Jason Keltz wrote:
> I'm working on setting up my exim 4.50 system to do content scanning
> with SpamAssassin through the data acl. I want to be able to do two
> things:
>
> 1) reject messages at a system threshold
> 2) add spam headers to the message, but using the recipients
> spamassassin prefs (even if there are multiple recipients)
>
> The first part is easy:
>
> deny message = This message scored $spam_score spam points.
> spam = nobody:true
> condition = ${if >{$spam_score_int}{120}{1}{0}}
>
> The second part is my problem. I basically understand the issue of
> multiple recipients. I know that if I am considering user settings, and
> a message comes in where two users have conflicting spam score settings,
> I cannot both ACCEPT and REJECT a message at the data level. I
> understand that some people get around this by enforcing single
> recipients, etc. but this solution is not acceptable for my environment.
> What I would like to know is whether I can still ACCEPT a message that
> is at least less than the system threshhold, but at the same time, add
> "Spam: Yes" or "Spam: No" headers to the message for each recipient,
> depending on their own personal configuration of spamassassin in their
> home directory. I'm just not sure if exim allows for this syntax in the
> ACL condition, or whether a single message cannot have different
> headings for different users...
>
> If this is not possible, I still wonder how I might enable Exim to
> "rescan" each message with "spamc" for each user so that I could at
> least add Spam headers to messages that are not rejected. Users could
> then choose what to do with messages that are less than the system
> threshold -- do nothing, move them out of their inbox with procmail, etc.
>
> Thanks for any help you can provide..
>
> Jason Keltz
> jas at cs.yorku.ca
>
Yes, you can do what you want, but not in the ACL.
If a message passes the system wide acceptance test, then you accept it. You
can use a pipe transport to process the message again, per recipient, using
the recipients own preferences. If the recipient's preferences are only on
threshold you may be able to avoid re-processing the message through SA, but
if they have different rules, or white/blacklists then you have to use SA to
process the message again. If the message fails now above some threshold you
can no longer reject it, it's already been accepted. Finally the pipe
transport passes the message back to exim to handle delivery.
It's quite a significant overhead if you need to re-process the message with
SA, so be sure that you really want/need to do this and have sufficient
memory and processor capability to handle the load.
--
Nigel Wade, System Administrator, Space Plasma Physics Group,
University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK
E-mail : nmw@???
Phone : +44 (0)116 2523548, Fax : +44 (0)116 2523555