On Wed 16 Jan 2002, martin f krafft wrote: > > sounds like (a) exim does it just like postfix. maybe they document it > more sophisticatedly, (b) you doubling the load unnecessarily, and (c) > you are asking for trouble. why not let procmail be MDA?
procmail is in no way light-weight; I'd hesitate to claim that procmail is less of a load than exim (especially since exim is already in memory, shared pages and all that). To keep it on topic: this is how I've configured exim to filter just about everything through spamassassin before delivery. As a bonus also a filter to automagically send marked messages to spamcop for reporting. As a transport: spam_scan: driver = pipe user = uucp restrict_to_path path = "/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/bin" suffix = command = "spamassassinpipe '${if eq {$sender_address}{}{mailer-daemon}{$sender_address}}' $pipe_addresses" Don't ask about the uucp, I have uucp already as a trusted user because of uucp email, and I couldn't be bothered to add another. spamassassinpipe is a script in /usr/local/sbin which I'll show below. As a director, before userforward: spamcheck: driver = smartuser transport = spam_scan condition = "${if or {{eq {$received_protocol}{spamscanned}} \ {eq {$sender_host_address}{127.0.0.1}}}\ {0}{${if >{$message_size}{100K}{0}{1}}}}" This is the spamassassinpipe: #!/bin/sh from="$1"; shift /usr/bin/spamassassin -P | /usr/sbin/sendmail -oMr spamscanned -f "$from" -- "$@" That's basically it. This is based on an installation of spamassassin debian packages from before it was actually in the debian distribution; so it uses system-wide preferences etc. This is the relevant begin of my .forward: # Exim filter if $h_subject: begins "*****SPAM*****" then pipe "/home/paul/bin/spamtospamcop $sender_address $h_from $h_subject " save Mail/SPAM endif spamtospamcop is a simple script to send the spam to spamcop with a suitable subject line (so that I can see from spamcop's reply subject whether it possibly may be non-spam): #!/bin/sh sender="$1"; shift h_from="$1"; shift subject="`expr \"$1\" : '...............\(.*\)'`" exec spamassassin -d | mailx -s "SPAM [$sender: $h_from: $subject]" [EMAIL PROTECTED] Paul Slootman