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MailServe Pro for Leopard—An Overview
Set up a fully buzzword-compliant mail server on Mac OS X Leopard that can:
- Send outgoing mail (SMTP)
- Receive incoming mail (SMTP)
- Retrieve mail from an ISP mail server (Fetchmail)
- Store all these mail on the server & and read them from any Mac Mail client (POP3 & IMAP, with a choice of UW/IMAP or Dovecot))
- Organise mail into folders (UW/IMAP) & sub-folders (Dovecot IMAP)
- Authenticate users before they are allowed to send mail through the server (SMTP-AUTH) or authenticate the server with an ISP server, using the latter as Smart Host to relay mail through it, in cases where the ISP has blocked all traffic through its network except through its designated server.
MailServe organises each of these tasks—from the simple to the complex—into discrete panels in its user interface. This allows the user to turn the mail services on one-by-one, and turn them off individually when they're not needed.
There's a reason for this organisation. It allows the user to fix problems—with their setup or their network—step-by-step and layer-by-layer, so even novice users can turn on a fully-powered mail server.
MailServe does a lot of complicated configuring of your server beneath its Mac-like user interface. It does this in a non-invasive manner, touching as little as possible of the original system files so as to leave your system in its pristine state. And you can remove all the files installed by the application, at one go, from the De-Install option in its Help menu.
Installing a Mail Server on Leopard— A Step-by-Step Guide
Step 1—Send Mail to other Mail Servers |
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Step 2—Receive Mail from other Mail Servers |
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Step 3—Set up POP3 and/or IMAP Servers
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Dovecot |
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UW/IMAP |
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Step 4—Set up Fetchmail (Optional) |
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Mail Log |
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Mail Queue |
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Port Reference
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Services |
Port |
SMTP |
25 |
POP3 |
110 |
POP3s (over SSL) |
995 |
IMAP |
143 |
IMAPs (over SSL) |
993 |
Why is the MailServe Pro download so big at 7MB?
This is because it contains Universal binaries (i.e., both Intel and PPC versions) of the Dovecot and UW/IMAP libraries. And the MailServe application itself is a Universal binary. So it all adds up.
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