Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Have you looked at the SME server disto from http://www.contribs.org? It installs as an appliance-like setup managed through a simple web interface. The code is mostly centos and includes hoard webmail running over dovecot with maildir storage out of the box. It doesn't have a shared calendar or other groupware components in the base setup and it is somewhat difficult to modify the already-customized configuration but there are a number of contributed add-ons that might provide them. Unfortunately the site seems to be down for maintenance right now so I can't check on them. Anyway, for a few hundred people, the setup really is as simple as answering a few questions and adding the users and it can also provide file/print/web/vpn services. -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ___ We have been using SME server 7.x for a long time now and I'm very happy with it. The installation is very straight forward and it does standard email out of the box. To get groupware, you need to install the egroupware / phpgroupware addons and then you have a good groupware as well. Support is generally good, but SME still runs on CentOS 4.7 and not 5.x They are working on SME 8.x which runs on CentOS 5.2 though, but there's no stable release yet. -- Kind Regards Rudi Ahlers ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you I would stick in a suggestion to look at Scalix. Not free at 300 users, but it does run nicely on CentOS. Integrates well with Outlook and has a very nice webmail front end. I would be careful with Scalix. My son used to work at a place where they went with Scalix for 300+ users. The day to day maintenance on it can be a real bear. When you have a real problem that requires support, Scalix support is less than helpful. He left that job for another but still keeps in touch with his old boss. The old boss has told him that due to the Scalix problems they are budgeting for replacing Scalix with Exchange. On the other side of the coin, when it works, it works well and integrates well with Outlook. It is just overly complex under the hood. This is one of the beauties of OpenGroupware - it's just PostgreSQL and the filesystem. Simple and clean; PostgreSQL 8.3 performance is very good. And you just reuse whatever SMTP/IMAP architecture you have or want, this a strong bias towards Cyrus (of course). That is how it should be, IMHO, subsystems should be loosely coupled; but it does make it more difficult to implement some features. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Adam Tauno Williams wrote: This is one of the beauties of OpenGroupware - it's just PostgreSQL and the filesystem. Simple and clean; PostgreSQL 8.3 performance is very good. And you just reuse whatever SMTP/IMAP architecture you have or want, this a strong bias towards Cyrus (of course). That is how it should be, IMHO, subsystems should be loosely coupled; but it does make it more difficult to implement some features. The problem has always been that there is not a standard calendar subsystem, particularly for shared group access. So you end up stuck with a web calendar and no client-side alerts or taking whatever you have to run to make your chosen client work. -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, 9 Jan 2009, Kevin Thorpe wrote: Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you I would stick in a suggestion to look at Scalix. Not free at 300 users, but it does run nicely on CentOS. Integrates well with Outlook and has a very nice webmail front end. I would be careful with Scalix. My son used to work at a place where they went with Scalix for 300+ users. The day to day maintenance on it can be a real bear. When you have a real problem that requires support, Scalix support is less than helpful. He left that job for another but still keeps in touch with his old boss. The old boss has told him that due to the Scalix problems they are budgeting for replacing Scalix with Exchange. On the other side of the coin, when it works, it works well and integrates well with Outlook. It is just overly complex under the hood. FWIW, they had Scalix running for 3+ years. -- Tom Diehl tdi...@rogueind.com Spamtrap address mtd...@rogueind.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you I would stick in a suggestion to look at Scalix. Not free at 300 users, but it does run nicely on CentOS. Integrates well with Outlook and has a very nice webmail front end. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Kevin Thorpe wrote on Fri, 9 Jan 2009 11:23:16 +: Scalix and just to name the third of the big three: OpenXchange. Kai -- Kai Schätzl, Berlin, Germany Get your web at Conactive Internet Services: http://www.conactive.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, January 9, 2009 6:23 am, Kevin Thorpe wrote: Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you I would stick in a suggestion to look at Scalix. Not free at 300 users, but it does run nicely on CentOS. Integrates well with Outlook and has a very nice webmail front end. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos We really do not use an email client here. We try to keep everything web based as much as possible. So interfacing with a email client such as outlook really isn't that important to me. The web interface is what I'm interested in. Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch schrieb: On Fri, January 9, 2009 6:23 am, Kevin Thorpe wrote: Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you I would stick in a suggestion to look at Scalix. Not free at 300 users, but it does run nicely on CentOS. Integrates well with Outlook and has a very nice webmail front end. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos We really do not use an email client here. We try to keep everything web based as much as possible. So interfacing with a email client such as outlook really isn't that important to me. The web interface is what I'm interested in. Bo Hm. Zimbra does _that_ very well IMO. Supports IE+FF+Safari, at least for the webmail-stuff. I'm not sure if the Open-Source version actually supports the Outlook-stuff (we use the commercial version and I don't use Outlook anyway...). I'd give Zimbra a try. It's relatively easy to setup, at least for a demo-case where you are not interested in customizing all the logos. Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Hm. Zimbra does _that_ very well IMO. Supports IE+FF+Safari, at least for the webmail-stuff. I'm not sure if the Open-Source version actually supports the Outlook-stuff (we use the commercial version and I don't use Outlook anyway...). I'd give Zimbra a try. It's relatively easy to setup, at least for a demo-case where you are not interested in customizing all the logos. Rainer One thing I have found interesting with Zimbra is that you can use their open source community edition and then get the outlook connector as an add-on for the users you want/need. We have a full licensed version due to the request to keep using outlook from most people. I would say their web based client is very good, but others are good too. We looked at Scalix and found it a little more complicated and complex than we were comfortable with going with. Having components that I was familiar with from prior experience in the linux world was a big help vs learning new. Andrew ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, January 9, 2009 10:07 am, Rainer Duffner wrote: Bo Lynch schrieb: On Fri, January 9, 2009 6:23 am, Kevin Thorpe wrote: Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you I would stick in a suggestion to look at Scalix. Not free at 300 users, but it does run nicely on CentOS. Integrates well with Outlook and has a very nice webmail front end. