Difference between revisions of "Amahi Mailman"

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Revision as of 17:08, 7 December 2010


NOTE: This should only be attempted by advanced users.

DISCLAIMER: Although this has been tested, use at your own risk. I cannot guarantee that it will work for your system or not cause any serious problems.

Further DISCLAIMER: This tutorial is based on already having installed the Amahi Mail Server [1] which uses Postfix and mySQL. Further it is for Fedora 12. It has NOT been tested on Fedora 14.

Purpose

Mailman is free software for managing electronic mail discussion and e-newsletter lists. Mailman is integrated with the web, making it easy for users to manage their accounts and for list owners to administer their lists. Mailman supports built-in archiving, automatic bounce processing, content filtering, digest delivery, spam filters, and more. See [2] for details.

How to Install

Here's the sequence of events to get mailman up and running:

  • Enable Advanced Settings in the Amahi Dashboard (Settings-->Settings)
  • Create a web app in Amahi named mailman.
  • Open a terminal window, become root, and run
yum install mailman
  • Set your mailman site password:
/usr/lib/mailman/bin/mmsitepass _______
  • Add/edit the following into /usr/lib/mailman/Mailman/mm_cfg.py
DEFAULT_URL_HOST   = 'mailman.foo.com'
DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST = 'foo.com'
POSTFIX_STYLE_VIRTUAL_DOMAINS = ['mailman.foo.com']
VIRTUAL_HOSTS.clear()
add_virtualhost(DEFAULT_URL_HOST, DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST)
MTA = 'Postfix'
(where foo.com is your domain name)
  • Make the following changes in /etc/postfix/main.cf
    • Uncomment: recipient_delimiter = +
    • Append to virtual_alias_maps , hash:/etc/mailman/virtual-mailman
    • Append to alias_maps , hash:/etc/mailman/aliases
  • Edit /etc/httpd/conf.d/10nn-mailman.conf using /etc/httpd/conf.d/mailman.conf
    • Replace the <Directory> section in 10nn-mailman.conf with the total content of mailman.conf
    • Uncomment and edit the RedirectMatch line with the ServerAlias name.
  • Rename /etc/httpd/conf.d/mailman.conf to something NOT ending in .conf
  • Add the domain mailman.foo.com to the Email domain SQL table.
  • Reload httpd and postfix.
service httpd reload
service postfix reload
  • Create the main mailman list:
/usr/lib/mailman/bin/newlist mailman
  • NOTE: I had permissions problems later. So at this point fix your mailman permissions:
/usr/lib/mailman/bin/check_perms -f
  • Start mailman.
service mailman start

Conclusion

You should now be able to access mailman at:

http://mailman.foo.com/mailman


Future Plans

Test this with Fedora 14.