Re: James in production

2012-01-25 Thread Zach Cox
We've been running james3 in production for several months now. Had a few issues but they turned out to be due to errors in our matchers, mailets & config. Otherwise it's been working great. Also did load testing last summer, pushing 20+ emails/sec each with 1MB attachment into james3 and could no

Re: James in production

2012-01-25 Thread Pavlos Georgiadis
IMHO the main advantages are support for IMAP and "native" support for virtual users/domains. I don't think it is stable enough for production yet. I run an instance of james3 as a pilot for 2 domains on my server. But the rest of the domains that my box serves are on a 2.3.2 instance. On 25/01/

James in production

2012-01-25 Thread math math
Hello, I would like to use James3 in production and i have few questions about it : What are advantages to use James v3 vs James v2? Does anybody uses James Beta3 in production already? Is it stable enough or better use James 2.3.2? When will final stable James 3 be released? Thanks, Mat.

Re: James in Production

2004-11-19 Thread Vincenzo Gianferrari Pini
I have James in production since 21 months (almost always running the latest release under development), under Win2K on a 800MHz/512MB machine that runs many other things. It handles about 2200-2300 messages per day (incoming and outgoing) for about 230 users, with antivirus scan and bayesian

Re: James in Production

2004-11-19 Thread Soren Hilmer
James is very stable. We handle support from all these sites and will therefore know when/if James is misbehaving in any way. Such support calls are very rare. --SÃren On Wednesday 17 November 2004 16:57, Boon Seong wrote: > Hi, > > Has anyone used James in production environment ? Any

RE: James in Production

2004-11-19 Thread Jason Webb
ll P3 400Mhz, 192Mb RAM running Win2k, ColdFusion, MS SQL and quite a few of your services. -- Jason > -Original Message- > From: Danny Angus [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: 19 November 2004 09:02 > To: James Users List > Subject: Re: James in Production > > Me too. >

Re: James in Production

2004-11-19 Thread Danny Angus
Me too. I've been using James for three years plus, I regularly receive 500-900 mails per day into a single account and access this via outlook. I've installed and maintained four production instances of James serving about ten users each, each with similar volumes on each account. Not to mention

RE: James in Production

2004-11-18 Thread Noel J. Bergman
> when I use mail client like Microsoft Outlook,it can not > receive the new mail More details would be required. I receive about 1000 e-mails daily from JAMES to Outlook. --- Noel - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PRO

RE: James in Production

2004-11-18 Thread Steve Brewin
ames is working fine, but Outlook is misconfigured. Whatever the problem, you are not using James in a production environment. Does this really position you to comment on the qualities of "James in Production"? -- Steve -

RE: James in Production

2004-11-18 Thread a . ledvinka
... too soon to ask me for james production use case. But without details your "james" problem could be more general (java behaviour/performance related) problem. First check logs if James has enough memory on java virtual machine heap or not and java spits out Out Of Memory exceptions. The oth

RE: James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Milton Li
t; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 18/11/2004 11:40 Please respond to "James Users List" To:"James Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> cc: Subject:RE: James in Production > I am using James in

RE: James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Jeremy . Foot
:        "James Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>         cc:                 Subject:        RE: James in Production > I am using James in my production env,but feel very sorry for its > reliability,and stability,I planned to changed it to Exchange or Qmail. I find JAMES to be

RE: James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Noel J. Bergman
> I am using James in my production env,but feel very sorry for its > reliability,and stability,I planned to changed it to Exchange or Qmail. I find JAMES to be quite stable and reliable. > That's my private opionion for ur reference. Well, actually it is your quite public opinion preserved in

RE: James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Milton Li
or ur reference. Regards Milton -Original Message- From: Serge Knystautas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 2004-11-17 (ææä) 8:24 To: James Users List Cc: Subject: Re: James in Production Boon Seong wrote:

RE: [junk] James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Daniel Perry
I've got james in production on two servers. (one version 2.1.3 one version 2.2.0)   The 2.1.3 server has been running since march (8 months without reboot/restarting james) and i have had 0 problems.  The 2.2.0 server has been running since 2.2.0 was realeased and i've had 0

Re: James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Serge Knystautas
Boon Seong wrote: Has anyone used James in production environment ? Any sample to quote ? How's it reliability and stability ? http://wiki.apache.org/james -- Serge Knystautas Lokitech >> software . strategy . design >> http://www.lokitech.com p. 301.656.5501 e.

James in Production

2004-11-17 Thread Boon Seong
Hi,   Has anyone used James in production environment ? Any sample to quote ? How's it reliability and stability ?     Regards,   Boon Seong

Re: James in production and DOS

2003-08-14 Thread Steven Job
On Thu, 7 Aug 2003, Serge Knystautas wrote: > Just finally got around to writing that up yesterday, so glad I could > use it so quickly. :) It's an excellent document. Some of the views I bet are controversal, but it does touch on all of the major points that I was thinking about. > If you

RE: James in production and DOS

2003-08-14 Thread Noel J. Bergman
Steve, I've been running James in production, and have not had a problem. Spam is more of an issue that DoS. And I limit the size of messages. Besides which, what you consider DoS, someone else might consider a normal load. I think it is more important for James to scale and de

Re: James in production and DOS

2003-08-14 Thread Serge Knystautas
Steven Job wrote: Thank you for your quick response. Just finally got around to writing that up yesterday, so glad I could use it so quickly. :) If I was to make a for loop (from i to 1,000,000) and send a 10Mb file to people with email address [EMAIL PROTECTED] (steve1, steve2, steve3, etc). W

Re: James in production and DOS

2003-08-14 Thread Steven Job
Thank you for your quick response. I do see your points about Fast Fail and see why it could hamper a spammer. But how are the benchmarks for servers like this though. Would an ISP that accepts mail for thousands of domains be able to use this in production though? If I was to make a for loo

Re: James in production and DOS

2003-08-10 Thread Serge Knystautas
Steven Job wrote: How does James work for large enterprise mail systems. I was reading the following faq item. http://james.apache.org/FAQ.html#2 It seems like this could be a problem on larger systems. 1) All spam will be delivered without verification upfront. This can cause problems in that al

Re: James in production and DOS

2003-08-10 Thread JRC
e owner of a ford taurus instructions like.take the steel and heat it until it is in liquid form then pour it into the cylinder mold... - Original Message - From: "Steven Job" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "James Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday,

James in production and DOS

2003-08-07 Thread Steven Job
How does James work for large enterprise mail systems. I was reading the following faq item. http://james.apache.org/FAQ.html#2 It seems like this could be a problem on larger systems. 1) All spam will be delivered without verification upfront. This can cause problems in that all of this data w