On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 20:28:05 +0200
Patrick Steiner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I can only say that i have the same problem with my debian machine
> and i have no answer why?? how long needs the same sample-spam file
> with spamassasin -D ??

I just did an apt-get upgrade about a week ago and I really think that might be 
when the problem started, though I cannot be sure.  Every friggin apt update on 
Debian results in a new stinking version of perl or db4 that manages to break 
something or other. (qmail-scanner is very prone to this).  Running this on my 
home box (SuSE) results in about 16-20 second scan (full autowhitelist, bayes, 
dns) on a PIII 450.

# dpkg -s perl
Package: perl
Status: install ok installed
Priority: standard
Section: interpreters
Installed-Size: 4236
Maintainer: Brendan O'Dea <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Version: 5.6.1-8.7
Replaces: perl-5.005 (<< 6), perl-5.6 (<< 6), perl-doc (<< 5.6.1-1)
Provides: perl5
Depends: perl-base (= 5.6.1-8.7), perl-modules (>= 5.6.1-8.7), libc6 (>= 
2.2.4-4), libdb2 (>= 2:2.7.7.0-7), libgdbmg1
Suggests: perl-doc, libterm-readline-perl-perl
Conflicts: perl-5.004 (<< 6), perl-5.005 (<< 6), perl-5.6 (<< 6)
Description: Larry Wall's Practical Extraction and Report Language.
 An interpreted scripting language, known among some as "Unix's Swiss
 Army Chainsaw".
 .
 Perl is optimised for scanning arbitrary text files and system
 administration.  It has built-in extended regular expression matching
 and replacement, a data-flow mechanism to improve security with
 setuid scripts and is extensible via modules that can interface to C
 libraries.


Josh

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