I used postfixadmin and it has been fine. (CentOS 5) I suggest redirecting (in the http server) all postfixadmin access to https for security. I found the db schema satisfactory for my needs. The point with postfixadmin is the PHP interface to the database. You could just create whatever tables you needed and edit them with phpMyAdmin, but postfixadmin gives you a simple interface that users and domain admins can use. kalinix wrote: On Mon, 2008-05-05 at 22:31 -0400, Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote:Hi All, I'm toying around with Postfix and MySQL on a CentOS 4 server (no longer using stock postfix and mysql rpms, obviously). I've read several "How-TOs", and it all looks fairly easy to do. The one thing that puzzles me is the table structure for the postfix mysql database: where is everyone getting it? Also, I've noticed that some people create more tables than others. But, this looks like it's just based on which bits of postfix people want to put into the database. I can just copy the SQL people have posted to create the tables I want. I'd much rather know if there is an official source for this, though. So far I haven't found it. Regards, RanbirMaybe postfixadmin (http://postfixadmin.sourceforge.net/) would help? at least as a starting point... Just my 2c Calin ================================================= Education is learning what you didn't even know you didn't know. -- Daniel J. Boorstin _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos -- Liam Kirsher PGP: http://liam.numenet.com/pgp/ |
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