Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

为提升您的使用体验,本站正在维护,部分功能暂时无法使用。如果本站文章无法解决您的问题,您想要向社区提问的话,请到 Twitter 上的 @FirefoxSupport 或 Reddit 上的 /r/firefox 提问,我们的支持社区将会很快回复您的疑问。

搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

attachments not opening in Thunderbird

  • 5 个回答
  • 1 人有此问题
  • 1 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 Matt

more options

This has only happened recently. I received an email with a photo attachments and this shoed as I could open it in MS Picture Mgr (my default for these). But all I got was a small red X in middle of a blank screen!

After a day or so puzzling this I went back into GMail which is my email provider and opened in ALL Mail the original email received and the attachments (photos) shoed there and I was able to view them!

This has never happened before. Any ideas? The sender is not filtered as 'spam' and I previously received emails from him without attachments

Thank you

This has only happened recently. I received an email with a photo attachments and this shoed as I could open it in MS Picture Mgr (my default for these). But all I got was a small red X in middle of a blank screen! After a day or so puzzling this I went back into GMail which is my email provider and opened in ALL Mail the original email received and the attachments (photos) shoed there and I was able to view them! This has never happened before. Any ideas? The sender is not filtered as 'spam' and I previously received emails from him without attachments Thank you

被采纳的解决方案

I received a package from the post office. it contained a broken vase. FEDEX delivered a replacement. It was not broken. Surely the front door would have caused the same result in both instances.

I know it is a bit of a childish way of putting it, but to compare what an anti virus does with web mail with what it does with a mail client is similar to that simplistic view.

When you get an attachment in web mail, the first your anti virus knows of it is that a file named whatever.pdf is being downloaded from the internet.

When an attachment comes in to a mail client it arrives as a mime encoded text stream. The first thing the anti virus needs to do if it wants to scan the attachment is to decode the mime encoded text stream and create a binary file names Whatever.pdf. But they do not do that after the mail arrives in Thunderbird, they hold up the delivery, they pull the mail apart, scan the bits that interest them and in some cases put it all back together again. But like Humpty Dumpty. It does not always work out.

The failure to put it all back together again is most often seen in association with inserting headers that the message has been scanned. Or worse still those horrors that insert text into the email saying it has been scanned.

Email issues with anti virus programs are very very common. Most people these days do not use mail clients. They use web mail. With the user base shrinking anti virus programs do not get the same levels of rigorous field testing they used to.

This link is to some of the issues we have recorded in Thunderbird with Avast. https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:Testing:Antivirus_Related_Performance_Issues#AVAST

定位到答案原位置 👍 0

所有回复 (5)

more options

Perhaps the attachment was corrupted by anti virus scanning of incoming mail.

more options

If this was the case surely my Avast Securitywould have stopped it at my GMail stage?

Thank you for replying

more options

选择的解决方案

I received a package from the post office. it contained a broken vase. FEDEX delivered a replacement. It was not broken. Surely the front door would have caused the same result in both instances.

I know it is a bit of a childish way of putting it, but to compare what an anti virus does with web mail with what it does with a mail client is similar to that simplistic view.

When you get an attachment in web mail, the first your anti virus knows of it is that a file named whatever.pdf is being downloaded from the internet.

When an attachment comes in to a mail client it arrives as a mime encoded text stream. The first thing the anti virus needs to do if it wants to scan the attachment is to decode the mime encoded text stream and create a binary file names Whatever.pdf. But they do not do that after the mail arrives in Thunderbird, they hold up the delivery, they pull the mail apart, scan the bits that interest them and in some cases put it all back together again. But like Humpty Dumpty. It does not always work out.

The failure to put it all back together again is most often seen in association with inserting headers that the message has been scanned. Or worse still those horrors that insert text into the email saying it has been scanned.

Email issues with anti virus programs are very very common. Most people these days do not use mail clients. They use web mail. With the user base shrinking anti virus programs do not get the same levels of rigorous field testing they used to.

This link is to some of the issues we have recorded in Thunderbird with Avast. https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:Testing:Antivirus_Related_Performance_Issues#AVAST

more options

Thanks Matt for this - I fully understand what you are saying!

It has only happened a couple of times and I have used Thunderbird for years as I find it easier to keep important emails in folders in Thunderbird as I find I have not the same options with Web Mail.

I take your point though. I am now worried I have missed some emails incoming so I go to WebMail to check. Paranoid or what?!!!

I have tried to use just GMail but cannot easily find emails I might have received or sent some months ago and TBird gives me this.

Thanks again

more options

I certainly find missed mails in gmails spam folder. Usually replies from the forum so folk think I am ignoring them