Stan Hoeppner:
Wietse Venema put forth on 1/29/2010 6:15 AM:
Stan Hoeppner:
Based on purely visual non-scientific observation (top), it seems my smtpd
processes on my MX hang around much longer in (Debian) 2.5.5 than they did
in
(Debian) 2.3.8. In 2.3.8 Master seemed to build them and
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 4:02 PM, Jeff Weinberger
j...@jeffweinberger.com wrote:
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 3:39 PM, Noel Jones njo...@megan.vbhcs.org wrote:
On 1/28/2010 5:36 PM, Jeff Weinberger wrote:
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 3:16 PM, Noel Jonesnjo...@megan.vbhcs.org
wrote:
On 1/28/2010 4:46
I am using mysql (quite successfully in most cases) to do lookups for
a variety of reasons in postfix.
Recently, I had some issues with a domain lookup and in the testing
tried varying my MySQL query between using %d and %s as the lookup
key.
The documentation is clear on this when the query is
Wietse Venema put forth on 1/30/2010 9:03 AM:
Allow me to present a tutorial on Postfix and operating system basics.
Thank you Wietse. I'm always eager to learn. :)
Postfix reuses processes for the same reasons that Apache does;
however, Apache always runs a fixed minimum amount of daemons,
Jeff Weinberger:
I am using mysql (quite successfully in most cases) to do lookups for
a variety of reasons in postfix.
Recently, I had some issues with a domain lookup and in the testing
tried varying my MySQL query between using %d and %s as the lookup
key.
The documentation is clear
On Sat, Jan 30, 2010 at 4:41 PM, Wietse Venema wie...@porcupine.org wrote:
Jeff Weinberger:
I am using mysql (quite successfully in most cases) to do lookups for
a variety of reasons in postfix.
Recently, I had some issues with a domain lookup and in the testing
tried varying my MySQL query
Stan Hoeppner:
AFAIK I don't use Berkeley DB tables, only hash (small,few) and cidr
(very large, a handful).
hash (and btree) == Berkeley DB.
If you have big CIDR tables, you can save lots of memory by using
proxy:cidr: instead of cidr: (and running postfix reload).
Effectively, this turns all
On my linux system, I have uses with mixed case names.
I have one user RosaliE and I want her to get mail but postfix seems to
translate this rosalie.
How do I change this behaviour.
Thanks
Chip
Quoting Ralph Blach chipp...@nc.rr.com:
On my linux system, I have uses with mixed case names.
I have one user RosaliE and I want her to get mail but postfix seems to
translate this rosalie.
How do I change this behaviour.
If this is a local user, AFAIK, you can't change the behavior
Wietse Venema put forth on 1/30/2010 7:14 PM:
Stan Hoeppner:
AFAIK I don't use Berkeley DB tables, only hash (small,few) and cidr
(very large, a handful).
hash (and btree) == Berkeley DB.
Ahh, good to know. I'd thought only btree used Berkeley DB and that hash tables
used something else.
Sorry for top posting. Forgot to add something earlier: Proxymap seems to be
exiting on my system immediately after servicing requests. It does not seem to
be obeying $max_use or $max_idle which are both set to 100. It did this even
before I added cidr lists to proxymap a few hours ago.
Hi GUys
I am new to postfix, running unser ubuntu.I want to create a new email
address.
please help me do that
Thanks
Dev
--
View this message in context:
http://old.nabble.com/create-new-email-address-in-postfix-tp27390832p27390832.html
Sent from the Postfix mailing list archive at
-Original Message-
From: owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org
[mailto:owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org] On Behalf Of dd1313
Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 1:53 AM
To: postfix-users@postfix.org
Subject: create new email address in postfix
Hi GUys
I am new to postfix, running unser ubuntu.I
13 matches
Mail list logo