When the load average on a machine (the average number of processes
in the queue run over the last minute) becomes too high,
sendmail can compensate in three different ways:
This QueueLA option determines the load at which
sendmail will begin to queue messages rather
than delivering them, and the load at which scheduled runs will be
skipped.
The RefuseLA option (RefuseLA)
determines the load at which sendmail will begin
to refuse connections rather than accepting them.
The DelayLA option (DelayLA)
determines the load at which sendmail will begin
to delay replies to SMTP commands.
The QueueLA option specifies the load above which
sendmail queues messages rather than delivering
them. The QueueLA and
QueueFactor options interact to determine this
cutoff; they are both covered under the
QueueFactor option (QueueFactor).
The forms of the QueueLA option are as follows:
O QueueLA=load configuration file (V8.7 and later)
-OQueueLA=load command line (V8.7 and later)
define(`confQUEUE_LA',load) mc configuration (V8.7 and later)
Oxload configuration file (deprecated)
-oxload command line (deprecated)
The optional argument load, of type
numeric, defaults to zero if it is missing. If
the entire QueueLA option is missing, the default
value given to load is eight times the
number of CPU processors. The default for the mc
technique is to omit this option. On newer, faster machines a higher
setting might be more appropriate.
This QueueLA option is effective only if your
sendmail binary was compiled with load-average
support (LA_TYPE). You can use the
-d3.1 debugging switch to discover whether your
binary includes the necessary support.
The QueueLA option is not safe. If specified from
the command line, it can cause sendmail to
relinquish its root privilege.