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by dochtman 3741 days ago
I've started using this a few months ago on my mail server that mostly just forwards stuff to GMail, and it's been really good. It catches (and rejects) most of the bad stuff before it even ends up in GMail's filters and, more importantly, this means my forwarding server doesn't get rate-limited anymore by GMail for sending so much spam.

I've been packaging rspamd for Gentoo, and it's pretty straightforward to build and run (more so now if you run Gentoo, of course), so that's good too.

1 comments

This is the first time I've seen rspamd, looks interesting, do you find it better than spamassassin?
My opinion is definitely not very objective as I'm the author of this project, however, I tried to do some recent comparison of rspamd vs SA: https://rspamd.com/misc/2016/03/03/rspamd-performance.html and there is another 3-rd party opinion here: https://github.com/haraka/Haraka/pull/964#issuecomment-10069....

In brief, rspamd can use the most of SA rules but it provides more optimization tricks than SA does. However, it is less mature and could be harder to setup than SA. You can also check my recent FOSDEM talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fl9i-az_Q0

I'm really sorry that this information is not in the landing page of rspamd.com - that's obviously my fault.

You may already have this posted somewhere, but a feature comparison between SA and rspamd would be very handy.
Well, I've recently ported a massive setup of SA rules and I've tried to add all functions that are supported by SA to rspamd. The only ones unsupported are pyzor/razor/dcc (all that is covered by fuzzy check: https://rspamd.com/doc/modules/fuzzy_check.html).

Both systems support statistics (rspamd uses 5-gramms hidden Markov model and SA uses naive bayes), they both support different backends for statistics (redis and sqlite for rspamd), per-user statistics, autolearning. Among network checks, they support URIBLs, RBLs, DMARC, DKIM, SPF. Obviously, both systems support regexp rules. However, I'm not an expert in SA features and might thus miss something...

And since the author's already here: A similar comparison between rspamd and dspam would be neat as well - I remember that I stumbled upon rspamd in the past, but went with dspam for some reason.

I think it was either related to learning (but rspamd can do that, right?) or the db backend (I didn't want to run multiple database backends and anything that didn't support postgresql was out right away). Then again, I might be completely off.