I have a second server (different customer), again fairlly fresh
CentOS5 qmail-toaster install, but on 32bit. I just checked to see if
preline would run from the shell, or fail, and it ran, and worked as I
would expect.
# /var/qmail/bin/preline
preline: usage: preline cmd [ arg ... ]
So the preline on the 64bit machine must be corrupted somehow, or
something is wrong with the coding for 64bit.???
Thanks
John
On Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 10:50 PM, Tek Support <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all, I'm trying to run TMDA on my fresh (for a few months) x86_64
> CentOS 5 install. I have had nothing but trouble and after many hours
> I have finally tracked it down to '/var/qmail/bin/preline'. Or at
> least it's part of the problem if not the whole thing.
>
> TMDA requires the usage of 'preline' in the .qmail-user file like such.
>
> | preline tmda-filter...blah blah...
>
> At first I thought the problem was in TMDA, but after much testing,
> what's happening is that preline is spitting out this error:
>
> /var/qmail/bin/preline: line 1: hello: command not found
>
> I have received a bounce email from the intented recipient with this
> error shown, and I have tried to run preline from the shell and got
> the exact same error. So in trying to be diligent I have looked at
> the preline.c source to see if I could figure out what might cause the
> above error. I couldn't find anything related. So I greped the full
> source tree for qmail-1.03 and still nothing came up. The source for
> preline has nothing in it with 'line 1:', nor for 'hello", nor for
> "command not found'. So that's why I greped the tree and no files
> seemed to have those. The documentation for preline is very slim, but
> it appears that there are 3 possible arguments (f, r, d). But those
> don't do anything different for me, using them all produce the same
> error.
>
> Can anyone help me?
>
> Preline add's some headers to the email and then forwards it onto the
> tmda-filter program. So I can't live without it. Could preline be
> corrupt? Can I rebuild it by itself, and if so, what would be the
> shell commands to use? I can read 'C' and even mess around a bit with
> it, but I'm not a full blown C programmer.
>
> Or, is this something someone has seen before? I have searched the
> toaster documention and googled for it but I'm not finding anything,
> which is odd, as I'm rarely the first person to ever encounter a
> problem.
>
> Thanks
> John
>
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