Mail Archives: cygwin/2003/10/07/09:41:21
Billy,
Please keep your replies on-list.
On Mon, Oct 06, 2003 at 05:53:17PM -0400, Billy Huddleston wrote:
> > How are you driving procmail? Via fetchmail? Or, by some other
> > means? What version of Windows? What version of procmail (and
> > fetchmail)?
> >
>
> Calling procmail via perl scripts which are spawned by my win32
> mailserver.
The above is possibly the problem. Can you use a Cygwin mail server
instead?
> We're running procmail v3.22
The official package? Or, one you built yourself?
> > Are the above error messages displayed in a pop-up dialogs? Or, are
> > they output to the procmail log file? Do you fork a lot in your
> > procmail recipes? Or, do you perform most of your filtering inside
> > procmail itself?
>
> Yes, they're displayed in pop-up dialogs.. and once we get too many of
> them, the filter completely stops responding, almost as if, procmail
> refuses to execute. We use test, formail, fgrep and various other
> things in the scripts..
>
> > FWIW, I run procmail-3.22-7 under cygwin-1.3.22-1 at home and
> > procmail-3.22-8 under cygwin-1.5.5-1 at work without any problems
> > whatsoever. To give you some idea of the volume and "complexity" of
> > my home setup:
> >
> > 15K - 20K messages processed per month
> > 550 line .procmailrc file
> >
>
> Our scripts are rather complex and I'm make sure not to send large
> files through it..
>
> > > and refused to open directories and write files, it even created a
> > > directory (I turned logging on and it's suppose to create a directory
> > > when it doesn't exist) with NO permissions, I can't even access it via
> > > administrator!!
> >
> > The above is probably ntsec related. Note that cygwin-1.3.2 is very
> > old! More recent cygwin versions default to ntsec on now.
> >
> > > Has anyone seen this or know how I can fix this..
>
> Well, you have any ideas on how to take care of the ntsec problems??
> Looks like it's not using the correct security somehow...
Under NTFS, it is as easy as:
$ chmod g-w,o-w ~/.procmailrc
$ # etc.
> > Maybe you need to revamp your spam recipes. I'm able to catch 95+
> > percent of all spam and viruses sent to me with the following
> > recipes and bogofilter:
> >
> > #
> > # File virus messages.
> > #
> >
> > MYVIRUS=$MAILDIR/virus-$MONTH
> > NASTYEXT=(bat|com|exe|hta|pif|scr|shs|vb[se]|ws[fh]|(doc|txt|xls)\.)
> > INCLUDERC=$HOME/.procmailrc-virussnag
> >
> > #
> > # Test messages for spam.
> > #
> >
> > :0 fw
> > | bogofilter -u -e -p
> >
> > #
> > # File spam messages.
> > #
> >
> > :0 W:
> > * ^X-Bogosity: Yes, tests=bogofilter
> > $MAILDIR/spam-$MONTH
> >
> > The .procmailrc-virussnag file is just Dallman Ross's Virus Snaggers:
> >
> > http://www.spamless.us/pub/procmail/virussnag.rc
> >
>
> We spent alot of time working on these procmail scripts and they work
> great on a Linux based system..
>
> I'm just totally baffled by the behavior of this thing... I still
> think it has something to do with hung processes and too many
> processes running.. I ran a watch to count the procmail's and when it
> gets around 25 or so, it'll start happining with more frequency.
Sorry, I don't know how to help you more.
Jason
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