on 8/13/04 9:55 AM, Bonno Bloksma wrote: > Read the archives. A mesage cannot be *both* deleted and send to someone > else. A copy to action is just adding an extra recipient to the smtp > envelope. As soon as that has been done.... the delete action will delete it > all, including the just modified smtp envelope. > > If you want a copyto/delete combination, use the routeto action. That will > send the mesage to another e-mail adderess in stead of to the intended > recipient.
Routeto doesn't produce any better results than copyto. If the weight of the incoming message exceeds our delete weight then I don't receive a version of the message. I'm using the latest interim, with 2 duplicate tests with different actions. The second test uses the routeto (or copyto) action while the first test uses the warn action. I have an independent .junkmail file for the routeto (or copyto) e-mail address with no delete actions in that file. For example, a message is sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (which uses a .junkmail file that does contain delete actions) and the message fails SPECIALTEST and fails enough other tests to exceed our delete weight. Instead of the copyto or routeto action happening (to a special e-mail address with it's own .junkmail file which contains no delete actions) the incoming message gets deleted. 1. Things work perfectly if the message fails the SPECIALTEST and the weight of the incoming message is below the delete weight. 2. I can't remove the delete action for the delete weight, as over 100,000 messages a day exceed the delete weight. 3. The [EMAIL PROTECTED] address was just an example. Any message to any subscriber could fail the SPECIALTEST and be over the delete weight. I simply want a copy of every message that fails the SPECIALTEST. Ideas? Greg --- [This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus (http://www.declude.com)] --- This E-mail came from the Declude.JunkMail mailing list. To unsubscribe, just send an E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and type "unsubscribe Declude.JunkMail". The archives can be found at http://www.mail-archive.com.
