RE: Requesting the services of Hercule Poirrot

2000-09-01 Thread Dave Kitabjian
However, when I ran qmail-qstat, it showed ~3300 messages in the queue (normally this is closer to 400). In the past, this has indicated an onslaught on spam. But if resources are available, and smtp and local have concurrency available, I don't understand why ANY incoming message would

RE: Requesting the services of Hercule Poirrot

2000-09-01 Thread Dave Sill
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Did you try injecting a message and tracking it through the logs? You need to identify where they're lingering. No, I did not try in enough detail. Do you recommend injecting from a remote qmail machine? That would allow me to track the individual message's delivery

RE: Requesting the services of Hercule Poirrot

2000-09-01 Thread Dave Kitabjian
Do you recommend injecting from a remote qmail machine? That would allow me to track the individual message's delivery from the remote qmail's maillog, since it may never make it to the local server... Hmm, I didn't think there was any question that messages were being queued and the

Re: Requesting the services of Hercule Poirrot

2000-08-31 Thread Dave Sill
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Problem: Inbound mail taking unusually long to arrive When I examined the system, it appeared to be neither cpu, memory, nor i/o bound. Also, checking the various logs, none of the following concurrencies were maxed: local, remote, smtp, pop. Also, the error log

RE: Requesting the services of Hercule Poirrot

2000-08-31 Thread Dave Kitabjian
--Original Message- From: Bob Ross [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, August 31, 2000 11:35 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Requesting the services of Hercule Poirrot Mine shows. Is this those it keeps working on and can't process?. If so how do I get rid of them.