Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C650 Guía Del Usuario
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Cisco AsyncOS 8.5.5 for Email Security User Guide
Chapter 2 Accessing the Appliance
Web-based Graphical User Interface (GUI)
System Administration menu
The System Administration section contains pages for the Trace, Alerting, User Management, LDAP,
Log Subscription, Return Addresses, System Time, Configuration File management, Feature Key
Settings, Feature Keys, Shutdown/Reboot, Upgrades, and System Setup Wizard features.
Log Subscription, Return Addresses, System Time, Configuration File management, Feature Key
Settings, Feature Keys, Shutdown/Reboot, Upgrades, and System Setup Wizard features.
Centralized Management
If you have created a cluster, you can browse machines in the cluster, create, delete, copy, and move
settings among clusters, groups, and machines (that is, perform the equivalent of the
settings among clusters, groups, and machines (that is, perform the equivalent of the
clustermode
and
clusterset
commands) from within the GUI.
For more information, see
.
The Commit Changes Button
The commit model in the GUI matches the same “explicit commit” model as used in the CLI. For more
information, see
information, see
. As you make configuration changes in
the GUI, you now must explicitly commit those changes by clicking the Commit Changes button. This
button displays when you have uncommitted changes that need to be saved.
button displays when you have uncommitted changes that need to be saved.
Figure 2-2
The Commit Changes Button
Clicking the Commit Changes button displays a page where you can add a comment and commit the
changes, abandon all changes made since the most recent commit (the equivalent of the
changes, abandon all changes made since the most recent commit (the equivalent of the
clear
command
in the CLI; see
), or cancel.
Figure 2-3
Confirming Committed Changes
Viewing Active Sessions
From the GUI, you can view all users currently logged into the Email Security appliance and information
about their sessions.
about their sessions.
To view these active sessions, click Options > Active Sessions at the top right of the page.
From the Active Sessions page you can view the user name, the user role, the time the user logged in,
idle time, and whether the user is logged in from the command line or the GUI.
idle time, and whether the user is logged in from the command line or the GUI.