Hi there Clifton first I wanted to tankyou for your reply it started the wheels to turn again for me. And I have made alot of progress by now I am able to sned all tagged spam msgs to my E-mail box. This is actualy GREAT. But now I have one snag and I hope that you or the development community can help me out. The only bad thing that happens now is that good e-mails do not reach tier reciepients.
I am going to explain my setup in much deatial as possible for the hope that someone has the answer out ther. In my enviroment this is our setup Internet --- Firewall Pix ----- Postfix MTA/SA/Scripts (No User Mailboxes on this server) ----- Exchange Server (this is were my users are) Here are the last files that were working correctly Master.cf # # Postfix master process configuration file. Each line describes how # a mailer component program should be run. The fields that make up # each line are described below. A "-" field value requests that a # default value be used for that field. # # Service: any name that is valid for the specified transport type # (the next field). With INET transports, a service is specified as # host:port. The host part (and colon) may be omitted. Either host # or port may be given in symbolic form or in numeric form. Examples # for the SMTP server: localhost:smtp receives mail via the loopback # interface only; 10025 receives mail on port 10025. # # Transport type: "inet" for Internet sockets, "unix" for UNIX-domain # sockets, "fifo" for named pipes. # # Private: whether or not access is restricted to the mail system. # Default is private service. Internet (inet) sockets can't be private. # # Unprivileged: whether the service runs with root privileges or as # the owner of the Postfix system (the owner name is controlled by the # mail_owner configuration variable in the main.cf file). # # Chroot: whether or not the service runs chrooted to the mail queue # directory (pathname is controlled by the queue_directory configuration # variable in the main.cf file). Presently, all Postfix daemons can run # chrooted, except for the pipe, virtual and local delivery daemons. # The files in the examples/chroot-setup subdirectory describe how # to set up a Postfix chroot environment for your type of machine. # # Wakeup time: automatically wake up the named service after the # specified number of seconds. A ? at the end of the wakeup time # field requests that wake up events be sent only to services that # are actually being used. Specify 0 for no wakeup. Presently, only # the pickup, queue manager and flush daemons need a wakeup timer. # # Max procs: the maximum number of processes that may execute this # service simultaneously. Default is to use a globally configurable # limit (the default_process_limit configuration parameter in main.cf). # Specify 0 for no process count limit. # # Command + args: the command to be executed. The command name is # relative to the Postfix program directory (pathname is controlled by # the program_directory configuration variable). Adding one or more # -v options turns on verbose logging for that service; adding a -D # option enables symbolic debugging (see the debugger_command variable # in the main.cf configuration file). See individual command man pages # for specific command-line options, if any. # # In order to use the "uucp" message tranport below, set up entries # in the transport table. # # In order to use the "cyrus" message transport below, configure it # in main.cf as the mailbox_transport. # # SPECIFY ONLY PROGRAMS THAT ARE WRITTEN TO RUN AS POSTFIX DAEMONS. # ALL DAEMONS SPECIFIED HERE MUST SPEAK A POSTFIX-INTERNAL PROTOCOL. # # DO NOT CHANGE THE ZERO PROCESS LIMIT FOR CLEANUP/BOUNCE/DEFER OR # POSTFIX WILL BECOME STUCK UP UNDER HEAVY LOAD # # DO NOT CHANGE THE ONE PROCESS LIMIT FOR PICKUP/QMGR OR POSTFIX WILL # DELIVER MAIL MULTIPLE TIMES. # # DO NOT SHARE THE POSTFIX QUEUE BETWEEN MULTIPLE POSTFIX INSTANCES. # # ========================================================================== # service type private unpriv chroot wakeup maxproc command + args # (yes) (yes) (yes) (never) (50) # ========================================================================== #Normal SMTP setting w/o filter #smtp inet n - n - - smtpd #filters through spamassassin smtp inet n - n - - smtpd -o content_filter=postfixfilter: #628 inet n - n - - qmqpd pickup fifo n - n 60 1 pickup cleanup unix n - n - 0 cleanup qmgr fifo n - n 300 1 qmgr #qmgr fifo n - n 300 1 nqmgr rewrite unix - - n - - trivial-rewrite bounce unix - - n - 0 bounce defer unix - - n - 0 bounce flush unix n - n 1000? 