What the hell are these arbitrary nsmail-#.tmp attachments and how do I stop them so my mail isn't rejected via rule-happy servers?
My mail is getting arbitrarily rejected by Amazon e-mail servers due to, apparently, attachments created by Thunderbird behind the scenes. Many of these were sent with no attachments added, which only adds to the confusion.
Here is a sample blowback message:
Unfortunately, I was unable to deliver your mail. The error given was:
AmazonSESException: Status Code: 400, AWS Service: SES, AWS Request ID: 9e25a0b3-540e-11e6-b7f0-c7219b1a344e, AWS Error Code: InvalidParameterValue, AWS Error Message: Illegal filename 'nsmail-5.tmp'.
Alle Antworten (3)
Have a look at this: http://kb.mozillazine.org/Nstmp_folders
Zenos,
Thank you for your response but I don't think it applies. I send normal e-mails and somehow Thunderbird is creating temporary files and attaching them to the mail before sending. They have the form nsmail-#.tmp (for instance nsmail-1.tmp, nsmail-2.tmp, etc). While an attachment does not show up in my sent items or outbox, one arrives at the mail server.
Further, I wasn't archiving and didn't see any messages about archiving the last few times this has happened. This may only be happening when the mail format is HTML.
Thanks again.
What's your antivirus? This question comes up time and time again wherever I search for this topic. For instance,