Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Joel Goguen
I've got SquirrelMail running for mine.  If you're looking for something
full of features it's not for you, but if you're looking for something
simple that Just Works with Courier-IMAP and Maildir it may be worth
taking a look at.

Jasper Bal wrote:
 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

 Jasper




-- 
Joel Goguen
http://iapetus.dyndns.org/



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Tautvydas

Hi

On 11/23/06, Jasper Bal [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

Jasper



roundcube webmail is quite nice. but I use not the latest beta. Latest
beta has some problems, I haven't got enough time for debugging :(

--
Hi, I'm a .signature virus! Copy me to your .signature file and help
me propagate, thanks!



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread João Salvatti

Horde (www.horde.org) run nice under OpenBSD.

My webmail (webmail.openbsd-pa.org).

On 11/23/06, Tautvydas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi

On 11/23/06, Jasper Bal [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

 Jasper


roundcube webmail is quite nice. but I use not the latest beta. Latest
beta has some problems, I haven't got enough time for debugging :(

--
Hi, I'm a .signature virus! Copy me to your .signature file and help
me propagate, thanks!





--
Joco Salvatti
Undergraduating in Computer Science
Federal University of Para - UFPA
web: http://www.openbsd-pa.org
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread HARANG Jean-Marc

Jasper Bal wrote:

Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

I use http://blog.ilohamail.org/ (imap/pop) , fast (it's running fine on 
a 330 Mhz sparc64), easy to install and to use ...


no problem :)

--
jean-marc



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Bryan Allen

On Nov 23, 2006, at 8:19 AM, Jasper Bal wrote:


Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?


Roundcube has been the new hotness for a while now.

http://www.roundcube.net/

It's trivial to configure, nice UI (shiny, has drag and drop),  
persistent IMAP connections... That said, I've only just now started  
stressing it, so, YMMV.

--
Bryan Allen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://bda.mirrorshades.net
Cyberpunk is dead. Long live cyberpunk.



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Michael
Jasper Bal schrieb:
 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

I like http://roundcube.net/, using beta2



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Jason Dixon

On Nov 23, 2006, at 10:24 AM, Bryan Allen wrote:


On Nov 23, 2006, at 8:19 AM, Jasper Bal wrote:


Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?


Roundcube has been the new hotness for a while now.

http://www.roundcube.net/

It's trivial to configure, nice UI (shiny, has drag and drop),  
persistent IMAP connections... That said, I've only just now  
started stressing it, so, YMMV.


I agree with others here that have suggested RoundCube.  It is very  
simple in features, but it does those things well.  I'm currently  
running revision 373 on a new OpenBSD -stable mailserver running  
Postfix/Courier-IMAP.  I have two other installations running older  
versions of RoundCube on OpenBSD and RHEL.


To compare and contrast, I've also used Squirrelmail and Horde/IMP  
for years.  I can't say that I have any serious problems with  
Squirrelmail, but the interface sorely needs a freshening-up.  Horde/ 
IMP setup is not for the faint of heart, but has a ton of modules  
available through the Horde framework.  But if all you need is a  
webmail interface that works well on OpenBSD, RoundCube should be on  
your short list.  Jump on the roundcube-dev list if you want to keep  
up with HEAD and track any regression bugs.


--
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Joel Goguen
Having tried this just now, I'm now going to have to agree with the other 
RoundCube users here.  In not quite 10 minutes I had RC downloaded and 
configured, and it's easily the best webmail client I've seen yet.

On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 11:40:58 -0500, Jason Dixon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Nov 23, 2006, at 10:24 AM, Bryan Allen wrote:
 
 On Nov 23, 2006, at 8:19 AM, Jasper Bal wrote:

 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

 Roundcube has been the new hotness for a while now.

 http://www.roundcube.net/

 It's trivial to configure, nice UI (shiny, has drag and drop),
 persistent IMAP connections... That said, I've only just now
 started stressing it, so, YMMV.
 
 I agree with others here that have suggested RoundCube.  It is very
 simple in features, but it does those things well.  I'm currently
 running revision 373 on a new OpenBSD -stable mailserver running
 Postfix/Courier-IMAP.  I have two other installations running older
 versions of RoundCube on OpenBSD and RHEL.
 
