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IronPort - daily management guide - AsyncOS 7.6.1

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Chapter 4 Quarantines<br />

OL-25138-01<br />

Configuring the Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam Quarantines Feature<br />

Figure 4-21 Enabling the <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam Quarantine on the Management Interface<br />

Step 2 Specify whether to use HTTP or HTTPS as well as the associated port numbers.<br />

Step 3 Select whether to redirect HTTP requests to HTTPS.<br />

Step 4 Specify whether this is the default interface (notifications and quarantine logins will originate on this<br />

interface) for Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam quarantine access. Select whether to use the hostname in the URL or<br />

specify a custom URL.<br />

Step 5 Submit and commit your changes.<br />

Enabling Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam Quarantines for a Mail Policy<br />

Once you have enabled the local Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam quarantine (or added an external Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong><br />

Spam quarantine) you can configure a mail policy to send spam or suspected spam messages to that<br />

quarantine. Note that you must have Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Anti-Spam scanning enabled on the mail policy in<br />

order to be able to send mail to the Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam quarantine.<br />

To configure a mail policy to send spam or suspect spam to the Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> Spam Quarantine:<br />

Step 1 On the Mail Policies > Incoming Mail Policies page, click the link in the Anti-Spam column for the<br />

corresponding mail policy.<br />

Cisco <strong>IronPort</strong> <strong>AsyncOS</strong> 7.6 for Email Daily Management Guide<br />

4-29

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