I am receiving several spam messages daily in which the message body appears
to consist entirely of random words.
p
Spamassassin is not catching these messages. The Bayesian filter has not yet
kicked in but I am running uncaught spam through sa-learn. I am concerned
about whether the Bayesian
On Sunday 21 December 2003 15:28, Ian Southam wrote:
My sa-learn is no longer working. I had it functioning under Mandrake
9.1
and
again under Mandrake 9.2 upgraded from 9.1.
Check you have a perl module called DB_File installed. Without this,
sa-learn will quietly fail (unless you
On Saturday 29 November 2003 18:53, Bryan Hoover wrote:
Can anyone please tell me generally how frenquently they're DCC is
hitting with SA?
I installed for single user client yesterday, and aside from a run with
the sample-spam.txt file, I've seen no dcc check hits in caught spam SA
markup
I am running Spamassassin 2.60-1 (the RPM package from the Spamassassin home
site) with the local.cf and default user.prefs files on a Mandrake 9.2
system.
Pyzor and Razor checking was enabled by simply downloading and installing the
Pyzor and Razor RPM packages from the Mandrake and Mandrake
On Tuesday 25 November 2003 14:31, Matt Kettler wrote:
At 01:43 PM 11/25/2003, Dan Tappin wrote:
When I run sa-learn I only see the '1 message learned' output even thought
I forwarded multiple messages to that mailbox.
Any ideas / comments?
sa-learn --mbox
unless you add the --mbox
I am using spamassassin with KMail.
I pipe messages through spamassassin with a starting filter with this rule:
any header matches regular expr. (dot)
This was followed by a filter with this rule:
X-Spam-Status contains Yes
This worked fine under spamassassin 2.44. About a week ago I
On Monday 24 November 2003 10:23, Josh Endries wrote:
Clive Dove wrote:
On the assumption that the kmail filter was picking up the string BAYES
in the X-Spam-Status header, I changed the rule to this:
X-Spam-Statuscontains Yes, hits=
Can I rely on the changed rule or should I use