I don't know off hand what the problem with preline is. It doesn't appear to
me to be a 64-bit thing, although that's certainly possible. Looks more to
me like the error is coming from a script, which typically shows a line
number. Is your setup executing the correct module? I'd check paths to be
sure it's not picking up some other module. Maybe specify the absolute path
to it in your .qmail-user file?
Tek Support wrote:
> Hi Eric, I can contact you off list but I want to be clear, the
> problem isn't with TMDA, it's with preline. And preline is part of
> the qmail-1.03 package. I need some help understanding if preline is
> compatable with the 64bit OS and if (and how) I can recompile it to
> work.
>
> We are in the situation where TMDA is going to be required. We were
> using it on our last server in our "qmailrocks" setup. Now that I've
> switched us over to qmailtoaster the install worked fine, but it
> wouldn't run. I've narrowed it down to preline giving a weird error,
> and it must be either incompatable with 64 bit or corrupted. In
> addition I have tried using TMDA without the preline and it worked for
> the initial incoming email. But after the sender gets the
> confirmation, and returns the comfirmation, preline is required - (per
> the TMDA website).
>
> If preline cannot do what I need, I'll have to find another option to
> do what preline did.
>
> By the way, the currently installed spam filters do seem to block
> emails to us that we would consider 'valid'. They also seem to let
> through spam that we would not like to get. TMDA resolves both of
> these issues. With TMDA we didn't have this problem, and the owner
> wants it back. And as far as I know, there are no technical issues
> with compatability or anything like that from installing TMDA.
>
> So I'm looking for some instructions on rebuiding preline? Or does
> anyone know if preline is incompatable with CentOS 5 64bit? If it is,
> I'll have to try something else.
>
> Thanks
> John
>
>
>
> On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 8:43 AM, Eric Shubert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I generally recommend not using TMDA for several reasons, but I realize that
>> it can be useful in some circumstances. That being said, I have installed
>> and configured TMDA on a toaster on a contract basis. Please contact me off
>> list if you're interested.
>>
>> FWIW, I don't recall having to use preline at all. That might have been due
>> to the way TMDA was implemented though.
>>
>> Tek Support 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
>>>
--
-Eric 'shubes'
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