Let me try and summarize what I have recieved from all these e-mails as
well as put together myself. Then you guys could give me some feedback
if I'm on the right trail. What I need to do is install SpamAssassin
w/pop3proxy on a linux box. Then setup the pop3proxy to point to my
external pop3
Hi Thomas,
Your email scored nearly 25 on my system. Chickenpox contributed 4.2,
uribls contributed tons.
HTH :)
Thomas Booms wrote:
Spam detection software, running on the system ns1.sandgnat.com, has
identified this incoming email as possible spam. The original message
has been
Jesse Shumaker wrote:
Let me try and summarize what I have recieved from all these e-mails as
[...]
use and am trying to piece it all together.
Correct, except that the remote POP3 server is specified on client
configuration and not wired statically on the pop3 proxy box. At least
with
OK. This is what I thought I needed to do. Just to clarify, SAproxy is
the same as pop3proxy.pl correct? I've looked around and can't find a
download for these. It looks like they have been discontinued. I saw
that a new one which is only windows based has sprung up called SpamFu.
I need it to be
Martin Lee wrote:
We've had some false positives with the X_LIBRARY, MIME_BOUND_RKFINDY
rules being tripped on e-faxes received through www.myvfm.com. Fairly
obviously the service has been built using the Indy.Sockets library
(www.indyproject.org).
The Indyproject knowledge base admits that
Chris Thielen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote on 07/07/2005 01:15:24 AM:
Hi Thomas,
Your email scored nearly 25 on my system. Chickenpox contributed
4.2,
uribls contributed tons.
HTH :)
As has been pointed out, make sure your network tests
are turned on. I am surprised that I only got two
Andy Jezierski wrote:
Chris Thielen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 07/07/2005
01:15:24 AM:
Hi Thomas,
Your email scored nearly 25 on my system. Chickenpox contributed 4.2,
uribls contributed tons.
HTH :)
As has been pointed out, make sure your network tests are turned on. I
am
In configuring the rules_du_jour script for rule updates, I am a bit
concerned over my interpretation of the SA_RESTART parameter. It sounds
like it is a call to the routine to stop and then re-start the spamd
daemon. But the rules_du_jour example kills the spamd process with
killall (ie no
I am just becoming familiar with SpamAssassin, so I am sure this may
appear to be an obvious issue to those familiar with the tool. I am
just learning the ins and outs however.
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil however), and I am
running spamassassin -D --lint. It seems
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 02:27:32PM -0400, Dr Robert Young wrote:
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil however), and I am
running spamassassin -D --lint. It seems like it is taking a very
long time to run. Is this typical or am I hosed? I am running it on
a test system
Dr Robert Young wrote:
I am just becoming familiar with SpamAssassin, so I am sure this may
appear to be an obvious issue to those familiar with the tool. I am
just learning the ins and outs however.
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil however), and I am
running
I am just becoming familiar with SpamAssassin, so I am
sure this may appear to be an obvious issue to those
familiar with the tool. I am just learning the ins and
outs however.
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil
however), and I am running spamassassin -D --lint. It
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Theo Van Dinter writes:
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 02:27:32PM -0400, Dr Robert Young wrote:
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil however), and I am
running spamassassin -D --lint. It seems like it is taking a very
long time to
Allo,
Dr Robert Young wrote:
In configuring the rules_du_jour script for rule updates, I am a bit
concerned over my interpretation of the SA_RESTART parameter. It
sounds like it is a call to the routine to stop and then re-start
the spamd daemon. But the rules_du_jour example kills the
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 11:43:10AM -0700, Justin Mason wrote:
eh, Theo, --lint doesn't require a message, it uses one of its own!
Oh. Hahaha. I forgot about that. ;)
Never mind me, brain is scattered right now due to work.
My second suggestion is to do local-only in case there's a network
Theo Van Dinter wrote:
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 11:43:10AM -0700, Justin Mason wrote:
eh, Theo, --lint doesn't require a message, it uses one of its own!
Oh. Hahaha. I forgot about that. ;)
Never mind me, brain is scattered right now due to work.
My second suggestion is to do local-only
Hi everyone,
I'm new to SA so I need a bit of help in configuring /training
SA-
The problem I have is that I do not keep any mail in the SA box- it forwards
to my mail server-
What method can I use to train it?
Jean-Paul Natola
Network Administrator
Information Technology
Family
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Hi everyone,
I'm new to SA so I need a bit of help in configuring /training
SA-
The problem I have is that I do not keep any mail in the SA box- it forwards
to my mail server-
What method can I use to train it?
