Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C650 Guía Del Usuario
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Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.6 for Email Advanced Configuration Guide
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Chapter 2 Configuring Routing and Delivery Features
Note
The number of Virtual Gateway addresses available to you depends on the model of your Cisco IronPort
appliance. Some appliance models can be upgraded to support more Virtual Gateway addressed via a
feature key. Contact your Cisco IronPort sales representative for more information about upgrading the
number of Virtual Gateway addresses on your appliance.
appliance. Some appliance models can be upgraded to support more Virtual Gateway addressed via a
feature key. Contact your Cisco IronPort sales representative for more information about upgrading the
number of Virtual Gateway addresses on your appliance.
Overview
Cisco has developed a unique Virtual Gateway technology designed to help ensure that corporations can
reliably communicate with their customers via email. Virtual Gateway technology enables users to
separate the Cisco IronPort appliance into multiple Virtual Gateway addresses from which to send and
receive email. Each Virtual Gateway address is given a distinct IP address, hostname and domain, and
email queue.
reliably communicate with their customers via email. Virtual Gateway technology enables users to
separate the Cisco IronPort appliance into multiple Virtual Gateway addresses from which to send and
receive email. Each Virtual Gateway address is given a distinct IP address, hostname and domain, and
email queue.
Assigning a distinct IP address and hostname to each Virtual Gateway address ensures that email
delivered through the gateway will be properly identified by the recipient host and prevents critical email
from being blocked as spam. The Cisco IronPort appliance has the intelligence to give the correct
hostname in the
delivered through the gateway will be properly identified by the recipient host and prevents critical email
from being blocked as spam. The Cisco IronPort appliance has the intelligence to give the correct
hostname in the
SMTP HELO
command for each of the Virtual Gateway addresses. This ensures that if a
receiving Internet Service Provider (ISP) performs a reverse DNS look-up, the Cisco IronPort appliance
will match the IP address of the email sent through that Virtual Gateway address. This feature is
extremely valuable, because many ISPs use a reverse DNS lookup to detect unsolicited email. If the IP
address in the reverse DNS look-up does not match the IP address of the sending host, the ISP may
assume the sender is illegitimate and will frequently discard the email. The Cisco IronPort Virtual
Gateway technology ensures that reverse DNS look-ups will always match the sending IP address,
preventing messages from being blocked accidentally.
will match the IP address of the email sent through that Virtual Gateway address. This feature is
extremely valuable, because many ISPs use a reverse DNS lookup to detect unsolicited email. If the IP
address in the reverse DNS look-up does not match the IP address of the sending host, the ISP may
assume the sender is illegitimate and will frequently discard the email. The Cisco IronPort Virtual
Gateway technology ensures that reverse DNS look-ups will always match the sending IP address,
preventing messages from being blocked accidentally.
Messages in each Virtual Gateway address are also assigned to a separate message queue. If a certain
recipient host is blocking email from one Virtual Gateway address, messages intended for that host will
remain in the queue and eventually timeout. But messages intended for the same domain in a different
Virtual Gateway queue that is not being blocked will be delivered normally. While these queues are
treated separately for delivery purposes, the system administration, logging and reporting capability still
provide a holistic view into all Virtual Gateway queues as if they were one.
recipient host is blocking email from one Virtual Gateway address, messages intended for that host will
remain in the queue and eventually timeout. But messages intended for the same domain in a different
Virtual Gateway queue that is not being blocked will be delivered normally. While these queues are
treated separately for delivery purposes, the system administration, logging and reporting capability still
provide a holistic view into all Virtual Gateway queues as if they were one.
Setting Up Virtual Gateway Addresses
Before setting up the Cisco IronPort Virtual Gateway addresses, you must allocate a set of IP addresses
that will be used to send email from. (For more information, see “Assigning Network and IP Addresses”
in the Cisco IronPort AsyncOS for Email Configuration Guide.) You should also ensure proper
configuration of your DNS servers so that the IP address resolves to a valid hostname. Proper
configuration of DNS servers ensures that if the recipient host performs a reverse DNS lookup, it will
resolve to valid IP/hostname pairs.
that will be used to send email from. (For more information, see “Assigning Network and IP Addresses”
in the Cisco IronPort AsyncOS for Email Configuration Guide.) You should also ensure proper
configuration of your DNS servers so that the IP address resolves to a valid hostname. Proper
configuration of DNS servers ensures that if the recipient host performs a reverse DNS lookup, it will
resolve to valid IP/hostname pairs.
Creating New IP Interfaces for Use with Virtual Gateways
After the IP addresses and hostnames have been established, the first step in configuring the Virtual
Gateway addresses is to create new IP interfaces with the IP/hostname pairs using the Network > IP
Interfaces page in the GUI or the
Gateway addresses is to create new IP interfaces with the IP/hostname pairs using the Network > IP
Interfaces page in the GUI or the
interfaceconfig
command in the CLI.
Once the IP interfaces have been configured, you have the option to combine multiple IP interfaces into
interface groups; these groups can then be assigned to specific Virtual Gateways addresses which the
system cycles through in a “round robin” fashion when delivering email.
interface groups; these groups can then be assigned to specific Virtual Gateways addresses which the
system cycles through in a “round robin” fashion when delivering email.