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quitesimple.org
| | dataswamp.org
8.2 parsecs away

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| | In this blog post, you will learn how to configure your email server to automatically encrypt incoming emails using GPG.
| | blog.jak-linux.org
9.1 parsecs away

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| | jan.wildeboer.net
7.6 parsecs away

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| | 0. The Journey - The basics and outlook (on the series, not the Microsoft mail client ;) 1. Postfix - the in and out, so to say. The robust, battle-hardened connection point for other mail servers on the internet to send emails to and receive emails from your domain(s). Also known as the MTA, the Mail Transfer Agent. 2. Dovecot - where you and your users talk to to get emails to their mail client, be it your smartphone, a mail client on your computer or just even the command line. It's the IMAP server. 3. DKIM/DMARC/SPF - Just having postfix and dovecot up and running isn't enough. We will also look at user authentication, letsencrypt certificates, DKIM, DMARC, SPF and the daily checks to make sure everything is humming along nicely. 4. The final stuff - How to make sure my e-mail server is happy and can do its job. Some simple checks, how to use fail2ban to keep bad servers and users away, checking log files, all those little things.
| | www.crosenthal.com
50.8 parsecs away

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| I used to run a pretty complicated publishing workflow on this website. I dont anymore. Im writing this up because it might be useful for somebody else who uses the Jekyll static site generator for publishing to their own private hosting site.