Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 10:32:57 +0100 From: Christian Damm <christian.damm@diewebmaster.at> To: thomas@hkeasyhost.com Cc: freebsd-isp@freebsd.org Subject: Re: SpamAssassian with FreeBSD and Big Mail Server Message-ID: <421D9F49.8060309@diewebmaster.at> In-Reply-To: <46881.147.8.2.201.1109222551.squirrel@147.8.2.201> References: <20050223110037.177AB43D2F@mx1.FreeBSD.org> <421C8A60.8010407@diewebmaster.at> <46881.147.8.2.201.1109222551.squirrel@147.8.2.201>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
thomas@hkeasyhost.com schrieb: > I would like to try dspam as well as I am using spamassassin, but dspam > are leak of docs on postfix supporting, and no one got experience with i can encourage you to do so - you wont regret it: the statistical spam filtering methods in dspam are miles ahead spamassassin`s (spamassassin on the other hand is an antispam framework where so many things can be done (rbl`s, razor, dcc, spf etc.) - i do things like rbl checking (wirespeed) on the smtp level with postfix so i dont mind. the postfix integration is dead-easy, really. the dspam docs could be better but the dspam mailinglist is quite helpful if you got questions. also consider using one of the many postfix/dspam/etc. howto`s out there: http://devnull.com/kyler/dspam.20040609.html > dspam+Spamassassin together, so... the latest amavisd-new versions got dspam support - anyway its a little bit "hacky" at the moment i.m.h.o, so i wouldnt really use it on production hosts (some might disagree in small mta environments). > > > >> >>Vahric MUHTARYAN schrieb: >> >>>Hi Everybody , >>> >>> Really I don't know can I say a big mail server which have >>>30,000 mailbox on it 1200+ simultaneously connections >>>(pop,smtp,webmail). >>>Ýncoming smtp connections are between 200-400 . We want to run spam >>>software >>>on it but machine can't handle it for this reason we seperated machine >>>freebsd+exim+SpamAssassian but on 400 connection machine goes down >>>average >>>is very high , cpu usage really too high . >>> >>> I want to learn Anybody Who have closer or bigger system and >>>using SpamAssassian ?! >>>Really this 400 connection simultaneously can be limit for spam software >>>?! >>>I mean Anybody can handle more ?! >>>I have to design distributed environment ?! >>> >>>My Hardware is (for spam) >>> 2 X PIII 1G + 1 GB RAM + 2 DISK RAID 0 SCSI 10000 RPM >> >>i use spamassassin only on small-/medium-sized MTA installations (its a >>memory/cpu hog i.m.h.o. but i like it) - on all my "bigger" systems i >>really prefer dspam (coded in straight C and fast as hell). it is used >>in some environments with 350,000 email users and scales really well (if >>you have the iron and experience to build/maintain such a system/cluster). >> >>http://www.nuclearelephant.com/projects/dspam/ >> >> >>>Thanks >>>Vahric >>> >>>_______________________________________________ >>>freebsd-isp@freebsd.org mailing list >>>http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-isp >>>To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-isp-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" >>> >>> >>> >> >>-- >> >>mfg. >> >>christian damm >>technische leitung >>phone: dw 42 >>email: christian.damm@diewebmaster.at >>icq at work: 124464652 >> >>die webmaster - flötzerweg 156 - 4030 linz - austria >>phone: +43-732-381242, fax: +43-732-381242-22, isdn (leonardo): >>+43-732-381242-33 >>homepage: www.diewebmaster.at, public email: office@diewebmaster.at >>_______________________________________________ >>freebsd-isp@freebsd.org mailing list >>http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-isp >>To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-isp-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" >> > > > > > !DSPAM:421d64a4175283000910921! > -- mfg. christian damm technische leitung phone: dw 42 email: christian.damm@diewebmaster.at icq at work: 124464652 die webmaster - flötzerweg 156 - 4030 linz - austria phone: +43-732-381242, fax: +43-732-381242-22, isdn (leonardo): +43-732-381242-33 homepage: www.diewebmaster.at, public email: office@diewebmaster.at
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?421D9F49.8060309>