This feature is
enabled by the inclusion of a second argument following the qtime argument in the
QueueTimeout option declaration:
O QueueTimeout=qtime/ notify ?†? configuration file (deprecated)
-OQueueTimeout=qtime/ notify ?†? configuration file (deprecated)
define(`confMESSAGE_TIMEOUT??,`qtime/ notify??) ?†? mc configuration (deprecated)
OTqtime/ notify ?†? configuration file (deprecated)
-oTqtime/ notify ?†? command line (deprecated)
If the second argument is present, it must be separated from the first by a /. Th enotify
specifies the amount of time sendmail should wait, after the message is first queued, before
sending notification to the sender that it was delayed. If notify is missing or longer than
qtime, no warning messages are sent. If notify is longer than qtime, no notification is ever
sent.
Note that this is a crude method compared to the one described under the Timeout option
in ?§24.9.119 on page 1097. Beginning withV8.7 sendmail and using the queuereturn and
queuewarn keywords of that option, the qtime and notify values can be tuned on the basis
of individual mail message priorities.
The QueueTimeout option is not safe. If specified from the command line, it can cause sendmail
to relinquish its special privileges.
24.9.94 RandFile
Source for random numbers V8.11 and later
STARTTLS requires that it have some source for randomized data.
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