JFIFxxC      C  " }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr#!/bin/sh # Copyright 2007,2008 Duncan Findlay # Copyright 2008-2019 Noah Meyerhans # This script does not do anything by default. If you are using systemd, # invoke "systemctl enable --now spamassassin-maintenance.timer" to enable # spamassassin's daily maintenance systemd timer. If you are not using # systemd, or otherwise prefer to use cron for daily maintenance, set CRON=1 # in /etc/cron.daily/spamassassin CRON=0 test -f /etc/default/spamassassin && . /etc/default/spamassassin test -x /usr/bin/sa-update || exit 0 command -v gpg > /dev/null || exit 0 if [ "$CRON" = "0" ] ; then exit 0 fi # If the systemd timer is active, there's nothing else for us to do: if [ -d /run/systemd/system ] && \ systemctl is-enabled --quiet spamassassin-maintenance.timer; then exit 0 fi # If we're running under systemd, and we reach this point, then we can # safely convert to the timer. If you'd rather run the daily # maintenance task from cron, even if systemd is present, then create # a file named /etc/spamassassin/skip-timer-conversion to avoid # running this conversion. if [ -d /run/systemd ] && [ ! -e /etc/spamassassin/skip-timer-conversion ]; then echo "Converting /etc/cron.daily/spamassassin to systemd timer" | logger -p mail.notice systemctl enable spamassassin-maintenance.timer systemctl start spamassassin-maintenance.service exit 0 fi # Sleep for up to 3600 seconds if not running interactively if [ ! -t 0 ]; then RANGE=3600 number=`od -vAn -N2 -tu4 < /dev/urandom` number=`expr $number "%" $RANGE` sleep $number fi exec /usr/sbin/spamassassin-maint