Upgrading SpamAssassin? ----------------------- Please be sure to read the UPGRADE file for important changes that have been made since previous versions. Installing or Upgrading SpamAssassin ------------------------------------ Using CPAN via CPAN.pm: perl -MCPAN -e shell [as root] o conf prerequisites_policy ask install Mail::SpamAssassin quit Using Linux: Debian unstable: apt-get install spamassassin Gentoo: emerge mail-filter/spamassassin Fedora: yum install spamassassin Alternatively download the tarfile, zipfile, and/or build your own RPM from http://spamassassin.apache.org/. Building from tar/zip file is usually as simple as: [unzip/untar the archive] cd Mail-SpamAssassin-* perl Makefile.PL [option: add -DSPAMC_SSL to $CFLAGS to build an SSL-enabled spamc] make make install [as root] Please make sure to read this whole document before installing, especially the prerequisite information further down. To install as non-root, see the directions below. If you are running AFS, you may also need to specify INSTALLSITELIB and SITELIBEXP. Note that you can upgrade SpamAssassin using these instructions, as long as you take care to read the caveats in the file UPGRADE. Upgrading will not delete your learnt Bayes data or local rule modifications. If you're using SunOS 4.1.x, see http://wiki.spamassassin.org/w/BuildingOnSunOS4 for build tips. Installing SpamAssassin for Personal Use (Not System-Wide) ---------------------------------------------------------- These steps assume the following, so substitute as necessary: - Your UNIX login is "user" - Your home directory is /home/user - The location of the procmail executable is /usr/bin/procmail Many more details of this process are at http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/SingleUserUnixInstall 1. Uncompress and extract the SpamAssassin archive, using "unzip" or "tar xvfz", in a temporary directory. 2. change directory into it: cd Mail-SpamAssassin-* 3. Make SpamAssassin as normal, but using your home directory as the target: perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=$HOME make make install Please see the file PACKAGING, sections "Changing paths in the Makefile" and "Setting further options on the command line" for more informations on available command line variables. 4. If you already use procmail, skip to step 6. If not, ensure procmail is installed using "which procmail" or install it from www.procmail.org. 5. Create a .forward file in your home directory containing the below lines: "|IFS=' ' && exec /usr/bin/procmail -f- || exit 75 #user" 6. Edit or create a .procmailrc file in your home directory containing the below lines. If you already have a .procmailrc file, add the lines to the top of your .procmailrc file: :0fw: spamassassin.lock | /home/user/bin/spamassassin The above line filters all incoming mail through SpamAssassin and tags probable spam with a unique header. If you would prefer to have spam blocked and saved to a file called "caughtspam" in your home directory, instead of passed through and tagged, append this directly below the above lines: :0: * ^X-Spam-Status: Yes caughtspam Also, see the file procmailrc.example and http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/UsedViaProcmail 7. Now, you should be ready to send some test emails and ensure everything works as expected. First, send yourself a test email that doesn't contain anything suspicious. You should receive it normally, but there will be a header containing "X-Spam-Status: No". If you are only tagging your spam, send yourself a copy of the GTUBE test string to check to be sure it is marked as spam. GTUBE is located in the sample-spam.txt message distributed with SpamAssassin and also at: http://spamassassin.apache.org/gtube/ If your test emails don't get through to you, immediately rename your .forward file until you figure out cause of the the problem, so you don't lose incoming email. Note: one possible cause for this is the use of smrsh on the MTA system; see http://wiki.spamassassin.org/w/ProcmailVsSmrsh for details. 8. You can now customize SpamAssassin. See README for more information. CPAN ---- Most of the modules listed below are available via the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN, see http://www.cpan.org/ for more information). While each module is different, most can be installed via a few simple commands such as: $ perl -MCPAN -e shell cpan> o conf prerequisites_policy ask cpan> install Module::Name cpan> quit If there are problems or questions regarding the installation any of the modules, please see the CPAN and relevant module's documentation for more information. We can't provide documentation or installation support for third party modules. Additional information about the CPAN module is also available via "perldoc CPAN". Most Linux distributions also offer the CPAN modules in their own native formats (RPMs, Debian packages, etc.), so you should be able to find these through those mechanisms, too, if you prefer. Required Perl Interpreter ------------------------- Perl 5.6.1 or a later version is required. Required Perl Modules --------------------- In addition to the modules associated with Perl, some additional modules need to be installed or upgraded depending on the version of Perl that you are running. You can get an immediate report on which of these modules you may need (or want) to upgrade, by running "perl build/check_dependencies" from the SpamAssassin build directory. The list of required modules that do not ship with Perl and must be installed: - Digest::SHA1 (from CPAN) The Digest::SHA1 module is used as a cryptographic hash for some tests and the Bayes subsystem. Debian: apt-get install libdigest-sha1-perl Gentoo: emerge dev-perl/Digest-SHA1 - HTML::Parser >= 3.43 (from CPAN) HTML is used for an ever-increasing amount of email so this dependency is unavoidable. Run "perldoc -q html" for additional information. Debian: apt-get install