[quote user="Curt Cuppels"]
Thanks David. I basically knew the answer when asking the question but wanted to hear from the developer first. I scrounged up Win2K Pro to replace NT4 and TLS works just fine on that. Recent mailing list conversation concerning Mercury running on wine in Linux also prompted me to test that, seeing that I run several linux boxes. I brought up Mercury v4.52 through wine in Fedora 7. I am running with Spamhalter, Clamwall ( with clamav installed on wine too). Everything seems to be working quite fine, including TLS. To keep from having to run as root on the mail server I port forwarded ports 25, 110, etc. to ports above 1023 off my IPCop firewall/router box. Maybe I didn't need to get that Win2K disk after all.
Thanks again,
Curt
[/quote]
I'm still working on the ports with my Ubuntu setup. It's not a big deal right now since almost nothing comes in via the external ports and Pegasus Mail sends via the queue. If push come to shove I'll do this with port forwarding like you have done to ports a normal user can use. That said, since my Ubuntu system is way behind a firewall/router the bad guys will have a tough time getting to anything on this system even though I am running as root. Nothing on this system is accessible outside the local lan.
I was really surprised how well Mercury/32 installs and runs on a Linux system. I know diddly about Linux and I got this up and running in less than a couple of hours after installing Ubuntu and Wine.
[quote user="Curt Cuppels"]<p>Thanks David. I basically knew the answer when asking the question but wanted to hear from the developer first. I scrounged up Win2K Pro to replace NT4 and TLS works just fine on that. Recent mailing list conversation concerning Mercury running on wine in Linux also prompted me to test that, seeing that I run several linux boxes. I brought up Mercury v4.52 through wine in Fedora 7. I am running with Spamhalter, Clamwall ( with clamav installed on wine too). Everything seems to be working quite fine, including TLS. To keep from having to run as root on the mail server I port forwarded ports 25, 110, etc. to ports above 1023 off my IPCop firewall/router box. Maybe I didn't need to get that Win2K disk after all.</p><p>Thanks again,</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Curt
</p><p>[/quote]</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>I'm still working on the ports with my Ubuntu setup.&nbsp; It's not a big deal right now since almost nothing comes in via the external ports and Pegasus Mail sends via the queue.&nbsp; If push come to shove I'll do this with port forwarding like you have done to ports a normal user can use.&nbsp; That said, since my Ubuntu system is way behind a firewall/router the bad guys will have a tough time getting to anything on this system even though I am running as root.&nbsp; Nothing on this system is accessible outside the local lan.&nbsp;</p><p>I was really surprised how well Mercury/32 installs and runs on a Linux system.&nbsp; I know diddly about Linux and I got this up and running in less than a couple of hours after installing Ubuntu and Wine.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>