The Computer Oracle

What does it mean to "subscribe" to an IMAP folder?

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Chapters
00:00 What Does It Mean To &Quot;Subscribe&Quot; To An Imap Folder?
00:15 Answer 1 Score 0
00:30 Accepted Answer Score 9
01:23 Answer 3 Score 33
02:22 Answer 4 Score 0
02:48 Thank you

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Full question
https://superuser.com/questions/61585/wh...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#email #gmail #thunderbird #imap

#avk47



ANSWER 1

Score 33


This is due of the peculiarities of the IMAP protocol. Strangely enough, the authors of that protocol not only thought about email when they dreamed it up, they also thought about usenet and newsgroups. The newsgroups of the usenet form a large hierarchy with thousands and thousands of groups. The original aim of IMAP was to support having the complete hierarchy available through your IMAP account. Of course, you wouldn't want all those groups to show up in your mail client, thus the concept of folder subscriptions was added to the protocol.

If I remember correctly, Thunderbird also has an option to simply show you all your available folders without going through the motions of subscribing to single folders. It has nothing to do with offline use or synchronization.

If you want to know more about the IMAP protocol, check out the corresponding Wikipedia article. You can also try to read the corresponding RFC which makes up the protocol and which is full of examples concerning usenet newsgroups (and has only a few examples that relate directly to email).




ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 9


The folders you subscribe to are the ones displayed by Thunderbird. It subscribes every folder it finds when you first setup the account and any folder you add through Thunderbird is automatically subscribed as well. I guess that option is there so if you were to add a folder through another application or a webmail-ish app and you wanted that new folder to be displayed as well you can just turn it on.

Maybe this link will clarify things. Here's a quote:

Your IMAP email client (eg Thunderbird) will display the folders in your account to which you are "subscribed".

Generally, this will be all of the folders in your account, and only the folders in your account. However, in some situations you may find that there are folders in your account that do not appear in Thunderbird, or folders that appear in Thunderbird that are not in your account. This can be fixed by subscribing to (or unsubscribing from) the offending folders.




ANSWER 3

Score 0


I believe that it allows you to subscribe to a folder on the server, there by syncing the contents of whats on the server with what's in the Thunderbird client.




ANSWER 4

Score 0


2017-01-26: Thunderbird 45.5.1: The previous answer, about starting at File, was the key for me.

From a particular account: File | Subscribe results in a list of folders, then: Gmail then from a list of folders: check or uncheck the folders desired or not desired. In my case, it was eliminating Important and All.