I used postfixadmin and it has been fine. (CentOS 5) I suggest redirecting (in the http server) all postfixadmin access to https for security. I found the db schema satisfactory for my needs. The point with postfixadmin is the PHP interface to the database. You /could/ just create whatever tables you needed and edit them with phpMyAdmin, but postfixadmin gives you a simple interface that users and domain admins can use. kalinix wrote: > On Mon, 2008-05-05 at 22:31 -0400, Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote: > >> Hi All, >> >> I'm toying around with Postfix and MySQL on a CentOS 4 server (no longer >> using stock postfix and mysql rpms, obviously). I've read several >> "How-TOs", and it all looks fairly easy to do. >> >> The one thing that puzzles me is the table structure for the postfix >> mysql database: where is everyone getting it? Also, I've noticed that >> some people create more tables than others. But, this looks like it's >> just based on which bits of postfix people want to put into the >> database. >> >> I can just copy the SQL people have posted to create the tables I want. >> I'd much rather know if there is an official source for this, though. So >> far I haven't found it. >> >> Regards, >> >> Ranbir >> >> > > > Maybe postfixadmin (http://postfixadmin.sourceforge.net/) would help? at > least as a starting point... > > > Just my 2c > > > Calin > > ================================================= > Education is learning what you didn't even know you didn't know. -- > Daniel J. Boorstin > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > -- Liam Kirsher PGP: http://liam.numenet.com/pgp/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20080506/e7be6da3/attachment-0005.html>