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos We really do not use an email client here. We try to keep everything web based as much as possible. So interfacing with a email client such as outlook really isn't that important to me. The web interface is what I'm interested in. Bo Hm. Zimbra does _that_ very well IMO. Supports IE+FF+Safari, at least for the webmail-stuff. I'm not sure if the Open-Source version actually supports the Outlook-stuff (we use the commercial version and I don't use Outlook anyway...). I'd give Zimbra a try. It's relatively easy to setup, at least for a demo-case where you are not interested in customizing all the logos. Rainer Should I be concerned with the Licensing structure down the road? Meaning in your opinion do you think that zimbra will close its door on the open source model. Just don't want to demo something get everyone excited about using it and have to migrate to something else. Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, January 7, 2009 7:19 pm, Craig White wrote: On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 18:54 -0500, Bo Lynch wrote: So are you required to run zimbras release of these packages? If you are forced to use them then how delayed are the releases. Are you able to use something other than amavis and clam for scanning?? We use a product called VAMS released by central command for spam and antivirus on our mail server currently. These guys are very generous with pricing when it comes to educational facilities in case anyone is looking. zimbra is pretty much of a closed box in that they have already decided what / how / where you will run stuff and no, you can't run anything other than the way they have decided it unless you decide to put a box in front of the zimbra server to receive mail first before you pass it to the zimbra box. zimbra is also not a lightweight system by any means. There are a lot of schools running Horde/IMP/etc. Craig Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch schrieb: Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Well, postfix is just a MTA. IMP will use localhost:25 or /usr/lib/sendmail to send mail ;-) What's more interesting is the choice of IMAP-server ;-) Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, January 9, 2009 11:31 am, Rainer Duffner wrote: Bo Lynch schrieb: Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Well, postfix is just a MTA. IMP will use localhost:25 or /usr/lib/sendmail to send mail ;-) What's more interesting is the choice of IMAP-server ;-) Rainer ___ We currently use dovecot. Any issues that you know of? Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch schrieb: Should I be concerned with the Licensing structure down the road? Meaning in your opinion do you think that zimbra will close its door on the open source model. The chance is always there. I come from the BSD-world, where this is happening regularly (or actually designed to happen). Think about it: if outside contributions are minimal and lot's of people offer services around the product without some sort of revenue-sharing, the product will die one way or the other. This is what happened with Nessus. Zimbra is way too complicated to survive as a pure non-company-sponsored GPL OSS-project. It's in the same league as OpenOffice IMO. Do you think OO would exist without SUN sponsoring most of the devs around the main project? In the BSD-world, it's a valid business-model to create some fork of a technology, commercialize it and later release most of it back into the tree. Even in GNU-land, you have more and more GPL-products with proprietary extensions for paying customers. What I want to say is: I believe Zimbra chose their license not because they wanted to cheat, but because they actually wanted to be able to keep stuff open-source while at the same time ensuring the company's commercial viability. Just don't want to demo something get everyone excited about using it and have to migrate to something else. Well, that's your choice. AFAIK, apache also has a BSD-style license that would allow it to keep the source for themselves - doesn't stop you (or most everyone) from using it, I assume... What happens to a product over one, two or three or more years is anyone's guess. Certainly, yahoo + zimbra have plans (that they don't want to share with us, most likely) - but wether these plans can actually be put into working is another question. Release 5.0.x is out now and will be supported for quite some time. Release 6.0 will arrive sometime next year. No change in license is visible for it now. I think Zimbra has always been profitable as a company, at least before the Yahoo! acquisition. If this continues, I don't see Yahoo making lot's of changes. (Well, in an ideal world...) cheers, Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, January 9, 2009 11:31 am, Rainer Duffner wrote: Bo Lynch schrieb: Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Well, postfix is just a MTA. IMP will use localhost:25 or /usr/lib/sendmail to send mail ;-) What's more interesting is the choice of IMAP-server ;-) Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos Any issues using dovecot? Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch schrieb: On Fri, January 9, 2009 11:31 am, Rainer Duffner wrote: Bo Lynch schrieb: Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Well, postfix is just a MTA. IMP will use localhost:25 or /usr/lib/sendmail to send mail ;-) What's more interesting is the choice of IMAP-server ;-) Rainer ___ We currently use dovecot. Any issues that you know of? Hm. I use dovecot, too, on my private mailserver - but I don't have a webmail setup there, because I use IMAP exclusively. I always wanted to try IMP/DIMP again, but never really got around to install and configure it. Dovecot is very fast, so IMP should perform well. When you want to continue using your current mail-platform (which is reasonable), you will have to find something that integrates well with it. OpenXchange can do that, but it will need to integrate into your provisioning-infrastructure. It's not a drop-in replacement (nothing is, once it's sufficiently complicated). I know one ISP here, that tried to use IMP and it performed very bad. They went with OpenXchange in the end - but they have lot's more users than you ;-) Regards, Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, Jan 09, 2009, Bo Lynch wrote: ... Should I be concerned with the Licensing structure down the road? Meaning in your opinion do you think that zimbra will close its door on the open source model. Just don't want to demo something get everyone excited about using it and have to migrate to something else. The thing I would be concerned about is the future of Yahoo. If it is finally absorbed by the Borg of Redmond, history says that anything that competes with Windows will be dropped. Bill -- INTERNET: b...@celestial.com Bill Campbell; Celestial Software LLC URL: http://www.celestial.com/ PO Box 820; 6641 E. Mercer Way Voice: (206) 236-1676 Mercer Island, WA 98040-0820 Fax:(206) 232-9186 It is practically impossible to teach good programming style to students that have had prior exposure to BASIC: as potential programmers they are mentally mutilated beyond hope of regeneration. -- Dijkstra ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
