On Fri, 9 Dec 1994, Patrick wrote:
> Opinions will differ, I'm sure, but from here it looks like "auto-delete"
> is one of those "improvements" that must have looked good on paper but
> turns out to be a pain in the neck in practice.
Well, I haven't used it, but I can see that it could cause problems. I
still think auto-delete's still a good idea though -- maybe it just needs
to be tweaked a little. People who use SmartList, another list manager for
Unix, rave about its autodelete function: like LISTSERV, it first tries to
determine whether errors are "temporary" or "permanent," but unlike
LISTSERV, when it gets a "permanent" error, rather than immediately
deleting the address it simply starts a counter of consecutive errors on
mail to that address. When the count hits some list-owner specified
number, the server sends a final warning to the account (which may bounce
of course, but at least it tried). Next bounce, it deletes the account
while notifying the list owner. How does that sound?
I think auto-delete is an important productivity feature for big lists, and
it's great that LISTSERV has it. Still, everything can be improved. Eric,
if you're there, what do *you* think? Am I missing some important
implementation issue? Could some sort of "tolerance" be built into the
auto-delete function? I think if I were designing it I'd prefer something
like "x unsuccessful deliveries, but don't delete until at least x days of
no success," just in case some heavy wave of mail pushed someone over the
bounce limit in a very short time ...
Norm
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