RE: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-19 Thread Dale Scott
 sysutils/webmin will work without much configuration.  Some of the other
 more traditional one like squirrelmail will work as well, but some extra
config
 may be required.

Webmin++ (and just plain handy for a whole lot more!)

Dale


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Re: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-18 Thread Adam Vande More
On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 11:23 AM, Errol Sayre esa...@olemiss.edu wrote:

 Does anyone know of a webmail product that can provide access to local
 system accounts? Even if it's just a script that runs /usr/bin/mail on
 behalf of the user.

 I'd like a simple way to access local system emails without having to
 forward them to an actual mailbox
 somewhere.___freebsd-questions@freebsd.org


sysutils/webmin will work without much configuration.  Some of the other
more traditional one like squirrelmail will work as well, but some extra
config may be required.

-- 
Adam Vande More
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Re: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-18 Thread Errol Sayre
Are you sure SquirrelMail will do this? I was under the impression (from their 
requirements page) that it needs an IMAP backend.

On Nov 18, 2011, at 12:02 PM, Adam Vande More wrote:

 On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 11:23 AM, Errol Sayre esa...@olemiss.edu wrote:
 Does anyone know of a webmail product that can provide access to local system 
 accounts? Even if it's just a script that runs /usr/bin/mail on behalf of the 
 user.
 
 I'd like a simple way to access local system emails without having to forward 
 them to an actual mailbox 
 somewhere.___
 
 sysutils/webmin will work without much configuration.  Some of the other more 
 traditional one like squirrelmail will work as well, but some extra config 
 may be required.
 
 -- 
 Adam Vande More

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Re: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-18 Thread Daniel Staal

On Fri, November 18, 2011 2:30 pm, Errol Sayre wrote:
 Are you sure SquirrelMail will do this? I was under the impression (from
 their requirements page) that it needs an IMAP backend.

In which case you'll want an IMAP server that can serve the local system
accounts.  Not hard to set up.

Daniel T. Staal

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Re: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-18 Thread Julian H. Stacey
Hi,
Reference:
 From: Errol Sayre esa...@olemiss.edu 
 Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2011 17:23:26 + 
 Message-id:   fab6ea27-2c6d-43f0-bddd-ca83b5226...@olemiss.edu 

Errol Sayre wrote:
 Does anyone know of a webmail product that can provide access to local system 
 accounts? Even if it's just a script that runs /usr/bin/mail on behalf of the 
 user.

Did you try /usr/ports/mail/openwebmail ? (Needs apache) Runs OK here.

 I'd like a simple way to access local system emails without having to forward 
 them to an actual mailbox 
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Cheers,
Julian
-- 
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 Reply below not above, cumulative like a play script,  indent with  .
 Format: Plain text. Not HTML, multipart/alternative, base64, quoted-printable.
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Re: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-18 Thread Errol Sayre
On Nov 18, 2011, at 1:55 PM, Julian H. Stacey wrote:

 Did you try /usr/ports/mail/openwebmail ? (Needs apache) Runs OK here.

I didn't, but I think Webmin's Read Mail module will do all that I need, plus 
it has some other niceties.

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Re: Webmail for local system mail

2011-11-18 Thread perryh
Errol Sayre esa...@olemiss.edu wrote:

 Does anyone know of a webmail product that can provide access
 to local system accounts? Even if it's just a script that runs
 /usr/bin/mail on behalf of the user.

 I'd like a simple way to access local system emails without
 having to forward them to an actual mailbox somewhere.

Er, /var/mail/$USER _is_ an actual mailbox.  Depending on what
mechanism the webmail client(s) use to access mailboxes, you might
need to install a POP or IMAP server.
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Re: Webmail

2007-12-14 Thread Lisa Casey
 - Original Message - 
 From: Satria Bramana

 To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
 Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2007 9:44 PM
 Subject: Webmail




 Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give suggestion
 what package to use? I will only use it for study purpose, so I need one 
that
 easy to configure and help me understand the big picture about 
mailserver..

 Thank you very much..



I've used Null Web Mail  (http://nullwebmail.sourceforge.net/webmail/)   for 
several years. It's a very basic webmail program written in C, and it's 
pretty simple to  configure and install. It doesn't have all of the features 
that some more sophisticated web mail programs have, but what I like most 
about it is it just basically works well. We encourage our users to POP 
their mail anyway so we don't need the bells   whistles of some of the 
more full featured web mail programs.


Lisa Casey 


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Re: Webmail

2007-12-14 Thread Philip Hallstrom
Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give suggestion 
what package to use? I will only use it for study purpose, so I need one 
that easy to configure and help me understand the big picture about 
mailserver.. Thank you very much..


Roundcube is pretty slick... acts more like a real app than most of the 
others...


http://roundcube.net/
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Re: Webmail

2007-12-14 Thread Chuck Robey

Satria Bramana wrote:

Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give suggestion what 
package to use? I will only use it for study purpose, so I need one that easy 
to configure and help me understand the big picture about mailserver.. Thank 
you very much..



I use postfix and dovecot, and dovecot is in imap4 mode.  This makes it 
possible for me to use seamonkey (or really, any browser that has a mail 
interface) to pick up my mail from any location.  Does good enough 
filtering, although I am investigating adding some extra filtering via 
postfix.  Setting up dovecot/postfix is easier than most mailers (it's a 
PITA, but the others are basically worse) and there are a lot of 
examples on the web for setting the combination of postfix/dovecot up.