maybe can look at http://nexist.sourceforge.net/groupware.html. cheers 2009/1/7 Bo Lynch bly...@ameliaschools.com: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you -- Bo Lynch Systems Administrator RedHat Academy Instructor Energy Manager Amelia County Public Schools ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos -- :: L.I. Ricardo D. Carrillo Sánchez :: Security Specialist :: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico:: :: Ciudad Universitaria , D.F. Mex :: e-mail prim.: davxoc at gmai dot com :: e-mail secu.: davxoc at hotmail dot com : ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 11:29 -0600, Ricardo Carrillo wrote: maybe can look at http://nexist.sourceforge.net/groupware.html. Nothing on that list has been updated since 2004! If you want to do searching use a mainstream site like http://www.freshmeat.net (although many projects, including ours [OpenGroupware] do a lousy job of keeping their entries up to date). ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
on 1-9-2009 8:21 AM Bo Lynch spake the following: On Fri, January 9, 2009 11:31 am, Rainer Duffner wrote: Bo Lynch schrieb: Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Well, postfix is just a MTA. IMP will use localhost:25 or /usr/lib/sendmail to send mail ;-) What's more interesting is the choice of IMAP-server ;-) Rainer ___ We currently use dovecot. Any issues that you know of? Bo I am running the latest horde webmail edition as a test and it seems to run great with dovecot. But you should install it on CentOS 5 because you get some errors on the older PHP in CentOS 4. I just dl'd the tarball and expanded it below the webroot and followed the INSTALL docs. -- MailScanner is like deodorant... You hope everybody uses it, and you notice quickly if they don't signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
on 1-9-2009 9:23 AM Bill Campbell spake the following: On Fri, Jan 09, 2009, Bo Lynch wrote: ... Should I be concerned with the Licensing structure down the road? Meaning in your opinion do you think that zimbra will close its door on the open source model. Just don't want to demo something get everyone excited about using it and have to migrate to something else. The thing I would be concerned about is the future of Yahoo. If it is finally absorbed by the Borg of Redmond, history says that anything that competes with Windows will be dropped. Bill You never know with them. But they have been making big reaches into the SAAS model. I guess it is easier to charge monthly instead of depending on the buy a new version every few years model they currently have. If they could use it as the backend for hotmail, they could go against their new best enemy Google! -- MailScanner is like deodorant... You hope everybody uses it, and you notice quickly if they don't signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Only was a reference for groupware names, you have to search into software repositories like freshmeat as well sourceforge. 2009/1/9 Adam Tauno Williams awill...@whitemice.org: On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 11:29 -0600, Ricardo Carrillo wrote: maybe can look at http://nexist.sourceforge.net/groupware.html. Nothing on that list has been updated since 2004! If you want to do searching use a mainstream site like http://www.freshmeat.net (although many projects, including ours [OpenGroupware] do a lousy job of keeping their entries up to date). ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos -- :: L.I. Ricardo D. Carrillo Sánchez :: Security Specialist :: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico:: :: Ciudad Universitaria , D.F. Mex :: e-mail prim.: davxoc at gmai dot com :: e-mail secu.: davxoc at hotmail dot com : ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 6:36 PM, Max Hetrick maxhetr...@verizon.net wrote: René Standfest wrote: We have running at the moment eGroupWare, but we plan to migrate to SOGo (http://sogo.opengroupware.org) in the next two months (we had some annoying problems with eGW in the past). It has a really cool Webfrontend (looks like Thunderbird with Lightning) and has a really functional CalDAV-Interface which integrates perfectly into Thunderbird/Lightning. On the Website is a really good Install-Howto and it has even a yum repo. Thank you for mentioning sogo. I took a look at this project today, and will be adding it to the list of packages I'm testing. When researching groupware packages before, this project didn't turn up, but am glad you brought it up here. It looks promising and worth a look! I opted for Kolab http://www.kolab.org/ over Zimbra. You can have unlimited users in Kolab. My users wanted to use outlook as the client - Zimbra charges quite a bit for that feature. With Kolab you buy a $10 outlook connector for each computer. Most other mail clients are free to use with Kolab. No package for cent but that is a good thing. It compiles everything it needs using openpkg. I have installed it on cent several times while testing. Just about to take my first installation live. -bazooka ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bill Campbell wrote: ... Should I be concerned with the Licensing structure down the road? Meaning in your opinion do you think that zimbra will close its door on the open source model. Just don't want to demo something get everyone excited about using it and have to migrate to something else. The thing I would be concerned about is the future of Yahoo. If it is finally absorbed by the Borg of Redmond, history says that anything that competes with Windows will be dropped. But that era may be over if MS now wants to compete with Google... -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 13:15 -0600, Les Mikesell wrote: Bill Campbell wrote: ... Should I be concerned with the Licensing structure down the road? Meaning in your opinion do you think that zimbra will close its door on the open source model. Just don't want to demo something get everyone excited about using it and have to migrate to something else. The thing I would be concerned about is the future of Yahoo. If it is finally absorbed by the Borg of Redmond, history says that anything that competes with Windows will be dropped. But that era may be over if MS now wants to compete with Google... Exchange is a Microsoft cash cow - if they were to buy Yahoo (which Balmer says isn't going to happen), Zimbra would be folded up - there's not a chance in the world that they would sell it off. Craig ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Can you use postfix with horde/imp? Yes, Horde doesn't care what the SMTP provider is so long as it works. Well, postfix is just a MTA. IMP will use localhost:25 or /usr/lib/sendmail to send mail ;-) What's more interesting is the choice of IMAP-server ;-) Yep. We currently use dovecot. Any issues that you know of? No issues. Hm. I use dovecot, too, on my private mailserver - but I don't have a webmail setup there, because I use IMAP exclusively. I always wanted to try IMP/DIMP again, but never really got around to install and configure it. We use Horde/IMP (and testing DIMP) to provide web mail to our low-end users. Horde is great stuff, works across browsers well, is stable, and deals with every tortured mail message (including ones that wig out either Thunderbird [not really very hard to do :(] or Outlook]. For groupware we use OpenGroupware, and Horde is very easy to integrate into almost anything. I know one ISP here, that tried to use IMP and it performed very bad. They set it up wrong. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch wrote: We really do not use an email client here. We try to keep everything web based as much as possible. So interfacing with a email client such as outlook really isn't that important to me. The web interface is what I'm interested in. Have you looked at the SME server disto from http://www.contribs.org? It installs as an appliance-like setup managed through a simple web interface. The code is mostly centos and includes hoard webmail running over dovecot with maildir storage out of the box. It doesn't have a shared calendar or other groupware components in the base setup and it is somewhat difficult to modify the already-customized configuration but there are a number of contributed add-ons that might provide them. Unfortunately the site seems to be down for maintenance right now so I can't check on them. Anyway, for a few hundred people, the setup really is as simple as answering a few questions and adding the users and it can also provide file/print/web/vpn services. -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
