Руководство Пользователя для Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C170

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C H A P T E R
 
7-1
Cisco IronPort AsyncOS 7.6 for Email Daily Management Guide
OL-25138-01
7
Other Tasks in the GUI
The graphical user interface (GUI) is the web-based alternative to some command line interface (CLI) 
commands for system monitoring and configuration. The GUI enables you to monitor the system using 
a simple Web-based interface without having to learn the Cisco IronPort AsyncOS command syntax. 
This chapter contains the following sections:
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The Cisco IronPort Graphical User Interface (GUI)
After HTTP and/or HTTPS services have been enabled for an interface, you can access the GUI and log 
in. See the “Overview” chapter in the Cisco IronPort AsyncOS for Email Configuration Guide for more 
information.
Enabling the GUI on an Interface
By default, the system ships with HTTP enabled on the Management interface (Data 1 for Cisco IronPort 
C150/160 appliances).
To enable the GUI, execute the 
interfaceconfig
 command at the command-line interface, edit the 
interface that you want to connect to, and then enable the HTTP services or secure HTTP services, or 
both.
Note
You can also use the Network > IP Interfaces page to enable or disable the GUI on an interface, once you 
have the GUI enabled on any other interface. See 
IP Interfaces, page -294
 for more information.
Note
Enabling secure HTTP on an interface requires you to install a certificate. For more information, see 
“Enabling a Certificate for HTTPS” in the Cisco IronPort AsyncOS for Email Advanced Configuration 
Guide
For either service, you specify the port on which you want the service to be enabled. By default, HTTP 
is enabled on port 80 and HTTPS on port 443. If you enable both services for an interface, you can 
automatically redirect HTTP requests to the secure service.