mail server setup

Juan Hernandez juanhernandez98 at gmail.com
Thu Jan 7 11:07:06 EST 2016


What do you mean same thing? Same as what?  What in the below message has a cost?

Thanks.

Juan Hernandez
Email:  juanhernandez98 at gmail.com
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web:  http://www.juanhernandez.meJuan Hernandez
4

-----Original Message-----
From: Speakup [mailto:speakup-bounces at linux-speakup.org] On Behalf Of Kelly Prescott
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2016 2:46 AM
To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux. <speakup at linux-speakup.org>
Subject: Re: mail server setup

This is a good solution, but if you want essentially the same thing with easy gui management and zero cost, use zimbra community edition.
I use both types of solutions depending on my clients needs and requirements.
kp


On Wed, 6 Jan 2016, Gregory Nowak wrote:

> On Wed, Jan 06, 2016 at 11:49:37AM -0800, Juan Hernandez wrote:
>> I wanted to know what you guys recommended for setups?
>>
>> I need webmail, imap, virtual domains, spam/antivirus protection, etc.
>
> For webmail, I use sqwebmail. For imap, I use courier-imap. For MTA 
> (including virtual domains) I use postfix. For spam, I use 
> spamassassin. For antivirus I use clamav-milter to interface clamav to postfix.
>
>
> On Wed, Jan 06, 2016 at 10:43:00PM +0100, MichaƂ Zegan wrote:
>> More like: leave message intact, but add something like
>> x-spam-status: yes
>> x-spam-core: 5.0
>> into mail headers.
>
> That's done by spamc, which you can invoke through maildrop, or 
> procmail. I use maildrop on my server, so I'll describe how to use 
> that to do what you want.
>
> You need to have postfix pass the message to maildrop. You can either 
> do this directly in master.cf, or through the .forward mechanism. I 
> use both, depending on which domain the mail is for. I'll explain how 
> to do that through .forward, since that's simpler
>
> In the user's $HOME/.forward file, you want to have something like:
>
>
> |/usr/bin/maildrop
>
>
> Now, you want to create a $HOME/.mailfilter file, which should look 
> something like:
>
>
> DEFAULT="$HOME/Maildir/"
>
> xfilter "/usr/bin/spamc"
> if (/^X-Spam-Flag: YES/:h || /^X-Spam-Status: Yes/:h) {  to 
> "$DEFAULT/.Spam/"
> }
>
>
> If the message is ham, it goes to $HOME/Maildir/. If the message is 
> spam, it goes to $HOME/Maildir/.Spam/ This assumes you are using the 
> Maildir mailbox format, which I am.
>
> Greg
>
>
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