Peter Bowyer wrote:
> On 02/07/2008, Marc Perkel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>   
>> Suppose Exim had 2 queues instead of one. We'll call the first queue the
>> primary queue which is a ram drive and the secondary queue which is a
>> disk drive. All this is of course optional and user settable.
>>     
>
> You're proposing a solution before defining the requirements. What's
> the high-level use case here?
>
> Peter
>
>   
Hi Peter,

I'll use myself as an example. I am in the front end spam filtering 
business. (http://www.junkemailfilter.com) I have about 4000 domains 
pointed to a single Exim server. Email comes in - I filter it - and I 
send the good email on to the customer's existing server. This machine 
is running Exim only. Spamassassin is running on a several other 
computers as well as MySQL and caching DNS servers. This one box, which 
is the box most everything hits first is all Exim. I have several other 
Exim servers on the next level of MX for backup and overload handling.

Additionally I have a a spam out channel where spam is forwarded to 
another server and is delivered to several other places that process my 
spam. It goes off to spam blocking companies for mining and to URIBL 
list processors to feed their block lists. These messages are very low 
priority and if they are lost or rejected there is no loss.


Most email hits this server and if it's good is instantly relayed to the 
customer's server for delivery. Most spam is forwarded to my spam 
processing server and if it fails it's deleted. No retry on spam. If the 
customer's server is down or overloaded and I get a 4xx error on 
delivery the message is transferred to a retry server which will attempt 
to deliver the message for 4 days. So the idea of this main exim server 
is not to hold anything in it's own queue. Whatever comes in goes 
somewhere because it is the fast bulk processor.

The bottleneck is the queue and I've noticed that if I use a ram disk 
for the queue that I can process many times as much mail with var lower 
load levels that using disk based queue. Ideally if I had a battery back 
up ram disk card that would be ideal but I can't find that anywhere.

So - that's the problem I wish to solve.


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