One more thing, I did a quick search and it appears that they are now supporting 6.x code...have you given that a try yet...I already have a centos 6.2 vmware template that would make it quick and easy to spool up... On Tue, Mar 13, 2012 at 1:56 PM, Nataraj <incoming-centos at rjl.com> wrote: > On 03/13/2012 11:28 AM, Tom Bishop wrote: > > Nataraj > > > > I need something for a very small shop and have been looking...been > > reading the comments. Is vpostmaster easy to setup and maintain, I'm > > looking for something lightweight and works for spam, I support them > after > > hours and looking for something that just works.... > Vpostmaster is very easy to setup, provided you start with a clean linux > install (CentOS is good choice). Don't install it on a system where > you've already installed postfix, dovecot etc. For a small site it runs > very well in a VM. A VM is certainly adequate for testing. > > I have done some customization to my config, but I don't really think > that's necessary for most small sites. It's certainly better then > piecing together all the components yourself. The install package will > provide you with a working postfix, dovecot, greylisting, clamav, > spamassassin, spf etc and you can always add any additional postfix > compatibile addons. The commercial version is still open source and gets > a few extra features over the free version. I currently run the free > version, but I like the author and plan to spring for the commercial > version. > > http://www.tummy.com/Products/vpostmaster > > There are a 2 or 3 alternatives that provide an integrated mail system > based on postfix. I looked at them a while back and all were less > attractive to me. I'd have to dig up their names, but one is a package > in the fedora repositories. I think it's written in java. Sounded like > a nightmare to me. > > Nataraj > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >