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- ## $Id: dspam.conf.in,v 1.100 2011/07/09 00:00:52 sbajic Exp $
- ## dspam.conf -- DSPAM configuration file
- ##
-
- #
- # DSPAM Home: Specifies the base directory to be used for DSPAM storage
- #
- Home /decrypted/dspam
-
- #
- # StorageDriver: Specifies the storage driver backend (library) to use.
- # You'll only need to set this if you are using dynamic storage driver plugins
- # from a binary distribution. The default build statically links the storage
- # driver (when only one is specified at configure time), overriding this
- # setting, which only comes into play if multiple storage drivers are specified
- # at configure time. When using dynamic linking, be sure to include the path
- # to the library if necessary, and some systems may use an extension other
- # than .so (e.g. OSX uses .dylib).
- #
- # Options include:
- #
- # libmysql_drv.so libpgsql_drv.so
- # libsqlite3_drv.so libhash_drv.so
- #
- # IMPORTANT: Switching storage drivers requires more than merely changing
- # this option. If you do not wish to lose all of your data, you will need to
- # migrate it to the new backend before making this change.
- #
- StorageDriver /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/dspam/libhash_drv.so
-
- #
- # Trusted Delivery Agent: Specifies the local delivery agent DSPAM should call
- # when delivering mail as a trusted user. Use %u to specify the user DSPAM is
- # processing mail for. It is generally a good idea to allow the MTA to specify
- # the pass-through arguments at run-time, but they may also be specified here.
- #
- # Most operating system defaults:
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/bin/procmail" # Linux
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/bin/mail" # Solaris
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/libexec/mail.local" # FreeBSD
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/bin/procmail" # Cygwin
- #
- # Other popular configurations:
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/cyrus/bin/deliver" # Cyrus
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/bin/maildrop" # Maildrop
- #TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/local/sbin/exim -oMr spam-scanned -oi" # Exim
- #
- TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/sbin/sendmail"
-
- #
- # Untrusted Delivery Agent: Specifies the local delivery agent and arguments
- # DSPAM should use when delivering mail and running in untrusted user mode.
- # Because DSPAM will not allow pass-through arguments to be specified to
- # untrusted users, all arguments should be specified here. Use %u to specify
- # the user DSPAM is processing mail for. This configuration parameter is only
- # necessary if you plan on allowing untrusted processing.
- #
- UntrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/lib/dovecot/deliver -d %u"
-
- #
- # SMTP or LMTP Delivery: Alternatively, you may wish to use SMTP or LMTP
- # delivery to deliver your message to the mail server instead of using a
- # delivery agent. You will need to configure with --enable-daemon to use host
- # delivery, however you do not need to operate in daemon mode. Specify an IP
- # address or UNIX path to a domain socket below as a host.
- #
- # If you would like to set up DeliveryHost's on a per-domain basis, use
- # the syntax: DeliveryHost.domain.com 1.2.3.4
- #
- #DeliveryHost 127.0.0.1
- #DeliveryPort 2424
- #DeliveryIdent localhost
- #DeliveryProto LMTP
-
- #
- # FallbackDomains: If you want to specify certain domains as fallback domains,
- # enable this option. For example, you could create a user @domain.com, and
- # if bob@domain.com does not resolve to a known user on the system, the user
- # could default to your @domain.com user. NOTE: This also requires designating
- # fallbackDomain for the domain name;
- # e.g. dspam_admin ch pref domain.com fallbackDomain on
- #
- #FallbackDomains on
-
- #
- # Quarantine Agent: DSPAM's default behavior is to quarantine all mail it
- # thinks is spam. If you wish to override this behavior, you may specify
- # a quarantine agent which will be called with all messages DSPAM thinks is
- # spam. Use %u to specify the user DSPAM is processing mail for.
