Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance X1050 Guía Del Usuario
A-4
Cisco AsyncOS 8.0.2 for Email User Guide
Appendix A Accessing the Appliance
IP Interfaces
Step 4
Use your FTP program to upload and download files to and from the appropriate directory.
Secure Copy (scp) Access
If your client operating system supports a secure copy (
scp
) command, you can copy files to and from
the directories listed in the previous table. For example, in the following example, the file
/tmp/test.txt
is copied from the client machine to the configuration directory of the appliance with
the hostname of
mail3.example.com
.
Note that the command prompts for the password for the user (
admin
). This example is shown for
reference only; your particular operating system’s implementation of secure copy may vary.
In this example, the same file is copied from the appliance to the client machine:
You can use secure copy (
scp
) as an alternative to FTP to transfer files to and from the Cisco appliance.
Note
Only users in the operators and administrators group can use secure copy (
scp
) to access the appliance.
For more information, see
.
Accessing the Email Security appliance via a Serial Connection
If you are connecting to the appliance via a serial connection (see
defines the
pin assignments and interface signals for the serial port connector.
% scp /tmp/test.txt admin@mail3.example.com:configuration
The authenticity of host 'mail3.example.com (192.168.42.42)' can't be established.
DSA key fingerprint is 69:02:01:1d:9b:eb:eb:80:0c:a1:f5:a6:61:da:c8:db.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added 'mail3.example.com ' (DSA) to the list of known hosts.
admin@mail3.example.com's password: (type the password)
test.txt 100% |****************************| 1007 00:00
%
% scp admin@mail3.example.com:configuration/text.txt .
admin@mail3.example.com's password: (type the password)
test.txt 100% |****************************| 1007 00:00
%