 To compare and contrast, I've also used Squirrelmail and Horde/IMP
 for years.  I can't say that I have any serious problems with
 Squirrelmail, but the interface sorely needs a freshening-up.  Horde/
 IMP setup is not for the faint of heart, but has a ton of modules
 available through the Horde framework.  But if all you need is a
 webmail interface that works well on OpenBSD, RoundCube should be on
 your short list.  Jump on the roundcube-dev list if you want to keep
 up with HEAD and track any regression bugs.
 
 --
 Jason Dixon
 DixonGroup Consulting
 http://www.dixongroup.net
--
Joel Goguen
http://iapetus.dyndns.org/



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Sam Fourman Jr.
Roundcube looks REALLY cool, does OpenBSD have a Maintainer for it yet?

Does anyone know of a tourtorial to set it up with postfix and PostgreSQL
support?
 is it better to use Postfix/Courier-IMAP or Postfix/Dovecot?


Sam Fourman Jr.

On 11/23/06, Joel Goguen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Having tried this just now, I'm now going to have to agree with the other
 RoundCube users here.  In not quite 10 minutes I had RC downloaded and
 configured, and it's easily the best webmail client I've seen yet.

 On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 11:40:58 -0500, Jason Dixon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
  On Nov 23, 2006, at 10:24 AM, Bryan Allen wrote:
 
  On Nov 23, 2006, at 8:19 AM, Jasper Bal wrote:
 
  Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?
 
  Roundcube has been the new hotness for a while now.
 
  http://www.roundcube.net/
 
  It's trivial to configure, nice UI (shiny, has drag and drop),
  persistent IMAP connections... That said, I've only just now
  started stressing it, so, YMMV.
 
  I agree with others here that have suggested RoundCube.  It is very
  simple in features, but it does those things well.  I'm currently
  running revision 373 on a new OpenBSD -stable mailserver running
  Postfix/Courier-IMAP.  I have two other installations running older
  versions of RoundCube on OpenBSD and RHEL.
 
  To compare and contrast, I've also used Squirrelmail and Horde/IMP
  for years.  I can't say that I have any serious problems with
  Squirrelmail, but the interface sorely needs a freshening-up.  Horde/
  IMP setup is not for the faint of heart, but has a ton of modules
  available through the Horde framework.  But if all you need is a
  webmail interface that works well on OpenBSD, RoundCube should be on
  your short list.  Jump on the roundcube-dev list if you want to keep
  up with HEAD and track any regression bugs.
 
  --
  Jason Dixon
  DixonGroup Consulting
  http://www.dixongroup.net
 --
 Joel Goguen
 http://iapetus.dyndns.org/



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Jason Dixon

On Nov 23, 2006, at 2:08 PM, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:

Roundcube looks REALLY cool, does OpenBSD have a Maintainer for it  
yet?


I don't think it needs a port.  Squirrelmail has been out there for  
years, no ports there either.


Does anyone know of a tourtorial to set it up with postfix and  
PostgreSQL support?


The INSTALL document covers everything.


 is it better to use Postfix/Courier-IMAP or Postfix/Dovecot?


It depends entirely on your needs.  I was almost convinced to use  
Dovecot on my new server.  It seems like a nice project, but it's a  
bit too close to the bleeding edge.  Simply too many regression bugs  
for my tastes.  If you choose that route, at least the port  
maintainers seem to keep up with it (in ports -current).  One nice  
feature is Dovecot-sasl, which Postfix now supports.  It is very easy  
and straightforward to setup, much more so than Postfix with Cyrus- 
SASL.  However, in my case, I needed to go with Cyrus-SASL[1].


