[Dovecot] exim4 + dovecot + SquirrelMail virtualhosted on Debian
Hello,
I have a Debian machine that is virtual-hosting 6 domains with exim4. I finally got exim4 working well enough where I can send and receive mail using the mail command on my machine. I would eventually like to have SquirrelMail (which requires IMAP) working on my website. For whatever reason, exim4 doesn't seem to support IMAP. I found out that Dovecot is a prominent IMAP server.
So I installed the most current Dovecot package (1.0.rc15) in Debian. Something is broken though...
As I log into SquirrelMail, I get an error message "Error connecting to IMAP server: localhost. 111 : Connection refused". To investigate, I decided to telnet localhost on port 143 and found out that yes, the connection is in fact refused.
So what do I need to do in order to have dovecot listen on port 143?
Also, I noticed when I restart dovecot...
debian:/etc/dovecot# /etc/init.d/dovecot restart Restarting mail server: dovecotError: Can't use mail executable /usr/lib/dovecot/imap: No such file or directory
I hope this isn't a serious problem.
Thanks
Tim Legg
Tim Legg wrote:
Hello,
I have a Debian machine that is virtual-hosting 6 domains with exim4. I finally got exim4 working well enough where I can send and receive mail using the mail command on my machine. I would eventually like to have SquirrelMail (which requires IMAP) working on my website. For whatever reason, exim4 doesn't seem to support IMAP. I found out that Dovecot is a prominent IMAP server.
Exim and its counterparts (Postfix, Sendmail, etc.) is an SMTP server.
So I installed the most current Dovecot package (1.0.rc15) in Debian. Something is broken though...
As I log into SquirrelMail, I get an error message "Error connecting to IMAP server: localhost. 111 : Connection refused". To investigate, I decided to telnet localhost on port 143 and found out that yes, the connection is in fact refused.
So what do I need to do in order to have dovecot listen on port 143?
Also, I noticed when I restart dovecot...
debian:/etc/dovecot# /etc/init.d/dovecot restart Restarting mail server: dovecotError: Can't use mail executable /usr/lib/dovecot/imap: No such file or directory
I hope this isn't a serious problem.
You probably didn't install the dovecot-imap package.
~Seth
Seth Mattinen wrote:
So I installed the most current Dovecot package (1.0.rc15) in Debian. Something is broken though...
As I log into SquirrelMail, I get an error message "Error connecting to IMAP server: localhost. 111 : Connection refused". To investigate, I decided to telnet localhost on port 143 and found out that yes, the connection is in fact refused.
So what do I need to do in order to have dovecot listen on port 143?
Also, I noticed when I restart dovecot...
debian:/etc/dovecot# /etc/init.d/dovecot restart Restarting mail server: dovecotError: Can't use mail executable /usr/lib/dovecot/imap: No such file or directory
I hope this isn't a serious problem.
You probably didn't install the dovecot-imap package.
Also, in the Debian setup you'll have to modify the /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf file and specify imap in the protocols line.
-- 1 + 1 = 3, for large values of 1.
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI eduardo@kalinowski.com.br http://move.to/hpkb
On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 07:34, Tim Legg wrote:
Hello,
I have a Debian machine that is virtual-hosting 6 domains with exim4. I finally got exim4 working well enough where I can send and receive mail using the mail command on my machine. I would eventually like to have SquirrelMail (which requires IMAP) working on my website. For whatever reason, exim4 doesn't seem to support IMAP. I found out that Dovecot is a prominent IMAP server.
Exim is an MTA, nothing more
So I installed the most current Dovecot package (1.0.rc15) in Debian. Something is broken though...
UHG!, well if you insist on using a distribution that is always so outdated, you might be better off asking on their lists for help.
If you look on dovecots website you'll see there the current stable release is at 1.1.11 (unless I've missed the official release notice of 1.2), I also guess squirrelmail is outdated by years as well, and if you run into problems there, Paul will also likely respond in similar fashion as to what I have here...
There is nothing wrong with using the source, as you dont know what tinkering the likes of debian and redhat do to distro-ise them
participants (4)
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Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
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Noel Butler
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Seth Mattinen
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Tim Legg