It’s more a case of needing to make sure it handles folder creation and management right. At the moment the mail server won’t create folders, even with generic rights, on the first connection and I have to create each user manually. Then again, this server is sunsetting soon but not until I have the replacement box running Now that I send this message it took upgrading to fBSD 10.0-RELEASE to get Postfix to even compile correctly (it was barfing on a user ID that supposedly existed but wasn’t really there previously). On May 4, 2014, at 16:19, Ryan Coleman <ryan.coleman at cwis.biz> wrote: > It’s more a case of needing to make sure it handles folder creation and management right. At the moment the mail server won’t create folders, even with generic rights, on the first connection and I have to create each user manually. Then again, this server is sunsetting soon but not until I have the replacement box running > > > > > On May 4, 2014, at 16:16, Tony Yarusso <tonyyarusso at gmail.com> wrote: > >> There's a lot of value in using what you know, so if you know FreeBSD >> maybe that's your answer. Personally for OS I prefer Ubuntu or >> Debian. My mail stack is similar to your current setup - Postfix, >> Dovecot, SpamAssassin, and Roundcube for webmail. Ubuntu does a nice >> job of tying Postfix and Dovecot together for shared account lists out >> of the box. I'm actually using a PostgreSQL database for mine, but >> LDAP is simple too - you'd just define whatever LDAP search returns >> valid users/mailboxes. >> _______________________________________________ >> TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota >> tclug-list at mn-linux.org >> http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list >