these are displayed in the system.log
Jul  3 14:38:07 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13001 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:38:09 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13002 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:38:17 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13005 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:38:18 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13006 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:38:32 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13007 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:39:03 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13008 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:39:06 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13009 from=127.0.0.1
Jul  3 14:39:11 mail xinetd[369]: START: imap pid=13010 from=127.0.0.1

i think i did everything that are necessary to have this SA to run


On 7/3/05, liyas_m m <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 7/3/05, Theo Van Dinter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Sun, Jul 03, 2005 at 12:54:20PM +0800, liyas_m m wrote:
> > > this show SA is running, right?
> > > root      5815   0.0  1.0    43900  10172  ??  Ss   Fri12PM   0:01.07
> > > /usr/bin/spamd -d
> > > root      5816   0.0  1.5    43932  15788  ??  S    Fri12PM   0:00.75
> > > spamd child
> > > ...
> >
> > It does seem to be, yes.
> >
> > > this is in procmailrc
> > >
> > > :0fw
> > > | /usr/bin/spamc
> >
> > Ok, so you call spamc.
> >
> > Are you sure procmail is being called?
> 
> how do check that? please
> 
> Is there anything in your procmail log
> > (try enabling VERBOSE)?  Is there anything in the system log from spamd?  
> > What
> > happens if you run "cat sample-spam.txt | spamc"?
> >
> > --
> > Randomly Generated Tagline:
> > "I'll be Bach." - Johann Sebastian Schwarzenegger
> >
> >
> >
>

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