Category Archives: DNS

How To Configure BIND as a Private Network DNS Server on CentOS 7

How To Configure BIND as a Private Network DNS Server on CentOS 7

Introduction

An important part of managing server configuration and infrastructure includes maintaining an easy way to look up network interfaces and IP addresses by name, by setting up a proper Domain Name System (DNS). Using fully qualified domain names (FQDNs), instead of IP addresses, to specify network addresses eases the configuration of services and applications, and increases the maintainability of configuration files. Setting up your own DNS for your private network is a great way to improve the management of your servers.

In this tutorial, we will go over how to set up an internal DNS server, using the BIND name server software (BIND9) on CentOS 7, that can be used by your Virtual Private Servers (VPS) to resolve private host names and private IP addresses. This provides a central way to manage your internal hostnames and private IP addresses, which is indispensable when your environment expands to more than a few hosts.

Prerequisites

To complete this tutorial, you will need the following:

  • Some servers that are running in the same datacenter and have private networking enabled
  • A new VPS to serve as the Primary DNS server, ns1
  • Optional: A new VPS to serve as a Secondary DNS server, ns2
  • Root access to all of the above.

Example Hosts

For example purposes, we will assume the following:

  • We have two existing VPS called “host1” and “host2”
  • Both VPS exist in the nyc3 datacenter
  • Both VPS have private networking enabled (and are on the 10.128.0.0/16 subnet)
  • Both VPS are somehow related to our web application that runs on “example.com”

With these assumptions, we decide that it makes sense to use a naming scheme that uses “nyc3.example.com” to refer to our private subnet or zone. Therefore, host1‘s private Fully-Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) will be “host1.nyc3.example.com”. Refer to the following table the relevant details:

Host Role Private FQDN Private IP Address
host1 Generic Host 1 host1.nyc3.example.com 10.128.100.101
host2 Generic Host 2 host2.nyc3.example.com 10.128.200.102

Note: Your existing setup will be different, but the example names and IP addresses will be used to demonstrate how to configure a DNS server to provide a functioning internal DNS. You should be able to easily adapt this setup to your own environment by replacing the host names and private IP addresses with your own. It is not necessary to use the region name of the datacenter in your naming scheme, but we use it here to denote that these hosts belong to a particular datacenter’s private network. If you utilize multiple datacenters, you can set up an internal DNS within each respective datacenter.

Our Goal

By the end of this tutorial, we will have a primary DNS server, ns1, and optionally a secondary DNS server,ns2, which will serve as a backup.

Here is a table with example names and IP addresses:

Host Role Private FQDN Private IP Address
ns1 Primary DNS Server ns1.nyc3.example.com 10.128.10.11
ns2 Secondary DNS Server ns2.nyc3.example.com 10.128.20.12

Let’s get started by installing our Primary DNS server, ns1.

Install BIND on DNS Servers

Note: Text that is highlighted in red is important! It will often be used to denote something that needs to be replaced with your own settings or that it should be modified or added to a configuration file. For example, if you see something like host1.nyc3.example.com, replace it with the FQDN of your own server. Likewise, if you see host1_private_IP, replace it with the private IP address of your own server.

On both DNS servers, ns1 and ns2, install BIND with yum:

  • sudo yum install bind bind-utils

Confirm the prompt by entering y.

Now that BIND is installed, let’s configure the primary DNS server.

Configure Primary DNS Server

BIND’s configuration consists of multiple files, which are included from the main configuration file,named.conf. These filenames begin with “named” because that is the name of the process that BIND runs. We will start with configuring the options file.

Configure Bind

BIND’s process is known as named. As such, many of the files refer to “named” instead of “BIND”.

On ns1, open the named.conf file for editing:

  • sudo vi /etc/named.conf

Above the existing options block, create a new ACL block called “trusted”. This is where we will define list of clients that we will allow recursive DNS queries from (i.e. your servers that are in the same datacenter as ns1). Using our example private IP addresses, we will add ns1ns2host1, and host2 to our list of trusted clients:

/etc/named.conf — 1 of 4

acl “trusted” {

10.128.10.11;    # ns1 – can be set to localhost

10.128.20.12;    # ns2

10.128.100.101;  # host1

10.128.200.102;  # host2

};

Now that we have our list of trusted DNS clients, we will want to edit the options block. Add the private IP address of ns1 to the listen-on port 53 directive, and comment out the listen-on-v6 line:

