other folders. Using the Repair Folder option does not solve the issue.

So what I want to achieve is to export everything except the Inbox itself. What I'd like to know is the best way to achieve this.

Is it better to create a new profile after the reinstall and just copy everything except inbox and inbox.msf from the existing profile or to copy the entire old profile over, set the new install to use that old profile and then copy the inbox and inbox.msf files from the default profile created during the install?

I'm using Thunderbird 91.9.1 on Ubuntu. I have other issues going on that make me decide to just reinstall the OS. I want to back up Thunderbird and I already know how to do so by copying the relevant profile folder in .thunderbird. However, I have been dealing with the Inbox "A unique identity matching the from address was not found" bug. For others looking for that error, it does seem to be a known bug, using Ctrl-o to open the email is a workaround. This does not affect any other folders. Using the Repair Folder option does not solve the issue. So what I want to achieve is to export everything except the Inbox itself. What I'd like to know is the best way to achieve this. Is it better to create a new profile after the reinstall and just copy everything except inbox and inbox.msf from the existing profile or to copy the entire old profile over, set the new install to use that old profile and then copy the inbox and inbox.msf files from the default profile created during the install?

Всички отговори (6)

more options

You refer to one option that would recreate the inbox and another option to use the old one. Usually, keeping the old profile is best as that is exactly what is working today. My suggestion is to try your desired solution now, prior to the reinstall. If you think removing the inbox might work, then rename the folder (with TB not running) and restart TB to see if it reconstructs your inbox satisfactorily.

more options

David,

I did as you suggested and deleted the existing inbox and inbox.msf files. (rather, as is what I think is best practice, I renamed them OLDInbox and OLDInbox.msf respectively)

Thunderbird does successfully re-create the Inbox. However, any mail from other people still presents the "A unique identity matching the From address was not found" error. This includes senders who are definitely in my address book.

Meanwhile, a test email sent from one of my accounts to another can be opened without creating the error.

more options

Do you have any addons that may be causing this? A quick web search indicated this may be a known bug.

more options

The problem persists even when booting Thunderbird in Safe-Mode. The known bug (dated four years ago and still affecting people today) was originally for OSX, which I assume is similar enough to Linux to affect users like myself. That bug report is where I found the ctrl-o workaround. I've been hoping for a bug fix for over a year now. As a side note, opening a message in a tab isn't affected. Only opening messages in new windows.

more options

barbarian818 said

The problem persists even when booting Thunderbird in Safe-Mode. The known bug (dated four years ago and still affecting people today) was originally for OSX, which I assume is similar enough to Linux to affect users like myself.

I doubt it as it is a keyboard issue. Are you using Apple keyboards? On OSX? That bug has only ever been reported by OSX users pressing return on the numeric keyboard made by apple. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1508153

Are you using the unified inbox? in which case deleting it and allowing it to recreate might help. Close Thunderbird. Open the profile folder and locate the smart folders in the mail folder/directory and delete them. Restart Thunderbird.

Otherwise I would be more inclined to think there was an issue with identities. ie mail to Bully@beef.com that is collected by say a gmail account bully@gmail.com will not have a unique identity to reply with unless you configure one.

more options

Matt;

I am on Ubuntu using a standard USB PC keyboard with the most common English/qwerty layout. Which means my keyboard sends scancode 40 when using the main enter key adjacent to the qwerty layout. The key associated with the number pad sends scan code 88. 

In most contexts, the two keys are identical in function. On my system, using either of the two return/keys creates the same error. CTRL-o or right click-open in new tab does not create the error. What struck me about that OSX bug was that it affected only use of the main return key. Using the numberpad return key (on keyboards that had a numpad) didn't seem to trigger the error.

I have already attempted the deletion of the inbox and allowing TB to recreate it. But that doesn't work. I have also tried deleting and recreating profiles.ini. I thought, as you suggest, that the issue may lie in the identity profile itself. Not in mapping case variations as in your example, but something deeper in the way TB interacts with the profile framework itself. For what it's worth, I have tried creating additional profiles and switching to them as a test. This also didn't work.

So, my current desire is to back up just the content of my current profile, but not the profile and inbox itself. Export everything to .json and .csv files, include user created folders and sorting rules, then do a full uninstall and purge of TB, followed by a fresh install and then import my data into the auto created profile. (calendar data is all in the cloud already)