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SA-LEARN(1) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
SA-LEARN(1) |
sa-learn - train SpamAssassin's Bayesian classifier
sa-learn [options] [file]...
sa-learn [options] --dump [ all | data | magic ]
Options:
--ham Learn messages as ham (non-spam)
--spam Learn messages as spam
--forget Forget a message
--use-ignores Use bayes_ignore_from and bayes_ignore_to
--sync Synchronize the database and the journal if needed
--force-expire Force a database sync and expiry run
--dbpath <path> Allows commandline override (in bayes_path form)
for where to read the Bayes DB from
--dump [all|data|magic] Display the contents of the Bayes database
Takes optional argument for what to display
--regexp <re> For dump only, specifies which tokens to
dump based on a regular expression.
-f file, --folders=file Read list of files/directories from file
--dir Ignored; historical compatibility
--file Ignored; historical compatibility
--mbox Input sources are in mbox format
--mbx Input sources are in mbx format
--max-size <b> Skip messages larger than b bytes;
defaults to 500 KB, 0 implies no limit
--showdots Show progress using dots
--progress Show progress using progress bar
--no-sync Skip synchronizing the database and journal
after learning
-L, --local Operate locally, no network accesses. Use
of this is recommended, see documentation.
--import Migrate data from older version/non DB_File
based databases
--clear Wipe out existing database
--backup Backup, to STDOUT, existing database
--restore <filename> Restore a database from filename
-u username, --username=username
Override username taken from the runtime
environment, used with SQL
-C path, --configpath=path, --config-file=path
Path to standard configuration dir
-p prefs, --prefspath=file, --prefs-file=file
Set user preferences file
--siteconfigpath=path Path for site configs
(default: /usr/local/etc/mail/spamassassin)
--cf='config line' Additional line of configuration
-D, --debug [area=n,...] Print debugging messages
-V, --version Print version
-h, --help Print usage message
Given a typical selection of your incoming mail classified as spam or ham
(non-spam), this tool will feed each mail to SpamAssassin, allowing it to
'learn' what signs are likely to mean spam, and which are likely to mean ham.
Simply run this command once for each of your mail folders, and it
will ''learn'' from the mail therein.
Note that csh-style globbing in the mail folder names is
supported; in other words, listing a folder name as
"*" will scan every folder that matches.
See "Mail::SpamAssassin::ArchiveIterator"
for more details.
If you are using mail boxes in format other than maildir you
should use the --mbox or --mbx parameters.
SpamAssassin remembers which mail messages it has learnt already,
and will not re-learn those messages again, unless you use the
--forget option. Messages learnt as spam will have SpamAssassin
markup removed, on the fly.
If you make a mistake and scan a mail as ham when it is spam, or
vice versa, simply rerun this command with the correct classification, and
the mistake will be corrected. SpamAssassin will automatically 'forget' the
previous indications.
Users of "spamd" who wish to
perform training remotely, over a network, should investigate the
"spamc -L" switch.
- --ham
- Learn the input message(s) as ham. If you have previously learnt any of
the messages as spam, SpamAssassin will forget them first, then re-learn
them as ham. Alternatively, if you have previously learnt them as ham,
it'll skip them this time around. If the messages have already been
filtered through SpamAssassin, the learner will ignore any modifications
SpamAssassin may have made.
- --spam
- Learn the input message(s) as spam. If you have previously learnt any of
the messages as ham, SpamAssassin will forget them first, then re-learn
them as spam. Alternatively, if you have previously learnt them as spam,
it'll skip them this time around. If the messages have already been
filtered through SpamAssassin, the learner will ignore any modifications
SpamAssassin may have made.
- --folders=filename, -f filename
- sa-learn will read in the list of folders from the specified file, one
folder per line in the file. If the folder is prefixed with
"ham:type:" or
"spam:type:", sa-learn will learn that
folder appropriately, otherwise the folders will be assumed to be of the
type specified by --ham or --spam.
"type" above is optional,
but is the same as the standard for ArchiveIterator: mbox, mbx, dir,
file, or detect (the default if not specified).
- --mbox
- sa-learn will read in the file(s) containing the emails to be learned, and
will process them in mbox format (one or more emails per file).
- --mbx
- sa-learn will read in the file(s) containing the emails to be learned, and
will process them in mbx format (one or more emails per file).
