77 lines
3.6 KiB
Plaintext
77 lines
3.6 KiB
Plaintext
Replied: Sat, 05 Oct 2002 13:03:11 +0100
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Replied: Justin Mason <yyyy@example.com>
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Replied: Craig R Hughes <craig@hughes-family.org>
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Replied: Daniel Quinlan <quinlan@pathname.com>
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Replied: SpamAssassin Developers <SpamAssassin-devel@example.sourceforge.net>
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From craig@hughes-family.org Sat Oct 5 12:38:05 2002
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Return-Path: <craig@hughes-family.org>
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for <jm@localhost>; Sat, 5 Oct 2002 12:38:04 +0100 (IST)
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ESMTP id 8BB783FDD; Sat, 5 Oct 2002 01:12:23 -0700 (PDT)
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Date: Sat, 5 Oct 2002 01:12:23 -0700 (PDT)
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From: Craig R Hughes <craig@hughes-family.org>
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To: Daniel Quinlan <quinlan@pathname.com>
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Cc: Justin Mason <yyyy@example.com>,
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SpamAssassin Developers <SpamAssassin-devel@lists.sourceforge.net>
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Subject: Re: [SAdev] nightly mass-check and hit-frequencies
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In-Reply-To: <yf265whg1ai.fsf@proton.pathname.com>
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Message-Id: <Pine.LNX.4.44.0210050111040.4446-100000@belphegore.hughes-family.org>
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X-Habeas-Swe-1: winter into spring
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X-Habeas-Swe-2: brightly anticipated
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X-Habeas-Swe-3: like Habeas SWE (tm)
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tests=AWL,EMAIL_ATTRIBUTION,FORGED_RCVD_TRAIL,HABEAS_SWE,
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X-Spam-Level:
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Daniel Quinlan wrote:
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DQ> jm@jmason.org (Justin Mason) writes:
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DQ>
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DQ> > But I think rsync is key; it's very efficient bandwidth-wise, and it
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DQ> > allows you to select which ones you want just as well as wget would.
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DQ> > (Bandwidth is a much bigger issue for me and some other of the europeans
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DQ> > involved, than it would be for you guys ;) IMO it's by far the most
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DQ> > efficient and scriptable way to do this stuff, these days.
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DQ>
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DQ> It must be horrible being a dial-up user in 2002. If we can *automate*
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DQ> rsync submission with good *authentication*, it would be fine with me.
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DQ> The current rsync method is not sufficiently authenticated, though.
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I'll take a look at it. I'm sure there's got to be some reasonly easy way to
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have rsync carry itself over ssh and secure access using ssh keys.
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DQ> > I suggest we use the hughes-family.org server for rsyncing, as we do for
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DQ> > the corpus_submit stuff -- in a separate subdirectory, though! -- then
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DQ> > I'll take a look at getting a nightly hit-frequencies-collation system
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DQ> > going.
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Ok, I'll take a look at it.
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C
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