Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C160 Mode D'Emploi

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Chapter 16      Enabling Your C350D Appliance
16-8
Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.5 for Email Configuration Guide
OL-25136-01
Using the Mail Merge
SMTP Injection
IPMM extends SMTP as the transport protocol. There is no special configuration 
that needs to be made to the Cisco IronPort C350D appliance. (By default, IPMM 
can be enabled for private listeners and disabled for public listeners on the Cisco 
IronPort C350D Email Security appliance.) However, if you are not currently 
using SMTP as your injection protocol, you must create a new private listener that 
utilizes SMTP through the Cisco IronPort C350D appliance interface. 
Refer to the “Customizing Listeners” chapter in the Cisco IronPort AsyncOS for 
Email Advanced Configuration Guide
 for more information on configuring 
listeners. Use the 
setipmm
 subcommand of 
listenerconfig
 to enable IPMM on 
the injector. 
IPMM modifies SMTP by altering two commands — 
MAIL FROM
 and 
DATA
 — and 
adding another: 
XDFN
. The 
MAIL FROM
 command is replaced with 
XMRG FROM
 and, 
the 
DATA
 command is replaced with 
XPRT
To generate a Mail Merge message, the commands used to generate the message 
need to be issued in a particular sequence.
Step 1
The initial EHLO statement, identifying the sending host.
Step 2
Each message starts with an XMRG FROM: statement, indicating the sender 
address.
Step 3
Each recipient is then defined:
One or more XDFN variable allocation statements are made, including 
defining the parts (XDFN *PART=1,2,3…), and any other recipient 
specific variables.
The recipient email address is defined with the RCPT TO: statement. Any 
variable allocations prior to the RCPT TO:, but after the prior XMRG 
FROM, or RCPT TO command, will be mapped to this recipient email 
address.
Step 4
Each part is defined using the XPRT n command, with each part terminated by a 
period (.) character similar to the DATA command. The last part is defined by the 
XPRT n LAST command.