Hello, Recently, we have been seeing some issues regarding "unknown locker ID's". We are running OpenSUSE 11.3 with libdb-4_5 and amavisd-new 2.6.4, both standard packages installed through yast.
Sometimes, our mail queue gets filled without the mails being sent out again. We need to restart amavis and postfix, after that the mails are being processed. The logfiles show following output: Sep 21 22:54:54 ELV_DMZ005 postfix/qmgr[9801]: 4187373263: from=<sen...@domain1.com>, size=7894, nrcpt=1 (queue active) Sep 21 22:54:54 ELV_DMZ005 postfix/smtp[23467]: 4187373263: to=<recipi...@domain2.com>, relay=127.0.0.1[127.0.0.1]:10024, delay=48086, delays=48085/0/0/0.76, dsn=4.4.2, status=deferred (lost connection with 127.0.0.1[127.0.0.1] while sending end of data -- message may be sent more than once) Sep 21 22:54:54 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2733]: (!!)TROUBLE in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 346d, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:54 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2733]: (!)_DIE: Suicide in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 346d, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:55 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2736]: (!!)TROUBLE in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 346e, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:55 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2736]: (!)_DIE: Suicide in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 346e, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:55 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2737]: (!!)TROUBLE in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 346f, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:55 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2737]: (!)_DIE: Suicide in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 346f, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:56 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2738]: (!!)TROUBLE in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 3470, . at (eval 82) line 27. Sep 21 22:54:56 ELV_DMZ005 amavis[2738]: (!)_DIE: Suicide in child_init_hook: BDB no dbS: Unknown locker ID: 3470, . at (eval 82) line 27. If I google around, the only topics I see are related to really old releases of amavis (v5.x). Does any of you have gotten same issues and how did you fix it? Kind regards, Robin