varad gupta:
> Thanx for the explanation Wietse - it really helped
>
> I can see that a few postsuper(s) and reloads were run by the team
So, what kind of file system are you using?
The Postfix cleanup server creates file names (in the incoming
queue) that match the inode number, but your file i
Thanx for the explanation Wietse - it really helped
I can see that a few postsuper(s) and reloads were run by the team
[root@ms1 maillog]# cat maillog_08122011-10122011 | grep postsuper
Dec 9 14:11:45 ms1 postfix/postsuper[13212]: Renamed to match inode
number: 478 messages
Dec 9 14:11:45 ms1
Wietse Venema:
> varad gupta:
> > Dec 9 13:24:25 ms1 postfix/smtpd[6462]: B082DCCEB6:
> > client=unknown[192.168.x.x], sasl_method=LOGIN,
> > sasl_username=x...@domain.tld
> > Dec 9 13:24:25 ms1 postfix/cleanup[24260]: B082DCCEB6:
> > message-id=<004801ccb647$d6a829e0$83f87da0$@domain.tld>
> > De
varad gupta:
> Dec 9 13:24:25 ms1 postfix/smtpd[6462]: B082DCCEB6:
> client=unknown[192.168.x.x], sasl_method=LOGIN,
> sasl_username=x...@domain.tld
> Dec 9 13:24:25 ms1 postfix/cleanup[24260]: B082DCCEB6:
> message-id=<004801ccb647$d6a829e0$83f87da0$@domain.tld>
> Dec 9 13:24:25 ms1 postfix/qmg
Hi All,
On one of our servers, we experienced this strange behavior.
A mail was sent to 2 other ids on the same virtual domain.
LMTP delivered a warning
and then after almost 24 hrs the mail was successfully delivered.
Pls see the logs below :