hmm, that is helpful. I did have blank a records, mostly so people could hit
my website without www, knowing full well it was bad practice but not
knowing why. I know this is semi unrelated but why is it bad practice to
name an a record as blank? also, would the presence of an mx record have any
notable impact on spam?
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Rob Arends" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2003 11:44 PM
Subject: [xmail] Re: question on mx records and spam


>
> Ok there are a couple of scenarios.
>
> Lets say your email address is [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> If there is an 'A' record for hostname in the domain.com domain, then some
> smtp servers (XMail is one of them) will send to the A record IF there is
no
> MX record defined for domain hostname.domain.com.
>
> That said, if your email address is [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> You can define a blank 'A' record in the domain domain.com
> If you look in the zone files an '@' is how the blank is shown.
> If there is an 'A' record for '@' in domain.com, then you will get mail.
> (obviously the @ A-record would point to your mail server.)
>
> This is how you don't need an MX to receive mail.  But it breaks the RFC,
> because you should have an MX.
> And it is only NICE smtp server writers that try to help you get your mail
> through, rather than bounce your mail because some sysadmin can't
configure
> a zone.
>
> Rob :-)
>
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of vin
> > Sent: Friday, July 25, 2003 1:56 AM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: [xmail] Re: question on mx records and spam
> >
> >
> >
> > well, that is all well and good, but I kept getting all or
> > virtually all of
> > my mail for the several months that I had no MX record. I don't
> > think it was
> > SMTP server specific either, because I got mail everywhere from hotmail
to
> > tiny, rural Australia ISPs. I kept getting mail from servers that I had
> > never recieved mail from before and never sent mail to, as well.
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Tracy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2003 11:12 AM
> > Subject: [xmail] Re: question on mx records and spam
> >
> >
> > > At 10:54 7/24/2003, vin wrote:
> > > >I had never bothered putting an mx record for my server,
> > because I seemed
> > to
> > > >be getting mail fine without it and I seem to remember from a
> > while back,
> > > >some discussion that under some circumstances, mx records are
> > not needed.
> > > >then the people at my dad's hospital changed their routers firmware
or
> > > >something and he could no longer email me, because his servers
> > need an mx
> > > >record. I put one, and now I get 1000% more spam. Is this a
> > coincidence?
> > > >under what circumstances should I NOT need an mx record? the IT
people
> > know
> > > >it is a configuration error on their part, but I do not really
> > understand
> > > >how mail gets delivered with no mx record, or if this is a good thing
> > >
> > > An MX record is always required (per relevant RFCs) for a mail
> > server that
> > > will be receiving mail from the Internet. An MX record is not
> > (absolutely)
> > > required for a mail server that *only* sends mail.
> > >
> > > The reason you never got spam before is because your mail server was
not
> > an
> > > Internet mail server until you put up the MX record. When someone
sends
> > > mail to you, their mail server does an MX lookup on the domain that
the
> > > mail is addressed to. If it cannot find it, it fails and
> > returns the mail
> > > to the sender as undeliverable (or, at least, that's the way
> > it's supposed
> > > to work - obviously there can be mailers that are configured
> > internally to
> > > handle mail to specific domains directly rather than through MX record
> > > lookups).
> > >
> > >
> > > -
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> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> >
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> >
> >
>
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