Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C650 Guía Del Usuario
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Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.6 for Email Advanced Configuration Guide
OL-25137-01
Chapter 2 Configuring Routing and Delivery Features
Exporting and Importing a Global Unsubscribe File
Like the HAT, the RAT,
smtproutes
, static masquerading tables, alias tables, domain map tables, and
altsrchost
entries, you can modify global unsubscribe entries by exporting and importing a file. Follow
these steps:
Step 1
Use the
export
subcommand of the
unsubscribe
command to export the existing entries to a file
(whose name you specify).
Step 2
for more information.)
Step 3
With a text editor, create new entries in the file.
Separate entries in the file by new lines. Return representations from all standard operating systems
are acceptable (<CR>, <LF>, or <CR><LF>). Comment lines start with a number sign (
are acceptable (<CR>, <LF>, or <CR><LF>). Comment lines start with a number sign (
#
) and are
ignored. For example, the following file excludes a single recipient email address
(
(
test@example.com
), all recipients at a particular domain (
@testdomain.com
), all users with the
same name at multiple domains (
testuser@
), and any recipients at a specific IP address
(
11.12.13.14
).
Step 4
Save the file and place it in the configuration directory for the interface so that it can be imported. (See
for more information.)
Step 5
Use the
import
subcommand of
unsubscribe
to import the edited file.
Our Email Gateway configuration now looks like this:
Please enter some comments describing your changes:
[]> Added username “user@example.net” to global unsubscribe
Changes committed: Thu Mar 27 14:57:56 2003
# this is an example of the global_unsubscribe.txt file
test@example.com
@testdomain.com
testuser@
11.12.13.14