-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Thanks Jason,
I didn't mean to accuse qmail-scanner of breaking the headers. You wrote: Can't you assign TWO addresses? One for your internal users to use, and one for the Internet (via MX records) to use? Then Qmail-Scanner can be configured to scan the Internet ones and not the local users one. This is how I understand it: Run the same smtpd from the same qmail installation twice (no need for 2). One SMTPD running qmail-scanner doing virus scanning and spam on the external IP and the other SMTPD just doing viruscanning on the internal IP. Can both smtpd's use the same qmail queue? This will work fine but how do I get fetchmail working. The only way I can see is to make a 3rd smtpd (providing the previous assumptions are correct) listening on say 127.0.0.1 doing both viruscanning and spamming just for fetchmail? I don't know why but as explained in the e-mail below if I disable the RELAYCLIENT check in qmail-scanner all messages on his end seem to be screwed i.e. the attachments don't show. That is why I want to disable the spam check on outgoing mail. Thanks for your help, Dan Jason Haar wrote: >On Wed, Jun 26, 2002 at 05:53:29PM +1000, Daniel Czarnecki wrote: > > >>I have a mate that is running the same config as me except he has >>Spamassassin set to fast_spamassassin. When his qmail-scanner-queue.pl >>script parses the e-mail and removes my spam headers and adds his >>headers it breaks the mime types in the e-mail and attachments are no >>longer assessable. >> >> > >"removes my spam headers"???? > >"it breaks the mime types"???? > >That is ***NOT QMAIL-SCANNER*** > >Q-S doesn't do either of those two things. > > > >>From an inside client: If I send an e-mail from 192.168.3.130 it will >>connect to 193.168.3.1 and then smtproute to 127.0.0.1 on port 26. So >>qmail-scanner will go hey this was originally from the internal network >>so I'm not going to do the spam check. >> >>From the outside: An e-mail comes in on 203.476.8.xx then gets >>smtprouted to 127.0.0.1 on port 26. Qmail-scanner checks the originating >>IP address and sees that its from somewhere on the Internet. Then it >>decides to check for spam. >> >> > >Can't you assign TWO addresses? One for your internal users to use, and one >for the Internet (via MX records) to use? Then Qmail-Scanner can be >configured to scan the Internet ones and not the local users one. > > > > >>The only problem I can see with this is if the originators IP address >>range was the same as yours. i.e. if they send it from there internal >>network with the same address range! >> >> > >All headers cannot be trusted. I really doubt I'd ever support classifing an >external address based on what the headers tell me... > >Face it. You have to use an "external address" and an "internal address". >Otherwise how else can any program distinguish between the two? > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iEYEARECAAYFAj0ahi0ACgkQHzcNDJnXCuTreQCcCZWoh8fkSvjPyjAAWoP/8exS mLgAn1Nh0vZhBqZ3QlAvNzJUm3e0IBba =zgvY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by: Jabber Inc. Don't miss the IM event of the season | Special offer for OSDN members! JabberConf 2002, Aug. 20-22, Keystone, CO http://www.jabberconf.com/osdn _______________________________________________ Qmail-scanner-general mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/qmail-scanner-general