Probablement un périphérique. D'entrée ou de sortie, je ne saurai dire, il faudrait demander à celui qui l'a installé.
-- G2N Ignore.
Yves Lambert
This line is added to the header of a posted article by the server. The contents of the header is either the IP address or the fully qualified domain name of the client host posting the article. The fully qualified domain name should be determined by doing a reverse lookup in the DNS on the IP address of the client. If the client article contains this line, it is removed by the server before acceptance of the article by the Usenet transport system.
This header provides some idea of the actual host posting the article as opposed to information in the Sender or From lines that may be present in the article. This is not a fool-proof methodology since reverse lookups in the DNS are vulnerable to certain types of spoofing, but such discussions are outside the scope of this document. -- <news:
-=-=- TagZilla 0.059 -=-=-
This line is added to the header of a posted article by the server.
The contents of the header is either the IP address or the fully
qualified domain name of the client host posting the article. The
fully qualified domain name should be determined by doing a reverse
lookup in the DNS on the IP address of the client. If the client
article contains this line, it is removed by the server before
acceptance of the article by the Usenet transport system.
This header provides some idea of the actual host posting the article
as opposed to information in the Sender or From lines that may be
present in the article. This is not a fool-proof methodology since
reverse lookups in the DNS are vulnerable to certain types of
spoofing, but such discussions are outside the scope of this
document.
--
<news:360a40dd.34822450@news.teaser.fr>
This line is added to the header of a posted article by the server. The contents of the header is either the IP address or the fully qualified domain name of the client host posting the article. The fully qualified domain name should be determined by doing a reverse lookup in the DNS on the IP address of the client. If the client article contains this line, it is removed by the server before acceptance of the article by the Usenet transport system.
This header provides some idea of the actual host posting the article as opposed to information in the Sender or From lines that may be present in the article. This is not a fool-proof methodology since reverse lookups in the DNS are vulnerable to certain types of spoofing, but such discussions are outside the scope of this document. -- <news: