I have been searching for an answer to why some messages are left in the queue. It appears that when a few messages, that on a daily basis go out, are left in the queue, others are are on hold? What I do is force a connection and shortly thereafter all messages will go?? Using Exchange Server 2003 standard as a member server on a Windows 2003 enterprise network. I pass every thing via the DNS server, which is the Enterprise server, thru to a Netopia Router and out to the Internet. I do not block anything. any help appreciated. thx
Do the messages in the local delivery queue contain attachments? Are they any event ID 327s in the application log? "John D Leonard -- Sage" wrote in message news:ei7JeWqXIHA.5132@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... >I have been searching for an answer to why some messages are left in the >queue. It appears that when a few messages, that on a daily basis go out, >are left in the queue, others are are on hold? > > What I do is force a connection and shortly thereafter all messages will > go?? > > Using Exchange Server 2003 standard as a member server on a Windows 2003 > enterprise network. > > I pass every thing via the DNS server, which is the Enterprise server, > thru to a Netopia Router and out to the Internet. > > I do not block anything. > > any help appreciated. > > thx > >
Make sure the directory is excluded from av real time monitoring. "John D Leonard -- Sage" wrote in message news:ei7JeWqXIHA.5132@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... >I have been searching for an answer to why some messages are left in the >queue. It appears that when a few messages, that on a daily basis go out, >are left in the queue, others are are on hold? > > What I do is force a connection and shortly thereafter all messages will > go?? > > Using Exchange Server 2003 standard as a member server on a Windows 2003 > enterprise network. > > I pass every thing via the DNS server, which is the Enterprise server, > thru to a Netopia Router and out to the Internet. > > I do not block anything. > > any help appreciated. > > thx > >