Cisco Cisco Content Security Management Appliance M160 ユーザーガイド
11-65
Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.2.0 for Security Management User Guide
OL-21768-01
Chapter 11 Common Administrative Tasks
Alert Classifications
AsyncOS sends the following alert classifications:
–
System
–
Hardware
Severities
Alerts can be sent for the following severities:
–
Critical: issue that requires immediate attention
–
Warning: problem or error requiring further monitoring and potentially
immediate attention
immediate attention
–
Info: information generated in the routine functioning of this device
Alert Settings
Alert settings control the general behavior and configuration of alerts, including:
•
The RFC 2822 Header From: when sending alerts (enter an address or use the
default “alert@<hostname>”). You can also set this via the CLI, using the
default “alert@<hostname>”). You can also set this via the CLI, using the
alertconfig -> from
command.
•
The initial number of seconds to wait before sending a duplicate alert.
•
The maximum number of seconds to wait before sending a duplicate alert.
•
The status of AutoSupport (enabled or disabled).
•
The sending of AutoSupport’s weekly status reports to alert recipients set to
receive system alerts at the Information level.
receive system alerts at the Information level.
Sending Duplicate Alerts
You can specify the initial number of seconds to wait before AsyncOS will send
a duplicate alert. If you set this value to 0, duplicate alert summaries are not sent;
instead, all duplicate alerts are sent without any delay (this can lead to a large
amount of email over a short amount of time). The number of seconds to wait
between sending duplicate alerts (alert interval) is increased after each alert is
sent. The increase is the number of seconds to wait plus twice the last interval. So
a 5-second wait would have alerts sent at 5 seconds, 15 seconds, 35 seconds, 75
seconds, 155 seconds, 315 seconds, and so on.
a duplicate alert. If you set this value to 0, duplicate alert summaries are not sent;
instead, all duplicate alerts are sent without any delay (this can lead to a large
amount of email over a short amount of time). The number of seconds to wait
between sending duplicate alerts (alert interval) is increased after each alert is
sent. The increase is the number of seconds to wait plus twice the last interval. So
a 5-second wait would have alerts sent at 5 seconds, 15 seconds, 35 seconds, 75
seconds, 155 seconds, 315 seconds, and so on.