I too migrated to Zimbra for more or less the same / similar reasons.
One of the mail reasons for me migrating was that email has changed
too dramatically over the last five years, with special consideration
to storage and storage management. Offering 1.5m users 1Gb+ mailboxes
cost effectively could never be possible with qmail-ldap. It was a
good qmail-ldap 6 years while it lasted though.

On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 2:13 AM, Ace Suares <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 02/02/2010 06:01 PM, Hugo Monteiro wrote:
>>
>> Claudio et al,
>>
>> For some time now i've been wondering if there are any plans to enhance
>> Qmail-LDAP in a near future.
>>
>> Some improvements that come to my mind regard the possibility to adopt
>> some anti-spam solutions into the code tree, ipv6 support, LDAP code
>> rewrite to be compliant with the latest OpenLDAP API and changes in the
>> build process to be able to lower the dependencies of binary code on the
>> build host.
>>
>> With the release of Qmail code into the public domain, by DJB over two
>> years ago, i was also wondering if there are plans to start releasing
>> Qmail-LDAP as a standalone project, to be distributed as whole solution,
>> and not just as a patch for Qmail.
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Hugo Monteiro.
>>
> Second that.
> I'm using Zimbra now more and more, but qmail-ldap was the original
> lifesaver regarding non-system users mail. I configured it in 2000 and it's
> still running with exact the same config now, 10 yrs later. GREAT software.
> Could be modernized. Not capable of spending time on it except for testing
> and documentation.
>
> Claudio et al, a billion thanks for what you have achieved.
>
>
>
>



-- 
Scott Ryan
http://bonoboslr.wordpress.com/

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