I have an email server with the spf record set up like this:
"v=spf1 ip4:192.0.2.21 ip6:2001:db8::f08c:95ff:feb4:f317 -all"
Actual ip address changed to protect the innocent, but those would be the ips of the mail server.
I have a user who uses yahoo mail, and has set up their 'send-only address' to use their custom domain name that's on my email server (example.com in the example below).
So when they send mail through yahoo, it fails spf with this error (was sent to a gmail address)
Authentication-Results: mx.google.com;
spf=fail (google.com: domain of [email protected] does not designate 98.137.69.147 as permitted sender) [email protected];
dkim=pass [email protected] header.s=s2048 header.b=KXfctSKQ
Received-SPF: fail (google.com: domain of [email protected] does not designate 98.137.69.147 as permitted sender) client-ip=98.137.69.147;
The 98.137.69.147
is a yahoo address, but I tried adding include:yahoo.com
and include:_spf.mail.yahoo.com
to the spf1 record and it failed with those as well. I assume I can't just add that ip, as it will likely change.
What do I need to add to the record to get it so she can email through her yahoo address without spf failing?
I realize a solution will mean allowing anyone with a yahoo address to send through the server, but I don't expect unauthorized users to really be a problem.
Thanks for any help!
Chris
_spf.mail.yahoo.com
, you'll see it containsptr:yahoo.com
. Include is the correct way to do this, and I can't see why that would not work. I'd suggest using the definitive validator on Scott Kitterman's site.include:_spf.mail.yahoo.com
is the correct way in the majority of cases.