On Sep 15, 2005, at 1:24 PM, Alex Dean wrote: > Interesting. Are you referring to qMail pop server or qMail MTA? > Care to elaborate as to why? The qmail fatal flaw, in my mind, has nothing to do with its features or configuration or the like. It's flaw, rather, can be expressed in three letters: DJB. As in, Dan J. Bernstein, the author of qmail. He is undoubtedly a brilliant programmer but as with a few of the brightest, his ego has a habit of getting in the way of his coding. The two most commonly quoted examples are his refusal to allow easy binary packaging of qmail and his refusal to accept a number of essential patches. More subtly, though, is the affect on the qmail community. I abandoned qmail some years ago so I don't know if it's changed since then, but back then, there was always an air of frustration permeating the community. DJB himself was very prickly and when other people would answer questions, they often had to apologize for either his attitude or his refusal to allow various things to happen. If you don't care about any of that and just want a powerful mail server, then qmail is certainly a valid choice. Nobody questions its power or fundamental security. I just didn't think it was worth it when there was two other very good sendmail alternatives with vibrant and helpful communities: exim and postfix > You could still talk me out of qMail, but I think I definitely want > to get away from exim. Trying to configure it was a PITA, and > posting questions here about it didn't draw much response. I never had problems with exim when I tried it but that was typically on systems where I didn't have any complex requirements. Set up a smart relay and that was it. Most of the complex setups (virtual domains, tls, auth, etc) were done with postfix. I highly recommend postfix. Very easy to setup and far more powerful than I ever needed it to be. Plus, there are a lot of very helpful postfix users, so that's a plus. One more thing on exim, though: you might try asking any exim questions on a debian community resource (lists, forums, etc). I believe exim is still the default on debian and debian users are typically very good at tutorials and one-on-one help, in my experience. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss