View Full Version : howto webmail.domain.com
nsansari
13th September 2009, 13:25
I have installed ispconfig 3.0.1.4 , and during installation I entered internal domain. so the server is now server.domain.int
how can i create webmail.domain1.com or www.domain1.com/webmail ?
Can I use one domain to provide access to webmail to all the other domains. ?
I've tried creating a subdomain called webmail.domain1.com and creating a symbolic link to the squirrelmail directory but that does not work, I'm not even sure if this is the right way to do this.
Thanks in advance
Mccy_McFlinn
18th September 2009, 15:59
Hello,
If you were to browse to http://ip_of_server/webmail I'm going to assume that you get the squirrel mail interface.
If this is the case then there are a couple of very simple ways in which we can make a FQDN to point at the webmail.
The easiest and quickest way would be to add a server alias to the default config file in /etc/apache2/sites-available. E.g:
ServerAlias webmail.example.com
Then restart apache - /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
This will result in http://webmail.example.com/webmail now showing the webmail interface (provided you configure DNS to point webmail.example.com to point to the server's IP address).
The other option is to create a new virtual host called webmail.example.com and point the document root to /var/www/webmail. That way http://webmail.example.com will point directly at the webmail interface.
If you need any advice on configuring a new virtual host to perform this operation then let me know.
Thanks
Mccy_McFlinn
18th September 2009, 16:04
Hello,
If you were to browse to http://ip_of_server/webmail I'm going to assume that you get the squirrel mail interface.
If this is the case then there are a couple of very simple ways in which we can make a FQDN to point at the webmail.
The easiest and quickest way would be to add a server alias to the default config file in /etc/apache2/sites-available. E.g:
ServerAlias webmail.example.com
Then restart apache - /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
This will result in http://webmail.example.com/webmail now showing the webmail interface (provided you configure DNS to point webmail.example.com to point to the server's IP address).
The other option is to create a new virtual host called webmail.example.com and point the document root to /var/www/webmail. That way http://webmail.example.com will point directly at the webmail interface.
If you need any advice on configuring a new virtual host to perform this operation then let me know.
Thanks
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