Razor doesn't care about headers only the message body. Message headers are not unique (dates, froms, tos, relays would be different for everyone)and would generate a different hash.
The word hi has probably been registered by someone just like test. -----Original Message----- From: dman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, March 05, 2002 12:11 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [SAtalk] razor gone haywire? I just reorganized my network topology, and to verify my port forwarding, I sent myself a message. The SMTP session looks like (done via telnet) : MAIL FROM: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 250 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is syntactically correct RCPT TO: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 250 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> verified DATA 354 Enter message, ending with "." on a line by itself From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: dman Subject: test message hi . 250 OK id=16i79G-0005YP-00 When this arrived, it was hit by RAZOR_CHECK. Can anyone offer an explantion for why this message would be in razor's database? (I have myself in the whitelist so it wasn't an issue, but is still quite curious) The other SA tests that matched all make sense (in particular referring to the From: and To: headers). -D -- Who can say, "I have kept my heart pure; I am clean and without sin"? Proverbs 20:9 _______________________________________________ Spamassassin-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/spamassassin-talk _______________________________________________ Spamassassin-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/spamassassin-talk