Does anybody here self-host a mail-by-proxy solution? If so, I’m interested to hear about your setup, experiences and any drawbacks. I have a custom domain and a hosted email service with a very small amount of storage. I’d like to host something locally so that I can keep all my email without stressing about the space. I also want to be able to use email on my phone and computer and a web interface for tablets or while traveling. Finally, I’d like emails that I send to be stored locally so I can search it. Does anybody else already do something like this? I can forge my own path, but oftentimes, somebody else is already doing it better.

  • @just_another_person
    link
    English
    9
    edit-2
    4 days ago

    You’re asking for a lot of pain. That’s all I can say. Like SIP, SMTP is one of the most attacked services out there. It has to be public, it has to be on specific ports, and it has to be advertised that it’s available. There’s a reason why people don’t mess with it anymore.

    • @r0ertelOP
      link
      English
      24 days ago

      I’d like to hide behind the service that I’m paying for without incurring extra fees for retaining it all. I can figure out the pull side by using fetchmail or something to a server that hosts dovecot, but the sending side is confusing since I’d need something that can receive my email and send it via the service. It’s only 1 email address, so I’m not looking for a mail relay, but something like a full caching mail proxy.

      • @themachine
        link
        English
        24 days ago

        Just configured your mail clients pop/IMAP server as your fetchmail target and SMTP as your hosted service.

      • @just_another_person
        link
        English
        -24 days ago

        Just use Proton or a similar service. You’re getting the same thing for free or cheap.