mail server setup
Juan Hernandez
juanhernandez98 at gmail.com
Thu Jan 7 18:21:48 EST 2016
I have a question about i-mscp.
DCan i-mscp manage multiple servers? I want my mail on its own server, the webserver on another, etc etc. can i-mscp manage this? Or do I need to have i-mscp installed on each server?
Thanks.
Juan Hernandez
Email: juanhernandez98 at gmail.com
mobile: (619) 750-9431
twitter: http://www.twitter.com/blindwiz
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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 Tony Baechler
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2016 2:22 AM
To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux. <speakup at linux-speakup.org>
Subject: Re: mail server setup
On 1/6/2016 11:49 AM, Juan Hernandez wrote:
> I wanted to know what you guys recommended for setups?
>
> I need webmail, imap, virtual domains, spam/antivirus protection, etc.
If you're running Debian or Ubuntu, I recommend I-MSCP. It's a web-based control panel which lets you add mail users, manage domains, etc similar to a web hosting company. We're hosting several domains with lots of email addresses and never had a problem. The installer is very accessible. The web interface leaves a little to be desired, but works fine in Firefox and Lynx. It uses Postfix and automatically downloads and installs packages, so it's best ran on a minimal system. The control panel is isolated from Apache, so if your web server goes down, your control panel should stay up.
You can customize some aspects of what it installs. http://i-mscp.net/ There is also Virtualmin which is part of Webmin, but I don't recommend it.
Webmin lets you customize most major mail servers with a web-based configuration, but I think it has too much bloat and isn't as accessible.
Virtualmin is similar to a control panel, but again, much harder to use and less accessible. http://www.webmin.com/ Having used Postfix, Exim and Qmail, I like Postfix and Qmail best. I found Exim harder to configure, but the Debian packages automate much of it for you.
>
> I was reading a site, and I came across citadel groupware and liked its features. Have any of you ever set it up?
>
Yes and I don't recommend it. It's not at all accessible with Lynx. I don't remember if I tried it in Firefox, but I remember it was too complicated and I didn't like it. If you want a similar feature set which is very accessible, try Synchronet. It was a dial-up BBS package as was Citadel, but is now telnet and web-based. It's natively built for Windows but runs on Linux and FreeBSD. http://synchro.net/ _______________________________________________
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