Jean-Paul Natola
Network Administrator
From: Dr Robert Young [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I am just becoming familiar with SpamAssassin, so I am sure this may
appear to be an obvious issue to those familiar with the tool. I am
just learning the ins and outs however.
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil however), and I am
From: Theo Van Dinter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I think you're not passing it a message so it's waiting on STDIN.
Try spamassassin -D --lint /dev/null.
Er, Theo, --lint does not take any parameters.
{o.o}
From: Jim Maul [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Theo Van Dinter wrote:
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 11:43:10AM -0700, Justin Mason wrote:
eh, Theo, --lint doesn't require a message, it uses one of its own!
Oh. Hahaha. I forgot about that. ;)
Never mind me, brain is scattered right now due to work.
JamesDR wrote:
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Hi everyone,
I'm new to SA so I need a bit of help in configuring /training
SA-
The problem I have is that I do not keep any mail in the SA box- it
forwards
to my mail server-
What method can I use to train it?
Since you are forwarding onto an
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil
however), and I am running spamassassin -D --lint. It
seems like it is taking a very long time to run. Is this
typical or am I hosed? I am running it on a test system
(non-production) so it is not currently a serious problem,
but I
Rick Macdougall wrote:
Daryl C. W. O'Shea wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Received: from host-212-158-194-14.bulldogdsl.com (HELO
phoenix.example.com) (212.158.194.14)
by secure.example.name with (DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA encrypted) SMTP; 1
Jul 2005 10:00:52 +0100
What SMTP service
Dr Robert Young wrote:
I am just becoming familiar with SpamAssassin, so I am sure this may
appear to be an obvious issue to those familiar with the tool. I am
just learning the ins and outs however.
I downloaded many of the SARE rulesets (not bigevil however), and I am
running
OK I found the documentation for using IMAP2mbox to train,
Now its quite simple to tell a user if its spam , drag it here
But how is the user to know if they have a false positive, unless they look
at the header like this one for example which I don't know WHY it says
possible spam as it
Is there anyway to configure SA so that if the ALL_TRUSTED rule is hit it
skips the Razor, DCC and Pyzor tests?
Thanks,
Kenneth
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
OK I found the documentation for using IMAP2mbox to train,
Now its quite simple to tell a user if its spam , drag it here
But how is the user to know if they have a false positive, unless they look
at the header like this one for example which I don't know WHY it says
-Original Message-
From: JamesDR [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2005 5:42 PM
To: users@spamassassin.apache.org
Subject: Re: SA training
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
OK I found the documentation for using IMAP2mbox to train,
Now its quite simple to tell a user if its
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 04:34:03PM -0500, Kenneth S. wrote:
Is there anyway to configure SA so that if the ALL_TRUSTED rule is hit it
skips the Razor, DCC and Pyzor tests?
Not without modifying code.
--
Randomly Generated Tagline:
It is far more impressive when others discover your good
Sorry for the slight delay, replies inline:
At 01:39 07-07-05, Daryl C. W. O'Shea - [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Received: from host-212-158-194-14.bulldogdsl.com (HELO
phoenix.example.com) (212.158.194.14)
by secure.example.name with (DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA encrypted) SMTP;
1 Jul 2005 10:00:52
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
-Original Message-
From: JamesDR [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2005 5:42 PM
To: users@spamassassin.apache.org
Subject: Re: SA training
Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
OK I found the documentation for using IMAP2mbox to train,
Now its quite
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry for the slight delay, replies inline:
At 01:39 07-07-05, Daryl C. W. O'Shea - [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Received: from host-212-158-194-14.bulldogdsl.com (HELO
phoenix.example.com) (212.158.194.14)
by secure.example.name with (DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA encrypted)
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Theo Van Dinter writes:
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 04:34:03PM -0500, Kenneth S. wrote:
Is there anyway to configure SA so that if the ALL_TRUSTED rule is hit it
skips the Razor, DCC and Pyzor tests?
Not without modifying code.
However, it is
Theo Van Dinter wrote:
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 04:34:03PM -0500, Kenneth S. wrote:
Is there anyway to configure SA so that if the ALL_TRUSTED rule is hit it
skips the Razor, DCC and Pyzor tests?
Not without modifying code.
You could probably create a set of meta-rules to counteract the
I think that is an excellent idea!
