Malcolm Weir wrote:

-----Original Message-----
From: Sam Varshavchik
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2005 12:11 PM

So, until modern technology advances to such a point, the only logical thing to do is attempt to deliver E-mail repeatedly, and follow the preferred logic for making each delivery attempt: pick a primary MX at random, if you can't connect it to it, pick a secondary MX at random, and so on.

I have to admit I am starting to come around to understanding Rodrigo's viewpoint on this, however. What is the *downside* of having Courier retry a different (same-priority if exists, or next lowest, as usual) MX rather than the same *potentially*-broken one, after the usual interval?

If there are multiple primary MXs set, Courier should already pick one at random with each delivery attempt.

And, contrary to the implication, it would be a BAD idea to include logic
that selects lower priority ("secondary") MXs for the subsequent attempts
unless (all) the higher priority ones cannot be contacted.

Why?

Well, how do you know that the _list_ of MXs hasn't been changed between
attempts?

If this is a concern, Courier can fetch a new list at every delivery attempt. Discard the ones it already tried and pick the remaining top priority one.

And if it has, presumably the recipient had a reason for so
doing.
I agree.

Multiple MXs with priorities are largely an artifact of unreliable
multi-path networks (i.e. dial-ups).

I'm really in no position as to speak about the reasons other sys admins might setup multiple MXs with priorities. The real fact is that they still do. I'm just trying to make the best use of it.

 In this day and age, the chances of
usefully using secondary MXs seems to me to be slight, except in a few
specialized cases.

Well, maybe I'm just a lucky guy but I have to regulary send messages to two different domains with different misconfigurations for which such a feature would be very helpfull.


Rodrigo



-------------------------------------------------------
SF.Net email is sponsored by: Discover Easy Linux Migration Strategies
from IBM. Find simple to follow Roadmaps, straightforward articles,
informative Webcasts and more! Get everything you need to get up to
speed, fast. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=7477&alloc_id=16492&op=click
_______________________________________________
courier-users mailing list
courier-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users

Reply via email to