.TH s/qmail: qmail-start 8 .SH NAME qmail-start \- turn on mail delivery .SH SYNOPSIS .B qmail-start [ .I defaultdelivery [ .I logger arg ... ] ] .SH DESCRIPTION .B qmail-start invokes .BR qmail-send , .BR qmail-lspawn , .BR qmail-rspawn , and .BR qmail-clean , under the proper uids and gids. These four daemons cooperate to deliver messages from the queue. .B qmail-start arranges for .BR qmail-send 's activity record to be sent to .BR qmail-start 's output. See .B qmail-log(5) for the format of the activity record. Other than this, .B qmail-start does not print anything, even on failure. If .I defaultdelivery is supplied, .B qmail-start passes it to .BR qmail-lspawn . If .I logger is supplied, .B qmail-start invokes .I logger with the given arguments, and feeds .BR qmail-send 's activity record through .IR logger . Environment variables given to .B qmail-start will eventually be passed on to .BR qmail-local , so make sure to clean up the environment if you run .B qmail-start manually: .EX # env - PATH="HOME/bin:$PATH" .br qmail-start ./Mailbox splogger qmail & .br (all on one line) .EE Resource limits, controlling ttys, et al. are also passed from .B qmail-start to .BR qmail-local . Note that .B qmail-send normally juggles several simultaneous deliveries. To reduce .BR qmail-send 's impact on other programs, you can run .B qmail-start with a low priority. .SH "SEE ALSO" logger(1), splogger(1), nice(1), qmail-log(5), qmail-local(8), qmail-clean(8), qmail-lspawn(8), qmail-rspawn(8), qmail-send(8)