A virtual machine with a ready-to-use Modoboa setup is available here. It is composed of the following components:
Actually, it is the result you obtain if you follow the official documentation.
The disk image is using the VMDK format and is compressed using bzip2. To decompress it, just run the following command:
$ bunzip2 modoboa.vmdk.bz2
If you can’t use the vmdk format, you can use qemu to convert it to another one. For example:
$ qemu-img convert modoboa.vmdk -O qcow2 modoboa.qcow2
Then, just use your prefered virtualization software (qemu, kvm, virtualbox, etc.) to start the machine. You’ll need to configure at least one bridged network interface if you want to be able to play with Modoboa, ie. your machine must be visible from your network.
The default network interface of the machine (eth0) is configured to use the DHCP protocol.
The following UNIX users are available if you want to connect to the system:
Login | Password | Description |
---|---|---|
root | demo | the root user |
demo | demo | an unpriviliged user |
To connect to Modoboa, first connect to the system and retrieve its current network address like this:
$ /sbin/ifconfig eth0
Once you know its address, open a web browser and go to this url:
http://<ip_address>/admin/
You should see the login page. Here are the users available by default:
Login | Password | Capabitilies |
---|---|---|
admin | password | Default super administrator. Can do anything on the admin but can’t access applications |
admin@demo.local | admin | Administrator of the domain demo.local. Can administrater its domain and access to applications. |
user@demo.local | user | Simple user. Can access to applications. |