Due to the space limitations of the Mac Pro’s SSD (512 gigabytes), I do have my documents folder, photo files, iTunes library, etc. I believe my (Mac’s) home folder is solely on my Mac Pro’s internal SSD. you are using a standard setup with everything stored on the Mac’s internal drive? It looks that way, but I want to be sure. I will look some more tomorrow, but at first glance I don’t see anything out of the ordinary that would cause Mail to disable the plug-in after it was enabled (which I can see that it was).Ĭan you confirm that your Mac’s home folder is not stored/linked/synced to another disk, i.e. If you click this link to enable some debug logging, future diagnostic reports will record why SpamSieve is deactivating the rules and what it thinks about the state of the plug-in. Does it even need to be in the Rules section at all? There was another rule, apparently installed with Mojave, that was unchecked. Under Preferences>Rules, only SpamSieve was checked. I even went so far as to uninstall the plugin, then the Spam Sieve app, followed by a computer restart and SpamSieve reinstallation. I would check Manage Plugins and SpamSieve would again be unchecked. It would work once then, when I closed and relaunched Mail, I would get a dialogue box indicating SpamSieve had been disabled. I uninstalled/reinstalled plugin and made sure SpamSieve was checked in Manage Plugins. It now appears in the Mail Messages dropdown so that seems to have fixed so far… if others are having the same problem then try the above The message telling how to install suggested I look in preferences>general>manage plugins, there I found that Spamsieve wasn’t checked on so I checked it. Okay, after several failed attempts, I deleted the plugin, then reinstalled.
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