On Thu, 2003-02-06 at 06:43, Gareth Hopkins wrote:
> On 3 Feb 2003, Jon Carnes wrote:
>
> JC>Some guesses (since no information was provided):
> JC> Mailman 2.0.x
> JC> IDE disk subsystem
> JC> Archiving turned on for list
> JC>
> JC>If that is the case, then Mailman is doing a lot of writing t
On 6 Feb 2003, Jon Carnes wrote:
JC>I have no idea what a truss is (besides something you wear when you have
JC>a hernia).
JC>
JC>What kind of a system are running on (cpu, ram, amount of virtual memory
JC>currently in use)? How many messages/minute are you seeing pass through
JC>your system?
JC>
On 3 Feb 2003, Jon Carnes wrote:
JC>Some guesses (since no information was provided):
JC> Mailman 2.0.x
JC> IDE disk subsystem
JC> Archiving turned on for list
JC>
JC>If that is the case, then Mailman is doing a lot of writing to the disk.
Howdie,
I have switched off archiving and the
On 3 Feb 2003, Jon Carnes wrote:
JC>Some guesses (since no information was provided):
JC> Mailman 2.0.x
JC> IDE disk subsystem
JC> Archiving turned on for list
JC>
JC>If that is the case, then Mailman is doing a lot of writing to the disk.
Howdie,
Ah yes, a little info that may have h
Some guesses (since no information was provided):
Mailman 2.0.x
IDE disk subsystem
Archiving turned on for list
If that is the case, then Mailman is doing a lot of writing to the disk.
On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 08:22, Gareth Hopkins wrote:
> Howdie,
>
> What is the python process doing h
Howdie,
What is the python process doing here?
Just got 5 messages in the space of about 10 seconds to the same
list on the machine. The list has about 15 recipients all in the same
domain.
A top shows
last pid: 24442; load averages: 0.99, 0.87, 0.73 up 9+22:18:18 15:19:30