On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 9:14 PM, Jeff <jpli...@nobaloney.net> wrote:
>
> Now I'm trying to decide on the architecture of the current store.

I'll answer one small portion of this.  If you're using Dovecot and if
you're using local drives (or SAN or iSCSI) you definitely need to use
the native dovecot mailstore with the indexes.  It will greatly speed
up the experience your IMAP client provides.  If you use NFS, you
can't use the indexes (locking issues) and you might as well just use
any maildir based imap client at that point.


> business.stuff@, personal.stuff@, vendor.stuff@, magazine.stuff@, all for
> only one domain, and other email addresses as forwarders, temporarily, until
> we can get rid of them.
>
> Or
>
> one.email.addr...@one.example.com
>
> with everything else forwarded to it.  This would give me (I think) an easier
> file store to navigate; imap otherwise will give me multiple inboxes, sent
> messages, spam folders, and the like.

Do both!  It requires double the storage, but then you can use
whichever method works better for you.

...Todd
-- 
The total budget at all receivers for solving senders' problems is $0.
 If you want them to accept your mail and manage it the way you want,
send it the way the spec says to. --John Levine
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