On Tue, 12 Aug 2014, Greg Ledford wrote:
They may take a couple of different forms depending on how SA is hooked into
your mail infrastructure.
Basic SA headers start with "X-Spam", like X-Spam-Status and X-Spam-Report.
If you're using Amavis, then there would be some Amavis headers. (Note
On Tue, Aug 12, 2014 at 1:27 PM, Greg Ledford
wrote:
>
> It should just be called by Amavis directly. Sometimes it scans and
> sometimes it doesn't. I just found another obvious piece of email that SA
> and Amavis scanned and missed. I tried to attach the headers but they are
> so blatant that th
>They may take a couple of different forms depending on how SA is hooked into
>your mail infrastructure.
>Basic SA headers start with "X-Spam", like X-Spam-Status and X-Spam-Report.
>If you're using Amavis, then there would be some Amavis headers. (Note that
>the mention of Amavis in the Receiv
On Tue, 12 Aug 2014, Greg Ledford wrote:
Can someone tell me why Spamassassin/Amavis are missing these types of
very obvious emails? I'm still trying to figure all of this out and I
know I missed something somewhere. Thanks.
Those headers don't seem to claim that message was even scanned by S
>> Can someone tell me why Spamassassin/Amavis are missing these types of
>> very obvious emails? I'm still trying to figure all of this out and I
>> know I missed something somewhere. Thanks.
>Those headers don't seem to claim that message was even scanned by SA.
>Do messages that SA *does* p
On Tue, 12 Aug 2014, Greg Ledford wrote:
Can someone tell me why Spamassassin/Amavis are missing these types of
very obvious emails? I'm still trying to figure all of this out and I
know I missed something somewhere. Thanks.
Those headers don't seem to claim that message was even scanned by S