jdow wrote:
Justin Mason wrote:

fyi, if you're using Fedora Core -- http://blog.dave.org.uk/archives/000715.html

totally unconfirmed, but worth noting in case that really is the case.

We have never shipped spamassassin with a changed default level. I have absolutely no idea where this is coming from. He is either using some 3rd party repository or some other software is changing his local.cf. This is not caused by Fedora AFAICT.



My copy of Fedora Core 4 has "required_hits 5" in local.cf using the distribution's RPM for Spamassassin. rpm -Va made no complaints about
 the file. Just to be sure, I uninstalled it, checked that local.cf
was gone, and reinstalled it via yum. Standard defaults.

It looks to me like something other than Fedora Core was messing with
 his config.


Naw, the basic SpamAssassin install for FC4 is, as I remarked, borked.
I could not make it work satisfactorily. Too many pieces were broken,
in the wrong places, or just plain missing. The know-it-alls who set
it up seem to have had to properly pee on it to make it their own. Rip
it out however you can with the rpm tool and install it, and 2.54 tonnes
of other required "stuff", via CPAN. It'll work a whole lot better.

This is outright unsubstantiated FUD. The package works just as fine as upstream, and there have been no bug reports proving otherwise.

It is also generally a bad idea to mix non-RPM installed stuff into an RPM installed system. You are certainly free to do whatever you want to your own system, but you live with needing to maintain it, remembering what version stuff is, and hoping a future package wont stomp on your non-package installed files. This is generally why most documentation recommends installing non-packaged stuff into /usr/local or /opt in order to avoid the chance of manually installed stuff conflicting or getting blown away.

Warren Togami
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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