0 flush smtp unix - - n - - smtp showq unix n - n - - showq error unix - - n - - error local unix - n n - - local virtual unix - n n - - virtual lmtp unix - - n - - lmtp # # Interfaces to non-Postfix software. Be sure to examine the manual # pages of the non-Postfix software to find out what options it wants. # The Cyrus deliver program has changed incompatibly. # cyrus unix - n n - - pipe flags=R user=cyrus argv=/cyrus/bin/deliver -e -m ${extension} ${user} uucp unix - n n - - pipe flags=Fqhu user=uucp argv=uux -r -n -z -a$sender - $nexthop!rmail ($recipient) ifmail unix - n n - - pipe flags=F user=ftn argv=/usr/lib/ifmail/ifmail -r $nexthop ($recipient) bsmtp unix - n n - - pipe flags=Fq. user=foo argv=/usr/local/sbin/bsmtp -f $sender $nexthop $recipient postfixfilter unix - n n - - pipe flags=Rq user=postfixfilter argv=/home/postfixfilter/postfixfilter -f ${sender} -- ${recipient} Main.cf # Global Postfix configuration file. This file lists only a subset # of all 100+ parameters. See the sample-xxx.cf files for a full list. # # The general format is lines with parameter = value pairs. Lines # that begin with whitespace continue the previous line. A value can # contain references to other $names or ${name}s. # # NOTE - CHANGE NO MORE THAN 2-3 PARAMETERS AT A TIME, AND TEST IF # POSTFIX STILL WORKS AFTER EVERY CHANGE. # SOFT BOUNCE # # The soft_bounce parameter provides a limited safety net for # testing. When soft_bounce is enabled, mail will remain queued that # would otherwise bounce. This parameter disables locally-generated # bounces, and prevents the SMTP server from rejecting mail permanently # (by changing 5xx replies into 4xx replies). However, soft_bounce # is no cure for address rewriting mistakes or mail routing mistakes. # #soft_bounce = no # LOCAL PATHNAME INFORMATION # # The queue_directory specifies the location of the Postfix queue. # This is also the root directory of Postfix daemons that run chrooted. # See the files in examples/chroot-setup for setting up Postfix chroot # environments on different UNIX systems. # # The command_directory parameter specifies the location of all # postXXX commands. The default value is $program_directory. # command_directory = /usr/sbin # The daemon_directory parameter specifies the location of all Postfix # daemon programs (i.e. programs listed in the master.cf file). The # default value is $program_directory. This directory must be owned # by root. # daemon_directory = /usr/libexec/postfix # QUEUE AND PROCESS OWNERSHIP # # The mail_owner parameter specifies the owner of the Postfix queue # and of most Postfix daemon processes. Specify the name of a user # account THAT DOES NOT SHARE ITS USER OR GROUP ID WITH OTHER ACCOUNTS # AND THAT OWNS NO OTHER FILES OR PROCESSES ON THE SYSTEM. In # particular, don't specify nobody or daemon. PLEASE USE A DEDICATED # USER. # # The default_privs parameter specifies the default rights used by # the local delivery agent for delivery to external file or command. # These rights are used in the absence of a recipient user context. # DO NOT SPECIFY A PRIVILEGED USER OR THE POSTFIX OWNER. # #default_privs = nobody # INTERNET HOST AND DOMAIN NAMES # # The myhostname parameter specifies the internet hostname of this # mail system. The default is to use the fully-qualified domain name # from gethostname(). $myhostname is used as a default value for many # other configuration parameters. # myhostname = jaxspam.rsandh.com #myhostname = virtual.domain.name # The mydomain parameter specifies the local internet domain name. # The default is to use $myhostname minus the first component. # $mydomain is used as a default value for many other configuration # parameters. # #mydomain = domain.name # SENDING MAIL # # The myorigin parameter specifies the domain that locally-posted # mail appears to come from. The default is to append $myhostname, # which is fine for small sites. If you run a domain with multiple # machines, you should (1) change this to $mydomain and (2) set up # a domain-wide alias database that aliases each user to # [EMAIL PROTECTED] # #myorigin = $myhostname #myorigin = $mydomain # RECEIVING MAIL # The inet_interfaces parameter specifies the network interface # addresses that this mail system receives mail on. By default, # the software claims all active interfaces on the machine. The # parameter also controls delivery of mail to user@[ip.address]. # #inet_interfaces = all #inet_interfaces = $myhostname #inet_interfaces = $myhostname, localhost # The mydestination parameter specifies the list of domains that this # machine considers itself the final destination for. That includes # Sendmail-style virtual domains hosted on this machine. # # Do not include Postfix-style virtual domains - those domains are # specified elsewhere (see sample-virtual.cf, and sample-transport.cf). # # The default is $myhostname + localhost.