All,
In searching through the archives, I found this posting from Ken last
October:
We are thinking to upgrade to the new version of Vpopmail because the
old one(currently installed vpopmail) has one critical bug in the
current version we are using needs to be addressed is that mail
Troy Settle wrote:
All,
In searching through the archives, I found this posting from Ken last
October:
We are thinking to upgrade to the new version of Vpopmail because the
old one(currently installed vpopmail) has one critical bug in the
current version we are using needs to be
of the sql database.
--
Troy Settle
Pulaski Networks
540.994.4254
http://www.psknet.com
** -Original Message-
** From: inter7 [mailto:inter7]On Behalf Of Ken Jones
** Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 10:00 AM
** To: Troy Settle
** Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
** Subject: Re: Deferral on database
** Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 10:00 AM
** To: Troy Settle
** Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
** Subject: Re: Deferral on database failure
**
**
** Troy Settle wrote:
**
** All,
**
** In searching through the archives, I found this posting from Ken last
** October:
**
**We are thinking
IT
Tel. +39 0744 5441330
Fax. +39 0744 5441372
-Messaggio originale-
Da: inter7 [mailto:inter7]Per conto di Ken Jones
Inviato: lunedi 9 luglio 2001 16.57
A: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Oggetto: Re: Deferral on database failure
Sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.
Ever try to build
-
From: Ken Jones [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 10:57 AM
Subject: Re: Deferral on database failure
Sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.
Ever try to build a replicated database (which is kinda what
you are talking about). The things you have to watch
Andrea Cerrito wrote:
I agree with Ken.
What are the needs for a cdb file when you have a replicated mysql db?
About speed, if the db is very large, I don't think that a cdb file can be
faster than a mysql lookup.
About replicated db, a question. I've looked at the code and I think it
]
** Subject: Re: Deferral on database failure
**
**
** How hard? Trust me, it is not easy.
**
** IBM spent over 500 million getting redudancy/failover to work
** in DBII. mysql doesn't have it, postgres doesn't have it
** oracle does but they have millions. Sybase has something
** close, but it can fail
I thought this was fixed in version 4.10.1; i.e. from Current Change Log
05/02/01 -
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- added check if mysql is down, email is deferred instead of bounced or
deleted.
Can you please clarify?
thanks in advance
Faruque
At 03:59 PM 7/9/01 +0200, Ken Jones