Rocco Scappatura: > >> So.. raising "maxprocs" value for the contet filter could not reduce > >> delay > >> "d" in 1) anyway.. Right? To raise "maxprocs" value for the contet > >> filter > >> helps only when is the active queue congested.. I think.. > > > > That depends on how much of that time the filter is busy in the > > CPU, and how much it spends waiting for DNS or disk I/O. > > > > If the filter spends 100% of its time busy in the CPU, then the > > optimal number of filter processes is a few times the number of > > CPUs. If the filter spends 50% of its time in the CPU, then the > > optimal number of filter processes is twice as large. > > Very interesting! I will observe closely this a spect.. Thanks. > > >> Could you explain - in the same terms - how is quantified the time > >> before > >> a message is passed to the queue manager, after it is processed by the > >> content filter? > > > > The time to deliver is measured as the time between MAIL FROM and > > "end-of-data". > > Sorry for my bad english.. To be clearer, given "delays=a/b/c/d" I asked > for the meaning of "a" delay. I need this definition to understand better > the difference of time between "d" in 1) and "d" in 2) in the example > above.
Citing from the HISTORY file: The information is now logged as "delays=a/b/c/d" where a=time before queue manager, including message transmission; a=time from MAIL FROM until queue manager. Wietse