Am 08.09.2012 15:43, schrieb Viktor Dukhovni: > On Sat, Sep 08, 2012 at 10:01:13AM +0200, Ralf Hildebrandt wrote: > >> When sending lots of mails (mass mailings) via many machines, one >> quickly realizes that the current concept of smtp_fallback_relay is >> a bit problematic: > > If one thinks harder, one realizes the purpose of the mechanism is > to move messages (to destinations) that gum up the queue out of > the primary queue, where they may impact the latency of delivery > to inocent destinations. > > Nobody said that the fallback relay has to another machine. You > can and should in many cases configure a second Postfix instance > on each machine to be the fallback relay, this solves the greylisting > by IP problem, and keeps the fallback load distributed to all the > available hardware. > > In the fallback queue (instance) increase the active queue limits, > and delivery agent process limits, since you expect this mail to > generate less network traffic per delivery attempt and to incur > a larger active queue size due to the longer queue occupancy per > message. > > There is no need to redesign Postfix, in fact getting the junk out > of the primary queue is always preferable. >
what about fallback relay being a loadbalancer ip , with logic included forward by i.e fifty fifty percent balance to other i.e two other postfix servers ? This should goal too, and leaves the first server power free for new jobs -- Best Regards MfG Robert Schetterer