Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C160 Mode D'Emploi

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C-4
User Guide for AsyncOS 9.8 for Cisco Email Security Appliances
 
Appendix C      Example of Mail Policies and Content Filters
  Overview of Incoming Mail Policies
Figure C-3
Anti-Spam Settings Page
Creating a Mail Policy for a Group of Sender and Recipients
In this part of the example, you will create two new policies: one for the sales organization (whose 
members will be defined by an LDAP acceptance query), and another for the engineering organization. 
Both policies will be assigned to the Policy Administrator custom user role to make delegated 
administrators belonging to this role responsible for managing these policies. You will then configure 
different email security settings for each. 
Procedure 
Step 1
Click the Add Policy button to begin creating a new policy. 
Step 2
Define a unique name for and adjust the order of the policy (if necessary). 
The name of the policy must be unique to the Mail Policies table (either incoming or outgoing) in 
which it is defined. 
Remember that each recipient is evaluated for each policy in the appropriate table (incoming or 
outgoing) in a top-down fashion. 
Step 3
Click the Editable by (Roles) link and select the custom user roles for the delegated administrators who 
will be responsible for managing the mail policy.
When you click the link, AsyncOS displays the custom roles for delegated administrators that have 
edit privileges for mail policies. Delegated administrators can edit a policy’s Anti-Spam, Anti-Virus, 
and Outbreak Filters settings and enable or disable content filters for the policy. Only operators and 
administrators can modify a mail policy’s name or its senders, recipients, or groups. Custom user 
roles that have full access to mail policies are automatically assigned to mail policies. 
See the 
 for more information on delegated administration.