On 22 Nov 2007, at 11:51, Davide Libenzi wrote:
> On Thu, 22 Nov 2007, David Lord wrote:
>
> > I should have added that defaults for retries seem very conservative
> > and much safer for a production server than my values that ramp up
> > the period between reduced number of retries much more a
On Thu, 22 Nov 2007, David Lord wrote:
> I should have added that defaults for retries seem very conservative
> and much safer for a production server than my values that ramp up
> the period between reduced number of retries much more agressively.
>
> Davide, please correct me if I've calculat
On 21 Nov 2007, at 23:27, David Lord wrote:
> On 21 Nov 2007, at 9:27, Dale Qualls wrote:
>
> > Same problem thing this morning. Sent a message, waited 30 minutes and
> > it's still sitting in the queue, no SLOG file, message was sitting in
> > the spool just fine. Restart XMail and the mess
On Wed, 21 Nov 2007, David Lord wrote:
> Only a home server here, k6-400, NetBSD 3.1, total memory = 127 MB,
> avail memory = 119 MB. I used to send a batch of 12 emails from a
> remote account as test of spamassassin and fprot, 6 x connections
> each to 2 accounts. Occasionally all would slowl
On 21 Nov 2007, at 9:27, Dale Qualls wrote:
> Same problem thing this morning. Sent a message, waited 30 minutes and
> it's still sitting in the queue, no SLOG file, message was sitting in
> the spool just fine. Restart XMail and the message flies on through.
> Is there anything strange with
On Wed, 21 Nov 2007, Dale Qualls wrote:
> Same problem thing this morning. Sent a message, waited 30 minutes and
> it's still sitting in the queue, no SLOG file, message was sitting in
> the spool just fine. Restart XMail and the message flies on through.
> Is there anything strange with my c
Same problem thing this morning. Sent a message, waited 30 minutes and
it's still sitting in the queue, no SLOG file, message was sitting in
the spool just fine. Restart XMail and the message flies on through.
Is there anything strange with my command line? This is happening on
both boxes.
I had attempted with the file system before, there just wasn't a slog file.
I followed your directions below but lo and behold the message
transferred immediately.
MX2:/var/MailRoot/spool # grep -R "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" *
MX2:/var/MailRoot/spool # cd ../logs
MX2:/var/MailRoot/logs # grep -R "[EMAIL
I had attempted with the file system before, there just wasn't a slog file.
I followed your directions below but lo and behold the message
transferred immediately.
MX2:/var/MailRoot/spool # grep -R "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" *
MX2:/var/MailRoot/spool # cd ../logs
MX2:/var/MailRoot/logs # grep -R "[EMAIL
On Tue, 20 Nov 2007, Dale Qualls wrote:
> Strange. I flushed the queue, using Haralds manager, and it shot the
> message right through.
Ok, forget the tools. Let's go to the file system. Stop XMail and clean
the spool `find spool/ -type f | xargs rm -f` (if spossible - this will
nuke possible
Strange. I flushed the queue, using Haralds manager, and it shot the
message right through.
Davide Libenzi wrote:
> On Tue, 20 Nov 2007, Dale Qualls wrote:
>
>
>> Hello all, I've got a bit of a head scratcher here.
>>
>> I have a couple of XMail boxes setup to do relaying (no filtering of any
I sent the test message at 2:24 p.m. CST and now at 3:19 p.m. CST it
still sits in the spool but there is no slog file. I didn't find a
corresponding one in the slog directory (although there are many others)
and using Haralds xmail queue manager it simply says "NO_SLOG_FILE".
Shall I bounce th
On Tue, 20 Nov 2007, Dale Qualls wrote:
> Hello all, I've got a bit of a head scratcher here.
>
> I have a couple of XMail boxes setup to do relaying (no filtering of any
> kind) as backup MX servers and I've never really paid much attention but
> it appears that they relay received messages ab
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