## $Id: dspam.conf.in,v 1.103 2011/11/10 00:27:34 tomhendr Exp $ ## dspam.conf -- DSPAM configuration file ## # # DSPAM Home: Specifies the base directory to be used for DSPAM storage # Home /var/lib/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 libsqlite_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/lib64/dspam/libhash_drv.so StorageDriver /usr/lib64/dspam/libmysql_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" # Exim # TrustedDeliveryAgent "/usr/bin/procmail" # # 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/bin/procmail -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.example.org 1.2.3.4 # #DeliveryHost 127.0.0.1 #DeliveryPort 24 #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 @example.org, and # if bob@example.org does not resolve to a known user on the system, the user # could default to your @example.org user. NOTE: This also requires designating # fallbackDomain for the domain name; # e.g. dspam_admin ch pref example.org 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 apache Trust mail Trust mailnull Trust smmsp Trust daemon Trust vmail Trust dovecot Trust postfix #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=quarantine" # { 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 # --- MySQL --- # # Storage driver settings: Specific to a particular storage driver. Uncomment # the configuration specific to your installation, if applicable. # MySQLServer /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock MySQLPort MySQLUser dspam MySQLPass kanchan MySQLDb dspam MySQLCompress true MySQLReconnect true # If you are using replication for clustering, you can also specify a separate # server to perform all writes to. # #MySQLWriteServer /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock #MySQLWritePort #MySQLWriteUser dspam #MySQLWritePass changeme #MySQLWriteDb dspam_write #MySQLCompress true #MySQLReconnect true # If your replication isn't close to real-time, your retraining might fail if # the signature isn't found. One workaround for this is to use the write # database for all signature reads: # MySQLReadSignaturesFromWriteDb on # If you're running DSPAM in client/server (daemon) mode, uncomment the # setting below to override the default connection cache size (the number # of connections the server pools between all clients). The connection cache # represents the maximum number of database connections *available* and should # be set based on the maximum number of concurrent connections you're likely # to have. Each connection may be used by only one thread at a time, so all # other threads _will block_ until another connection becomes available. # MySQLConnectionCache 10 # If you're using vpopmail or some other type of virtual setup and wish to # change the table dspam uses to perform username/uid lookups, you can over- # ride it below MySQLVirtualTable dspam_virtual_uids MySQLVirtualUIDField uid MySQLVirtualUsernameField username # UIDInSignature: MySQL supports the insertion of the user id into the DSPAM # signature. This allows you to create one single spam or fp alias # (pointing to some arbitrary user), and the uid in the signature will # switch to the correct user. Result: you need only one spam alias MySQLUIDInSignature on # --- PostgreSQL --- # For PgSQLServer you can Use a TCP/IP address or a socket. If your socket is # in /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432 specify just the path where the socket # resits (without .s.PGSQL.5432). #PgSQLServer /var/run/postgresql/ #PgSQLPort #PgSQLUser dspam #PgSQLPass changeme #PgSQLDb dspam # If you're running DSPAM in client/server (daemon) mode, uncomment the # setting below to override the default connection cache size (the number # of connections the server pools between all clients). # #PgSQLConnectionCache 3 # UIDInSignature: PgSQL supports the insertion of the user id into the DSPAM # signature. This allows you to create one single spam or fp alias # (pointing to some arbitrary user), and the uid in the signature will # switch to the correct user. Result: you need only one spam alias #PgSQLUIDInSignature on # If you're using vpopmail or some other type of virtual setup and wish to # change the table dspam uses to perform username/uid lookups, you can over- # ride it below #PgSQLVirtualTable dspam_virtual_uids #PgSQLVirtualUIDField uid #PgSQLVirtualUsernameField username # --- SQLite --- #SQLitePragma "synchronous = OFF" # --- Hash --- # # HashRecMax: Default number of records to create in the initial segment when # building hash files. 