Thanks for the command, that is very useful.
That user is actually me, I know why where are so many open. I have my
computer, and two tablets, and since I am using server side filtering
(procmail) I have to set watch on all the folders that are filtered to
or I miss a email. But I am doing the same for about 4 other users
accounts I also monitor, so I am not sure why it's just my username that
is doing that. I am going to shut down all the clients one at a time and
see what client is opening all those connections.
Once I close the client, I assume the connection should also close and
the count go down, correct?
I turned off both tablets and the connection count for my username still
is at 60, since I am writing this email with my computer client I will
send it and close my client and see what happens. Thanks! - Jeremy
On 6/9/2022 11:29, Richard wrote:
Date: Thursday, June 09, 2022 11:07:38 -0500
From: Jeremy Schaeffer <kb9...@phonesplus.biz>
On 6/9/2022 10:59, Richard wrote:
Date: Thursday, June 09, 2022 10:46:25 -0500
From: Jeremy Schaeffer <kb9...@phonesplus.biz>
That was the first thing I tried, I lowered the cache connections
in Thunderbird. Actually the max connections was 50, not 500, but
I could see why as I do have a lot of folders, but what is odd is
I have other mailboxes that have even more folders, but it's only
one mailbox that is trowing the error.
"# ps -axww | grep imap" does not give me the same results -
.....
19897 ? S 0:00 dovecot/imap
19900 ? S 0:02 dovecot/imap
19901 ? S 0:00 dovecot/imap
19902 ? S 0:00 dovecot/imap
.....
I wish it did give me the mailbox, is there a option to get it to
give me that information?
Try "auxw" on your "ps". I.e., add in the "u" which will get you
the user detail in the first column, otherwise you just get the
process id.
Thank you! That worked, I piped the output to a file, grep the
username and sure enough there are 60 lines. So I guess going over
50 was a possibility.
Learn something new every day. I set the maximum to 100 so I should
not have any errors on that anymore.
Rather than simply upping the limit I think a reasonable question to
ask is why/how they are managing to do that. That's a lot of open
folders.
By the way, the single command:
ps auxw | grep imap | cut -d" " -f1 | sort | uniq -c
will get you a nice list with the users and their connection counts.