I would repeat my opinion that Sendmail and similar servers are not for easy to 
install and use. here is the link to Surgemail:
https://netwinsite.com/cgi-bin/keycgi.exe?cmd=download&product=surgemail&;

I'm not promoting but simply years of good work.

Mikhail Utin

________________________________
From: CentOS <centos-boun...@centos.org> on behalf of Peter Eckel 
<li...@eckel-edv.de>
Sent: Monday, October 1, 2018 11:37
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] email Server for CentOS 7

> On 29. Sep 2018, at 23:58, John R. Dennison <j...@gerdesas.com> wrote:
>
> Save yourself the effort, time, headaches and eventual bloody tears of 
> impotent
> rage and just go with Google or some other provider. Running a mail
> server properly is one of the more difficult tasks and quite often not
> worth the time and trouble, especially if one is asking about it on a
> list such as this.

I fully agree with most of the former, except for the Google part. Google is to 
privacy what a shark pool is to a carp. If possible, avoid Google at all cost, 
and particularly for E-Mail. There are services around that cost a very small 
amount of money (e.g. mailbox.org or posteo.de), provide a very reasonable 
service and do *not* peek into your mail for advertisement targets and sell 
your data to their customers.

If you want to run your own mail server (there are good reasons to do so, I've 
been running my own services for many years now) be prepared for a learning 
curve, as mail is not as simple and straightforward as it looks. You should 
also run your own DNS in that case, as many modern features of secure mail 
services are tightly linked to DNS (e.g. SPF, DKIM, DMARC etc.). DNSsec is 
preferred.

There are some good books around (e.g. the Postfix/Dovecot books by Peer 
Heinlein, who incidentally is the owner of the mailbox.org service, but the 
Postfix book only seems to be available in German). Without a good foundation 
on running mail servers and/or some help from experienced mail server operators 
you're almost certain to screw up big time, which in most cases means ending up 
on some blacklists or having mail delivered very unreliably.

As for the software question, I recommend the Postfix/Dovecot setup, enriched 
with some additional components to support graylisting, virus checking, spam 
filtering, DKIM, DMARC and SPF.

  Pete.
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