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Attention
It's recommended to use the new iRedMail Easy deployment and support platform to deploy and keep your mail server up to date, technical support is available through the ticket system.
Read more: iRedMail Easy - Meet our new deployment and support platform
Warning
To install iRedMail on RHEL or CentOS Linux, you need:
2 GB
memory is required for a low traffic production mail server, but
4 GB
is strongly recommended to prevent ClamAV eating too much memory for big virus
signature database.No matter your server is a testing machine or production server, it's strongly recommended to set a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) hostname.
Enter command hostname -f
to view the current hostname:
$ hostname -f
mx.example.com
On RHEL/CentOS/Scientific Linux, hostname is set in two files:
/etc/sysconfig/network
:HOSTNAME=mx.example.com
For RHEL/CentOS/Scientific Linux 7, hostname is defined in /etc/hostname
.
mx.example.com
/etc/hosts
: hostname <=> IP address mapping. Warning: List the FQDN hostname as first item.127.0.0.1 mx.example.com mx localhost localhost.localdomain
Verify the FQDN hostname. If it wasn't changed, please reboot server to make it work.
$ hostname -f
mx.example.com
iRedMail doesn't work with SELinux, so please disable it by setting below
value in its config file /etc/selinux/config
. After server reboot, SELinux
will be completely disabled.
SELINUX=disabled
If you prefer to let SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing, you can set below value instead:
SELINUX=permissive
Disable it immediately without rebooting your server.
# setenforce 0
For CentOS or Scientific Linux, please
epel
repo.For Red Hat Enterprise Linux, please
epel
repo (you can enable it by installing package epel-release
)Attention
Since official RHEL/CentOS and EPEL repositories don't have all
required packages with the needed features, iRedMail team has built these
packages and made them available trough the iRedMail repository enabled by
default at installation time. You can view all available packages
here, please check README
and
ChangeLog
files under each directory for more details. Source RPMs (srpm)
used by iRedMail team to build the binary packages are available
here.
Visit Download page to get the latest stable release of iRedMail.
Upload iRedMail to your mail server via ftp or scp or whatever method you
can use, login to the server to install iRedMail. We assume you uploaded
it to /root/iRedMail-x.y.z.tar.bz2
(replace x.y.z by the real version number).
Uncompress iRedMail tarball:
# cd /root/
# tar xjf iRedMail-x.y.z.tar.bz2
It's now ready to start iRedMail installer, it will ask you several simple questions, that's all required to setup a full-featured mail server.
# cd /root/iRedMail-x.y.z/
# bash iRedMail.sh
/var/vmail/
.Note
There's no big difference between available backends, so it's strongly recommended to choose the one you're familiar with for easier management and maintenance after installation.
To MySQL/MariaDB/PostgreSQL users
If you choose to store mail accounts in MySQL/MariaDB/PostgreSQL, iRedMail
installer will generate a random, strong password for you. You can find it
in file iRedMail.tips
.
Note: This account is an admin account and a mail user. That means you can login to webmail and admin panel (iRedAdmin) with this account, login username is full email address.
After answered above questions, iRedMail installer will ask you to review and
confirm to start installation. It will install and configure required packages
automatically. Type y
or Y
and press Enter
to start.
Warning
The weakest part of a mail server is user's weak password. Spammers don't want to hack your server, they just want to send spam from your server. Please ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS force users to use a strong password.
Read file /root/iRedMail-x.y.z/iRedMail.tips
first, it contains:
After installation successfully completed, you can access web-based programs
if you choose to install them. Replace your_server
below by your real server
hostname or IP address.
?config=smtp
for SMTP traffic log)