hi there,

if i understand it correctly the blacklists are now stored
in spamd instead of pf, right?   it's definitely much bigger
in memory.

integer> sudo spamdb | wc -l
     161

11331 _spamd     2    0   13M 7628K sleep    select   6:22  0.00% spamd

how does the memory usage grow on systems with hundreds of users?


is there a way i can see these blacklisted addresses?
or manipulate them directly using pfctl as before?

in 3.9 everything was nicely visible thru pfctl.  pf had
nice info on the table holding these blacklisted addresses.
is there a way to access this info now?

of course i don't know how much memory these adresses used
in the kernel, so perhaps it is more efficient this way,
but i find it more logical to have the blocked addresses
in pf, on the firewall level.

could someone elaborate a little bit more why these decisions
were made?


-f
-- 
this message was brought to you by the Campaign to Save Humans.

Reply via email to