mysql viability (was: shells and bells)
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Thu May 4 19:15:25 EDT 2000
This is not the way things are done. In the "real world," the database is
part of the infrastructure and it is common to all projects. This allows
it to be managed, backed up, and so forth. Choosing a database server on
a per-project basis is like choosing your mail transport agent on a
per-message basis. "Well, this one is going to a mailing list, so I guess
we can send it with exim. And this one is going to someone whose machine
is unreliable, so we should use Sendmail." You see my point?
No; I do that sort of thing all the time. ;-)
"Hey, that message bounced and the garbage that came back doesn't
explain anything. Well, let's try sendmail -v ... Hmmm; that wasn't
too informative either; let's try it with ..."
I do have a couple of perl and expect scripts that know something
about SMTP and can deliver a message with lots of extra info about
what's going wrong. They come in handy when the default mail delivery
thingies fail.
Sometimes I send mail with a "telnet $host 25" command.
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