-----Original Message-----
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Wolf Tombe
Sent: Saturday,
October 23, 2004 4:49 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail]
iMail, Declude and Killer Web Mail Installation Question
Thanks guys! This was exactly the
type of advice I was looking for. One quick follow on question, are their
any recommendations or calculations I should use for determining the amount of space
to allocate for spool and logging directories as compared to main/user
directory size? Since I have roughly 130 Gb to use for iMail. Would
allocating 100Gb for user and iMail program area and 15 Gb each for logging and
spooling be reasonable, not-enough or overkill?
Wolf
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark E. Smith
Sent: Friday, October
22, 2004 2:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] iMail,
Declude and Killer Web Mail Installation Question
Adding to this, I use the mounted volume
feature (added in W2000 and to Unix on day 1) so that the filesystem
seems seamless to Imail/Declude/Sniffer, etc.
For example, I have the following volumes:
C:\ System
e:\ Imail
F:\ Imail Spool ---
Mounted to e:\imail\spool
g:\ Declude
Junkmail/virus Log Files -- Mounted to e:\imail\DecludeLogs
h:\ SpamChk
Logs -- Mounted to e:\imail\spamchk\spamchklogs
Config files just use e:\imail\blah blah
to reference everything.
That way if I want to change something or
just revert to a single filesystem I don't need to change config files.
It's probably not necessary but this helps
cut down on NTFS corruption and DR times by putting everything on its own
filesystem.
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Darin Cox
Sent: Friday, October
22, 2004 12:16 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail]
iMail, Declude and Killer Web Mail Installation Question
Separate, most definitely. OS should always be
separate from other services, and each service should be in it's own partition,
sometimes even it's own drive.
I would do 8GB for the OS (you can get away with less, but
it depends on how much other software will be loaded), and have two or three
IMail partitions.
One IMail partition for the main install, and a separate
partition (preferably separate drives, but if you're setting up RAID you've
already gone a different route) each for spool and logging. As to size of
each partition, it depends on your expected volume, but generally smaller spool
partitions are better as long as they are adequate to the volume.
By putting spool, logging, and main installation on separate
drives, you get better performance due to dedicated channels for each type of
traffic, and also make it easier to defragment each partition.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, October
22, 2004 12:01 PM
Subject: [Declude.JunkMail]
iMail, Declude and Killer Web Mail Installation Question
I’m getting ready to setup a new mail server.
I’ve purchased a Dell PowerEdge server with RAID 1 and two 148Gb drives
and will be using Windows 2003 Enterprise edition as
the OS. My question has to do with partitioning the drives. Does
anyone have a recommendation as to whether I should create a small (say 4 to 8
Gb) partition just for the OS and then a larger separate partition for iMail,
declude and KWM? Or should I just create one large partition for
everything?
I’d like to install this system to the highest
standards I can right out the gate. Since this list is one of the best
sources for good solid professional advice, I’d really appreciate any
guidance or opinions anyone would be willing to share.
Thanks!