Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C160 Guía Del Usuario
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Cisco AsyncOS 8.0.2 for Email User Guide
Chapter 35 Centralized Management Using Clusters
Administering a Cluster from the GUI
Note
The
passwd
command is a special case because it needs to be usable by guest users. If a guest user issues
the
passwd
command on a machine in a cluster, it will not print the warning message but will instead just
silently operate on the cluster level data without changing the user’s mode. All other users will get the
above written behavior (consistent with the other restricted configuration commands).
above written behavior (consistent with the other restricted configuration commands).
The following commands are restricted to machine mode:
If a you try to run one of the commands above in cluster or group mode, you will be given a warning
message and the opportunity to switch to an appropriate mode.
message and the opportunity to switch to an appropriate mode.
The following commands are further restricted to the login host (i.e., the specific machine you are logged
into). These commands require access to the local file system.
into). These commands require access to the local file system.
Administering a Cluster from the GUI
Although you cannot create or join clusters or administer cluster specific settings from the GUI (the
equivalent of the
equivalent of the
clusterconfig
command), you can browse machines in the cluster, create, delete,
copy, and move settings among the cluster, groups, and machines (that is, perform the equivalent of the
clustermode
and
clusterset
commands) from within the GUI.
When you first log into the GUI, you are shown the Incoming Mail Overview page. Presuming that you
have configured the current machine to be a member of a cluster, you are also notified that the centralized
management feature has been enabled in the GUI.
have configured the current machine to be a member of a cluster, you are also notified that the centralized
management feature has been enabled in the GUI.
The Incoming Mail Overview page is an example of a command that is restricted to the login host,
because the Mail Flow Monitoring data you are viewing is stored on the local machine. To view the
Incoming Mail Overview reports for another machine, you must log into the GUI for that machine.
because the Mail Flow Monitoring data you are viewing is stored on the local machine. To view the
Incoming Mail Overview reports for another machine, you must log into the GUI for that machine.
Note the URL in the browser’s address field when clustering has been enabled on an appliance. The URL
will contain the word
will contain the word
machine
,
group
, or
cluster
as appropriate. For example, when you first log in, the
URL of the Incoming Mail Overview page will appear as:
antispamstatus
etherconfig
resume
suspenddel
antispamupdate
featurekey
resumedel
suspendlistener
antivirusstatus
hostrate
resumelistener
techsupport
antivirusupdate
hoststatus
rollovernow
tophosts
bouncerecipients
interfaceconfig
routeconfig
topin
deleterecipients
ldapflush
sbstatus
trace
delivernow
ldaptest
setgateway
version
diagnostic
nslookup
sethostname
vofflush
dnsflush
quarantineconfig
settime
vofstatus
dnslistflush
rate
shutdown
workqueue
dnslisttest
reboot
status
dnsstatus
resetcounters
suspend
Table 35-3
Commands Restricted to Login Host Mode
last
resetconfig
tail
upgrade
ping
supportrequest
telnet
who