That said, I chose to stay with Courier.  I've been running Courier- 
IMAP for 3 years on the 3.0.x base without a single glitch or  
exploit.  No corruption issues whatsoever.  I've installed the  
following -current ports, everything is working great.  I migrated  
all of my customers off the old 3.0.x base without any sort of  
maildir changes whatsoever.


courier-authlib-0.58p0 authentication library for courier
courier-authlib-mysql-0.58p0 mysql authentication module for courier- 
authLib

courier-imap-4.1.1-imap_bugs imap server for maildir format mailboxes
courier-pop3-4.1.1  pop3 server for maildir format mailboxes

[1] I tend to use MySQL virtual accounts with the passwords stored  
via MD5.  Unfortunately, Cyrus-SASL will not support MD5 passwords  
via the SQL auxprop plugin.  I've gotten around this by using Cyrus- 
SASL's authdaemond support, which authenticates against Courier's  
authdaemond (courier-authlib), which in turn *does* support MD5  
passwords in MySQL.  This feature is not enabled in Jakob's cyrus- 
sasl2 port, so I added a new flavor.


@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@
MODGNU_CONFIG_GUESS_DIRS=${WRKSRC}/config ${WRKSRC}/saslauthd/config
-FLAVORS=   db4 ldap mysql pgsql sqlite
+FLAVORS=   db4 ldap mysql pgsql sqlite authdaemond
FLAVOR?=
.if ${FLAVOR:L:Mdb4}
@@ -100,6 +100,10 @@
--without-mysql \
--without-pgsql \
--with-sqlite
+.endif
+
+.if ${FLAVOR:L:Mauthdaemond}
+CONFIGURE_ARGS+=   --with-authdaemond=/var/run/courier-auth
.endif
post-extract:


--
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Joel Goguen
Doesn't seem to be in ports, so I'd guess not.

There's directions for setting up with MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQLite in the 
INSTALL file once you unpack it.


On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 13:08:10 -0600, Sam Fourman Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Roundcube looks REALLY cool, does OpenBSD have a Maintainer for it yet?
 
 Does anyone know of a tourtorial to set it up with postfix and PostgreSQL
 support?
  is it better to use Postfix/Courier-IMAP or Postfix/Dovecot?
 
 
 Sam Fourman Jr.
 
 On 11/23/06, Joel Goguen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Having tried this just now, I'm now going to have to agree with the
 other
 RoundCube users here.  In not quite 10 minutes I had RC downloaded and
 configured, and it's easily the best webmail client I've seen yet.

 On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 11:40:58 -0500, Jason Dixon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
  On Nov 23, 2006, at 10:24 AM, Bryan Allen wrote:
 
  On Nov 23, 2006, at 8:19 AM, Jasper Bal wrote:
 
  Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?
 
  Roundcube has been the new hotness for a while now.
 
  http://www.roundcube.net/
 
  It's trivial to configure, nice UI (shiny, has drag and drop),
  persistent IMAP connections... That said, I've only just now
  started stressing it, so, YMMV.
 
  I agree with others here that have suggested RoundCube.  It is very
  simple in features, but it does those things well.  I'm currently
  running revision 373 on a new OpenBSD -stable mailserver running
  Postfix/Courier-IMAP.  I have two other installations running older
  versions of RoundCube on OpenBSD and RHEL.
 
  To compare and contrast, I've also used Squirrelmail and Horde/IMP
  for years.  I can't say that I have any serious problems with
  Squirrelmail, but the interface sorely needs a freshening-up.  Horde/
  IMP setup is not for the faint of heart, but has a ton of modules
  available through the Horde framework.  But if all you need is a
  webmail interface that works well on OpenBSD, RoundCube should be on
  your short list.  Jump on the roundcube-dev list if you want to keep
  up with HEAD and track any regression bugs.
 
  --
  Jason Dixon
  DixonGroup Consulting
  http://www.dixongroup.net
 --
 Joel Goguen
 http://iapetus.dyndns.org/


 
 
--
Joel Goguen
http://iapetus.dyndns.org/



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Bob Beck
All webmail products suck.  I am using horde in one location
and squirrelmail in another.

-Bob

* Jasper Bal [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006-11-23 07:48]:
 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?
 
 Jasper
 

-- 
#!/usr/bin/perl
if ((not 0  not 1) !=  (! 0  ! 1)) {
   print Larry and Tom must smoke some really primo stuff...\n; 
}



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Michal Lesniewski

Jasper Bal wrote:

Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?

