Okay, I think that I got it. On amavis's website they suggested using
eicar.com as a test file. When I sent that through as an attachment it
was picked up by clamav. Sorry for the earlier post. Great software!!!
Sid
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
First, sorry for the long post. I'm trying to sup
Hi!
It would be really cool with an update on the current development status
of ClamAV, what will be included in the next release, how stable the
current code is, when the next release is scheduled, what is still left
until that release.
Or maybe there is a roadmap available, which I haven't f
First, sorry for the long post. I'm trying to supply enough information
for someone to help. I'm using clamav-0.54 with postfix-1.1.11,
amavis-ng-0.1.4, and openbsd 3.2. I ran into a few problems installing
amavis-ng because apparently OpenBSD doesn't recognize install -D as
indicated in the
I guess your problem is that you call qmail-scanner without sending the
attachment to scan to it. I guess the file to scan should be sent on
stdin to qmail-scanner or be written to a tempfile or something, not
sure how that works.
//daniel wiberg
tech mail wrote:
I guess I just want to keep e
I will have to look into that other patch...
as for why not use the patch..just an opinion I guess, it is a great tool -
dont get me wrong...I also find it interesting that I can mimic 95% of the
functionality without the patch (from what I can see)...the tcp.smtp fine
tuning is one of them, but s
I can't get the point not using the patch.
Switch using ClamAV together with qmail or not with commenting one of these
lines in /etc/tcp.smtp:
127.:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
#127.:allow,RELAYCLIENT="",QMAILQUEUE="/var/qmail/bin/qmail-scanner-queue.pl
"
If you use the multiple qmail patch by matt.simer