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Date:      Fri, 29 Jan 1999 09:08:26 -0800 (PST)
From:      Jesse <j@lumiere.net>
To:        "Gary D. Margiotta" <gary@tbe.net>
Cc:        freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: mailing lists
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.05.9901290905240.426-100000@leaf.lumiere.net>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.05.9901291015060.10147-100000@solo.tcdesigns.com>

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Hi Gary,

> The biggest problem you'll run into with mailing lists is disk speed.
> Processor speed is negligible, but memory should be decent.  Also, if you
> want speed, drop sendmail in favor of a replacement MTA: qmail and postfix
> being two of them.

Why disk? I would expect there to be hardly any disk activity, assuming
you're not swapping.

> I've had most of my experiences with qmail, and it is a decent
> replacement, but we are loking to switch to postfix due to its
> configurability.  Postfix resembles sendmail and uses the same sort of
> configuration files, and if you are already familiar with sendmail, that
> would be the best way to go.  From first tests, postfix seems to work just
> as well, if not better than qmail.

Thanks for the suggestion -- several people have pointed me towards
postfix so I'll definitely be taking a look at it.

> With either MTA, you'll be able to move several hundred thousand local
> emails daily, as long as you have a decent amount of memory, and a fast
> drive.  My reccomendation would be a PII-350 (just for the 100MHz FSB),
> 128MB RAM (maybe 256 if you feel like it), and two seprate drives in the
> system, maybe a 2- or 4-GB for your system partitions (IBM LP drives are
> good, 6.5 ms, 7200RPM), and a 10,000 RPM Cheetah or the likes for your
> /var/mail partition.  Run postfix, and you should have no problems.

Ah -- I don't expect to be doing any local deliveries, maybe that was the
disk factor you were counting in?

I'll be be reusing a machinwe we have now which is a PII 333, with 256M
RAM and a 9gig 7200rpm HD or building a new one which would be an AMD K6-2
400 with 256M RAM and a 9gig IDE drive (probably two, actually, for
software raid redundancy).

Thanks a bunch for your suggestions. It's greatly appreciated.

---
Jesse Shrieve
j@lumiere.net


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