René Standfest wrote: We have running at the moment eGroupWare, but we plan to migrate to SOGo (http://sogo.opengroupware.org) in the next two months (we had some annoying problems with eGW in the past). It has a really cool Webfrontend (looks like Thunderbird with Lightning) and has a really functional CalDAV-Interface which integrates perfectly into Thunderbird/Lightning. On the Website is a really good Install-Howto and it has even a yum repo. Slightly OT, but just wondering if you are planning on running openLDAP on the SOGo Opengroupware installation, or whether or not you have an external LDAP server (CentOS DS or RHEL DS) that you are planning on using? Any experiences or gotchas that you have already encountered that might be useful? My company is planning on implementing either FDS or CentOS DS as an LDAP server, and I read the docs for SOGo, and they are using openLDAP on the same machine. Regards, Max ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
We have running at the moment eGroupWare, but we plan to migrate to SOGo (http://sogo.opengroupware.org) in the next two months (we had some annoying problems with eGW in the past). It has a really cool Webfrontend (looks like Thunderbird with Lightning) and has a really functional CalDAV-Interface which integrates perfectly into Thunderbird/Lightning. On the Website is a really good Install-Howto and it has even a yum repo. Slightly OT, but just wondering if you are planning on running openLDAP on the SOGo Opengroupware installation, or whether or not you have an external LDAP server (CentOS DS or RHEL DS) that you are planning on using? Any experiences or gotchas that you have already encountered that might be useful? My company is planning on implementing either FDS or CentOS DS as an LDAP server, and I read the docs for SOGo, and they are using openLDAP on the same machine. I develop on OpenGroupware, not SOGo, but both use SOPE's LDAP library/bindings. If the DSA supports LDAPv3 binds you shouldn't have any problems using it. I'd recommend OpenLDAP any day, as it is far-and-away the faster and more feature-reach DSA. But I very much doubt it matters in regards to SOGo. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. I will consider Sun Java Communications Suite as a serious candidate. Usermanagement is running in the Sun Directory Server. The calendarserver integrates very well with thunderbird, outlook and the webinterface is quite usefull. It is free, if You dont't need a support-contract. Lars Schelde Institute of Astronautics Technische Universitüt München Germany ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Adam Tauno Williams wrote: I develop on OpenGroupware, not SOGo, but both use SOPE's LDAP library/bindings. If the DSA supports LDAPv3 binds you shouldn't have any problems using it. I'd recommend OpenLDAP any day, as it is far-and-away the faster and more feature-reach DSA. But I very much doubt it matters in regards to SOGo. Adam, Excellent. Thanks! Max ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Max Hetrick schrieb am 08.01.2009 17:23: We have running at the moment eGroupWare, but we plan to migrate to SOGo (http://sogo.opengroupware.org) in the next two months (we had some annoying problems with eGW in the past). It has a really cool Webfrontend (looks like Thunderbird with Lightning) and has a really functional CalDAV-Interface which integrates perfectly into Thunderbird/Lightning. On the Website is a really good Install-Howto and it has even a yum repo. Slightly OT, but just wondering if you are planning on running openLDAP on the SOGo Opengroupware installation, or whether or not you have an external LDAP server (CentOS DS or RHEL DS) that you are planning on using? We have a mixed network and use Active Directory as central directory service. I had no problems to bind SOGo to ADS. But it should be no problem to use OpenLDAP or similar. Greets René -- GEEKCODE: GIT$ d- s+: a- C+++ UL$ P+ L++ E--- W+++ N+ !o K- w+ O- M-- V- PS+ PE Y+ PGP++ t++ 5++ X+ R tv+ b DI D++ G e+ h--- r++ y+++ PGP-Key and more available at http://www.standfest.net My Blog is at http://www.gaudidiecher.de ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, January 7, 2009 7:19 pm, Craig White wrote: On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 18:54 -0500, Bo Lynch wrote: So are you required to run zimbras release of these packages? If you are forced to use them then how delayed are the releases. Are you able to use something other than amavis and clam for scanning?? We use a product called VAMS released by central command for spam and antivirus on our mail server currently. These guys are very generous with pricing when it comes to educational facilities in case anyone is looking. zimbra is pretty much of a closed box in that they have already decided what / how / where you will run stuff and no, you can't run anything other than the way they have decided it unless you decide to put a box in front of the zimbra server to receive mail first before you pass it to the zimbra box. zimbra is also not a lightweight system by any means. There are a lot of schools running Horde/IMP/etc. Craig I have been looking at both and the thing that concerns me with zimbra is the closed box scenario and the EULA. I was assuming that its was license was going to be GPL. But its YPL Yahoo. Does anyone think this is something to be concerned with in the future? Meaning down the road zimbra closes its open source edition? What does Horde really lack from zimbra? Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Fri, Jan 09, 2009, Bo Lynch wrote: On Wed, January 7, 2009 7:19 pm, Craig White wrote: On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 18:54 -0500, Bo Lynch wrote: ... zimbra is pretty much of a closed box in that they have already decided what / how / where you will run stuff and no, you can't run anything other than the way they have decided it unless you decide to put a box in front of the zimbra server to receive mail first before you pass it to the zimbra box. zimbra is also not a lightweight system by any means. There are a lot of schools running Horde/IMP/etc. Craig I have been looking at both and the thing that concerns me with zimbra is the closed box scenario and the EULA. I was assuming that its was license was going to be GPL. But its YPL Yahoo. Does anyone think this is something to be concerned with in the future? Meaning down the road zimbra closes its open source edition? What does Horde really lack from zimbra? Easy conversion from existing Exchange servers. This is not something I personally care or know much about as I have never voluntarily used any Microsoft Windows systems or software, but there are many who do. We have migrated such customers from Exchange to Zimbra, and use Samba as well with good results. Most of these systems run Zimbra in a VMware Server CentOS virtual machine on a CentOS host. The VM runs only Zimbra, while everything else of interest runs on the host machine. Bill -- INTERNET: b...@celestial.com Bill Campbell; Celestial Software LLC URL: http://www.celestial.com/ PO Box 820; 6641 E. Mercer Way Voice: (206) 236-1676 Mercer Island, WA 98040-0820 Fax:(206) 232-9186 In free governments the rulers are the servants, and the people their superiors sovereigns. -- Benjamin Franklin ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
[CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you -- Bo Lynch Systems Administrator RedHat Academy Instructor Energy Manager Amelia County Public Schools ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 14:56 -0500, Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. horde/imp/kronolith/turba/etc. I think it's even packaged in CentOS Plus Craig ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. I've been evaluating some packages for my employer the last few months. The two products I have narrowed it down to my needs are eGroupware and Zimbra. So far, I'm leaning towards Zimbra, because it seems to offer a nice e-mail system with an easy to use interface for users. There is a community edition and a commercial edition. http://www.zimbra.com/community/downloads.html I too am currently using Postfix and Squirrelmail, and would like to keep using Postfix as the primary transport system. There is a way to configure Zimbra to act as a secondary system forwarding mail to Postfix, but I can't find the link right now. There are also methods to migrate to Zimbra from Squirrelmail using some imapsync scripts to migrate the mailboxes. By itself though, it seems to have a nice and powerful mail system with all the features of anti-virus, spam, etc. eGroupware works great too, so make sure you check it out, but I'm thinking of leaning towards Zimbra for my needs. http://www.egroupware.org/ Check them out. Regards, Max ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you -- Bo Lynch Systems Administrator RedHat Academy Instructor Energy Manager Amelia County Public Schools I may start a war here, but I'm going to recommend Lotus Notes / Domino as the collaborative software for you. I've had quite a bit of experience with it in a large multi-national company. It can definitely handle all that you may want to throw at it. It does have some draw backs - what doesn't? IBM / Lotus can give your people a great deal of support while they get their legs underneath them. I'm not going to swear to it, but I think they can extend some pretty good terms to public schools. There are all kinds of specialized add-ons as well. Development tools are pretty robust as well. Ed Westphal ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, January 7, 2009 3:28 pm, Tim Nelson wrote: - Bo Lynch bly...@ameliaschools.com wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Zimbra works quite well. How many users do you have? One detriment I've found is that much of it's backend relies on Java and requires some serious tuning for installations with a large user base. Also, the logging facilities use MySQL and can cause huge performance issues especially when running consolidations/stat generations. Tim Nelson Systems/Network Support Rockbochs Inc. (218)727-4332 x105 ___ I would say that we have around 300 users. Bo Lynch ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
- Bo Lynch bly...@ameliaschools.com wrote: I would say that we have around 300 users. Bo Lynch You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self-supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. Tim Nelson Systems/Network Support Rockbochs Inc. (218)727-4332 x105 ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Bo Lynch schrieb am 07.01.2009 20:56: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you We have running at the moment eGroupWare, but we plan to migrate to SOGo (http://sogo.opengroupware.org) in the next two months (we had some annoying problems with eGW in the past). It has a really cool Webfrontend (looks like Thunderbird with Lightning) and has a really functional CalDAV-Interface which integrates perfectly into Thunderbird/Lightning. On the Website is a really good Install-Howto and it has even a yum repo. Greets René -- GEEKCODE: GIT$ d- s+: a- C+++ UL$ P+ L++ E--- W+++ N+ !o K- w+ O- M-- V- PS+ PE Y+ PGP++ t++ 5++ X+ R tv+ b DI D++ G e+ h--- r++ y+++ PGP-Key and more available at http://www.standfest.net My Blog is at http://www.gaudidiecher.de ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, January 7, 2009 3:38 pm, Tim Nelson wrote: - Bo Lynch bly...@ameliaschools.com wrote: I would say that we have around 300 users. Bo Lynch You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self-supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. Tim Nelson Systems/Network Support Rockbochs Inc. (218)727-4332 x105 __ I would have thought that this was a small install:) We probably have at the most around 200-250. I was just guessing for growth. We too opt open source. Is zimbra a resource hog? Meaning do you think it would work with maybe a xeon quadcore with 4gb RAM? Bo ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, Jan 07, 2009, Bo Lynch wrote: On Wed, January 7, 2009 3:38 pm, Tim Nelson wrote: ... I would have thought that this was a small install:) We probably have at the most around 200-250. I was just guessing for growth. We too opt open source. Is zimbra a resource hog? Meaning do you think it would work with maybe a xeon quadcore with 4gb RAM? Zimbra isn't too bad in terms of resources. We have it running on a system with several hundred users, primarily doing e-mail on a system with a single Intel(R) Pentium(R) D CPU 3.00GHz and 4GB RAM. My primary gripe with Zimbra is that it wants to take over a machine with its own versions of openldap, postfix, amavisd, clamav, etc., and these are not always kept current. We have one Zimbra system running as a VM under the free VMware server, allowing us to screen incoming and outgoing e-mail with current versions of amavisd and clamav before passing it to the VM for final delivery. Zimbra also works independently of the Linux user system, which some consider a feature, but I don't like as I like to be able to handle many things at the user's $HOME directory level. In particular we normally use courier-imap with Maildir storage, and our own server-side filtering and routing before delivery. Bill -- INTERNET: b...@celestial.com Bill Campbell; Celestial Software LLC URL: http://www.celestial.com/ PO Box 820; 6641 E. Mercer Way Voice: (206) 236-1676 Mercer Island, WA 98040-0820 Fax:(206) 232-9186 It is not the function of our Government to keep the citizen from falling into error; it is the function of the citizen to keep the Government from falling into error. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
on 1-7-2009 12:15 PM Bo Lynch spake the following: On Wed, January 7, 2009 3:23 pm, Ed Westphal wrote: Bo Lynch wrote: Just wanted to get some thoughts from the list. We are a public k-12 school and are looking to migrate to a groupware style system for out staff to collaborate better. Currently we are using Squirrelmail/postfix for email. Does anyone have any recommendations/opinions. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thank you -- Bo Lynch Systems Administrator RedHat Academy Instructor Energy Manager Amelia County Public Schools I may start a war here, but I'm going to recommend Lotus Notes / Domino as the collaborative software for you. I've had quite a bit of experience with it in a large multi-national company. It can definitely handle all that you may want to throw at it. It does have some draw backs - what doesn't? IBM / Lotus can give your people a great deal of support while they get their legs underneath them. I'm not going to swear to it, but I think they can extend some pretty good terms to public schools. There are all kinds of specialized add-ons as well. Development tools are pretty robust as well. Ed Westphal ___ Has anyone used PHPGroupware? I've been looking at some comparisons with this and it looks like it has alot of features. Bo Lynch I think PHPgroupware is sort of stale, and EGroupware is a fork that just made a release in November or December. -- MailScanner is like deodorant... You hope everybody uses it, and you notice quickly if they don't signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
