On Mar 10, 2010, at 05:51 AM, Stefan Foerster wrote:
Good news (kinda) - another list on that server just started to slow
down, and this time, it is a very unimportant and small list (472
members, 466 of them have mail delivery enabled), so I can take all
the time in the world to try and debug
When a bounce occurs due to a bad email address, all my list members receive
an email stating Delivery Error, Your message was not delivered
successfully. Then the original message is repeated. Can I configure
mailman to only send this message to the administrator or not send the
message at all?
I am running some lists with mailman and I have made real good
experience. The problem which occurs now occasionally is that sometimes
messages become discarded silently. The vette log contains very small
information once a message is discarded. The discarding seems to happen
preferable with
Kris Johnson wrote:
When a bounce occurs due to a bad email address, all my list members receive
an email stating Delivery Error, Your message was not delivered
successfully. Then the original message is repeated. Can I configure
mailman to only send this message to the administrator or not send
Thomas Hartwig wrote:
1. Is there a global option to prefer rejecting over discarding?
No, but there are a few list settings.
2. Is there some kind of extended logging available to see the reasons
of discarding?
Not without hacking the code.
3. Is there a global option to get notified by
Mark Sapiro wrote:
Then the recent posts are probably not in the
archives/private/LISTNAME.mbox/LISTNAME.mbox file, perhaps because of
some permissions error. If that is the reason, they are probably all
shunted and in the shunt queue. If so, you will find error messages
and tracebacks in
LexIcon wrote:
[...]
... so no March errors, and I'm still not getting anywhere.
That appears to be almost an exact repost of
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/mailman-users/2010-March/069102.html
which was answered at
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/mailman-users/2010-March/069103.html.
Did