Max SpamAssassin Size problems

Ken A ka at pacific.net
Thu Aug 24 18:41:04 IST 2006



Logan Shaw wrote:
> On Thu, 24 Aug 2006, Julian Field wrote:
>> Anthony Peacock wrote:
>>> Julian Field wrote:
> 
>>>> Sounds survivable. After the limit I will keep going until I hit the
>>>> first line that only contains white space.
> 
>>> I have been watching this discussion with a growing uneasiness.  I
>>> could be wrong but doesn't this behaviour open up the system to
>>> problems with huge image files...
> 
>> Yes, you are absolutely correct. Non-spam may well include huge images.
>> The problem with rewinding to the previous boundary is that you may end
>> up not giving SpamAssassin _anything_ to work with.
>>
>> So it's up for a vote:
>>
>> do I chop half way through an image?
>> do I chop at the end of an image?
>> do I carry on for a max of 100 lines of Base64 data or until the end of
>> an image, which is earlier?
> 
> I don't like the last option at all.  It still easily allows
> a situation where a valid message with a valid image in it
> gets detected as a corrupt image and hits a rule that scores
> it as spam.
> 
> If we assume there are 80 columns of base64 data per line, then
> we get 60 bytes per line (since each base64 character carries
> 6 bits of data).  That means 100 lines only holds 6K, maximum.
> 
> So this option only works if the chop-off point randomly
> happens to fall within the last 6K (or less) of the image.
> If the max message size causes the initial chop-off point to
> fall any earlier, it still creates an invalid image.  If you
> have a 50K max message size and someone sends a 75K image
> (which is not out of the ordinary at all), this method will
> keep going up to 56K and then quit.
> 
> Basically, adding the 100 extra lines is really not much better
> than chopping right at the max message size barrier, unless
> you assume that most images aren't much larger than 6K, which
> I don't think is a valid assumption at all.  So, this option
> adds extra complexity and doesn't really give much benefit.
> 
>   - Logan

I'm all for #3 and and just set "score FUZZY_OCR_CORRUPT_IMG 0" if you 
are worried about false positives. Fuzzyocr will get better at sorting 
this out. And of course in the mean time, don't use outlook, since it 
will probably render corrupt images just fine. (it's a feature)

Ken A
Pacific.Net




More information about the MailScanner mailing list