Hello,
On Sun, 12 Aug 2007 09:32:53 -0500, cjackson <cjackson@???>
wrote:
> cjackson wrote:
>> cjackson wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I am having a very difficult time sending email to att.net with the
>>> default Exim 4.62 configuration. Att.net gives me 450 Busy Retry error
>>> on almost all email I send to them right after the connection attempt.
> I
>>> notice that if I manually resend using exim -M <emailid> many times,
>>> like once every second for 30 seconds, the email usually goes. What
>>> configuration should I try in the configure file to make this happen? I
>>> tried this but it doesn't work.
>>>
>>> att.net rcpt_450 F,1m,1s
>>>
>>> Is the hints database preventing the retry? Please let me know how you
>>> send to att.net or how I can make this work.
>>>
>>
>> I can't seem to get the retry to work. Here are the retry lines.
>>
>> att.net rcpt_450 F,3m,3s; F,2h,5m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h
>> bellsouth.net rcpt_450 F,3m,3s; F,2h,5m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h
>> * * F,2h,5m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h
>>
>> Now if I run exim -brt, the last retry rule applies. The email is to
>> bellsouth.net, so shouldn't the 2nd rule apply?
>>
>>
>
> This list has gotten pretty quiet.
>
> Anyway, I figured out a couple of things. Basically, I conclude that the
> retry rules don't work the way I need them to. The messages are not
> being resent. So I set up a script that greps the queue for Bellsout/ATT
> mail then starts a special queue runner that resends the mail every 5s
> then kills the queue runner process. It works. Mail is now being
> accepted by those rogue systems. But is this really the best way to do
> this with Exim? Surely there's a better way. Comments welcome.
The best way to go is set up crontab and run
exim -Rff bellsouth.net with the frequency you desire.
Regards,
--
Zbigniew Szalbot