SMTP problems

GavinHRC

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 20, 2007
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For the last couple of weeks I've had trouble sending mail with even the smallest, less than 100KB, attachment. It makes no difference which SMTP server I use, gmail or iburst, it just times out. Eventually the mail goes, normally after trying for about an hour. Browsing and downloading are working fine, I can upload via ftp, everythings ok just SMTP? I've changed the server time out settings, no difference.
 
For the last couple of weeks I've had trouble sending mail with even the smallest, less than 100KB, attachment. It makes no difference which SMTP server I use, gmail or iburst, it just times out. Eventually the mail goes, normally after trying for about an hour. Browsing and downloading are working fine, I can upload via ftp, everythings ok just SMTP? I've changed the server time out settings, no difference.

Please forward me your UTID via PM and I'll have it investigated.
 
Have you removed / deleted the e-mail account and re-added the account in the e-mail client? I had a similar problem when I still used Outlook. You can also check your MTU settings.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_transmission_unit

In computer networking, the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of a communications protocol of a layer is the size (in bytes) of the largest protocol data unit that the layer can pass onwards. MTU parameters usually appear in association with a communications interface (NIC, serial port, etc.). Standards (Ethernet, for example) can fix the size of an MTU; or systems (such as point-to-point serial links) may decide MTU at connect time.

A larger MTU brings greater efficiency because each packet carries more user data while protocol overheads, such as headers or underlying per-packet delays, remain fixed; the resulting higher efficiency means a slight improvement in bulk protocol throughput. A larger MTU also means processing of fewer packets for the same amount of data. In some systems, per-packet-processing can be a critical performance limitation.

Large packets can occupy a slow link for some time, causing greater delays to following packets and increasing lag and minimum latency. For example, a 1500-byte packet, the largest allowed by Ethernet at the network layer (and hence over most of the Internet), ties up a 14.4k modem for about one second.

Large packets are also problematic in the presence of communications errors. Corruption of a single bit in a packet requires that the entire packet be retransmitted. At a given bit error rate larger packets are more likely to be corrupted. Retransmissions of a larger packet takes longer.
 
Have you removed / deleted the e-mail account and re-added the account in the e-mail client? I had a similar problem when I still used Outlook. You can also check your MTU settings.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_transmission_unit

Thanks, I tried adding another email account, same problem, but I discovered it is all uploads not just SMTP, I've pm'd Ronald. Been with iBurst many years so I'm familiar with MTU.
 
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