I've got a fairly small user set, but 1.) there's a lot of travel involved for some, 2.) there's a desire to have the ability to check mail from home and work and not worry about folder/message sync problems, and 3.) we've got new security requirements being implemented on us. This is why I opted for IMAP rather the POP (good for 1 & 2), and #3 is the reason that even though we have a pretty small user community ( <50) we're not giving them login accounts on the new mail server. However I didn't feel that a database backend was really justified, in terms of setup and maintenance time, for such a small set.
However, I'm just getting into this so any words of wisdom would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Tony
On 7/6/06, Jay Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, July 6, 2006 11:42 am, Tony Stocker wrote:
> Okay, thanks very much for the information. Now I can stop chasing one
> imaginary bunny and start chasing a real one! :) Based on other things
> that I've read, I'm assuming that both sqwebmail and squirrelmail have the
> password change functionality.
You will need the courierpassd daemon (http://www.arda.homeunix.net/store/
) in order to use Squirrelmail's poppass password changing plugin ( I
belive it's one of the included plugins with v1.4+). I still strongly
suggest you look at using MySQL or LDAP instead of UserDB, if you do,
you'll thank me in 3 years...
Jay
--
Jay Lee
Network / Systems Administrator
Information Technology Dept.
Philadelphia Biblical University
--
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