Re: more spamassassin questions.

2002-03-14 Thread Corey Halpin
> Maybe a .spamassasin file in the user 'mail's homedir? Good idea, but no go. It runs spamassassin as the user "mail", but tries to read/write to the homedir of the user running spamc. :-( crh -- Corey R. Halpin (http://www.cae.wisc.edu/~halpin/ ) Student of Electrical Engineering and Com

Re: more spamassassin questions.

2002-03-14 Thread Karsten Heymann
* Corey Halpin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [020314 09:36]: > You seem to be confused about what I mean by "default configuration". > I most expressly _do_not_ mean the contents of /etc/default/spamassassin. > I _do_ mean what is the default behavior of spamd. > See "man spamd": >-x Turn of

Re: more spamassassin questions.

2002-03-14 Thread Anthony and Mary Ann Tantillo
Yes, I misunderstood your message. Have you tried the spamassassin.org website for documentation? I too thought that either /etc/spamassassin.prefs or /etc/spamassassin/local.cf was a sitewide configuration file. Tony On Wed, Mar 13, 2002 at 07:36:48PM -0600, Corey Halpin wrote: > You seem

Re: more spamassassin questions.

2002-03-14 Thread Corey Halpin
You seem to be confused about what I mean by "default configuration". I most expressly _do_not_ mean the contents of /etc/default/spamassassin. I _do_ mean what is the default behavior of spamd. See "man spamd": -x Turn off per-user config files. All users will just get

Re: more spamassassin questions.

2002-03-14 Thread Anthony and Mary Ann Tantillo
I just enabled the daemon by enabling the it in the /etc/default/spamassassin file. The "default" setting does not include the -x setting. Tony On Sun, Mar 10, 2002 at 02:28:14PM -0600, Corey Halpin wrote: > when one runs spamd -x, is there a way to specify what default > configuration > sh