I have that set up, but how much of your email comes in to your @gmail.com address?
If you use gmail as your outgoing email, then the sent emails will have a Sender: header (and return-path) of your @gmail.com address, even if you set a role.
If you search gmail for 'to: [email protected]' you'll see how much mail is bypassing your domain.
> then the sent emails will have a Sender: header (and return-path) of your @gmail.com address
You can setup alternate e-mail addresses in Gmail and tell it to reply with the one it was sent to. It's still sent off Gmail servers, but with the Sender changed (so you just setup your SPF to allow Gmail).
But your reply-to is set to your own domain. Unless someone willfully types in your "@gmail.com" address then when they reply to your email it will go to your own domain.
If you use gmail as your outgoing email, then the sent emails will have a Sender: header (and return-path) of your @gmail.com address, even if you set a role.
If you search gmail for 'to: [email protected]' you'll see how much mail is bypassing your domain.