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Open source xinetd/tcpserver based IMAP server for the Linux platform, with support for Maildir.
Widely-used DNS server software, and related tools. (C) [Many platforms]
An SMTP/IMAP/POP3/HTTP (webmail) server, implementing SMTP extensions for mailing list management and spam filtering. (C, C++, Perl) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
An IMAP server developed at Carnegie Mellon University. (C, Perl) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
A web control panel for dns administrators. DNS information is stored in mysql and can be output to either BIND or tinydns files. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Uses free software running on inexpensive hardware for a personal server and offers various services. Presentation, FAQ, manual, download links.
Gives you the power to embed Perl code in your HTML documents and the ability to build your Web site out of small reusable objects in a OO-style. (Perl)
A tiny and simple http server that runs under inetd. It supports HEAD/GET/POST, and IPv6.
Provides IRC networks with definitive nickname and channel ownership, allows messages to be sent to offline users, and gives IRC operators more control. [GNU/Linux, Unix]
A HTTP and mail proxy server licensed under a 2-clause BSD-like license. By Igor Sysoev. [Unix, Mac OS X]
Open source e-mail filtering solution for Linux e-mail servers. (C, Perl) [Linux, BSD]
A compatible, more secure replacement for sendmail program, which transfers mail over the internet. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Daemon which proxies TLS connections into services which don't support TLS themselves. Readme file, change log, man page, and tarballed source. Requires OpenSSL. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Pop 3 server designed to be fast, extensible, and secure. Version history, FAQ, overview, and tarballed source distribution. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
An IRC daemon with SSL support and WebTV support. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix, Windows]
Aims for simple administration of a server, and therefore democratize self-hosting with services like e-mail, instant messaging or blogging. Documentation, online trial, download links.
Aims for simple administration of a server, and therefore democratize self-hosting with services like e-mail, instant messaging or blogging. Documentation, online trial, download links.
An IRC daemon with SSL support and WebTV support. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix, Windows]
Widely-used DNS server software, and related tools. (C) [Many platforms]
Uses free software running on inexpensive hardware for a personal server and offers various services. Presentation, FAQ, manual, download links.
Provides IRC networks with definitive nickname and channel ownership, allows messages to be sent to offline users, and gives IRC operators more control. [GNU/Linux, Unix]
An IMAP server developed at Carnegie Mellon University. (C, Perl) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
A HTTP and mail proxy server licensed under a 2-clause BSD-like license. By Igor Sysoev. [Unix, Mac OS X]
Open source e-mail filtering solution for Linux e-mail servers. (C, Perl) [Linux, BSD]
A tiny and simple http server that runs under inetd. It supports HEAD/GET/POST, and IPv6.
Gives you the power to embed Perl code in your HTML documents and the ability to build your Web site out of small reusable objects in a OO-style. (Perl)
A compatible, more secure replacement for sendmail program, which transfers mail over the internet. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Daemon which proxies TLS connections into services which don't support TLS themselves. Readme file, change log, man page, and tarballed source. Requires OpenSSL. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Pop 3 server designed to be fast, extensible, and secure. Version history, FAQ, overview, and tarballed source distribution. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Open source xinetd/tcpserver based IMAP server for the Linux platform, with support for Maildir.
An SMTP/IMAP/POP3/HTTP (webmail) server, implementing SMTP extensions for mailing list management and spam filtering. (C, C++, Perl) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
A web control panel for dns administrators. DNS information is stored in mysql and can be output to either BIND or tinydns files. (C) [GNU/Linux, Unix]
Last update:
November 4, 2025 at 17:45:31 UTC
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