On 2/21/2015 8:07 AM, Stéphane MERLE wrote:
> Hi,
> Le 21/02/2015 00:38, Noel Jones a écrit :
>> On 2/20/2015 5:12 PM, Stéphane MERLE wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I am using a postfix as relay for email sent from an hoster that
>>> close the port 25, so I send the mail to the relayer through the
>>> 10025 port.
>>> but the IP of the originating server appear in the header of the
>>> mail and I would like to remove it :
>>>
>>> source server  ---10025---> relayer ---25---> FAI
>>>
>>> just showing the relayer ip and hostname, I have access to both
>>> config files, is this possible ?
>>>
>>> Thanks for your help.
>>>
>>> Stéphane
>>> PS : sorry for my english
>>
>> You can use a header_checks rule with the IGNORE result to remove
>> the offending header.
>>
>> This must be done on the relayer server, which is where that header
>> is added.
>>
>> Make your header_checks rule as specific as possible so you don't
>> unintentionally remove other headers.
> 
> That's doing the trick perfectly but ... I also have the MESSAGE-ID
> with the "bad" source serveur name ... the header_checks remove it
> too and it get "re-created" by the receiver as :
> 
> Message-Id: <54e89006.a30db40a.6372.0ef1smtpin_added_miss...@mx.google.com>
> 
> Not sure that's a good idea ... is there a way to replace the
> @baddomaine.com with @goodrelayerdomaine.com in the MESSAGE-ID ?
> 
> Stéphane

You really shouldn't mess with the Message-ID.  If you don't like
the auto-generated Message-ID, have your mail software add one
before the message is submitted.



  -- Noel Jones


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