I call spamc from maildrop, so I can filter out some message's that do not
need to be processed by SpamAssassin. But it would be much easier for most
installations if such behaviour can be done from within SpamAssassin.
You might want to add even an extra
Well this works out. I started putting something together after Theo's
response. I already have it working and skipping the checks based on
ALL_TRUSTED but did not add any debug code. Since it looks like this is
something that you want in SA I'll add debug code and put a patch
together. I
I don't immediately see that anyone more knowledgable replied,
so I'll toss out some possibilities/confirmations:
Yes, you need something like a Linux box. It will run
SA, and will retrieve mail using pop3 from your current provider.
Pop3proxy is one possibility. Another possibility is
at the header like this one for example which I don't know WHY it says
possible spam as it scored a ZERO
X-Spam-Score: 0.0 (/)
Is that directly out of SA? Or do you have sometrhing else like qmail or
some such in the path?
If that is straight out of SA, something looks broken as all heck.
Hello,
Man, I can't wait till these kinds of features get implemented. Another
similar idea would be to stop SA scanning if the score gets to a certain
number. On heavily hit mail servers, these kinds of features would help
with CPU usage.
As it stands now, SA goes through all of the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
yeah, I saw that -- the message scores 3.7 according to the report, well
under 5. It's pretty reckless to lower the threshold enough to cause that
to hit as spam.
however, it'd be nice to get a copy with full headers so we could think
about
On Thu, Jul 07, 2005 at 07:24:02PM -0500, Kenneth S. wrote:
Skip DNS tests (Default option = 0)
-Skip Razor, Pyzor and DCC checks and the above tests (option = 1)
-Skip all checks (option = 2)
How does that look? Also what would the option be called?
This really belongs on dev, but...
Justin Mason wrote:
however, it'd be nice to get a copy with full headers so we could think
about whitelisting it ;)
- --j.
The problem arises if the open source filter is installed straight out
of the box; the messages (usually written in upper case) are not
considered spam.
According to
I wish I can Answer That with 100% certainty,
Here's what I did,
Installed Freebsd, then installed exim, then clamav and finally SA,
All were done via passive ftp
-Original Message-
From: Loren Wilton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2005 8:33 PM
To:
On Thursday 07 July 2005 21:15, Daryl C. W. O'Shea wrote:
Justin Mason wrote:
however, it'd be nice to get a copy with full headers so we could
think about whitelisting it ;)
- --j.
The problem arises if the open source filter is installed straight
out of the box; the messages (usually
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Thursday 07 July 2005 21:15, Daryl C. W. O'Shea wrote:
Justin Mason wrote:
however, it'd be nice to get a copy with full headers so we could
think about whitelisting it ;)
- --j.
The problem arises if the open source filter is installed straight
out of the box; the
No, it doesn't. We go fetchmail to procmail to mailbox and local POP3
server. AV filtering is done on the local machines via a standard AV
tool that is maintained up to date automatically. I don't trust tools
like ClamAV to be as up to the minute as the email scanners. (Besides,
SA filters here as
From: Gene Heskett [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thursday 07 July 2005 21:15, Daryl C. W. O'Shea wrote:
Justin Mason wrote:
however, it'd be nice to get a copy with full headers so we could
think about whitelisting it ;)
- --j.
The problem arises if the open source filter is installed
Procmail will act as the pop3 server
Not quite. My belief (and Joanne set this up, so she has the actual
details) is that Fetchmail is feeding procmail, possibly going through Sendmail
to do this. Procmail has a 2-line recipe that calls SA as part of the delivery
process for local deliery
All we hope for is that a system is in place by the time half of
LaPalma slides into the ocean. If the predictions are correct, our
gulf coast/florida real estate will need all new maps. The
Indonesian tsunami was a ripple in the bathtub in comparison
according to some doomsayers.
We have 9 site and around 20 users who need e-mail on average per site.
What I really want in the end is a SpamAssassin, ClamAV, setup. I want
to make it so that the users can either grab their filtered mail from a
linux box inside each site that has already pulled their mail from the
ISP's mail
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Jul 7, 2005, at 9:30 PM, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
Here's what I did,
Installed Freebsd, then installed exim, then clamav and finally SA,
All were done via passive ftp
The default Exim configuration files do not do any SA scanning, so
you
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Jul 7, 2005, at 10:59 PM, Loren Wilton wrote:
Procmail will act as the pop3 server
Not quite. My belief (and Joanne set this up, so she has the
actual details) is that Fetchmail is feeding procmail, possibly
going through Sendmail to do
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