Jay Lee wrote:
GAIA Host Collective wrote:
Based on reading docs i think i understand that aliases (ones created
by 'makealiases') can not be trained with the bayesian learning. For
instance a mailbox is setup [EMAIL PROTECTED] and an alias is
setup called [EMAIL PROTECTED] that forwards to
notes below... ~Thanks, charles uchu
Some of the config stuff that is set:
courierd
-
DEFAULTDELIVERY="| /usr/bin/maildrop -V 10"
-
maildroprc
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import RECIPIENT
import SENDER
logfile "/tmp/maildrop.log"
import VERBOSE
log $VERBOSE
-
The output on the maildrop
es maildrop sends its way. Maildrop is only
itself being invoked on about 40% of the incoming messages that have
already passed through rbl and virus scanning processes.
charles uchu
---
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localhost [127.0.0.1]) with local; Tue, 14 Jun 2005 17:28:19
-0400
Of course, the date would be modified to be the date at the moment the
autoresponse was sent.
Any other ways that it could be done? Thanks for any tips!
~charles uchu
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i experienced a unexpected result when running a test on email
delivery. Is this they way Courier is set to behave around delivery
regarding email addressed to an [EMAIL PROTECTED] Maybe i've got
something wrong with the way i'm using email aliases?
some specs:
- several virtual hosted emai
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
charles uchu writes:
what happened:
1) sent a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED], when
[EMAIL PROTECTED] is a mailbox, it arrives just fine in
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailbox.
2) sent a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED], when there is only an
alias for [EMAIL PROTECTED] bounce
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Gordon Messmer writes:
>
>> It's come up before that "aliased" hosteddomains sometimes don't do
>> what users expect them to. The man page for "makehosteddomains"
>> indicates that if "mail.domain.com" is aliased to "domain.com", then
>> an address of the form <[EMAIL P
Does anyone know much about encoding differences? One user has
received two different emails from the same sender in the last two
weeks. These emails were in Russian and sent from Outlook Express.
The first had a content-type header as listed below and the text of the
message was properly v
thanks!
charles
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
charles uchu strader writes:
Does anyone know much about encoding differences? One user has
received two different emails from the same sender in the last two
weeks. These emails were in Russian and sent from Outlook Express.
The first had a
o?
Thanks,
charles uchu strader
-
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If my assumption in 2) is correct, my next thought would be to do
this on a mailbox level using .mailfilter, where the .mailfilter would
match the received from headers against the IP range and if it failed
put it in the spam bucket.
Thanks,
Charles
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