Karanbir Singh wrote:
> Ralph Angenendt wrote:
>>> how about just have logwatch use a mua and have that use a remote
>>> smtp server ( mutt works well ).
>>
>> Since when is the mutt in base compiled with esmtp support?
>
> must it be from base :D
Not necessarily :P
Ralph
pgpeKR9XqU0Fw.pgp
Des
Ralph Angenendt wrote:
how about just have logwatch use a mua and have that use a remote smtp
server ( mutt works well ).
Since when is the mutt in base compiled with esmtp support?
must it be from base :D
- KB
--
Karanbir Singh : http://www.karan.org/ : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
_
Karanbir Singh wrote:
> Brett Serkez wrote:
>> For a production environment, I'd like to setup CentOS XEN guests as
>> lightweight as possible. I'd like the XEN guests to be able to send
>> nightly email as all CentOS servers do, but there is no reason to run
>> a mail server as the CentOS Dom0 al
Brett Serkez wrote:
All,
For a production environment, I'd like to setup CentOS XEN guests as
lightweight as possible. I'd like the XEN guests to be able to send
nightly email as all CentOS servers do, but there is no reason to run
a mail server as the CentOS Dom0 already has an email server ru
Brett Serkez wrote:
> Does anyone on this list have experience running a minimal MTA? What
> other options/software should I be looking at? Any other insights,
> suggestions or insights?
I run postfix on all of my vmware VMs with this minimal config:
/etc/postfix/main.cf -
queue_directory = /v
I like exim for this purpose. I used to run a number of high performance
clusters and some of the nodes needed to send status information via e-mail.
Exim was just right for me. It is also pretty easy to configure.
http://www.exim.org/
Geoff Galitz
Blankenheim NRW, Deutschland
http://www.gal
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