On Monday 13 April 2009 23:31:22 Kai Schaetzl wrote: > Anne Wilson wrote on Mon, 13 Apr 2009 12:47:50 +0100: > > It doesn't. > > I thought so. You should have found that out yourself and told here in your > first posting! > I had already found that out, and thought it so obvious that it didn't need mentioning. You really are judgemental, aren't you? > I'm under the impression that a socket cannot be manually created, > > > but has to be created by the application, so I simply don't know what to > > do about this. > > Nothing. So far I haven't seen a reason to change it from the default. > There is *NO* instruction in that short tutorial that tells you to do this. > So, simply leave it where it was and tell amavisd where to find that > socket! I remember you had the exact same problem some weeks ago, when you > also changed the clamd socket for some obscure reason and it stopped > working. Didn't you learn from that? You can't just change those paths for > fun. The program has to be able to write to that new path, of course! > Judgemental again - I had not changed the path, which is why I had the problem this time. The default did not work. I made the mistake of assuming that if it was default there would not be a problem with it. Anne -- New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org Just found a cool new feature? Add it to UserBase -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 197 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part. URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20090414/bb89e973/attachment-0005.sig>