--- Nigel Horne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Friday 21 Jan 2005 14:46, N Fung wrote: > > > > --- Nigel Horne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > On Friday 21 Jan 2005 14:15, N Fung wrote: > > > > --- Nigel Horne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > > > > Presumably you ran clamd with 0.80. Please > start > > > > > clamd as you did > > > > > with 0.80, disable --internal, restart > > > clamav-milter > > > > > and report the results. > > > > > > > > As per your instructions, I did: > > > > > > > > Started clamd first and ran clamav-milter > withOUT > > > > --internal. Result: infected mail sent to the > > > > quarantine address. It worked as in 0.80. > Just > > > what I > > > > wanted. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Also, try without the -o option but with > > > --internal. > > > > > > > > That didn't work. Infected mail was rejected. > > > > > /var/log/maillog said: > > > > > > In that case it DID work, the infected mail was > > > intercepted. > > > > OK. It worked. I guess the quarantine address has > to > > be somewhere "outside" if --internal is active? > > No, the -o option will always block locally created > emails.
I'm sorry if I wasn't clear about this; when I tested it with these flags: -HNPCl --max-children=5 --quarantine=quart<localdomain> Note that -o was NOT used. The infected mail was NOT delivered to the local user user "quart." The infected mail was discarded. Thanks. N. __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - Find what you need with new enhanced search. http://info.mail.yahoo.com/mail_250 _______________________________________________ http://lists.clamav.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users