336a64246a
- pass maintainership to submitter - add LICENSE - drop optional dependencies on database backends - since 3.0 it's handled with libzdb - rename rc-scripts to .sh-less ones - add UPDATING entry for users, that want to stay with dbmail 2.2.x Please note, that committed patch is reworked version of originally submitted (missing deps added, rc-scripts renamed, NOPORTDOCS issue handled more completely, some plist fixes applied). Sorry for delay. PR: 164631 Submitted by: Alan Hicks <ahicks at p-o.co dot uk> Feature safe: yes
24 lines
1.1 KiB
Text
24 lines
1.1 KiB
Text
Dbmail is the name of a group of programs that enable the possibility of
|
|
storing and retrieving mail messages from a database (currently MySQL,
|
|
PostgreSQL or SQLite).
|
|
|
|
* Scalability.
|
|
Dbmail is as scalable as the database system that is used for the mail
|
|
storage. In theory millions of accounts can be managed using dbmail. One
|
|
could, for example, run 4 different servers with the pop3 daemon each
|
|
connecting to the same database (cluster) server.
|
|
* Manageability.
|
|
Dbmail is based upon a database. Dbmail can be managed by changing settings
|
|
in the database (f.e. using PHP/Perl/SQL), without needing shell access.
|
|
* Speed.
|
|
Dbmail uses very efficient, database specific queries for retrieving mail
|
|
information. This is much faster then parsing a filesystem.
|
|
* Security.
|
|
Dbmail has got nothing to do with the filesystem or interaction with other
|
|
programs in the Unix environment which need special permissions. Dbmail is
|
|
as secure as the database it's based upon.
|
|
* Flexibility.
|
|
Changes on a Dbmail system (adding of users, changing passwords etc.) are
|
|
effective immediately.
|
|
|
|
WWW: http://www.dbmail.org/
|