* Ryan Cleary ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> 1)  A program has already bound to the spamd port (783 by default), 
>     possibly another copy of spamd.  Depending on what operating system
>     you're running, you may be able to check this with the "netstat" 
>     command.
I run netstat, no prog is using that port (783)

> 
> 2)  783 is a reserved port, meaning that you have to be root to bind to 
>     it.  Are you running spamd as root?  Otherwise, you'll have to 
>     run spamd on an unreserved port (>1023) by using the --port 
>     option (and making sure to tell spamc to use the same port).
I run 'spamd' as a root. I have tried your suggestion, run spamd with
port >1023, I did "spamd -p 1088". But it return the same error msg.

--
willy


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