Piler3

Piler Email Archiving

Piler doesn’t pretend to be sexy. It just works — quietly, reliably, and with enough knobs and switches to satisfy any admin who’s tired of black-box backups and overpriced archive solutions.

OS: Windows, Linux, macOS
Size: 50 MB
Version: 1.4.7
🡣: 2312

Piler Email Archiving — Email Never Forgets, So Make Sure It’s Stored Right

There are two kinds of admins: those who archive email, and those who eventually wish they had. Piler falls squarely into the “do it properly” camp — a self-hosted, open-source archiving system that captures, deduplicates, indexes, and stores email for the long haul. No licensing traps, no per-mailbox pricing, no weird cloud lock-in.

It’s not a glossy SaaS platform with blinking dashboards and sales reps. It’s a straight-shooting, Linux-native archive engine that quietly keeps every message exactly where it needs to be — accessible, secure, and out of users’ inboxes.

What It Does (Without the Marketing Gloss)

Feature Why It’s Useful
SMTP-Based Archiving Captures all mail through journaling or transport rules — no plugins, no fuss.
Works with Any Mail Server Exchange, Postfix, Sendmail — if it sends mail, Piler can archive it.
Deduplication & Compression One copy per message, no matter how many recipients — keeps storage sane.
Fast Search Interface Web-based, clean, and fast — even legal can figure it out.
Role-Based Access Separate access for users, auditors, IT — no need to share credentials.
Legal Hold & Retention Lock messages, define policies, stay compliant without needing external tools.
TLS & Encryption Messages are encrypted at rest and in transit. Tick that checkbox.
LDAP/AD Integration Pulls users from existing infrastructure. No need to manage accounts twice.

Where It Fits (And Why It Sticks Around)

  • Compliance teams keep asking for “that one email from 18 months ago.”
  • PSTs are piling up in random folders and nobody knows what’s where.
  • Legal needs mailbox access but can’t have full mailbox access.
  • Management wants retention policies that actually get enforced.
  • Current solution costs a fortune and no one remembers why it was bought.

Getting It Running (With Minimal Drama)

  1. Set the Stage
    Install on a Linux box — Ubuntu or CentOS works well. Expect to bring along MariaDB, Redis, Nginx, and Postfix.
  2. Get the Code
    Either build from source or use one of the package builds. Official project lives at piler.hu and GitHub.
  3. Feed It Mail
    Configure journaling or a transport rule to BCC a copy of all mail to Piler. This is the part where everything starts flowing in.
  4. Tune the Config
    Settings are stored in /etc/piler. Define paths, DB access, encryption settings, and other core parameters.
  5. Archive & Search
    Once live, mail gets ingested, indexed, deduplicated, and stored. The search interface gives quick access to years’ worth of messages.
  6. Tie It to LDAP
    Add Active Directory or LDAP integration to allow seamless user access. Role separation is built in — no need for workarounds.

Final Notes

Piler doesn’t pretend to be sexy. It just works — quietly, reliably, and with enough knobs and switches to satisfy any admin who’s tired of black-box backups and overpriced archive solutions.

It keeps the mail. All of it. Efficiently. And when the day comes that someone asks for a message from three years ago — it’ll be right there, waiting.

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