On Mar 3, 2010, at 5:24 PM, Wietse Venema wrote:
donovan jeffrey j:
Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/smtp[1054]: name_mask: resource
Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/smtp[1054]: name_mask: software
Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/qmgr[603]: 0529299C4604: removed
Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/smtp[1054]: < 127
donovan jeffrey j:
> Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/smtp[1054]: name_mask: resource
> Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/smtp[1054]: name_mask: software
> Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/qmgr[603]: 0529299C4604: removed
> Mar 3 09:49:59 mx1 postfix/smtp[1054]: < 127.0.0.1[127.0.0.1]: 220
> [127.0.0.1] ESMTP a
On Mar 3, 2010, at 12:09 AM, Wietse Venema wrote:
donovan jeffrey j:
5468961666%
13235578 6836202 66% /
And that's 26 GBytes as well.
It would be interesting to see what Postfix smtpd logs. You can
turn it on selectively
postconf -e debug_peer_list=127.0.0.1
postfix reloa
donovan jeffrey j:
>
> On Mar 2, 2010, at 9:03 PM, Wietse Venema wrote:
>
> > It may be worthwhile to run the Postfix fsspace test program.
> >
> > - Download any Postfix source code that compiles on your system.
> >
> > - cd into the source tree, then execute the following commands:
> >
> >m
On Mar 2, 2010, at 9:03 PM, Wietse Venema wrote:
It may be worthwhile to run the Postfix fsspace test program.
- Download any Postfix source code that compiles on your system.
- cd into the source tree, then execute the following commands:
make makefiles
cd src/util
make fsspace
Wietse Venema:
> donovan jeffrey j:
> >
> > On Mar 2, 2010, at 7:31 PM, Daniel V. Reinhardt wrote:
> >
> > >> this is default on all my systems.
> > >
> > >>
> > >> MX1
> > >> /dev/disk1s3 77G51G26G66%/
> > >>
> > >> MX2
> > >> /dev/disk0s3 234G46G
donovan jeffrey j put forth on 3/1/2010 8:06 AM:
> Greetings
>
> I had several of these on my primary MX this weekend and one just popped
> up. Can someone explain where this Insufficient system storage is ?
What filesystem are you using? Are you running out of inodes?
/$ df -i
--
Stan
donovan jeffrey j:
>
> On Mar 2, 2010, at 7:31 PM, Daniel V. Reinhardt wrote:
>
> >> this is default on all my systems.
> >
> >>
> >> MX1
> >> /dev/disk1s3 77G51G26G66%/
> >>
> >> MX2
> >> /dev/disk0s3 234G46G 187G20%/
> >>
> >>
It may be
On Mar 2, 2010, at 7:31 PM, Daniel V. Reinhardt wrote:
this is default on all my systems.
MX1
/dev/disk1s3 77G51G26G66%/
MX2
/dev/disk0s3 234G46G 187G20%/
Can you show the partitioning of these systems?
Thanks
thats all i hav
> this is default on all my systems.
>
> MX1
> /dev/disk1s3 77G51G26G66%/
>
> MX2
> /dev/disk0s3 234G46G 187G20%/
>
>
Can you show the partitioning of these systems?
Thanks
Daniel Reinhardt
Website: www.cryptodan.com
Email:
crypto...
On Mar 1, 2010, at 10:56 AM, lst_ho...@kwsoft.de wrote:
Zitat von donovan jeffrey j :
Greetings
I had several of these on my primary MX this weekend and one just
popped up. Can someone explain where this Insufficient system
storage is ?
both mail queues are empty, and DF shows < 20% on
Zitat von donovan jeffrey j :
Greetings
I had several of these on my primary MX this weekend and one just
popped up. Can someone explain where this Insufficient system
storage is ?
both mail queues are empty, and DF shows < 20% on the reporting system.
Out: 220 mx2.beth.k12.pa.us ESMTP
12 matches
Mail list logo