[Dovecot] Confusion when trying to set up a first postfix+dovecot mailserver
Hans J. Albertsson
hans.j.albertsson at branneriet.se
Sun Jul 22 15:49:19 EEST 2012
Sorry, you're right: I was stressed out when writing this. I meant mkdir
.lkml and mkdir .bugtraq and touch dovecot-shared.
Of course.
It is not the best example, I agree.
Still it should say something like "create the file dovecot-shared if
you want a shared mailbox named dovecot-shared" (can probably be
whittled down).
And, yes, if I can get thru setting up dovecot properly ( I know I can,
it will just take longer ) I will of course do a writeup in the style I
want to see myself.
When it comes to dovecot, I am a user (that IS a terribly derogative
term, isn't it?), but I have been actively supporting large farms of
servers running other forms of mail delivery agents in Sun's various
OSes since 1986 up to 2008, so I do think I ought to be able to get my
head around dovecot, too.
I will just have to read the wiki thru, all of it... :-)
On 2012-07-22 12:41, Charles Marcus wrote:
> On 2012-07-22 5:53 AM, Hans J. Albertsson > As an example, to wit, in the
>> http://wiki2.dovecot.org/SharedMailboxes/Public doc, there's a line
>>
>> "In the above example, you would then create Maildir mailboxes under the
>> /var/mail/public/ directory."
>>
>> and a colour plate plate showing a directory listing.
>>
>> # ls -la /var/mail/public/
>> drwxr-s--- 1 root mail 0 2007-03-19 03:12 .
>> drwxrws--- 1 root mail 0 2007-03-19 03:12 .lkml
>> drwxrws--- 1 root mail 0 2007-03-19 03:12 .bugtraq
>> -rw-rw---- 1 root mail 0 2007-03-19 03:12 dovecot-shared
>>
>> I am guessing that this means I'm supposed to do mkdir dovecot-shared
>> inside /var/mail/public.
>
> Since it isn't listed as a directory, I'm confused as to why would you
> guess that?
>
> dovecot-shared is a FILE, not a directory.
>
> The 3rd line below that example on that page specifically says:
>
> "The dovecot-shared FILE..."
>
> It seems to me that you aren't even bothering to read these docs,
> andit is more like all you want to do is complain that there is
> nothing already written holding your hand through every possible
> config that you want to accomplish.
>
> Dovecot is primarily written by one guy (Timo), and he does a
> remarkable job of both coding and documenting dovecot on the wiki, as
> well as answering support questions here on the list, and while
> sometimes there are a few days before he answers many questions,
> serious bug reports generally get prompt attention, and I don't think
> I've ever seen him not respond to a question in time.
>
> There is no doubt that dovecot could really use some good, experienced
> technical writers that could help Timo with documenting dovecot to
> make it easier to learn by someone new to it, and I'm sure he would
> welcome that help - are you volunteering?
>
>> Sorry if I'm being horridly difficult, but I think (from experiencing it
>> as a user) dovecot is too good not to have proper tutorials and howtos.
>
> Well, dovecot's intended audience isn't a 'user', it is experienced
> system/mail admins, but if you are volunteering to help Timo (and the
> dovecot community) out by improving the wiki documentation and/or
> creating some of these HowTos from the perspective of someone totally
> new to dovecot (and maybe even IMAP servers in general), then I am
> quite certain that Timo will welcome such help.
>
> And as for documentation in the form of books, you cannot compare
> dovecot to postfix in this regard.
>
> Postfix is one of the most mature, stable projects out there - it's
> core functionality basically never changes (only the rare bug fixes),
> and major new features are pretty rare too, so even books written 8
> years ago are still fairly relevant (and generally are only missing
> the new features).
>
> With dovecot, things are very different. It is still very young and
> changing rapidly, and probably will continue to do so as Timo adds new
> features on his ToDo list. A book written even a year ago would not
> have much use to someone using the current version today. As it
> matures and features stabilize, this will change, and I'm hopeful that
> in a year or two, dovecot will stabilize to the point that some of the
> talented book writers out there will take on such a huge project - but
> none of them want to do that right now because dovecot is such a fast
> moving target.
>
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