Am 2017-03-14 10:19, schrieb Alice Wonder:> On 03/14/2017 12:53 AM, Rajmohan Banavi wrote: >> Is there any package available for qmail? I am having hard time >> finding it. >> _______________________________________________ >> CentOS mailing list >> CentOS at centos.org >> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >> > > I doubt it, qmail is quite deprecated and does not support any modern > TLS capabilities without a ton of community provided patches. > > I doubt even with community supported patches that it will ever > support RFC 7672 which is important (it takes the "opportunistic" out > of opportunistic TLS when both servers implement it, preventing > protocol downgrade attacks that now are as easy as removing the > STARTTLS)You could try Matt Simerson's Toaster: https://github.com/msimerson/Mail-Toaster-6 It does a lot more than just qmail and replaced as much of qmail as possible...
On 2017-03-14, rainer at ultra-secure.de <rainer at ultra-secure.de> wrote:> > You could try Matt Simerson's Toaster: > > https://github.com/msimerson/Mail-Toaster-6 > > It does a lot more than just qmail and replaced as much of qmail as > possible...But is it for Linux? The Wiki says: "each component is thinly provisioned in a FreeBSD jail." If it uses something as low level as a FreeBSD jail it might be difficult to get working in linux. --keith -- kkeller at wombat.san-francisco.ca.us
Am 2017-03-15 06:22, schrieb Keith Keller:> On 2017-03-14, rainer at ultra-secure.de <rainer at ultra-secure.de> wrote: >> >> You could try Matt Simerson's Toaster: >> >> https://github.com/msimerson/Mail-Toaster-6 >> >> It does a lot more than just qmail and replaced as much of qmail as >> possible... > > But is it for Linux? The Wiki says: > > "each component is thinly provisioned in a FreeBSD jail." > > If it uses something as low level as a FreeBSD jail it might be > difficult to get working in linux.Ah, yes. The previous version also worked on Linux (supposedly). Still available on github. Qmail is a very special beast...