On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 16:33 +0200, Sandy Drobic wrote: > Sebas PRE wrote: > > I would like to create a sieve filter to deliver to a folder all mail with > > "leído:" in the Subject: header, but it does not work. > > Because 8 bit characters are not allowed in header lines. You need to look > for the encoded equivalent. that's not correct. the Sieve interpreter should decode headers as per RFC 2047 (or RFC 2231 as appropriate) into Unicode. I quote from RFC 3028: 2.7.2. Comparisons Across Character Sets All Sieve scripts are represented in UTF-8, but messages may involve a number of character sets. In order for comparisons to work across character sets, implementations SHOULD implement the following behavior: Implementations decode header charsets to UTF-8. Two strings are considered equal if their UTF-8 representations are identical. Implementations should decode charsets represented in the forms specified by [MIME] for both message headers and bodies. Implementations must be capable of decoding US-ASCII, ISO-8859-1, the ASCII subset of ISO-8859-* character sets, and UTF-8. If implementations fail to support the above behavior, they MUST conform to the following: No two strings can be considered equal if one contains octets greater than 127. Cyrus is allowed to not match on accented characters as per the last stanza, but it clearly would be benificial if it supported other character sets than US-ASCII. the code actually tries to do so, but there is a bug somewhere -- I think the problem is that the strings from the script are not represented in UTF-8. I couldn't quite keep track across all the function pointers, however. -- Kjetil T. ---- Cyrus Home Page: http://asg.web.cmu.edu/cyrus Cyrus Wiki/FAQ: http://cyruswiki.andrew.cmu.edu List Archives/Info: http://asg.web.cmu.edu/cyrus/mailing-list.html