1.3.123
Another ./configure adjustment for NetBSD.
Release /var/dcc/libexec/ck2ip
Fix bug that broke DCC Reputation server count statistics.
Put "reps=0%" into X-DCC header when that is the answer.
Add "cksums" to the MTA-to-dccifd ASCII protocol for SpamAssassin
auto-learn. See /var/dcc/build/dcc/misc/DCC.pm or
http://www.dcc-servers.net/dcc/dcc-tree/misc/DCC.pm
Fix `dccm -aIGNORE` bug reported by Chris Aseltine.
Add "option greylist-log-on" and "option greylist-log-off" for
whiteclnt files. greylist-log-on makes spam wait until after
a greylist embargo before it is rejected and spam does not reset
the embargo for a greylist triple.
1.3.113
Work around broken updatedcc in version 1.3.109
1.3.112
Fix dccproc, dccm, and dccifd -B...,any, bug reported by Bart Dumon.
Add dccproc, dccm, and dccifd -Bdomain,IPaddr,all-names as suggested by
Bart Dumon.
Delete ill conceived dccm, dccproc, dccifd -Bset:temp-fail
Add /var/dcc/libexec/dcc-nagios
1.3.111
fix "trap -" hiccup in updatedcc on Solaris
1.3.103
Quiet RedHat versus Debian error message from rcDCC reported by Ken Rea.
Deal with corrupt /var/dcc/map reported by Steve Martin instead of
calling abort().
Fix error in libexec/fetch-testmsg-whitelist reported by Horst Scheuermann
and William Taylor.
Tweak ./configure and makefiles to try to avoid the mysterious,
unreproducable linking problem reported by John Levine.
Fix bug with `./configure --with-max-log-size=0` reported by
Valentin Schmid.
`./configure --with-max-log-size=KB` now also applies to dccproc log files.
Generate man pages with /var/dcc and other directories replaced by
local ./configure choices. This is intended to help the FreeBSD
package and similar redistributions.
- Remove all options except dccm.
- Override do-install, remove patch-aa.
- Use SPECIAL_PERMS, add user-destdir support.
Add note from author:
On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 06:27:03PM +0000,
Vernon Schryver wrote:
>
> There should be no patches in whatever
> you distribute. Updatedcc must work.
The Distributed Checksum Clearinghouses or DCC is an anti-spam content filter
that runs on a variety of operating systems. As of the middle of 2007, it
involves millions of users, more than six hundred thousand client computer
systems, and more than 250 servers collecting and counting checksums related to
more than 300 million mail messages on week days. The counts can be used by
SMTP servers and mail user agents to detect and reject or filter spam or
unsolicited bulk mail. DCC servers exchange or "flood" common checksums. The
checksums include values that are constant across common variations in bulk
messages, including "personalizations".