Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance X1050 Guía Del Usuario
8-23
Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.6 for Email Advanced Configuration Guide
OL-25137-01
Chapter 8 Centralized Management
The System Time pages encompass the
settz
,
ntpconfig
, and
settime
commands, and thus represents
a mixture of restricted and non-restricted commands. In this case,
settime
must be restricted to
machine-only modes (since time settings are specific for machine), while
settz
and
ntpconfig
may be
configured at cluster or group modes.
Consider the following example:
Figure 8-8
Example of Interdependent Settings
In this representation, the listener “IncomingMail” is referencing a footer named “disclaimer” that has
been configured at the machine level only. The drop-down list of available footer resources shows that
the footer is not available on the machine “buttercup.run” which is also available in the cluster. There
are two solutions to this dilemma:
been configured at the machine level only. The drop-down list of available footer resources shows that
the footer is not available on the machine “buttercup.run” which is also available in the cluster. There
are two solutions to this dilemma:
•
promote the footer “disclaimer” from the machine level to the cluster level
•
demote the listener to the machine level to remove the interdependency
In order to fully maximize the features of a centrally managed system, the former solution is preferred.
Be aware of interdependencies among settings as you tailor the configuration of your clustered
machines.
Be aware of interdependencies among settings as you tailor the configuration of your clustered
machines.
Best Practices and Frequently Asked Questions
Best Practices
When you create the cluster, the machine you happen to be logged into is automatically added to the
cluster as the first machine, and also added to the Main_Group. Its machine level settings effectively get
moved to the cluster level as much as possible. There are no settings at the group level, and the only
settings left at the machine level are those which do not make sense at the cluster level, and cannot be
clustered. Examples are IP addresses, featurekeys, etc.
cluster as the first machine, and also added to the Main_Group. Its machine level settings effectively get
moved to the cluster level as much as possible. There are no settings at the group level, and the only
settings left at the machine level are those which do not make sense at the cluster level, and cannot be
clustered. Examples are IP addresses, featurekeys, etc.