| # SpamAssassin user preferences file. See 'perldoc Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf' |
| # for details of what can be tweaked. |
| #* |
| #* Note: this file is not read by SpamAssassin until copied into the user |
| #* directory. At runtime, if a user has no preferences in their home directory |
| #* already, it will be copied for them, allowing them to perform personalised |
| #* customisation. If you want to make changes to the site-wide defaults, |
| #* create a file in /etc/spamassassin or /etc/mail/spamassassin instead. |
| ########################################################################### |
| |
| # How many points before a mail is considered spam. |
| # required_score 5 |
| |
| # Whitelist and blacklist addresses are now file-glob-style patterns, so |
| # "friend@somewhere.com", "*@isp.com", or "*.domain.net" will all work. |
| # whitelist_from someone@somewhere.com |
| |
| # Add your own customised scores for some tests below. The default scores are |
| # read from the installed spamassassin rules files, but you can override them |
| # here. To see the list of tests and their default scores, go to |
| # https://spamassassin.apache.org/tests.html . |
| # |
| # score SYMBOLIC_TEST_NAME n.nn |
| |
| # Speakers of Asian languages, like Chinese, Japanese and Korean, will almost |
| # definitely want to uncomment the following lines. They will switch off some |
| # rules that detect 8-bit characters, which commonly trigger on mails using CJK |
| # character sets, or that assume a western-style charset is in use. |
| # |
| # score HTML_COMMENT_8BITS 0 |
| # score UPPERCASE_25_50 0 |
| # score UPPERCASE_50_75 0 |
| # score UPPERCASE_75_100 0 |
| # score OBSCURED_EMAIL 0 |
| |
| # Speakers of any language that uses non-English, accented characters may wish |
| # to uncomment the following lines. They turn off rules that fire on |
| # misformatted messages generated by common mail apps in contravention of the |
| # email RFCs. |
| |
| # score SUBJ_ILLEGAL_CHARS 0 |
| |