libhtml-parser-perl Gentoo: emerge dev-perl/HTML-Parser - Net::DNS (from CPAN) Used for all DNS-based tests (SBL, XBL, SpamCop, DSBL, etc.), perform MX checks, used when manually reporting spam to SpamCop, and used by sa-update to gather version information. You need to make sure the Net::DNS version is sufficiently up-to-date: - version 0.34 or higher on Unix systems - version 0.46 or higher on Windows systems - LWP (aka libwww-perl) (from CPAN) This set of modules will include both the LWP::UserAgent and HTTP::Date modules, used by sa-update to retrieve update archives. - HTTP::Date (from CPAN) Used by sa-update to deal with certain Date requests. - IO::Zlib (from CPAN) Used by sa-update to uncompress update archives. Version 1.04 or later is required. - Archive::Tar (from CPAN) Used by sa-update to expand update archives. Version 1.23 or later is required. Optional Modules ---------------- In addition, the following modules will be used for some checks, if available and the version is high enough. If they are not available or if their version is too low, SpamAssassin will still work, just not as effectively because some of the spam-detection tests will have to be skipped. Note: SpamAssassin will not warn you if these are installed, but the version is too low for them to be used. - MIME::Base64 This module is highly recommended to increase the speed with which Base64 encoded messages/mail parts are decoded. - DB_File (from CPAN, included in many distributions) Used to store data on-disk, for the Bayes-style logic and auto-whitelist. *Much* more efficient than the other standard Perl database packages. Strongly recommended. There seems to be a bug in libdb 4.1.25, which is distributed by default on some versions of Linux. See http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/DbFileSleepBug for details. - Net::SMTP (from CPAN) Used when manually reporting spam to SpamCop. - Mail::SPF (from CPAN) or Mail::SPF::Query (from CPAN) Used to check DNS Sender Policy Framework (SPF) records to fight email address forgery and make it easier to identify spams. Either of Mail::SPF or Mail::SPF::Query can be used but Mail::SPF is preferred as it is the current reference implementation for RFC 4408. Net::DNS version 0.58 or higher is required to use Mail::SPF. Net::DNS version 0.34 or higher is required to use Mail::SPF::Query. If using Mail::SPF note that NetAddr::IP (required by Mail::SPF) versions up to and including version 4.006 include a bug that will slow down the entire perl interpreter. NetAddr::IP version 4.007 or later fixes this. - IP::Country::Fast (from CPAN) Used by the RelayCountry plugin (not enabled by default) to determine the domain country codes of each relay in the path of an email. - Net::Ident (from CPAN) If you plan to use the --auth-ident option to spamd, you will need to install this module. - IO::Socket::INET6 (from CPAN) This is required if the first nameserver listed in your IP configuration or /etc/resolv.conf file is available only via an IPv6 address. - IO::Socket::SSL (from CPAN) If you wish to use SSL encryption to communicate between spamc and spamd (the --ssl option to spamd), you need to install this module. (You will need the OpenSSL libraries and use the ENABLE_SSL="yes" argument to Makefile.PL to build and run an SSL compatibile spamc.) - Compress::Zlib (from CPAN) If you wish to use the optional zlib compression for communication between spamc and spamd (the -z option to spamc), useful for long-distance use of spamc over the internet, you need to install this module. - Time::HiRes (from CPAN) If this module is installed, the processing times are logged/reported more precisely. - Mail::DKIM (from CPAN) If this module is installed, and you enable the DKIM plugin, SpamAssassin will perform DKIM lookups when a DKIM-Signature header is present in the message headers. If Mail::DKIM version 0.20 or later is installed, this will also perform Domain Key lookups on DomainKey-Signature headers, without requiring the Mail::DomainKeys module. Note that the Mail::DKIM module in turn requres the OpenSSL libraries. - Mail::DomainKeys (from CPAN) If this module is installed, and you enable the DomainKeys plugin, SpamAssassin will perform Domain Key lookups when Domain Key information is present in the message headers. Note that Mail::DKIM version 0.20 or later will perform Domain Key lookups, so this may be redundant. Note that the Mail::DomainKeys module in turn requres the OpenSSL libraries and the CPAN module Crypt::OpenSSL::Bignum. - DBI *and* DBD driver/modules for your database (from CPAN) If you intend to use SpamAssassin with an SQL database backend for user configuration data, Bayes storage, or other storage, you will need to have these installed; both the basic DBI module and the driver for your database. - Encode::Detect (from CPAN) If you plan to use the normalize_charset config setting to detect charsets and convert them into Unicode, you will need to install this module. - Apache::Test (from CPAN) If you plan to run the Apache2 version of spamd in the "spamd-apache2" directory, you will need to install this module. - Apache 2 and mod_perl If you plan to run the Apache2 version of spamd in the "spamd-apache2" directory, you will need to ensure these are installed. Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install apache2 libapache2-mod-perl2 - Razor2 If you plan to use Vipul's Razor, note that versions up to and including version 2.82 include a bug that will slow down the entire perl interpreter. Version 2.83 or later fixes this. If you do not plan to use this plugin, be sure to comment out its loadplugin line in "/etc/mail/spamassassin/v310.pre". What Next? ---------- Take a look at the USAGE document for more information on how to use SpamAssassin. The SpamAssassin Wiki contains information on custom plugins, extensions, and other optional modules included with SpamAssassin. (end of INSTALL) // vim:tw=74: