Re: [Mailman-Users] bounce-events-*.pck

2006-05-12 Thread Mark Sapiro
kalin mintchev wrote: > > from a recent post (02.06): >> If the bounce runner is >> stopped or restarted when there is an outstanding file, the file can >> be orphaned and the bounces lost. > >please somebody clarify "outstanding file". how would i know which one is >outstanding? I think I wrote

[Mailman-Users] bounce-events-*.pck

2006-05-12 Thread kalin mintchev
hi all... from a recent post (02.06): > If the bounce runner is > stopped or restarted when there is an outstanding file, the file can > be orphaned and the bounces lost. please somebody clarify "outstanding file". how would i know which one is outstanding? can there be more than one bounce-e

Re: [Mailman-Users] Bounce-events pck files...

2005-06-08 Thread Glenn Sieb
Mark Sapiro said the following on 6/8/2005 4:19 PM: >Yes, they are mostly if not all garbage and yes, they contain >unprocessed bounce messages. > > Ah-hah! Thank you, Mark! I think I can code up a script to safely clean these out. :) Thanks again! Best, --Glenn -- "They that can give up ess

Re: [Mailman-Users] Bounce-events pck files...

2005-06-08 Thread Mark Sapiro
Glenn Sieb wrote: > >I was just looking in my mailman/data directory and noticed that I have >155 of these bounce-events-#.pck files taking up about 24 meg of >space there. > >They date back as far as January 18th of this year. Are these garbage >files? Unprocessed bounce messages? What does

[Mailman-Users] Bounce-events pck files...

2005-06-08 Thread Glenn Sieb
I run Mailman 2.1.5 on FreeBSD 4.11-RELEASE, with Apache 2.0.54, and Postfix 2.2.3 I was just looking in my mailman/data directory and noticed that I have 155 of these bounce-events-#.pck files taking up about 24 meg of space there. They date back as far as January 18th of this year. Are t