Re: which MTA / POP server?

2002-04-09 Thread Marcel Hicking



--On Dienstag, 9. April 2002 08:09 +1000 Dj Statik 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 [...]
 Alternative 2. postfix and cyrus imapd/pop3d

 1. postfix does have MySQL support
 2. Cyrus appears to cope quite hapilly with MySQL

 The only flaw with this set up is that it doesn't really allow for
 checking your mail on the local system via mutt or something, not a huge
 problem but a slight inconvenience.

I'm running cyrus (with sendmail) and I have no problems
reading mail with mutt. Neither via pop3 nor imap.

Cheers, Marcel


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Re: which MTA / POP server?

2002-04-09 Thread Ted Deppner

On Tue, Apr 09, 2002 at 08:09:20AM +1000, Dj Statik wrote:
 Should be able to handle a large number of emails * Isn't full of
 security exploits. 

IMHO, This means qmail. [1]

 1.  the exim packaged for Debian doesn't have MySQL support, so an
 apt-get upgrade would break the system if I made my own package.  2.

You can hold the package after installing your own.  You can also divert
the core binaries, in case an accidental install occurs.  It is
manageable, but I do prefer debian core packages when available.

 tpop3d and vmail-sql don't have Debian packages so it would be a matter
 of keeping up with these software packages and building my own debs
 every time a new release came out.

If this is an ISP production mail system, rethink #2.  You won't want to
make *ANY* changes without lots of testing in a non-production
environment.  The point I'm making is the overhead of making your own debs
should be insignificant to the testing you'll be doing before installing
*any* debs (your own or debian produced).

 Alternative 1.  Qmail + vpopmail. 

This is the one I've chosen.

 I noticed the vpopmail package for debian is several versions behind
 that on the inter7 web site.  Also the vpopmail-mysql package appears to
 be broken and doesn't query the MySQL database like it should, I ended
 up having to build my own deb package of this to correct the problem. 

If you know a little C and debian's packaging system, you won't have any
trouble pulling down vpopmail 5.2 and building packages.

 Alternative 2. postfix and cyrus imapd/pop3d 

Don't know anything about either of these.

 The only flaw with this set up is that it doesn't really allow for
 checking your mail on the local system via mutt or something, not a huge
 problem but a slight inconvenience.

I think you're saying the only way you can support users w/ download
problems is to use your favorite pop-3 mail reader.  It sure is nice to
pull up mutt locally the few times it's an issue.

 Does anyone else have any recommendations on what would be a good
 configuration to handle the type of mail setup I am aiming for? 

You've given zero information about your environment, business size,
number of email accounts, staff capabilities, etc... give some more
context so we don't end up wasting our time.

[1] IMHO.  I don't want to start a religeous war over MTA choices.

-- 
Ted Deppner
http://www.psyber.com/~ted/


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