Once upon a time, Colin Walters <walters@xxxxxxxxxx> said: > One data point I'd like to add to this is that specifically in the > Fedora context (i.e. outside of the general exim vs postfix debate), > Postfix has the advantage in that its design (multiple independent > mutually untrusting processes¹) allows a strong SELinux policy to be > easily applied, further enhancing Postfix's already good security. I would definately give the edge to Postfix then. I use sendmail everywhere myself, but for my main servers I have to roll my own RPMs anyway to get additional things turned on (also I use the same source RPM on Linux, Tru64, and Solaris). Having sendmail removed wouldn't bother me. The biggest question is still the upgrade issue; if sendmail is removed from Core, what will happen on upgrades? Users will be left with the old version of sendmail running. What would be "nice" would be a hack in anaconda to check for a default config sendmail install (i.e. nothing has been changed since install) and replace it with the new default MTA (postfix or exim). If anything has changed, just leave it alone. There currently isn't really a way to handle changing the default provider of a service from one package to another. -- Chris Adams <cmadams@xxxxxxxxxx> Systems and Network Administrator - HiWAAY Internet Services I don't speak for anybody but myself - that's enough trouble.