On 10/11/07, Eric Shubes wrote: > I have mixed emotions regarding qmailtoaster. I was heavily involved with it > a year ago, but have been too busy with other things more recently to stay > up to date with it. > > QMT is a nice appliance-type package/distro. It's very easy to build and get > a standalone server up and running, and community support is outstanding. > > It's also very efficient. I continue to run it on a PII/266 w/ 256M. > > On the downside, it's not available on many distros, and even on CentOS (the > preferred distro to use) it does many things in an unconventional (djb) > fashion. It really does work reliably though, so you shouldn't need to spend > much effort learning its quirks, or even learning CentOS in detail. > > BL, if you decide to try QMT, I'd recommend only doing it with a standalone > machine. Since it doesn't require much of a machine, that's not typically a > big deal. > > Mark Phillips wrote: > > Qmailtoaster looks great. Too bad it is an rpm and not Debian > > compatible. > > > > I didn't find any discussion if alien worked in this particular > > situation or not. I did find this write-up > > http://www.shupp.org/toaster/?page=preface#whatisatoaster which covered > > installing most of the bits of qmail toaster on a Debian box. Not sure > > how current it is. > > > > How different is CentOS from Debian? I have only ever used Debian, so I > > am a little concerned about adding yet one more unknown to the puzzle. > > > > Thanks for the lead!! > > > > Mark > > > > On Fri, 2007-10-05 at 09:35 -0700, Jorge Delacruz wrote: > >> Please check out qmailtoaster. It even comes in an ISO that has the > >> whole server side well integrated. It provides MTA, MDA, anti-spam, > >> anti-virus, imap, pop, webmail, muti-domain support, certificates, and > >> a web-based point & click interface so you don't have to learn too > >> much. I've set up a few of these (not the ISO, but sitting on CentOS > >> 4), and it works very well - takes hardly any (about an hour per > >> month, maybe) of my time. > >> > >> JD > >> > >> > >> Mark Phillips wrote: > >> I am thinking about setting up my own mail server (IMAP) so I > >> can sync > >> email, contacts, calendars with my blackberry. I have been > >> researching > >> email servers on Debian, and have a few questions. > >> > >> I need email for 5 users, 2-3 have Blackberries, and there are > >> 2 domains > >> involved. On the desktop, they all use Evolution. > >> > >> 1. How difficult is it to maintain am email server? > >> [...] > >> > >> 2. What combinations of MTA, MDA, MUA's do people use? > >> [...] > >> > >> 3. How much hardware do I need? > >> [...] > >> > >> Thanks! > >> > >> Mark > >> --------------------------------------------------- > >> PLUG-discuss mailing list - [...] > > -- > -Eric 'shubes' > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - [...] I was curious about this: > [...] it does many things in an unconventional (djb) > fashion. [...] so I did some checking (like, at thedjbway.org); I found some interesting stuff, such as this: ((excerpt from [part of] http://www.thedjbway.org/license_free.html )): << "the "License Free" software protocol allows you to: * freely download the software * once downloaded, you legally own a copy of the work * patch, modify, compile, and use your copy however you want * run the software without any obligation or implied contract * study the source code and learn from it * develop patches and distribute them however you want What more could one want? Well there's the rub of copyright law, what you can't do without the copyright holder's permission: * you can't redistribute the software * especially, you can't redistribute modified versions of the software " >> Just F Y I, -- Mike Schwartz Glendale AZ schwartz@acm.org --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss