Richard Wilson wrote: > We discovered the hard way that > a recent Java Mail applet that's become very popular with Web developers > doesn't use the built in mail applications that *should* be running on > the web servers but tries to manage the SMTP "conversation" directly. > While this is good from the perspective of Web Server system load, the > applet doesn't handle timeouts from the mail relays gracefully -- it > instead throws the mail away. The applet has no retry mechanism, no > queuing and furthermore latches on to the first IP address it gets when > it starts and resolves the DNS alias. Thus the DNS round robin does not > come into play at all. This is not good in any way shape or form. Unless this Java "applet" can act 100% like an MTA (queueing to disk, redelivering, handling 3xx 4xx 5xx series errors, RFC compliance...) it is a broken bit of ugliness. > Does anyone on this distribution know of any other applications that try > to handle their own mail in a similar fashion? No, I certainly don't. Well, let me rephrase- I don't know of anything that is not spyware or spamware that does this. ~Ben -- --- "Confession only helps if you actually feel bad for your actions. For you, it would just be a really long boast." -Tara http://www.emptiedout.com --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss