Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance X1050 Guida Utente
Chapter 5 Logging
Log Types
5-198
Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.1 for Email Daily Management Guide
OL-22160-02
Use as a guide to reading the preceding log file.
10
Thu Sep 9 13:00:09 2004 LDAP: Query
(&(ObjectClass=inetLocalMailRecipient)(mailLocalAddress=rroute.d0000
2b.loc@ldap.route.local.add00002.qa)) returned 1 results
11
Thu Sep 9 13:00:09 2004 LDAP: returning: [<LDAP:>]
Table 5-26
Detail of LDAP Debug Log Example
Line Number
Description
1.
The log file is initialized.
2.
3.
4.
The listener is configured to use LDAP for masquerading,
specifically with the LDAP query named “sun.masquerade.”
specifically with the LDAP query named “sun.masquerade.”
The address employee@routing.qa is looked up in the LDAP
server, a match is found, and the resulting masquerade address is
employee@mail.qa, which will be written to the message
headers and/or the envelope from, depending on the masquerade
configuration.
server, a match is found, and the resulting masquerade address is
employee@mail.qa, which will be written to the message
headers and/or the envelope from, depending on the masquerade
configuration.
5.
The user has manually run
ldapflush
.
6.
A query is about to be sent to sun.qa, port 389. The query
template is: (&(ObjectClass={g})(mailLocalAddress={a})).
template is: (&(ObjectClass={g})(mailLocalAddress={a})).
The {g} will be replaced by the groupname specified in the
calling filter, either a rcpt-to-group or mail-from-group rule.
calling filter, either a rcpt-to-group or mail-from-group rule.
The {a} will be replaced by the address in question.
7.
8.
Now the substitution (described previously) takes place, and this
is what the query looks like before it is sent to the LDAP server.
is what the query looks like before it is sent to the LDAP server.
9.
The connection to the server is not yet established, so make a
connection.
connection.