I've several hundred messages for hotmail users in my outgoing queues
- not spam (I've checked).
It seems that today, hotmail are accepting connections on up to four
of their 16 advertised servers. This is a bit worse than their usual
performance which seems to be 12 of 16 accepting connections. They
arrange their servers like this:
> host -tmx hotmail.com
> hotmail.com mail is handled by 5 mx2.hotmail.com.
> hotmail.com mail is handled by 5 mx3.hotmail.com.
> hotmail.com mail is handled by 5 mx4.hotmail.com.
> hotmail.com mail is handled by 5 mx1.hotmail.com.
>
> mx1.hotmail.com has address 64.4.50.50
> mx1.hotmail.com has address 65.54.252.99
> mx1.hotmail.com has address 64.4.50.99
> mx1.hotmail.com has address 65.54.166.99
etc, with four IP addresses for each mx record.
I've tried this to flush the queue:
exim -Rf hotmail.com
hoping that the queue runner would latch on to an open server and
deliver a whole load of the emails. Is that a vain hope? Will the
runner try to establish a new connection for each message?
My logs *seem* to indicate that the runner is trying various mx hosts
- but that's not entirely clear as the log entries might be caused by
other processes. Certainly, I don't see the queue coming down in size.
Is there anything I can do to get this mail delivered faster?
I guess I could set off a host of queue runners, or fix the retry
rules for hotmail.
--
Ian Eiloart
Postmaster,
IT Services
University of Sussex
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Windows Can Be
Dangerous To Your Health
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