I realize this is slightly off topic (relates to qmail indirectly), but
I though some of the people on this list might be able help me a bit.
I'm attempting to setup a failover nfs server with 2 machines. They
will have a shared scsi bus between them with 2 raid controllers for
redundancy.
Sorry, I forgot to include the list in the to...
Any comments would be greatly appreciated, esp. in regard to nfs locking...
Jeff,
You make a very valid point, however this can be overcome in many ways.
I am currently researching this for my employer. Here's a general
overview of how I'm
Does anyone know what happened to the qmail-ldap-control patches on
bayour.com?
The directory linked to in the faq is empty. And
bayour.com/qmail/patches_ldap appears to be empty as well. Were the
patches mirrored anywhere? If not, I'd be glad to provide one (as well
as a mirror for
The faq for qmail-ldap (see below) provides a link to download the
qmail-ldap-control patch, but the directory on the server is empty. I
checked google's cached copy and it had files dating 2001050n. Are
there any official mirrors?
The FAQ:
http://www.lifewithqmail.org/ldap/#The
Adrian,
DISCLAIMER
I've only been playing with qmail for a few months and it's only
installed on one server, but here's what I would suggest.
/DISCLAIMER
Setup qmail/ldap at all of your pops. Enable clustering (in qmail) and
have the local (remote POPs) mail servers replicate the core/primary
I have 2 e450s (with very large hardware RAID5 arrays) that I want to
setup in a replicated/failover environment. These boxes will primarily
be a backend for smtp/pop3. Is there a clean way to do this without
investing $40k in Veritas's clustering/replication software? Can NFS
failover cleanly