On 2014/11/13 12:43, Darr247 wrote:
On 13 November 2014 @21:51 zulu, Miranda Hawarden-Ogata wrote:
Have you tried setting up the TB filter to mark as not-junk when it runs? Mine are set to "apply before junk classification" matching on "to/from/cc/bcc contains centos@centos.org" and then the actions are "move to folder", "set junk to not-junk", "stop filter exec". It seems to work, I don't recall getting any false-junks in quite a while... I do also have a gmail filter that "never spam" filters all centos.org email.
Thanks! Miranda
- You sent that to my email, not the list.
- I already have "Filter before Junk Classification" selected in that
filter's Getting New Mail picklist. 3) You should look in your Spam folder and see if there aren't some emails with [CentOS] in their Subject lines. If it's completely empty, possibly you're having TB delete emails it thinks are junk.
1) I replied privately to reduce the list load since it was a TB config issue that I was addressing and not particularly the topic being discussed, where you and I are doing something similar and I was interested to know why my solution works and yours doesn't. But oh well :)
2) The pertinent part of the TB filter was the "set junk to not-junk", but that will only work if the filtering is applied before TB junking occurs, which is why I mentioned it to confirm your settings.
3) I do not have any mailing list messages deposited in my spam boxes and do not have any "/dev/null" redirects either in gmail or in TB (and never will. I'm a sysad, therefore the word paranoid cannot be applied
:D). I can say with certainty that none of my mailing list emails have
wound up in any of the 3 spam boxes that they could land in. I have checked them all. As I was mentioning, I have filters set up on all the mailing lists that I care about to not spam/junk any messages on those lists. And those filters have been working reliably for some time now. Which is why I am curious to know what is different between your filtering and mine.
Thanks! Miranda