>quote author="li...@rhsoft.net" >since you still have not solved your issue:
>if you would have used "spamass-milter" from the very begin >besides the before-queue filtering you would not need to >mangle around in postfix configurations to drop messages I have by now tried it with milters = no joy. I have by now tried Spamassassin scripts to discard / reject email. The scripts are written specifically to be applied with Postfix and specifically for the purpose of rejecting / discarding emails = no luck. Scripts were created by Spamassassin developers and experts. Found here: https://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/IntegratedSpamdInPostfix I have tried the settings particularly designed and documented to be applied with Postfix and my distro = no way. Found here: https://wiki.debian.org/DebianSpamAssassin I have tried running warn in an if-else-elseif statements = not a chance, there are no issues / mistakes reported anywhere at all. I have tried spampd = same problem. I have come up with about 20 different regex expressions which are all reported to be correct ones and tried them all in various combinations = no help. No matter what I do the issue persists. That is when Spamassassin tags my mail as spam nothing ever happens. My mail is not discarded, not rejected, nothing. It gets delivered right into my inbox. However, when I type the word spam manually into the subject field everything works OK. Now the only suggestion I am being advised at the moment is that it's the delivery problem somewhere and Spamassassin exits with a non zero number IIRC, when the mail is spam. Not sure if this is now the scope of this forum but would highly appreciate it if anybody could further comment if it was possible to check on these SA "exits" somehow inside Postfix? Any other suppositions / hypothesis on what else might be going wrong would be also extremely highly appreciated. Many thanks! -- View this message in context: http://postfix.1071664.n5.nabble.com/header-checks-not-working-tp36845p71004.html Sent from the Postfix Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.