For security, I use ssl (openssl) and ssl has a really nice tool, 
openssl, that has among its different modes, sclient and sserver, 
which allow pretty good testing of your ssl setup, and you can find on 
the web instructions for setting up your keys (lts of examples all over).






  

Never miss a thing.  Make Yahoo your home page. 
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs

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Re: Webmail

2007-12-14 Thread Per olof Ljungmark

Satria Bramana wrote:

Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give suggestion what 
package to use? I will only use it for study purpose, so I need one that easy 
to configure and help me understand the big picture about mailserver.. Thank 
you very much..


IMP from the Horde project is an excellent web client, arguably the best.
http://www.horde.org/imp/

--per
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Re: Webmail

2007-12-13 Thread Peter Boosten

- Message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] -
Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2007 18:44:54 -0800 (PST)
From: Satria Bramana [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Satria Bramana [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Webmail
  To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org


Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give   
suggestion what package to use? I will only use it for study   
purpose, so I need one that easy to configure and help me understand  
 the big picture about mailserver.. Thank you very much..




I have running: courier-imap and squirrelmail (development version 1.5.1).
Currently I'm testing imp (within the Horde framework).

Peter

--
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Re: Webmail

2007-12-13 Thread Beech Rintoul
On Thursday 13 December 2007, Satria Bramana said:
 Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give
 suggestion what package to use? I will only use it for study
 purpose, so I need one that easy to configure and help me
 understand the big picture about mailserver.. Thank you very much..


I'd suggest horde, our version of webmail edition is the default 
settings in horde-meta. It works nicely with any mailserver IMAP, or 
POP and is very easy to configure. It can authenticate from about 10 
different sources including dealing with LDAP, so it will work with 
just about any server situation I can think of. You can look it all 
over at http://www.horde.org, and almost all of the modules are 
available in the ports for easy install.

Beech

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RE: Webmail

2007-12-13 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Beech Rintoul
 Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2007 8:45 PM
 To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
 Cc: Satria Bramana
 Subject: Re: Webmail


 On Thursday 13 December 2007, Satria Bramana said:
  Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give
  suggestion what package to use? I will only use it for study
  purpose, so I need one that easy to configure and help me
  understand the big picture about mailserver.. Thank you very much..
 

 I'd suggest horde, our version of webmail edition is the default
 settings in horde-meta. It works nicely with any mailserver IMAP, or
 POP and is very easy to configure. It can authenticate from about 10
 different sources including dealing with LDAP, so it will work with
 just about any server situation I can think of. You can look it all
 over at http://www.horde.org, and almost all of the modules are
 available in the ports for easy install.


We use IMP  (the webmail portion of Horde is IMP, not horde BTW)
and I will sing it's praises any day - it's the best webmail client
out there and has features the other webmail clients are nowhere
near providing - but to claim it's easy to configure is quite a
stretch, to say the least.

Ted
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.17.1/1183 - Release Date: 12/13/2007
9:15 AM

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RE: Webmail

2007-12-13 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Satria Bramana
 Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2007 6:45 PM
 To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
 Subject: Webmail


 Can anyone who had experience running a web-based e-mail give
 suggestion what package to use? I will only use it for study
 purpose, so I need one that easy to configure and help me
 understand the big picture about mailserver.. Thank you very much..



The simplest one out there is webmin and usermin  Easy to
install and easy to use.  Utterly lacking in any advanced features
though, but they will definitely help you to understand the big
picture about the mailserver if anything will...

Ted
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.17.1/1183 - Release Date: 12/13/2007
9:15 AM

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Re: webmail solution

2005-12-18 Thread Thomas Linton
I played with http://www.squirrelmail.org/ in combination with
postfix, which was to me pretty good. My ISP (www.inode.at) is
porviding their webmail service also via squirrelmail  (they changed
the look and feel-but it's still squirrelmail).


On 12/18/05, Olivier Nicole [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I'm looking for experiences with a webmail solution. I want to use
  postfix as my mta and on a freebsd6 machine. The users who will be using
 the
  server probably would do better with a webmail package so they can get to
 it
  from anywhere. The box already has apache and php so i don't think that'll
  be an issue. One thing i'm uncertain is whether to offer direct pop/imap
 or
  their equivalent encrypted counterparts or just do it all through webmail.

 I am using imp from the ports. It need some pop/imap to access the
 mailboxes.

 Olivier
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Re: webmail solution

2005-12-17 Thread Sasa Stupar



--On 17. december 2005 11:46 -0500 Dave [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Hello,
I'm looking for experiences with a webmail solution. I want to use
postfix as my mta and on a freebsd6 machine. The users who will be using
the server probably would do better with a webmail package so they can
get to it from anywhere. The box already has apache and php so i don't
think that'll be an issue. One thing i'm uncertain is whether to offer
direct pop/imap or their equivalent encrypted counterparts or just do it
all through webmail.
Experiences and recommendations welcome.
Thanks.
Dave.

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Squirrelmail is my choise. Works nice, easy to setup, a lot of plugins to 
add, etc. I use it with cyrus-imapd imap/pop3 server and sendmail as mta.


--
Sasa Stupar
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Re: webmail solution

2005-12-17 Thread chip
On 12/17/05, Dave [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello,
 I'm looking for experiences with a webmail solution. I want to use
 postfix as my mta and on a freebsd6 machine. The users who will be using
 the
 server probably would do better with a webmail package so they can get to
 it
 from anywhere. The box already has apache and php so i don't think that'll
 be an issue. One thing i'm uncertain is whether to offer direct pop/imap
 or
 their equivalent encrypted counterparts or just do it all through webmail.
 Experiences and recommendations welcome.
 Thanks.
 Dave.



