On 16.08.2013, at 08:50, Titanus Eramius <tita...@aptget.dk> wrote:

[DNS]

> I tend to simply use "v=spf1 mx -all" since my setup is simple, but you
> can see the entire syntax here http://www.openspf.org/SPF_Record_Syntax

Hmm, I used to have just that configuration in my DNS for more than a year,
but very recently I got some rejections upon delivery of mails from my 
published mx records (mx1.my-domain.tld and mx2.my-domain.tld) in DNS stating:

| An SPF-enabled mail server rejected a message from a mail server claiming 
| to be mx1.my-domain.tld.
|
| An SPF-enabled mail server received a message from mx1.my-domain.tld 
(1.2.3.4) 
| from a mail server claiming to be mx1.my-domain.tld.
|
| The domain mx1.my-domain.tld has not published an SPF policy. It is possible 
| that the receiving mail server refuses all mail from domains that do not have 
| an SPF policy.

I do understand http://www.openspf.org/SPF_Record_Syntax that the "mx" in
"v=spf1 mx -all" will tell: "Accept mail from *any* published mx of a given
domain", right?

For he time being (before I really do understand SPF) I'm back to run DNS 
without SPF, shrug.

Regards,
Michael





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