- #
- #QuarantineAgent "/usr/bin/procmail -d spam"
-
- #
- # DSPAM can optionally process "plused users" (addresses in the user+detail
- # form) by truncating the username just before the "+", so all internal
- # processing occurs for "user", but delivery will be performed for
- # "user+detail". This is only useful if the LDA can handle "plused users"
- # (for example Cyrus IMAP) and when configured for LMTP delivery above
- #
- #EnablePlusedDetail on
-
- #
- # Character to use as seperator between user names and address extensions.
- # If you change this value then please adjust QuarantineMailbox to use the
- # new specified character. The default is '+'.
- #
- #PlusedCharacter +
-
- #
- # Turn this feature on if you want to force DSPAM to lowercase the "plused
- # users" username.
- #
- #PlusedUserLowercase on
-
- #
- # Quarantine Mailbox: DSPAM's LMTP code can send spam mail using LMTP to a
- # "plused" mailbox (such as user+quarantine) leaving quarantine processing
- # for retraining or deletion to be performed by the LDA and the mail client.
- # "plused" mailboxes are supported by Cyrus IMAP and possibly other LDAs. If
- # you don't set/change PlusedCharacter then the mailbox name must have the +
- # since the + is the default used character.
- #
- #QuarantineMailbox +quarantine
-
- #
- # OnFail: What to do if local delivery or quarantine should fail. If set
- # to "unlearn", DSPAM will unlearn the message prior to exiting with an
- # un successful return code. The default option, "error" will not unlearn
- # the message but return the appropriate error code. The unlearn option
- # is use-ful on some systems where local delivery failures will cause the
- # message to be requeued for delivery, and could result in the message
- # being processed multiple times. During a very large failure, however,
- # this could cause a significant load increase.
- #
- OnFail error
-
- #
- # Trusted Users: Only the users specified below will be allowed to perform
- # administrative functions in DSPAM such as setting the active user and
- # accessing tools. All other users attempting to run DSPAM will be restricted;
- # their uids will be forced to match the active username and they will not be
- # able to specify delivery agent privileges or use tools.
- #
- Trust root
- Trust dspam
- Trust www-data
- Trust mail
- Trust daemon
- Trust amavis
- Trust vmail
- #Trust nobody
- #Trust majordomo
-
- #
- # Debugging: Enables debugging for some or all users. IMPORTANT: DSPAM must
- # be compiled with debug support in order to use this option. DSPAM should
- # never be running in production with debug active unless you are
- # troubleshooting problems.
- #
- # DebugOpt: One or more of: process, classify, spam, fp, inoculation, corpus
- # process standard message processing
- # classify message classification using --classify
- # spam error correction of missed spam
- # fp error correction of false positives
- # inoculation message inoculations (source=inoculation)
- # corpus corpusfed messages (source=corpus)
- #
- #Debug *
- #Debug bob bill
- #
- #DebugOpt process spam fp
-
- #
- # ClassAlias: Alias a particular class to spam/nonspam. This is useful if
- # classifying things other than spam.
- #
- #ClassAliasSpam badstuff
- #ClassAliasNonspam goodstuff
-
- #
- # Training Mode: The default training mode to use for all operations, when
- # one has not been specified on the commandline or in the user's preferences.
- # Acceptable values are:
- # toe Train on Error (Only)
- # teft Train Everything (Trains on every message)
- # tum Train Until Mature (Train only tokens without enough data)
- # notrain Do not train or store signatures (large ISP systems, post-train)
- #
- TrainingMode teft
-
- #
- # TestConditionalTraining: By default, dspam will retrain certain errors
- # until the condition is no longer met. This usually accelerates learning.
- # Some people argue that this can increase the risk of errors, however.
- #
- TestConditionalTraining on
-
- #
- # Features: Specify features to activate by default; can also be specified
- # on the commandline. See the documentation for a list of available features.
- # If _any_ features are specified on the commandline, these are ignored.
- #
- #Feature noise
- Feature whitelist
-
- # Training Buffer: The training buffer waters down statistics during training.
