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Zarafa

Revision as of 16:05, 8 January 2010 by imported>Cov

Zarafa is a Free Software groupware server. The for-pay enterprise version provides Microsoft Exchange server functionality. For non-enterprise users, Zarafa's ability to function as a back-end for Z-Push, allowing full-fledged, locally served Android synchronization may be its most attractive feature. On the desktop side, the gratis and libre community version Zarafa supports, POP3, IMAP, CalDAV and an HTTP interface out-of-the-box, allowing Mac, Mozilla and Novell PIM applications (i.e. Mac Mail, Thunderbird, Lightning and Evolution) to easily connect to its information stores. Note that the KDE PIM suite requires GroupDAV, which is not provided by Zarafa. With additional configuration and integration, using LDAP for contact storage and access is also possible.

Contents

Setup Guide

The following instructions were written for CentOS 5 and may not work on other platforms or versions. If you would like to see additional coverage, please add it yourself or make a request on the wiki's wanted page.

Prerequisites

Zarafa requires a MySQL database server be accessible. If you don't already have one, setup and run MySQL on your local machine.

Installation

Download the non-Outlook, open source, binary package from the community section of the company's website. If you want to give it a proper extension, it's a gzipped tarball so you can name it zarafa.tar.gz if you like. Unpack the tarball and run the installation script. If you have RPM errors, check to see if you have older versions of the dependencies it ships with already installed. If this is the case, removing them should lead to successful execution of the installation script.

# wget 'http://url.com' -O zarafa.tar.gz
# tar -xzf zarafa.tar.gz
# zarafa-*/install.sh

Give the installation script the login information to your MySQL database when asked.

Configuration

Zarafa has a flexible, pluggable user system. If you have a fully functional LDAP or Active Directory server, go ahead and use it. The default MySQL database backend works fine out-of-the-box, but a Unix backend is also available. If you don't know what to choose, just don't change anything to use the database backend.

If you want to use the Unix backend, edit /etc/zarafa/unix.cfg and change the domain to your own.

# Default email domain for constructing new users
# Required, no default
default_domain = domain.com

Lastly, you'll need to add a user. How you do this depends on the user backend you chose. If you went with the default database backend, an administration tool is provided. Read the man page or run zarafa-admin --help for the full documentation. A quick example is below.

# zarafa-admin -c username -e username@domain.com -f 'Full Username' -P

Starting services

The first time you run the installation script, it may start some services. Below is the list of services you'll want running on a regular basis.

zarafa-server 
Main server
zarafa-spooler 
Outgoing mail service
zarafa-monitor 
Quota monitoring service
zarafa-gateway 
POP and IMAP service
zarafa-ical 
iCal/CalDAV service

External Links