I have dbmail setup for 1800 users. Mandrake 9.2 Dbmail 1.2 (latest release) Postfix Amavis-new Fprot antivirus Horde imp webmail Mysql 4 with innodb
Running on a dell 6400 dual xeon 2.0 ghz 4gig/ram and dual raid controller 4 40gig drives as raid 5 for linux 4 40gig drives as raid 5 for mysql and horde database Its been running for 6 months with no problem Bien à vous Jacques Beaudoin Agent d'administration Les services des technologies de l'information et des communications Commission scolaire de la Pointe de l'Île Montréal, Québec, Canada Selon Forrest Aldrich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > We also want to take the Google approach, where use of commodity > hardware could be a win-win situation. > > When you crunch the numbers, you don't need the latest-and-greatest > processor -- you need ones that will do an adequate job, at the right > price, from which you can scale at low cost. Simple, manageable. > > However, one of my concerns is the backend mailstore. The load on the > MySQL (or PostgreSQL) server could get very high here -- and it doesn't > seem anyone has done any "real world" testing of DBMail in this scenario. > > DBMail is a new project - so it still has some growing pains to work > through, as does any new project. I'd be concerned about using it in > production until such a time where things have been tweaked and the > feature-set has matured, etc. (that isn't meant to be a negative remark) > > In an Enterprise-wide setup, there really needs to be some form of > balancing between multiple DB's (or mailstores, however you refer to it). > > I've read about mail.com's setup, where they cache inbound mail into an > mbox file, until the user logs in, at which point the mail is then piped > into the database server - thus reducing the overall load on the server. > > Frankly, I'm also concerned about MySQL's performance under such > potentially harsh conditions. That remains to be seen. > > I'm hoping some others will speak up and participate in a useful way in > this thread. This is how a project such as this can gain momentum. > > There are probably very few of us who have actually implemented > Enterprise-wide mail infrastructures -- there are some useful docs on > the net, but a situation like this is really one that needs to be > customized per the situation. I had a couple of good people chatting > with me when I was considering Qmail, but they disappeared when I > mentioned our company would be using Postfix. Not very helpful. > > > > Forrest > > > Kevin Baker wrote: > > >Forrest, > > > >(Long reply) > >I am also a new dbmail user and testing options. We are > >definitely moving forward with an implementation of dbmail > >with similar requirements. We are just now setting up our > >test environment. > > > >Basically my major concerns with a solution are fail over > >and scalability. We explored a number of options that > >would load balance by segmenting mailboxes into server > >clusters. Each cluster being inexpensive machines with > >large local drives. One primary, one secondary (hot spare) > >server. This would give us scalability and reasonable fail > >over. > > > > > >OPTIONS: > > > >---postfix+cyrus murder---- > >While it seems to solve most problems, the setup is very > >complex... with little support for RDBMS that would helps > >with central account administration. Plus cyrus docs flat > >out say not to use NAS... only SAN, significantly > >increasing overhead. > > > > > >---postfix+cyrus+mysql--- > >Got the mysql for settings and other but for fail over we > >would need to implement something like DRBD at the > >filesystem level. This seems like a good option, but would > >require a very custom OS configuration to handle the > >DRBD... DRDB also seems to require a high throughput > >dedicated connection between cluster nodes for any > >performance... we can't provide that. > > > > > >---postfix+dbmail+mysql--- > >This seems to solve everything and is easy to setup. 2 > >node clusters. Each cluster having a primary and > >secondary. Secondary uses standard mysql replication with > >primary as "master" giving us a hot spare. We will > >probably look into master master replication over the > >cluster in the future if things go well. > > > >We will be using simple ip takeover to handle fail over to > >the secondary if the primary goes down. > > > >Mail is then routed through postfix to the correct server > >cluster based on mysql configuration for load balancing. > >So to scale we just add a cluster every x number of users. > >No need for remote storage solutions... we will get better > >performance off the cheap local drives, have fail over > >through the cluster and scale by adding clusters. Each > >cluster is so cheap it seems to offset the advantage of > >SAN or NAS... although that was definitely something we > >were looking at early on. > > > >This also has the advantage of low initial overhead. We > >can easily start with a single cluster and just add as we > >go. > > > >So that it... we are still testing but it looks good so > >far. No real benchmarks yet. I will likely post in the > >next week or so as we complete more testing. > > > >The major down side I see for you is storage.. where you > >are looking to offer GB+ per user.. I would guess you > >*will* likely need a SAN or NAS solution... I'd love to > >hear about MySQL performance over NAS... that would make > >this solution even more interesting. > > > >Hope this helps.. I'm psyched to see this as a discussion > >item. The more discussion we get the more this > >configuration can be refined... tested. Love to see a > >howto focused specifically around this topic.. I'll have a > >lot to contrib soon. > > > > > >Kevin Baker > >Mission Vi Inc. > >http://www.missionvi.com > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >>I'm going to guess that DBMail isn't yet ready for > >>prime-time. It > >>doesn't appear to have the benefit (yet) of wide-spread > >>exposure to > >>Enterprise-scale environments. > >> > >>It's an approach I had been considering, as a possible > >>solution to the > >>many issues I find myself facing with a "standard" > >>configuration (which > >>is inevitably more complex). > >> > >>I see problems with system load on the database server at > >>high-peak -- > >>without a plan to load balance, in whatever way, this > >>could downspiral > >>quickly. No single point of failure is a goal I have for > >>my design (as > >>much as possible). > >> > >>It would be cool to have GMail's GFS for this project ;-) > >> But I don't > >>see that happening anytime soon.. ;-) > >> > >>There are other projects out there - like GFS from RedHat, > >>open-sourced > >>-- which is more geared toward SAN. One of the goals of > >>my design is to > >>keep it simple, if possible -- manageability is a desired > >>end-result. > >> > >> > >>Thanks, > >>Forrest > >> > >> > >> > >> > >>Paul J Stevens wrote: > >> > >> > >> > >>>Forrest Aldrich wrote: > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>o IMAP sort and indexing - the load this would create > >>>>on the system - > >>>>this is a major concern; could this be distributed > >>>>amoungst different > >>>>databases to load-balance? > >>>> > >>>> > >>>Sort and search is currently implemented in the database > >>>client > >>>(dbmail-imapd), not serverside. This makes searching and > >>>sorting at > >>>present very slow when it concerns many messages. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>o Distributing the accounts evenly across the backend > >>>>server(s) and > >>>>which filesystem to use > >>>> > >>>> > >>>Dbmail doesn't use the filesystem for storage, just the > >>>database. > >>> > >>>Dbmail currently only uses a single storage database. > >>>Using mysql's > >>>replication with automatic fallover is easy, but running > >>>a > >>>multi-master setup won't work due to possible overlap in > >>>generated > >>>message id's. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>o DBmail supports multiple databases - we need some > >>>>load balancing > >>>>with reasonable tcp/ip cutoff points > >>>> to avoid any downspiral performance issues - no > >>>>single point of > >>>>failure. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>Well, there's been talk of using sqlrelay for something > >>>like that. But > >>>at present the sqlrelay driver setup is on the wishlist > >>>only. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>o Quotas - how granular is DBMail's quota - we'd like > >>>>to offer x GB > >>>>of space per user, and aggregate that amoungst an > >>>>offering of 8 > >>>>mailboxes per "master account" - the logical approach > >>>>to this? > >>>> > >>>> > >>>Quota are per mailbox. There is no concept of groups in > >>>the code, only > >>>an unused client_id field in the usertable. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>o Capacity monitoring > >>>> > >>>> > >>>Indeed, wouldn't a snmp driver be nice. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>o Deliver to the DB immediately or to a temp mbox file, > >>>>then to the > >>>>db upon login? Concerned about the load on the > >>>>database server(s) > >>>> > >>>> > >>>As said dbmail doesn't do filebased storage. That would > >>>directly > >>>conflict with it's distributed nature: the dbmail > >>>frontend handling > >>>the delivery may well be a very different machine from > >>>the one > >>>handling the imap connect. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>>>Are there any Enterprise-scale implementations of > >>>>DBMail at this time? > >>>> > >>>> > >>>Hmm, Ilja? > >>> > >>>Sorry, but dbmail aint gmail just yet :-) > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>_______________________________________________ > >>Dbmail mailing list > >>Dbmail@dbmail.org > >>https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail > >> > >> > >> > > > >_______________________________________________ > >Dbmail mailing list > >Dbmail@dbmail.org > >https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Dbmail mailing list > Dbmail@dbmail.org > https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail >