Le 6 mars 2015 à 00:48, Noel Jones a écrit :
>
> All anti-spam tools require configuration and updating.
>
> Updating (via the FreeBSD ports system or the various linux package
> management tools) should be fairly painless for any antispam tool
> you choose, or at least they should all have a si
All anti-spam tools require configuration and updating.
Updating (via the FreeBSD ports system or the various linux package
management tools) should be fairly painless for any antispam tool
you choose, or at least they should all have a similar level of pain.
Amavisd-new does not stand out as par
with very different usage/load patterns.
Maybe you should try a similar approach.
Eugene
-Original Message-
From: b...@todoo.biz
Sent: Friday, March 06, 2015 1:55 AM
To: postfix-users@postfix.org
Subject: Re: Anti spam filtering tools
I am quite surprised that no one has anything to
Hey,
I know it can be quite cumbersome but are you using a flat file for
managing amavisd and policies or are using mysql backend?
I have found putting all the policies, domains, managment, blacklists etc..
into mysql to be a much better way to manage it. Then you can use a tool
like phpmyadmin
I am quite surprised that no one has anything to say about this…
;-?
G.B.
> Le 5 mars 2015 à 19:17, b...@todoo.biz a écrit :
>
> Hi,
>
> I am currently using postfix with amavisd + spamassassin on FreeBSD.
> I have also SPF implemented with some py module.
>
> It is working quite wel
Hi,
I am currently using postfix with amavisd + spamassassin on FreeBSD.
I have also SPF implemented with some py module.
It is working quite well but I found the management and update of amavisd quite
heavy !
I wanted to know what you were using out there in order to filter efficiently
s