> Mike Burger wrote: > >>>>> I'm running postfix + dovecot on my CentOS server, >>>>> together with amavisd, clamd and spamassassin, >>>>> following the instructions in >>>>> <http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/postfix>. >>>>> As far as I can see it is all working, >>>>> but I must admit I'm not clear exactly what path >>>>> an incoming email travels along. >>>>> I asked this question before, and someone suggested >>>>> a document I should read, >>>>> but unfortunately I've mislaid the note I made at the time. > >> Assuming that you've properly configured the master.cf and main.cf to >> allow amavisd/clamav scanning of email, the following is how the process >> will flow: >> >> Remote mail client (user, some other mail server, etc) connects to port >> 25 >> to send an email through your Postfix installation. >> >> Postfix passes the email to amavisd over some port. >> >> Amavisd processes the email through clamav and, if the message is clean, >> passes it back to Postfix through a different port. >> >> Postfix delivers the message (to a remote mail server, or to a local >> user). > > Thanks for your response. > I've a couple of queries. > > 1) Where does SpamAssassin come into the process? > > 2) In my case all incoming email comes through fetchmail > from external mail servers like gmail. > I take it that this is sent through port 25 to postfix, > more precisely to the sendmail emulator of postfix? > > 3) I take it that in the last stage postfix passes the email to dovecot, > which stores it in ~/Maildir/cur/ (in my case). > > It is picked up from there by KMail on my laptop, > but that is another story. 1) Usually via procmail, called in /etc/procmailrc. On my system, that file contains: USER=`whoami` :0 fw | spamc :0 e { EXITCODE=$? } 2) Fetchmail is, effectively, a mail client, and connects to Gmail via IMAP or POP3. Without seeing the fetchmail configuration (I've never had to make use of it), I'll have to assume that fetchmail does pass the mail through to Postfix over port 25. To clarify on the second part of this question, there's no "sendmail emulator" in play, though...Postfix is a replacement for Sendmail, with all the requisite functionality built in without having to resort to some sort of emulation. 3) Postfix makes use of the procmail agent to deliver the email to the mail spools in /var/spool/mail and/or, if the user has procmail recipes in place to do any type of sorting/archival, mail spool files usually in $HOMEDIR/mail. Dovecot then queries those mailstores (POP3 will only query the inbox in /var/spool/mail, IMAP will query all of the other folders as long as your mail client requests it to do so). _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos