On Friday 25 August 2006 14:27, Evan Platt wrote:
> At 03:12 PM 8/25/2006, you wrote:
> >Manually change that to your ISPs DNS server, or better yet, to his
> >Secondary.  Try that for a bit...
>
> Done.
>
> Still getting
>
> Aug 25 15:26:09 www spamd[281]: bayes: bayes db version 0 is not able
> to be used, aborting! at
> /Library/Perl/5.8.6/Mail/SpamAssassin/BayesStore/DBM.pm line 195,
> <GEN50> line 2.\n
> Aug 25 15:26:09 www spamd[281]: bayes: bayes db version 0 is not able
> to be used, aborting! at
> /Library/Perl/5.8.6/Mail/SpamAssassin/BayesStore/DBM.pm line 195,
> <GEN50> line 392.\n
> Aug 25 15:26:11 www spamd[281]: bayes: bayes db version 0 is not able
> to be used, aborting! at
> /Library/Perl/5.8.6/Mail/SpamAssassin/BayesStore/DBM.pm line 195,
> <GEN50> line 392.\n

Ok this cleared up the other problem, so something is lame about
your router.  Time for a reboot of that router perhaps.  

Check its configuration to see if it allows you to manually code a 
dns server for the local subnet, and put your ISPs IP in there.  Its no
different that sending it to the router and having it send it onward 
to the ISP.

Now you just have a bases DB problem.
Sounds like this user was either root, or some other user that did not
have  bayes set up yet. 


>
> And fyi, it appears on a reboot, /etc/resolv.conf is reverted back to
> 192.168.1.66.

Yes, that's normal.  You can prevent this in your DHCP setings.
But the better solution is to solve it at the router.

-- 
_____________________________________
John Andersen

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