On 20 February 2002 Greg Ward said:
>
> On 20 February 2002, Ben Strawson said:
> > I'm probably missing something here (wouldn't be the first
> time), but
> > why does hardly anyone use the "transport_filter" option to invoke
> > spamassassin (and other similar programs). Most people (I
> would have
> > thought) will be using spamassassin on local deliveries, so
> this to me
> > is the quickest way to configure it.
>
> Hmmm, good idea. That works as long as all you want to do is
> filter the mail (eg. add "this is spam" headers), but not if
> you want to reroute the message based on the outcome of the
> filter -- eg. save spam to a special folder and send
> everything else on.
OK - I see. I do my filtering later down the line (in the MDA) so
doesn't affect me.
> > I set spamassassin up to work this way - it just meant
> adding one line
> > to the configuration.
> >
> > transport_filter = /usr/bin/spamd -F 0
>
> Umm, you are aware that spamd is a daemon that is meant to be
> run independently of the MTA, and contacted by the spamc
> client, right? You should be running spamc from Exim.
Ooops - yep my typo - s/spamd/spamc/ ;-)
Ben.