- # It is designed to prevent false positives, but can also dramatically reduce
- # dspam's catch rate during initial training. This can be a number from 0
- # (no buffering) to 10 (maximum buffering). If you are paranoid about false
- # positives, you should probably enable this option.
- #
- #Feature tb=5
-
- #
- # Algorithms: Specify the statistical algorithms to use, overriding any
- # defaults configured in the build. The options are:
- # naive Naive-Bayesian (All Tokens)
- # graham Graham-Bayesian ("A Plan for Spam")
- # burton Burton-Bayesian (SpamProbe)
- # robinson Robinson's Geometric Mean Test (Obsolete)
- # chi-square Fisher-Robinson's Chi-Square Algorithm
- #
- # You may have multiple algorithms active simultaneously, but it is strongly
- # recommended that you group Bayesian algorithms with other Bayesian
- # algorithms, and any use of Chi-Square remain exclusive.
- #
- # NOTE: For standard "CRM114" Markovian weighting, use 'naive', or consider
- # using 'burton' for slightly better accuracy
- #
- # Don't mess with this unless you know what you're doing
- #
- #Algorithm chi-square
- #Algorithm naive
- Algorithm graham burton
-
- #
- # Tokenizer: Specify the tokenizer to use. The tokenizer is the piece
- # responsible for parsing the message into individual tokens. Depending on
- # how many resources you are willing to trade off vs. accuracy, you may
- # choose to use a less or more detailed tokenizer:
- # word uniGram (single word) tokenizer
- # Tokenizes message into single individual words/tokens
- # example: "free" and "viagra"
- # chain biGram (chained tokens) tokenizer (default)
- # Single words + chains adjacent tokens together
- # example: "free" and "viagra" and "free viagra"
- # sbph Sparse Binary Polynomial Hashing tokenizer
- # Creates sparse token patterns across sliding window of 5-tokens
- # example: "the quick * fox jumped" and "the * * fox jumped"
- # osb Orthogonal Sparse biGram tokenizer
- # Similar to SBPH, but only uses the biGrams
- # example: "the * * fox" and "the * * * jumped"
- #
- # In general the reccomendation is to use 'osb' for new installations.
- # The default value of 'chain' remains here as not to surprise anyone upgrading
- # that has not changed from the default value.
- #
- Tokenizer chain
-
- #
- # PValue: Specify the technique used for calculating Probability Values,
- # overriding any defaults configured in the build. These options are:
- # bcr Bayesian Chain Rule (Graham's Technique - "A Plan for Spam")
- # robinson Robinson's Technique (used in Chi-Square)
- # markov Markovian Weighted Technique (for Markovian discrimination)
- #
- # Unlike the "Algorithms" property, you may only have one of these defined.
- # Use of the chi-square algorithm automatically changes this to robinson.
- #
- # Don't mess with this unless you know what you're doing.
- #
- #PValue robinson
- #PValue markov
- PValue bcr
-
- #
- # WebStats: Enable this if you are using the CGI, which writes .stats files
- WebStats on
-
- #
- # ImprobabilityDrive: Calculate odds-ratios for ham/spam, and add to
- # X-DSPAM-Improbability headers
- #
- #ImprobabilityDrive on
-
- #
- # Preferences: Specify any preferences to set by default, unless otherwise
- # overridden by the user (see next section) or a default.prefs file.
- # If user or default.prefs are found, the user's preferences will override any
- # defaults.
