Bueno, la verdad es que no termino de pillar para qué se supone que sirve esto. Yo tengo el "local.cf" estándard que venia con Debian 5.0, con solo algun pequeño cambio al final:
Code:
# This is the right place to customize your installation of SpamAssassin.
#
# See 'perldoc Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf' for details of what can be
# tweaked.
#
# Only a small subset of options are listed below
#
###########################################################################
# Add *****SPAM***** to the Subject header of spam e-mails
#
# rewrite_header Subject *****SPAM*****
# Save spam messages as a message/rfc822 MIME attachment instead of
# modifying the original message (0: off, 2: use text/plain instead)
#
# report_safe 1
# Set which networks or hosts are considered 'trusted' by your mail
# server (i.e. not spammers)
#
# trusted_networks 212.17.35.
# Set file-locking method (flock is not safe over NFS, but is faster)
#
# lock_method flock
# Set the threshold at which a message is considered spam (default: 5.0)
#
# required_score 5.0
# Use Bayesian classifier (default: 1)
#
# use_bayes 1
# Bayesian classifier auto-learning (default: 1)
#
# bayes_auto_learn 1
# Set headers which may provide inappropriate cues to the Bayesian
# classifier
#
# bayes_ignore_header X-Bogosity
# bayes_ignore_header X-Spam-Flag
# bayes_ignore_header X-Spam-Status
# Activar dcc-client (dccifd)
# use_dcc 1
# dcc_home /var/lib/dcc
# Amavis requiere esto (ver la página principal)
bayes_auto_expire 0
Eso sí, el directorio donde se encuentra la whitelist es entonces:
Code:
/var/lib/amavis/.spamassassin
Donde yo tengo los ficheros (modificados a cada momento, así que se usan de verdad). Por otra parte, te recomiendo que para ver este tipo de cosas te hagas amigo de:
Code:
/etc/init.d/amavis debug
/etc/init.d/amavis debug-sa