Sykje yn Support

Mij stipescams. Wy sille jo nea freegje in telefoannûmer te beljen, der in sms nei ta te stjoeren of persoanlike gegevens te dielen. Meld fertochte aktiviteit mei de opsje ‘Misbrûk melde’.

Mear ynfo

Dizze konversaasje is argivearre. Stel in nije fraach as jo help nedich hawwe.

Problem converting from POP3 to IMAP mail

  • 3 antwurd
  • 1 hat dit probleem
  • 15 werjeftes
  • Lêste antwurd fan sfhowes

more options

To whom it may concern,

I'm trying to change access to my Gmail account from POP to IMAP per instructions at http://kb.mozillazine.org/Convert_a_POP_account_to_a_IMAP_account AND NOT SUCCEEDING.

In the past, although I used only POP3 mail, the Gmail server settings showed both POP and IMAP enabled. I don't understand why, but it worked for years. However in recent weeks POP download has become increasingly intermittent (usually zero) and despite a couple weeks' assistance from both the Thunderbird and Gmail user groups, no solution could be found. Since it would be convenient to be able to access mail via multiple devices, I'm willing to convert to IMAP to escape from this download problem, and store mail locally if needed on this Win 10 laptop as I did with POP.

As part of this effort I have disabled POP at the server, although Thunderbird still shows a POP download account.

But...

I am hung up at the step that says: Create the IMAP account using Tools -> Account Settings -> Account Actions -> Add Account

When I attempt to do this, two things happen: (1) A Google page appears, requesting that I log in to my Google account. But it doesn't accept my Gmail address. (2) Meanwhile the Thunderbird Account Setup page displays a notice: "Unable to log in at server. Probably wrong configuration, username or password."

This makes no sense to me. POP is now disabled at the server, and IMAP is enabled. At some point during multiple loops through this process I managed to delete my Thunderbird POP3 server account, with the result that all my several hundred email folders disappeared. Fortunately I had backed up the Thunderbird profile prior to starting on what I mistakenly thought would be a reasonably straightforward process. That allowed me to restore my email to the Local Folders; it took a few hours but worked. From reading your articles it appears this makes them safe from server changes.

I have subsequently restored my Thunderbird POP3 incoming mail setting, but it really doesn't matter because the Gmail server won't download my mail.

It seems that the next challenge is finding a way to convert the Server setting in Thunderbird from POP to IMAP. I can't get past this issue where Google appears not to recognize my Gmail address, thus the IMAP server linkage can't be created. I am basically 100% certain that there is no problem with my Google/Gmail account. So I could definitely use some assistance. After several weeks now, having to read my email on the Gmail website is getting really old.

Martt Harding

To whom it may concern, I'm trying to change access to my Gmail account from POP to IMAP per instructions at http://kb.mozillazine.org/Convert_a_POP_account_to_a_IMAP_account AND NOT SUCCEEDING. In the past, although I used only POP3 mail, the Gmail server settings showed both POP and IMAP enabled. I don't understand why, but it worked for years. However in recent weeks POP download has become increasingly intermittent (usually zero) and despite a couple weeks' assistance from both the Thunderbird and Gmail user groups, no solution could be found. Since it would be convenient to be able to access mail via multiple devices, I'm willing to convert to IMAP to escape from this download problem, and store mail locally if needed on this Win 10 laptop as I did with POP. As part of this effort I have disabled POP at the server, although Thunderbird still shows a POP download account. But... I am hung up at the step that says: Create the IMAP account using Tools -> Account Settings -> Account Actions -> Add Account When I attempt to do this, two things happen: (1) A Google page appears, requesting that I log in to my Google account. But it doesn't accept my Gmail address. (2) Meanwhile the Thunderbird Account Setup page displays a notice: "Unable to log in at server. Probably wrong configuration, username or password." This makes no sense to me. POP is now disabled at the server, and IMAP is enabled. At some point during multiple loops through this process I managed to delete my Thunderbird POP3 server account, with the result that all my several hundred email folders disappeared. Fortunately I had backed up the Thunderbird profile prior to starting on what I mistakenly thought would be a reasonably straightforward process. That allowed me to restore my email to the Local Folders; it took a few hours but worked. From reading your articles it appears this makes them safe from server changes. I have subsequently restored my Thunderbird POP3 incoming mail setting, but it really doesn't matter because the Gmail server won't download my mail. It seems that the next challenge is finding a way to convert the Server setting in Thunderbird from POP to IMAP. I can't get past this issue where Google appears not to recognize my Gmail address, thus the IMAP server linkage can't be created. I am basically 100% certain that there is no problem with my Google/Gmail account. So I could definitely use some assistance. After several weeks now, having to read my email on the Gmail website is getting really old. Martt Harding

Keazen oplossing

It doesn't actually store a cookie, but an oauth:// token in Saved Passwords in Privacy & Security.

I think the 2nd setting is for those IMAP servers that don't support automatic notification of new mail (IDLE command), although I don't know any specific examples.

http://kb.mozillazine.org/IMAP:_advanced_account_configuration#Features

Dit antwurd yn kontekst lêze 👍 0

Alle antwurden (3)

more options

When you add a gmail account, the server settings are automatically entered, and the window that pops up is the OAUth2 authentication to allow TB access to the account. The email address should be autofilled, but if it isn't, it's usually because cookies are not accepted in TB Preferences/Privacy & Security. Check also that a VPN is disabled if you have one. Some antivirus apps might also interfere.

As the kb article explains, you can't change from POP to IMAP by just changing the server settings; the IMAP account has to be added as a new account.

more options

For sfhowes,

I believe you have solved my problem and THANK YOU for your quick response. But I have a couple remaining questions:

(1) Your suggestion about cookies being blocked appear to have been the key to creating the IMAP account. I had all cookies blocked; didn't realize that Thunderbird can accept cookies. I changed it to "accept cookies from sites" (with none blocked) plus "accept third-party cookies from visited" and "keep until I close Thunderbird". This allowed me to fill in the forms to set up the new IMAP account (for the moment, the POP account remains).

I was puzzled to note that after setting up the IMAP account, Thunderbird showed no retained cookies. Since I prefer to not accept cookies (and in particular third-party cookies), now that the IMAP account is set up, can I revert to Thunderbird not accepting any cookies? Would this cause any problems?

(2) One element in Thunderbird "Server Settings" puzzles me. I am under the (mis?) impression that IMAP automatically downloads message headers in the background as they arrive at the Gmail server. But my settings for POP mail seem to have been included in the IMAP account: "Check for new messages at startup", "check for new messages every 10 minutes", and "allow immediate server notifications when new messages arrive." I suppose the first and third make sense, but if message headers automatically download in the background then the "check for new messages every 10 minutes" seems irrelevant. Please comment.

And thank you again for your original suggestion.

Martt Harding

more options

Keazen oplossing

It doesn't actually store a cookie, but an oauth:// token in Saved Passwords in Privacy & Security.

I think the 2nd setting is for those IMAP servers that don't support automatic notification of new mail (IDLE command), although I don't know any specific examples.

http://kb.mozillazine.org/IMAP:_advanced_account_configuration#Features