On 10/2/12 8:30 PM, dar...@chaosreigns.com wrote:
Run the email through spamassassin -D received-header. That'll tell you
how and if the headers got parsed. SA has certainly had bugs where it
failed to parse received headers before, and IPv6 hasn't had a whole lot of
use.
Thanks for pointing
On 10/04, troxlinux wrote:
Hi list , I try to run sa-learn on centos 6.3 but no work
sa-learn --spam --showdots /dir/dir/domain.com.ni/spam/.spam/cur/
Try:
sa-learn --spam --showdots /dir/dir/domain.com.ni/spam/.spam/
(cur/ is inside the mailbox, not part of the path to the mailbox)
--
On 10/4/2012 2:06 PM, troxlinux wrote:
Hi list , I try to run sa-learn on centos 6.3 but no work
sa-learn --spam --showdots /dir/dir/domain.com.ni/spam/.spam/cur/
Learned tokens from 0 message(s) (1 message(s) examined)
ERROR: the Bayes learn function returned an error, please re-run
On Thu, 4 Oct 2012, troxlinux wrote:
Hi list , I try to run sa-learn on centos 6.3 but no work
sa-learn --spam --showdots /dir/dir/domain.com.ni/spam/.spam/cur/
Learned tokens from 0 message(s) (1 message(s) examined)
ERROR: the Bayes learn function returned an error, please re-run with
-D
ok, my debug
Oct 4 12:19:15.857 [8148] dbg: logger: adding facilities: all
Oct 4 12:19:15.857 [8148] dbg: logger: logging level is DBG
Oct 4 12:19:15.858 [8148] dbg: generic: SpamAssassin version 3.3.2
Oct 4 12:19:15.858 [8148] dbg: generic: Perl 5.010001, PREFIX=/usr,
Hi Mabry,
At 03:46 04-10-2012, Mabry Tyson wrote:
The debug output shows that SA is (IMO, mis-) interpreting the
x-originating-ip as a Received header.
The IP address from the X-Origination-IP header field, similarly to
those in the Receiver header fields, is used for DNSBL lookups.
I'm getting a lot of SPAM with words written like this. These are pretty
horrible, and I don't like
getting them every day.
A:N ;A %L
P:O ~R %N ( P lCT U #RE /
Is there a way to make a rule for strings of characters that would
ignoring non-alpha characters embedded
in the string?