On 2022-12-26, Askhat Tokabay via Exim-users wrote:
> Helo
> I found in the documentation:
> Delivery processes may be started as a
> result of a message’s arrival, by a queue runner process,
> or by an administrator using the -M option.
>
> The question is the following:
> Can you tell me who
This router is ran for all your local domains. If it creates a new
address @+local_domains, there is no chance to get to the routers
further down the chain: A new address means, the routing starts again at
the very first router, and eventually it will reach your pgsql_aliases
again, which doesn't
On 12/26/22 18:08, Askhat Tokabay wrote:
Do I understand correctly that the reception process start a delivery
process?
Yes, when immediate deliveries are done, which is the usual case.
Sometimes exim will queue a message instead, and then no delivery
attempt will be made until the next
Ok, thank you.
пн, 26 дек. 2022 г. в 16:11, Gedalya :
> On 12/26/22 18:08, Askhat Tokabay wrote:
> > Do I understand correctly that the reception process start a delivery
> > process?
>
> Yes, when immediate deliveries are done, which is the usual case.
> Sometimes exim will queue a message
On 26/12/2022 04:12, Askhat Tokabay via Exim-users wrote:
I found in the documentation:
Delivery processes may be started as a
result of a message’s arrival, by a queue runner process,
or by an administrator using the -M option.
The question is the following:
Can you tell me who starts the
This is a theoretical question, I write
exim instructions.
The documentation says that there are four types of processes:
1. The daemon process
2. Reception processes
3. Queue runner processes
4. Delivery processes
With respect to the first three, everything is clear,
the main process starts the
On 12/26/22 12:12, Askhat Tokabay via Exim-users wrote:
Helo
I found in the documentation:
Delivery processes may be started as a
result of a message’s arrival, by a queue runner process,
or by an administrator using the -M option.
The question is the following:
Can you tell me who starts the
You wrote:
Once a message has arrived, and
it's time to attempt a delivery, that process will start the delivery
process ...
Do I understand correctly that the reception process start a delivery
process?
пн, 26 дек. 2022 г. в 16:00, Gedalya :
> On 12/26/22 12:12, Askhat Tokabay via Exim-users
On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 12:34 PM Askhat Tokabay via Exim-users <
exim-users@exim.org> wrote:
> Thanks,
>
> as I understand it,
> the delivery process,
> that the message has arrived,
> can be told by the process of
> receiving the message,
> which puts the message in the queue?
>
> Or can it tell
Maybe you should tell us what you want to do.
Best,
Niels
On 26. Dec 2022, at 10:27, Askhat Tokabay
wrote:
�
Thanks,
as I understand it,
the delivery process,
that the message has arrived,
can be told by the process of
receiving the message,
which
Thanks,
as I understand it,
the delivery process,
that the message has arrived,
can be told by the process of
receiving the message,
which puts the message in the queue?
Or can it tell the service
that is listening on SMTP
that it learns this from
the receiving process?
пн, 26 дек. 2022 г. в
Hi,
>
> On 26. Dec 2022, at 09:41, Askhat Tokabay via Exim-users
> wrote:
>
> Helo
> I found in the documentation:
> Delivery processes may be started as a
> result of a message’s arrival, by a queue runner process,
> or by an administrator using the -M option.
>
> The question is the
Helo
I found in the documentation:
Delivery processes may be started as a
result of a message’s arrival, by a queue runner process,
or by an administrator using the -M option.
The question is the following:
Can you tell me who starts the delivery process
when a message arrives?
Or how does the
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