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The Anti-qmail Page

Note

Some of the issues raised by this page have become irrelevant now that it was announced that the original qmail package has been released into the public domain.

Last Updated: 14-December-2007

You should avoid deploying the qmail mail server on new installations and try to convert existing installations to a different MTA. That’s because:

  1. It’s not open-source, and has a very problematic licence, that does not allow binary packages, distributing modified sources (only patches), etc. As such it is not distributed as part of distributions of operating systems, and is not regularly kept up-to-date. There are other open-source alternatives that work just as well.
  2. It is no longer actively maintained. The last version was released on 1998. So qmail has been abandonware for over 7 years at the time of this writing (November 2005). Many patches are available for it, but they may not apply cleanly one after the other, and are not supported by the author. It even no longer compiles cleanly on Linux.
  3. Because the licence effectively permits only the author (Daniel J. Bernstein) to maintain the software, his consistent, mulishly unpleasant and hostile attitude tends to become an obstacle, as it would not be if the software were licensed differently.
  4. It has a completely user-unfriendly build system, a long build process, and incredibly unreadable code. Bernstein uses a lot of one- or two-letter variable names, and cryptic function names.
  5. The ezmlm-idx mailing list manager, whose use with qmail is popular has a lot of duplication in its configuration. It hard-codes the various paths in many different places. It is also exclusive to qmail. (Note that one can use one or more different mailing list managers using qmail).
  6. Many bugs were discovered in qmail since its last release (including some security bugs) and were left unfixed in the vanilla version.
  7. qmail lags behind other MTAs in its feature-set.

Alternatives

Instead you should use one of the following MTAs:

  1. Postfix
  2. Courier
  3. Exim
  4. Other SMTP Servers. (Also see Rick Moen’s comparison of common Mail Transport Agents.)

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