On Mon, Jul 03, 2006 at 06:25:52PM -0400, Nick Holland wrote: > FTP wrote: > >On Mon, Jul 03, 2006 at 08:49:03PM +0200, Sigfred Heversen wrote: > >>Stuart Henderson wrote: > >>>On 2006/07/03 13:52, Nick Holland wrote: > >>> > >>>>(contrast this to Squirrelmail, which does (amazingly) run in a > >>>>chroot > >>> > >>>Same for Hastymail and Roundcube. I guess it's not too much of a > >>>stretch with IMP either (though I haven't actually used IMP > >>>recently enough to have checked chroot). > >>> > >>In tree mail/imp depends on devel/horde that has exploit(s) in the > >>wild. > >> > >>/Sigfred > >> > > > >I had a look on IMP and looks fine to me cause you can have POP3 too > >as well. I actually dodn't intend to isntall an IMAP server. > > Using IMP to avoid an IMAP server is like cutting off your hands because > you don't wish to trim your fingernails. A Bit Drastic, I do think. > And similarly crippling, as IMP is less than 100% effective without > IMAP, apparently: > http://www.horde.org/imp/docs/?f=INSTALL.html > "IMAP is recommended over POP3 in order to let users maintain mail > folders other than INBOX and is required to allow messages to be > flagged. IMAP is also much faster than POP3 in displaying a mailbox of > messages. In short, do not use POP3 unless IMAP is not available." > > If you want IMP, IMAP is the least of your tasks. I think once you have > IMP configured, you will forget that IMAP was even involved. > > >As a result is IMP a good solution for a small e-mail server? > > I've never got IMP all the way running...but I very quickly came to the > conclusion that "small" and IMP or any other Horde-based product have > nothing to do with each other. > > That's not to say that IMP isn't a (potentially) cool product, and I'd > like to come back to it, but the setup and config is much more > "involved" than I'd find justified for a "small" e-mail server. > > OpenWebmail is very charming because of how very little it needs to > bring into base OpenBSD to get working. I set it up for a school of > about 200 students on a PII-450, worked well (once I set up MASSIVE > amounts of swap space...having 25 students change their PWs at the same > time burned through something like 600M of RAM+swap very > quickly...swap-to-file to the rescue!). I must say, at this point, > being not written in PHP is starting to look Really Nice, too. > > Nick. >
bottom line, your suggestion is to stick with openwebmail (if I don't want to intsall IMAP) and run 'insecure' apache? Would that be a 'good' solution for a small e-mail server? Thanks George