Jasper



Hi, I use:
1. http://hastymail.sourceforge.net/ - by default Hastymail does NOT use 
HTML frames, Javascript, or cookies.
2. http://www.roundcube.net/ - browser-based multilingual IMAP client 
with an application-like user interface (XHTML, CSS 2, AJAX).

Regards,
Michal



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread Vijay Sankar
Last year I replaced an Exchange Server with OpenBSD-based mail, file,
print, and webmail server and found the following combination to be the
best option for me:

Openwebmail
Dovecot
Samba3
Plone/Zope

All work with OpenLDAP so the user needs to remember only one password.
They are all available as packages (except Plone 2.5 and Zope 2.8 which
I had to build from source) which makes installation and configuration
really straightforward. HTTP compression with OpenWebmail made a big
difference when accessing mail through DSL uplinks. Also, Openwebmail
does not require IMAP, which meant that dovecot could be taken down,
upgraded, etc. without users losing access to email. I am able to use
the IMAP client in Plone, Oulook 2003, Kontact/Kmail, and Evolution
along with OWM without any conflicts.

The only problem I had with OWM was that I could not make it work in a
chrooted environment properly without having symlinks everywhere. So it
is running with -u -DSSL. Also, sometimes dovecot indices get corrupted
if I do something silly like deleting email through OWM while composing
an email from an IMAP client using the same mailbox (obviously my fault
since I use three workstations with Kmail on OpenBSD, Evolution on
Ubuntu, Outlook 2003 on Windows XP and leave them all running at the
same time ...)

Vijay

On Thu, 2006-23-11 at 14:19 +0100, Jasper Bal wrote:
 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?
 
 Jasper
 
-- 
Vijay Sankar, M.Eng., P.Eng.
ForeTell Technologies Limited
59 Flamingo Avenue, Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3J 0X6
Phone: 204 885 9535, E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: webmail

2006-11-23 Thread dreamwvr
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 10:28:43PM +0100, Michal Lesniewski wrote:
 Jasper Bal wrote:
 Anyone using webmail on OpenBSD? What's good, what's not?
 
 Jasper
 
 
 Hi, I use:
 1. http://hastymail.sourceforge.net/ - by default Hastymail does NOT use 
 HTML frames, Javascript, or cookies.
 2. http://www.roundcube.net/ - browser-based multilingual IMAP client 
 with an application-like user interface (XHTML, CSS 2, AJAX).
 Regards,
 Michal
I have been playing with IMP lately. It is more like a suite than
just webmail. If that is what  someone is after then SQWebmail is 
good as well. One thing is that setting all the php.ini for mini_sendmail
as well as sendmail with libs simply does not work in chroot w/IMP.
IMO IMP debug is not verbose enough.

Best Regards,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-05 Thread Ray Lai
On Tue, Oct 04, 2005 at 01:20:24PM -0500, Bob Bostwick (Lists) wrote:
 Not sure if it will run on OBSD or not (haven't had time to try yet...),
 but hands down Zimbra is the best looking web interface out there -
 including Exchange OWA.
 
 http://www.zimbra.com/

Egads, it's 150 MB!  Just for webmail?  It does look good, though.

-Ray-

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
 
 Of Chris
 Sent: Saturday, October 01, 2005 5:35 PM
 To: misc@openbsd.org
 Subject: Webmail recommendations?
 
 Hello
 
 I want to setup a OBSD box for my email server.  It will service 
 probably about 2 dozen people, but It could conceivably double or more
 
 over the next year or two.
 
 I was wondering if anyone had any recommendations for an mta, and for 
 a webmail program that is easy to use and fully featured for users who
 
 are not so computer savvy.
 
 I am pretty comfortable with Sendmail, but I hear a lot of people are 
 moving more toward postfix (which I know nothing about).
 
 I am at a loss for a good web interface.
 
 Anyone care to make any recommendations?
 
 Thank you.
 
 
 Chris



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-05 Thread Jason Dixon

On Oct 5, 2005, at 10:38 AM, Ray Lai wrote:


On Tue, Oct 04, 2005 at 01:20:24PM -0500, Bob Bostwick (Lists) wrote:

Not sure if it will run on OBSD or not (haven't had time to try  
yet...),

but hands down Zimbra is the best looking web interface out there -
including Exchange OWA.

http://www.zimbra.com/


To be honest, I think you'd be nuts to run it on OpenBSD.

1) It's dog slow.
2) It uses it's own internal mail server.
2b) Has not been scrutinized for security, stability or scalability.
3) Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.  I'm not impressed with the  
design, other than the preview pane.
4) Because it is relatively new, it lacks much of the features found  
in other entrenched webmail systems.

5) Does it run in chroot?

--
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-05 Thread Roy Morris
 Jason Dixon wrote:

  On Oct 5, 2005, at 10:38 AM, Ray Lai wrote:

On Tue, Oct 04, 2005 at 01:20:24PM -0500, Bob Bostwick (Lists)
wrote:

  Not sure if it will run on OBSD or not (haven't had time to
  try  yet...),
  but hands down Zimbra is the best looking web interface out
  there -
  including Exchange OWA.

  http://www.zimbra.com/

  To be honest, I think you'd be nuts to run it on OpenBSD.

  1) It's dog slow.
  2) It uses it's own internal mail server.
  2b) Has not been scrutinized for security, stability or scalability.
  3) Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.  I'm not impressed with the 
  design, other than the preview pane.
  4) Because it is relatively new, it lacks much of the features found 
  in other entrenched webmail systems.
  5) Does it run in chroot?

  --
  Jason Dixon
  DixonGroup Consulting
  http://www.dixongroup.net

according to a Freebsd thread I read on the site, it appears there is
some hard call to Iptables. I am surprised anyone has it running on
Openbsd.



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-04 Thread Geoff White

Jason Dixon wrote:

On Oct 1, 2005, at 6:34 PM, Chris wrote:


I want to setup a OBSD box for my email server.  It will service
probably about 2 dozen people, but It could conceivably double or more
over the next year or two.

I was wondering if anyone had any recommendations for an mta, and for a
webmail program that is easy to use and fully featured for users who are
not so computer savvy.

I am pretty comfortable with Sendmail, but I hear a lot of people are
moving more toward postfix (which I know nothing about).

I am at a loss for a good web interface.




Check out my OpenBSD distro  www.MailDroid.org  burn a CD, load it 
into Iron, has everything you need.


geoffw



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-04 Thread Raul Aldaz
 One that I worked with a while back and kinda like for some reasons is
 OpenWebMail.  The big plus was that it worked with sendmail directly --
 didn't need to learn a new mail system.  A few OpenWebMail notes:
 
 
 2) Not too processor intensive, but memory hungry.

It depends on the number of users. For 100 users, without any memory problem,
we had a huge performance improvement after changing to SpeedyCGI. 

 
 3) Users seemed to find it pretty usable.  Not exactly loaded with
 features, but works.

It's one of the few that integrates very good with ldap. We only had to write
something to sync addressbook with ldap.

 6) The port may have some permissions issues.  I figured it out, but
 didn't have time to do it again and take notes this time to help get it
 fixed.

I have all after port installation fixes, I'd like to post the patch at port@
when I have time.

 Definitely an app with quirks...but if you are comfy with sendmail now
 and don't want to spend a lot of time learning a new mail handler, this
 might be worth a look-at.

It works very good with qmail-ldap. Only issue was vacation.pl with remote
smtp servers, but a small sync script solved it also.



Este correo electrsnico y la informacisn contenida en el mismo es de
 caracter confidencial y esta sometida al secreto profesional, dirigiindose
 exclusivamente al destinatario mencionado en el encabezamiento, cuyos datos
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 electrsnico. Le informamos que cuenta con los derechos de acceso,
 rectificacisn y cancelacisn, que podra ejercitar  mediante el envmo de un e-
 mail a la siguiente direccion: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Si  el  receptor de la comunicacisn no fuera el destinatario, le informamos
 que cualquier divulgacisn, copia,  distribucisn  o utilizacisn  no
 autorizada de la informacisn contenida en la misma esta prohibida por la
 legislacisn vigente.

http://www.grupocarreras.com




Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-04 Thread Roberto Pereyra
Hi !

