On 16 Apr 2018, at 19:01 (-0400), John Hardin wrote:
On Mon, 16 Apr 2018, Computer Bob wrote:
Why should sa-learn not be run as root ?
That's a general safe practice. Do as little as root as you possibly
can. Why risk a root crack from an unknown bug in sa-learn that
somebody has discovere
On Mon, 16 Apr 2018, Computer Bob wrote:
Why should sa-learn not be run as root ?
That's a general safe practice. Do as little as root as you possibly can.
Why risk a root crack from an unknown bug in sa-learn that somebody has
discovered and figured out how to exploit via email?
--
John
Well, now I am more thoroughly confused than usual. #:)
On 4/15/18 2:04 PM, RW wrote:
On Sun, 15 Apr 2018 13:39:31 -0500
Computer Bob wrote:
Update:
For this location, it is ok to have a central bayes database, so I
turned off AWL, adjusted local.cf to contain:
bayes_path /Central_Path/bayes_db
Sorry for the Off Topic but... please does anyone know what Antivirus Engines
does Microsoft O365 ATP use?
Thanks...
PedroD
On Apr 16, 2018, at 11:15 AM, RW wrote:
>
> You seem to be confusing unix and virtual users.
Sorry, I was confusing "virtual hosting" with "virtual users." Oops.
Ignore me!
--- Amir
On Mon, 16 Apr 2018 10:34:41 -0600
Amir Caspi wrote:
> > On Apr 15, 2018, at 12:39 PM, Computer Bob
> > wrote:
> >
> > I still am a bit puzzled how bayes db gets handled when using
> > virtual users and domains. I see no trace of bayes or .spamassassin
> > files in any of the virtual locations o
> On Apr 15, 2018, at 12:39 PM, Computer Bob wrote:
>
> I still am a bit puzzled how bayes db gets handled when using virtual users
> and domains. I see no trace of bayes or .spamassassin files in any of the
> virtual locations or in the sql databases.
If you want Bayes to run per-user with vi