/etc/named.conf — 2 of 4

options {

listen-on port 53 { 127.0.0.1; 10.128.10.11; };

#        listen-on-v6 port 53 { ::1; };

Below those entries, change the allow-transfer directive to from “none” to ns2‘s private IP address. Also, change allow-query directive from “localhost” to “trusted”:

/etc/named.conf — 3 of 4

options {

allow-transfer { 10.128.20.12; };      # disable zone transfers by default

allow-query { trusted; };  # allows queries from “trusted” clients

At the end of the file, add the following line:

/etc/named.conf — 4 of 4

include “/etc/named/named.conf.local”;

Now save and exit named.conf. The above configuration specifies that only your own servers (the “trusted” ones) will be able to query your DNS server.

Next, we will configure the local file, to specify our DNS zones.

Configure Local File

On ns1, open the named.conf.local file for editing:

  • sudo vi /etc/named/named.conf.local

The file should be empty. Here, we will specify our forward and reverse zones.

Add the forward zone with the following lines (substitute the zone name with your own):

/etc/named/named.conf.local — 1 of 2

zone “nyc3.example.com” {

type master;

file “/etc/named/zones/db.nyc3.example.com”; # zone file path

};

Assuming that our private subnet is 10.128.0.0/16, add the reverse zone by with the following lines (note that our reverse zone name starts with “128.10” which is the octet reversal of “10.128”):

/etc/named/named.conf.local — 2 of 2

zone “128.10.in-addr.arpa” {

type master;

file “/etc/named/zones/db.10.128”;  # 10.128.0.0/16 subnet

};

If your servers span multiple private subnets but are in the same datacenter, be sure to specify an additional zone and zone file for each distinct subnet. When you are finished adding all of your desired zones, save and exit the named.conf.local file.

Now that our zones are specified in BIND, we need to create the corresponding forward and reverse zone files.

Create Forward Zone File

The forward zone file is where we define DNS records for forward DNS lookups. That is, when the DNS receives a name query, “host1.nyc3.example.com” for example, it will look in the forward zone file to resolve host1‘s corresponding private IP address.

Let’s create the directory where our zone files will reside. According to our named.conf.local configuration, that location should be /etc/named/zones:

  • sudo chmod 755 /etc/named
  • sudo mkdir /etc/named/zones

Now let’s edit our forward zone file:

  • sudo vi /etc/named/zones/db.example.com

First, you will want to add the SOA record. Replace the highlighted ns1 FQDN with your own FQDN, then replace the second “nyc3.example.com” with your own domain. Every time you edit a zone file, you should increment the serial value before you restart the named process–we will increment it to “3”. It should look something like this:

/etc/named/zones/db.nyc3.example.com — 1 of 3

@       IN      SOA     ns1.nyc3.example.com. admin.nyc3.example.com. (

3         ; Serial

604800     ; Refresh

86400     ; Retry

2419200     ; Expire

604800 )   ; Negative Cache TTL

After that, add your nameserver records with the following lines (replace the names with your own). Note that the second column specifies that these are “NS” records:

/etc/named/zones/db.nyc3.example.com — 2 of 3

; name servers – NS records

IN      NS      ns1.nyc3.example.com.

IN      NS      ns2.nyc3.example.com.

Then add the A records for your hosts that belong in this zone. This includes any server whose name we want to end with “.nyc3.example.com” (substitute the names and private IP addresses). Using our example names and private IP addresses, we will add A records for ns1ns2host1, and host2 like so:

/etc/named/zones/db.nyc3.example.com — 3 of 3

; name servers – A records

ns1.nyc3.example.com.          IN      A       10.128.10.11

ns2.nyc3.example.com.          IN      A       10.128.20.12

 

; 10.128.0.0/16 – A records

host1.nyc3.example.com.        IN      A      10.128.100.101

host2.nyc3.example.com.        IN      A      10.128.200.102

Save and exit the db.nyc3.example.com file.

Our final example forward zone file looks like the following:

/etc/named/zones/db.nyc3.example.com — complete

  • $TTL 604800
  • @ IN      SOA     nyc3.example.com. admin.nyc3.example.com. (
  • 3       ; Serial
  • 604800     ; Refresh
  • 86400     ; Retry
  • 2419200     ; Expire
  •     604800 )   ; Negative Cache TTL
  • ;
  • ; name servers – NS records
  • IN      NS      nyc3.example.com.
  • IN      NS      nyc3.example.com.
  • ; name servers – A records
  • nyc3.example.com. IN      A       10.128.10.11
  • nyc3.example.com. IN      A       10.128.20.12
  • ; 10.128.0.0/16 – A records
  • nyc3.example.com. IN      A      10.128.100.101
  • nyc3.example.com. IN      A      10.128.200.102

Now let’s move onto the reverse zone file(s).

