On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 12:00 +1100, Simon Slater wrote: > On Thu, 2009-03-19 at 16:43 -0700, Craig White wrote: > > I use a setup that I implement on all my clients... > > > > postfix > > MailScanner (wrapper for clamav & spamassassin) > > SQLGrey (greylisting) > > cyrus-imapd > > > > mail is received by postfix, put into incoming queue, noticed by > > MailScanner, checked, passed back to postfix for delivery, and finally > > put into cyrus-imapd store. > > > The mail client (Evo, Kmail etc) then points to the local IMAP store? ---- yes, the one computer with all of the mail handling would be the IMAP server and all the computers would point to that computer. ---- > > I use RHEL or CentOS for this mail server and not Fedora because of > > the > > need to frequently update. I use Fedora for user desktops. > > > We go at a slow pace with nothing on computer being "mission critical" > so I'm happy to stay with Fedora for now while I'm still learning, but > when I need to free up more time for other things CentOS is the favoured > option and RHEL when I'm not hands-on much. ---- suit yourself - RHEL is by design a long term supported platform. Current RHEL 5 seems to be spun from much of what was Fedora 6 ---- > > I also install the latest Horde/IMP/Kronolith/Nag/Turba/etc. (and > > LDAP) > > to give a fully integrated workgroup collaboration suite of not only > > shared e-mail but also shared contacts, shared calendars, etc. > > > Until now, only heard of the Evo suite and Koffice. Will check those > out. ---- the idea is that the protocols are supported so if you have Kronolith set up, then you can point Evolution calendars on the server ---- > > If you plan on continuing to use the same mail accounts at the same > > ISP, > > then you would probably need to set up fetchmail (or getmail) to > > retrieve the e-mail from the ISP and feed it into your mail server. > > > So the flow is: > ISP -> fetchmail -> postfix/procmail/sendmail -> MailScanner -> SQLGrey > -> Cyrus/Dovecot -> Evo/KOffice/etc ---- Sendmail < or > Postfix procmail is pretty ugly and not needed if you use sieve Ingo (part of Horde) can give users a very nice sieve interface to control server based rules Greylisting not useful if you are doing fetchmail from ISP Cyrus IMAP < or > Dovecot Craig -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines