On 30/05/17 12:01 PM, Per Jessen wrote:
That's what we do - tables that rarely change are kept as hash, tables that change frequently or need changing by end-users, they are in mysql.
That makes perfect sense. For a service provider or any kind. For an individual, for a family, the constraints are different. When I was using Postfix in this set of circumstances, fetchmail feeding procmail to do the SpamAssassin stuff, then feeding to postfix to 'dispatch' and deal with aliases and identities, it was set up the once and stayed that way until I had a unrecoverable disk crash and said "Buqqer This", and went to a IMAP based system working with Dovecot. A single user, a family, well its a lot more 'static' configuration. The single user is the admin and has better things to do since he or she is not employed as an admin. Such people have the computer for applications and that's their focus. That we do admin stuff is just part of keeping the machine running. We don't have to obsess about it, fine tune it to the ultimate degree as some service providers needs to. -- A: Yes. > Q: Are you sure? >> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation. >>> Q: Why is top posting frowned upon? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org