A brief follow up: It seems the ~/.icedove folder is not used by icedove (it was probably a relic of when I used icedove-wayland). Now looking into ~./thunderbird instead I see several more profiles. ``` nicholas@guix14 ~/.thunderbird$ ls bv7r86h9.default/ installs.ini profiles.ini gdmykixq.default-default-1/ k6sjw3jm.default-default/ nicholas@guix14 ~/.thunderbird$ cat profiles.ini [Profile2] Name=default-default-1 IsRelative=1 Path=gdmykixq.default-default-1 [Profile1] Name=default IsRelative=1 Path=bv7r86h9.default Default=1 [Profile0] Name=default-default IsRelative=1 Path=k6sjw3jm.default-default [Install281FC43567D8867D] Default=gdmykixq.default-default-1 Locked=1 [General] StartWithLastProfile=1 Version=2 [Install3F4F07DFB18472B1] Default=k6sjw3jm.default-default Locked=1 ``` Launching icedove with `icedove -p` and then iterating through the 3 listed profiles all leads to a blank profile, except for default-default. The default-default profile contains all of my mail account and settings. I now set default-default to be my main profile (resolving my issue) but I doubt this is what users expect the software to do. Is it possible that icedove creates a new profile on upgrades and sets it as default? I definitely did not manually create 3 profiles. Kind regards, Nicholas