Sorry. But I'll have to wait for another one to get stuck. As for the one I thought was a error message back from the system. It was just a normal message. So once one get stuck. I double check my findings and get you a ls - l from it.

Thanks,

Josh

----- Original Message ----- From: "Wietse Venema" <wie...@porcupine.org>
To: "Postfix users" <postfix-users@postfix.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2013 2:24 PM
Subject: Re: update: 1 mail stoped by 1 user. Now it is 2 users and I noticed something.


Josh Cason:
So this is a update. I had put a few days ago. I said 1 mail was
stopped by 1 user in the incoming directory. Then goes away without
a error. Well I now have 2 users. But I noticed something the other
day and on this user. It has a pair of ?? marks on it.

Please provide a complete line of "ls -l" output with the mystery
file's name and permissions.

So I did a
search but still did not provide any answers. Most of that type
went through no problem. The other update was there was on some
email. It showed up a few hours later. I'm still trying to see
that in my logs.

Postfix logs the queue file name when the file is created. For example:

Sep 17 00:47:47 spike postfix/smtpd[54896]: 3cfBdb4G3tzjymn: client=unknown[61.164.179.222]

Sep 17 01:05:06 spike postfix/pickup[54595]: 3cfC1Z1qMXzjymp: uid=1001 from=<wietse>

What does the logging look like for your mystery file? This means
you need to search the mail logfile.

But what would cause a message to hang out in the
incoming that long. When all the other go through? Size?

The universe of possibilities is too large to speculate.  This
question is best answered if you can provide Postfix logfile records
for the file's arrival and delivery. This means you need to search
the mail logfile.

Wietse

--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
dangerous content by Galaxy Mail Server, and is
believed to be clean.



--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
dangerous content by Galaxy Mail Server, and is
believed to be clean.

Reply via email to