When you attempt to send e-mail from your Virtual Private Servers to
an e-mail address at a server that is down or temporarily
unreachable, the e-mail is queued on your server for future
delivery. There is a process on your server's host machine
that will attempt to flush your Virtual Private Servers E-Mail queue every 8 hours. After 3 days if
the e-mail is still undeliverable, the mail will be returned
to the sender.
There may be times
that you want or need to flush your mail queue by hand. For
example, one of your users may send out e-mail to a large
list of addresses many of which are undeliverable. A spammer
may use your server to relay e-mail that may contain many
invalid e-mail addresses. Or the process to automatically
flush your mail queue may not be working properly. The e-mail
that queues up on your server consumes your valuable disk
space quota and affects the performance of your sendmail program.
The directions below will help you properly maintain your
Virtual Private Servers's mail queue.
Your Virtual Private Servers's
mail queue is located in the ~/usr/spool/mqueue directory
on your Virtual Private Servers. Each e-mail in the queue is normally
stored in 2 separate files. The header of each e-mail is stored
in a file with a name that starts with a "q". The rest of
the file name indicates when the e-mail was received. The
body of the same e-mail is stored in a file with a name beginning
with a "d". The rest of the file name matches that of the
header.
You can check the
contents of your mail queue by typing this command at your
Virtual Private Servers prompt:
% virtual sendmail -bp
You can check the
amount of your disk space quota that e-mail in your mail queue
is consuming by typing this command at the prompt:
% vdiskuse | grep mqueue
You can flush your
mail queue by typing this command:
% virtual sendmail -q -v
The "-q" flag flushes
the queue. The "-v" flag prints the output to the screen so
you can see what is happening.
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