- #
- Preference "trainingMode=TEFT" # { TOE | TUM | TEFT | NOTRAIN } -> default:teft
- Preference "spamAction=tag" # { quarantine | tag | deliver } -> default:quarantine
- Preference "spamSubject=[SPAM]" # { string } -> default:[SPAM]
- Preference "statisticalSedation=5" # { 0 - 10 } -> default:0
- Preference "enableBNR=on" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "enableWhitelist=on" # { on | off } -> default:on
- Preference "signatureLocation=headers" # { message | headers } -> default:message
- Preference "tagSpam=off" # { on | off }
- Preference "tagNonspam=off" # { on | off }
- Preference "showFactors=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "optIn=off" # { on | off }
- Preference "optOut=off" # { on | off }
- Preference "whitelistThreshold=10" # { Integer } -> default:10
- Preference "makeCorpus=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "storeFragments=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "localStore=" # { on | off } -> default:username
- Preference "processorBias=on" # { on | off } -> default:on
- Preference "fallbackDomain=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "trainPristine=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "optOutClamAV=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "ignoreRBLLookups=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "RBLInoculate=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
- Preference "notifications=off" # { on | off } -> default:off
-
- #
- # Overrides: Specifies the user preferences which may override configuration
- # and commandline defaults. Any other preferences supplied by an untrusted user
- # will be ignored.
- #
- AllowOverride enableBNR
- AllowOverride enableWhitelist
- AllowOverride fallbackDomain
- AllowOverride ignoreGroups
- AllowOverride ignoreRBLLookups
- AllowOverride localStore
- AllowOverride makeCorpus
- AllowOverride optIn
- AllowOverride optOut
- AllowOverride optOutClamAV
- AllowOverride processorBias
- AllowOverride RBLInoculate
- AllowOverride showFactors
- AllowOverride signatureLocation
- AllowOverride spamAction
- AllowOverride spamSubject
- AllowOverride statisticalSedation
- AllowOverride storeFragments
- AllowOverride tagNonspam
- AllowOverride tagSpam
- AllowOverride trainPristine
- AllowOverride trainingMode
- AllowOverride whitelistThreshold
- AllowOverride dailyQuarantineSummary
- AllowOverride notifications
-
- # --- Profiles ---
-
- #
- # You can specify multiple storage profiles, and specify the server to
- # use on the commandline with --profile. For example:
- #
- #Profile DECAlpha
- #MySQLServer.DECAlpha 10.0.0.1
- #MySQLPort.DECAlpha 3306
- #MySQLUser.DECAlpha dspam
- #MySQLPass.DECAlpha changeme
- #MySQLDb.DECAlpha dspam
- #MySQLCompress.DECAlpha true
- #MySQLReconnect.DECAlpha true
- #
- #Profile Sun420R
- #MySQLServer.Sun420R 10.0.0.2
- #MySQLPort.Sun420R 3306
- #MySQLUser.Sun420R dspam
- #MySQLPass.Sun420R changeme
- #MySQLDb.Sun420R dspam
- #MySQLCompress.Sun420R false
- #MySQLReconnect.Sun420R true
- #
- #DefaultProfile DECAlpha
-
- #
- # If you're using storage profiles, you can set failovers for each profile.
- # Of course, if you'll be failing over to another database, that database
- # must have the same information as the first. If you're using a global
- # database with no training, this should be relatively simple. If you're
- # configuring per-user data, however, you'll need to set up some type of
- # replication between databases.
- #
- #Failover.DECAlpha SUN420R
- #Failover.Sun420R DECAlpha
-
- # If the storage fails, the agent will follow each profile's failover up to
- # a maximum number of failover attempts. This should be set to a maximum of
- # the number of profiles you have, otherwise the agent could loop and try
- # the same profile multiple times (unless this is your desired behavior).
- #
- #FailoverAttempts 1
-
- #
- # Ignored headers: If DSPAM is behind other tools which may add a header to
- # incoming emails, it may be beneficial to ignore these headers - especially
- # if they are coming from another spam filter. If you are _not_ using one of
- # these tools, however, leaving the appropriate headers commented out will
- # allow DSPAM to use them as telltale signs of forged email.
- #
- #IgnoreHeader X-Spam-Status
- #IgnoreHeader X-Spam-Scanned
- #IgnoreHeader X-Virus-Scanner-Result
-
- #
- # Lookup: Perform lookups on streamlined blackhole list servers (see
- # http://www.nuclearelephant.com/projects/sbl/). The streamlined blacklist
- # server is machine-automated, unsupervised blacklisting system designed to
- # provide real-time and highly accurate blacklisting based on network spread.
