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<div style="font-family:sans-serif"><div style="white-space:normal"><br><p dir="auto">On 8 Dec 2017, at 20:33, Bill Cole wrote:</p>
<blockquote style="border-left:2px solid #777; color:#777; margin:0 0 5px; padding-left:5px"><blockquote style="border-left:2px solid #777; color:#999; margin:0 0 5px; padding-left:5px; border-left-color:#999"><p dir="auto">My testing shows that the standard flags are working as expected but custom flags (tags in MM) are not — I mean they are not transferred to another computer. They wrote that CGP supports custom flags $Label1, $Label2 und $Label3 (only 3?).</p>
</blockquote><p dir="auto">As of CGP v6.1.16 that was true. I have backed up messages with $Label1 (mapped to a client name in MM) set on both of my Macs, so I'm certain that at least 1 of the 3 worked for me with MM & CGP within the past year. Given how CGP implements flags for its file-per-message storage model (which is highly accessible to 3rd-party tools) I would not expect them to support arbitrary user-defined flags any time soon.<br>
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One problem in the CGP world complicating the problem is that the licensing model encourages sites to stick with older versions indefinitely even though only the current x.y version gets any sort of support, enhancement, or bug fix work. As a result, there are far worse problems than weird IMAP keyword support frozen in place on obsolete CGP systems still being used. I'm not sure exactly when CGP got the fixed keyword support it has but I vaguely recall that 4.x (which still exists in the wild) only supported the core standard flags.</p>
</blockquote><p dir="auto">It seems they are running GCP 6.1.18 and from what you are saying, I gather that I have to learn to live with only the standard flags on this service…</p>
<p dir="auto">Robert</p>
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