Jeferson Pessoa Santana wrote: > Hy Matthew, > > I tried to start the daemon in the way that you said in your e-mail > but the result are the same. For some reason, the daemon goes back to > the command line /usr/bin/spamd -d -u nobody. > > Thanks anyway for all the help provided by you and the entire list
One last try... you said the command line is /usr/bin/spamd -i -d -u nobody --allowed-ips=200.X.X.X,127.0.0.1 Is it, in fact: /usr/bin/spamd -i -d -u nobody --allowed-ips=200.189.68.248,127.0.0.1 And furthermore, is the IP of the machine 200.189.68.248? If so, then /usr/bin/spamd -d -u nobody makes sense. Why? Because -i is ignored, as it has no interface IP... And --allowed-ips specifies the default IPs anyway. >From the man spamd page: "By default, connections are only accepted from localĀ host [127.0.0.1]." And of course, the interface IP addresses are all on the local host. So that --allowed-ips, though it is parsed, is just a fancy way of specifying the default anyway. -- Matthew.van.Eerde (at) hbinc.com 805.964.4554 x902 Hispanic Business Inc./HireDiversity.com Software Engineer