Domain: qmailtoaster.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to qmailtoaster.com.
Comments · 9
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Re:OK so when exactly?I switched from qmail to postfix a few years ago because qmail was non-free and because qmail would get clogged with bounce messages from joe-jobs. It was not fun, and I still want to switch away from postfix (Sendmail is not a better option). From what I hear, both problems can be solved now. Give the QmailToaster a shot. It doesn't do joe-jobs, comes integrated with virtual users, antivirus/anti-spam, spf/srs, and a bunch of other shit.
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Re:Qmail and the patchset of doom
The ISP I used to work at did. We used qmailtoaster. Made upgrading and redeploying much easier.
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Re:Sender ID, SPF, DomainKeys
DomainKeys doesn't break forwarding and... you know, SMTP.
DomainKeys breaks a lot of things. As one of the maintainers of the QmailToaster project, I've run across a lot of people where DomainKeys breaks their entire setup.
1) If you forward your mail to an upstream server (sendmail smarthost, Exchange SMTP Connector, etc), DomainKeys will always be void.
2) If you have a backup mail server or a scanning mail server that receives and then transfers to your primary mail server un-modified (IE doesn't remove the DomainKeys) then your main mail server will reject it.
DomainKeys sucks. SPF sucks, SRS is a hack. -
QmailToaster
You might want to check out QmailToaster. It's free, supports multiple domains, has a web interface, and has SPF and ClamAV integration.
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QmailToaster
My recommendation would be to run a QmailToaster from http://www.qmailtoaster.com/. I've run this for three years, it's very simple and easy to use. There are scripts that will install the entire setup from beginning to end.
Then you can get a company like postini or dyndns.org or something to act as a backup mail server in case yours is down.
I'd recommend joining the QmailToaster mailing list first, to get a feel of the community. -
Re:qMail
http://www.qmailtoaster.com/
This is an easy and simple way to get Qmail going. -
Re:Effect on me?
When it comes to ease of use, I would say that the good ol QmailToaster is a worthy project. They've taken Qmail and made it easy enough for anyone to install a fully functioning mail server complete with webmail and easy administration.
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QmailToaster Man!
I like the good ol Qmail Toaster. They are rock solid, support many standard rpm distributions and don't need much fussin to get working.
Quick note about DSL hosted e-mail, be sure to relay your e-mail through your isp's mail server. Sending directly from your DSL doesn't typically work for many big name isp's. -
Re:BSD-based solution with a big support community
Personally if he is going to diverge from Gentoo, then the simplest setup would probably be the good ol' Qmail Toaster. It's a few src.rpm's that you simply --rebuild and voila.