Sven Willenberger wrote, on 30. jan 2007 18:53:
On Tue, 2007-01-30 at 17:00 +0100, Tony Earnshaw wrote:
justind wrote, on 30. jan 2007 16:28:
I recently decided to switch my dspam configuration to an opt-in config
because 98% of the users of our system do not use dspam. However I have
dspam configured to send messages through ClamAV. I noticed immediatly
that only mail for users that were opted in were getting scanned. My
ultimate goal is to have all users mail scanned with ClamAV by default
(with the option to opt-out) and only be processed by Dspam if opted in.
I've looked over Dspam's preferences but nothing looks promsing there. I
think I may have to move the ClamAV out of the Dspam process althogethor
and find another place in the chain to put it.
Any suggestions?
Well, more or less the same (or completely different, depending on what
you are using as MTA, LDA, before-or-after proxy filter, dspam
configuration, custom scripts etc.) as what we're doing.
Pity we can't give any concrete advice, all your details are missing.
Oh, and confining yourself to ClamAV will get your users a *bunch* of
unwanted virus and trojans - there are other, complementary, free, AV
scanners. Which we use besides ClamAV ...
--Tonni
Not to go completely OT here, but I am curious as to any reports on the
[in]effectiveness of ClamAV in its current incarnation on detecting (or
not) virii and trojans as well as what other AV scanners exist that run
on *nix and are free for use on mail gateways.
Why not? Here's at least one (which I use), others might have others:
http://www.viruspool.net/
--Tonni
--
Tony Earnshaw
Email: tonni at hetnet dot nl