Posts Tagged: Ubuntu


Mail-in-a-Box: access Munin from a different subdomain

Munin is a network and infrastructure monitoring software that comes standard in a Mail-in-a-Box installation. Depending on your wants or needs, you can access Munin from a subdomain, or domain, other than the default box.example.com/admin/munin directory. For instance, our Mail-in-a-Box install is located at mail.obstance.com. Because we added several servers to monitor through the box,

Adding more servers to monitor with Munin in Mail-in-a-Box

Munin is one of the various software that gets installed when you set up Mail-in-a-Box on your server. It comes with both the master and slave (node), and can be accessed at box.example.com/admin/munin/. Since MiaB comes with the heftier, required Munin master package, we might as well utilize it to its fullest — by connecting

Mail-in-a-Box: access Nextcloud from a different subdomain (or domain)

Mail-in-a-Box is a fantastic and easy-to-deploy mail server that comes with a suite of different, intermingled software that comes preinstalled during initial set up on your server. One of the biggest positives of MiaB also comes with one of its biggest negatives: Upside Installing Mail-in-a-Box is quick and easy, and it comes with some great

Mail-in-a-Box: monitor your files with Monit

Monit is a useful process supervision tool for Linux. Mail-in-a-Box doesn’t recommend customizing your box much, if at all, because it’s meant to be easy to deploy and maintain. It focuses on this ease, which is one of its positives. Files that are core to Mail-in-a-Box aren’t meant to be touched because they’ll eventually be

Showing your Mail-in-a-Box users their email aliases

After reading a post on the Mail-in-a-Box forum about users and family members not knowing which email aliases they have available to them, it interested me enough to figure out a decent solution. Roundcube is a core part of the Mail-in-a-Box set up, and in it, users have to manually add an identity in their