- remove OpenBSD-bmf-mini-howto.html (redundant with README) and add a
.gnus sample configuration in README; - while there, remove "" from the COMMENT line. from Jim Razmus (maintainer); gnus bits by me
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14760fb0b1
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@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
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# $OpenBSD: Makefile,v 1.10 2005/10/07 00:21:04 fgsch Exp $
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# $OpenBSD: Makefile,v 1.11 2007/09/07 08:13:20 aanriot Exp $
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COMMENT= "easy to use Bayesian spam filter"
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COMMENT= easy to use Bayesian spam filter
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DISTNAME= bmf-0.9.4
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PKGNAME= ${DISTNAME}p0
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PKGNAME= ${DISTNAME}p1
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CATEGORIES= mail
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HOMEPAGE= http://sourceforge.net/projects/bmf
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@ -35,9 +35,6 @@ INSTALL_TARGET= MANDIR=${PREFIX}/man \
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BINDIR=${PREFIX}/bin \
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install
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DOCS= README ${FILESDIR}/OpenBSD-bmf-mini-howto.html
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NO_REGRESS= Yes
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post-install:
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@ -45,7 +42,7 @@ post-install:
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strip ${PREFIX}/bin/$$f; \
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done
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${INSTALL_DATA_DIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/bmf
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${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/${DOCS} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/bmf
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${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/README ${PREFIX}/share/doc/bmf
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.include <bsd.port.mk>
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@ -1,127 +0,0 @@
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
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<html>
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<head>
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<title>bmf mini-howto</title>
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" >
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<link rel="STYLESHEET" href="http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/docbook.css">
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</head>
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<body>
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<h3>Theoretical part:</h3>
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<p>Before you start to use bmf it is a good thing to know a little bit about
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the theoretical background of
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<a href="http://www.paulgraham.com/spam.html">Bayesian spamfiltering</a>.
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<h3>Training bmf:</h3>
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<p>Lets take a look at this basic <tt class="FILENAME">.procmailrc</tt> example.
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<dl><dd><pre>
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:0fw
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* < 256000
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| bmf -p
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:0e
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{
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EXITCODE=$?
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}
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:0:
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* ^X-Spam-Status: Yes
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zspam # This is the mailbox where all spam goes.
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:0w
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inbox # This is your inbox</pre></dd></dl>
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<p>bmf will now sort your mail in a spam and non-spam folder. Training
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bmf means you have to tell it when it has made a mistake.
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As an example you can add these shortcuts to your <tt class="FILENAME">.muttrc</tt>
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<dl><dd><pre>
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macro index <f3> "|bmf -S\n<save-message>=zspam\n" "SPAM"
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macro index <f4> "|bmf -N\n<save-message>=inbox\n" "NOT SPAM"
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macro pager <f3> "|bmf -S\n<save-message>=zspam\n" "SPAM"
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macro pager <f4> "|bmf -N\n<save-message>=inbox\n" "NOT SPAM"
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</pre></dd></dl>
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<p>Now you can press the F3 button to tell bmf a message in your inbox
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is spam ( <tt class="FILENAME">bmf -S</tt> ) and move it to your
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spam-folder. If you find a non-spam message in your spam-folder you
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can press F4 and bmf will unregister the message as spam and put it
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in your normal mailfolder.
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<h3>Feeding a spam-archive to bmf:</h3>
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<p>To speed up the process of feeding the bmf-database you can also
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download a recent
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<a href="http://www.em.ca/~bruceg/spam/">spam archive</a>
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and run the files in the archive through the following one-liner:
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<dl><dd><pre>for i in * ; do bmf -s -i $i; done</pre></dd></dl>
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<p>This method is not recommended by the author since the headers of a
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message are also taken in account. And the headers of the messages
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from a spam-archive do not match yours. But I had good results with
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this method.
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<h3>Mixing with SpamAssassin:</h3>
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<p>You can also mix bmf with
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<a href="http://spamassassin.org">SpamAssassin</a>.
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bmf is much lighter than spamassassin but SpamAssassin does not have
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to be trained. You can actually use SpamAssassin to train bmf. Change
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your <tt class="FILENAME">.procmailrc</tt> to something like this:
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<dl><dd><pre>
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:0fw
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* < 256000
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| bmf -p
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:0e
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{
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EXITCODE=$?
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}
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:0:
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* ^X-Spam-Status: Yes
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zspam-bmf
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:0fw
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* < 256000
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| spamc -p 4321 -f
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:0e
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{
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EXITCODE=$?
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}
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:0:
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* ^X-Spam-Status: Yes
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{
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:0c
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| spamassassin -d | bmf -S
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:0
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zspam-sa
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}
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:0w
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inbox</pre></dd></dl>
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<p>All spam caught by bmf will be send to the zspam-bmf folder. All spam
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missed by bmf but caught by SpamAssassin will be fed to bmf for
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training and then send to the zspam-sa folder.
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<h3>Disclaimer:</h3>
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<p>If anything bad happens to your email I am not responsible. If you
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have any improvements to this document please send them to the
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maintainer of this port.
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</body>
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</html>
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29
mail/bmf/patches/patch-README
Normal file
29
mail/bmf/patches/patch-README
Normal file
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$OpenBSD: patch-README,v 1.1 2007/09/07 08:13:20 aanriot Exp $
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--- README.orig Fri Sep 7 10:02:26 2007
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+++ README Fri Sep 7 10:03:34 2007
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@@ -92,6 +92,25 @@ These will override these commands:
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<Esc>t = test for spamicity.
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<Esc>u = de-register as spam, register as non-spam, and move to inbox folder.
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+Alternatively, if you use gnus you could add the following lines to your
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+.gnus to accomplish a similar result:
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+
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+(defun spam ()
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+ (interactive)
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+ (pipe-message "/usr/local/bin/bmf -S")
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+ (gnus-summary-move-article 1 "nnml:Spam"))
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+
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+(defun notspam ()
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+ (interactive)
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+ (pipe-message "/usr/local/bin/bmf -N")
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+ (gnus-summary-move-article 1 "nnml:inbox"))
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+
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+(add-hook
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+ 'gnus-sum-load-hook
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+ (lambda nil
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+ (define-key gnus-summary-mode-map (read-kbd-macro "C-c C-o") 'spam)
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+ (define-key gnus-summary-mode-map (read-kbd-macro "C-c C-p") 'notspam)))
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+
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How to train bmf
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================
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@ -1,8 +1,7 @@
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@comment $OpenBSD: PLIST,v 1.3 2004/09/15 09:09:41 espie Exp $
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@comment $OpenBSD: PLIST,v 1.4 2007/09/07 08:13:20 aanriot Exp $
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bin/bmf
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bin/bmfconv
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@man man/man1/bmf.1
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@man man/man1/bmfconv.1
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share/doc/bmf/
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share/doc/bmf/OpenBSD-bmf-mini-howto.html
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share/doc/bmf/README
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