Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Sun, 2008-12-14 at 19:04 +0200, Leon Vergottini wrote:
Hi
I have been tasked to commissioned an e-mail server in the first
quarter of next year. I got this task because I am the only one at work
that plays and have a small bit of understanding of how Linux work. So,
I am on a research spree. I have already had a look at the following sites:
The Linux document project
How to forge
Flurdy.com
I do not ask for step by step instructions, although it will be nice,
however I ask that you guys will point me to resources on the internet
that may help me in this regard.
Thank you very much
Regards
Leon
Leon,
Setting up a mail server is a great way to understand many aspects of
the internet. I was elected in our firm to do the same thing. It took
me two years and lots of study, but it was more than worthwhile.
Lots of others have given you advice and I concur with their advice to
use Centos 5.2 ... very stable
I have used sendmail as the MTA It is easy to configure it to transfer
mail to a 'smart host' from a desktop. It gets harder the more pieces
of it you choose to use. Make sure you get the 'bat book' Sendmail!!!
In my opinion sendmail works much better when you use bind to have a
local dns server. You can use sendmail without bind, but you have to
deal with sendmail having difficulty being able to identify your
internal machines from remote machine. One of the other posters has
advised you to be careful of allowing unwanted relay privileges granted
to outside machines. Make sure you study this subject well.
dovecot has been recommend and I have used it frequently with ease. I
have not had the opportunity to install cyrus. Make sure you understand
the difference between POP3 and IMAP.
procmail needs to be understood
spamassassin is great, and you will need to make sure you know how to
use a spam filter.
clamav is better, and I have used it as a sendmail milter and within
procmail. The milter works better.
My advice is for you to start with a small steps, and do not give up.
You will feel like giving up but don't. Make sure you get the 'bat
book'.
Good Luck!!!
Greg
Leon
I'd echo what Greg said.
I've used sendmail and postfix - sendmail was my first foray into email
and served me very well. The bat book as pointed out is a must, it helps
you understand how things fit together and was my reference when I
started ~ 2000/2001. That mailserver was retired last year and postfix
took it's place. Looking back on the past year there haven't really been
any showstoppers. Mail goes into maildirs now which does help. There's
an oreilly postfix book that I bought to give me a leg up on the
changes. Dovecot works well for us from the client picking up email
aspect. cacert.org also does free certificates which you might want to
look into.
Whatever you choose it's well worth the effort for reliable mail
services - I've never looked back since changing the Windows box all
those years ago which was anything but reliable!
I did document out all the changes I made along the way. There was a
couple of people on the RedHat lists that were good on email questions.
I guess just ask specifics once you get going.
Bryan
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