H3c-technologies H3C Intelligent Management Center User Manual Page 68

  • Download
  • Add to my manuals
  • Print
  • Page
    / 84
  • Table of contents
  • BOOKMARKS
  • Rated. / 5. Based on customer reviews
Page view 67
59
Adding a mail audit task
1. Access the User Behavior Audit Management page.
2. In the user behavior audit task list, click Add.
The Select Audit Type page appears.
3. Select Mail Audit and click Next.
The Add Custom Mail Audit page appears.
4. In the basic information area, perform the following tasks:
a. In the Name field, enter the task name.
b. From the Server list, select the audit server.
c. Click Select next to the Reader field. On the window that appears, select operator groups that
have the right to view the task, and click OK.
5. In the Mail Condition area, perform the following tasks:
a. Select the Sender option and enter the mail address of the sender.
b. Select the Receiver option and enter the mail address of the receiver.
c. Select the Title option and enter the mail title.
6. In the Audit Condition area, perform the following tasks:
a. Select Meet All or Meet Any.
If you select Meet All, UBA audits only flow records that meet all audit conditions you will
select. If you select Meet Any, UBA audits flow records that meet any of the audit conditions
you will select.
b. Select the Access User option and perform the following tasks:
Enter the account name used by the access user that is managed by UAM in the Access
User field.
S
elect the terminal type from the Terminal Type list and the operating system from the
Operating System list. By default, the terminal type and the operating system are unlimited.
The Access User, Terminal Type, and Operating system fields are displayed only when UBA
works with UAM. For more information about UBA working with UAM, see "Showing/hiding
ac
cess users."
When you select the Access User option, you cannot select the Source and Destination
options.
c. Select the Source and Destination options, and enter the source and destination addresses.
You can enter an IP addresses, an IP segment, or an IP address range.
An example of a valid IP address entry:
10.153.89.0
An example of a valid IPv4 segment:
10.153.89.*
An example of a valid IPv4 address range entry:
1.1.1.1-2.2.2.2
An example of a valid IPv6 address entry:
a001:410:0:1::1
An example of a valid IPv6 address and subnet mask entry using CIDR notation:
Page view 67
1 2 ... 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 ... 83 84

Comments to this Manuals

No comments