this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2023
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A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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inbox@yourdomain.com
(better not to self-host, but to use an email provider)Wanted to expand on your custom domain for an email since this is something I do to get a more professional email address to put on my resume. A lot of DNS services like Cloudflare or NameCheap will actually let you create email addresses off of your custom domain that will just forward to a different email of your choosing, and generally free or very very cheap as well. If you want to be able to actually send emails from your custom domain, you can setup a Google Workspace account with a single seat for $5 a month and have a fully hosted email solution that uses your custom domain name.
Can also do this with iCloud+ for 99 cents a month.
Purelymail
better to use zoho. Zoho mails provides you 5 free custom email for free and zeptomail allows you to send k emails for 1 dollars
When I used Zoho Free, many of my emails would end up in people's spam folders. My domain is certainly not on any blacklist, it was pointed correctly and with the security and domain validation features enabled and everything configured properly. Deployed it to small business clients as well and same result.
Gmail doesn't seem to like Zoho.
What seemed to work like a charm was to use iCloud+ Custom Email and just add my custom domain addresses as aliases on Gmail. It's like having a custom domain Google Workspace without paying anything (apart from the iCloud subscription that gives you a ton of space for all your data).
Does it even work?
Proton mail will let you do wildcard email and it's only $3-4 a month. If you need smtp support then you can just setup a hydroxide container.
Just to be clear for OP, that applies only for protocols that "support DNS" as in, they send the DNS in the protocol.
The one I have in mind: http(s) and emails.
Games, FTP and most of the protocols don't.
Still a bit wrong. You can use things like Portzilla and make it so that certain subdomains are for certain game servers.
Hum, then I am missing something because portzilla is just a reverse proxy by the look of it
This mean:
Or
I assumed OP was in IPV4 and only has one IP.
Just to be sure from my other assumptions (kinda ELI5)
This is how networking works. Only with IP, no DNS.
You can also just use a web server like apache and have it forward the traffic to the correct place depending on the sub domain. This is what I do, I can have minecraft.mydomain.com route to 192.168.1.40:5000 and valheim.mydomain.com route to 192.168.1.40:27015.
Just a note, as we've had this discussion before: DNS ACME challenges will publish the FQDN of every service you encrypt to a public record, which some sites will scrape up. Just in case this bothers some people.
I use DNS challenges for mine as well, but I have been manually renewing my cert every time. Is there a way to automate letsencrypt/cerbot renewal when you use DNS challenges?
can recommend acme.sh if on Linux