Scalix: Linux Administrator's Guide
Scalix: Linux Administrator's Guide: Install, configure, and administer your Scalix Collaboration Platform email and groupware server by Markus Feilner
Publisher: Packt Publishing (April 28, 2008) | 276 pages | ISBN: 1847192769 | PDF | 7.3 MB
Publisher: Packt Publishing (April 28, 2008) | 276 pages | ISBN: 1847192769 | PDF | 7.3 MB
High-end email and groupware is a domain where only few vendors can provide solutions. It is where companies like HP, Novell, or Scalix offer reliable and scalable products. And Scalix is the only one that has licensed parts under a free and open-source license (Scalix Public License). Scalix runs on Linux, is free for up to 10 users, offers a lot of possible features, ranging from caldav or syncml to clusters, and supports any client. Its flexible architecture gives you the freedom to choose your hardware platform, desktop client, security, directory, and storage infrastructure.
"With over one million mailboxes deployed, 140,000 Community Edition downloads, 5,500 community forum members and almost 700 corporate customers, the Scalix collaborating platform is the most field-proven Linux e-mail and group calendaring solution available to enterprise." --The Scalix website
With the right know-how, Scalix can be managed easily, and several thousand mailboxes are possible on a single server, Web GUIs and command-line tools help the administrator, and Scalix integrates easily with other professional tools, such as OpenVPN, Nagios, and others.
During its history of almost 20 years, many tools and programs have been developed for Scalix to help you with your routine work. While the official documentation has several thousand pages, which are not all up to date, this book gives a detailed overview from installation to advanced setups and best practices for configuration and security. It will help you implement and manage both the free open-source Community Edition and the Enterprise Edition of Scalix.The author provides both a concise description of the features of Scalix and an easy-to-use starting guide for those new to administering it. By bringing together material that might take days to find online this book is a real timesaver.
What you will learn from this book?
* Dissecting an email message and understanding how email and groupware servers work
* Installing Scalix on OpenSuSE 10.2, Fedora Core 5, and Windows
* Setting up Scalix in a multiserver environment with clustering and replication
* Troubleshooting and hardening your Scalix environment
* Working with the Scalix Administration Console (SAC)
* Managing users and handling common tasks
* Deploying the Scalix connector for Outlook and integrating with IMAP mail clients
* Understanding Scalix configuration files and administrative commands
* Standard Scalix monitoring tools and status reports
* Integrating Scalix in your centralized Nagios monitoring system
* Securing your server using firewalls, Stunnel, and OpenVPN
* Performing full, incremental, and single-mailbox backups and restores
* Integrating an external LDAP directory with Scalix and configuring the Scalix LDAP server
* Integrating Scalix Administration tools for Active Directory
* HA (high availability) and multi-server setups
* Setting up an active/passive cluster with backup functions
* Preparing Scalix for spam and virus filtering using smtpd.cfg and Clamav and Spamassasin
Approach
This book is a well-illustrated and practical guide to implementing and understanding Scalix. It includes exhaustive references to the relevant online documents and RFCs.
Who this book is written for?
This book is written for Linux administrators who wish to set up an email server for businesses or who wish to switch to Scalix from another email server. Scalix can be used very easily by beginners; however, advanced strategies and administrative tasks are difficult to learn and this book will help you master them all.
About the Author
Markus Feilner
Markus Feilner is a Linux professional from Regensburg, Germany, and has been working with open-source software since the mid 1990s. His first contact with UNIX was a SUN cluster and SPARC workstations at Regensburg University (during his studies of geography). Since the year 2000, he has published several documents used in Linux training all over Germany. In 2001, he founded his own Linux consulting and training company, Feilner IT.
He was working as a trainer, consultant, and systems engineer at Millenux, Munich, where he focused on groupware, collaboration, and virtualization with Linux-based systems and networks.
Since 2007, he is an editor at the German Linux-Magazine, where he is writing about Open-Source-Software for both printed and online magazines, including the Linux Technical Review and the Linux Magazine International. He regularly holds speeches and lectures at conferences in Germany.
He is interested in anything about geography, traveling, photography, philosophy (especially that of open-source software), global politics, soccer and literature, but always has too little time for these hobbies.
Markus Feilner supports Linux4afrika - a project bringing Linux computers into African schools.
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