> On 12/04/2014 09:38 PM, Noel Jones wrote:
>
> You can remove or alter the line with a smtp_header_checks rule, but
> be *very careful* not to alter unrelated headers, or Received:
> headers that aren't yours. Construct your regexp carefully.
>
> Also be aware (at least in the past) some spam a
On 4 Dec 2014, at 15:20, Martin Vegter wrote:
When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
example below:
Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
by mail.destination.com (P
On 12/4/2014 5:18 PM, li...@rhsoft.net wrote:
Am 05.12.2014 um 00:02 schrieb deoren:
A few weeks back I was also surprised to see that the client IP was
being sent out in the headers. Two options that I found in my research:
#1) Enabling the "smtpd_sasl_authenticated_header" option and using
h
Am 05.12.2014 um 00:02 schrieb deoren:
A few weeks back I was also surprised to see that the client IP was
being sent out in the headers. Two options that I found in my research:
#1) Enabling the "smtpd_sasl_authenticated_header" option and using
header_checks to remove that header (which if I
On 12/4/2014 2:20 PM, Martin Vegter wrote:
When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
example below:
Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
by mail.destination.com (Po
On 12/4/2014 2:29 PM, li...@rhsoft.net wrote:
>
> if you don't want to expose it configure postfix that way and the
> only point where it makes sense is in the smtp-*client* realy mail
> outside
Yes.
>
> http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#smtp_header_checks
> /^Received: from .* \[192\.168\
Pascal Volk:
> On 12/04/2014 08:20 PM, Martin Vegter wrote:
> > When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
> > address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
> > example below:
> >
> > Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
>
On 12/4/2014 2:20 PM, Martin Vegter wrote:
> When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
> address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
> example below:
>
> Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
> by mail.destinatio
Am 04.12.2014 um 21:20 schrieb Martin Vegter:
When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
example below:
Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
by mail.destination.com
On 12/04/2014 08:20 PM, Martin Vegter wrote:
> When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
> address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
> example below:
>
> Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
> by mail.destinat
When I send email via my Postfix, the header actually contains the IP
address of my laptop. Such as 192.168.1.113 [12.34.56.78]) in the
example below:
Received: from mail.origin.com (mail.origin.com [65.254.242.180])
by mail.destination.com (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 31A1B66
for ; Th
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