I've always had good luck with Squirrel Mail, www.squirrelmail.org.
However,
recently the webhost I use has started offering the IMP Webmail Client,
http://www.horde.org/imp/.
And I must say it's pretty nice.

Most of what you will find is that these web based clients are simply
interface to the imap/pop servers.
That way is doesn't really mattter what you do under the hood.

--chip

Just my $.02, your mileage may vary,  batteries not included, etc
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Re: webmail solution

2005-12-17 Thread Olivier Nicole
 I'm looking for experiences with a webmail solution. I want to use 
 postfix as my mta and on a freebsd6 machine. The users who will be using the 
 server probably would do better with a webmail package so they can get to it 
 from anywhere. The box already has apache and php so i don't think that'll 
 be an issue. One thing i'm uncertain is whether to offer direct pop/imap or 
 their equivalent encrypted counterparts or just do it all through webmail.

I am using imp from the ports. It need some pop/imap to access the
mailboxes.

Olivier
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Re: Webmail Selection Setup Configuration

2005-06-15 Thread luke
 1 - Where is a good starting point to read about configuring a webmail 
 system. I have looked into SquirellMail and actually installed it but I had 
 trouble with the IMAP server and security portions of it. I was not able to 
 get it running very well because need more information on the various parts 
 of the complete system.

if IMAP is the issue, sqwebmail does not require imap, it accesses
maildir/'s directly. it is also a stable, useable product

 3 - Are there good *detailed* resources available that provide procedures on 
 how to set up a webmail system and the required / recommended components.

google probably provides tons of resources on just about any webmail
program ever made. don't search for webmail though, pick one and
search for _it_

good luck

luke
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Re: Webmail Selection Setup Configuration

2005-06-15 Thread Bob Bomar
On Wed, Jun 15, 2005 at 12:06:07PM -0700, M. Goodell wrote:
 I am looking at setting up a webmail solution on my server and I would like 
 to ask a few  questions:
  
 1 - Where is a good starting point to read about configuring a webmail 
 system. I have looked into SquirellMail and actually installed it but I had 
 trouble with the IMAP server and security portions of it. I was not able to 
 get it running very well because need more information on the various parts 
 of the complete system.

Google is a great place to start.

  
 2 - Any highly recommended solutions? Horde / SquirellMail / others?

I use postfix, cyrus-imap, horde/IMP, and SpamAssassin, and it works
great.

  
 3 - Are there good *detailed* resources available that provide procedures on 
 how to set up a webmail system and the required / recommended components.

Google is the best start.  

This is pretty good:
http://www.bsdguides.org/guides/freebsd/mailserver/imp.php


-- 
Bob Bomar
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
FreeBSD: The Power to Serve
http://www.freebsd.org



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Re: Webmail Selection Setup Configuration

2005-06-15 Thread Iavor Raytchev
 I am looking at setting up a webmail solution on
 my server and I would like to ask a few  questions:

...

 2 - Any highly recommended solutions? Horde /
 SquirellMail / others?

We use Squirrelmail for 2-3 years for 50+ domains and
500+ e-mail accounts and it behaves very well. There
are quite interesting plug-ins for Squirrelmail.

 3 - Are there good *detailed* resources available
 that provide procedures on how to set up a webmail
 system and the required / recommended components.

Squirrelmail has very nice IRC where you can ask
questions - see on the web site www.squirrelmail.org -
irc.freenode... and then #squirrelmail.

Iavor





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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-11 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Peter Risdon
 Sent: Monday, January 10, 2005 1:32 AM
 To: Ted Mittelstaedt
 Cc: Colin J. Raven; FreeBSD Questions
 Subject: RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.


 
 Surely the easiest way to deal with a horde installation on FreeBSD is
 to install the ports, 

Now, yes.  Then, no - as the versions of the various bits in the ports
had security holes in them.  And also IMP wasn't completely in the
ports dirs when I first started dealing with it.

Ted
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-10 Thread Peter Risdon
On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 22:17 -0800, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 09:59 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
   
Use IMP.
  [...]
  
   Now you mention it, I seem to recall a shedload of issues if you had to
   download the source and build it by hand. There were definite
  gotchas in
   that process I believe.
  
  
 
  How so? It's PHP. There's nothing to build.
 
 
 There were a number of gotchas that were serious EARLIER ON.
 Here's a list of the ones I ran into:

OK, I see what you mean. I was strictly correct and a lot of these
gotchas have nothing to do with IMP, but that's not much help to someone
who actually has to get a working installation of horde/IMP in real
life.

Surely the easiest way to deal with a horde installation on FreeBSD is
to install the ports, so dependencies including the necessary PHP
extensions are pulled in for you, php.ini is updated properly as the
install goes along, paths in config files are correct, program names are
appropriate and so on. then replace scripts and upgrade dependencies
where there are security or feature reasons to do so? And that respect,
installing IMP is no more difficult or problematic than any other
moderately complicated web based application, which is the point I was
trying to make.

I just tried this and got a working horde without any problems. BTW, it
all works fine with courier-imap as well as imap-uw.

Peter.