$mydomain. On a mail domain # gateway, you should also include $mydomain. Do not specify the # names of domains that this machine is backup MX host for. Specify # those names via the relay_domains or permit_mx_backup settings for # the SMTP server (see sample-smtpd.cf). # # The local machine is always the final destination for mail addressed # to user@[the.net.work.address] of an interface that the mail system # receives mail on (see the inet_interfaces parameter). # # Specify a list of host or domain names, /file/name or type:table # patterns, separated by commas and/or whitespace. A /file/name # pattern is replaced by its contents; a type:table is matched when # a name matches a lookup key. Continue long lines by starting the # next line with whitespace. # mydestination = rsandh.com #mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain $mydomain #mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, $mydomain, # mail.$mydomain, www.$mydomain, ftp.$mydomain # TRUST AND RELAY CONTROL # The mynetworks parameter specifies the list of "trusted" SMTP # clients that have more privileges than "strangers". # # In particular, "trusted" SMTP clients are allowed to relay mail # through Postfix. See the smtpd_recipient_restrictions parameter # in file sample-smtpd.cf. # # You can specify the list of "trusted" network addresses by hand # or you can let Postfix do it for you (which is the default). # # By default (mynetworks_style = subnet), Postfix "trusts" SMTP # clients in the same IP subnetworks as the local machine. # On Linux, this does works correctly only with interfaces specified # with the "ifconfig" command. # # Specify "mynetworks_style = class" when Postfix should "trust" SMTP # clients in the same IP class A/B/C networks as the local machine. # Don't do this with a dialup site - it would cause Postfix to "trust" # your entire provider's network. Instead, specify an explicit # mynetworks list by hand, as described below. # # Specify "mynetworks_style = host" when Postfix should "trust" # only the local machine. # #mynetworks_style = class #mynetworks_style = subnet #mynetworks_style = host # Alternatively, you can specify the mynetworks list by hand, in # which case Postfix ignores the mynetworks_style setting. # # Specify an explicit list of network/netmask patterns, where the # mask specifies the number of bits in the network part of a host # address. # # You can also specify the absolute pathname of a pattern file instead # of listing the patterns here. Specify type:table for table-based lookups # (the value on the table right-hand side is not used). # #mynetworks = 168.100.189.0/28, 127.0.0.0/8 #mynetworks = $config_directory/mynetworks #mynetworks = hash:/etc/postfix/network_table # The relay_domains parameter restricts what clients this mail system # will relay mail from, or what destinations this system will relay # mail to. See the smtpd_recipient_restrictions restriction in the # file sample-smtpd.cf for detailed information. # # By default, Postfix relays mail # - from "trusted" clients whose IP address matches $mynetworks, # - from "trusted" clients matching $relay_domains or subdomains thereof, # - from untrusted clients to destinations that match $relay_domains # or subdomains thereof, except addresses with sender-specified routing. # The default relay_domains value is $mydestination. # # In addition to the above, the Postfix SMTP server by default accepts mail # that Postfix is final destination for: # - destinations that match $inet_interfaces, # - destinations that match $mydestination # - destinations that match $virtual_maps. # These destinations do not need to be listed in $relay_domains. # # Specify a list of hosts or domains, /file/name patterns or type:name # lookup tables, separated by commas and/or whitespace. Continue # long lines by starting the next line with whitespace. A file name # is replaced by its contents; a type:name table is matched when a # (parent) domain appears as