M. Fioretti
2007-Jul-27 07:42 UTC
[CentOS] Best way to have Postfix 2.3 or 2.4 on Centos 4.4?
Greetings, I would like to install Postfix 2.3 or 2.4 (I need support for SASL authentication via Dovecot) on a Centos 4.4 server. I have already found rpm packages at http://postfix.wl0.org/en/available-packages/ and pages about using the centosplus repo for postfix. Before launching rpm or yum, however, I'd like to ask the list which way you think is the best way to do this. By "best" I mean the way which: * has no known issues, gotchas, extra configuration tricks... * has as little extra dependencies as possible * can be maintained/upgraded with yum Thank you in advance for any feedback! Marco -- The Family Guide to Digital Freedom: http://digifreedom.net
M. Fioretti
2007-Jul-27 07:50 UTC
[CentOS] Best way to have Postfix 2.3 or 2.4 on Centos 4.4?
On Fri, Jul 27, 2007 09:42:17 AM +0200, io (mfioretti at mclink.it) wrote:> Before launching rpm or yum, however, I'd like to ask the list which > way you think is the best way to do this. By "best" I mean the way > which: > > * has no known issues, gotchas, extra configuration tricks... > * has as little extra dependencies as possible > * can be maintained/upgraded with yumSorry, I forgot one thing: * which has the smallest impact on other packages meaning that if the postfix I want is in some extra repo which has lot of other things I don't need, I (ideally) only want to take postfix from there when I run "yum update", and keep taking other packages from the official Centos Repos. Marco -- The Family Guide to Digital Freedom: http://digifreedom.net
beast
2007-Jul-27 09:52 UTC
[CentOS] Re: Best way to have Postfix 2.3 or 2.4 on Centos 4.4?
On 27/07/07 09:42 +0200, M. Fioretti wrote:>Greetings, > >I would like to install Postfix 2.3 or 2.4 (I need support for SASL >authentication via Dovecot) on a Centos 4.4 server. > >I have already found rpm packages at >http://postfix.wl0.org/en/available-packages/ and pages about using >the centosplus repo for postfix. > >Before launching rpm or yum, however, I'd like to ask the list which >way you think is the best way to do this. By "best" I mean the way >which: > >* has no known issues, gotchas, extra configuration tricks... >* has as little extra dependencies as possible >* can be maintained/upgraded with yumIf this is a dedicated mailserver, i prefer installing postfix from source. --beast