I never noticed this before (having relied entirely on Dave Sill's LWQ
for installation), but daemontools 0.61 does not ship with
documentation... Why?!?
--
Allen Versfeld
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
QVANTI CANICVLA ILLE IN FENESTRA
53240 warning: trouble injecting bounce message,
will try later
1999-06-23 11:03:36.573619 warning: trouble injecting bounce message,
will try later
It doesn't seem to be affecting mail delivery (At least, none of my
users have complained...), but obviously *something* is amiss...
Any ideas?
Eric Ess wrote:
>
> Allen Versfeld wrote:
>
> Eric Ess wrote:
> >
> > A user of my mail system is having problems retrieving emails with attachments
>larger than 10k or so. They receive 'server timed out' messages. They are using
>Outlook Express as the
Not everybody here is a programmer - When I find a problem, I can do no
more than report it as best I can. Isn't that the point of the mailing
list? Reporting bugs, and helping those less clueful?
(And yes, before anybody gets emotive on me, I am aware that you don't
need to program
no
> mailbox or user, send apropriate message to sender. I want from qmail
> little more inteligence here, to check before reeceiveing whole
> message does
> user/mailbox exist, if not, dont even receive message, just take from
> sender field
> from heder and send apropriet m
y_has_my_Delievered_to_line'
>
> Can anyone tell me what to do about this?
>
> ~Chris
--
Allen Versfeld
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Wandata
"I hate quotations" - Ralph Waldo Emerson
ange,
ack, ptew) fell over.
A blessing in disguise! with exchange gone, I started receiving
incoming mail, and since installing checkpassword (shouldn't this
package be mentioned in the documentation somewhere? (apologies if
it is)), I can read mail through a pop3 client...
--
Allen Versf
o humbling. I managed how to achieve
the same goal in NT from scratch (no previous knowledge, and including
installation of NT) in 4 hours, but I guess that it takes a real man to
work a proper OS.
--
Allen Versfeld
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Wandata
"I hate quotations" - Ralph Waldo Emerson