Not really.  The best you can do is have James grab emails using
fetchmail (or receiving them directly), running them through the
filters and adding whatever headers you want that your Outlook client
can then use to put into the appropriate folders.

--
Serge Knystautas
Lokitech >> software . strategy . design >> http://www.lokitech.com
p. 301.656.5501
e. [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On 10/7/05, Steve Brewin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Gaurav Handa wrote:
> > I am trying to make the current James mail server to act as a
> > Email filter
> > fetching mails from the pop server and doing a check to
> > verify that the
> > incoming mail is a spam or not. I need to then move the mail
> > to a specified
> > folder in Outlook.
> <snipped>
>
> The way I have done this in the past is to have the James' mailets that
> detect spam such as SenderInFakeDomain and InSpammerBlacklist pass
> processing to the spam processor, which includes...
>          <mailet match="All" class="NotifyPostmaster">
>               <sender>unaltered</sender>
>               <prefix xml:space="preserve">[SPAM] </prefix>
>               <inline>heads</inline>
>               <attachment>message</attachment>
>               <passThrough>false</passThrough>
>          </mailet>
> The <prefix/> stanza adds "[SPAM] " to the header so its easy for an Outlook
> filter or a plug-in such as SpamBayes - http://spambayes.sourceforge.net/ to
> detect it. By making the original message an <attachment/> the potential
> viral load is not exposed to the mail client. Either an Outlook filter or
> SpamBayes can move the mail to a given folder.
>
> Of course there are many other ways to handle this within James. It depends
> on your specific needs.
>
> -- Steve

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to