On Friday 10 January 2003 11:38 pm, Alan Dayley wrote: > - The mail server uses fetchmail (or a similar tool/function) to ahem.. > fetch the mail. > - A program like spamanator filters out the garbage. > - The mail is put in user mail boxes. > - The client computers retrieve their mail via the POP server. > - The client computers send mail out via the SMTP server (qmail, I > think). > > Never having done this sort of setup before, I have some questions: > 1. This server is inside the firewall. I don't want it as an email > server on the net. My ISP can do that. Fetchmail can handle this, > correct? Yeah, no problem at all. > 2. Any recommendations on spam programs like spamanator? > Something better? SpamAssassin (http://www.spamassassin.org) and Vipul's Razor (http://razor.sf.net) are both very common. In my case, though, a decent number of spam got through. I switched to using bogofilter (http://bogofilter.sf.net) and my incoming spam has trickled down to almost zero! It's trivial to setup but takes a bit more time to get going since it "learns" what is spam and what is not based on what you tell it.. but once it has a good database of what kind of spam you get, it is very accurate. > 3. I have not researched yet what apps do the POP > function. Is it the same app as the SMTP function? What app is a good > one for this? On my mail server, I use Courier (http://www.courier-mta.org) as my IMAP and POP3 server. It was easy to setup and handles Maildir mailboxes. Apparently, Courier can also do the SMTP part of it, but I didn't do that. For the SMTP, I went with exim (http://www.exim.org). Also very easy to setup and has worked perfectly. > This should be fun! Yep! -- Kurt Granroth - "KDE -- Conquer Your Desktop" KDE Developer/Evangelist | granroth@kde.org http://www.granroth.org | kurt@granroth.org