I had the same problem with a new OTRS installation, while never
had the problem before.
In the new installatio I used (as recommended) utf-8 charset.
I switched back from ‘utf-8’ to ‘iso-8859-1’ charset and the
problem disappeared…..
Regards,
Peter
Van: otrs-bounces@otrs.org
[mailto:otrs-bounces@otrs.org] Namens Tabitha Stang
Verzonden: woensdag 14 maart 2007 9:40
Aan: 'User questions and discussions about OTRS.org'
Onderwerp: AW: [otrs] error message
Hi Salvador,
Thanks for the quick answer!
Yeah, I'm sure that'd work but having the perl script not recover
at all is prety harsh (especially in unattended situations like at 2am.)
Would it be possible for perl to trap such an error? (Sorry, I'm not a perl
guru.)
Thanks!
Tabitha
Von:
otrs-bounces@otrs.org [mailto:otrs-bounces@otrs.org] Im Auftrag von Salvador
Manzo
Gesendet: Dienstag, 13. März 2007 18:11
An: User questions and discussions about OTRS.org
Betreff: Re: [otrs] error message
POP3 clients occasionally fall over
on a particular header. When this happens, you usually need to use an
alternate client to log into the mailbox and manually zap the problem message.
On 3/13/07 09:48, "Tabitha Stang" <stang@cleverbridge.com>
wrote:
Hi OTRS List,
I’m using OTRS 2.1.6. PostMasterPOP3.pl dies on a bad message with the
following error:
Message 18/759 (imap-test@pop3.cgn.cleverbridge.com)
Safety protection waiting 2 second till processing next mail...
Malformed UTF-8 character (unexpected non-continuation byte 0x63, immediately
after start byte 0xfc) in pattern match (m//) at
/usr/pkg/otrs/Kernel/cpan-lib/MIME/Words.pm line 223.
Malformed UTF-8 character (fatal) at
/usr/pkg/otrs/Kernel/cpan-lib/MIME/Words.pm line 223.
What makes things worse is, the next time it starts up, it starts with message
#1 and dies again on #18. And then again, rinse and then repeat.
What to do? Help!
Tabitha
-----
Salvador Manzo
[ 620 W. 35th St • Los Angeles, CA 90089 e. manzo@usc.edu
]
Auxiliary Services IT, Datacenter
University of Southern California
818-612-5112
---
"Sometimes
it is said that man can not be trusted with government of himself. Can he,
then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the
forms of kings to govern him? Let history answer this question."
-- Thomas Jefferson (First Inaugural Address, 3/4 1801)