- --use-ignores
- Don't learn the message if a from address matches configuration file item
"bayes_ignore_from" or a to address
matches "bayes_ignore_to". The option
might be used when learning from a large file of messages from which the
hammy spam messages or spammy ham messages have not been removed.
- --sync
- Synchronize the journal and databases. Upon successfully syncing the
database with the entries in the journal, the journal file is
removed.
- --force-expire
- Forces an expiry attempt, regardless of whether it may be necessary or
not. Note: This doesn't mean any tokens will actually expire. Please see
the EXPIRATION section below.
Note: "--force-expire" also
causes the journal data to be synchronized into the Bayes databases.
- --forget
- Forget a given message previously learnt.
- --dbpath
- Allows a commandline override of the bayes_path configuration
option.
- --dump option
- Display the contents of the Bayes database. Without an option or with the
all option, all magic tokens and data tokens will be displayed.
magic will only display magic tokens, and data will only
display the data tokens.
Can also use the --regexp RE option to specify
which tokens to display based on a regular expression.
- --clear
- Clear an existing Bayes database by removing all traces of the database.
WARNING: This is destructive and should be used with care.
- --backup
- Performs a dump of the Bayes database in machine/human readable format.
The dump will include token and seen data. It is suitable for
input back into the --restore command.
- --restore=filename
- Performs a restore of the Bayes database defined by filename.
WARNING: This is a destructive operation, previous Bayes data
will be wiped out.
- -h, --help
- Print help message and exit.
- -u username, --username=username
- If specified this username will override the username taken from the
runtime environment. You can use this option to specify users in a virtual
user configuration when using SQL as the Bayes backend.
NOTE: This option will not change to the given
username, it will only attempt to act on behalf of that user.
Because of this you will need to have proper permissions to be able to
change files owned by username. In the case of SQL this generally
is not a problem.
- -C path, --configpath=path,
--config-file=path
- Use the specified path for locating the distributed configuration files.
Ignore the default directories (usually
"/usr/share/spamassassin" or
similar).
- --siteconfigpath=path
- Use the specified path for locating site-specific configuration files.
Ignore the default directories (usually
"/etc/mail/spamassassin" or
similar).
- --cf='config line'
- Add additional lines of configuration directly from the command-line,
parsed after the configuration files are read. Multiple --cf
arguments can be used, and each will be considered a separate line of
configuration.
- -p prefs, --prefspath=prefs,
--prefs-file=prefs
- Read user score preferences from prefs (usually
"$HOME/.spamassassin/user_prefs").
- --progress
- Prints a progress bar (to STDERR) showing the current progress. In the
case where no valid terminal is found this option will behave very much
like the --showdots option.
- -D [area,...], --debug [area,...]
- Produce debugging output. If no areas are listed, all debugging
information is printed. Diagnostic output can also be enabled for each
area individually; area is the area of the code to instrument. For
example, to produce diagnostic output on bayes, learn, and dns, use:
spamassassin -D bayes,learn,dns
For more information about which areas (also known as
channels) are available, please see the documentation at:
C<http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/DebugChannels>
Higher priority informational messages that are suitable for
logging in normal circumstances are available with an area of
"info".
- --no-sync
- Skip the slow synchronization step which normally takes place after
changing database entries. If you plan to learn from many folders in a
batch, or to learn many individual messages one-by-one, it is faster to
use this switch and run "sa-learn
--sync" once all the folders have been scanned.
Clarification: The state of --no-sync overrides the
bayes_learn_to_journal configuration option. If not specified,
sa-learn will learn to the database directly. If specified, sa-learn
will learn to the journal file.
Note: --sync and --no-sync can be specified on
the same commandline, which is slightly confusing. In this case, the
--no-sync option is ignored since there is no learn
operation.
- -L, --local
- Do not perform any network accesses while learning details about the mail
messages. This should be normally used, as there really isn't anything
Bayes can learn from network lookup results. Official SpamAssassin plugins
do not currently do any network lookups when learning, but it's possible
that third party ones might.
- --import
- If you previously used SpamAssassin's Bayesian learner without the
"DB_File" module installed, it will have
created files in other formats, such as
"GDBM_File",
"NDBM_File", or
"SDBM_File". This switch allows you to
migrate that old data into the "DB_File"
format. It will overwrite any data currently in the
"DB_File".
Can also be used with the --dbpath path option
to specify the location of the Bayes files to use.
