On Mittwoch, 8. Februar 2006 21:29 Bowie Bailey wrote: > Looking at the headers above, if the SPF record for customer.com does > not allow mail to come from 84.152.113.90, then the check will fail.
OK, but how can people ever send e-mail then? That server is very alone somewhere in a dark room, seeing no daylight until the end of his life. Hard to imagine anybody going there directly to send some mail. ATM, I use pop-before-smtp to authenticate users, afterwards allowing them to send. It's working, but if that SPF check truly has to fail, it would mean it has to fail on all mail sent over my server (nearly all domains have strict SPF). I looked at some messages, none has that check failing (even from that customer). mfg zmi -- // Michael Monnerie, Ing.BSc --- it-management Michael Monnerie // http://zmi.at Tel: 0660/4156531 Linux 2.6.11 // PGP Key: "lynx -source http://zmi.at/zmi2.asc | gpg --import" // Fingerprint: EB93 ED8A 1DCD BB6C F952 F7F4 3911 B933 7054 5879 // Keyserver: www.keyserver.net Key-ID: 0x70545879
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