Feature changed by: Ludwig Nussel (lnussel) Feature #312320, revision 5 Title: don't install postfix by default anymore openSUSE Distribution: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Ludwig Nussel (lnussel) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: postfix slows down system boot and runs on every installation even though it's not actually needed anymore on the average desktop. Even mutt can send mails without local mta nowadays. Therefore we shouldn't install postfix anymore by default. cron may need adjustments to report output of cron jobs via other means such as syslog. Discussion: #1: Ruediger Meier (rudi_m) (2011-05-10 12:52:51) Bad idea. For good reason /usr/sbin/sendmail is a LSB requirement and comes per default with postfix. Usual users expect emails from cron and other daemons and ~/.forward to be respected. How should they collect their cron reports from different machines via syslog? Why should user specific output (maybe x MB of trash every 5 minutes) be logged via syslog at all? Furthermore mailx and other scriptable MUAs should work whithout any arguments per default at least for local receivers. #2: Vitezslav Cizek (vitezslav_cizek) (2011-05-10 23:11:45) Default cron install would require only minor changes to write command output to syslog. (Adding startup option `-m off' to disable e-mail messages and some MTA checks in run-crons script). However, as Ruediger pointed out, I can't imagine a single cron user not installing a MTA back. And personally, I'm not a fan of this feature either. + #3: Ludwig Nussel (lnussel) (2011-05-11 08:15:18) + Well, personally I couldn't imagine my workstation without an MTA + either. I doubt Joe Average would notice though. The mails cron sends + by default basically go to /dev/null anyways as the user never reads + root's mail. Even if you check the option to send mail to the first + created user during install that user wouldn't notice as default gui + MUA configs are not set up to check the local spool AFAIK. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/312320