I may start a war here, but I'm going to recommend Lotus Notes / Domino as the collaborative software for you. I've had quite a bit of experience with it in a large multi-national company. It can definitely Has anyone used PHPGroupware? I've been looking at some comparisons with this and it looks like it has alot of features. Bo Lynch I think PHPgroupware is sort of stale, and EGroupware is a fork that just made a release in November or December. We looked at PHPgroupware a long time ago (2003?) and it did have allot of features but not a very strong core and some parts of it seemed unfinished. We also were considering throwing in the Open Source towel on groupware and going with Notes. Fortunately that was the moment that OpenGroupware was released as Open Source, we've been using that ever since and are very happy. It is fast, minimal requirements, uses Cyrus as the mail store (*very* hast and feature-ful), and has a solid set of core features. The WebUI certainly isn't the sexiest but it is robust and has a great XML-RPC API. But if I was going to go with a paid solution I'd go with Notes over the other commercial offerings. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self-supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. I would have thought that this was a small install:) Agree. If you need multi-servers for 300 hundred users something is just designed wrong. Unless you've got 300 intense power users. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Am 07.01.2009 um 22:24 schrieb Adam Tauno Williams: You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self- supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. I would have thought that this was a small install:) Agree. If you need multi-servers for 300 hundred users something is just designed wrong. Unless you've got 300 intense power users. Even then... 300 users should fit on a desktop-class machine (provided you've got enough RAM). Zimbra uses Java / Jetty and thus likes to have enough RAM. On a single server, I'd go with at least 8 GB of RAM. Go with 64bit Linux (AMD64). CentOS is not supported, but it seems to work nicely or now... Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
-Original Message- From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Rainer Duffner Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 5:32 PM To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite Am 07.01.2009 um 22:24 schrieb Adam Tauno Williams: You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self- supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. I would have thought that this was a small install:) Agree. If you need multi-servers for 300 hundred users something is just designed wrong. Unless you've got 300 intense power users. Even then... 300 users should fit on a desktop-class machine (provided you've got enough RAM). Zimbra uses Java / Jetty and thus likes to have enough RAM. On a single server, I'd go with at least 8 GB of RAM. Go with 64bit Linux (AMD64). CentOS is not supported, but it seems to work nicely or now... Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos My problem would be that a single machine is a single point of failure. We are looking at zimbra and using at least two machines utilizing GFS and our SAN so we can withstand a failure. We have around 75 users but I am not willing to have email down due to a single machine failing. (Btw, these would be virtual machines running on xenserver) Seeing as you are in education, if you are looking to actually pay for licensing a product and are actually interested in Zimbra, take a look at their hosted model. It is only for educational institutions right now (not that I know if they will make the offering more widely available) and may fit the bill even more by not having to manage the hardware. My biggest concern is the long term viability of zimbra with the possibility of MicroHoo or someone else picking up Yahoo in the future. I don't want to start something with that one, but for a business this is definitely a concern. I believe some of this has been addressed in their licensing language and there is always the the GPL version which would probably survive for at least a short while. Andrew ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Andrew Cotter wrote: My problem would be that a single machine is a single point of failure. We are looking at zimbra and using at least two machines utilizing GFS and our SAN so we can withstand a failure. Wouldn't drbl/heartbeat be less complicated for 2 machines? -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, January 7, 2009 6:06 pm, Andrew Cotter wrote: -Original Message- From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Rainer Duffner Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 5:32 PM To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite Am 07.01.2009 um 22:24 schrieb Adam Tauno Williams: You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self- supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. I would have thought that this was a small install:) Agree. If you need multi-servers for 300 hundred users something is just designed wrong. Unless you've got 300 intense power users. Even then... 300 users should fit on a desktop-class machine (provided you've got enough RAM). Zimbra uses Java / Jetty and thus likes to have enough RAM. On a single server, I'd go with at least 8 GB of RAM. Go with 64bit Linux (AMD64). CentOS is not supported, but it seems to work nicely or now... Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos My problem would be that a single machine is a single point of failure. We are looking at zimbra and using at least two machines utilizing GFS and our SAN so we can withstand a failure. We have around 75 users but I am not willing to have email down due to a single machine failing. (Btw, these would be virtual machines running on xenserver) Seeing as you are in education, if you are looking to actually pay for licensing a product and are actually interested in Zimbra, take a look at their hosted model. It is only for educational institutions right now (not that I know if they will make the offering more widely available) and may fit the bill even more by not having to manage the hardware. My biggest concern is the long term viability of zimbra with the possibility of MicroHoo or someone else picking up Yahoo in the future. I don't want to start something with that one, but for a business this is definitely a concern. I believe some of this has been addressed in their licensing language and there is always the the GPL version which would probably survive for at least a short while. Andrew We would definitely be looking at a app for free in other words zimbra's open source release. We are planning on using existing hardware that we have. Currently we are running CentOS 5.2 with Pentium D 3.2 with 2gb ram and 2 500GB SATA drives in a RAID. The motherboard that we have will support a quadcore xeon if needed. Are setup now has no probs but we are only doing basic email and calendar within squirrelmail itself. Bo Lynch ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