 
 1) The versions of IMP and Horde in the ports tree were old and had
 security holes thus had to be scratched
 
 2) X Windows is a dependency on one of the subsidiary programs so you
 have to plan your disk partition strategy.
 
 3) IMP's config file used the name wvHtml for the MS Word viewer and
 first time I ran across this I spent at least an hour finding out that
 this program had been renamed wv  (wv requires imagemagic which
 requires X and a great many other programs)
 
 4) IMP looks for user programs (like ispell) in /usr/bin not /usr/local/bin
 
 5) many issues with getting Apache mod-SSL running properly with a
 self-signed
 key  (you have to generate it manually with openssl, the apache docs that
 say use make key or whatnot don't work)
 
 6) There's no list anywhere of what drivers in php IMP needs you have to
 guess.
 (ie: ldap)
 
 7) Using a different imap server than uw-imap might cause trouble with php,
 as that port installs the uw-imap client libraries.
 
 8) All kinds of dumb-ass file naming issues with default config files from
 when php went to php4.  (ie: .php3 to .php)
 
 9) uw-imap that ports installs was old and had security hole
 
 10) php.ini and local.inc in phplib supplied by Horde has wrong pathnames in
 it
 
 11)  php.ini doesen't have extension-imap.so and mysql.so in it
 
 12) Not clear that dirs horde-1.2.3 and imp-2.2.3 need to be renamed
 horde and imp
 
 13) - the instructions place phplib into the document root, and local.inc is
 in there, so a command like:
 
 https://machinename.com/horde/phplib/local.inc
 
 Will open up the local.inc file in all its glory.  You can
 you can move phplib from /usr/local/www/htdocs/horde/phplib to
 /usr/local/www/phplib and change all the references to point to there.
 
 
 Most of these are due to misinterpretaitons of the install docs, which
 exist because the install docs were written by someone who thinks that
 concise writing  is a good thing with instructions.
 
 Ted
 
 

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Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-09 Thread Tabor Kelly
Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
snip
Pointless for us, as CAcert's root certificate isn't included in I.E., so
the
end users have to go through the same honky-tonk to include it in their
browsers as if you just make your own certs.
 

Not quite. If they include the CA-Cert root certificate, they only have 
to do that once for all of your CA-Cert signed certificates.

--
Tabor Kelly
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://tabor.taborandtashell.net
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-09 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Tabor Kelly
 Sent: Sunday, January 09, 2005 9:39 AM
 To: Ted Mittelstaedt
 Cc: Colin J. Raven; Peter Risdon; FreeBSD Questions
 Subject: Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.


 Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:

 snip

 Pointless for us, as CAcert's root certificate isn't included in I.E., so
 the
 end users have to go through the same honky-tonk to include it in their
 browsers as if you just make your own certs.
 
 
 Not quite. If they include the CA-Cert root certificate, they only have
 to do that once for all of your CA-Cert signed certificates.


Good point.

Ted

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Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-08 Thread Colin J. Raven
On Jan 7 at 23:53, Tabor Kelly launched this into the bitstream:
Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
snip
5) many issues with getting Apache mod-SSL running properly with a
self-signed
key  (you have to generate it manually with openssl, the apache docs that
say use make key or whatnot don't work)
I am not doubting you that this was an issue. But it is now documented quite 
nicely in the mod_ssl faq (http://www.modssl.org/docs/2.8/ssl_faq.html). Also 
(as a side note), I use CAcert (http://www.cacert.org) for my key signing 
needs.
Good tip, thanks for sharing it
Regards,
-Colin
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-08 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: Tabor Kelly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 11:54 PM
 To: Ted Mittelstaedt
 Cc: Peter Risdon; Colin J. Raven; FreeBSD Questions
 Subject: Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.


 Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:

 snip

  5) many issues with getting Apache mod-SSL running properly with a
  self-signed
  key  (you have to generate it manually with openssl, the apache
 docs that
  say use make key or whatnot don't work)

 I am not doubting you that this was an issue. But it is now documented
 quite nicely in the mod_ssl faq

As I said, gotchas that were serious EARLIER ON.

 (http://www.modssl.org/docs/2.8/ssl_faq.html). Also (as a side note), I
 use CAcert (http://www.cacert.org) for my key signing needs.


Pointless for us, as CAcert's root certificate isn't included in I.E., so
the
end users have to go through the same honky-tonk to include it in their
browsers as if you just make your own certs.

We use self-signed certs for a great many production items - e-mail
webinterface,
account stats, imaps, etc. basically anything that a password would go over.
Never had a customer have a problem inserting our self-signed cert into
their browser, never had any complaints about it either.

Only thing we don't do is take credit card#'s online - not because of the
SSL issues, but because our credit card processing software is so old that
we would either have to pay $500 for an update to it, or the bank requires
us to only take #'s by phone or in person.  So far nobody here has thought
up a good enough reason to pay a bank $500 for new software just to be
able to do this when the old software runs fine.  We kind of feel that since
the bank is saving money by not having to manually process a pack of CC
paper slips, that we shouldn't be the ones paying for software to help
the bank save itself money, you know?  Maybe if it was some other
vendor than a bank

Ted

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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: Peter Risdon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 2:17 AM
 To: Colin J. Raven
 Cc: Ted Mittelstaedt; FreeBSD Questions
 Subject: RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.


 On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 11:12 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
  On Jan 7 at 09:41, Peter Risdon launched this into the bitstream:
 
   On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 09:59 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
   On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
  
   Use IMP.
 [...]
 
  Now you mention it, I seem to recall a shedload of issues if you had to
  download the source and build it by hand. There were definite
 gotchas in
  that process I believe.
 
 

 How so? It's PHP. There's nothing to build.


There were a number of gotchas that were serious EARLIER ON.
Here's a list of the ones I ran into:

1) The versions of IMP and Horde in the ports tree were old and had
security holes thus had to be scratched

2) X Windows is a dependency on one of the subsidiary programs so you
have to plan your disk partition strategy.

3) IMP's config file used the name wvHtml for the MS Word viewer and
first time I ran across this I spent at least an hour finding out that
this program had been renamed wv  (wv requires imagemagic which
requires X and a great many other programs)

4) IMP looks for user programs (like ispell) in /usr/bin not /usr/local/bin

5) many issues with getting Apache mod-SSL running properly with a
self-signed
key  (you have to generate it manually with openssl, the apache docs that
say use make key or whatnot don't work)

6) There's no list anywhere of what drivers in php IMP needs you have to
guess.
(ie: ldap)

7) Using a different imap server than uw-imap might cause trouble with php,
as that port installs the uw-imap client libraries.

8) All kinds of dumb-ass file naming issues with default config files from
when php went to php4.  (ie: .php3 to .php)

9) uw-imap that ports installs was old and had security hole

10) php.ini and local.inc in phplib supplied by Horde has wrong pathnames in
it

11)  php.ini doesen't have extension-imap.so and mysql.so in it

12) Not clear that dirs horde-1.2.3 and imp-2.2.3 need to be renamed
horde and imp

13) - the instructions place phplib into the document root, and local.inc is
in there, so a command like:

https://machinename.com/horde/phplib/local.inc

Will open up the local.inc file in all itÂ’s glory.  You can
you can move phplib from /usr/local/www/htdocs/horde/phplib to
/usr/local/www/phplib and change all the references to point to there.


Most of these are due to misinterpretaitons of the install docs, which
exist because the install docs were written by someone who thinks that
concise writing  is a good thing with instructions.

Ted

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Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Tabor Kelly
Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
snip
5) many issues with getting Apache mod-SSL running properly with a
self-signed
key  (you have to generate it manually with openssl, the apache docs that
say use make key or whatnot don't work)
I am not doubting you that this was an issue. But it is now documented 
quite nicely in the mod_ssl faq 
(http://www.modssl.org/docs/2.8/ssl_faq.html). Also (as a side note), I 
use CAcert (http://www.cacert.org) for my key signing needs.

--
Tabor Kelly
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://tabor.taborandtashell.net
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Colin J. Raven
On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
Use IMP.  Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
to setup.  However, IMP is one of those programs that is worth
the effort, as if you install the entire suite of programs you
have a very powerful front end mail system.
IMP is what we use and if you want my notes from the last installation
your welcome to them.
Like others, I'd heard of the installation difficulties you made 
reference to. I'm at something of a crossroads moment right now as it 
relates to webmail, so this thread is well timed. I *was* gonna simply 
install Squirrelmail since I know it and use it elsewhere. Now perhaps 
is the time to look at an alternative. I'd welcome your IMP installation 
notes!

I *gather* (not in front of a FreeBSD box at this moment) that IMP is 
*not* in ports, otherwise (surely) installation wouldn't be *that* 
complex? Configging maybe, but install-wise ports 'apps just; slide 
right in there - usually :-)

/me is keenly anticipating install notes!! Thanks for that Ted!
Regards,
-Colin
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Jorn Argelo
On Thu, 6 Jan 2005 21:41:50 -0800, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote
 Use IMP.  Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
 to setup.  However, IMP is one of those programs that is worth
 the effort, as if you install the entire suite of programs you
 have a very powerful front end mail system.

True enough, but I never managed to get it up and running. It's a very nice 
suite indeed, if you can get it running.

I'm using Open Webmail. A powerful webmail client based on Neomail. It uses 
speedycgi, and requires suid to be compiled in your perl enviroment. You 
probably have to recomple perl, but it's still alot easier then IMP.

Jorn.

 
 IMP is what we use and if you want my notes from the last 
 installation your welcome to them.
 
 Ted
 
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Rene C. Mendoza
  Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 6:10 PM
  To: freebsd-questions
  Subject: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.
  
  
  I'm in the process of looking for a webmail frontend to my Postfix mail 
  server setup installed on FreeBSD 5.3.  I use cyrus-imap as well.  What 
  would you recommend?  I've heard of Squirrel Mail and IMP, but I don't 
  know what to choose.
  
  thanks,
  Rene
  
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Peter Risdon
On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 09:59 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
 On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
 
  Use IMP.  Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
  to setup.  However, IMP is one of those programs that is worth
  the effort, as if you install the entire suite of programs you
  have a very powerful front end mail system.
 
  IMP is what we use and if you want my notes from the last installation
  your welcome to them.
 
 
 Like others, I'd heard of the installation difficulties you made 
 reference to. I'm at something of a crossroads moment right now as it 
 relates to webmail, so this thread is well timed. I *was* gonna simply 
 install Squirrelmail since I know it and use it elsewhere. Now perhaps 
 is the time to look at an alternative. I'd welcome your IMP installation 
 notes!
 
