If you are using NTFS cluster size smaller than 4096 (default), you are in
trouble with XMail + NTFS.
Your machine will become slower and slower if the number of files increase
too much.

Do you have reverse zones configured? If so, try to exclude them for a while
and look at your graphics.

Another tip: are you using Cisco routers? If so, install CIPAF
http://cipaf.sourceforge.net/


Edinilson
---------------------------------------------------------
ATINET-Professional Web Hosting
Tel Voz: (0xx11) 4412-0876
http://www.atinet.com.br


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Davide Libenzi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "XMail mailing list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2003 11:13 AM
Subject: [xmail] Re: Xmail cache experience



On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, DOLIST Technical Center wrote:

> I'm experiencing a strange processing since some months concerning
> the using of the XMail's cache. I'm not saying this is bad or not, I
> just want to understand why it works this way. I've already began a
> thread there without any result so I make some tests by myself during
> this summer.
>
> During 4 weeks I setup Xmail normally and let the cache working by
> itself. Mails was sent but after one week performances "seems" to be
> lower. Never we have the MRTG Traffic Analysis bandwidth monitoring up
> to 100% when we have usually on big posts and it was always
> decreasing. I just reboot the system.
>
> Next 4 weeks I suppress the cache manually when I think that it was
> "too slow". Surprising, just after deletion the bandwidth was up next
> to 100% for some hours, then, decreasing slowly day after 1 or 2 days.
>
> The next 4 weeks, I set up a cron that do:
>
> del D:\MailRoot\xmail\MailRoot\dnscache\mx\*.* /S/Q > nul
>
> every 1 hours, starting at 23h55 (just before an hour without minutes,
> just because our customers always set up campaign planning on rounded
> hours) and ALL of them goes very quickly to 100% bandwidth.
>
> The second thing I noticed was the noise on this bandwidth that was
> reduced to almost 0% between 2 posts, when it was alway between 5-10%
> after one or 2 days when I don't purge the cache.
>
> We use "SmartDNSHost"
"192.168.41.2:udp,192.168.41.2:tcp,192.168.41.1:udp,192.168.41.1:tcp"
> on a local network.
>
> What could it be? Any idea? Does XMail lost time searching in cache
> folders or it has all in memory?

It should be exactly the contrary. XMail won't make any new DNS resolution
if it'll find an MX record for a domain whose TTL is still valid. How many
files did you have inside the cache ? Maybe it is a sub-optimal
performance of NTFS with lots of small files.



- Davide

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