

The defaults are listed in teh brackets so you can just press enter for every question. Next you need to select the packages to install. Run the install script with a platform-override argument (since we’re installing on CentOS and not Red Hat) and then follow the instructions by installing whatever external packages the setup tells you are required and selecting options that correspond to your configuration (I used the default option at practically every step):
#Zimbra install sh permission denied download#
You can download Zimbra by using wget command: Notice that the ip address returned is the same as the local machine. It should return something similar to this: To verify that it is working do the following: Restart Bind by issuing /etc/init.d/named restart command. We are the master server for įile "/var/named/" Ĭreate /var/named/. Statistics-file "/var/named/data/named_stats.txt" Yum install bind bind-chroot bind-libs bind-utilsĬreate /etc/nf file and use the sample configuration:ĭump-file "/var/named/data/cache_dump.db" Go ahead and reboot, and fill up that coffee cup. On the next page we will setup Split DNS which is essential for ZCS. This completes the base installation of CentOS. We need one package before we can continue: The last step is to shutoff some services that will interfere with ZCS. Things to do after a clean installation of Centos 5.5:

I was unable to make it run without errors with any less memory. The machine will need at least 1024mb of memory to run the default Zimbra services. In this post, I will be installing Zimbra onto a CentOS virtual machine. In many ways, Zimbra is the Unix equivalent to Microsoft Exchange. Zimbra is a suite of tools for Unix/Linux/MacOS systems, which includes a secure mail server, web mail, anti-spam/anti-virus controls, a Web management interface, integrated calendaring, mobile device sync, and more.
