Re: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw

2002-11-05 Thread Luís Gustavo Facioni Barcellos
Ken Jones wrote:
 Tune your /etc/my.cnf file

I dont use MySQL, Ken

well, I delayed a little bit to answer beacause I taught I had solved 
it... but I was wrong n I am still worried about..

the vchkpw continues eating my CPU.

in the hope someone helps me, I think I figured out somethings.
1 - my ps output when the was busy:
root   171  0.0  0.0  1276  296 ?SOct31   0:00  \_ 
supervise qmail-pop3d
root 22995  0.0  0.0  1844  648 ?SNov01   0:00  |   \_ 
/usr/local/bin/tcpserver -v -H -R 0 pop3 
/usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-popup emater.tche.br /usr/local/vpopmai
root 17710  0.0  0.0  1276  288 ?SNov04   0:00  | 
\_ /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-popup emater.tche.br 
/usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw /usr/local/qmail/bin/qma
root 17711  0.0  0.0  1600  536 ?DNov04   0:00  | 
\_ /usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d 
Maildir
root 17712 99.8  0.0  1600  536 ?RNov04 744:49  | 
\_ /usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw 
/usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d Maildir

as u can see, (if the asc art let u see:) the overloaded process is 
child of another vchkpw process, not of my qmail-popup, called from 
/service/qmail-pop3d/run script.
Is it normal? wouldn't be a qmail-popup child? As long as I know, my run 
script is working fine...

2 - I made a script to catch both last log lines and ps output when 
server gets a hungry vchkpw process. the scripts output:

Nov  4 20:06:20 server vpopmail[17711]: vchkpw: login success 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:200.227.122.250
root 17712 98.9 0.0 1600 536 ? R 20:06 2:40 
/usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d Maildir

The the user ip address is external, from an ISP. At this time, the user 
was at home and is exacly the same time the server become busy.
There is a problem related to some configuration file, perhaps my 
tcp.smtp file?
My tcp.smtp file has just tree lines: my external network, the internal 
one and the localhost.

some guru wants help a poor and lost soul?  :)
TIA
--
Gustavo
--
* When I was born..the doctor came out to the waiting room and said to 
my father...I'm very sorry. We did everything we could...but he pulled 
through.
--

On Tuesday 29 October 2002 1:58 pm, Luís Gustavo Facioni Barcellos wrote:

I have a qmail 1.0.3, daemontools 0.76, qmail-scanner 1.12 with mcafee,
vpopmail 5.2.1 and sqwebmail 3.3.4 in a brand new Slackware 8.1 box.

Its all running fine, but sometimes the server stops authenticating. The
top shows a vchkpw process consuming more then 90% CPU and I get a
*server busy* on client.






Re: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw

2002-10-30 Thread Luís Gustavo Facioni Barcellos
Hi, Justin,
well, there's no one more simple :)
the most options are *no* by default, so I just use:

./configure  --enable-qmaildir=/usr/local/qmail

thanks,

Gustavo



Luis, which options did you use when compiling vpopmail?



top shows a vchkpw process consuming more then 90% CPU and I get a
*server busy* on client.

#!/bin/sh
env - PATH=/usr/local/qmail/bin:/usr/local/bin
MAXCON=40
exec /usr/local/bin/softlimit -m 200 \
 /usr/local/bin/tcpserver -v -H -R -c $MAXCON 0 pop3 \
 /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-popup mydomain.here.com \
 /usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d
Maildir 21






RE: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw

2002-10-29 Thread Brad Dameron
What does softlimit do? 

---
Brad Dameron
Network Account Executive
TSCNet Inc.
 www.tscnet.com
Silverdale, WA. 
1-888-8TSCNET

 

 -Original Message-
 From: Luis Gustavo Facioni Barcellos [mailto:lbarcellos;emater.tche.br]
 Sent: Tuesday, October 29, 2002 11:58 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw
 
 
 Hi, all
 
 I have a qmail 1.0.3, daemontools 0.76, qmail-scanner 1.12 with mcafee, 
 vpopmail 5.2.1 and sqwebmail 3.3.4 in a brand new Slackware 8.1 box.  
 
 Its all running fine, but sometimes the server stops authenticating. The 
 top shows a vchkpw process consuming more then 90% CPU and I get a 
 *server busy* on client.
 
 my qmail-pop3/run script:
 #!/bin/sh
 env - PATH=/usr/local/qmail/bin:/usr/local/bin
 MAXCON=40
 exec /usr/local/bin/softlimit -m 200 \
   /usr/local/bin/tcpserver -v -H -R -c $MAXCON 0 pop3 \
   /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-popup mydomain.here.com \
   /usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d 
 Maildir 21
 
 Someone could tell where do I start to fix it?
 
 TIA
 -- 
 Gustavo
 --
 * Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it 
 holds the universe together.
 --
 
 
 




Re: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw

2002-10-29 Thread David Phillips
Brad Dameron writes:
 What does softlimit do?

http://cr.yp.to/daemontools/softlimit.html

-- 
David Phillips [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://david.acz.org/





Re: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw

2002-10-29 Thread Justin Heesemann
On Tuesday 29 October 2002 21:22, Brad Dameron wrote:
 What does softlimit do?


it limits the ammount of memory the process may use.
in this case about 2MB ram.

Luis, which options did you use when compiling vpopmail?

  -Original Message-
  From: Luis Gustavo Facioni Barcellos [mailto:lbarcellos;emater.tche.br]
  Sent: Tuesday, October 29, 2002 11:58 AM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: [vchkpw] 90% CPU in vchkpw
 
 
  Hi, all
 
  I have a qmail 1.0.3, daemontools 0.76, qmail-scanner 1.12 with mcafee,
  vpopmail 5.2.1 and sqwebmail 3.3.4 in a brand new Slackware 8.1 box.
 
  Its all running fine, but sometimes the server stops authenticating. The
  top shows a vchkpw process consuming more then 90% CPU and I get a
  *server busy* on client.
 
  my qmail-pop3/run script:
  #!/bin/sh
  env - PATH=/usr/local/qmail/bin:/usr/local/bin
  MAXCON=40
  exec /usr/local/bin/softlimit -m 200 \
/usr/local/bin/tcpserver -v -H -R -c $MAXCON 0 pop3 \
/usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-popup mydomain.here.com \
/usr/local/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw /usr/local/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d
  Maildir 21
 
  Someone could tell where do I start to fix it?
 
  TIA
  --
  Gustavo
  --
  * Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it
  holds the universe together.
  --

-- 
Best Regards
---
Justin Heesemannionium Technologies
[EMAIL PROTECTED]www.ionium.org