Create Reverse Zone File(s)

Reverse zone file are where we define DNS PTR records for reverse DNS lookups. That is, when the DNS receives a query by IP address, “10.128.100.101” for example, it will look in the reverse zone file(s) to resolve the corresponding FQDN, “host1.nyc3.example.com” in this case.

On ns1, for each reverse zone specified in the named.conf.local file, create a reverse zone file.

Edit the reverse zone file that corresponds to the reverse zone(s) defined in named.conf.local:

  • sudo vi /etc/named/zones/db.128

In the same manner as the forward zone file, replace the highlighted ns1 FQDN with your own FQDN, then replace the second “nyc3.example.com” with your own domain. Every time you edit a zone file, you should increment the serial value before you restart the named process–we will increment it to “3”. It should look something like this:

/etc/named/zones/db.10.128 — 1 of 3

@       IN      SOA     ns1.nyc3.example.com. admin.nyc3.example.com. (

3         ; Serial

604800         ; Refresh

86400         ; Retry

2419200         ; Expire

604800 )       ; Negative Cache TTL

After that, add your nameserver records with the following lines (replace the names with your own). Note that the second column specifies that these are “NS” records:

/etc/named/zones/db.10.128 — 2 of 3

; name servers – NS records

IN      NS      ns1.nyc3.example.com.

IN      NS      ns2.nyc3.example.com.

Then add PTR records for all of your servers whose IP addresses are on the subnet of the zone file that you are editing. In our example, this includes all of our hosts because they are all on the 10.128.0.0/16 subnet. Note that the first column consists of the last two octets of your servers’ private IP addresses in reversed order. Be sure to substitute names and private IP addresses to match your servers:

/etc/named/zones/db.10.128 — 3 of 3

; PTR Records

11.10   IN      PTR     ns1.nyc3.example.com.    ; 10.128.10.11

12.20   IN      PTR     ns2.nyc3.example.com.    ; 10.128.20.12

101.100 IN      PTR     host1.nyc3.example.com.  ; 10.128.100.101

102.200 IN      PTR     host2.nyc3.example.com.  ; 10.128.200.102

Save and exit the reverse zone file (repeat this section if you need to add more reverse zone files).

Our final example reverse zone file looks like the following:

/etc/named/zones/db.10.128 — complete

  • $TTL 604800
  • @ IN      SOA     example.com. admin.nyc3.example.com. (
  • 3         ; Serial
  • 604800         ; Refresh
  • 86400         ; Retry
  • 2419200         ; Expire
  • 604800 )       ; Negative Cache TTL
  • ; name servers
  • IN      NS      nyc3.example.com.
  • IN      NS      nyc3.example.com.
  • ; PTR Records
  • 10 IN      PTR     ns1.nyc3.example.com.    ; 10.128.10.11
  • 20 IN      PTR     ns2.nyc3.example.com.    ; 10.128.20.12
  • 100 IN PTR     host1.nyc3.example.com.  ; 10.128.100.101
  • 200 IN PTR     host2.nyc3.example.com.  ; 10.128.200.102

Check BIND Configuration Syntax

Run the following command to check the syntax of the named.conf* files:

  • sudo named-checkconf

If your named configuration files have no syntax errors, you will return to your shell prompt and see no error messages. If there are problems with your configuration files, review the error message and the Configure Primary DNS Server section, then try named-checkconf again.

The named-checkzone command can be used to check the correctness of your zone files. Its first argument specifies a zone name, and the second argument specifies the corresponding zone file, which are both defined in named.conf.local.

For example, to check the “nyc3.example.com” forward zone configuration, run the following command (change the names to match your forward zone and file):

  • sudo named-checkzone example.com /etc/named/zones/db.nyc3.example.com

And to check the “128.10.in-addr.arpa” reverse zone configuration, run the following command (change the numbers to match your reverse zone and file):

  • sudo named-checkzone 10.in-addr.arpa /etc/named/zones/db.10.128

When all of your configuration and zone files have no errors in them, you should be ready to restart the BIND service.

