Migration of departmental email system to CalMail
Contents
- 1 New CalMail Math Service
- 2 Frequently Asked Questions
- 2.1 How can I use the CalMail web-based tool?
- 2.2 Why haven't I received any mail since April 6?
- 2.3 How should I configure my email client?
- 2.4 Will my math.berkeley.edu email address go away after the transition?
- 2.5 Will I need to create my own CalMail account?
- 2.6 What if I already have a Calmail account?
- 2.7 Do I already have a CalMail Math password?
- 2.8 How do I create my new password?
- 2.9 Will the "quota for incoming mail" still be in effect after the transition?
- 2.10 What will happen to the current contents of my inbox?
- 2.11 What about outgoing mail? Will the process of sending mail change?
- 2.12 What happened to the mailing list(s) that I manage?
- 2.13 I subscribe to some high-volume mailing lists, and used to use procmail to send them all to a separate file. Will that setup continue to work?
- 2.14 What about other uses of procmail?
- 2.15 What about mail forwarding?
- 2.16 What if I don't have a valid Calnet ID?
- 2.17 I do have a valid Calnet ID. Why hasn't my new account been created?
- 2.18 HELP! I can't understand this stuff. How can I get a person to help?
New CalMail Math Service
At 9:00 A.M., on April 6, the Mathematics Department switched email service to the campus' email system, CalMail. This was done in order to free up departmental staff time for other duties, and because increasing volumes of spam, clever spammers, and changes in the way that email is used are making it increasingly difficult for us properly to manage an email in-house system.
Advantages for users are that the CalMail system will be more reliable than the departmental mail server, spam should be more effectively reduced, and disk storage for mail on the CalMail server will be substantially larger.
The main change for users is in the way that you read incoming mail. The extent of this change depends on which mail client you use.
- Approved IMAP-capable email clients
- Users of mutt, alpine (formerly pine), Thunderbird, Apple's Mail.app (also known as Mail) and other IMAP-capable mail readers will see minimal changes, although they will need to change the configuration. See the wiki page Email Calmail Settings for information on how to do this.
- Eudora
- Eudora may work, but its use is strongly discouraged. In fact, Eudora has been abandoned by its developers and does not meet the minimal security standards required by IS&T, so you should not be using it on campus at all. Please see this article on Eudora-to-Thunderbird migration from IS&T knowledge base. Also have a look at Tom Holub's blog with additional discussion and links to LSCR howto pages. Apple's Mail.app has built-in support for migrating from Eudora.
- SquirrelMail
- Users who read mail using the department's SquirrelMail web interface will need to point their browsers to CalMail instead.
- Traditional Unix "mail" command
- The Unix mail program does not directly support the IMAP protocol. Users can either switch to one of the above mail clients, or make some changes in how you read mail. See the wiki page on CalMail conversion and Unix mail.
- Solaris CDE "dtmail" client
- The mail client dtmail will no longer be supported. (This is the client that you get when you click on the mail icon in the Solaris CDE environment). Users of dtmail will have to switch to one of the mail clients listed above.
- Other Unix command-line mailers
- Users of emacs RMAIL will be responsible for managing the transition on their own (for one possible solution see Emacs RMAIL with CalMail). Another emacs mail reader, VM (View Mail), might also be usable.
Watch this space for further information on procedures to follow during the transition. (e.g., see the question on setting your CalMail password, below).
Frequently Asked Questions
Here are answers to some questions you may have about the transition.
How can I use the CalMail web-based tool?
- Just go to https://calmail.berkeley.edu/ and log in. You can then read and send emails from there. Your username will be <username>@math.berkeley.edu address and your password will be the special CalMail password that you have already set up, as described below.
Why haven't I received any mail since April 6?
- Probably you haven't reconfigured your email client for CalMail. If you haven't, then your mail program is looking for mail in the wrong place.
How should I configure my email client?
Will my math.berkeley.edu email address go away after the transition?
- No, you will still have the same math.berkeley.edu email address as before. The only difference is that incoming and outgoing mail will be handled by CalMail servers instead of by Math Department computers. (This assumes that you have a valid Calnet ID; if that's not the case see the answers below.)
Will I need to create my own CalMail account?
- No, you will not need take steps on your own to create the CalMail account. Note that if you go to CalMail's web site and create an account for yourself, you will have a different email address, username@berkeley.edu, instead of username@math.berkeley.edu. Of course, you can do that, but it is probably not what you want to do, since you will then have two independent CalMail accounts after the transition.
- New accounts have already been created for most users, including all staff and faculty. You may access them now. Note that your login on Calmail includes the text @math.berkeley.edu. If you find that you do not have an account, either we were unable to obtain a Calnet UID for you, or you do not have a valid Calnet ID.
What if I already have a Calmail account?
- It will continue to operate, independent of this new account. You might want to arrange to forward mail from one to the other. Note that settings are not shared between your two CalMail accounts; if you forward mail from your old CalMail account, that does not result in mail being forwarded from the new account, unless you set it up.
