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About:
Postfix is an attempt to provide an alternative to the widely-used Sendmail program. Postfix attempts to be fast, easy to administer, and hopefully secure, while at the same time being sendmail compatible enough to not upset your users.
Author:
Wietse Venema <wietse (at) porcupine (dot) org>
[contact developer]
Homepage:
http://www.postfix.org/
Tar/GZ:
ftp://ftp.porcupine.org/[..]ix-release/official/postfix-2.5.3.tar.gz
Mailing list archive:
http://groups.google.com/group/list.postfix.users/topics
Trove categories:
[change]
Dependencies:
[change]
No dependencies filed
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» Rating:
8.73/10.00
(Rank 111)
» Vitality: 1.30% (Rank 278)
» Popularity: 22.46% (Rank 39)

(click to enlarge graphs)
Record hits: 142,875
URL hits: 115,379
Subscribers: 741
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Branches
Articles referencing this project
- Debian: New postfix packages fix privilege escalation
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Sun, Aug 24th 2008 19:01
- Red Hat: Updated postfix packages fix a security issue
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Mon, Aug 18th 2008 08:49
- SuSE: New postfix packages fix local privilege escalation
by Patrick Lenz
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in Security
Mon, Aug 18th 2008 08:45
- Without A Net
by jeff covey ,
in Editorials
Sat, May 31st 2008 00:00
- Gmail on Home Linux Boxes using Postfix and Fetchmail
by Mike Chirico ,
in Tutorials
Sat, Jun 4th 2005 00:00
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Comments
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Some thoughts on Postfix
by Crippler - Feb 17th 2003 19:10:29
Let me get the negatives out of the way FIRST.
1) License sucks. Why couldn't IBM have released this under one of the
big licenses like BSD or GPL? If this had been BSD licensed, we'd probably
see it overtake Sendmail by now (even in Linux distros).
2) Back end database support. It's been a bit lacking. My understanding
from the mailing list archives is that the maintainers are putting
security, performance & stability over features. This is a noble cause
which I am hesitant to criticize. But as a Postfix user I sometimes feel
as if it would better serve me with more flexible back end options.
Stuff I like:
1) Easy to set up. It has a big config file, but it is in plain english
and well commented. You don't have to read a book before setting it up.
2) Drop-in replacement for Sendmail. It replaces the command-line
sendmail utilities and everything.
3) Secure. You hardly ever hear anything about Postfix vulnerabilities on
Bugtraq.
4) Fast. I've set up some large mailing list servers on Postfix and it
just rrrrrips.
Overall I give it an 8 out of 10. The license bugs me but there is not a
lot that can be done about that now, at least not by the Postfix
maintainers (but IBM could retroactively re-release their code under BSD or
GPL and Postfix could opt to relicense their copious additions). There
isn't a lot of push for this so I won't hold my breath.
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Great
by Thomas - Sep 18th 2001 13:41:37
Forget sendmail, install Postfix - real-drop-in-replacement, nice
configruation, fast, reliable - perfect
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Postfix
by naChoZ - Jan 12th 2000 08:40:44
I've been using it since the Postfix 19990317 release and I've never had
any trouble with it. Drop in replacement for sendmail that doesn't require
aspirin to configure. And performance is *great*, too.
-- Andy Harrison
ICQ: 123472 AIM/Y!: AHinMaine
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I'm impressed
by Chris Horry - Jan 5th 2000 09:25:44
And that takes a lot! I tried Postfix after hearing good reports and first
impressions are that it's a superb mail server, I managed to make a
complete mirror image of my existing sendmail setup in a couple of hours
from first downloading it. Looking forward to seeing how well it performs
when I start hammering it :-) Thanks!
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postfix is very good
by karellen - Dec 26th 1999 02:58:43
Ok, with the world writable directory fixed postfix became
a very good MTA. Eventually I got rid of qmail and installed
postfix after several people told me it's fast and reliable.
It even supports MySQL database lookups now and other advanced
stuff and the IBM license it's distributed under is surprisingly
liberal. Postfix has also made it into Debian/Potato. Thanx
again Wietse.
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World writable maildrop issue
by Edgard Castro - Mar 7th 1999 19:02:15
As of December 30, 1998, Postfix offers a choice between a
world-writable maildrop directory and a protected one.
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