Start BIND

Start BIND:

  • sudo systemctl start named

Now you will want to enable it, so it will start on boot:

  • sudo systemctl enable named

Your primary DNS server is now setup and ready to respond to DNS queries. Let’s move on to creating the secondary DNS server.

Configure Secondary DNS Server

In most environments, it is a good idea to set up a secondary DNS server that will respond to requests if the primary becomes unavailable. Luckily, the secondary DNS server is much easier to configure.

On ns2, edit the named.conf file:

  • sudo vi /etc/named.conf

Note: If you prefer to skip these instructions, you can copy ns1‘s named.conf file and modify it to listen onns2‘s private IP address, and not allow transfers.
Above the existing options block, create a new ACL block called “trusted”. This is where we will define list of clients that we will allow recursive DNS queries from (i.e. your servers that are in the same datacenter as ns1). Using our example private IP addresses, we will add ns1ns2host1, and host2 to our list of trusted clients:

/etc/named.conf — 1 of 4

acl “trusted” {

10.128.10.11;    # ns1 – can be set to localhost

10.128.20.12;    # ns2

10.128.100.101;  # host1

10.128.200.102;  # host2

};

Now that we have our list of trusted DNS clients, we will want to edit the options block. Add the private IP address of ns1 to the listen-on port 53 directive, and comment out the listen-on-v6 line:

/etc/named.conf — 2 of 4

options {

listen-on port 53 { 127.0.0.1; 10.128.20.12; };

#        listen-on-v6 port 53 { ::1; };

Change allow-query directive from “localhost” to “trusted”:

/etc/named.conf — 3 of 4

options {

allow-query { trusted; }; # allows queries from “trusted” clients

At the end of the file, add the following line:

/etc/named.conf — 4 of 4

include “/etc/named/named.conf.local”;

Now save and exit named.conf. The above configuration specifies that only your own servers (the “trusted” ones) will be able to query your DNS server.

Next, we will configure the local file, to specify our DNS zones.

Save and exit named.conf.

Now edit the named.conf.local file:

  • sudo chmod 755 /etc/named
  • sudo vi /etc/named/named.conf.local

Define slave zones that correspond to the master zones on the primary DNS server. Note that the type is “slave”, the file does not contain a path, and there is a masters directive which should be set to the primary DNS server’s private IP. If you defined multiple reverse zones in the primary DNS server, make sure to add them all here:

/etc/named/named.conf.local

  • zone “example.com” {
  • type slave;
  • file “slaves/db.example.com”;
  • masters { 128.10.11; };  # ns1 private IP
  • };
  • zone “10.in-addr.arpa” {
  • type slave;
  • file “slaves/db.128”;
  • masters { 128.10.11; };  # ns1 private IP
  • };

Now save and exit named.conf.local.

Run the following command to check the validity of your configuration files:

  • sudo named-checkconf

Once that checks out, start BIND:

  • sudo systemctl start named

Enable BIND to start on boot:

sudo systemctl enable named

Now you have primary and secondary DNS servers for private network name and IP address resolution. Now you must configure your servers to use your private DNS servers.

Configure DNS Clients

Before all of your servers in the “trusted” ACL can query your DNS servers, you must configure each of them to use ns1 and ns2 as nameservers. This process varies depending on OS, but for most Linux distributions it involves adding your name servers to the /etc/resolv.conf file.

CentOS Clients

On CentOS, RedHat, and Fedora Linux VPS, simply edit the resolv.conf file:

  • sudo vi /etc/resolv.conf

Then add the following lines to the TOP of the file (substitute your private domain, and ns1 and ns2 private IP addresses):

/etc/resolv.conf

search nyc3.example.com  # your private domain

nameserver 10.128.10.11  # ns1 private IP address

nameserver 10.128.20.12  # ns2 private IP address

Now save and exit. Your client is now configured to use your DNS servers.

Ubuntu Clients

On Ubuntu and Debian Linux VPS, you can edit the head file, which is prepended to resolv.conf on boot:

  • sudo vi /etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.d/head

Add the following lines to the file (substitute your private domain, and ns1 and ns2 private IP addresses):

/etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.d/head

search nyc3.example.com  # your private domain

nameserver 10.128.10.11  # ns1 private IP address

nameserver 10.128.20.12  # ns2 private IP address

Now run resolvconf to generate a new resolv.conf file:

  • sudo resolvconf -u

Your client is now configured to use your DNS servers.

