On Sunday 23 July 2006 12:39, Igor Chudov wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 23, 2006 at 03:33:03PM -0500, Igor Chudov wrote:
> > I started receiving a lot of spam in my mailbox. That spam regards one
> > of the most frequently spammed mede cations, with its name somewhat
> > misspelled in the Subject:. I am afraid that perhaps some of my rules
> > stopped working (like network identification of open spam relays).
> >
> > It is strange. Anyone else experienced something similar?
>
> Further investigation revealed the following. I run SA on a sitewide
> basis from root's procmailrc.
>
> Here's the tests from the root's run:
>
> X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.1.3 (2006-06-01) on
>         manifold.algebra.com
> X-Spam-Level:
> X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.1 required=3.0 tests=BAYES_50,FORGED_RCVD_HELO,
> HTML_MESSAGE autolearn=ham version=3.1.3 X-Spam-Relay-Country: US ES
>
> If I rerun SA manually from my own account, by doing
>
>    spamassassin < /tmp/badspam 2>&1 | less
>
> I get the following headers and proper identification of that spam as spam:
>
> X-Spam-Flag: YES
> X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.1.3 (2006-06-01) on
>         manifold.algebra.com
> X-Spam-Level: *****
> X-Spam-Status: Yes, score=5.6 required=3.0 tests=HTML_MESSAGE,URIBL_BLACK,
>         URIBL_SBL,URIBL_WS_SURBL autolearn=no version=3.1.3
>
> So, when I run it manually, it works great. Why does it not work from
> /etc/procmailrc?
>
> thanks
>
> i

Because your spamd is not using network tests.

Prolly the -L flag in the spamd invocation.

-- 
_____________________________________
John Andersen

Attachment: pgpwYp8WRgd6I.pgp
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to