It does take over the function, but to the best of my knowledge is
doesn't replace it in the stock install of qmt, unless things have
changed. As far as I know, Spamdyke has to be installed on it's own.
Hopefully someone will correct me if I'm wrong, haven't kept up with
things the last couple
Oh! So spamdyke has replaced the old blacklists config?
So, the wiki page on RBLs should probably point to
http://wiki.qmailtoaster.net/index.php/Spamdyke and the entry on RBLs on
the Spamdyke page should have 'check-dnsrbl' swapped out for
'dns-blacklist-entry' as it looks like the name of that
On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 2:38 PM, Eric Broch wrote:
> Right off the top, what OS are you using?
>
CentOS Linux release 7.3.1611 (Core)
> I'm not sure why you wouldn't have a blacklists file.
>
Built a clean qmailtoaster on 1/29 using the docs on the site and the
install tools downloaded on t
That's where is is on my centos 5 boxes, haven't upgraded them just yet.
But it's irrelevant if you are running spamdyke, as blocklists are
configured within spamdyke directly if you have it installed.
Not sure if there's an easier way, but I just do a tail -n 100
/var/log/qmail/smtp/current
Right off the top, what OS are you using? I'm not sure why you wouldn't
have a blacklists file.
On 2/13/2017 3:10 PM, Chris wrote:
I followed the instructions at
http://wiki.qmailtoaster.com/index.php/RBLs for adding RBLs. There
wasn't a file named /var/qmail/control/blacklists with a defaul
I followed the instructions at http://wiki.qmailtoaster.com/index.php/RBLs
for adding RBLs. There wasn't a file named /var/qmail/control/blacklists
with a default of '-r sbl.spamhaus.org' but I went ahead and created it
with the content '-r zen.spamhaus.org -r list.dsbl.org -r combined.njabl.org
It is that simple!
Roundcube comes with EPEL
yum install epel-release (which was installed with QMT/CentOS 7)
yum install php-mysql
yum install roundcubemail
Again, look at the top of the page, here:
http://www.qmailtoaster.com/extras.html
On 2/13/2017 1:27 PM, Angus McIntyre wrote:
On
> On Feb 13, 2017, at 2:57 PM, CarlC Internet Services Service Desk
> wrote:
> Cool, I was always interested in Roundcube.
>
> Any gotcha's on installation? Or do I just "yum install roundcube" [Doubt
> it's that easy or I would be that lucky] :) ?
I don’t know if it’s as simple as ‘yum instal
http://www.qmailtoaster.com/extras.html
top of page
On 2/13/2017 12:57 PM, CarlC Internet Services Service Desk wrote:
Dan,
Cool, I was always interested in Roundcube.
Any gotcha's on installation? Or do I just "yum install roundcube" [Doubt
it's that easy or I would be that lucky] :) ?
Tha
Dan,
Cool, I was always interested in Roundcube.
Any gotcha's on installation? Or do I just "yum install roundcube" [Doubt
it's that easy or I would be that lucky] :) ?
Thanks!
Carl
-Original Message-
From: Dan McAllister
Roundcube is the service most of my clients prefer.
It will wor
Roundcube is the service most of my clients prefer.
It will work with either Courier or Dovecot
It can work side-by-side with other webmail options (that's how I determined
that my clients prefer RC -- I let them choose!
Dan
-Original Message-
From: CarlC Internet Services Service Desk [m
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