On Sat, 26 Mar 2011 22:20:48 +0100
Ana Guerrero <a...@debian.org> wrote:

> On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 10:16:00PM +0100, Julien Valroff wrote:
> > 
> > I plan to upload current git snapshot to experimental very soon - not
> > everything was tested as much as I would have expected, and I think some
> > documentation would need to be checked/rephrased/updated but the package has
> > been in use on several production servers for some time now, which makes me
> > confident for the future.
> >
> 
> Experimental is experimental after all :-)
>
Maybe the Debian package is experimental but the product it self is not 
experimental. Version 3.8.x of DSPAM has been used for ages in other distros. 
The new 3.9.x series of DSPAM is the result of many bug fixes that DSPAM users 
have reported after the community has taken over from Sensory Networks (that is 
the company used to hold the copyright for DSPAM).

I know the codebase pretty well and I would say that the current 3.9.x series 
of DSPAM is by far the best DSPAM you can get today. I might be biased but I 
think by looking at the GIT commit history you will see yourself that many bug 
fixes, memory leaks and stability issues have been resolved.

I respect the decision to go with 3.6.8 but that version is almost 5 years old 
(release date was 2006-06-06). I know, I know. Good software does not need to 
be constantly updated. But in case of DSPAM I would say that there are way to 
many issues with that older version. To many memory leaks and to many bugs and 
a lot of stability issues.

I am no Debian user and maybe I don't understand the whole thing.... but why is 
it so hard to get an updated version of DSPAM into Debian? What is the problem? 
How can I help? What needs to be done in order to allow Debian users to enjoy a 
more recent DSPAM version?

Regarding documentation: Tell me what needs to be rephrased or rewritten or 
added and I will do it. Just send me patches for existing text or send me new 
text and I will commit it. I think the DSPAM project never rejected changes in 
the past regarding documentation.

Regarding confidence: The Rice University is using DSPAM since ages for all 
their students. I think they have about 65'000 mail boxes that they filter with 
DSPAM. If DSPAM would be unstable or unusable then they would for sure not use 
it. Beside that the DSPAM mailing list is full of users using DSPAM in various 
scenarios. Just recently Nate Custer from Hostgator.com said on the DSPAM 
mailing list that they filter mail for 3 million mail boxes with DSPAM. If that 
does not speak for DSPAM then I don't know what would?


> Also, most of the DSPAM uploaders are MIA. Well, I think all are MIA except
> Christoph Haas.  Could you please update the list in your upload? Same with
> the DM flag (!?).
> 
> Thanks,
> Ana
> 
-- 
Kind Regards from Switzerland,

Stevan Bajić



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