Basil L. Contovounesios wrote: > Bob Proulx writes: > > Are all of those messages yours? They all have the same unique string > > pattern. > > This pattern is generated by an Emacs MUA.
Oh! Thank you for that tidbit of information. I am unfamiliar with that signature and thought it might have been applied custom. (One might notice that message-ids on my messages are custom for example.) > The @tcd.ie ones are mine, and the @protesilaos.com ones are Prot's > (CCed). I think I received the messages locally, but they're > clearly missing from https://bugs.gnu.org/45068 and possibly other > places too. Should I just resend the missing messages? Since they were logged as being discarded they are never going to be delivered. I would go slow and send one or two initially and note the message-ids of those messages. If they do not show up through the list in a reasonable time please send a note to the debbugs team mailing list with the message-ids so we can look for them. help-debb...@gnu.org help-debbugs AT gnu DOT org (The obfuscators often get in the way of actually sending email addresses to people who read the email on web pages.) The main debbugs team members do not monitor the Savannah mailing lists. As a standard operating procedure we normally hold all unknown senders (unknown in this case is unknown to the Mailman mailing list management software, you might be Margaret Hamilton in real life but still an unknown sender to Mailman here), we normally hold all unknown senders for human review upon the initial contact. After review the message is approved and the sender is then added to the known list of senders for that mailing list. This is so it is only the initial review is needed for specific human checking. Subsequent mail is completely automated after that point with no human delays added. I found it an unusual pattern to see that large group of message-ids that all had the same syntax form all were discarded that morning over that time of 8am to 11am. Which is why I asked about them. Something might have gone wrong somewhere, potentially between a chair and keyboard for that matter. Bob
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