lookup key. # # NOTE: Postfix will not automatically forward mail for domains that # list this system as their primary or backup MX host. See the # permit_mx_backup restriction in the file sample-smtpd.cf. # #relay_domains = $mydestination # INTERNET OR INTRANET # The relayhost parameter specifies the default host to send mail to # when no entry is matched in the optional transport(5) table. When # no relayhost is given, mail is routed directly to the destination. # # On an intranet, specify the organizational domain name. If your # internal DNS uses no MX records, specify the name of the intranet # gateway host instead. # # In the case of SMTP, specify a domain, host, host:port, [host]:port, # [address] or [address]:port; the form [host] turns off MX lookups. # # If you're connected via UUCP, see also the default_transport parameter. # #relayhost = $mydomain #relayhost = gateway.my.domain #relayhost = uucphost #relayhost = [an.ip.add.ress] # REJECTING UNKNOWN LOCAL USERS # # The local_recipient_maps parameter specifies optional lookup tables # with all names (not addresses) of users that are local with respect # to $mydestination and $inet_interfaces. If this parameter is # defined, then the SMTP server will reject mail for unknown local # users. # # If you use the default Postfix local delivery agent for local # delivery, uncomment the definition below. # # Beware: if the Postfix SMTP server runs chrooted, you may have to # copy the passwd (not shadow) database into the jail. This is # system dependent. # #local_recipient_maps = $alias_maps unix:passwd.byname # INPUT RATE CONTROL # # The in_flow_delay configuration parameter implements mail input # flow control. This feature is turned on by default, although it # still needs further development (it's disabled on SCO UNIX due # to an SCO bug). # # A Postfix process will pause for $in_flow_delay seconds before # accepting a new message, when the message arrival rate exceeds the # message delivery rate. With the default 50 SMTP server process # limit, this limits the mail inflow to 50 messages a second more # than the number of messages delivered per second. # # Specify 0 to disable the feature. Valid delays are 0..10. # #in_flow_delay = 1s # ADDRESS REWRITING # # Insert text from sample-rewrite.cf if you need to do address # masquerading. # # Insert text from sample-canonical.cf if you need to do address # rewriting, or if you need username->Firstname.Lastname mapping. # ADDRESS REDIRECTION (VIRTUAL DOMAIN) # # Insert text from sample-virtual.cf if you need virtual domain support. # "USER HAS MOVED" BOUNCE MESSAGES # # Insert text from sample-relocated.cf if you need "user has moved" # style bounce messages. Alternatively, you can bounce recipients # with an SMTP server access table. See sample-smtpd.cf. # TRANSPORT MAP # # Insert text from sample-transport.cf if you need explicit routing. # ALIAS DATABASE # # The alias_maps parameter specifies the list of alias databases used # by the local delivery agent. The default list is system dependent. # On systems with NIS, the default is to search the local alias # database, then the NIS alias database. See aliases(5) for syntax # details. # # If you change the alias database, run "postalias /etc/aliases" (or # wherever your system stores the mail alias file), or simply run # "newaliases" to build the necessary DBM or DB file. # # It will take a minute or so before changes become visible. Use # "postfix reload" to eliminate the delay. # #alias_maps = dbm:/etc/aliases alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/aliases #alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases, nis:mail.aliases #alias_maps = netinfo:/aliases # The alias_database parameter specifies the alias database(s) that # are built with "newaliases" or "sendmail -bi". This is a separate # configuration parameter, because alias_maps (see above) may specify # tables that are not necessarily all under control by Postfix. # #alias_database = dbm:/etc/aliases #alias_database = dbm:/etc/mail/aliases #alias_database = hash:/etc/aliases #alias_database = hash:/etc/aliases, hash:/opt/majordomo/aliases # ADDRESS EXTENSIONS (e.g., user+foo) # # The recipient_delimiter parameter specifies the separator between # user names and address extensions (user+foo). See canonical(5), # local(8), relocated(5) and virtual(5) for the effects this has on # aliases, canonical, virtual, relocated and .forward file lookups. # Basically, the software tries