Having used "debian's" sendmail and exim for 3+ years I can honestly say I prefer Sendmail, but mostly because Im a wee bit more familiar with it than exim. Ive found them both very reliable and stable, as for security bugs how long has it been since one was found in sendmail? over 2 years? I dont recollect a CERT or SAN's or any other alert in that time.
We could get into a religious war over mta's just like we do over distro's, i prefer to use sendmail because of its links to enterprise stuff and scalability (grin) so its suits me to learn /suffer it, otherwise exim is probably easier. BTW has anybody tried running Samsung's Contact on Debian? (ne HP Openmail) so far Ive been forced to put Red Hat 7.3 on my HA cluster as Ive been unable to get it to install/work. :( I think Debian did a install package for netscape Navigator a while back, whats the chances of similar for Contact? if I could code I'd do it, but my perl gets as far as "hello world" ;/ But Id be happy to write up docs. This might sound mad but Im finding that trying to run commercial packages on Debian is becoming all but impossible, I have compaq servers stuff that I run Red Hat on not because I want to but because there is no .deb's for the array software (some of its even source....) :( regards, Steven -----Original Message----- From: Andrew Sharp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, 18 June 2002 3:01 To: debian-sparc@lists.debian.org Subject: Re: Mail Server? Mark Eichin wrote: > > > I was surprised that no one was really pushing qmail or sendmail..... > > Why were you surprised? qmail, while useful, isn't DFSG-free. And > sendmail is pretty much a legacy system :-) (Although in theory it > has improved, the phrase "a security hole you could drive a sendmail > through" is still common jargon...) qmail can be annoying if you just want to configure your server and forget it exists. If I had a company with thousands of employees and severe scalability, dns, and improperly configured recipient servers were hourly problems, qmail would probably be on my list. That whole custom file system thing turns out to be really annoying at the very worst moments, however. Exim works great and I don't have to switch my brain to `genius' to configure it. Sendmail, well geez, have you ever tried to configure sendmail? Eric should be shot for the billions of hours of system administrator time over the years that have been wasted trying to configure sendmail. Sure, there is a nifty program that helps you configure it now, but, too little, too late, I say. Smail, I haven't used but it looks reasonable, and I haven't heard anything [credible] bad about it. a -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]