As described in Section 6.1, it is possible to get into situations where too many sendmail processes are processing queues. These queue processors are children of the main sendmail process. Should too many queue-processing children become a problem at your site, you can use this MaxQueueChildren option to limit them. The MaxQueueChildren option is declared like this: O MaxQueueChildren= num configuration file (V8.12 and later) -OMaxQueueChildren= num command line (V8.12 and later) define(`confMAX_QUEUE_CHILDREN',` num') mc configuration (V8.12 and later) Here, num is of type numeric . If num is negative, nonnumeric, or zero (the default), no limit is placed on the number of queue-processing children that can simultaneously run. If num is greater than zero, each time sendmail is about to fork (3) to create another queue-processing child, it checks to make sure that there are not too many running. If the number running is equal to or greater than the limit imposed by num , sendmail skips launching another one. When you define queue groups (Section 11.4), you can set up processors for each group with the Runners= equate (Section 11.4.2.7). When this MaxQueueChildren option is defined, it establishes a limit on the total queue processors across all queue groupsthat is, for example, if you have two queue groups [40] and you define Runners=2 for each group. If this MaxQueueChildren option is three, the process shown in Table 24-21 will occur during each queue run (where - means to skip the run, and "run" means to perform the run):
Table 24-21. Queue processing example
The MaxQueueChildren option is not safe. If specified from the command line, it can cause sendmail to relinquish its special privileges. |