That's definitely weird. The change in priority shouldn't have an effect on mail delivery at all as long as they are still in the same order, which it looks like they are. I've definitely noticed this discrepancy in their documentation... I think the old priority and server list is still up on some pages. I know that I do still get requests for MX records using both ways. Anyway, yeah I definitely think the Google documentation is inconsistant for apps for domains...
This is the kind of thing that deserves a #google #fail hash usage and multiple pings to people like Matt Cutts and other high-profile googlers. It's crap, it's amateurish, and shouldn't happen with a supposedly enterprise product.
I say this as someone who deploys Google Apps for clients and expects it to work as promised.
All Google would have had to do is make a cname for aspmx4 and aspmx5 which pointed them to aspmx2 and aspmx3 and this never would have been a problem. Way to fail Google. Way. To. Fail.
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LeonardoWake up and smell the glaciersEagle River, AlaskaIcrontian
edited October 2009
Anybody want to translate this from email science to common man?
Mail gets routed through servers. Icrontic uses Google's servers to host its mail. Google publishes a list of the servers it uses to route/deliver mail. These servers are used on our end to configure how mail is sent/received. Google dropped two of the mail servers from the recommended configuration without telling us. This means the config on our end still contained entries for these servers. This means that some of our mail appears to have been sent to servers that are no longer in service, or are not functioning correctly. This means Icrontic has definitely lost important emails.
I have the same seven MX records (different priorities) as you have, and ran thorough tests on each which showed everything working fine. I checked on Google's Apps MX setup instructions and aspmx4.googlemail.com. and aspmx5.googlemail.com. are still listed (and the priorities don't matter as long as they're in the right order, as @Frank points out). So, they are still recommending them. Furthermore, I know exactly what MX record my missing emails went through, and it was the primary one - aspmx.l.google.com.
Interested to hear if anyone else is experiencing issues, and if anyone has any more insight into the problem.
Curious if your also experiencing Spoofing issues with your google for domains mail?
My domain has been hit by a spoofer, and nothing seems to help, added SPF records still no change. Sometimes I think that my incoming mail is effected due to the spoofing on my domian.
Spoofing of that type is nearly impossible to do. The only way to pull it off would be if someone who hosts at the same place that their DNS is hosting was ARP cache poisoning and redirecting all DNS traffic to their box which was pointing Icrontic's mail elsewhere. Any decent hosting company will catch something like that nearly immediately and shut it down. That said it's not technically impossible...
Comments
I say this as someone who deploys Google Apps for clients and expects it to work as promised.
Blow this up, guys.
I have the same seven MX records (different priorities) as you have, and ran thorough tests on each which showed everything working fine. I checked on Google's Apps MX setup instructions and aspmx4.googlemail.com. and aspmx5.googlemail.com. are still listed (and the priorities don't matter as long as they're in the right order, as @Frank points out). So, they are still recommending them. Furthermore, I know exactly what MX record my missing emails went through, and it was the primary one - aspmx.l.google.com.
Interested to hear if anyone else is experiencing issues, and if anyone has any more insight into the problem.
My domain has been hit by a spoofer, and nothing seems to help, added SPF records still no change. Sometimes I think that my incoming mail is effected due to the spoofing on my domian.