Stuart Johnston wrote:
> jdow wrote:
>> From: "Stuart Johnston" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> Eric Persson wrote:
>>>> This might be a shot in the dark, but after running a patched qmail,
>>>> qmailscanner with spamassassin and mysqlsuppor
This might be a shot in the dark, but after running a patched qmail,
qmailscanner with spamassassin and mysqlsupport for a while and a
selfdeveloped webinterface, we've started to look around what others are
using?
Is there any project that combines the strength of spamassassin, mysql
and a good w
jdow wrote:
Copy the /usr/share/spamassassin directory to your -C directory.
Do not use -C /etc/mail/spamassassin. That upsets the whole ballgame.
(IMAO -C was arguably done wrong. I suspect two options were needed,
one to redirect /etc/mail/spamassassin and the other to redirect
the default rule
Bret Miller wrote:
It looks to me like SA isn't finding the /share/spamassassin folder
where all the rules and scores are defined.
That was actually the case, I started spamd with -C
/etc/mail/spamassassin/ -q -d -m5 -x -u spamd
But the default rules, *.cf files where located in /usr/share/
I installed spamassassin 3.0.4 and qmail-scanner and clam together with
the SQL feature described at http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/UsingSQL.
The problem is all mails are scored 0.0, and I cant figure out why. Any
hints why? I've included some logparts below which might give someone
more
Hi,
I've been using spamassassin for a while and also used to save the
preferences in a mysqldb and it works quite well.
I've been looking for some quarantine software to hold all the
spamemail, which could be cleaned at a certain interval.
I read the readme of SAQ and it seems to be somewh
Hi,
I just installed spamassassin together with qmail, qmail-scanner and
clam on a server to try it out. I am planning on using it to filter spam
and then forward the mail to the "real mailserver". This seems to work
fine so far, I've set it up with the sqlstuff described at
http://wiki.apach