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Comments
Yes.
Thanks!
Unless you're attaching ISOs to your emails, yes it's enough.
Thanks
guerilla said fuck the thanks button
Fixed that for him.
Thanks
Even 20 Mb/s would be plenty. Even with occasionally attached ISO.
I think you need 10 gigabit at least.
How are you planning on setting up this mail server. I think most mail will go into peoples spam boxes. I haven't set one up in a year or so though there might be easier solutions now?
Yes, it's enough.
SPF, DKIM are mandatory today, also PFS, DANE can help.
how many emails do you expect to receive at any one time...??and is there attachement...??
if just plain/html email,even with hundreds at any one time, i believe that even 5mbps would be enough....
E-mails were designed in a time where 100 Mb/s would have been total luxury. So, yes, you could even run a mail server on much less than 100 Mb/s.
That shouldn't be the case if:
For the first requirement: if you get an IP address assigned that was previously used for spamming, then you won't see good delivery rates of course. Best way to prevent that from happening is to rely on a provider that has a "zero-spam" policy and actually monitors whether users cause their IP addresses to land on those blacklists.
For the second requirement: setup SFP and DKIM on your mail server, and also configure reverse DNS entries. If you are done with it, send a mail to mail-tester.com and see if there is still some recommendation left you can implement to optimise your mail server.
If you can fulfil both requirements, email delivery on a VPS won't give you any headaches and all you mails will land in the receivers mailbox.