Try http://www.uebimiau.org/

roberto

2005/10/4, Jason Dixon [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 On Oct 1, 2005, at 6:34 PM, Chris wrote:

  I want to setup a OBSD box for my email server.  It will service
  probably about 2 dozen people, but It could conceivably double or more
  over the next year or two.
 
  I was wondering if anyone had any recommendations for an mta, and
  for a
  webmail program that is easy to use and fully featured for users
  who are
  not so computer savvy.
 
  I am pretty comfortable with Sendmail, but I hear a lot of people are
  moving more toward postfix (which I know nothing about).
 
  I am at a loss for a good web interface.
 
  Anyone care to make any recommendations?

 Everyone has their own favorite MTA;  mine happens to be Postfix.  I
 use Squirrelmail on one server, it's fine for basic webmail and you
 can't beat the easy installation.  For users that want a prettier
 interface, Horde/IMP works quite well, even in the OpenBSD httpd
 chroot.  I no longer run the ports version, installing manually from
 source is no less difficult and allows you to keep up with the more
 current releases.  I also happen to use Turba (address book),
 Kronolith (shared calendar), Nag (shared tasklists), and Whups
 (ticket system).  I've encountered some small issues with Kronolith,
 everything else seems production-ready.

 --
 Jason Dixon
 DixonGroup Consulting
 http://www.dixongroup.net



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-04 Thread Jens Teglhus Møller
I've used SquirrelMail and it works with both IMAP and POP3. It's 
pretty
good, simple and functional. However it does lack more advanced 
features

suchs as threading, searching, etc. I personally wish it had.


SquirrelMail supports threading, if you use it against an imap server 
that supports it.


I use it with courier imap on an openbsd box and it works great.

/jtm 



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-03 Thread Adam Douglas
I've used SquirrelMail and it works with both IMAP and POP3. It's pretty
good, simple and functional. However it does lack more advanced features
suchs as threading, searching, etc. I personally wish it had.

Adam

 I am at a loss for a good web interface.

 Anyone care to make any recommendations?

I'm a pretty big fan of SquirrelMail.  It's a web-based IMAP client, so
you'd need an IMAP server as well (I use Courier).  It works just fine
with OpenBSD's chrooted Apache, which is a big plus.



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-03 Thread viq
On Sunday 02 of October 2005 00:34, Chris wrote:

 Anyone care to make any recommendations?

http://www.pingwales.co.uk/tutorials/webmail-on-openbsd.html seems to be a 
nice tutorial, one of a couple they have. They suggest using dovecot (IMAP), 
and Horde+Imp for webmail. I cannot say i tried it, but the article seems 
nice.

 Chris

-- 
viq

--
Jestem niesamowita... ;-)  http://link.interia.pl/f18b8



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-03 Thread hellsop
On Mon, Oct 03, 2005 at 10:01:26AM -0600, Adam Douglas wrote:
 I've used SquirrelMail and it works with both IMAP and POP3. It's pretty
 good, simple and functional. However it does lack more advanced features
 suchs as threading, searching, etc. I personally wish it had.

This is a feature, intended to encourage users to avail themselves of
excellent shell tools as ghod intended, instead of webmail which is
expensive in host, client, and bandwidth-resources as well.

(;

-- 
Better to teach a man to fish than to give him a fish.  And if he can't
be bothered to learn to fish and starves to death, that's a good enough
outcome for me.
  -- Steve VanDevender



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-03 Thread FBN

you could try horde - it's pretty full-featured. Mta, i would
recommend qmail, but YMMV... The setup will be pretty tedious if u go
this way, but once setup, everything will run very nicely.

-jf


Horde/IMP from OpenBSD ports seems to have a problem.

The attachment size, mime type and name is reported
correctly in IMP, but when I download it, their size
is 0KB.

you can read about it in horde.imp group.

I had to change to squirrelmail

FBN



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-03 Thread Aaron Glenn
On 10/1/05, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I am at a loss for a good web interface.

 Anyone care to make any recommendations?

http://www.uebimiau.org/demo.php

I've never installed it myself, but a few of my collegues swear by it. YMMV

aaron.glenn



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-03 Thread Jason Dixon

On Oct 1, 2005, at 6:34 PM, Chris wrote:


I want to setup a OBSD box for my email server.  It will service
probably about 2 dozen people, but It could conceivably double or more
over the next year or two.

