I don`t know about jmail, but as Far as James, I`ve stress tested it
with over 10,000
emails one right after another to different accounts on a relatively low
resource machine.
800mghtz celeron + 256MB sdram on FreeBSD 4.6.2 with the Native build of
jdk1.3.1p7
I didn`t lose any messages and have had it running for about a month.
I am about to replace our current setup of Sendmail + Squirrell mail,
but haven`t had time to evaluate
Jmail. In all honesty, Sendmail is faster on my benchmarker, but I often
build Linux , BSD, NT, and 2000
servers for my clients and James really solves the cross platform problem as
well as cost and SMTP_AUTH. SMTP_AUTH and ease of configuration was the real
selling point for me. I spent way to many months learning to config
sendmail, and about 3 hours to learn James to a useable level.
----- Original Message -----
From: "serwa akoto quarshie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "James Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2002 4:47 PM
Subject: RE: JAMES support +1000 users?
>
>
> Hello everybody,
> I pretty new to the world of mail servers.
> What I basically want is a stable free java based mail server, which
> provides APIs that can be called from within a portal and can cache data
in
> a windows environment
> I would however be most grateful if some one could give me review on jmail
> and James. I'm looking at java proxy as a proxy server as well.
> Comparative advantages with respective these issues will be a great help
> thank you.
> Stability
> Cost implications (money, time, resource)
> Any alternatives suggestions are welcome. Time is my most precious
resource
> now.
> Thank you.
>
>
>
>
>
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