up. Sorry it didn't work out.
...
Sorry, no mailbox here by that name. (#5.1.1)
==
James Hammond --- [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---
Executive Director of Information Technology
http://www.winthrop.edu/acc/execdir.htm
Voice:
On Sun, 07 Nov 1999 15:11:29 -0700 in Andy Bradford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thus said Jason Haar on Mon, 08 Nov 1999 10:36:38 +1300:
>
> > We have a 64Kb Frame Relay link with burst to 128Kb. We have users here
> > sending their current favourite 3 Mb MP3 file to 30 friends - effectively
>
of Stores. Millions of Products. All in one place.
>Yahoo! Shopping: http://shopping.yahoo.com
--
James N. (Jamey) Maze
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Computing, Information and Networking Division
http://www.ornl.gov/cind
ith
SSL and CRAM-MD5 authentication. And our SMTP server allows relaying
if you authenticate. And we can automatically post messages to any
IMAP mailbox. One thing we don't have at this point is a single,
unified account database and message store for POP and IMAP. Cyrus
could do this as will
26.12), port 25
connection open
220 agent57.gbnet.net ESMTP
helo blodwen.watching.org
250 agent57.gbnet.net
mail from:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
250 ok
rcpt to:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
553 sorry, that domain isn't in my list of allowed rcpthosts (#5.7.1)
quit
221 agent57.gbnet.net
So there you go. 'agent57.gbnet.net' won't relay for me, won't
accept 'acm.org' as local, *and* rejects it immediately.
James.
Hello. I just installed Qmail 1.03 on Solaris 7. Mail deliveries are working
fine, but I just can't get any evidence of mail transport written to
/var/log/syslog. I edited syslog.conf for mail.debug and mail.notice, and I am
piping qmail-send output to logger in my startup script. Basically, I
ing to provide an ident
response to remote systems for later tracking purposes, to configure
filters to send TCP resets for port 113 (whereas most defaults are
just to 'drop' the packet, ie ignore it and act as if it was never
received.)
James.
ther than defer? I predict lots more complaints from users,
than they probably make already about their mail delivery being slow,
if they do that. Mad.
James.
ur logs for failures?
I use something like:
% tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep '[^g] delivery [0-9][0-9]*: '
to watch successes and deferrals.
James.
ogether with tracking
outages? Some of our mailing lists regularly have large amounts of
mail stacked up for yahoo.com, and we're always getting strange
bounces from hotmail.com - as well as the usual 'mail box full'
rubbish. It seems like something that would be worth measuring and
recording.)
James.
responses.
Sometimes sites that return the above errors are themselves at fault
(I encountered one only the other week that was rejecting absolutely
everything, presumably because of a DNS fault at their end.)
James.
>bash-2.03# tcpserver: fatal: unable to figure out port number for pop-3
Check your /etc/services file to see if there is such a service as
"pop-3" and whether a port is defined for it. The service for port 110
might be spelled differently then "pop-3" as you have here.
Hi all,
Sorry for the OT but I was wondering if anyone knew of a
non-GUI based MUAs that groks Maildirs, as simple as say
binmail? (I don't need/want any fancy features)
I guess I could do a dirty perl hack but I don't grok
Maildirs and its features myself yet, so thought I'll
ask you folks fir
Hi (lol),
>
> for i in /dev/gf*; do
> touch $i
> strip $i
> unzip
> fsck
> fsck
> fsck
> fsck
> yes
> yes
> yes
>
Hi all,
I just wanted to thank all of you who had responded to
this OT question (semi OT since Maildir is included? :).
To my surprise,
within an hour, I received over 10 responses with all of
them mentioning mutt, and I thought to myself - there must
be something very good that I've been missi
he impending situation and
return a temporary deferral.
James.
Alexander Jernejcic wrote:
>
> hi,
> only for my interest: was this from Money Maker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ?
> i received that today.
>
> ;) a
YUP!
cheers,
jamie
ps
maybe I should start including all spam-email addresses I have received
in the past in my signature so they could harvest thei
Hi Robin,
"Robin S. Socha" wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> I just installed open-smtp by Russ Nelson. It does Not Work(tm). The
> tcprules-file gets overwritten as expected (?), but there are '"'
> missing:
>
> (root@kens):(~)$ cat /etc/tcprules.d/qmail-smtpd
> 212.84.219.13:allow,RELAYCLIENT=
[ver
Hi,
While thinking this over, I became confused so I was
wondering if someone could shed some light on adding
an outgoing-only qmail server to a network/domain.
Any docs, references, etc, for pointers are very much
appreciated.
