Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance X1050 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
Rate Limiting
•
Concurrent Connections: number of simultaneous connections to remote hosts the appliance will
attempt to open.
attempt to open.
•
Maximum Messages Per Connection: number of messages your appliance will send to a destination
domain before the appliance initiates a new connection.
domain before the appliance initiates a new connection.
•
Recipients: number of recipients the appliance will send to a given remote host in a given time
period.
period.
•
Limits: how to apply the limits you have specified on a per-destination and per MGA hostname
basis.
basis.
TLS
•
Whether TLS connections to remote hosts will be accepted, allowed, or required (see
•
Whether to send an alert when TLS negotiation fails when delivering a message to a remote host that
requires a TLS connection. This is a global setting, not a per-domain setting.
requires a TLS connection. This is a global setting, not a per-domain setting.
•
Assign a TLS certificate to use for all outbound TLS connections to remote hosts.
Bounce Verification
•
Whether or not to perform address tagging via Cisco IronPort Bounce Verification (see
Bounce Profile
•
Which bounce profile should be used by the appliance for a given remote host (the default bounce
profile is set via the Network > Bounce Profiles page).
profile is set via the Network > Bounce Profiles page).
You can also control the default settings for unspecified domains.
Determining Which Interface is Used for Mail Delivery
Unless you specify the output interface via the
deliveryconfig
command or via a message filter
(
alt-src-host
), or through the use of a virtual gateway, the output interface is selected by the AsyncOS
routing table. Basically, selecting “auto” means to let AsyncOS decide.
In greater detail: local addresses are identified by applying the interface netmask to the interface IP
address. Both of these are set via the Network > Interfaces page or by the
address. Both of these are set via the Network > Interfaces page or by the
interfaceconfig
command
(or during system setup). If the address space overlaps, the most specific netmask is used. If a destination
is local, packets are sent via the appropriate local interface.
is local, packets are sent via the appropriate local interface.
If the destination is not local, packets are sent to the default router (set via the Network > Routing page
or with the
or with the
setgateway
command). The IP address of the default router is local. The output interface is
determined by the rule for selecting the output interface for local addresses. For example, AsyncOS
chooses the most specific IP address and netmask that include the default router's IP address.
chooses the most specific IP address and netmask that include the default router's IP address.
The routing table is configured via the Network > Routing page (or via the
routeconfig
command). A
matching entry in the routing table takes precedence over the default route. A more specific route take
precedence over a less specific route.
precedence over a less specific route.