Hi,
Another thing to defend incoming viruses is to use greylising (what
you should do anyway :-)). Greylisting catches mostly every virus mail
sent out of bot nets (that's where viruses usually come from). We're
using amavisd-new as pre-queue filter with spamassassin and clamAV. we
didn't get any
Hi Philip
> What other solutions are small hosting providers using next to
> ClamAV? What are you using?
Back in the time Vexira hat a per-domain-Licence for its Vexira
Antivirus for Mail Server (VAMS) which was quite competitive compared
to other solutions that billed you per mailbox. Maybe it's
On 01.03.2011 5:34, Philip Iezzi wrote:
What other solutions are small hosting providers using next to ClamAV? What are
you using?
We're using Kaspersky on Linux. The scanning engine doesn't add much to
the CPU load and it integrates into postfix like a charm. Actually, the
setup script does
On 3/1/11 6:57 PM, Pim van Pelt wrote:
On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 5:34 PM, Philip Iezzi wrote:
Hi there
We're a small Swiss hosting provider. Currently we host over 4000 IMAP mail
accounts on Debian Linux mail servers
(Postfix/Amavis/Spamassassin/ClamAV/Cyrus). As anti-virus solution we are usin
On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 5:34 PM, Philip Iezzi wrote:
> Hi there
>
> We're a small Swiss hosting provider. Currently we host over 4000 IMAP mail
> accounts on Debian Linux mail servers
> (Postfix/Amavis/Spamassassin/ClamAV/Cyrus). As anti-virus solution we are
> using ClamAV over Amavis (amavisd-
Hi there
We're a small Swiss hosting provider. Currently we host over 4000 IMAP mail
accounts on Debian Linux mail servers
(Postfix/Amavis/Spamassassin/ClamAV/Cyrus). As anti-virus solution we are using
ClamAV over Amavis (amavisd-new) at the SMTP level.
We are looking for a more professional
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