- # When performing a lookup, DSPAM will automatically learn the inbound message
- # as spam if the source IP is listed. Until an official public RABL server is
- # available, this feature is only useful if you are running your own
- # streamlined blackhole list server for internal reporting among multiple mail
- # servers. Provide the name of the lookup zone below to use.
- #
- # This function performs standard reverse-octet.domain lookups, and while it
- # will function with many RBLs, it's strongly discouraged to use those
- # maintained by humans as they're often inaccurate and could hurt filter
- # learning and accuracy.
- #
- #Lookup "sbl.yourdomain.com"
-
- #
- # RBLInoculate: If you want to inoculate the user from RBL'd messages it would
- # have otherwise missed, set this to on.
- #
- #RBLInoculate off
-
- #
- # Notifications: Enable the sending of notification emails to users (first
- # message, quarantine full, etc.)
- #
- Notifications off
-
- #
- # QuarantineWarnSize: You may specify a size when DSPAM should send a "Quarantine
- # Full" message to each user. This is only working if you enable notifications
- # (see above). Value is in bytes. Default is 2097152 -> 2MB.
- #
- #QuarantineWarnSize 2097152
-
- #
- # Purge configuration: Set dspam_clean purge default options, if not otherwise
- # specified on the commandline
- #
- PurgeSignatures 14 # Stale signatures
- PurgeNeutral 90 # Tokens with neutralish probabilities
- PurgeUnused 90 # Unused tokens
- PurgeHapaxes 30 # Tokens with less than 5 hits (hapaxes)
- PurgeHits1S 15 # Tokens with only 1 spam hit
- PurgeHits1I 15 # Tokens with only 1 innocent hit
-
- #
- # Purge configuration for SQL-based installations using purge.sql
- #
- #PurgeSignature off # Specified in purge.sql
- #PurgeNeutral 90
- #PurgeUnused off # Specified in purge.sql
- #PurgeHapaxes off # Specified in purge.sql
- #PurgeHits1S off # Specified in purge.sql
- #PurgeHits1I off # Specified in purge.sql
-
- #
- # Local Mail Exchangers: Used for source address tracking, tells DSPAM which
- # mail exchangers are local and therefore should be ignored in the Received:
- # header when tracking the source of an email. Note: you should use the address
- # of the host as appears between brackets [ ] in the Received header.
- # By default DSPAM is considering the following IPs always as LocalMX:
- # 10.0.0.0/8 - Private IP addresses (RFC 1918)
- # 127.0.0.0/8 - Localhost Loopback Address (RFC 1700)
- # 169.254.0.0/16 - Zeroconf / APIPA (RFC 3330)
- # 172.16.0.0/12 - Private IP addresses (RFC 1918)
- # 192.168.0.0/16 - Private IP addresses (RFC 1918)
- #
- LocalMX 127.0.0.1
-
- #
- # Logging: Disabling logging for users will make usage graphs unavailable to
- # them. Disabling system logging will make admin graphs unavailable.
- #
- SystemLog on
- UserLog on
-
- #
- # TrainPristine: for systems where the original message remains server side
- # and can therefore be presented in pristine format for retraining. This option
- # will cause DSPAM to cease all writing of signatures and DSPAM headers to the
- # message, and deliver the message in as pristine format as possible. This mode
- # REQUIRES that the original message in its pristine format (as of delivery)
- # be presented for retraining, as in the case of webmail, imap, or other
- # applications where the message is actually kept server-side during reading,
- # and is preserved. DO NOT use this switch unless the original message can be
- # presented for retraining with the ORIGINAL HEADERS and NO MODIFICATIONS.
- #
- # NOTE: You can't use this setting with dspam_trian; if you're going to use it,
- # wait until after you train any corpora.
