On Aug 3, 2004, at 08:40, Brendan Braybrook wrote:
so, sqwebmail can only be installed at sama machine with email server. isThat's because sqwebmail does not use an IMAP server.i want to configure sqwebmail, so it can access IMAP server. but i don't know what to do.
that right?
you could nfs mount the user's mail directories from the mail server onto
the web server.
This is probably the best way, if you can do it in your setup. Another (probably less desirable) method would be to set up a reverse proxy on the web server that targets sqwebmail on the mail server (on the inside of your network) whenever anyone hits it from the outside. -- There's probably some other way to make it work too, but I can't think of one off the top of my head, and they all have their own headaches... since SQWebMail is designed to run on the same machine as the mail server. *shrug*
i have problem like this: i have 2 servers: web server (apache, php, mysql, sqwebmail) mail server (qmail, vpopmail, qmailadmin, courier-imap)
if it cannot, does anyone know another software beside sqwebmail?
you might want to try squirrelmail, if you can't make sqwebmail work for
you.
Also... IMP/Horde, NOCC, NeoMail, blah-blah-blah... Just Google for "webmail client" and "webmail php" to find a bunch of the most popular ones.
(that software must have facility to change user password, it will installed
at web server)
could be done, if you have your password file accessible over nfs.
But, writing (or finding :) a script/program on one machine that talks to the other securely and does it would probably be just as good and hopefully as easy. It's another option at least -- especially if your passwords aren't actually going to be stored in a password file, but in a database (LDAP/SQL/etc.) instead you might find that more doable.
-jab
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