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An email with the following "From:" header was accepted by my mail server:
From: "Someone <someone@junk.com>"@mydomain.com
The server a.b.c.d from which this email was sent to my port 25 is a valid (according to SPF) server for "junk.com", but not for "mydomain.com". The domain "mydomain.com" is hosted on my server.
I would have expected this to fail, as a.b.c.d is not a permitted sender for "mydomain.com" according to SPF records. But OpenDMARC probably looked at the "@junk.com" part and decided this was allowed.
A test without the pointy brackets shows that, in that case, the message gets rejected correctly.
Also, SPF is not applied to From: header but smtp.from. So I don't think that this is not a problem on header parsing, and if there is some problem about it, it is on handling of smtp.from.
An email with the following "From:" header was accepted by my mail server:
The server a.b.c.d from which this email was sent to my port 25 is a valid (according to SPF) server for "junk.com", but not for "mydomain.com". The domain "mydomain.com" is hosted on my server.
I would have expected this to fail, as a.b.c.d is not a permitted sender for "mydomain.com" according to SPF records. But OpenDMARC probably looked at the "@junk.com" part and decided this was allowed.
A test without the pointy brackets shows that, in that case, the message gets rejected correctly.
This has been confirmed by at least one other person, see mail-in-a-box/mailinabox#2273.
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