 I *gather* (not in front of a FreeBSD box at this moment) that IMP is 
 *not* in ports, otherwise (surely) installation wouldn't be *that* 
 complex? Configging maybe, but install-wise ports 'apps just; slide 
 right in there - usually :-)

I'm baffled by all this. IMP is easy to install and set up. It is in the
ports tree, together with several other useful horde components:

From /usr/ports/www/horde2/pkg-descr:

Horde is used by these ports: mail/imp3, mail/turba, devel/chora,
deskutils/kronolith, deskutils/nag, www/jonah, net/nic, devel/whups,
and deskutils/mnemo

Horde applications have an intuitive folder structure, clearly
identified config files and, the dozen or so times I've had to set this
up, it's always just worked first time.

Peter.



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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Colin J. Raven
On Jan 7 at 09:41, Peter Risdon launched this into the bitstream:
On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 09:59 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
Use IMP.  Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
to setup.  However, IMP is one of those programs that is worth
the effort, as if you install the entire suite of programs you
have a very powerful front end mail system.
I *gather* (not in front of a FreeBSD box at this moment) that IMP is
*not* in ports, otherwise (surely) installation wouldn't be *that*
complex? Configging maybe, but install-wise ports 'apps just; slide
right in there - usually :-)
I'm baffled by all this. IMP is easy to install and set up. It is in the
ports tree, together with several other useful horde components:
From /usr/ports/www/horde2/pkg-descr:
Horde is used by these ports: mail/imp3, mail/turba, devel/chora,
deskutils/kronolith, deskutils/nag, www/jonah, net/nic, devel/whups,
and deskutils/mnemo
Horde applications have an intuitive folder structure, clearly
identified config files and, the dozen or so times I've had to set this
up, it's always just worked first time.
I think the difficulties arise where there is no application 
distribution mechanism such as ports.

Now you mention it, I seem to recall a shedload of issues if you had to 
download the source and build it by hand. There were definite gotchas in 
that process I believe.

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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-07 Thread Peter Risdon
On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 11:12 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
 On Jan 7 at 09:41, Peter Risdon launched this into the bitstream:
 
  On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 09:59 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
  On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
 
  Use IMP. 
[...]
 
 Now you mention it, I seem to recall a shedload of issues if you had to 
 download the source and build it by hand. There were definite gotchas in 
 that process I believe.
 
 

How so? It's PHP. There's nothing to build.

Peter.

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Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-06 Thread Gregor Mosheh
Three companies I know of use Squirrel: my work, my
friend's colo, and the last ISP where I worked.
They're all very fond of it, as am I. It does require
IMAP, but so does IMP.

At my friend's colo he also tried IMP but decided
against it because installation was more complicated
than Squirrel. I wasn't part of that project, so I
can't say what his issues were.


--- Rene C. Mendoza
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I'm in the process of looking for a webmail frontend
 to my Postfix mail 
 server setup installed on FreeBSD 5.3.  I use
 cyrus-imap as well.  What 
 would you recommend?  I've heard of Squirrel Mail
 and IMP, but I don't 
 know what to choose.




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Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-06 Thread whitevamp
i use openwebmail  i found it easer to setup then squarlmail
- Original Message - 
From: Rene C. Mendoza [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: freebsd-questions freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 6:10 PM
Subject: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.


I'm in the process of looking for a webmail frontend to my Postfix mail 
server setup installed on FreeBSD 5.3.  I use cyrus-imap as well.  What 
would you recommend?  I've heard of Squirrel Mail and IMP, but I don't 
know what to choose.

thanks,
Rene
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Re: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-06 Thread Tabor Kelly
Rene C. Mendoza wrote:
I'm in the process of looking for a webmail frontend to my Postfix mail 
server setup installed on FreeBSD 5.3.  I use cyrus-imap as well.  What 
would you recommend?  I've heard of Squirrel Mail and IMP, but I don't 
know what to choose.

thanks,
Rene
I used IMP a few years ago, and I found it complicated to set up. I use 
SqWebMail now. SqWebMail may be less elegant than SquirrelMail, but 
SqWebMail is far more efficient. It is written in C, and accesses 
Maildirs locally, not through an IMAP server. If Postfix does not 
support Maildirs, you couldn't use SqWebMail.

I have written a short tutorial on how to set up SqWebMail here (it is 
draft quality now): 
http://tabor.taborandtashell.net/serversetup/sqwebmail.html The 
installation is pretty straight forward (it is in ports), except the 
Makefile, which is a little confusing at first.

--
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://tabor.taborandtashell.net
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RE: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.

2005-01-06 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt
Use IMP.  Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
to setup.  However, IMP is one of those programs that is worth
the effort, as if you install the entire suite of programs you
have a very powerful front end mail system.

IMP is what we use and if you want my notes from the last installation
your welcome to them.

Ted

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Rene C. Mendoza
 Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 6:10 PM
 To: freebsd-questions
 Subject: Webmail Frontend to mailboxes.
 
 
 I'm in the process of looking for a webmail frontend to my Postfix mail 
 server setup installed on FreeBSD 5.3.  I use cyrus-imap as well.  What 
 would you recommend?  I've heard of Squirrel Mail and IMP, but I don't 
 know what to choose.
 
 thanks,
 Rene
 
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Re: WebMail

2004-04-09 Thread eric
Shawn Guillemette wrote:

 From [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Thu Apr  8 19:59:55 2004
 From: Shawn Guillemette [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Freebsd-Questions [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: Thu, 8 Apr 2004 22:59:57 -0400
 Subject: WebMail

 I'm looking into options for webmail.. was looking for ideas... Looking for
 something with a good how to .. ;-)

I also looked into this recently. There are a number of options, and
they all work quite differently. Some are just a web-based mail client,
that expect to talk to an existing IMAP server (squirrelmail) which may
or may not live on the same server; others are a client AND mail server
in their own right and expect to directly manipulate mailboxes/maildirs
(openwebmail, sqwebmail).

