On Thursday 09 October 2003 11:42 am, Steven T. Hatton wrote:
On Thursday 09 October 2003 11:19 am, Bruce Marshall wrote:
On Thursday 09 October 2003 11:00 am, Steven T. Hatton wrote:
Someone else suggested called SA from procmailrc, and that is the best way.
But if you're only doing POP from Kmail, then you can also call SA from Kmail.
1) Set up a filter that will always be hit. Something like looking for TO: in the headers. Use that filter to call SA.
2) Set up another filter to look for the SA flags, such as X-Spam-Status: Yes
3) Use that filter to move the email to a special folder (or to /dev/null)
Careful using (3) for /dev/null. You can lose some good emails that way.
Using fetchmail and procmail is best, but to set it up is not a '3 line' how-to deal.
OK. It's starting to look as though I have a smapc and spamd to deal with. For now, I just want to run a filter in KMail and have it check to see if the address (or other data) is black listed. It would be nice if SA would look at the contents of the Mail/spam directory to determine what should be in the black list. That way, if I drag a message into the spam directory, the data automatically becomes part of the blacklist filter. Am I on the right track?
STH
SA will learn on its own... as it processes incoming mail. You *CAN* point SA to your Mail/spam files and run sa-learn --spam <filename> -- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ + Bruce S. Marshall bmarsh@bmarsh.com Bellaire, MI 10/09/03 12:33 + +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ First Law of Living: "As soon as you're doing what you wanted to be doing," "you want to be doing something else"