On Sun, 5 Sep 1999, PointyBird wrote:
> Hi,
>
> If you get any useful replies, I'd greatly appreciate a copy, as I currently
> run a similar setup.
I was myself able to figure out what to do. Had to poke a little bit
into the source code. Here it is:
1. Edit the file qmail-queue.c in the source code of qmail, and comment
the last line {receivedfmt(received);} of the function
received_setup().
2. Edit the file received.c and comment the entire inside of the function
received(qqt,protocol,local,remoteip,remotehost,remoteinfo,helo).
Recompile (make setup). That does the job, no headers!!!!
Any better suggestions???
-----------------------------------------------------------
| Farooq Ashraf | Tel : (966) 3-860-5634 |
| System Admin. & Lecturer | Fax : (966) 3-860-5634 |
| College of Computer Science | |
| and Engineering (CCSE) | |
| King Fahd University of | E-Mail: |
| Petroleum & Minerals (KFUPM)| [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
| KFUPM Box 1218 | [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
| Dhahran 31261, Saudi Arabia | |
-----------------------------------------------------------
>
> I run Qmail on a second system behind the firewall. The firewall itself is a
> masquerade system which runs from a CDROM. I use 'junkbuster' as a web proxy
> to obfuscate http headers, but I don't have anything to serve a similar
> function for outgoing mail.
>
> I hope, by the way, that you'll excuse my presumption in suggesting this,
> but it's generally considered a bad idea to run anything on a firewall that
> may potentially be used to gain access to it.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Pointy
>
>
>