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How do I ensure that procmail is working?

If you already use procmail, skip to the next section. If not, ensure procmail is installed using which procmail or install it from [http://www.procmail.org/ www.procmail.org]. Note that some systems use procmail by default, so the directions in the next paragraph may not be necessary for your installation. Also, some accounts require use of web-based configuration tools to specify that a given mailbox should "filter" to /usr/bin/procmail (for example).

In a traditional shell installation, create a .forward file (or .qmail as appropriate) in your home directory containing the below lines, but replacing user with your username (which you can discover by entering whoami) and entering the correct procmail path (which you can discover with which procmail):

"|IFS=' ' && exec /usr/bin/procmail -f- || exit 75 #user"

How do I use SpamAssassin with procmail?

Now, edit or create a .procmailrc file in your home directory containing the below lines, which come from the [http://spamassassin.org/dist/procmailrc.example procmailrc.example].

# SpamAssassin sample procmailrc
#
# Pipe the mail through spamassassin (replace 'spamassassin' with 'spamc'
# if you use the spamc/spamd combination)
#
# The condition line ensures that only messages smaller than 250 kB
# (250 * 1024 = 256000 bytes) are processed by SpamAssassin. Most spam
# isn't bigger than a few k and working with big messages can bring
# SpamAssassin to its knees.
#
# The lock file ensures that only 1 spamassassin invocation happens
# at 1 time, to keep the load down.
#
:0fw: spamassassin.lock
* < 256000
| spamassassin

# Mails with a score of 15 or higher are almost certainly spam (with 0.05%
# false positives according to rules/STATISTICS.txt). Let's put them in a
# different mbox. (This one is optional.)
:0:
* ^X-Spam-Level: \*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*
almost-certainly-spam

# All mail tagged as spam (eg. with a score higher than the set threshold)
# is moved to "probably-spam".
:0:
* ^X-Spam-Status: Yes
probably-spam

# Work around procmail bug: any output on stderr will cause the "F" in "From"
# to be dropped.  This will re-add it.
:0
* ^^rom[ ]
{
  LOG="*** Dropped F off From_ header! Fixing up. "
  
  :0 fhw
  | sed -e '1s/^/F/'
}

If you already have a .procmailrc file, add the above lines to your .procmailrc file. If you don't currently have a procmail file, you can import that one by entering

wget http://spamassassin.org/dist/procmailrc.example
mv procmail.example .procmailrc

Detailed instructions

See SingleUserUnixInstall for very detailed instructions.

Important details

If you're running procmail as root, you need to add the line DROPPRIVS=yes at the top of the procmail script to avoid having an invalid owner of the processed email.

Another common (but more complicated) use of procmail is to forward mail to another account, after processing with SpamAssassin. This can also support mistake-based Bayes training. See ProcmailToForwardMail.

The [http://www.spamassassin.org/doc/spamc.html spamc] client program can be used instead of [http://www.spamassassin.org/doc/spamassassin.html spamassassin], if you intend to install and use the [http://www.spamassassin.org/doc/spamd.html spamd] server system-wide.

Read [http://mirrors.ccs.neu.edu/cgi-bin/unixhelp/man-cgi?procmailrc 'man procmailrc'] and [http://mirrors.ccs.neu.edu/cgi-bin/unixhelp/man-cgi?procmailex 'man procmailex'] for further details and explanation.

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