quite enough. >
>> Of course, the only resources you need to worry about are process
>> count (some systems have limits to the number of concurrent processes, so
>> you should find out what your limit is), and RAM. The waiting process
>> won't actually do any processing, disk access or network access.
>
> I can use the logs to estimate the numbers of delayed processes
> and thus investigate whether process limits will be a problem.
> Do you have any ideas, however, on how I can find out how much
> RAM a delayed process will use? We use Exim 4.63 and FreeBSD 4.11
> on our current production servers.
ps -aux | egrep 'exim|PID' | head
exiwhat will tell you what a process is doing.
should help. The size will depend on how you've built exim. Oh, and you
need to be concerned about the total number of exim processes, rather than
the number of delayed ones. Of course, the proportion of delayed processes
may
>> > As our mail volumes get higher, however, I am beginning to
>> > be concerned about the load that all these delayed
>> > connections will place on our servers. At the moment it
>> > does not appear to be an issue, but I am looking for advice
>> > on whether or not it is likely to become a problem.
>> >
>> > Regards
>> >
>> > Clive Goodhead
>> > --
>> > ------------------------------------------------------------
>> > Cornwall Internet Limited
>> > Registered in England, registered number 3387326.
>> > Registered office: Montaza, Fore Street, Goldsithney,
>> > Penzance, Cornwall, UK.
>> > ------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Ian Eiloart
>> IT Services, University of Sussex
>>