What I would like to do is this:
host1 -> primary MX for incomin
Hi Dave,
Dave Sill wrote:
> OK, so where are you stuck?
oops, sorry ;)
I must have sent out the message in the middle of my racing
thoughts.
I was wondering whether to include host2 also as an MX in the
dns records although host1 is the only MX handling incoming and
part of outgoing (none fro
Hi Dave,
I just wanted to thank you for giving me clarity (which also
set off a number of chain-reactions in my head :).
Best regards,
jamie
#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#
-- If somebody can help create a search engine for my room,
I will call them
or good. I
> find yahoo.com and yahoo.ca to be down 20% of the time.
ditto yahoo.co.uk - for the same reason. Their MX hosts are regularly
too busy.
Many sites also bounce mail with 'unknown user' at certain times of
the day. Anyone would think they weren't updating user-lists
atomically...
James.
er of operations
specified are constructed in order that it can be "safe" - although
you should note that the recommendation is still to deliver locally
and read remotely if you must (obviously on a dedicated NFS server you
can't deliver locally.)
James.
urn an error
response to the originating user.
although clearly the bounce that results from that could direct the
recipient to send the mail elsewhere. Which may, or may not be, what
the original poster was wanting to avoid.
James.
ter - Pine does IMAP right? (Isn't that it's real
reason for existence?) So hook your Maildirs up with IMAP, and point
Pine at that.
Seems pretty simple to me.
James.
give me some pointers? Otherwise I'll
have to go digging. (Any patches to qmail-smtpd to log useful things
would also be of help to me: I've seen, and am looking at Maex's code.)
James.
Adam McKenna <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2001 at 01:32:29AM +0000, James R Grinter wrote:
> > But, it doesn't matter - Pine does IMAP right? (Isn't that it's real
> > reason for existence?) So hook your Maildirs up with IMAP, and point
>
Peter van Dijk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2001 at 02:12:32AM +0000, James R Grinter wrote:
> [snip]
> > Indeed, qmail already uses a split queue/mess/ directory structure and
> > it was a bit of an omission to assume that there would never be a
> >
e is no such mailbox "jo." Your original email implied that
it didn't (not sure which of those two cases you were specifically
referring to), and that puzzles me.
James.
parently doesn't).
Does GFS? That's the question..
James.
t would seem that even if it fails to do so it will
remove the file.
> Messages in local queue: 0
> Messages in remote queue: 2
don't know about the descrepancy in numbers, sorry.
James.
e very good examples of validation in the
past - check the list archives.
James.
ataneous jobs on a system, or across systems.
(and the ability to have user interfaces sat atop, to indicate how far
a batch-run has got.)
James.
rvise/ ?
(control/ should arguably be in /etc/opt/qmail/..., as should alias/.)
Dan's right that it's a mess, for sure.
James.
ng to analyse it passing through your system.
Markus Stumpf has been working on some improved qmail-smtpd logging.
James.
ss in the To: header
(and they don't put any Precedence headers, or anything that might
give you a clue).
But it's a good start.
James.
ctory
/var/qmail/queue/lock (and /var/qmail/queue) prevent anyone not in the
qmail group from accessing it anyway.
(Students of Unix variations will also know that Solaris and some
other OSs don't correctly enforce permissions on the named pipe itself
anyway.)
James.
support the mbox format.
You could just make all clients talk through POP3 or IMAP.
(That might discount Elm, but I wouldn't consider that a great loss)
James.
resolving the sending domain. Delegation and the
nameservers were fine, as it was the second address I tried (which
also failed with a 5xx code)
Very messy, and not very good for their customers.
James.
Chad Ziccardi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> What are the most common cause of deferreds?
In my experience, a) remote hosts being poorly run and maintained, b)
with poor network connections, c) or very busy (which brings you back
to a, really.)
James.
t message will get through just fine.
I put it down to them being broken,
James.
for <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Tue, 13 Mar 2001 22:56:03 -0900 (AKST)
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2001 22:56:13 -0900
From: "James A. Crippen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: Spectrum Wireless, Inc.
X-Mailer: Mozilla
x27;$1 ~ /remote/ { sub(/^.*@/,"",$2);
domains[$2]=domains[$2]+1 } END { for ( domain in domains ) { print domains[domain],
domain; } }' | sort -n
hope that helps,
James.
I'm not sure how far they are, though. (IMP, a web-based email client
and another part of the Horde project, works nicely.)
(HP OpenMail has been around a long time - so to say that they
realised it would be an Exchange killer is quite funny!)
James.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with any suggestions! Local users actually get the
mail and the .qmail's are in the same directory as the mailing lists .qmails
Thanks,
James Clark
-
Jan 17 13:11:54 leat qmail: 979755114.882956 info msg 361545: bytes 684 from
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]&g
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