Chapter 6 Device Security Settings
Vantage CNM User’s Guide
150
E-Mail Address
This field displays when you select the
type. Enter an e-mail address or
domain name (up to 63 ASCII characters).
You can enter an individual e-mail address like [email protected].
If you enter a domain name, the device searches the source e-mail address string
after the “@” symbol to see if it matches the domain name. For example, you
configure a entry with “def.com” as the domain name. E-mails sent from def.com e-
mail addresses such as “[email protected]” match the entry. E-mails sent from
mail.def.com, such as [email protected] do not match the entry since
“mail.def.com” does not match “def.com”.
You can also use a wildcard (*). For example, if you configure *def.com, any e-mail
address that ends in def.com matches. So “mail.def.com” matches.
The wildcard can be anywhere in the text string and you can use more than one
wildcard. You cannot use two wildcards side by side, there must be other
characters between them.
The device can check up to the first 63 characters of an e-mail’s address. The
whitelist or blacklist check fails for addresses over 63 characters. However, a
whitelist or blacklist entry that uses some text followed by a wildcard only requires
the device to check the number of characters before the wildcard. So the check
would still work for addresses longer than 63 characters. For example, if you used
“abc*”, the device would only check up to the first three characters of the e-mail
address.
Header
This field displays when you select the
MIME Header
type.
Type the header part of an MIME header (up to 63 ASCII characters).
In an MIME header, the header is the part that comes before the colon (:).
For example, if you want the whitelist or blacklist entry to check for the MIME
header “X-MSMail-Priority: Normal”, enter “X-MSMail-Priority” here as the MIME
header.
Value
This field displays when you select the
MIME Header
type.
Type the value part of an MIME header (up to 63 ASCII characters).
In an MIME header, the part that comes after the colon is the value.
For example, if you want the whitelist or blacklist entry to check for the MIME
header “X-MSMail-Priority: Normal”, enter “Normal” here as the MIME value.
Subject
This field displays when you select the
Subject
type. Enter up to 63 ASCII
characters of text to check for in the e-mail headers. Spaces are allowed.
You can use a wildcard (*). For example, if you configure “*good”, any e-mail
subject that ends in “good” matches. So “this is very good” and “this is not so good”
both match.
The wildcard can be anywhere in the text string and you can use more than one
wildcard. You cannot use two wildcards side by side, there must be other
characters between them.
The device can check up to the first 63 characters of an e-mail’s subject. The
whitelist or blacklist check fails for subjects over 63 characters. However, a
whitelist or blacklist entry that uses some text followed by a wildcard only requires
the device to check the number of characters before the wildcard. So the check
would still work for subjects longer than 63 characters. For example, if you used
“abc*”, the device would only check up to the first three characters of the e-mail
subject.
Apply
Click
Apply
to save your settings and exit this screen.
Cancel
Click
Cancel
to exit this screen without saving.
Table 58
Device Operation > Device Configuration > Security > Anti-Spam > Lists > Add/Edit
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Summary of Contents for Centralized Network Management Vantage CNM
Page 2: ......
Page 24: ...Vantage CNM User s Guide 24...
Page 30: ...Vantage CNM User s Guide 30...
Page 33: ...33 PART I Introduction Introducing Vantage CNM 31 GUI Introduction 35...
Page 34: ...34...
Page 52: ...52...
Page 58: ...Chapter 4 Device General Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 58...
Page 108: ...Chapter 5 Device Network Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 108...
Page 184: ...Chapter 6 Device Security Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 184...
Page 207: ...Chapter 7 Device Advanced Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 207...
Page 208: ...Chapter 7 Device Advanced Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 208...
Page 210: ...Chapter 8 Device Log Vantage CNM User s Guide 210...
Page 234: ...Chapter 9 Device Configuration Management Vantage CNM User s Guide 234...
Page 248: ...248...
Page 264: ...Chapter 14 VPN Monitor Vantage CNM User s Guide 264...
Page 265: ...265 PART IV Monitor Device Status Monitor 267 Device HA Status Monitor 269 Device Alarm 271...
Page 266: ...266...
Page 276: ...Chapter 17 Device Alarm Vantage CNM User s Guide 276...
Page 277: ...277 PART V Log Report Device Operation Report 279 CNM Logs 291 VRPT 293...
Page 278: ...278...
Page 296: ...Chapter 20 VRPT Vantage CNM User s Guide 296...
Page 298: ...298...
Page 312: ...Chapter 21 CNM System Setting Vantage CNM User s Guide 312...
Page 318: ...Chapter 24 Vantage CNM Software Upgrade Vantage CNM User s Guide 318...
Page 322: ...Chapter 26 About Vantage CNM Vantage CNM User s Guide 322...
Page 323: ...323 PART VII Account Management Group 325 Account 329...
Page 324: ...324...
Page 328: ...Chapter 27 Group Vantage CNM User s Guide 328...
Page 332: ...Chapter 28 Account Vantage CNM User s Guide 332...
Page 333: ...333 PART VIII Troubleshooting Troubleshooting 335...
Page 334: ...334...
Page 338: ...Chapter 29 Troubleshooting Vantage CNM User s Guide 338...
Page 340: ...340...
Page 378: ...Appendix E IP Address Assignment Conflicts Vantage CNM User s Guide 378...
Page 382: ...Appendix F Common Services Vantage CNM User s Guide 382...
Page 416: ...Appendix H Open Software Announcements Vantage CNM User s Guide 416...
Page 424: ...Appendix J Customer Support Vantage CNM User s Guide 424...
Page 428: ...Index Vantage CNM User s Guide 428...
Page 429: ...Index Vantage CNM User s Guide 429...
Page 430: ...Index Vantage CNM User s Guide 430...