This was disclosed to me after almost 2 hours on the phone with IPSwitch
tech support.  It only shows up with a large amount of emails in the queue.
In our case, almost 16,000 or so.

The Queue Manager, while reading the spool folder, restarts the read when
significant changes to the folder occur during the read.  I am paraphrasing
the person I spoke with on the phone, but this is my understanding of it.
Max CPU was the result.

This did not happen in 7.15, and does not, now that we have returned to 7.15
after 10 days on 8.0.

William


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bill B.
Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2003 9:49 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

William,

>I have to wait for IMail 8.01 at the end of June (est) because of a queue
> manager bug that sent me back to 7.15.  

What queue manager bug are you referring to?  I don't remember reading about
this on the list.  We were planning an 8.0 upgrade soon in order to take
advantage of the new queue manage, but would rather wait if it is still
buggy.

Thanks,
Bill



-----Original Message-----
From: "William Lefkovics"
Sent: Wed, 4 Jun 2003 14:30:12 -0700
Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] Stay or Go...


Please do.  Thanks!

I've only worked with a dozen or so mail servers, so I know there are lots
out there.

I have to wait for IMail 8.01 at the end of June (est) because of a queue
manager bug that sent me back to 7.15.  Other than that though, it will be a
store and forward with antispam functionality enabled to another system.

William
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jason Newland 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2003 1:58 PM
  Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] Stay or Go...


  I will put together a list of vendors that, by their words, offer much
greater functionality in Spam controls than IMail8 does.  And on the Postini
front, we used them for a spell, but using them as a front end didn't stop
the Dictionary attacks at all, and further, they rendered all of our logs-IP
Blocks useless (since all incomming SMTP connections came from their IP
ranges).


  Jason

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: William Lefkovics 
    To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2003 3:52 PM
    Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] Stay or Go...


    I haven't read the other replies yet, but...

    Not too many mail servers offer as much anti-spam functionality as
IMail8.  Most depend on 3rd party applications to facilitate that process.
Including the big boys.

    It sounds like you are a good candidate for outsourcing, though.
    www.postini.com for example.
    Or www.bigfish.com 

    William Lefkovics
    from TechEd

      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Jason Newland 
      To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
      Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2003 9:56 AM
      Subject: [IMail Forum] Stay or Go...


      Everyone,

      I have been sitting here pondering the usefulness of IMail for a few
days now.  I just wanted to get everyone's thoughts on the subject of
abandoning Imail for another mail solution.

      Here are my observations so far:  With spam being the number one
concern I (and most mail admins) have, what does i-mail offer that is
usefull?  Well, from where I sit, we successfully filter about 95-99% of all
Spam sent to our customers (Mind you this is done with the wonderful Declude
products as add ons, but could be done with the new goodies in V8)  The
problem with this solution is that it isn't complete.  The effect of spam is
still felt on my systems.  Our CPU cycles spent dealing with it, and our
bandwidth wasted in accepting it in the first place.  From a resource point
of view this is a worthless endeavor.  The only real way that IMail prevents
this waste is the Kill file that blocks the message at the initial
transaction level. 

      This brings me to my topic of switching to a better system.  After a
couple of days of reading other vendors product sheets, I have came to the
conclusion that IMail is WAAAAY behind in the Spam department.  It seems
that most other mail solutions already offer what we have been looking for
in IMail.  Such as dynamic kill files, tarpitting (for defense against
dictionary attacks, mass mailers, IPV4 lookups during the SMTP transaction,
Hijack prevention, and the list goes on.  

      I do have to say, that Yes, Imail is the 10 minute e-mail solution (or
whatever their pitch is), but that is all, you have to spend thousands of
dollars in extra hardware and software to achieve the same result that you
get what other vendors offer out of the box.  So this leads me to believe
that most IMail users continue to be users due to the fact that the TRUE
costs involved with IMail only creep up on you so that you don't notice the
price you pay!


      Please let me know what your thoughts....



      Jason





To Unsubscribe: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html
List Archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/imail_forum%40list.ipswitch.com/
Knowledge Base/FAQ: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/IMail/


To Unsubscribe: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html
List Archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/imail_forum%40list.ipswitch.com/
Knowledge Base/FAQ: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/IMail/

Reply via email to