For a completely /different/ idea... I know several nonprofit and not-for-profit groups who coordinate their email and activities using a combination of GMail, google calendar(s) for scheduling, google apps for shared documents, and google group(s) for message board functionality. You can pull all this together with a google website, and put it under a domain name. The advantages of doing it this way are no costs at all, no hardware, no hardware maintenance. you just have to figure out how to put the google pieces together and teach your users how to use this mashup you've created from the various google pieces... the downside is that google is running everything, and you're relying on google goodwill to continue running this. your files and data are stored on their systems so you're subject to their privacy policies. and, of course, if your internet link is down, you'll have no access to any of it. otherwise, um, if you really do want self hosting... pick your favorite email server (postfix, sendmail, etc), use cyrus imap, let your clients use any imap email app they prefer (Mozilla Thunderbird, Microsoft Outlook or Live Mail, etc) and use openLDAP for a directory service.A wiki like DokuWiki can provide for group shared stuff...add in a calender server (webDAV wth iCAL files, or similar) that can be used with Thunderbird's Lightning Calendering plugin, and you've got quite a bit of groupware functionality right off the bat, including meeting invitations. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, January 7, 2009 3:59 pm, Bill Campbell wrote: On Wed, Jan 07, 2009, Bo Lynch wrote: On Wed, January 7, 2009 3:38 pm, Tim Nelson wrote: ... I would have thought that this was a small install:) We probably have at the most around 200-250. I was just guessing for growth. We too opt open source. Is zimbra a resource hog? Meaning do you think it would work with maybe a xeon quadcore with 4gb RAM? Zimbra isn't too bad in terms of resources. We have it running on a system with several hundred users, primarily doing e-mail on a system with a single Intel(R) Pentium(R) D CPU 3.00GHz and 4GB RAM. My primary gripe with Zimbra is that it wants to take over a machine with its own versions of openldap, postfix, amavisd, clamav, etc., and these are not always kept current. We have one Zimbra system running as a VM under the free VMware server, allowing us to screen incoming and outgoing e-mail with current versions of amavisd and clamav before passing it to the VM for final delivery. Zimbra also works independently of the Linux user system, which some consider a feature, but I don't like as I like to be able to handle many things at the user's $HOME directory level. In particular we normally use courier-imap with Maildir storage, and our own server-side filtering and routing before delivery. Bill -- INTERNET: b...@celestial.com Bill Campbell; Celestial Software LLC URL: http://www.celestial.com/ PO Box 820; 6641 E. Mercer Way Voice: (206) 236-1676 Mercer Island, WA 98040-0820 Fax:(206) 232-9186 So are you required to run zimbras release of these packages? If you are forced to use them then how delayed are the releases. Are you able to use something other than amavis and clam for scanning?? We use a product called VAMS released by central command for spam and antivirus on our mail server currently. These guys are very generous with pricing when it comes to educational facilities in case anyone is looking. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Cc$ Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry -Original Message- From: Bo Lynch bly...@ameliaschools.com Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2009 18:45:22 To: CentOS mailing listcentos@centos.org Subject: Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite On Wed, January 7, 2009 6:06 pm, Andrew Cotter wrote: -Original Message- From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Rainer Duffner Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 5:32 PM To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite Am 07.01.2009 um 22:24 schrieb Adam Tauno Williams: You'll definitely want to look at a multi-server setup for that. Put your mail/web services on one box and database/LDAP on another. Also, for such a large installation you may even want to look at their commercially supported editions. Last time I checked (admittedly quite a while ago) the pricing wasn't too horrendous and I've heard good things about their support staff. We've always opted to go with the pure open source aka self- supported version but then again we're running installations with fewer than 300 users. I believe our largest installation to date is ~100 users or so. I would have thought that this was a small install:) Agree. If you need multi-servers for 300 hundred users something is just designed wrong. Unless you've got 300 intense power users. Even then... 300 users should fit on a desktop-class machine (provided you've got enough RAM). Zimbra uses Java / Jetty and thus likes to have enough RAM. On a single server, I'd go with at least 8 GB of RAM. Go with 64bit Linux (AMD64). CentOS is not supported, but it seems to work nicely or now... Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos My problem would be that a single machine is a single point of failure. We are looking at zimbra and using at least two machines utilizing GFS and our SAN so we can withstand a failure. We have around 75 users but I am not willing to have email down due to a single machine failing. (Btw, these would be virtual machines running on xenserver) Seeing as you are in education, if you are looking to actually pay for licensing a product and are actually interested in Zimbra, take a look at their hosted model. It is only for educational institutions right now (not that I know if they will make the offering more widely available) and may fit the bill even more by not having to manage the hardware. My biggest concern is the long term viability of zimbra with the possibility of MicroHoo or someone else picking up Yahoo in the future. I don't want to start something with that one, but for a business this is definitely a concern. I believe some of this has been addressed in their licensing language and there is always the the GPL version which would probably survive for at least a short while. Andrew We would definitely be looking at a app for free in other words zimbra's open source release. We are planning on using existing hardware that we have. Currently we are running CentOS 5.2 with Pentium D 3.2 with 2gb ram and 2 500GB SATA drives in a RAID. The motherboard that we have will support a quadcore xeon if needed. Are setup now has no probs but we are only doing basic email and calendar within squirrelmail itself. Bo Lynch ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 18:54 -0500, Bo Lynch wrote: So are you required to run zimbras release of these packages? If you are forced to use them then how delayed are the releases. Are you able to use something other than amavis and clam for scanning?? We use a product called VAMS released by central command for spam and antivirus on our mail server currently. These guys are very generous with pricing when it comes to educational facilities in case anyone is looking. zimbra is pretty much of a closed box in that they have already decided what / how / where you will run stuff and no, you can't run anything other than the way they have decided it unless you decide to put a box in front of the zimbra server to receive mail first before you pass it to the zimbra box. zimbra is also not a lightweight system by any means. There are a lot of schools running Horde/IMP/etc. Craig ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Am 08.01.2009 um 00:54 schrieb Bo Lynch: So are you required to run zimbras release of these packages? For Zimbra, yes. But honestly: how on earth would they be able to guarantee that it's working correctly in any other meaningful way? Would you like to do support for your product that relies on a dozen or more external other products (that aren't maintained in most Enterprise Linux distributions anyway) when any of the vendors you support the product on can introduce a patch anyday that changes some stuff only you need in your software - and now you have customers all over the world phoning you why your P-O-S-software stopped working out- of-a-sudden. They have to maintain their own releases. If you are forced to use them then how delayed are the releases. There's a new release every couple of months. See http://pm.zimbra.com It's not that bad. If there is some serious problem, they provide extra hotfixes, too. It's (well, supposed to be) a turnkey-product. At least, the pay-version is. Are you able to use something other than amavis and clam for scanning?? No. We use a product called VAMS released by central command for spam and antivirus on our mail server currently. These guys are very generous with pricing when it comes to educational facilities in case anyone is looking. You can still use it. Just not on the Zimbra-server. I'm actually glad they don't have so many use this instead of that stuff. Just more stuff that could go wrong and that nobody QAs anyway. Rainer ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
