Quoth Roel Rozendaal - IC&S:
> Well i just killed a little bug (cvs has been updated) that caused the 
> daemons to ignore the -f option - reverting to the default 
> (/etc/dbmail.conf). Could be that your problem is solved now. On our 
> systems the trace_level option works just fine; setting it to zero does 
> prevent all logging to mail.log.

Well, as it turns out, so does commenting out 

mail.info       -/var/log/maillog

in syslog.conf :-) it'll work for now, until I get other stuff sorted...

My next question, it seems like dbmail and mysqld are conspiring to eat
up a lot of CPU time on my server.  (load avg around 20.00 on a
dual-Xeon with 2GB of ram, running /etc/my.cnf-huge with some tweaks)
Prior to setting up dbmail and postfix I didn't have such problems.  In
fact, when I was only using dbmail for certain users, I didn't have such
problems either.  Hmmmm, I have a hackish solution to this problem...

Anyways, if I didn't want to re-map /etc/postfix/transport to only
accept dbmail incoming for certain users, could I somehow alias
[EMAIL PROTECTED] to /dev/null from within dbmail?  My
/etc/postfix/transport file is about to have another 1000 lines added to
it otherwise :)


-- 
     "It's just a job.  Grass grows, birds fly, waves pound the sand.
      I just beat people up."
                                                      --Muhammad Ali

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