On Mon, 16 Jun 2003 23:24:06 -0400, Michael Fratoni wrote
[snip]
> I added a line to /etc/init.d/spamassassin:
> export LANG=en_US
Another approach for RH 8/9 is to add
export LANG=en_US SUPPORTED="en_US" LC_MESSAGES=C LC_ALL=C
to /etc/bashrc. That pretty well picks up all utf-8 probs.
--
r
Hi,
Thanks for the info, I too have upgraded to
2.55 and the problem has gone. It did drop
the mail though. That's how I found the
problem. Two of my users said that messages
that had definitely been sent to them and they
hadn't got them, so I trawled thru the logs
and sure enough, the bad prot
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Monday 16 June 2003 07:52 am, Bill Dossett wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using stock RH9, no mods. I'm running
> spamd/spamc and occasionally mail is getting lost
> to my users:
>
> I am getting the messsage:
>
> spamd[24614]: bad protocol: header error:
On Mon, 16 Jun 2003, Bill Dossett wrote:
> Anyway, I've upgraded (with some difficulty,
> -ivF didn't work, had to rpm -e spamassassin,
> then build version 2.55 from sourcerpm from
> the spamassassin site and install it with -ivh,
> new version doesn't check header size vs real
> size apparently,
Thanks... sounds interesting, lot higher
rate than I get with SA anyway, but then
again I haven't really tuned SA much yet.
Anyway, I've upgraded (with some difficulty,
-ivF didn't work, had to rpm -e spamassassin,
then build version 2.55 from sourcerpm from
the spamassassin site and install it wit
On Mon, 2003-06-16 at 07:52, Bill Dossett wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using stock RH9, no mods. I'm running
> spamd/spamc and occasionally mail is getting lost
> to my users:
>
> I am getting the messsage:
>
> spamd[24614]: bad protocol: header error: (Content-length mismatch:
> 3907 vs. 3906)
>
>
Hi,
I'm using stock RH9, no mods. I'm running
spamd/spamc and occasionally mail is getting lost
to my users:
I am getting the messsage:
spamd[24614]: bad protocol: header error: (Content-length mismatch:
3907 vs. 3906)
I've googled for solutions, but as I am using a stock RH9
system, I would