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authorLuke Smith <luke@lukesmith.xyz>2020-10-18 08:37:32 -0400
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2020-10-18 08:37:32 -0400
commitc93deff4c290d3e271d434285f7bde0e2d5a0a31 (patch)
tree7f352622c703738dcd5254119861f6b794fb47e6
parentf41246d575d5d9de7156973ad1bcf36b50cb91d7 (diff)
parent4b3fc1a5b8cb351cf6caf9c32734138868c5966a (diff)
Merge pull request #85 from lesha-co/master
Make README clearer about PTR record
-rw-r--r--README.md7
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 31846d6..228430c 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -51,9 +51,10 @@ actually works perfectly.
**CNAME record** for your `mail.` subdomain.
4. **A Reverse DNS entry for your site.** Go to your VPS settings and add an
entry for your IPV4 Reverse DNS that goes from your IP address to
- `mail.<yourdomain.com>`. If you would like IPV6, you can do the same for
- that. This has been tested on Vultr, and all decent VPS hosts will have
- a section on their instance settings page to add a reverse DNS PTR entry.
+ `<yourdomain.com>` (not mail subdomain). If you would like IPV6, you can do
+ the same for that. This has been tested on Vultr, and all decent VPS hosts
+ will have a section on their instance settings page to add a reverse DNS PTR
+ entry.
You can use the 'Test Email Server' or ':smtp' tool on
[mxtoolbox](https://mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx) to test if you set up
a reverse DNS correctly. This step is not required for everyone, but some