There are now multiple backend storage modules available for storing user's
bayesian data. As such you might want to migrate from one backend to another.
Here is a simple procedure for migrating from one backend to another.
Note that if you have individual user databases you will have to
perform a similar procedure for each one of them.
- sa-learn --sync
- This will sync any outstanding journal entries
- sa-learn --backup > backup.txt
- This will save all your Bayes data to a plain text file.
- sa-learn --clear
- This is optional, but good to do to clear out the old database.
- Repeat!
- At this point, if you have multiple databases, you should perform the
procedure above for each of them. (i.e. each user's database needs to be
backed up before continuing.)
- Switch backends
- Once you have backed up all databases you can update your configuration
for the new database backend. This will involve at least the
bayes_store_module config option and may involve some additional config
options depending on what is required by the module. (For example, you may
need to configure an SQL database.)
- sa-learn --restore backup.txt
- Again, you need to do this for every database.
If you are migrating to SQL you can make use of the -u
<username> option in sa-learn to populate each user's database.
Otherwise, you must run sa-learn as the user who database you are
restoring.
(Thanks to Michael Bell for this section!)
For a more lengthy description of how this works, go to
http://www.paulgraham.com/ and see "A Plan for Spam". It's
reasonably readable, even if statistics make me break out in hives.
The short semi-inaccurate version: Given training, a spam
heuristics engine can take the most "spammy" and "hammy"
words and apply probabilistic analysis. Furthermore, once given a basis for
the analysis, the engine can continue to learn iteratively by applying both
the non-Bayesian and Bayesian rulesets together to create evolving
"intelligence".
SpamAssassin 2.50 and later supports Bayesian spam analysis, in
the form of the BAYES rules. This is a new feature, quite powerful, and is
disabled until enough messages have been learnt.
The pros of Bayesian spam analysis:
- Can greatly reduce false positives and false negatives.
- It learns from your mail, so it is tailored to your unique e-mail
flow.
- Once it starts learning, it can continue to learn from SpamAssassin and
improve over time.
And the cons:
- A decent number of messages are required before results are useful for
ham/spam determination.
- It's hard to explain why a message is or isn't marked as spam.
- i.e.: a straightforward rule, that matches, say, "VIAGRA" is
easy to understand. If it generates a false positive or false negative, it
is fairly easy to understand why.
With Bayesian analysis, it's all probabilities - "because
the past says it is likely as this falls into a probabilistic
distribution common to past spam in your systems". Tell that to
your users! Tell that to the client when he asks "what can I do to
change this". (By the way, the answer in this case is "use
whitelisting".)
- It will take disk space and memory.
- The databases it maintains take quite a lot of resources to store and
use.
Still interested? Ok, here's the guidelines for getting this working.
First a high-level overview:
- Build a significant sample of both ham and spam.
- I suggest several thousand of each, placed in SPAM and HAM directories or
mailboxes. Yes, you MUST hand-sort this - otherwise the results won't be
much better than SpamAssassin on its own. Verify the spamminess/haminess
of EVERY message. You're urged to avoid using a publicly available corpus
(sample) - this must be taken from YOUR mail server, if it is to be
statistically useful. Otherwise, the results may be pretty skewed.
- Use this tool to teach SpamAssassin about these samples, like so:
-
sa-learn --spam /path/to/spam/folder
sa-learn --ham /path/to/ham/folder
...
Let SpamAssassin proceed, learning stuff. When it finds ham
and spam it will add the "interesting tokens" to the
database.
- If you need SpamAssassin to forget about specific messages, use the
--forget option.
- This can be applied to either ham or spam that has run through the
sa-learn processes. It's a bit of a hammer, really, lowering the
weighting of the specific tokens in that message (only if that message has
been processed before).
- Learning from single messages uses a command like this:
-
sa-learn --ham --no-sync mailmessage
This is handy for binding to a key in your mail user agent.
It's very fast, as all the time-consuming stuff is deferred until you
run with the "--sync" option.
- Autolearning is enabled by default
- If you don't have a corpus of mail saved to learn, you can let
SpamAssassin automatically learn the mail that you receive. If you are
autolearning from scratch, the amount of mail you receive will determine
how long until the BAYES_* rules are activated.
Learning filters require training to be effective. If you don't train them, they
won't work. In addition, you need to train them with new messages regularly to
keep them up-to-date, or their data will become stale and impact accuracy.
