If you let fetchmail process incoming mail via smtp and put "|usr/bin/procmail" in your ~/.forward file (or specify procmail as your MDA in .fetchmailrc) fetchmail will use procmail.
Bob On Sat, Nov 30, 2002 at 03:51:37AM +0100, chainy wrote: > > I see this two packages are made for procmail, are there any others for > fetchmail directly? Or am I asking a very stupid question? > > Thanks a lot. > > Chainy. > > On Friday 29 November 2002 18:21, Anthony Campbell wrote: > > On 29 Nov 2002, Matthias Hentges wrote: > > > Am Fre, 2002-11-29 um 09.13 schrieb Nicolas SABOURET: > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > I installed spamassassin and I use it "locally" (with a user's .forward > > > > and a .procmailrc, as told in the README file). I also installed razor. > > > > How can I make sure whether it is used by spamassassin or not ? 1/3 > > > > spam messages still go through spamassassin. > > > > man razor tells to use a procmail rule but > > > > /etc/spamassassin/20_body_tests.cf seems to call razor automagically. > > > > Am I wrong ? > > > > > > No need for a procmail rule since SA indeed uses razor if it is > > > installed. > > > -- > > > > > > Matthias Hentges > > > [www.hentges.net] -> PGP + HTML are welcome > > > ICQ: 97 26 97 4 -> No files, no URLs > > > > It slows things down a lot however. I now use the L switch with > > spamassassin to do local checking only. This is very much faster and > > doesn't result in many spam messages getting through; I can live with > > deleting the few that do. > > > > AC > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]