user+foo and .forward+foo before # trying user and .forward. # #recipient_delimiter = + # DELIVERY TO MAILBOX # # The home_mailbox parameter specifies the optional pathname of a # mailbox file relative to a user's home directory. The default # mailbox file is /var/spool/mail/user or /var/mail/user. Specify # "Maildir/" for qmail-style delivery (the / is required). # #home_mailbox = Mailbox #home_mailbox = Maildir/ # The mail_spool_directory parameter specifies the directory where # UNIX-style mailboxes are kept. The default setting depends on the # system type. # #mail_spool_directory = /var/mail #mail_spool_directory = /var/spool/mail # The mailbox_command parameter specifies the optional external # command to use instead of mailbox delivery. The command is run as # the recipient with proper HOME, SHELL and LOGNAME environment settings. # Exception: delivery for root is done as $default_user. # # Other environment variables of interest: USER (recipient username), # EXTENSION (address extension), DOMAIN (domain part of address), # and LOCAL (the address localpart). # # Unlike other Postfix configuration parameters, the mailbox_command # parameter is not subjected to $parameter substitutions. This is to # make it easier to specify shell syntax (see example below). # # Avoid shell meta characters because they will force Postfix to run # an expensive shell process. Procmail alone is expensive enough. # # IF YOU USE THIS TO DELIVER MAIL SYSTEM-WIDE, YOU MUST SET UP AN # ALIAS THAT FORWARDS MAIL FOR ROOT TO A REAL USER. # #mailbox_command = /some/where/procmail #mailbox_command = /some/where/procmail -a "$EXTENSION" mailbox_command = /usr/bin/procmail # The mailbox_transport specifies the optional transport in master.cf # to use after processing aliases and .forward files. This parameter # has precedence over the mailbox_command, fallback_transport and # luser_relay parameters. # # Specify a string of the form transport:nexthop, where transport is # the name of a mail delivery transport defined in master.cf. The # :nexthop part is optional. For more details see the sample transport # configuration file. # #mailbox_transport = lmtp:unix:/file/name #mailbox_transport = cyrus # The fallback_transport specifies the optional transport in master.cf # to use for recipients that are not found in the UNIX passwd database. # This parameter has precedence over the luser_relay parameter. # # Specify a string of the form transport:nexthop, where transport is # the name of a mail delivery transport defined in master.cf. The # :nexthop part is optional. For more details see the sample transport # configuration file. # #fallback_transport = lmtp:unix:/file/name #fallback_transport = cyrus #fallback_transport = # The luser_relay parameter specifies an optional destination address # for unknown recipients. By default, mail for unknown local recipients # is bounced. # # The following expansions are done on luser_relay: $user (recipient # username), $shell (recipient shell), $home (recipient home directory), # $recipient (full recipient address), $extension (recipient address # extension), $domain (recipient domain), $local (entire recipient # localpart), $recipient_delimiter. Specify ${name?value} or # ${name:value} to expand value only when $name does (does not) exist. # # luser_relay works only for the default Postfix local delivery agent. # #luser_relay = $[EMAIL PROTECTED] #luser_relay = $[EMAIL PROTECTED] #luser_relay = admin+$local # JUNK MAIL CONTROLS # # The controls listed here are only a very small subset. See the file # sample-smtpd.cf for an elaborate list of anti-UCE controls. # The header_checks parameter specifies an optional table with patterns # that each logical message header is matched against, including # headers that span multiple physical lines. Patterns are matched # in the specified order, and the search stops upon the first match. # When a pattern matches, what happens next depends on the associated # action that is specified in the right-hand side of the table: # # REJECT the entire message is rejected. # REJECT text.... The text is sent to the originator. # IGNORE the header line is silently discarded. # WARN the header is logged (not rejected) with a warning message. # WARN text... as above, and the text is logged, too. # # These patterns do not apply to MIME headers in the message body. # # See also the body_checks example in the sample-filter.cf file. # #header_checks = regexp:/etc/postfix/header_checks # FAST ETRN SERVICE # # Postfix maintains per-destination logfiles with information about # deferred mail, so that mail can be flushed quickly with the SMTP # "ETRN domain.name" command, or by executing "sendmail -qRdomain.name". # # By default, Postfix maintains deferred mail logfile information # only for destinations that Postfix is willing to relay to (as # specified in the relay_domains parameter). For other destinations, # Postfix attempts to deliver ALL queued mail after receiving the # SMTP "ETRN domain.name" command, or after execution of "sendmail # -qRdomain.name". This can be slow when a lot of mail is queued. # # The fast_flush_domains parameter controls what destinations are # eligible for this "fast ETRN/sendmail -qR" service. # #fast_flush_domains = $relay_domains #fast_flush_domains = # SHOW SOFTWARE VERSION OR NOT # # The smtpd_banner parameter specifies the text that follows the 220 # code in the SMTP server's greeting banner. Some people like to see # the mail version advertised. By default, Postfix shows no version. # # You MUST specify $myhostname at the start of the text. That is an # RFC requirement. Postfix itself does not care. # #smtpd_banner = $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name #smtpd_banner = $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name ($mail_version) # PARALLEL DELIVERY TO THE SAME DESTINATION # # How many parallel deliveries to the same user or domain? With local # delivery, it does not make sense to do massively parallel delivery # to the same user, because mailbox updates must happen sequentially, # and expensive pipelines in .forward files can cause disasters when # too many are run at the same time. With SMTP deliveries, 10 # simultaneous connections to the same domain could be sufficient to # raise eyebrows. # # Each message delivery transport has its XXX_destination_concurrency_limit # parameter. The default is $default_destination_concurrency_limit for # most delivery transports. For the local delivery agent the default is 2. #local_destination_concurrency_limit = 2 #default_destination_concurrency_limit = 10 # DEBUGGING CONTROL # # The debug_peer_level parameter specifies the increment in verbose # logging level when an SMTP client or server host name or address # matches a pattern in the debug_peer_list parameter. # debug_peer_level = 2 # The debug_peer_list parameter specifies an optional list of domain # or network patterns, /file/name patterns or type:name tables. When # an SMTP client or server host name or address matches a pattern, # increase the verbose logging level by the amount specified in the # debug_peer_level parameter. # #debug_peer_list = 127.0.0.1 #debug_peer_list = some.domain # The debugger_command specifies the external command that is executed # when a Postfix daemon program is run with the -D option. # # Use "command .. & sleep 5" so that the debugger can attach before # the process marches on. If you use an X-based debugger, be sure to # set up your XAUTHORITY environment variable before starting Postfix. # debugger_command = PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin xxgdb $daemon_directory/$process_name $process_id & sleep 5 # INSTALL-TIME CONFIGURATION INFORMATION # # The following parameters are used when installing a new Postfix version. # # sendmail_path: The full pathname of the Postfix sendmail command. # This is the Sendmail-compatible mail posting interface. # sendmail_path = /usr/sbin/sendmail.postfix # newaliases_path: The full pathname of the Postfix newaliases command. # This is the Sendmail-compatible command to build alias databases. # newaliases_path = /usr/bin/newaliases.postfix # mailq_path: The full pathname of the Postfix mailq command. This # is the Sendmail-compatible mail queue listing command. # mailq_path = /usr/bin/mailq.postfix # setgid_group: The group for mail submission and queue management # commands. This must be a group name with a numerical group ID that # is not shared with other accounts, not even with the Postfix account. # setgid_group = postdrop # manpage_directory: The location of the Postfix on-line manual pages. # manpage_directory = /usr/share/man # sample_directory: The location of the Postfix sample configuration files. # sample_directory = /usr/share/doc/postfix-1.1.7/samples # readme_directory: The location of the Postfix README files. # readme_directory = /etc/postfix/README_FILES alias_database = hash:/etc/postfix/aliases transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/exchange myorigin = rsandh.com best_mx_transport = smtp:exchange.rsandh.com bounce_notice_recipient = pryort 2bounce_notice_recipient = pryort local_transport = smtp:exchang.rsandh.com procmailrc ###################################################################### # Ailbhe's .procmailrc # ###################################################################### ###################################################################### # Procmail is disastrously confusing. Many thanks to Telsa Gwynne for# # making a decently commented .procmailrc available to the world for # # perusal, or I wouldn't even know the little I do. # # http://roadrunner.swansea.linux.org.uk/~hobbit/procmailrctest # # Lines beginning in # are, of course, comments. # ###################################################################### # The full path of your shell. I use bash, which lives in /bin/bash SHELL=/bin/bash # This is so that it can deal with long lines LINEBUF=4096 # Where are things that procmail uses kept? These 3 paths should do. PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin # Verbosity of procmail logs. "off" gives you a 1-line summary per mail VERBOSE=off # Your Mail directory. _Not_ /var/spool/mail/username MAILDIR=$HOME/Mail # It is convenient to keep procmail logs with email. You can use # $HOME/logs/procmaillog if it suits your system better # `date +%y%m` expands to yymm, so mail for August 2001 # is saved in a file called $HOME/Mail/procmaillog200108 LOGFILE=$HOME/Mail/procmaillog20`date +%y%m` # Procmail uses "formail"; you need the full path. Type "which formail" # at the command line if you don't know where it is. FORMAIL=/usr/bin/formail # Procmail also uses "sendmail"; I think it can use other MTAs, too. # (Mail Transport Agent). Again, "which sendmail". SENDMAIL=/usr/sbin/sendmail ##################################################################### # Recipes stolen from Telsa Gwynne. They work. I don't argue. # ##################################################################### # Kills duplicate messages which is useful if you check mail from # different machines and leave them on the POP3 server. :0 Wh: msgid.lock | $FORMAIL -D 8192 msgid.cache # Puts a backup copy of the last 200 messages in $HOME/Mail/backup # To change the number of backups, change "1,200d" to "1,<foo>d" :0 c backup :0 ic | cd backup && rm -f dummy `ls -t msg.* | sed -e 1,200d` # Regenerate "From" lines to make sure they are valid # Takes longer, but works. :0 fhw | formail -I "From " -a "From " ###################################################################### # These are the "recipes" I use to sort mail. It will check things in# # alpha order, so be careful about very similar sort criteria. # ###################################################################### # Characters you will need to "escape" with a backslash "\" include # # [ ] { } ( ) ^ \ $ ? + . * # # If you type "* ^TO:" it will check the "To" and "Cc" lines. # ###################################################################### ###################################################################### # BUILDING RECIPES # # # # I don't know what ":0:" does; I assume it tells procmail that the # # recipe starts here # # # # The "^" checks that the line _begins_ with the text, eg "From:" # # ".*" is a wildcard. "\." is a literal "." so it searches for # # "From:<anything>amazon.<anything>" # # # # The last line is the folder in $HOME/Mail it puts the mail into. # ###################################################################### :0 *^X-Spam-Status: Yes ! [EMAIL PROTECTED] # Because it sorts through everything in alphabetical order, I use all # the next 3 recipes to make sure mail for two similar lists goes to # seperate mailboxes. :0: * ^From:.*amazon\..* amazon :0: * ^Subject:.*\[web-discuss\] CVS.* cvs :0: * ^Subject:.*CVS.* cvs :0: * ^Subject:.*\[web-discuss\].* web-discuss :0: * ^Subject:.******SPAM*****.* SPAM1 ###################################################################### # The End - remember, this file has the copyright and disclaimer. # # Commentthem out before you try to use the file! # ###################################################################### <<...OLE_Obj...>> "Every animal leaves traces behind after they die. Man leaves what he has created." -Author Unknown ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ Spamassassin-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/spamassassin-talk