You need to train with both spam and ham mails. One type of
mail alone will not have any effect.
Note that if your mail folders contain things like forwarded spam,
discussions of spam-catching rules, etc., this will cause trouble. You
should avoid scanning those messages if possible. (An easy way to do this is
to move them aside, into a folder which is not scanned.)
If the messages you are learning from have already been filtered
through SpamAssassin, the learner will compensate for this. In effect, it
learns what each message would look like if you had run
"spamassassin -d" over it in advance.
Another thing to be aware of, is that typically you should aim to
train with at least 1000 messages of spam, and 1000 ham messages, if
possible. More is better, but anything over about 5000 messages does not
improve accuracy significantly in our tests.
Be careful that you train from the same source -- for example, if
you train on old spam, but new ham mail, then the classifier will think that
a mail with an old date stamp is likely to be spam.
It's also worth noting that training with a very small quantity of
ham, will produce atrocious results. You should aim to train with at least
the same amount (or more if possible!) of ham data than spam.
On an on-going basis, it is best to keep training the filter to
make sure it has fresh data to work from. There are various ways to do
this:
- 1. Supervised learning
- This means keeping a copy of all or most of your mail, separated into spam
and ham piles, and periodically re-training using those. It produces the
best results, but requires more work from you, the user.
(An easy way to do this, by the way, is to create a new folder
for 'deleted' messages, and instead of deleting them from other folders,
simply move them in there instead. Then keep all spam in a separate
folder and never delete it. As long as you remember to move
misclassified mails into the correct folder set, it is easy enough to
keep up to date.)
- 2. Unsupervised learning from Bayesian classification
- Another way to train is to chain the results of the Bayesian classifier
back into the training, so it reinforces its own decisions. This is only
safe if you then retrain it based on any errors you discover.
SpamAssassin does not support this method, due to experimental
results which strongly indicate that it does not work well, and since
Bayes is only one part of the resulting score presented to the user
(while Bayes may have made the wrong decision about a mail, it may have
been overridden by another system).
- 3. Unsupervised learning from SpamAssassin rules
- Also called 'auto-learning' in SpamAssassin. Based on statistical analysis
of the SpamAssassin success rates, we can automatically train the Bayesian
database with a certain degree of confidence that our training data is
accurate.
It should be supplemented with some supervised training in
addition, if possible.
This is the default, but can be turned off by setting the
SpamAssassin configuration parameter
"bayes_auto_learn" to 0.
- 4. Mistake-based training
- This means training on a small number of mails, then only training on
messages that SpamAssassin classifies incorrectly. This works, but it
takes longer to get it right than a full training session would.
sa-learn and the other parts of SpamAssassin's Bayesian learner, use a
set of persistent database files to store the learnt tokens, as follows.
- bayes_toks
- The database of tokens, containing the tokens learnt, their count of
occurrences in ham and spam, and the timestamp when the token was last
seen in a message.
This database also contains some 'magic' tokens, as follows:
the version number of the database, the number of ham and spam messages
learnt, the number of tokens in the database, and timestamps of: the
last journal sync, the last expiry run, the last expiry token reduction
count, the last expiry timestamp delta, the oldest token timestamp in
the database, and the newest token timestamp in the database.
This is a database file, using
"DB_File". The database 'version
number' is 0 for databases from 2.5x, 1 for databases from certain 2.6x
development releases, 2 for 2.6x, and 3 for 3.0 and later releases.
- bayes_seen
- A map of Message-Id and some data from headers and body to what that
message was learnt as. This is used so that SpamAssassin can avoid
re-learning a message it has already seen, and so it can reverse the
training if you later decide that message was learnt incorrectly.
This is a database file, using
"DB_File".
- bayes_journal
- While SpamAssassin is scanning mails, it needs to track which tokens it
uses in its calculations. To avoid the contention of having each
SpamAssassin process attempting to gain write access to the Bayes DB, the
token timestamps are written to a 'journal' file which will later (either
automatically or via "sa-learn --sync")
be used to synchronize the Bayes DB.
Also, through the use of
"bayes_learn_to_journal", or when
using the "--no-sync" option with
sa-learn, the actual learning data will take be placed into the journal
for later synchronization. This is typically useful for high-traffic
sites to avoid the same contention as stated above.
