To begin,
the usual heading shows a new item:
----Q-ID---- --Size-- -Priority- -----Q-Time----- ---------Sender/Recipient---------
dB928Xl04182 354 54320 Fri Mar 15 08:32 your@your.domain
george@wash.dc.gov
dB928RR04181* 1972 39020 Fri Mar 15 08:45 your@your.domain
8BITMIME (Timed out waiting to connect to wash.dc.gov)
jefferson@wash.dc.gov
dB928RR04192- 23 30001+Fri Mar 15 09:32 your@your.domain
(Timed out waiting to connect to wash.dc.gov)
jefferson@wash.dc.gov
(---you---)
bob
The Priority is the value from the P line (?§11.12.13 on page 453) in the qf file. Printing
the queue does not change a message??™s priority, whereas processing the queue
does. See the RecipientFactor option (?§24.9.95 on page 1077) for a description of
how the priority is calculated.
Verbose mode also causes a + to print after the Priority (as in the third item in the
example) if a warning message has been sent. See the Timeout.queuewarn option
(?§24.9.119 on page 1097) for a description of how messages time out.
If any R line is preceded by a controlling user (the C line in the qf file, ?§11.12.3 on
page 447), verbose mode causes that controlling user??™s name to be put in parentheses
and prepended to the recipient name. The third item in the preceding example
illustrates this.
This is the Title of the Book, eMatter Edition
Copyright ?© 2007 O??™Reilly & Associates, Inc.
Pages:
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763