On Tue, 2005-02-08 at 15:47, Eric Vought wrote: > Sorry, there was a very similar question asked the day before, and I > think most people assumed the question had already been answered. In > general, try searching the mailing list archives before posting. The > same questions often come up more than once. Here is my earlier reply: > > You may want to look at webmin and virtualmin (webmin.com). Webmin is a > web control panel for your system's services/configuration. It comes > with usermin, which allows users to check mail, upload/download files, > change their password, etc. VirtualMin is a Virtual Webhost control > panel. It allows you to set up domains, correctly configuring virtual > hosted mail, websites, ftp permissions, etc., and provides a control > panel for the site owner to, e.g., create new email accounts, password > protect directories, etc. > > Webmin is available from the Dag RPM repository (wieers.com). You may also want to look at this program: http://chaogic.com/vhost/ Have used it in the past and it worked very well. I noticed they have upgraded it for FC3 support too. What is it? vHost is a one-step solution for all virtual hosting needs. It enables a Linux/BSD server with single or multiple IP addresses to function as unlimited virtual hosts with HTTP, FTP, SMTP, POP3, IMAP, and other virtual services extentable via modules. It comes with both command-line and web-based graphical user interfaces, which give maximum control to a domain's owner, while relieving the system administrator of most routine administration tasks. Other major features include four levels of login, comprehensive quota control, and built-in clustering capability. News Flash: Dec. 30, 2004 - Version 3.20r1 released. This release includes support for DNS running on chroot and/or NAT systems, improved command --uphost/--cphost, improvements specific to Fedora Core 3 and SELinux, and many other fixes and enhancements. May 24, 2004 - Website now has a "Contributed" section which accepts contributed projects. Modules, web GUI themes, HowTo's etc. are all welcome. Share those tricks and hacks with others! -- Scot L. Harris webid@xxxxxxxxxx Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky