On Wed, Jul 02, 2014 at 05:58:31AM -0400, Wietse Venema wrote:
> > Jun 30 12:21:21 cllxprmgtsmtp01 postfix/smtpd[8837]: timeout after RSET
> > from unknown[10.84.66.53]
>
> The LYRIS client sent the RSET command, and then it sent no more
> commands until Postfix timed out (default timeout is 1000
Wietse Venema:
> > Jun 30 12:21:21 cllxprmgtsmtp01 postfix/smtpd[8837]: timeout after RSET
> > from unknown[10.84.66.53]
>
> The LYRIS client sent the RSET command, and then it sent no more
> commands until Postfix timed out (default timeout is 1000s). That
> could indicate a problem with LYRIS.
you do this to send more than one message over the same connection but
after the last message you should send QUIT instead RST
Am 02.07.2014 12:02, schrieb tswmmeejsdad .:
> Thanks for the reply Dominik. What does the RSET command do when sent by the
> Client?
>
> On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 4:12 PM,
Thanks for the reply Dominik. What does the RSET command do when sent by
the Client?
On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 4:12 PM, Dominik George wrote:
> Hi,
>
> >I'm not entirely sure what these RSETs are but they could be that the
> >customer was hammering our mail server and we ran out of smtpd
> >connec
> Jun 30 12:21:21 cllxprmgtsmtp01 postfix/smtpd[8837]: timeout after RSET
> from unknown[10.84.66.53]
The LYRIS client sent the RSET command, and then it sent no more
commands until Postfix timed out (default timeout is 1000s). That
could indicate a problem with LYRIS.
Wietse
Hi,
>I'm not entirely sure what these RSETs are but they could be that the
>customer was hammering our mail server and we ran out of smtpd
>connections/processes to handle it.
RSET is an SMTP command sent by the client. Form what I see, your Postfix duely
tried to reply to it but the reply dropp
Hi There...
We are running Postfix 2.6.14.
What we are seeing is that one of our client sent a bulk email yesterday
using their LYRIS mailing program.
*-bash-3.2# zgrep LYRIS maillog-20140701.gz | wc -l*
*6826*
So 6826 got through but there’s a few thousand missing they reported.
Lo