Once upon a time, Wietse Venema <wie...@porcupine.org> said:
> But this matters only if you really want to give a REJECT response
> to the remote SMTP client.

I would prefer to do that for this particular setup.  This is a
low-traffic domain, mostly just forwarding to other domains; there are a
couple of mailing lists and a ticket system; no mail gets normal local
delivery.  Nobody would normally be checking a spam box, so any messages
that hit would effectively disappear.

In the old setup (sendmail+mimedefang+SA), it has been useful that
"spam" is rejected so that legit senders get a notice, and that the
message gets saved (so I can review when somebody complains).

Thanks; I guess I'll take a look at amavis.
-- 
Chris Adams <cmad...@hiwaay.net>
Systems and Network Administrator - HiWAAY Internet Services
I don't speak for anybody but myself - that's enough trouble.

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