The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
This article is intended to give you an idea of the volume of mail this
gateway can theoretically move for inbound mail and outbound mail. This
information will help you set the proper expectations of this gateway in
high volume environments, or when a disproportionate amount of mail moves
into, or out of, the postoffice.
MORE INFORMATIONOutboundWhen you move mail from the Microsoft Mail environment to SMTP, there are three obvious variables: the Wait Option, the actual time it takes to send mail, and how many messages move per cycle. A cycle begins with a wait state and ends with a wait state. A limit of six messages is sent outbound during each cycle.Below are examples of how changing the Wait Option will increase or decrease the volume of mail moving out of the SMTP gateway. A large wait time will decrease the amount of time available for outgoing mail; thus, it limits the amount of outbound mail. Factors
Factors
Factors
Per the factors above, if you change the -W option, it has a substantial
impact on the volume of mail moved out of the gateway. Inversely, this will
affect the availability of inbound messages. Depending on how much mail
needs to be sent, or which way it needs to be sent, this option will
determine how you configure your gateway.
However, there is one more issue that should be addressed. Receiving mail, unlike sending mail, does not limit how many messages may be received during a cycle. (This is not possible to configure on the SMTP host.) In theory, once a connection is made messages will be received indefinitely. Therefore, the setting of the command-line options makes no difference. InboundBelow is a table showing the maximum volume of inbound messages based on the same size message.Factors
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Last Reviewed: October 29, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |