Ok... we are going to use an outside MX forwarding service to scan all
incoming mail coming to the servers from other hosts for spam and viruses.
Now how can I lock things down so ONLY the users popping in for SMTP and the
filtering servers can have access? I already have the pop-before-smtp
confi
I think I will try to use the symlik and then run qmail queue-fix program.
I had nice results a little bit ago moving a whole system to another
drive. I tarred everything and opened to the filesystems in new disk.
The only thing which didnt work was again qmail trigger file (I assumed
but might be
I am still working with our web designer for the
inter7 development page. There is more than just pointing
at source forge. So for the time being I will keep it up to date manually.
Ken
On Thursday 21 August 2003 4:12 pm, Tom Collins wrote:
> On Thursday, August 21, 2003, at 01:48 PM, Paul L. A
Hi Evren,
Please don't send any reply to me privately unless explicitely
requested. I do read the list (else I wouldn't have been able to answer
your question) and I don't need two or more copies of one mail.
Thank you.
On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 12:17:36 +0300 (WET) Evren Yurtesen wrote:
[quoting fixed
I want to change it because current queue directory is in /var/qmail/queue
and I figured out that the 256mbyte in /var filesystem might be
insufficient if there comes too much emails with attachments from my
customers at the same time. Plus the undeliverable ones etc.
I thought I might use this qm
Hi Evren,
On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 11:18:29 +0300 (WET) Evren Yurtesen wrote:
> I know this is not the right list but do you know how can I change the
> qmail's queue directory nicely? :) Is a little symlink to another location
> would do? or would sacrifice too much of performance?
It should work an
I know this is not the right list but do you know how can I change the
qmail's queue directory nicely? :) Is a little symlink to another location
would do? or would sacrifice too much of performance?
Evren