Abigail Marshall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Try putting the recipe that is in your personal .procmailrc at the end > of the main /etc/procmailrc - then the mail will be sent to the > $SUSPECT file BEFORE going to your individual POP boxes.
This would work, but it implies that the $SUSPECT file needs to be writable by any user that receives mail on the system. Because DROPPRIVS=yes was specified, procmail won't have root privileges to write to the mailbox anymore. > SWO> I have an account on my server for myself and for my wife. There > SWO> is the typical /etc/procmailrc to get us started: > > SWO> DROPPRIVS=yes > > SWO> :0fw > SWO> * < 256000 > SWO> | spamc > > SWO> I have a recipe in my personal .procmailrc that looks for X-Spam-Flag: > > SWO> :0: > SWO> * ^X-Spam-Flag: > SWO> $SUSPECT > > SWO> The problem is that my wife's mail is POPd off her account over > SWO> to her machine. I want her spam to end up in my spam folder. So > SWO> what I need is a recipe to forward (or even better yet, bounce) > SWO> her spam to my account. If it gets to my account, then my > SWO> .procmailrc will end up putting it into my spam folder (which is > SWO> what I want). > > SWO> Any takers? -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Fuzzy Fox) || "Good judgment comes from experience. sometimes known as David DeSimone || Experience comes from bad judgment." ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email sponsored by: Parasoft Error proof Web apps, automate testing & more. Download & eval WebKing and get a free book. www.parasoft.com/bulletproofapps1 _______________________________________________ Spamassassin-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/spamassassin-talk