On Wed, 26 May 2004, Tor Slettnes wrote:
>
> Being completely ignorant about DSPAM, does this also mean that its
> exit status means nothing? In which case you cannot use:
> condition = ${run {/path/to/dspam ...}{true}{false}}"
>
> Asked a different way, what is the mechanism for invoking DSPAM and
> finding out whether a particular message is spam or not?
>
The thing about dspam is it's a training based system only so it needs to
modify the body of every message passing through to add a signature, so in
case that message is indeed spam, you can report it back to the dspam
system.
the default behavior for dspam is to call the MTA again and do the
delivery.
-S
> -tor
>
>
>
>
> !DSPAM:40b4c433247451260181254!
>
>
>
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