sa-awl(1)

awl - examine and manipulate SpamAssassin's auto-welcomelist db

Section 1 spamassassin bookworm source

Description

SA-AWL.RAW

NAME

sa-awl - examine and manipulate SpamAssassin’s auto-welcomelist db

SYNOPSIS

sa-awl [--clean] [--dry-run] [--min n] [dbfile]

DESCRIPTION

Check or clean a SpamAssassin auto-welcomelist ( AWL ) database file.

The name of the file is specified after any options, as "dbfile". The default is "$HOME/.spamassassin/auto-welcomelist".

OPTIONS

--clean

Clean out infrequently-used AWL entries. The "--min" switch can be used to select the threshold at which entries are kept or deleted.

--dry-run

When specified with th "--clean" option it displays the infrequently-used AWL entries that will be deleted. The "--min" switch can be used to select the threshold at which entries are kept or deleted.

--min n

Select the threshold at which entries are kept or deleted when "--clean" is used. The default is 2, so entries that have only been seen once are deleted.

OUTPUT

The output looks like this:

AVG (TOTSCORE/COUNT) -- EMAIL|ip=IPBASE

For example:

0.0 (0.0/7) -- dawson@example.com|ip=208.192
21.8 (43.7/2) -- mcdaniel_2s2000@example.com|ip=200.106

"AVG" is the average score; "TOTSCORE" is the total score of all mails seen so far; "COUNT" is the number of messages seen from that sender; "EMAIL" is the sender’s email address, and "IPBASE" is the AWL base IP address.

AWL base IP address is a way to identify the sender’s IP address they frequently send from, in an approximate way, but remaining hard for spammers to spoof. The algorithm is as follows:

- take the last Received header that contains a public IP address -- namely
one which is not in private, unrouted IP space.
- chop off the last two octets, assuming that the user may be in an ISP's
dynamic address pool.