There's tons of different ways to setup email on CentOS and about every other distribution. If you are only going to do a couple of accounts, then the basic yum install method is generally suitable, then just do a useradd to add a new account.

If you are going to do far more accounts, then I suggest the postfix-dovecot-spamassassin-postfixadmin-squirrelmail route:

http://www.karlkatzke.com/centos-postfix-dovecot-spamassassin-postfixadmin-and-squirrelmail/


Jamie Holly
http://www.intoxination.net 
http://www.hollyit.net

On 8/16/2011 3:50 PM, Skip Taylor wrote:
I have that situation but it's being rejected because the email account doesn't exist and I have no clue how to create one for it.  Wish there was an online tutorial for this on Centos 5.

Anyone seen such?

On Tue, Aug 16, 2011 at 12:10 PM, Prkos <prkos@prkos.hr> wrote:
Does the site email domain match the website domain? Some spam filters
mark emails as suspicious if those domains don't match.

If the site informs you the message has been sent and you can see the
entry in the Database log but the mail doesn't arrive most likely it's
something to do with email configuration and spam filters. Check the
mail log of your email server, find the message in the queue and see
what status it has (if you have access to your email server).

Mihaela

On 08/16/2011 08:51 PM, Gastón Pablo Pérez wrote:
> Hi there!
>
> I have a problem with contact form in Drupal 7, when I try to send a
> contact information through this, the site informs that the message
> was sent, but the mails doesn't come. In the same server I have other
> site with Drupal 6 and this site works perfectly, so I deduce that the
> problem is not on the mail server configuration.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> thanks in advance
>
> /"El software libre construye una sociedad mejor." (Richard Stallman)/
>
> Gastón Pablo Perez
> Email: gpperez@gmail.com <mailto:gpperez@gmail.com>
> Web: http://www.gpperez.com.ar
> Ubuntu User #30611
>
>

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