Mail migration

September 3, 2009 · Posted in Blog 

As a response to my crashed firewall, I decided to retire my hobby mail server running Postfix/Dovecot on Ubuntu Server. Instead I have decided to join the masses and go for a hosted exchange service instead. For a die-hard Linux freak as yours truly, this sucks. However, on the flip side, I gain better reliability and set of services, such as beside of synching mail to my Android HTC Hero mobile, I also get calendar and contacts.

Before summer I was looking intensively for a open source version of calendaring and contacts that allowed me to synch to a mobile phone. I tried eGroupware with Funambole client. But there were allways some part that didn’t work, whever I got something to work.

Now, when I’m on the move frequently I need a working solution for mobile mail/calendar/contacts that also works with a desktop client. Google mail wasn’t an option becuase they doesn’t seem to have a professional solution for a small-business.

As long as it comes to pure mail management using the postfix/dovecot/spam-assasin/postgray combo, it works flawlessly. But finding a decent (open source) calendar and contacts server, accessing them over HTTPS from a hotel room or via a mobile phone, is not possible.

Running a SOHO server(s) has its moments, when the broadband connection goes down, when the home assembled firewall crashes or just the cat plays with a cable that happens to be cord to the ADSL modem. Last summer (2008), the firewall crashed due to iover-heating. It was an old PC baught for my son when we were living in London 2001. The problem was, me and my wife was at the Canary Islands for another two weeks. After that I got some new hardware from a local computer store and it lasted for a year. The firewall software I’m using is Smoothwall, which used to be a very decent OS-based firewall. However, they haven’t upgraded the bundled drivers for many years, which results in it’s not able to install on modern hardware.

When the firewall crashed recently I bought a brand-new (cheap) PC, just to discover for the second time that Smoothwall doesn’t install on contemporary hardware. I wasn’t particulary tempted to build my own distribution with the appropriate drivers, at the same time I was cut-off from the net. So, I found a spare machine from 2004, which allowed installation of Smoothwall. But, as I said in the beginning of this post, I will not wait for this junk to crash, so I have migrated the mail handling elsewhere.

The next step will be to migrate the webs {www, blog, lib}.ribomation.com. I will write another post, when it’s done. Probably it will take some time, because I will be on the move for several weeks during September and October. Next week I will run a series of seminars on Cloud Computing, Groovy & Grails and trends in Application Development. The following weeks I will teach Erlang, Real-time Systems Programming in C++, more seminars and then more Erlang and RT++. It goes on like this until November. It’s fun and intensive.

Comments

One Response to “Mail migration”

  1. Tim on September 19th, 2009 01:14

    Did you try Smoothwall 3.0? That was released only recently and possibly you tried using an older version maybe?

    I’m no great lover of smoothwall as I just began using it, but I found it to install pretty cleanly on a fairly recent socket 775 running a PentiumD processor. Not the newest machine for sure but not the oldest in the bunch either.

    TimT

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