Le 11/06/2011 16:42, m...@smtp.fakessh.eu a écrit :
> Le samedi 11 juin 2011 00:28, Noel Jones a écrit :
>> On 6/10/2011 4:04 PM, m...@smtp.fakessh.eu wrote:
>>> hi folks
>>>
>>> I asked a question.
>>> there are providers that remove information from headers like X-Mailer
>>> Received
>>>
>>>
>>> when is there any good uses and customs
>>>
>>> This is easy to set up with information like this
>>> /^Received:/        IGNORE
>>
>> The above is a bad idea.  You'll lose valuable tracking
>> information.  NOT RECOMMENDED.
>>
>> Some people like to remove Received headers from their
>> internal hosts. It's OK to remove your own Received headers,
>> but the above rule will remove all Received headers.
>>
>>> /^User-Agent:/      IGNORE
>>
>> This won't break anything, but there's no reason for it.
> 
> 
> I came to these two rules: that here
> 
> /^(Received: from ).*\[192\.168\.1+\..+\]\)(.*)/ REPLACE 
> ${1}localhost([127.0.0\
> .1] (may be forged by MTA or private))${2}
> /^(Received: from ).*roundcube.fakessh.eu(.*)/ REPLACE 
> ${1}localhost([127.0.0.1\
> ] (may be forged by MTA or private ))${2}
> 
> they are suitable

really? what are you trying to do? hide your 192.168.1.* class? hide
your roundcube client? all that is useless.


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