In my case, we had users already with OE/Mozilla via IMAP/POP3 connecting
to a dovecot mail server. Since this already provides IMAP funcationality,
and maintains indexes etc, it didnt make sense to run something that
wanted to directly touch the maildirs - so I went with squirrelmail.

Currently, its installed on a different server to the mail server, and is
quite happy talking imaps (secure IMAP, port 993) to dovecot.

It was relatively easy to setup (hardest part was probably the PHP4
dependency, which I'd never touched before), and has good documentation
online (though not always easy to find what you're looking for). It
has a nice selection of plugins, too, which I've started to play around
with and customise.

Cheers,

Eric.

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Re: WebMail

2004-04-09 Thread Cory Petkovsek
On Thu, Apr 08, 2004 at 10:59:57PM -0400, Shawn Guillemette wrote:
 I'm looking into options for webmail.. was looking for ideas... Looking for
 something with a good how to .. ;-)

First pick a package, then worry about a howto.  Openwebmail is nice, it reads
mail directly off of the mail spool.  However it only works with mbox format.
If this doesn't mean much to you it's not a big deal.  Squirrelmail is also
good but works through an imap server.  This means it is independent
of the underlying format, but it is slower.

Cory 

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RE: WebMail

2004-04-09 Thread mark rowlands
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Josh Paetzel
 Sent: Friday, April 09, 2004 5:04 AM
 To: Shawn Guillemette
 Cc: Freebsd-Questions
 Subject: Re: WebMail
 
 On Thu, Apr 08, 2004 at 10:59:57PM -0400, Shawn Guillemette wrote:
  I'm looking into options for webmail.. was looking for ideas... 
  Looking for something with a good how to .. ;-)
  
  Shawn Guillemette
 
 I've had pretty good luck with openwebmail
 
 Josh Paetzel

ducking and covering...

I use Microsoft Exchange 2003 with postfix / spam-assassin / 
amavis-d as the mta / frontend and then reverse proxy the 
webmail through apache. Though I hate to say it I simply haven't
found any webmail / open source collaboration software that really
matches the functionality in OWA 2003  :-(. The cost sucks tho...
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Re: WebMail

2004-04-08 Thread Andy Miller
On Thu, Apr 08, 2004 at 10:59:57PM -0400, Shawn Guillemette wrote:
 I'm looking into options for webmail.. was looking for ideas... Looking for
 something with a good how to .. ;-)


SquirrelMail (http://www.squirrelmail.org/) is pretty good.  The website has
pretty good documentation.

Andy Miller
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Re: WebMail

2004-04-08 Thread Josh Paetzel
On Thu, Apr 08, 2004 at 10:59:57PM -0400, Shawn Guillemette wrote:
 I'm looking into options for webmail.. was looking for ideas... Looking for
 something with a good how to .. ;-)
 
 Shawn Guillemette

I've had pretty good luck with openwebmail

Josh Paetzel
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Re: WebMail Options

2002-07-17 Thread Simon Dick

I use it too, but the problem is that it requires an IMAP server as a
backend, I read his request as needing to use a POP3 server :|

On Tue, Jul 16, 2002 at 12:26:17PM -0400, Moti Levy wrote:
 i use SquirrelMail its in the ports
 
 
  -Multiple domains - yes
  -POP3 - if you mean retriving email from pop3 clients than yes
  -Runs on FreeBSD, Apache,  CGI or PHP preferably - apache + php
  -SSL Option + broswer built
  -User friendly - extreamly freindly with lots of features ( spell check
 and others )
  -Not too too expensive - free ...
 
 enjoy
 Moti
 
 
  We have looked at OpenWebmail and cannot seem to allow it to work
  with multiple domains (hosting environment). Anyone with documentation
  on how to, would be greatly appreciated.
 
  We have looked at Uebimiau for the longest time try to solve a bug.
  We have tried to contact the author several times without success.
  Below is my original post, hopefully someone who is using it can offer
  some further insight.
 
  Found here: http://www.uebimiau.sili.com.br/
 
  On a FreeBSD 4.6R server, when I send a message through the web
  interface, the recipient will see the following in the header fields
 within their
  (any) mail client software (note the comments after each line):
 
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is NOT right
  CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is again
 not right
  Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
 
  Any idea how can I stop the server from appending it's (or another) mail
 server name
  after the 'To:' field. I have tried tweaking the code with no positive
 results.
 
  We have also tried relaying the mail through the server Webmail is setup
 on,
  right through sendmail, and two other FreeBSD servers running Sendmail.
 
  We have tried contacting the author several times, as well as the FAQ,
 site, etc.
 
