Wed, 19 Jan 2000 08:36:45 -0500
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I did what you said and got this:
Wed Jan 19 08:27:32 EST 2000
root in (/) --->ps aux |grep lsv
listserv 25000 0.0 6.5 20.6M 16M ?? I 14:35:50 4:20.52
./lsv
listserv 31292 0.0 0.0 20.6M 96K ?? I 08:26:37 0:00.00
./lsv
root 31325 0.0 0.1 1.66M 184K ttyp1 S + 08:27:55 0:00.02 grep
lsv
root in (/) --->ps aux |grep sendmail
root 423 0.0 0.1 2.29M 168K ?? I Jan 13 0:42.08
sendmail: accepting connections on
root 26393 0.0 0.3 2.74M 784K ?? I 14:36:09 0:09.17
sendmail: server society.massmed.or
root 31330 0.0 0.1 1.66M 184K ttyp1 S + 08:28:17 0:00.01 grep
sendmail
root in (/) --->
Is it possible for just one list to die?
----- Original Message -----
From: stan <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2000 9:43 PM
Subject: Re: Help! All lists have stopped sending mail.
> >===== Original Message From LISTSERV give-and-take forum
> <[log in to unmask]> =====
> >I am using LISTSERV ver 1.8d with sendmail 8.8 on a Dec Alpha UNIX Server
> >running ver 4.0e. I am concerned because I inherited this application
from
> >another who has left. Where do I start checking?
>
> Take a look at the processes on your system to see if you have any
sendmail
> and lsv processes going. To do this, type:
>
> ps aux | grep lsv
> ps aux | grep sendmail
>
> There should be a few sendmail processes going and at least one lsv
process.
> If there's no lsv process going, then that means your Listserv has
crashed.
> Start it by going into ~listserv/bin and typing "./go.user". If no
sendmail
> processes are going, then you'll need to start sendmail. Specific
directions
> on how to do this depend on how your server is configured.
>
> Note that you can easily test the sendmail to see if its accepting
connections
> by telnetting to the server's port 25 from a different system. If sendmail
is
> working, port 25 should give you a response when you telnet to it. If you
get
> no response, you either have a misconfigured sendmail or your sendmail
isn't
> operating.
>
> Also, check the mail and Listserv logs on the system to make sure nothing
odd
> shows up there. Believe me, you'll know when something is wrong in either
of
> these log files when you see it.
>
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