Try running without --client, and also try just running it on the command
line (piping a mail into dspam, for example).  Is "globaluser" the user that
you trained the 60,000 mails for?

My bet is that you do not have the client part of dspam.conf configured
correctly.

-Kyle

On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 4:42 PM, Chris Baldwin
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

> Hi again,
>
> Having trained dspam 3.8.0 with about 60,000 emails, I figured I'd press it
> into service on my account and see what happened. (my question is at the
> bottom)
>
> I ran the daemon with this:
> dspam --debug --daemon &
>
> I have this set up in my .procmailrc:
>
> #
> # Procmail configuration
> #
>
> PATH=$HOME/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/ucb:/bin:/usr/local/bin:.
> LOGFILE=$HOME/.procmail.log
> #VERBOSE=${VERBOSE:-yeah}
> LOCKFILE=$HOME/.lockmail
>
> # Begin spam treatment.
> :0fw
> | /usr/local/bin/dspam --client --user globaluser --stdout
> --deliver=innocent,spam
>
>
> :0:
> * ^X-DSPAM-Result: spam
> mail/Spam
> # End spam treatment.
>
> However, every time it processes an email, it get a nice error code in
> /var/log/mail.err:
> 15053: [11/20/2008 16:12:08] Client exited with error -5
>
> The log files dspam.debug and dspam.messages didn't have anything terribly
> helpful in them. From what I can tell, the mail is not being flagged in any
> form and is being let right through. I'm not sure what I should do at this
> point - most of my google-based research points in seemingly random
> directions. So, my question to you: where should I look/what should I do to
> solve this problem?
>
> Thanks,
> -Chris
>
>
> 
>
>
>


-- 
Thank you,
Kyle Johnson
(410) 370-3252
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


!DSPAM:1011,4925f9d7150921781616830!

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