- #
- #TrainPristine on
-
- #
- # Opt: in or out; determines DSPAM's default filtering behavior. If this value
- # is set to in, users must opt-in to filtering by dropping a .dspam file in
- # /var/dspam/opt-in/user.dspam (or if you have homedirs configured, a .dspam
- # folder in their home directory). The default is opt-out, which means all
- # users will be filtered unless a .nodspam file is dropped in
- # /var/dspam/opt-out/user.nodspam
- #
- Opt out
-
- #
- # TrackSources: specify which (if any) source addresses to track and report
- # them to syslog (mail.info). This is useful if you're running a firewall or
- # blacklist and would like to use this information. Spam reporting also drops
- # RABL blacklist files (see http://www.nuclearelephant.com/projects/rabl/).
- #
- #TrackSources spam nonspam virus
-
- #
- # ParseToHeaders: In lieu of setting up individual aliases for each user,
- # DSPAM can be configured to automatically parse the To: address for spam and
- # false positive forwards. From there, it can be configured to either set the
- # DSPAM user based on the username specified in the header and/or change the
- # training class and source accordingly. The options below can be used to
- # customize most common types of header parsing behavior to avoid the need for
- # multiple aliases, or if using LMTP, aliases entirely..
- #
- # ParseToHeader: Parse the To: headers of an incoming message. This must be
- # set to 'on' to use either of the following features.
- #
- # ChangeModeOnParse: Automatically change the class (to spam or innocent)
- # depending on whether spam- or notspam- was specified, and change the source
- # to 'error'. This is convenient if you're not using aliases at all, but
- # are delivering via LMTP.
- #
- # ChangeUserOnParse: Automatically change the username to match that specified
- # in the To: header. For example, spam-bob@domain.tld will set the username
- # to bob, ignoring any --user passed in. This may not always be desirable if
- # you are using virtual email addresses as usernames. Options:
- # on or user take the portion before the @ sign only
- # full take everything after the initial {spam,notspam}-.
- #
- #ParseToHeaders on
- #ChangeModeOnParse on
- #ChangeUserOnParse on
-
- #
- # Broken MTA Options: Some MTAs don't support the proper functionality
- # necessary. In these cases you can activate certain features in DSPAM to
- # compensate. 'returnCodes' causes DSPAM to return an exit code of 99 if
- # the message is spam, 0 if not, or a negative code if an error has occured.
- # Specifying 'case' causes DSPAM to force the input usernames to lowercase.
- # Specifying 'lineStripping' causes DSPAM to strip ^M's from messages passed
- # in.
- #
- #Broken returnCodes
- #Broken case
- #Broken lineStripping
-
- #
- # MaxMessageSize: You may specify a maximum message size for DSPAM to process.
- # If the message is larger than the maximum size, it will be delivered
- # without processing. Value is in bytes.
- #
- #MaxMessageSize 4194304
-
- # --- ClamAV ---
-
- #
- # Virus Checking: If you are running clamd, DSPAM can perform stream-based
- # virus checking using TCP. Uncomment the values below to enable virus
- # checking.
- #
- # ClamAVResponse: reject (reject or drop the message with a permanent failure)
- # accept (accept the message and quietly drop the message)
- # spam (treat as spam and quarantine/tag/whatever)
- #
- #ClamAVPort 3310
- #ClamAVHost 127.0.0.1
- #ClamAVResponse accept
-
- # --- CLIENT / SERVER ---
-
- #
- # Daemonized Server: If you are running DSPAM as a daemonized server using
- # --daemon, the following parameters will override the default. Use the
- # ServerPass option to set up accounts for each client machine. The DSPAM
- # server will process and deliver the message based on the parameters
- # specified. If you want the client machine to perform delivery, use
- # the --stdout option in conjunction with a local setup.
- #
- # ServerHost: Not enabling ServerHost will bind DSPAM server to all available
- # interfaces.
- #
- # ServerPort: Default upstream configuration is to run dspam daemon on port
- # 24. On Debian, dspam being run as a unprivileged user, default port is
- # set to 2424.