On 7-Jan-09, at 3:57 PM, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote: otherwise, um, if you really do want self hosting... pick your favorite email server (postfix, sendmail, etc), use cyrus imap, let your clients use any imap email app they prefer (Mozilla Thunderbird, Microsoft Outlook or Live Mail, etc) and use openLDAP for a directory service.A wiki like DokuWiki can provide for group shared stuff...add in a calender server (webDAV wth iCAL files, or similar) that can be used with Thunderbird's Lightning Calendering plugin, and you've got quite a bit of groupware functionality right off the bat, including meeting invitations. I had thought about going this way, but I could never find a calander server that I liked/ ran good under CentOS. D ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote: [using google mail+calendar+etc] The advantages of doing it this way are no costs at all, Actually you only get 25 users for free. After that you have to pay for it. I'm using it on one of my domains and it's very very good, but too low a limit for any decent sized business. -- Spiro Harvey Knossos Networks Ltd 021-295-1923www.knossos.net.nz signature.asc Description: PGP signature ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
r...@vshift.com wrote: Cc$ Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry Huh??? and why did you send this, quoting 200 something lines of previous peoples quotes without a clue what you're referring to?? folks, your cellphones make LOUSY email list communications device. please stick with sending your one-liners to twitter. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Actually you only get 25 users for free. After that you have to pay for it. I'm using it on one of my domains and it's very very good, but too low a limit for any decent sized business. does that apply to nonprofits like k12/edus ? Can't answer that without making stuff up. :) Mine's not registered as a company, though, just a personal account and it has the 25 user restriction. -- Spiro Harvey Knossos Networks Ltd 021-295-1923www.knossos.net.nz signature.asc Description: PGP signature ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
otherwise, um, if you really do want self hosting... pick your favorite email server (postfix, sendmail, etc), use cyrus imap, let your clients use any imap email app they prefer (Mozilla Thunderbird, Microsoft Outlook or Live Mail, etc) Agree strongly with PostFix+Cyrus. It is a very solid e-mail platform and it provides delayed expunge and unexpunge (data retention), shared folders included shared seen state, full-text indexing, and quotas. and use openLDAP for a directory service. I'd discourage this. LDAP is great, and OpenLDAP is a solid DSA, but LDAP makes a miserable groupware platform. No client other than Evolution supports updating LDAP, every other client is read-only. And no clients agree on schema. It's pretty awful for usability. A wiki like DokuWiki can provide for group shared stuff...add in a calender server (webDAV wth iCAL files, or similar) that can be used with Thunderbird's Lightning Calendering plugin, and you've got quite a bit of groupware functionality right off the bat, including meeting invitations. One needs to carefully define what you need and what features you want. Calendaring is very vague. Do you need resource reservation, conflict detection, participant roles, etc... For addressbooks GroupDAV is reasonably supported by most clients at this point (including Thunderbird). Calendering is more complicated. Most importantly, you *MUST* have GroupDAV or CalDAV for group calendering/collaboration - iCalendar is *not* a groupware solution, it just doesn't work for technical reasons. -- Adam Tauno Williams, Network Systems Administrator Consultant - http://www.whitemiceconsulting.com Developer - http://www.opengroupware.org ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
Rainer Duffner wrote: For Zimbra, yes. But honestly: how on earth would they be able to guarantee that it's working correctly in any other meaningful way? Would you like to do support for your product that relies on a dozen or more external other products (that aren't maintained in most Enterprise Linux distributions anyway) when any of the vendors you support the product on can introduce a patch anyday that changes some stuff only you need in your software - and now you have customers all over the world phoning you why your P-O-S-software stopped working out- of-a-sudden. I would have to agree here too. It can be a pain if you would have to maintain all the dependencies on a boxed system like this. There are plus and minuses to both. This is much like VMware's model for their Infrastructure software. (Yes, I know I'm comparing apples and oranges, but am using it as an example.) They are running on a RHEL base, which they maintain. You can't, or should I say you shouldn't, install, modify, or fiddle with any of your own packages, because they are supporting the actual OS, all the dependencies, as well as their own code. This is a plus because the project X maintains the patches, updates, bugs, etc. I think you could argue this as a benefit, or a nuisance, but if you're not looking to have to maintain separate pieces of a system, then it would be a benefit. If you have the time and resources to maintain them all separately, then you have the choice of choosing something where you have more control. If I'm not mistaken, I believe Zimbra tells you right up front that it should be a dedicated server for just Zimbra. It's purpose is exactly that, and you get what is advertised. I guess this is why mailing lists exist, so everyone can give their opinions and experiences as advice. Ultimately, you choose the project that you can best maintain given your time and experience, and what best meets your needs. My two cents anyways. Regards, Max ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] Email/GroupWare Suite
René Standfest wrote: We have running at the moment eGroupWare, but we plan to migrate to SOGo (http://sogo.opengroupware.org) in the next two months (we had some annoying problems with eGW in the past). It has a really cool Webfrontend (looks like Thunderbird with Lightning) and has a really functional CalDAV-Interface which integrates perfectly into Thunderbird/Lightning. On the Website is a really good Install-Howto and it has even a yum repo. Thank you for mentioning sogo. I took a look at this project today, and will be adding it to the list of packages I'm testing. When researching groupware packages before, this project didn't turn up, but am glad you brought it up here. It looks promising and worth a look! Regards, Max ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos