I wrote (about Sendmail and dialup): > By default, Sendmail will keep messages for up to five days, waiting for > a chance to send them. But it will send warning messages after only four > hours. You may want to modify sendmail's configuration files to lengthen > either or both these intervals. Alexander Dalloz wrote: > What should that change? The aim can't be to prolong the queueing time, > but to find the trouble maker. Sorry, that wasn't aimed at finding the troublemaker, but was a general configuration recommendation. If you don't dial up in the next four hours, the sender gets notified that the message couldn't be sent (and will be retried). This probably isn't useful: your users may get tons of these, and say through clenched teeth "Yes, I *know* the e-mail hasn't gone yet: we don't dial up at that time of night / until cheap rate / unless someone wants to browse the Web / whatever". It's only really relevant to send the notification if the message is delayed for longer then the normal maximum delay between dialups. Hope this makes things clearer, James. -- E-mail address: james@ | "Luck is my middle name," said Rincewind, westexe.demon.co.uk | indistinctly. "Mind you, my first name is Bad." | -- Terry Pratchett, Interesting Times