- #
- #ServerHost 127.0.0.1
- #ServerPort 2424
- #ServerQueueSize 32
- #ServerPID /var/run/dspam/dspam.pid
-
- #
- # ServerMode specifies the type of LMTP server to start. This can be one of:
- # dspam: DSPAM-proprietary DLMTP server, for communicating with dspamc
- # standard: Standard LMTP server, for communicating with Postfix or other MTA
- # auto: Speak both DLMTP and LMTP; auto-detect by ServerPass.IDENT
- #
- #ServerMode dspam
-
- # If supporting DLMTP (dspam) mode, dspam clients will require authentication
- # as they will be passing in parameters. The idents below will be used to
- # determine which clients will be speaking DLMTP, so if you will be using
- # both LMTP and DLMTP from the same host, be sure to use something other
- # than the server's hostname below (which will be sent by the MTA during a
- # standard LMTP LHLO).
- #
- #ServerPass.Relay1 "secret"
- #ServerPass.Relay2 "password"
-
- # If supporting standard LMTP mode, server parameters will need to be specified
- # here, as they will not be passed in by the mail server. The ServerIdent
- # specifies the 250 response code ident sent back to connecting clients and
- # should be set to the hostname of your server, or an alias.
- #
- # NOTE: If you specify --user in ServerParameters, the RCPT TO will be
- # used only for delivery, and not set as the active user for processing.
- #
- #ServerParameters "--deliver=innocent -d %u"
- #ServerIdent "localhost.localdomain"
-
- # If you wish to use a local domain socket instead of a TCP socket, uncomment
- # the following. It is strongly recommended you use local domain sockets if
- # you are running the client and server on the same machine, as it eliminates
- # much of the bandwidth overhead.
- #
- ServerDomainSocketPath "/var/run/dspam/dspam.sock"
-
- #
- # Client Mode: If you are running DSPAM in client/server mode, uncomment and
- # set these variables. A ClientHost beginning with a / will be treated as
- # a domain socket.
- #
- #ClientHost /var/run/dspam/dspam.sock
- #ClientIdent "secret@Relay1"
- #
- #ClientHost 127.0.0.1
- #ClientPort 2424
- #ClientIdent "secret@Relay1"
-
- # --- RABL ---
-
- # RABLQueue: Touch files in the RABL queue
- # If you are a reporting streamlined blackhole list participant, you can
- # touch ip addresses within the directory the rabl_client process is watching.
- #
- #RABLQueue /var/spool/rabl
-
- # --- ---
-
- # DataSource: If you are using any type of data source that does not include
- # email-like headers (such as documents), uncomment the line below. This
- # will cause the entire input to be treated like a message "body"
- #
- #DataSource document
-
- # ProcessorWordFrequency: By default, words are only counted once per message.
- # If you are classifying large documents, however, you may wish to count once
- # per occurrence instead.
- #
- #ProcessorWordFrequency occurrence
-
- # ProcessorURLContext: By default, a URL context is generated for URLs, which
- # records their tokens as separate from words found in documents. To use
- # URL tokens in the same context as words, turn this feature off.
- #
- ProcessorURLContext on
-
- # ProcessorBias: Bias causes the filter to lean more toward 'innocent', and
- # usually greatly reduces false positives. It is the default behavior of
- # most Bayesian filters (including dspam).
- #
- # NOTE: You probably DONT want this if you're using Markovian Weighting, unless
- # you are paranoid about false positives.
- #
- ProcessorBias on
-
- # StripRcptDomain: Cut the domain (including the at sign) from recipients.
- # This is particularly useful if the recipient name is equal to real user
- # accounts as recipients with domains tend to cause permission issues with
- # dspam-web.
- #
- StripRcptDomain off
-
- # --- Split Configuration File Support ---
-
- # Include a directory with configuration items.
- Include /etc/dspam/dspam.d/
-
- # --- ---
-
- ## EOF
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