Dear All, Many thanks for your reply.
> It may not be set where you think it is. IIWY I'd do a recursive grep Yes, actually true. There is a ' ok_locales en' in file "sa-mimedefang.cf" I have overlooked this fact. But this explains. > .... the SA can use users' ~/.spamassassin/user_prefs where ... I tried this but it does NOT work for me. Is it possible it only works when "spamd" is running ? > So, how do you call spamassassin? I am using "mimedefang" as INPUT_MAIL_FILTER in my sendmail configuration. And mimedefang is calling SA as a perl script in perl's bin directory. There is no "spamd" running. Kind regards Hans -- quite probably, but it highly depends on how you filter the spam. For example, using spamassassin/spamc from spamass-milter or per-user procmail/maildrop filters, the SA can use users' ~/.spamassassin/user_prefs where the directives are configured. So, how do you call spamassassin? -- Matus UHLAR - fantomas, uh...@fantomas.sk ; http://www.fantomas.sk/ Warning: I wish NOT to receive e-mail advertising to this address. Varovanie: na tuto adresu chcem NEDOSTAVAT akukolvek reklamnu postu. 10 GOTO 10 : REM (C) Bill Gates 1998, All Rights Reserved! -----Original Message----- From: RW [mailto:rwmailli...@googlemail.com] Sent: Wednesday, March 2, 2016 2:42 PM To: users@spamassassin.apache.org Subject: Re: CHARSET_FARAWAY and other charsets On Wed, 2 Mar 2016 14:12:18 +0100 MAYER Hans wrote: > pts rule name description > ---- ---------------------- > -------------------------------------------------- 3.2 > CHARSET_FARAWAY_HEADER A foreign language charset used in headers 3.2 > CHARSET_FARAWAY BODY: Character set indicates a foreign > language 2.5 MIME_CHARSET_FARAWAY MIME character set indicates > foreign language > ... > Looking into my configuration I didn't set "ok_languages" and I didn't > take "ok_locales". So I assume it will take the defaults from > "10_default_prefs.cf" with a value of "all". "ok_locales" is the relevant setting and those rules shouldn't fire if it's set to "all". It may not be set where you think it is. IIWY I'd do a recursive grep for ok_locales and see if it turns anything up.