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Remember that after you set your Google MX records it will take up to 4-8 hours for full DNS propagation. CNAME records. CNAME records are among the most common types of DNS records out there. The acronym “CNAME” actually stands for canonical name, and like it suggest this kind of record is used create an alias between two different domains. I'm setting up DNS server for my home network. It contains plenty of machines but I have only one public IP so there's a lot of NAT, proxies etc. Many people find it difficult to memorize all services provided by it. So i was looking for some DNS record that would allow me to list all services available in the network.
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Active3 years, 10 months ago
I'm sending weekly emails to subscribers and it turns out that messages are frequently going to the spam folder for users.
I'm utilizing Amazon SES to send these messages and have added an SPF record according to their instructions: http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/ses/latest/DeveloperGuide/SPFSenderIDDKIM.html?r=3917
In querying the SPF records for my domain I get the following back from http://www.kitterman.com/spf/validate.html:
For my CloudFlare DNS records I have:
The emails are being sent from '[email protected]' and '[email protected]'.
Some users have reported seeing the following message: 'Messages that falsely appear to be a 'bounced message' response (a system-generated email that you might automatically get after sending a message that can't be delivered such as a message sent to an invalid email address)'
With my current sending solution I can't add a DKIM to the emails.
How can this be resolved so as to ameliorate any kind of receipt issues for our users?
ylluminate
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1 Answer
![Domain Domain](https://help.hover.com/hc/article_attachments/115013132887/blobid1.png)
There are no valid
TXT
records for your domain (notice that the test doesn't return any, see below for a working example), which is caused by missing quotes around those TXT
records you defined, as explained e.g. in Record Types Supported:Unlike with most other record types, for TXT records the Data field is essentially free-form and may even include spaces. Please note: When entering a string that includes spaces, such as SPF records, you must enclose the string in double quotes; otherwise, individual words will be separately quoted and break up the record into multiple parts.
Here are the
TXT
records we currently use successfully for Amazon SES as per Authenticating Your Email Address and (it's indeed unfortunate that their documentation doesn't address the quoting needs):Accordingly, here is our domain's abbreviated result for the test you have been running:
MrWhite13.6k33 gold badges3535 silver badges6464 bronze badges
Steffen OpelSteffen Opel57.5k99 gold badges169169 silver badges199199 bronze badges
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