Since SpamAssassin can auto-learn messages, the Bayes database files could
increase perpetually until they fill your disk. To control this, SpamAssassin
performs journal synchronization and bayes expiration periodically when
certain criteria (listed below) are met.
SpamAssassin can sync the journal and expire the DB tokens either
manually or opportunistically. A journal sync is due if --sync is
passed to sa-learn (manual), or if the following is true
(opportunistic):
- - bayes_journal_max_size does not equal 0 (means don't sync)
- - the journal file exists
and either:
- - the journal file has a size greater than bayes_journal_max_size
or
- - a journal sync has previously occurred, and at least 1 day has passed
since that sync
Expiry is due if --force-expire is passed to sa-learn
(manual), or if all of the following are true (opportunistic):
- - the last expire was attempted at least 12hrs ago
- - bayes_auto_expire does not equal 0
- - the number of tokens in the DB is > 100,000
- - the number of tokens in the DB is > bayes_expiry_max_db_size
- - there is at least a 12 hr difference between the oldest and newest token
atimes
If either the manual or opportunistic method causes an expire run to start, here
is the logic that is used:
- - figure out how many tokens to keep. take the larger of either
bayes_expiry_max_db_size * 75% or 100,000 tokens. therefore, the goal
reduction is number of tokens - number of tokens to keep.
- - if the reduction number is < 1000 tokens, abort (not worth the
effort).
- - if an expire has been done before, guesstimate the new atime delta based
on the old atime delta. (new_atime_delta = old_atime_delta *
old_reduction_count / goal)
- - if no expire has been done before, or the last expire looks
"weird", do an estimation pass. The definition of
"weird" is:
- - last expire over 30 days ago
- - last atime delta was < 12 hrs
- - last reduction count was < 1000 tokens
- - estimated new atime delta is < 12 hrs
- - the difference between the last reduction count and the goal reduction
count is > 50%
Go through each of the DB's tokens. Starting at 12hrs, calculate whether or not
the token would be expired (based on the difference between the token's atime
and the db's newest token atime) and keep the count. Work out from 12hrs
exponentially by powers of 2. ie: 12hrs * 1, 12hrs * 2, 12hrs * 4, 12hrs * 8,
and so on, up to 12hrs * 512 (6144hrs, or 256 days).
The larger the delta, the smaller the number of tokens that will
be expired. Conversely, the number of tokens goes up as the delta gets
smaller. So starting at the largest atime delta, figure out which delta will
expire the most tokens without going above the goal expiration count. Use
this to choose the atime delta to use, unless one of the following
occurs:
- - the largest atime (smallest reduction count) would expire too many
tokens. this means the learned tokens are mostly old and there needs to be
new tokens learned before an expire can occur.
- - all of the atime choices result in 0 tokens being removed. this means
the tokens are all newer than 12 hours and there needs to be new tokens
learned before an expire can occur.
- - the number of tokens that would be removed is < 1000. the benefit
isn't worth the effort. more tokens need to be learned.
If the expire run gets past this point, it will continue to the
end. A new DB is created since the majority of DB libraries don't shrink the
DB file when tokens are removed. So we do the "create new, migrate old
to new, remove old, rename new" shuffle.
- "bayes_auto_expire" is used to specify whether or not
SpamAssassin ought to opportunistically attempt to expire the Bayes
database. The default is 1 (yes).
- "bayes_expiry_max_db_size" specifies both the auto-expire token
count point, as well as the resulting number of tokens after expiry as
described above. The default value is 150,000, which is roughly equivalent
to a 6Mb database file if you're using DB_File.
- "bayes_journal_max_size" specifies how large the Bayes journal
will grow before it is opportunistically synced. The default value is
102400.
The sa-learn command is part of the Mail::SpamAssassin Perl
module. Install this as a normal Perl module, using
"perl -MCPAN -e shell", or by hand.
spamassassin(1) spamc(1) Mail::SpamAssassin(3)
Mail::SpamAssassin::ArchiveIterator(3)
<http://www.paulgraham.com/> Paul Graham's "A Plan For
Spam" paper
<http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6467> Gary Robinson's
f(x) and combining algorithms, as used in SpamAssassin
<http://www.bgl.nu/~glouis/bogofilter/> 'Training on error'
page. A discussion of various Bayes training regimes, including 'train on
error' and unsupervised training.
The SpamAssassin(tm) Project <https://spamassassin.apache.org/>
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