0x4447_product_s3_email
0x4447_product_secure301
0x4447_product_s3_email | 0x4447_product_secure301 | |
---|---|---|
15 | 1 | |
3,010 | 15 | |
0.1% | - | |
2.6 | 2.4 | |
4 months ago | 3 months ago | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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0x4447_product_s3_email
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Free VPS as SMTP Proxy
Here is something on GitHub that roughly follows this paradigm, and was made to use SES as the "email server".
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Need any open-source alternatives?
- https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email
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Self-hosted email is the hardest it's ever been, but also the easiest
> Could there be a serverless alternative where the service wakes up only to receive emails and will be charged only when emails are processed, filtered and served & rest of the time no charge - avoiding $3 to $5 charged by behemoths per inbox?
I love ideas as much as the next guy and serverless email is kind of floating out there:
https://medium.com/schibsted-engineering/building-a-serverle...
https://github.com/arithmetric/aws-lambda-ses-forwarder
https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email
It's possible to build it, but the problem is that you still have the same problem of deliverability. Obviously it works fine/great for receving emails though.
> Idea is how cheap can it go for personal inbox with all the features denied by the superlative pricing plans
It could get really cheap, but would people buy it? I always wonder if price is really the limiting factor for self hosted emails.
Zoho is already QUITE cheap: https://www.zoho.com/mail/zohomail-pricing.html
Maybe this would work as a business, but it's a bit questionable to me.
- Lambda email system
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Get email attachments directly into S3 bucket?
Based on your description I think this project is for you: https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email - it dose what you are looking for, I hope this helps.
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Need Help | Create serverless 'Email Service'
Here is a complete solution that hopefully gives you some ideas for a more simplified approach based on your needs. https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email
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Please fix the AWS free tier before somebody gets hurt
> What do you think about this page: https://aws.amazon.com/getting-started/
It is very dangerous. If you select the full-stack tutorial you get: "Time to Complete 30 minutes". It should say: "30 min to ruin your life" ;)
If you want to really learn AWS, then this page should be used as a reference of how to design a stack. If I were you I would read the tutorials to see which services are needed for a solution, but before doing anything, I would read the docs for each of those services to really understand them, then I would go back to the tutorial and actually do it, and - MOST IMPORTANTLY - I would read the pricing page for each service that you are going to use.
> Do you think it's irresponsible for AWS to encourage beginners to try their service when they apparently only intend it to be used by those with a computer science degree and 5-year apprenticeship under an experienced sysadmin?
100% - when I started working with AWS in 2016 I had a very hard time figuring it out, because I was looking for the simplicity the the marketing team was writing about. I really don't like what the marketing team tries to tell you, because it dose not exist.
Regarding an approach to learn about AWS, I would start with all the serverless services that they have, since the pricing for most of them is ideal for beginners (WARNING - read the pricing page for each since not all have a free staring plane, like S3 and DynamoDB) and for simple weekend projects.
For example, I did build this project a while ago: https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email, if you scroll down to the pricing section you will see this:
```
- A serverless email server on AWS using S3 and SES
0x4447_product_secure301
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Please fix the AWS free tier before somebody gets hurt
```
So you can have a stack that is actually doing something very useful that costs not even a $1 a month.
It is possible to pay $0 to AWS, but you need to first understand AWS to be able to do it, another trivial example of a tiny project that is useful and cost $0 to run: https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_secure301
The last point would be: don't listen to the marketing material - they are there to sell you AWS, marketing never cares about reality.
I also recommend this website https://awsvideocatalog.com - pick a service and watch all the keynotes AWS has on that service, if you'd spend 1h a day, in 6 months you'll know more about AWS then anyone else complaining here.
What are some alternatives?
aws-nuke - Nuke a whole AWS account and delete all its resources.
former2 - Generate CloudFormation / Terraform / Troposphere templates from your existing AWS resources.
developer-handbook - An opinionated guide on how to become a professional Web/Mobile App Developer.
mCaptcha - A no-nonsense CAPTCHA system with seamless UX | Backend component
DevOps-Roadmap - DevOps Roadmap for 2024. with learning resources
amail - AWS-hosted personal email system: sending, receiving, storage, and forwarding (relaying). `notmuch` client. JMAP server WIP.
MoonMail - Email marketing platform for bulk emailing via Amazon SES (Google Cloud Platform and Azure coming soon)
cloud-nuke - A tool for cleaning up your cloud accounts by nuking (deleting) all resources within it
Apache - Mirror of Apache HTTP Server. Issues: http://issues.apache.org
Listmonk - High performance, self-hosted, newsletter and mailing list manager with a modern dashboard. Single binary app.