documentation for information on how to do that.
Under Mandrake Linux the PEAR classes are installed as part of the
php-devel package and under FreeBSD they are installed as part of
-the mod_php4 or php4 port/package. I'm afraid I have no information on
+the mod_php4 or php4 port/package. In Debian, you can install the
+php4-pear package. I'm afraid I have no information on
other systems at the present time.
mysql://squirreluser:sqpassword@localhost/squirrelmail or
pgsql://squirreluser:sqpassword@localhost/squirrelmail
+Note that when using the above PostgreSQL schema, you also need to change
+the prefs_user_field variable in config.php from the default 'user' to
+'username'.
+
From now on all users' personal preferences will be stored in a
database.
Default preferences can be set by altering the $default array in
db_prefs.php.
+
+Troubleshooting
+---------------
+1. Oversized field values. Preferences are not/can't be saved
+
+Database fields have size limits. Preference table example sets 128
+character limit to owner field, 64 character limit to preference key
+field and 64KB (database BLOB field size) limit to value field.
+
+If interface tries to insert data without checking field limits, it
+can cause data loss or database errors. Table information functions
+provided by Pear DB libraries are not accurate and some database
+backends don't support them. Since 1.5.1 SquirrelMail provides
+configuration options that set allowed field sizes.
+
+If you see oversized field errors in your error logs - check your
+database structure. Issue can be solved by increasing database field
+sizes.
+
+If you want to get more debugging information - check setKey() function
+in dbPrefs class. Class is stored in functions/db_prefs.php