Do I already have a CalMail Math password?
- No, not unless you have independently created one. Your CalMail account username@math.berkeley.edu should have already been created, and should be receiving email.
How do I create my new password?
- You cannot create the new password without valid Calnet ID. (See the question about Calnet ID below.) If you have any doubts, you can verify your Calnet ID here. (By now you should have changed your Calnet id from you employee number to a personalized one.) Once your new account has been established, you should use a web browser and go to the Change Password link, on the left side of the Calmail home page. That will allow you to authenticate via Calnet ID, and return you to the password page. Enter your Login, which will be username@math.berkeley.edu, and then create a new password.
Will the "quota for incoming mail" still be in effect after the transition?
- The existing mail quota system will no longer be in effect. Incoming mail will no longer be stored in the directory /var/mail, presently used for incoming mail and subject to the 25 MB departmental quota. Mail will either be stored in your home directory, where it will be subject to your usual quota, or on the CalMail server, which has its own quota of 1 GB per user. (In the unlikely event that even 1 GB is not enough for you, you can send a request for an increase to request@math.berkeley.edu.)
What will happen to the current contents of my inbox?
- Nothing will happen to your inbox on the Math server without your explicit action. You should move the contents of your inbox (the file /var/mail/username) to your new account, using your IMAP mail client. You may also have mail folders stored in your home directory. The departmental imap server, as well as some mail clients, may immediately move incoming mail into the file mbox in your home directory. Most people store mail in folders within their home directories. The transition will not affect the mbox file, other mail folders, or anything else within your home directory. These can be moved at your leisure (before or after April 6), once you have set up the password for your CalMail account - see Move mbox Calmail wiki page.
What about outgoing mail? Will the process of sending mail change?
- When sending mail from one of the Math Department workstations or servers, you should not see any difference. If you've configured your own email client for remote access, you'll need to change the server settings, specifically the SMTP server, which should be calmail.berkeley.edu.
What happened to the mailing list(s) that I manage?
- Managed mailing lists (i.e. Mailman lists) were moved for you. The list address is still the same. Currently, Calmail doesn't provide Mailman archiving, but that may change soon.
I subscribe to some high-volume mailing lists, and used to use procmail to send them all to a separate file. Will that setup continue to work?
- procmail will no longer be operative on mail received by CalMail (but it can be used with fetchmail). CalMail has its own facilities for automatically directing incoming mail to separate folders on CalMail. Go to the CalMail home page, click on "Manage your account" in the box on the left, log in with your CalMail account and password, and select "Filters".
What about other uses of procmail?
- See the previous question. More esoteric uses may not be possible with CalMail's mail filtering options, or may need to take a different form.
What about mail forwarding?
- It is possible to forward mail from your CalMail account, either keeping a copy also on CalMail or not. Forwarding is no longer managed by editing a file .forward within your home directory, however. Instead, you will need to log in to the CalMail web page to set this up. By default, your .forward settings were not transferred to the new account; however, we can do that for you if you specifically request it, via email to request@math.berkeley.edu. See CalMail page about forwarding.
- If you currently do not have a login account, but email to your @math.berkeley.edu address is forwarded, that forwarding will stop, unless you explicitly request it to continue via email to request@math.berkeley.edu.
What if I don't have a valid Calnet ID?
- Unfortunately, without a valid Calnet ID, we cannot create an account for you on Calmail. If you forgot your Calnet ID pass-phrase, contact Kathy Santos or Jennifer Sixt to reset the pass-phrase. If you have a login account in the Math Department, or mail forwarding from an older account, but do not currently have a valid Calnet ID, we can arrange for mail forwarding to your new account. Send a request to request@math.berkeley.edu. Our current position is that we will honor all such requests, and we have not set any time limit on that forwarding. (This could change, if the administrative load becomes too great.)
I do have a valid Calnet ID. Why hasn't my new account been created?
- At this point we have requested calmail accounts for all users for which we have been able to find valid Calnet IDs. If you feel that you do (or should) have a valid Calnet iD, send email to request@math.berkeley.edu. If possible, include your Calnet UID (which is not the same as your CalnetID). You should be able to look it up in the campus directory.
HELP! I can't understand this stuff. How can I get a person to help?
- There are a number of people that can be contacted for help. Please DO NOT call these people and say that you haven't bothered to read the documentation that so many of us have worked to prepare. Your appeal for personal help will be greeted much more sympathetically if you at least indicate that you have read this page. In fact, if you have read it, you may not actually need to contact anyone. However, if you do:
- First, you can contact the Calmail support team directly - consult@berkeley.edu, or 510-642-8500.
- Next, you can send email to request@math.berkeley.edu, or contact the Unix support staff of LSCR, which includes Steve (2-8570) and Igor (3-8747).
- Staff can contact ohlone@ls.berkeley.edu.
- Faculty can get help from the LSCR faculty support team - fac_support@ls.berkeley.edu.
- A couple of faculty members, Arthur Ogus and Paul Vojta, are volunteering to help individual faculty by personal request.