Проблема с открытием новых писем
Good afternoon,
We are experiencing the following issue.
I work as a Technical Support Engineer at a large company in Russia. All of our branches use Thunderbird as their email client.
Approximately three weeks ago, we started receiving reports from users that their email was no longer working.
After investigating the issue and trying to identify the root cause, we have not been able to find a permanent solution. We have already tried the following:
1. Completely clearing the cache, rebuilding the mailbox while preserving emails, and allowing Thunderbird to re-download all messages. 2. Changing the `mail.server.default.mime_parts_on_demand` and `mail.imap.mime_parts_on_demand` configuration settings to `false`, clearing the Trash folder, and restarting Thunderbird. (This only provided a temporary fix.) 3. Reinstalling Thunderbird and creating a fresh client installation. 4. Using the **Repair Folder** and **Compact Folder** options for every mailbox folder. 5. Several other troubleshooting methods found online, none of which resolved the issue.
According to multiple users from different departments who are not connected to one another, they all describe the same behavior:
Thunderbird stops working for about half a day. Then it starts working normally for approximately 15–30 minutes, after which it stops working again for another several hours. During these periods, no new emails are downloaded, regardless of the size or content of the messages.
When checking the mailbox size in Exchange, it reports:
- 3.56 GB used. The quota is unlimited.
However, on the local computer, the Thunderbird profile folder (`Thunderbird > Profiles`) occupies nearly 9 GB. If we calculate the size of all mailbox folders within Thunderbird itself, the total is approximately 6 GB.
Does anyone have any suggestions on what else we can try?
Has anyone experienced a similar issue or found a solution?
At this point, our employees are unable to work effectively because email is a critical part of their daily workflow, and we have been unable to identify a permanent fix.