• AmbiguousProps
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    10 months ago

    It should be noted that email servers, no matter the setup, require you to follow strict standards to achieve proper delivery. It’s very easy to get blacklisted, and it’s next to impossible to get off of said blacklist once you’re on it.

    I used to host my own mail server with this, but it got to be too much to get my emails to actually send. I was always wondering if my email was actually delivered or if it was silently bounced or sent to spam. Email is the only thing I’m not willing to self host.

    • @null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      210 months ago

      I’m absolutely in the “don’t self-host email” camp. That said, I think it could be done reliably if you wanted to use someone else’s SMTP server and let them worry about deliverability. As in, have your mx records on your domain route to your MTA and dovecot, but set your DKIM and SPF records to match a third party SMTP server. You could use mxroute as an SMTP server very cheaply. There are others like the email API type services. I still can’t think of why I’d want to self host with all this drama but just an idea I’ve heard.

  • mesaOP
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    910 months ago

    Ive used this in the past to host an email server. Eventually, my ISP actually stopped allowing people to use mail ports, so I had to discontinue. But it worked very well when I used it many years ago.

    • @9tr6gyp3@lemmy.world
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      510 months ago

      Its perfect for a small VPS. Been using it for years.

      I do occasionally get places where my email simply will not send to them, even though it follows every email standard properly and isnt blacklisted. For those rare occasions, ill use a third party email address to send, which then forwards everything to my main email.

    • @jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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      210 months ago

      Call them and tell them to open it. It probably isnt legal for them to close the port if you ask them to open it.

  • Rimu
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    510 months ago

    MailCow is similar except uses docker. I expect that will mean easier maintenance as it is less tightly bound to the underlying OS.

    • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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      210 months ago

      I think Mailcow is a fair bit further along in features than this. I used this for a short bit but wasn’t overly impressed, and you are right about how running a docker stack is less hassle for updating.

  • hendrik
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    210 months ago

    I’ve always been looking for an all-in-one mailserver with a few added features like mailing lists and something like AnonAddy (anonymous mail forwarding). Sadly there doesn’t seem anything like that out there. So I have to configure postfix and dovecot myself. Or make ends meet with a bit more basic features.

    • @words_number@programming.dev
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      510 months ago

      Check out stalwart mail! Not sure it has all the features you need, but it is really flexible through scripting and has got a nice admin web-interface!

      • hendrik
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        110 months ago

        Thanks, and I happen to already be aware of it. It doesn’t have any of that. And it’s more complicated to hook it into other things, since the good old postfix is the default case and well-trodden path. I think I’ll try Stalwart anyways. It’s a bit of a risk, though. Since it’s a small project with few developers and the future isn’t 100% certain. And I have to learn all the glue in between the mailserver stuff, since there aren’t any tutorials out there. But both the frontend, and the configuration and setup seem to make sense.

        • @words_number@programming.dev
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          310 months ago

          If you need to hook it up to other stuff (where there is a solution using postfix), it’s probably easier to stick with postfix. As an all-in-one mail server I prefer stalwart over docker-mailserver, mailcow, etc. because it’s one unified software with sensible configuration instead of a clusterfuck of services put together using string and duckt tape.