SA 3.1.7
FreeBSD 4.11

Hi there,

I am trying to get better understanding as to why spamassassin is behaving the way it is.

So I see that autolearn=no. I thought by default autolearn is turned on. I dont have this turned off in the system-wide configuration nor the user specific configuration. Both files appear below. Also I want more verbose output. Is there a way that spamassassin can place the scores next to each of the tests that were found positive.

--- snip ----

*X-Spam-Checker-Version:* SpamAssassin 3.1.7 (2006-10-05) on <hostname>
*X-Spam-Level:* ****
*X-Spam-Status:* No, score=4.6 required=5.0 tests=BAYES_99,FORGED_RCVD_HELO,
   NO_REAL_NAME autolearn=no version=3.1.7

--- snip ---


here is the system-wide configuration file

----- snip -----

# cat /usr/local/etc/mail//spamassassin/local.cf
# This is the right place to customize your installation of SpamAssassin.
#
# See 'perldoc Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf' for details of what can be
# tweaked.
#
###########################################################################
#
# rewrite_subject 0
# report_safe 1
# trusted_networks 212.17.35.


------- snip -------

this is the user specific configuration:

---- snip ----

# cat ~/.spamassassin/user_prefs
# SpamAssassin user preferences file. See 'perldoc Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf'
# for details of what can be tweaked.
###########################################################################

# How many points before a mail is considered spam.
# required_score                5

# Whitelist and blacklist addresses are now file-glob-style patterns, so
# "[EMAIL PROTECTED]", "[EMAIL PROTECTED]", or "*.domain.net" will all work.
# whitelist_from        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

# Add your own customised scores for some tests below. The default scores are # read from the installed spamassassin rules files, but you can override them
# here.  To see the list of tests and their default scores, go to
# http://spamassassin.apache.org/tests.html .
#
# score SYMBOLIC_TEST_NAME n.nn

# Speakers of Asian languages, like Chinese, Japanese and Korean, will almost # definitely want to uncomment the following lines. They will switch off some # rules that detect 8-bit characters, which commonly trigger on mails using CJK
# character sets, or that assume a western-style charset is in use.
#
# score HTML_COMMENT_8BITS      0
# score UPPERCASE_25_50         0
# score UPPERCASE_50_75         0
# score UPPERCASE_75_100        0


---- snip ---


cheers,

Noah

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