https://bz.apache.org/SpamAssassin/show_bug.cgi?id=7686
--- Comment #4 from Bill Cole <[email protected]> --- (In reply to Jordan from comment #3) > Something I'm still not clear on: > > In the example provided we happen to operate both the RainLoop webmail > system that the message was sent *from* and the *receiving* server. > > The spamassassin headers and PBL checks were done on the *receiving* server. > Therefore its on the *receiving* server that I would need to set > msa_networks. > > Great, this would solve things for when our servers happen to be the > receiving server. > > But configuring msa_networks in Spamassassin does absolutely nothing when > someone sends a message to some server using Spamassassin that's out of our > control. Machines that do not trust your webmail server (i.e. have it in trusted_networks) would not check the it claims to have received the message from. This is not a bug, it's a configuration problem. If you need advice on how to set up your *_networks you can find a wide range of SA users on the SpamAssassin Users mailing list, possibly including someone who has run into the same issue and can help in more depth. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.
