Re: Nat problem

2001-06-13 Thread Maciej Bogucki
> You can set the enviroment variables when you call the smtp server > for tcpserver edit your tcp.smtp file like this: > 192.168.00.:allow,TCPREMOTEHOST="",TCPREMOTEIP="",RELAYCLIENT="" > this will set those variables to "" BIG Thanks . It helped . Regards Maciej Bogucki, Network Administrator

RE: Nat problem

2001-06-13 Thread Tim Hunter
You can set the enviroment variables when you call the smtp server for tcpserver edit your tcp.smtp file like this: 192.168.00.:allow,TCPREMOTEHOST="",TCPREMOTEIP="",RELAYCLIENT="" this will set those variables to "" -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]O

Re: Nat problem

2001-06-13 Thread Dave Sill
Maciej Bogucki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >In sendmail I can change this in sendmail.cf file. qmail isn't Sendmail. You could (1) modify the source to not include that info, or (2) filter messages to strip that info, e.g. using qmail-qfilter. -Dave

Re: Nat problem

2001-06-13 Thread Maciej Bogucki
> > I thought this information was used to determine how the message was > routed. The only useful purpose to turn it off would be so you could spam > people without having to worry about them finding you. *shrugs* I can trust my local users. Potential atacker can read my private IP from header,

Re: Nat problem

2001-06-13 Thread David Gartner
I thought this information was used to determine how the message was routed. The only useful purpose to turn it off would be so you could spam people without having to worry about them finding you. *shrugs* I think it's hardcoded. David Maciej Bogucki wrote: > HI! > I'm just configuring new