If Apache is running, you must now configure this installation of Horde by visiting: http://127.0.0.1/horde/ and then navigating to Administration > Setup > Horde Documentation on configuring Horde can be found at: /usr/share/doc/horde-3.3.6/docs/INSTALL **IMPORTANT** By default, everyone accessing Horde is automatically logged in as 'Administrator'. This is a security risk! It is very important that you change the authentication backend under the 'Authentication' tab. For this reason, Horde is currently only accessible from localhost. To enable wider access, edit: /etc/httpd/conf.d/horde.conf Notice: Cookies will not be stored by your browser if you don't use a FQDN (fully qualified domain name), e.g. http://localhost/horde/. This will break horde's sessions and could result in crashing your browser! Take care to only access horde via IP address or FQDN (like http://localhost.localdomain/horde/) Most Horde sites will want to configure a database backend for user preferences and other horde metadata. In order to configure such a backend, be sure you install the appropriate php database module (such as php-mysql or php-pgsql). Then, follow the instructions in /usr/share/horde/scripts/sql/README to import the DB schema. The following actions are also highly recommended: - Install 'horde-enhanced' which contains the following packages: php-imap php-mbstring php-mcrypt php-pecl-Fileinfo php-pear-Auth-SASL php-pear-Date php-pear-HTTP-Request php-pear-Mail php-pear-Net-Socket php-pear-Net-SMTP (or install them individually) - Increase memory_limit in /etc/httpd/conf.d/horde.conf to 32M or higher - Browse http://localhost.localdomain/horde/test.php for additional suggestions