Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C160 Guia Do Utilizador

Página de 652
Chapter 6      Email Security Manager
6-36
Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.5 for Email Configuration Guide
OL-25136-01
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. See 
 for more information. 
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 “Common Administrative Tasks” chapter in the Cisco IronPort 
AsyncOS for Email Daily Management Guide
 for more information on 
delegated administration.
Step 4
Define users for the policy.
You define whether the user is a sender or a recipient. (See 
 for more detail.) The form shown in 
 defaults to recipients 
for incoming mail policies and to senders for outgoing mail policies.
Users for a given policy can be defined in the following ways:
Full email address: 
user@example.com
Partial email address: 
user@
All users in a domain: 
@example.com
All users in a partial domain: 
@.example.com
By matching an LDAP Query
Note
Entries for users are case-insensitive in both the GUI and CLI in 
AsyncOS. For example, if you enter the recipient 
Joe@
 for a user, a 
message sent to 
joe@example.com
 will match.