I was wondering if anyone had any recommendations for an mta, and  
for a
webmail program that is easy to use and fully featured for users  
who are

not so computer savvy.

I am pretty comfortable with Sendmail, but I hear a lot of people are
moving more toward postfix (which I know nothing about).

I am at a loss for a good web interface.

Anyone care to make any recommendations?


Everyone has their own favorite MTA;  mine happens to be Postfix.  I  
use Squirrelmail on one server, it's fine for basic webmail and you  
can't beat the easy installation.  For users that want a prettier  
interface, Horde/IMP works quite well, even in the OpenBSD httpd  
chroot.  I no longer run the ports version, installing manually from  
source is no less difficult and allows you to keep up with the more  
current releases.  I also happen to use Turba (address book),  
Kronolith (shared calendar), Nag (shared tasklists), and Whups  
(ticket system).  I've encountered some small issues with Kronolith,  
everything else seems production-ready.


--
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-02 Thread Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse
On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 18:19:17 -0500 (CDT)
C. Bensend [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  I am at a loss for a good web interface.
 
  Anyone care to make any recommendations?
 
 I'm a pretty big fan of SquirrelMail.  It's a web-based IMAP client,
 so you'd need an IMAP server as well (I use Courier).  It works just
 fine with OpenBSD's chrooted Apache, which is a big plus.
 
 Benny
 
 
 -- 
 Now, that next spring you find in your garage a creature that
 looks like a cross-bred badger and anaconda. A badgerconda.
   -- bash.org
 

Yes, that's very nice WebMail software indeed. And it's quite light.

Jasper


-- 
Security is decided by quality -- Theo de Raadt



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-02 Thread Jeffrey Lim
you could try horde - it's pretty full-featured. Mta, i would
recommend qmail, but YMMV... The setup will be pretty tedious if u go
this way, but once setup, everything will run very nicely.

-jf



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-02 Thread Csillag Tamás
On 10/01, Chris wrote:
 Hello
 
 I want to setup a OBSD box for my email server.  It will service
 probably about 2 dozen people, but It could conceivably double or more
 over the next year or two.
 
 I was wondering if anyone had any recommendations for an mta, and for a
 webmail program that is easy to use and fully featured for users who are
 not so computer savvy.
 
 I am pretty comfortable with Sendmail, but I hear a lot of people are
 moving more toward postfix (which I know nothing about).
 
 I am at a loss for a good web interface.
 
 Anyone care to make any recommendations?
 
 Thank you.
 
 
 Chris

Hi

My personal favorite is: postfix + courier-imap + sqwebmail.
(You will need maildrop too between postfix and courier-imap.)
SqWebMail is a simple cgi written in c++ so it is really fast.

http://www.postfix.org
http://www.courier-mta.org/imap
http://www.courier-mta.org/sqwebmail

-- 
cstamas



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-01 Thread Roger Neth Jr
maildroid www.maildroid.org http://www.maildroid.org
 rogern
 John 3:16

 On 10/1/05, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello

 I want to setup a OBSD box for my email server. It will service
 probably about 2 dozen people, but It could conceivably double or more
 over the next year or two.

 I was wondering if anyone had any recommendations for an mta, and for a
 webmail program that is easy to use and fully featured for users who are
 not so computer savvy.

 I am pretty comfortable with Sendmail, but I hear a lot of people are
 moving more toward postfix (which I know nothing about).

 I am at a loss for a good web interface.

 Anyone care to make any recommendations?

 Thank you.


 Chris



Re: Webmail recommendations?

2005-10-01 Thread C. Bensend
 I am at a loss for a good web interface.

 Anyone care to make any recommendations?

I'm a pretty big fan of SquirrelMail.  It's a web-based IMAP client,
so you'd need an IMAP server as well (I use Courier).  It works just
fine with OpenBSD's chrooted Apache, which is a big plus.

Benny


-- 
Now, that next spring you find in your garage a creature that
looks like a cross-bred badger and anaconda. A badgerconda.
  -- bash.org