Articles on: SECURITY & BACK UP

Messages QueuedYour own fallback server(s)Troubleshooting messages in the queueReplying to messages in the queue

If there is a failure to deliver emails on the destination server, all the emails that are sent out are put on queue locally on the filtering servers for a delivery retry. 

Any emails that have been rejected permanently by the systems with an error code of 5xx, will not be in the queue and will be rejected by the system.

If a recipient is marked as invalid, the email is temporarily rejected and put on queue at the senders side instead of the filtering server.



Queue Access

Email queues can be accessed from the web interface. A manual retry delivery of an email that is in the queue can also be done.


Automatic Retry Schedule



Intervals for automatic delivery retry of emails:

A fixed interval of15 minutes during the first 2 hours.
A variable interval delivery is instigated in the next 14 hours. For example, the retry starts at 15 minutes, and then gets multiplied by 1.5 with each attempt (e.g. The first attempt is at 15 minutes, then 22.5 minutes, 34 minutes, etc.)


During the first 2 hours, delivery is retried at a fixed interval of 15 minutes.
During the next 14 hours, delivery is retried at a variable interval, starting at 15 minutes and multiplying by 1.5 with each attempt (e.g. after 15 minutes, then 22.5 minutes, then 34 minutes, and so on).
From 16 hours since the initial failure, until 4 days have passed, delivery is retried at a fixed interval of every 6 hours.
After 4 days we generate a bounce to the sender. If the bounce cannot be delivered immediately, it will be frozen. After this time, delivery of the message will have permanently failed. Optionally via the Software API the 4 days can be overruled to a longer (or shorter) period.



SpamExperts caches valid recipients up to 4 days. When such entry has expired, SpamExperts will not queue email for such recipients and instead temporarily reject the message so it's queued on the sending server. The sending server in such case will automaticallty retry delivery. When using the "Local Recipients" feature, no caching is involved and SpamExperts continues to accept and queue the emails for all specified recipients.



Messages Queued



The SMTP RFC 5321 specifies a sending server must queue messages which cannot be directly delivered because of a temporary failure at the receiving end. Therefore in case of temporary issues with the email infrastructure, emails will not be bounced immediately but are instead queued on the sending server(s) and automatically retried for delivery.

In case of downtime of the destination mailserver, messages are only accepted for delivery by the filtercluster if the recipient is known to be valid. Valid destination recipients are cached up to 96 hours.


When a destination server cannot be reached for 4 days, all messages will be bounced after 4 days and no new email will be accepted/queued until the destination server is back online. This 4 day period is conform the SMTP RFC. The reason it's not longer than 4 days, is because it's important for the sender to be aware that delivery of their message has been failing for 4 days so they can try and contact the recipient in another way.


Your own fallback server(s)



Please note that when you specify multiple destination routes, the SpamExperts system will assume you run your own fallback system. If the specified fallback server is not responding to recipient callouts, there will be no database built up of valid recipients internally. We recommend not to specify any fallback server(s) unless you've specifically designed your infrastructure to handle outages of the main destination server.


Troubleshooting messages in the queue



If there are messages stored in the queue there will always be a (temporary) error when delivering to the destination server. To investigate the issue:

Verify you have set a correct destination route (also ensure there are not multiple destination routes specified, normally there should just be 1 route)
Check the logs on your destination server to investigate why it's not accepting the delivery attempts
Run a telnet test to check the response of your destination mailserver
If after following these steps you still have an issue, please contact SpamExperts support providing a sample sender/recipient/date to investigate




Replying to messages in the queue



Whilst a message is queued you can reply to it directly from the webinterface by using the "Reply" option from the message options:

The resulting page allows you to immediately respond to the email, ensuring you can continue to manage your email whilst your destination mailserver environment is unavailable.

Updated on: 18/06/2023

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