:> machine. In this case the overcommit that can occur is with I/O, not :> swap. As a general performance rule, you have to set MaxDaemonChildren :> and MaxArticleSize to prevent the overcommit from occuring. This is a :> function of sendmail, not a function of the kernel. : :Sigh. ((c)you) Sendmail can overcommit a machine with right set of :MaxDaemonChildren, MaxArticleSize, QueueLA & RefuseLA options - I have seen :such situations. MaxDaemonChildren limits only number of main processes for :incoming connections (plus queue run processes). For each connection, after :"main from:" and until accepting message, server process for incoming :connection forks child which accepts recipient list and letter body. After :message accepting, that child can fork delivery process. A queue run process :with "O ForkEachJob=true" option, which is default, can create a delivery :process for each queue job (in my practice, queue of more than 1000 jobs is :-- :Netch
Actually this isn't true. QueueLA & RefuseLA tend to be useless options with sendmail. MaxDaemonChildren, on the otherhand, tends to be a very useful option. By running the daemon and the queue separately, and putting the daemon in queue-only mode, sendmail has virtually no chance of taking down the machine. Example (assuming a box w/256MB of ram): sendmail -bd -O MaxDaemonChildren=130 -O DeliveryMode=queue sendmail -q1m -O MaxDaemonChildren=40 -O MinQueueAge=30m sendmail -q1m -O MaxDaemonChildren=40 -O MinQueueAge=2h This is what we do at BEST. Once we began doing things this this way, our three (continuously loaded) frontend mail machines never bogged down ever again. -Matt Matthew Dillon <dil...@backplane.com> To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message