  Appreciate any assistance. Thank you,
 
 
  ..D
 
 
 
 
 
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Simon Dick  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: WebMail Options

2002-07-17 Thread Moti Levy

my bad ,sorry

- Original Message -
From: Simon Dick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Moti Levy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2002 3:16 AM
Subject: Re: WebMail Options


 I use it too, but the problem is that it requires an IMAP server as a
 backend, I read his request as needing to use a POP3 server :|

 On Tue, Jul 16, 2002 at 12:26:17PM -0400, Moti Levy wrote:
  i use SquirrelMail its in the ports
 
 
   -Multiple domains - yes
   -POP3 - if you mean retriving email from pop3 clients than yes
   -Runs on FreeBSD, Apache,  CGI or PHP preferably - apache + php
   -SSL Option + broswer built
   -User friendly - extreamly freindly with lots of features ( spell
check
  and others )
   -Not too too expensive - free ...
 
  enjoy
  Moti
 
  
   We have looked at OpenWebmail and cannot seem to allow it to work
   with multiple domains (hosting environment). Anyone with documentation
   on how to, would be greatly appreciated.
  
   We have looked at Uebimiau for the longest time try to solve a bug.
   We have tried to contact the author several times without success.
   Below is my original post, hopefully someone who is using it can offer
   some further insight.
  
   Found here: http://www.uebimiau.sili.com.br/
  
   On a FreeBSD 4.6R server, when I send a message through the web
   interface, the recipient will see the following in the header fields
  within their
   (any) mail client software (note the comments after each line):
  
   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is NOT
right
   CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is
again
  not right
   Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
  
   Any idea how can I stop the server from appending it's (or another)
mail
  server name
   after the 'To:' field. I have tried tweaking the code with no positive
  results.
  
   We have also tried relaying the mail through the server Webmail is
setup
  on,
   right through sendmail, and two other FreeBSD servers running
Sendmail.
  
   We have tried contacting the author several times, as well as the FAQ,
  site, etc.
  
   Appreciate any assistance. Thank you,
  
  
   ..D
  
  
  
  
  
   To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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 --
 Simon Dick [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Re: WebMail Options

2002-07-17 Thread lists

That is Correct, IMAP is not an option. Needs to read via POP3 on a or other
POP3 servers.

Thanks...

- Original Message - 
From: Simon Dick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Moti Levy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2002 3:16 AM
Subject: Re: WebMail Options


 I use it too, but the problem is that it requires an IMAP server as a
 backend, I read his request as needing to use a POP3 server :|
 
 On Tue, Jul 16, 2002 at 12:26:17PM -0400, Moti Levy wrote:
  i use SquirrelMail its in the ports
  
  
   -Multiple domains - yes
   -POP3 - if you mean retriving email from pop3 clients than yes
   -Runs on FreeBSD, Apache,  CGI or PHP preferably - apache + php
   -SSL Option + broswer built
   -User friendly - extreamly freindly with lots of features ( spell check
  and others )
   -Not too too expensive - free ...
  
  enjoy
  Moti
  
  
   We have looked at OpenWebmail and cannot seem to allow it to work
   with multiple domains (hosting environment). Anyone with documentation
   on how to, would be greatly appreciated.
  
   We have looked at Uebimiau for the longest time try to solve a bug.
   We have tried to contact the author several times without success.
   Below is my original post, hopefully someone who is using it can offer
   some further insight.
  
   Found here: http://www.uebimiau.sili.com.br/
  
   On a FreeBSD 4.6R server, when I send a message through the web
   interface, the recipient will see the following in the header fields
  within their
   (any) mail client software (note the comments after each line):
  
   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is NOT right
   CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is again
  not right
   Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
  
   Any idea how can I stop the server from appending it's (or another) mail
  server name
   after the 'To:' field. I have tried tweaking the code with no positive
  results.
  
   We have also tried relaying the mail through the server Webmail is setup
  on,
   right through sendmail, and two other FreeBSD servers running Sendmail.
  
   We have tried contacting the author several times, as well as the FAQ,
  site, etc.
  
   Appreciate any assistance. Thank you,



To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with unsubscribe freebsd-questions in the body of the message



RE: WebMail Options

2002-07-16 Thread Barry Byrne

I've used IMP (http://www.horde.org/imp) and found it quite good. Takes a
little effort to get it up and running but once done, everything is pretty
smooth.

Cheers,

Barry

--
Barry Byrne, IT Manager,
WBT Systems, Block 2, Harcourt Centre
Harcourt Street, Dublin 2, Ireland


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: 16 July 2002 17:19
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: WebMail Options


 We are exploring our options for WebMail, but having difficulty
 finding the
 right one, specifically:

 One that supports:

 -Multiple domains
 -POP3
 -Runs on FreeBSD, Apache,  CGI or PHP preferably
 -SSL Option
 -User friendly
 -Not too too expensive

 We have looked at OpenWebmail and cannot seem to allow it to work
 with multiple domains (hosting environment). Anyone with documentation
 on how to, would be greatly appreciated.

 We have looked at Uebimiau for the longest time try to solve a bug.
 We have tried to contact the author several times without success.
 Below is my original post, hopefully someone who is using it can offer
 some further insight.

 Found here: http://www.uebimiau.sili.com.br/

 On a FreeBSD 4.6R server, when I send a message through the web
 interface, the recipient will see the following in the header
 fields within their
 (any) mail client software (note the comments after each line):

 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is NOT right
 CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] @server.mydomain.com // which is
 again not right
 Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] // which is right

 Any idea how can I stop the server from appending it's (or
 another) mail server name
 after the 'To:' field. I have tried tweaking the code with no
 positive results.

 We have also tried relaying the mail through the server Webmail
 is setup on,
 right through sendmail, and two other FreeBSD servers running Sendmail.

 We have tried contacting the author several times, as well as the
 FAQ, site, etc.

 Appreciate any assistance. Thank you,


 ...D





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 with unsubscribe freebsd-questions in the body of the message



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