keith smith wrote: > Hi Ben, Hi Keith :) > My concern is messing up a vps server .... this is for leaning mostly so I guess I give it a try. If you go the qmail route(see my next email) you probably won't screw it up. You can build it and install it if you copy /usr/sbin/sendmail and /var/lib/sendmail out of the way first and redirect those files in RPM(I don't know how to do this- I've not used redhat since 7.2...) On Debian boxes I leave Exim in place(to fulfill the "mta" requirement of many packages and because I like having "mail" around ;) and simply disable it in /etc/rc?.d. > The last Linux I used was Debian Patato. I was familiar with apt-get and how to determine which package to get. I would go to the Debian website where they listed all the packages. That's way oldschool! apt-cache lets you search the repositories you have configured and you can install from there. Example: root@nulled:~# apt-cache search cisco vpn vpnc - Cisco-compatible VPN client root@nulled:~# apt-cache show vpnc Package: vpnc Priority: extra Section: net Installed-Size: 124 Maintainer: Eduard Bloch Architecture: i386 Version: 0.3.2+SVN20050326-2 Depends: iproute, libc6 (>= 2.3.2.ds1-21), libgcrypt11, libgpg-error0 (>= 1.0) Suggests: resolvconf Filename: pool/main/v/vpnc/vpnc_0.3.2+SVN20050326-2_i386.deb Size: 43496 MD5sum: 7430a017963a410eefba142dc45361cf Description: Cisco-compatible VPN client vpnc is a VPN client compatible with cisco3000 VPN Concentrator (also known as Cisco's EasyVPN equipment). vpnc runs entirely in userspace and does not require kernel modules except of the tun driver to communicate with the network layer. . It supports most of the features needed to establish connection to the VPN concentrator: MD5 and SHA1 hashes, 3DES and AES ciphers, PFS and various IKE DH group settings. root@nulled:~# > I'm aware of exim, postfix,qmail, and sendmail. I hear exim is good but not widely used. Qmail is reportedly difficult to configure. Evey one says to avoid sendmail. I've also read that sendmail is not all that efficient. I have read good things about postfix over the years. I think postfix will be my next stop. Exim is a lot more popular in Europe than the US for sure... My MTA of choice is qmail, but it does require care and feeding. It is not, as you say, difficult to configure once you understand it's base files and what they mean. > Any suggestions on a pop3 server? If you go with Qmail it comes with qmail-pop3d which is pretty solid. qpopper is a nice one too. For IMAP I like courier. > And I'm still not clear on setting up an email account. Is that handled through the pop3 server? That really depends on the implementation. > I saw port 587 was used in sendmail also. Is that a standard alternative to port 25? For outbound mail, yes. ~Ben -- --- "Confession only helps if you actually feel bad for your actions. For you, it would just be a really long boast." -Tara http://www.emptiedout.com --------------------------------------------------- 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