A list of mailinglists for Cyrus can be found here: http://asg.web.cmu.edu/cyrus/mailing-list.html
Cheers, Trevor Shawn Grover said: > Thanks Jesse and Ian. I'll check out the alternatives you mentioned. > I'm also going to be doing a search for "cyrus crash" and see what it > leads me to. I would think that Cyrus and Postfix have been around for > a while, and are relatively stable, so I shouldn't be having these sort > of problems (on an established distro). But, I'm also sure these are > likely issues someone has had to deal with before. > > Does anyone have any URLs to a mailing list for Cyrus? I know there's > one for postfix at postfix.org. > > Thanks muchly. > > Shawn > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Jesse Kline [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, March 10, 2003 10:35 AM > To: CLUG TALK > Subject: Re: (clug-talk) Email server problems - Cyrus > > > On Mon, 2003-03-10 at 09:51, Shawn Grover wrote: >> When I run the cyradm application I get prompted for a password. I >> enter the password of my cyrus user, then the app pauses for a bit and >> returns a "Segmentation Fault" (going from memory, hope I got the >> wording right). A search of Google reveals very few references to >> this, and those seem to be referring to a different situation. So, >> I'm stuck when comes to adding users/mailboxes to cyrus IMAP. > > A segmentation fault is pretty much a generic crash. You should do a > search for a crash in your situation, otherwise there are many other > programs that crash :-). You also have the option of running it through > a debugger to get some more insight. > >> Also, could someone who has setup the postfix/cyrus IMAP combination >> send > me >> a point form list of the steps necessary? I'm sure I've missed >> something > as >> I still get connection refused on the SMTP port. > > I'm sorry I cannot help you here, I have never set that up before. > >> Out of curiosity, is there not an "Email Server" package out there >> that > you >> can install, and it handles everything including the MTA, and POP3, >> IMAP, etc. From my perspective thus far, it seems that installing an >> email > server >> is tougher than it needs to be. > > There are a number of commercial e-mail servers available including an > offering from SuSE > (http://www.suse.com/us/business/products/suse_business/openexchange/index.h > tml) and one from SCO (http://www.sco.com/products/SCOoffice/mail/). > There are of course a number of free e-mail servers out there. You might > want to try installing one that is a little more common, as there may be > more people on this list that could help you out. Maybe try > Sendmail/imapd. You might also want to look into a GUI front end for > doing some of your configuration. I would check out Webmin as they have > front ends for many different servers (http://www.webmin.com/). > > Good luck, > > Jesse > -- > Jesse Kline, RHCT > http://www3.telus.net/public/klinej/resume.html
