Assuming you use Apache of course :
Thomas Madej
Furi Enterprises
http://furi.ca/
On 1-Mar-04, at 4:07 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eduardo M. Bragatto wrote:
Rick Widmer wrote:
There are two ways to run the extension that I know of.
o Start a separate instance of Apache on its own port or
Eduardo M. Bragatto wrote:
Rick Widmer wrote:
There are two ways to run the extension that I know of.
o Start a separate instance of Apache on its own port or IP address,
running as the mail user. This instance should only serve mail related
pages. This is very easy to do.
o Don't
o Start a separate instance of Apache on its own port or IP address,
running as the mail user. This instance should only serve mail
related
pages. This is very easy to do.
o Don't allow any web sites on the mail server. Only run QmailAdmin
and
sqWebmail on the mail server, and
Another problem, if you allow the www user access to the vpopmail
programs - how do you keep every web site on the server from having full
access to mail system? The vpopmail library functions don't provide
authentication. (They do provide functions for doing authentication,
but the calling
Marcin Soltysiak wrote:
Another problem, if you allow the www user access to the vpopmail
programs - how do you keep every web site on the server from having full
access to mail system? The vpopmail library functions don't provide
authentication. (They do provide functions for doing
Another problem, if you allow the www user access to the vpopmail
programs - how do you keep every web site on the server from having full
access to mail system? The vpopmail library functions don't provide
authentication. (They do provide functions for doing authentication,
but the calling
On 22-Feb-04, at 7:29 PM, Marcin Soltysiak wrote:
o Start a separate instance of Apache on its own port or IP address,
running as the mail user. This instance should only serve mail
related
pages. This is very easy to do.
o Don't allow any web sites on the mail server. Only run QmailAdmin
Eduardo M. Bragatto wrote:
Rick Widmer wrote:
There are two ways to run the extension that I know of.
o Start a separate instance of Apache on its own port or IP address,
running as the mail user. This instance should only serve mail related
pages. This is very easy to do.
o Don't allow any
Thomas Madej wrote:
On 22-Feb-04, at 7:29 PM, Marcin Soltysiak wrote:
sudo with PHP extension? When PHP is a module? How?
Solt
Via PHP's CGI module.
Please try it and let me know how it works!
Personally, I am quite happy keeping general web sites off the mail
server, and running PHP
On 22-Feb-04, at 8:04 PM, Rick Widmer wrote:
Thomas Madej wrote:
On 22-Feb-04, at 7:29 PM, Marcin Soltysiak wrote:
sudo with PHP extension? When PHP is a module? How?
Solt
Via PHP's CGI module.
Please try it and let me know how it works!
Personally, I am quite happy keeping general
Alejandro Aguilar Sierra wrote:
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004, Rick Widmer wrote:
There are now 21 functions available to access and update information
about email addresses. To work they must be run as the vpopmail user.
I do it by running apache under the mail user. Hopefully there are
other
There is now a sneak peek at the updated PHP extension for vpopmail
available on my test web site:
http://kimberly.developersdesk.com/vpopmail.php.tar.gz
Basic installation instructions are in INSTALL.
You should read README, NEWS and TODO.
There are now 21 functions available to access
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004, Rick Widmer wrote:
There is now a sneak peek at the updated PHP extension for vpopmail
available on my test web site:
http://kimberly.developersdesk.com/vpopmail.php.tar.gz
Basic installation instructions are in INSTALL.
You should read README, NEWS and TODO.
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