* Bjoern Voigt
[06-01-16 10:26]: Bjoern Voigt wrote:
/etc/procmailrc # ... malware scanner etc. Don't use /etc/procmailrc! To invoke procmail as <user>, make ~/.procmailrc and recipies in another file called from ~/.procmailrc
I believe this will solve your permissions problems. I use procmail and employe it that way. Yes, but how should the usage of ~/.procmailrc solve my specific
Patrick Shanahan wrote: permission problem? (BTW, my users have additional ~/.procmailrc files too, but I usually place recipes for all users/mailboxes in /etc/procmailrc.) I wrote:
I like to write a procmail recipe which does the following: All malware mails (tagged with header "^X-Spam-Virus: Yes") should be delivered to a specific mailbox (e.g. /home/malware/Maildir/) regardless of the recipient of the mail. The problem is, that all mails delivered to /home/malware/Maildir/ get uid "root" and gid "mail". DROPPRIVS=yes also does not work, because DROPPRIVS changes uid/gid to the recipient user and this uid/gid usually has no write permission for /home/malware/Maildir/.
Mails in /home/malware/Maildir/ should get gid/uid of user "malware".
Greetings, Björn -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org