Using the Spam Panel

The Spam Panel includes controls for managing spam and setting up user accounts.




The Spam
Panel

Real-time Black Lists

This field allows you to list RBL (Real-Time Black Lists) sites that you want your server to check against. If you have more than one, you should separate them by commas. Such sites include bl.spamcop.net, sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org, cbl.abuseat.org, etc... You can choose from among a lot more if you search Google.

Mailbox Size Limit

Set to 0 for no limit, which may be useful for people running Fetchmail. The default is about 50 MB.

Catch All Mail Box

You can choose who, among your users, gets to be swamped by mail that cannot find a valid user on your server. If you elect not to nominate anyone, all these messages will be bounced back to the sender.

Or sent into the black hole, if you choose /dev/null in the popup menu.

Spam Filtering using SpamBayes

MailServe Snow can turn on Spam Filtering using SpamBayes with just one click.

The mail administrator will find two special folders in his Spam folder (created by MailServe) – one for spam samples and the other for false positives. A SpamBayes training job runs at set intervals, using the samples the administrator has placed into his training folders.

The administrator trains SpamBayes on behalf of all the other mail users.

Each time the training job runs, SpamBayes gets better at recognising spam. The spam samples are deleted automatically after each training run (but not the false positives in case they are still needed for filing).

Please note that MailServe Snow's spam fltering mechanism needs Dovecot to be running.

Procmail

MailServe Snow uses Procmail to integrate Postfix, Dovecot and SpamBayes.

With version 4.1.4 of MailServe Snow, there is now a Procmail button in the Spam Panel that will allow the administrator to set up custom Procmail directives to be processed before or after spam filtering. The administrator can also edit the default procmailrc directives, with the option to revert to default if the custom edits do not work.



Mail User Account Management

The Spam panel contains a Mail User Management utility, which allows the administrator to create or delete mail users, set passwords, and decide if they are to be standard OS X users, or users with a minimal home folder (to store the IMAP folders) who are hidden from the OS X Login Window.

The administrator can also decide for each user if his spam mail will be deleted right away (sent to /dev/null) or continue to be collected in the spam folder.

I'm using the example below to show that the entry fields allow you to enter diacriticals and umlauts, etc., for the user name and the OS X short name (the account name).

But not for the password field, though (I think) I remember that it used to be possible. I'm not sure at which version of OS X that ceased to be true.