I use all these items on production sites with a couple hundred users.
So I'm conservative.
Perhaps not as conservative as some of the big dogs out there.

The only change I made was to raise the surbl score to 8 from 3.

Matt Kettler said:
> At 09:58 AM 8/26/2004 -0400, Ronald I. Nutter wrote:
>>I have SA running with Postfix running with Amavisd and Razor.  In the
>>short time (a little over a day) that we have had this running, we have
>>noticed a dramatic reduction in spam with the default settings specified
>>in the Scott Henderson setup document we used.  Are there any other
>>databases/addons that would be suggested to use ?  I don't want to
>>over engineer it but want to do the best job possible at blocking spam.
>
> These are the "optional" features for SA that I like and use (not in any
> order)
>
> razor 2.61 or higher
>          http://razor.sourceforge.net
>
> dcc
>          get package from http://www.rhyolite.com/anti-spam/dcc/
>
> surbl, using the Mail::SpamCopURI addon in SA 2.6x, or the default support
> in 3.0
>          If you need spamcopURI, get it from
> http://sourceforge.net/projects/spamcopuri/
>
> DNSBL support, using the Net::DNS module
>          Just install the perl module with CPAN or packages.
>
> Antidrug.cf
>          cd /etc/mail/spamassassin
>          wget http://mywebpages.comcast.net/mkettler/sa/antidrug.cf
>          spamassassin --lint (to check for errors)
>          restart spamd
>          Disclaimer: I wrote antidrug.cf, so I am biased. Also note that
> versions of these rules are built into 3.0, so delete it when you
> upgrade.
>


-- 
Luke Computer Science System Administrator
Security Administrator,College of Engineering
Montana State University-Bozeman,Montana


Reply via email to