Anonymous
7/21/2025, 10:28:21 PM
No.105981339
>>105979537
stalwart unironically.
Stalwart will happily manage imap, pop, smtp, dkim, spf and has integration with standard tools like spamassassin or clamav.
You just install it and configure it once (you don't need to configure and enable all features like jmap or pop), then you copy the dns records it gives you to your domain provider and you're done. It even generates the configuration xml endpoint for mail clients to automatically configure and connect. The web interface works really well, but has way too many options and the search feature could be improved, but it's really easy to add new mail accounts.
stalwart will automatically send dmarc requests and perform deliverability tests using google and amazon to regularly check that your emails are going through.
Then you can get into the more secured setups by rotating dkim keys and using multiple servers in case one goes down (highly recommended by the email rfc for reliability).
>>105980541
You don't need to do that, you can rent an ip for 1.5-5usd/mo and you can even buy a /8 subnet for relatively cheap (then of course you resell the unused ips).
>>105980935
>>105981101
never happened to me, running multiple emails services (including ones for companies).
unless you're a complete retard and don't want to sign your emails with dkim.
for clean ips, you want non-shady hosts like hetzner or ovh. Usually you just rent the cheapest vps possible, if it's got a bad rep, you rent another one for around 3-5$/mo. Then you make a tunnel from your machine/server to that vps which you're going to use as a reverse-tunnel. That'll prevent people from getting your ip and you can always cancel your vps for a new one if your rep goes down. That won't happen unless you do a terrible job.
stalwart unironically.
Stalwart will happily manage imap, pop, smtp, dkim, spf and has integration with standard tools like spamassassin or clamav.
You just install it and configure it once (you don't need to configure and enable all features like jmap or pop), then you copy the dns records it gives you to your domain provider and you're done. It even generates the configuration xml endpoint for mail clients to automatically configure and connect. The web interface works really well, but has way too many options and the search feature could be improved, but it's really easy to add new mail accounts.
stalwart will automatically send dmarc requests and perform deliverability tests using google and amazon to regularly check that your emails are going through.
Then you can get into the more secured setups by rotating dkim keys and using multiple servers in case one goes down (highly recommended by the email rfc for reliability).
>>105980541
You don't need to do that, you can rent an ip for 1.5-5usd/mo and you can even buy a /8 subnet for relatively cheap (then of course you resell the unused ips).
>>105980935
>>105981101
never happened to me, running multiple emails services (including ones for companies).
unless you're a complete retard and don't want to sign your emails with dkim.
for clean ips, you want non-shady hosts like hetzner or ovh. Usually you just rent the cheapest vps possible, if it's got a bad rep, you rent another one for around 3-5$/mo. Then you make a tunnel from your machine/server to that vps which you're going to use as a reverse-tunnel. That'll prevent people from getting your ip and you can always cancel your vps for a new one if your rep goes down. That won't happen unless you do a terrible job.