On Tue, 2004-05-25 at 16:11, Matt Yackley wrote:
> Ron McKeating said:
> > On Tue, 2004-05-25 at 15:43, Martin Hepworth wrote:
> >> Ron McKeating wrote:
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> <snip>>
> >>
> >> Ron
> >>
> >> the local.cf are ones that have been added in by local people, hence the
> >> JANET reference.
> >>
> >> there's lots info about the RBL's in their individual homepages....
> >>
> >> the surbl checks URL info *inside* the body of the message, for known
> >> spam holding URL's, not the sending ip-address which is what the RBL's
> >> do. IE the message body calls out via html to get pictures etc. replaces
> >> the bigevil etc SA rules.
> >>
> >
> > OK, I see the scores for the others are in 50_scores. I assume an entry
> > like
> > score RCVD_IN_SORBS_HTTP 0 1.101 0 1.101
> >
> > means this rule is turned off as the it has 0,
> > what are the other numbers for?
> >
> > Ron
> >
> 
Thanks for that, very useful.

Ron

> Hi Ron,
> The four score entries are used for different score sets.
> 
> See: 
> http://www.spamassassin.org/doc/Mail_SpamAssassin_Conf.html#scoring%20options
> "If only one valid score is listed, then that score is always used for a test.
> 
> If four valid scores are listed, then the score that is used depends on how
> SpamAssassin is being used. The first score is used when both Bayes and 
> network
> tests are disabled. The second score is used when Bayes is disabled, but 
> network
> tests are enabled. The third score is used when Bayes is enabled and network 
> tests
> are disabled. The fourth score is used when Bayes is enabled and network 
> tests are
> enabled.
> 
> Setting a rule's score to 0 will disable that rule from running."
> 
> Cheers,
> matt
-- 
Ron McKeating
Senior IT Services Specialist
Internet Services and Software Solutions
Loughborough University
01509 222329

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