Charles,
this is not a chkuser limit, but a vpopmail limit. vpopmail's vauth_getpw()
does not check for the availability of the resource (that may be MySQL as
LDAP), but simply returns something like 1/0 (pointer exists, pointer does
not exist, despite of the reason why it does not exist).
tonix (Antonio Nati) wrote:
I feel it would be nice if it could be developed another set of robust
vpopmail calls.
What if you had vauth_open() which you can call early in the program.
If it returns 0, you have a valid authentication connection and can
expect later calls to work. If it
At 12/05/2004 12/05/2004 -0600, you wrote:
tonix (Antonio Nati) wrote:
I feel it would be nice if it could be developed another set of robust
vpopmail calls.
What if you had vauth_open() which you can call early in the program. If
it returns 0, you have a valid authentication connection and
On Wed, 12 May 2004, tonix (Antonio Nati) wrote:
You have the same problem in vdelivermail, if MySQL is down. You see
chkuser because it is the first filter in the chain.
Unless I'm mistaken though, in this case the mail will simply go back in
the queue, it won't be lost, right?
Thanks,
At 12/05/2004 12/05/2004 -0400, you wrote:
On Wed, 12 May 2004, tonix (Antonio Nati) wrote:
You have the same problem in vdelivermail, if MySQL is down. You see
chkuser because it is the first filter in the chain.
Unless I'm mistaken though, in this case the mail will simply go back in
the
Charles Sprickman wrote:
Just following up on my own question a bit...
I'm trying to figure out how many mysql hits a single incoming message can
generate to arrive at a max_connections setting for mysql.
Worst case, I assume it would look like this:
-initial chkusr check (is it a valid
Howdy,
I've seen a few people complaining that their mail is getting bounced.
Not good, needless to say. On examing the bounces, I see that it's the
chkusr error message that the user does not exist.
At this point my best guess, by looking at overall server activity is that
this is happening
Just following up on my own question a bit...
I'm trying to figure out how many mysql hits a single incoming message can
generate to arrive at a max_connections setting for mysql.
Worst case, I assume it would look like this:
-initial chkusr check (is it a valid address?)
-smtp-auth (possible