> Paul A. Procacci wrote: > > Victor Farah wrote: > >> Hello > >> I'm running qmail and I created an smtproutes file, inside my > >> /var/qmail/control/ directory. I then sent a killall -ALRM > >> qmail-send, but it doesn't seem like it uses that smtproutes file I > >> made. I start qmail using supervise scripts. > >> > > Hello, > > > > This isn't the right place to ask this question. Irregardless of > > that, since you are using supervise to manage the daemon, try the > > following: > > > > svc -h /path/to/service/directory > > > > OR > > > > svc -a /path/to/service/directory > > ~Paul > > I Agree, this would be better posted to a qmail list, but anyway: > > I think -ALRM tells qmail to re-run the queue, what you need is to send > a HUP signal to the qmail-send, like "pkill -HUP qmail-send", so it will > read the control files again. > Have you read the Life With Qmail docs?
See qmail-control(5) and qmail-remote(8). smtproutes is read by qmail-remote not qmail-send. qmail-remote doesn't require a signal since a new instance is started for each delivery. If smtproutes is not working, something else is wrong. Check the syntax of the file (it is described in qmail-remote man page). You may need to use wild cards to handle all instances for that domain name. If that's all fine, then perhaps there's a problem on the remote host. sdb -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] Todays Poem: ((12 + 144 + 20 + (3 * 4^(1/2))) / 7) + (5 * 11) = 9^2 + 0 _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"