andryyy 2017-03-22 15:08:21 +01:00
parent 271e9a4b56
commit 78f75deccb
1 changed files with 18 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -79,10 +79,10 @@ Open `data/conf/postfix/main.cf` and find `smtpd_sender_restrictions`. Prepend `
smtpd_sender_restrictions = check_sasl_access hash:/opt/postfix/conf/check_sender_access reject_authenticated_sender [...]
```
Run postmap on check_sasl_access:
Run postmap on check_sender_access:
```
docker-compose exec postfix-mailcow postmap /opt/postfix/conf/check_sasl_access
docker-compose exec postfix-mailcow postmap /opt/postfix/conf/check_sender_access
```
Restart the Postfix container.
@ -266,6 +266,22 @@ The bayes statistics are written to Redis as keys `BAYES_HAM` and `BAYES_SPAM`.
You can also use Rspamd's web ui to learn ham and/or spam.
### Learn ham or spam from existing directory
You can use a one-liner to learn mail in plain-text (uncompressed) format:
```
# Ham
for file in /my/folder/cur/*; do docker exec -i $(docker-compose ps -q rspamd-mailcow) rspamc learn_ham < $file; done
# Spam
for file in /my/folder/.Junk/cur/*; do docker exec -i $(docker-compose ps -q rspamd-mailcow) rspamc learn_spam < $file; done
```
Consider attaching a local folder as new volume to `rspamd-mailcow` in `docker-compose.yml` and learn given files inside the container. This can be used as workaround to parse compressed data with zcat. Example:
```
for file in /data/old_mail/.Junk/cur/*; do rspamc learn_spam < zcat $file; done
```
### CLI tools
```