Hello, I'm using DeleGate/7.1.0 on a Slackware 7.1/2.4.2 kernel box (Pentium III/600 MHz/512kb cache). I'm running the DeleGate proxy from the command line with a config file (not inetd) with uid/gid = delegate/nobody and i have set all the necessary environment settings for the normal behavior like DGROOT, LIBPATH, etc. Everything is ok. The only problem is when there are SIGSEGV crashes. The DeleGate daemon sends to the mail address which I have included in the config fil a short message telling me about the problem. I'm quite sure that this is not becoause of intrusion. No matter, the DeleGate proxy informs me about the SIGSEGV. But the DeleGate sends me one and the same message about one and the same Pid received SIGSEGV, in on and the same second about 332-338 times!!! And when decide to have a look in my mailbox i get flooded by my own server :). And if there are 4-5 SIGSEGV crasshes for a single day, I receive about 1000-1200 messages in my mailbox. It is not much convinient you see... How to stop this flood in messages? Here is one of the mails I'm receiving (the other 331 are the same :)))) (1001 is the uid of the delegate user which runs the proccess.) ############################################# Return-Path: <pcmcabdyi-znqnbun5oylr.ml@ml.delegate.org> Delivered-To: pcmcabdyi-znqnbun5oylr.ml@ml.delegate.org Received: (qmail 14301 invoked from network); 6 Mar 2001 23:44:12 -0000 Received: from proxy.nationalradio.bg (HELO proxy.nationalradio.bg?SMTP-DeleGate/7.1.0) (delegate@21 2.95.175.2) by proxy.nationalradio.bg with SMTP; 6 Mar 2001 23:44:12 -0000 Subject: DeleGate-Report: SIGSEGV From: [1001]@proxy Date: Wed, 07 Mar 2001 01:44:12 +0200 Subject: DeleGate-Report: SIGSEGV From: [1001]@proxy Date: Wed, 07 Mar 2001 01:44:12 +0200 Event: SIGSEGV Version: DeleGate/7.1.0 (February 20, 2001) (Linux/2.4.2) Host: proxy Owner: uid=1001/1001, gid=98/98 Started: Mon, 05 Mar 2001 04:29:04 +0200 Pid: 14230 Cwd: /var/spool/delegate/work/8080 Load: 18.04 (0.0 6.4 13.2) ############################################ Thanks. With respect: Ivelin Simeonov, system administrator in Bulgarian National Radio