100,000 yields files 1.6MB in size, but can fill up # fast, so be sure to increase this (to a million or more) if you're not using # autoextend. # # NOTE: If you're using a heavy-weight tokenizer, such as SBPH, you should be # looking for settings in the 'millions' of records. # # Primes List: # 53, 97, 193, 389, 769, 1543, 3079, 6151, 12289, 24593, 49157, 98317, 196613, # 393241, 786433, 1572869, 3145739, 6291469, 12582917, 25165843, 50331653, # 100663319, 201326611, 402653189, 805306457, 1610612741, 3221225473, # 4294967291 # HashRecMax 98317 # # HashAutoExtend: Autoextend hash databases when they fill up. This allows # them to continue to train by adding extents (extensions) to the file. There # will be a small delay during the growth process, as everything needs to be # closed and remapped. # HashAutoExtend on # # HashMaxExtents: The maximum number of extents that may be created in a single # hash file. Set this to zero for unlimited # HashMaxExtents 0 # # HashExtentSize: The initial record size for newly created extents. Creating # this too small could result in many extents being created. Creating this too # large could result in excessive disk space usage. Typically, a value close # to half of the HashRecMax size is good. # HashExtentSize 49157 # # HashPctIncrease: Increase the next extent size by n% from the size of the # last extent. This is useful in accommodating systems where the default # HashExtentSize can be too small for certain high-volume users, and can also # help keep seeks nice and speedy and/or prevent too many unnecessary extents # from being created when using a low HashMaxSeek. The default behavior, when # HashPctIncrease is not used, is to always use # HashExtentSize with no # increase. # HashPctIncrease 10 # # HashMaxSeek: The maximum number of record seeks when inserting a new record # before failing or adding a new extent. This ultimately translates into the # max # of acceptable seeks per segment. Setting this too high will exhaustively # scan each segment and hurt performance. Typically, a low value is acceptable # as even older extents will continue to fill as training progresses. # HashMaxSeek 10 # # HashConcurrentUser: If you are using a single, stateful hash database in # daemon mode, specifying a concurrent user below will cause the user to be # permanently mapped into memory and shared via rwlocks. This is very fast and # very cool if you are running a "userless" relay appliance. # #HashConcurrentUser user # # HashConnectionCache: If running in daemon mode, this is the max # of # concurrent connections that will be supported. NOTE: If you are using # HashConcurrentUser, this option is ignored, as all connections are read- # write locked instead of mutex locked. # HashConnectionCache 10 # --- ExtLookup --- # ExtLookup: Perform various external lookup functions depending on user- # defined variables. ExtLookup can either be set to 'on' or 'off'. The # behavior of such lookups are defined by the use of ExtLookupMode, which # can be set to 'verify', 'map' and 'strict'. # # verify Will cause dspam to validate the user, prior to # creating the user entry in the system. # # map Will cause dspam to try to map the user address # to a certain unique identifier. # # strict Will cause dspam to enforce both 'verify' and 'map'. # # ExtLookupDriver will set the engine behind the lookups. For now the only # supported mechanisms are 'ldap' and 'program'. The first will make dspam # talk directly to the configured LDAP server. The second will prefrom the # various lookup functions by running a certain binary program or executable # script. The program MUST be a binary executable or a script with a well # defined interpreter in its first line ( #!/path/to/interpreter ). There # are plans to support TLS/SSL connections to backend databases. # #ExtLookup on # Turns on/off external lookup #ExtLookupMode strict # available modes are 'verify', 'map' and 'strict'. # 'strict' enforces both verify and map #ExtLookupDriver ldap # Currently only ldap and program are supported. # There are plans to support both MySQL and Postgres. #ExtLookupServer ldap.example.org # Can either be a database hostname or the full path to # an executable lookup program and its arguments. #ExtLookupPort 389 # Desired port when connecting to the lookup database. #ExtLookupDB "ou=Users,dc=domain,dc=com" # Can either be an LDAP search base or a database name (TODO). #ExtLookupQuery "(&(objectClass=qmailUser)(|(mail=%u)(mailAlternateAddress=%u)))" # Can either be an LDAP search filter or an SQL query (TODO) #ExtLookupLDAPAttribute "mail" # Attribute to be used when ExtLookupDriver is 'ldap' # and ExtLookupMode 'map' or 'strict' #ExtLookupLDAPScope sub # Can be set to 'base', 'sub' or 'one'. Only used when ExtLookupDriver is 'ldap'. #ExtLookupLDAPVersion 3 # Sets the LDAP protocol version (1, 2 or 3) #ExtLookupLogin "cn=admin,dc=domain,dc=com" # Login to be used when connecting to any direct database backend. #ExtLookupPassword itsasecret # Password to use with ExtLookupLogin. #ExtLookupCrypto tls # Sets the use of TLS on backend communication (only compatible with LDAPv3) # --- 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.example.org" # # 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 # TxtDirectory: the directory that holds the templates for notification # messages (see Notifications) and tagging (see tagSpam/tagNonspam). # #TxtDirectory /var/lib/dspam/txt # # 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@example.org 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. # ServerHost 127.0.0.1 ServerPort 2424 ServerQueueSize 32 #ServerPID /var/run/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 24 #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 # GroupConfig: The configuration file for groups. See the README file # for details on how to enable users to combine their training data to # get better results. GroupConfig /var/lib/dspam/group # --- Split Configuration File Support --- # Include a directory with configuration items. #Include /etc/dspam/dspam.d/ # --- --- ## EOF