On Wed, Dec 13, 2000 at 07:11:12PM +0000, Peter Woods wrote:
>
> Thanks for the response. Could you please expand upon
> this procedure? I am not familiar and I am not having much
> luck with this procedure.
Which bit didn't you understand?
> > 0. Stop qmail.
> > 1. Check at initial injection:
> > 1-1. Inject a local delivery email with qmail-inject
> > 1-2. Inject a remote delivery email with qmail-inject
> > 1-3. Search thru /var/qmail/queue for the emails - rewritten?
>
> I was unable to find any email with a matching time stamp.
You say you stopped qmail and then you injected the new mail and that
no file in /var/qmail/queue contained the text that matches
/tmp/message?
How did you look? Show us.
> I am using:
>
> cat /tmp/message | /var/qmail/bin/qmail-inject
>
> Is this ok?
Yes.
> I don't understand why these two are different:
> cat /tmp/message | /var/qmail/bin/qmail-inject
> cat /tmp/message | /var/qmail/bin/qmail-inject -n
You haven't yet given *any* evidence to suggest they are different?
When are they different exactly? Show us the real before and after.
> > 2. Check at queue processed:
> > 2-1. Backup your /var/qmail/control/concurrency* files
>
> I don't have any concurrency* files at all. Is this normal?
Yes. It's fine. Thus restoring them in this case means to remove the
temporary ones.
>
> > 2-2. Change both concurrency control files to have zero in them
> > 2-3. Start qmail.
> > 2-4. Search thru /var/qmail/queue for the emails - rewritten?
>
> > 3. Check final delivery:
> > 3-1. Restore your backup concurrency files.
> > 3-2. Restart qmail.
> > 3-3. Examine final delivery destinations - rewritten?
I repeat. Show us before and after, with all headers.
Regards.