John Andersen wrote:
On Saturday 03 March 2007, Sandy Drobic wrote:
John Andersen wrote:
On Saturday 03 March 2007, Sandy Drobic wrote:
If you receive them with delay it is probably a delay on your mailserver. In my case it was hammer in postfix limiting his connection rate. Hammer? Or do you mean anvil? In any case, I never saw more than a few connections at the same time. Anvil should only limit concurrent connections if more than a few concurrent connections are opened.
The default for $smtpd_client_connection_count_limit is 50 (half the default process limit of 100). What did you set it to?
Oh yeah, DUH, it was one of those blacksmith tools... ;-)
That's why understood very fast what you actually were referring to.
But, you've misread the job of anvil. It will also RATE limit the number of connections per unit of time.
Quote from the Postfix site: IMPORTANT: These limits are designed to protect the smtpd(8) server against flagrant abuse. Do not use these limits to regulate legitimate traffic: mail will suffer grotesque delays if you do so. Currently I am testing Amavisd-new as a pre-queue smtp-proxy, so I only have six smtpd processes available (512 mb RAM and a server dating back to the previous century). I still saw no delay in mail. That is, why I was a bit puzzled why you received the mails not in one batch but over a longer period. What did you set these limits to? -- Sandy List replies only please! Please address PMs to: news-reply2 (@) japantest (.) homelinux (.) com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org