Entry tags:
dammit
I am annoyed with the company's web host. Email dropped out yesterday, a trouble ticket was sent, and no word. In the past the problem was fixed with no notification of what they did or what was wrong. I can see in the site cpanel that no one has exceeded the email allowance but I can't do anything about it. I wish the host was here in Aus, so I could call them.
Looks like it's time for DIY company web hosting.
james_b
makovette any ideas that would help?
Looks like it's time for DIY company web hosting.
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And I have two solid daze worth of moving work ahead of me, doh! Can you post in the HRF group which domains you want to move to Vegas in what order please? I'll start whittling away at those as time allows.
THhanks!
Mako
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It depends if IPrimus will let us add a web/email server to our connection.
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You'll also have to see if they do port filtering. Port filtering may prevent you from hosting a usable e-mail server. Many ISPs default to port filtering if you have a Dynamic IP.
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Cheap in house: Spin up a linux box on CentOS with a pair of mirrored hard drives. Run Postfix as your mail software and use IMAP (keeps a copy of all the mail on the server) or POP (client sucks the mail off the server).
Use Thunderbird or any flavor of Outlook you like.
Requirements:
Generic P4 box with 512MB of ram and a pair of reasonably fat hard drives, and a reliable broadband connection to the server with a static IP. A firewall appliance or run iptables on the server.
Some DNS wizardry is required. between James and I, that's covered though.
Upside:
It's all yours. You have total control, and responsibility for the server. You can also run apache to serve the company's web page.
Downside:
No web based interface to the mail server w/o another package. If it breaks, you fix it.
If this sounds like the HRF server, well, you'd be right :)
Outsourced: Ping
CYa!
Mako
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