Test Clients

Use nslookup—included in the “bind-utils” package—to test if your clients can query your name servers. You should be able to do this on all of the clients that you have configured and are in the “trusted” ACL.

Forward Lookup

For example, we can perform a forward lookup to retrieve the IP address of host1.nyc3.example.com by running the following command:

  • nslookup host1

Querying “host1” expands to “host1.nyc3.example.com because of the search option is set to your private subdomain, and DNS queries will attempt to look on that subdomain before looking for the host elsewhere. The output of the command above would look like the following:

Output:

Server:     10.128.10.11

Address:    10.128.10.11#53

 

Name:   host1.nyc3.example.com

Address: 10.128.100.101

Reverse Lookup

To test the reverse lookup, query the DNS server with host1‘s private IP address:

  • nslookup 10.128.100.101

You should see output that looks like the following:

Output:

Server:     10.128.10.11

Address:    10.128.10.11#53

 

11.10.128.10.in-addr.arpa   name = host1.nyc3.example.com.

If all of the names and IP addresses resolve to the correct values, that means that your zone files are configured properly. If you receive unexpected values, be sure to review the zone files on your primary DNS server (e.g. db.nyc3.example.com and db.10.128).

Congratulations! Your internal DNS servers are now set up properly! Now we will cover maintaining your zone records.

Maintaining DNS Records

Now that you have a working internal DNS, you need to maintain your DNS records so they accurately reflect your server environment.

Adding Host to DNS

Whenever you add a host to your environment (in the same datacenter), you will want to add it to DNS. Here is a list of steps that you need to take:

Primary Nameserver

  • Forward zone file: Add an “A” record for the new host, increment the value of “Serial”
  • Reverse zone file: Add a “PTR” record for the new host, increment the value of “Serial”
  • Add your new host’s private IP address to the “trusted” ACL (conf.options)

Then reload BIND:

  • sudo systemctl reload named

Secondary Nameserver

  • Add your new host’s private IP address to the “trusted” ACL (conf.options)

Then reload BIND:

  • sudo systemctl reload named

Configure New Host to Use Your DNS

  • Configure resolv.conf to use your DNS servers
  • Test using nslookup

Removing Host from DNS

If you remove a host from your environment or want to just take it out of DNS, just remove all the things that were added when you added the server to DNS (i.e. the reverse of the steps above).

Conclusion

Now you may refer to your servers’ private network interfaces by name, rather than by IP address. This makes configuration of services and applications easier because you no longer have to remember the private IP addresses, and the files will be easier to read and understand. Also, now you can change your configurations to point to a new servers in a single place, your primary DNS server, instead of having to edit a variety of distributed configuration files, which eases maintenance.

Once you have your internal DNS set up, and your configuration files are using private FQDNs to specify network connections, it is critical that your DNS servers are properly maintained. If they both become unavailable, your services and applications that rely on them will cease to function properly. This is why it is recommended to set up your DNS with at least one secondary server, and to maintain working backups of all of them.

Source: How To Configure BIND as a Private Network DNS Server on CentOS 7 | DigitalOcean

How the Client DNS Settings work to resolve DNS names

How the Client DNS Settings work to resolve DNS names

Information:

There are a number of ways to configure the DNS on the client, but using the default DNS configure from Microsoft is the best.  In this article we will show you how to configure the Client DNS settings so that all the pieces fit together to help properly resolve DNS names in your environment.

In Windows NT 4.0 TCP/IP used a simple Domain: setting in the TCP/IP DNS to configure a DNS setting for the entire computer.  In Window 2000 Microsoft introduced the concept of a Primary DNS Suffix.  They also moved this settings configuration to the System Properties applet.  This setting is usually overlooked or not understood by many network administrators.

By default, when your workstation is a member of a domain the Primary DNS Suffix is the same as the Active Directory Domain that the computer belongs to.  You can access this setting via the Computer Name tab in the System Properties available in the Control Panel (see below).

 

Click the “Change” button, to access the computer name option.  Then click the More button, to access the Primary DNS suffix of this computer.

If the computer is a member of a Workgroup or Joined to a Windows NT 4.0 domain you should click the More button and set the Primary DNS suffix for your computer.  Do this only in these two cases, and leave the “Change primary DNS suffix when domain membership changes” checked.  This will allow moving to an Active Directory domain easier in the future and prevent future visits to the workstation.

