May 5, 2024 11:34 PM, "J Doe" <gene...@nativemethods.com> wrote:

> On 2024-05-05 17:26, gil...@poolp.org wrote:
> 
>> May 5, 2024 11:18 PM, "J Doe" <gene...@nativemethods.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hello,
>> 
>> Hello,
>> 
>>> I am using the Senderscore OpenSMTPD filter from packages on OpenBSD
>>> 7.5. All packages installed are up-to-date.
>>> 
>>> In my mail server logs I noticed:
>>> 
>>> May 4 20:12:44 server smtpd[58189]: check_senderscore:
>>> link-connect addr=115.231.78.9 score=-1
>>> 
>>> This is the first time I have seen a negative score. According to the
>>> Senderscore website[0] scores should be between zero and one hundred.
>>> 
>>> What does a negative result mean ?
>> 
>> In most cases, -1 means that the IP address is not known to senderscore,
>> implying a neutral reputation.
> 
> Hi Gilles,
> 
> Thank you for your reply.
> 
> Ok, if a negative number means the address is not known (and has neither
> a good or bad reputation), does the argument: -blockBelow take this into
> account ?
> 
> For example, on my server I use
> 
> filter check_senderscore proc-exec "filter-senderscore
> -scoreHeader -blockBelow 11" ...
> 
> .. so I want scores of 10 and lower to be blocked, but I wouldn't want
> a negative score blocked as there is no reputation data.
> 
> Does the filter take that into account or will a negative score lead to
> a block based on how I have configured it ?
> 

Yes, the filter takes that into account.
-1 is a filter specific-value to determine if... it should take the value into 
account.

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