Sean Reifschneider <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ding ding ding ding! We have a winner! Try at least doubling that.
> Unfortunately, you can't say "20 per destination" or "20 per domain",
> but setting it to "20 total" is really going to kill performance.
> Going from 240 to 20 may have been a bit of an over-reaction. Can you
> try 120? That'll help a LOT.
If there's one domain in particular which tends to croak or deny your
connections if you make too many connections, you could also set up a
separate qmail installation with a low concurrencyremote and use
smtproutes to route all mails to that domain via that installation.
This can be done either as a separate server or as a separate
installation with its own queue directory on your current server
(although in that case it must of course listen on another port, and
you'll need to include the port number in your smtproutes entry).
It's an ugly kludge, but it works. It also has the advantage that the
mails to other domains won't be held up while qmail is trying to
process the queue for the domain which is having trouble.
--
"I live in the heart of the machine. We are one."