Mark, Take a look at your /etc/procmailrc file which probably controls where your spam is being routed. This is the entry in my procmailrc file that controls the spam to our system.
If had the entry below all you would need to do is to remove or comment out all lines after "# This routine.....". Take a look at this file on your system, if you can not find any entry related to spamassassin there, then you are using a different method of routing. DROPPRIVS=YES :0fw * < 256000 | spamc # This routine will dump your spam :0 H * ^Subject:.*\[SPAM\] $MAILDIRLOG/spam.log Good Luck!! Greg Ennis On Sun, 2005-05-01 at 14:25 -0700, Mark Harwood wrote: > Apologies if I missed this rather simple question in the FAQ's, but I > really did look. > > I'm on fedora core 3, using spamassassin 3.0.3 with spamc/spamd. All > seems to be working fine (probably as designed). The headers are > getting rewritten just fine. What I want to do is STOP the spam from > being written to separate folders (e.g. probably-spam, etc.) and let > it continue to be written to the regular mail folder > (i.e. /usr/spool/mail/user. > > Don't see how I do that. Help appreciated. > > Mark -- Gregory P. Ennis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>