Archiving GMAIL Leaves Messages on Server
Hello, I'm trying to archive old gmail messages to free up storage space. On my server settings, under "Message Archives", it says to keep messages in "Archives" folder on Local Folders. However, when I archive messages they remain on the server.
Interestingly, there are two inboxes listed under the gmail account: an "Inbox" and an "All Mail" folder. The archived messages do not appear in the "Inbox" folder on Thundebird, but they seem to be re-downloaded into the "All Mail" folder.
Am I missing a step to get Thunderbird to delete the old messages?
Many thanks! This is version 91.11.0 on Linux.
選ばれた解決策
OK, it's a tradeoff. If a user wants to keep profile smaller, the easiest approach is to remove AllMail folder from Thunderbird, letting AllMail continue to grow online. To reduce overall Gmail message storage, the solution is to delete from inbox and also from AllMail folder. To reduce overall Gmail message storage, but keep the messages anyway, the solution is to archive on TB and delete from Allmail. So, YES to your question.
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If you want message deleted from AllMail folder, you must delete it from there. Gmail keeps all messages there, otherwise.
Many thanks David! To be sure I'm understanding correctly:
- Archiving from "Inbox" will remove the "inbox" label on the server, leave the message undeleted and copy to the archive
- Archiving from "AllMail" will simply copy to the archive and not do any deletion on the server.
So to free up my gmail account, I should archive messages from "AllMail" and then manually delete them?
Many thanks, Justin
選ばれた解決策
OK, it's a tradeoff. If a user wants to keep profile smaller, the easiest approach is to remove AllMail folder from Thunderbird, letting AllMail continue to grow online. To reduce overall Gmail message storage, the solution is to delete from inbox and also from AllMail folder. To reduce overall Gmail message storage, but keep the messages anyway, the solution is to archive on TB and delete from Allmail. So, YES to your question.
Thanks so much!