Now that the Primary DNS suffix is configured for the workstation we turn our attention to understanding the settings available on the DNS tab of the TCP/IP properties.  The default configuration that Microsoft provides rarely needs to be modified, as it provides the most flexible implementation with the least amount of work.

The default settings of Append primary and connection specific DNS suffixes and Append parent suffixes of the primary DNS suffix allows DNS to query parent DNS zones easily, and allows for an additional DNS zone (connection specific) to be provided manually or via DHCP.  This will provide 3 – 4 DNS zones to query by default.  This is usually more than enough for most companies.  If you need more than what is provided by default then you must use the Append these DNS suffixes (in order) setting.

Below is a diagram that shows the relation ship between the all the DNS setting and how they display in the ipconfig /all command.

Things to note from the screen shot are

1)      The Primary DNS setting is searched first

2)      If specified, the connection specific DNS setting is search directly after the Primary DNS setting

3)      The parent DNS setting(s) are appended and searched in order after the connection specific setting.

Note: If you select the Append these DNS suffixes (in order) setting and do not specify a list of DNS suffixes you will disable DNS search orders.  This will allow only fully qualified DNS names to be resolved.

The Register this connection’s addresses in DNS will only register the Primary DNS Suffix if set, and is the default setting.  It is therefore the recommended setting as well.

By default, the connection-specific setting (DNS suffix for this connection) is not registered in DNS, but can be registered by checking Use this connection’s DNS suffix in DNS registration.  This is normally not needed and is not recommended.  Instead manually create an alias (CNAME) record in DNS that point’s to the FQDN of this computer.

More Information:

It is highly recommended to that client DNS settings be left at their default values.  Over 90% of name resolutions issues can be traced back to misconfigured DNS clients.  If you find yourself troubleshooting DNS issues on the client periodically it is most likely because of changes to these default settings.  All the solutions that Microsoft provides require DNS to work correctly and their solutions are based on the default configurations of the DNS Client.  It is highly recommended to use the default settings when ever possible.

via How the Client DNS Settings work to resolve DNS names.

SPF Record

SPF Record

Having a proper Sender Policy Framework (SPF) record increases the chances people will get emails you send. Without one, your email has a greater chance of being marked as Spam.

Publishing an SPF record in your “example.com” DNS records tells the world which server IP addresses are authorized to send emails from “@example.com” email addresses.

If you host your company email in cloud, your hosting provider should be able to provide you with instructions on how to publish your SPF record.

When you have multiple vendors handling your mail, For example, you may have your email hosted with one provider (e.g. Google Apps) and also send marketing newsletters from another provider (e.g. Awebber, StreamSend, SendGrid, etc.). In this case you will need to merge the information from both providers.

Here’s an example. Cloud providers will typically provide an “include” for you to simply add to your record. In this case, you are telling the world to only accept mail from Google Apps (gmail) or your email marketing company.

Example

v=spf1 include:spf.google.com include:acmeemailmarketing.com ~all

 

Explain:

 

v=spf version

include=outsourcing mail sender like google apps that allowed to send mail for your domain..

~all= recipients may accept mail from another server, but it should be viewed with suspicion.

 

  • The ~all at the end is called a soft fail. It means that recipients may accept mail from another server, but it should be viewed with suspicion. If you change it to -all, you are directing the recipient to reject mail from any server other than these. The soft fail approach is safer and recommended.

If you host your own mail servers, you may need to specify the IP addresses of your mail servers in CIDR notation along with other providers. That would look like this:

Example

 

v=spf1 a ip4:12.34.56.78/28 include:acmeemailmarketing.com ~all

 

Explain:

 

v=spf version

                a=the a record of your domain name can send emails.

                ip4:=your local smtp servers that can send mails for you domain.

include=outsourcing mail sender like google apps that allowed to send mail for your domain..

 

You can also use it without notation:

v=spf1 a ip4:12.34.56.78 include:acmeemailmarketing.com ~all

 

Multiple SPF records are not recommended and may cause delivery and spam classification issues. According to RFC specs, a domain name must not have multiple records that would cause an authorization check to select more than one record.

If you need to authorize more than one mail server for your domain, it is recommend that you update your existing SPF record instead of creating multiple records.

 

Via:

http://mxtoolbox.com/problem/spf/spf-record

http://support.easydns.com/tutorials/SPF/

https://support.google.com/a/answer/4568483?hl=en

Tools:

http://mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx

http://www.kitterman.com/spf/validate.html