spamc - client for spamd
- spamc [options] < message
- -B
-
Assume input is a single BSMTP-formatted message. In other words, spamc will
pull out everything between the DATA line and the lone-dot line to feed to
spamd, and will place the spamd output back in the same envelope (thus, any
SIZE extension in your BSMTP file will cause many problems).
- -c
-
Just check if the message is spam or not. Set process exitcode to 1 is
message is spam, 0 if not spam or processing failure occurs. Will print
score/threshold to stdout (as ints) or 0/0 if there was an error.
- -r
-
Just output the SpamAssassin report text to stdout, if the message
is spam. If the message is ham (non-spam), nothing will be printed.
The first line of the output is the number of hits and the threshold,
in this format:
-
hits/threshold
- -R
-
Just output the SpamAssassin report text to stdout, for all messages.
See -r for details of the output format used.
- -y
-
Just output the names of the tests hit to stdout, on one line, separated
by commas.
- -d host
-
Connect to spamd server on given host. If host resolves to multiple
addresses, then spamc will fail-over to the other addresses, if the first one
cannot be connected to.
- -e command [args]
-
Instead of writing to stdout, pipe the output to command's standard input.
Note that there is a very slight chance mail will be lost here, because if the
fork-and-exec fails there's no place to put the mail message.
-
Note that this must be the LAST command line option, as everything after the
-e is taken as arguments to the command (it's like rxvt or xterm).
- -f
-
Cause spamc to safe-failover if it can't connect to spamd -- what this means
is that in case spamc fails to connect to spamd, it will not return with an
exitcode set, it will instead dump the original message to stdout, allowing
the message to be delivered, albeit unscanned for spam. Without this flag,
connection failures to spamd will cause message delivery failures.
-
Even with this flag set however, if spamc connects successfully, and then
encounters an error at a later stage of communication, it will still return
an exitcode.
-
This now defaults to on. This flag is accepted though for
backwards-compatibility. -x can be used to tell spamc to use an
exit-code which will cause the message to be re-queued by the MTA instead.
- -h
-
Print this help message and terminate without action.
- -S
-
If spamc was built with support for SSL, encrypt data to and from the
spamd process with SSL; spamd must support SSL as well.
- -p port
-
Connect to spamd server listening on given port.
- -s max_size
-
Set the maximum message size which will be sent to spamd -- any bigger than
this threshold and the message will be returned unprocessed. Note that the
default size is 250k, so if spamc gets handed a message bigger than this, it
won't be passed to spamd. The size is specified in bytes, and if you send it a
negative number, things are quite likely to break very hard.
- -t timeout
-
Set the timeout for spamc-to-spamd communications. If spamd takes longer than
this many seconds to reply to a message, spamc will abort the connection and
treat this as a failure to connect; in other words the message will be
returned unprocessed.
- -u username
-
This argument has been semi-obsoleted. To have spamd use per-user-config
files, run spamc as the user whose config files spamd should load. If you're
running spamc as some other user, though, (eg. root, mail, nobody, cyrus, etc.)
then you can still use this flag.
- -x
-
Don't use the 'safe fallback' error-recovery method, which passes through the
unaltered message if an error occurs. Instead, exit with an error code, and
let the MTA queue up the mails for a retry later. The exit codes used are
as follows:
-
EX_USAGE 64 command line usage error
EX_DATAERR 65 data format error
EX_NOINPUT 66 cannot open input
EX_NOUSER 67 addressee unknown
EX_NOHOST 68 host name unknown
EX_UNAVAILABLE 69 service unavailable
EX_SOFTWARE 70 internal software error
EX_OSERR 71 system error (e.g., can't fork)
EX_OSFILE 72 critical OS file missing
EX_CANTCREAT 73 can't create (user) output file
EX_IOERR 74 input/output error
EX_TEMPFAIL 75 temp failure; user is invited to retry
EX_PROTOCOL 76 remote error in protocol
EX_NOPERM 77 permission denied
EX_CONFIG 78 configuration error
- -U socketpath
-
Connect to
spamd
via UNIX domain socket socketpath instead of a
TCP/IP connection.
- -H
-
For TCP/IP sockets, randomize the IP addresses returned from a DNS name
lookup (when more than one IP is returned). This provides for a kind of
hostname-base load balancing.
Spamc is the client half of the spamc/spamd pair. It should be used in place
of spamassassin
in scripts to process mail. It will read the mail from
STDIN, and spool it to its connection to spamd, then read the result back and
print it to STDOUT. Spamc has extremely low overhead in loading, so it should
be much faster to load than the whole spamassassin program.
See the README file in the spamd directory of the SpamAssassin
distribution for more details.
spamd(1)
spamassassin(1)
Mail::SpamAssassin(3)
Craig R Hughes <craig@hughes-family.org>
Mail::SpamAssassin