On Tue, 22 May 2001, Simon Huggins wrote:
> Hmm, that machine has been up since the 2nd May at least (wtmp rotated
> then) so it hasn't crashed.
> Could it happen if the thing that was feeding it had died for some
> reason?
No, Exim should clean up in that circumstance, but you never know, it
may be buggy...
> Yes, sorry, the -D ones. But they do seem to be complete messages - the
> end appears intact and there are about 50 of them like this.
Exim writes the D file before it writes the H file - it keeps the header
in memory, reads and writes the D file, and then creates the H file as
its final act in receiving a message.
After delivery, the D file is removed first, and then the H file.
--
Philip Hazel University of Cambridge Computing Service,
ph10@??? Cambridge, England. Phone: +44 1223 334714.