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Mail
UCE/Spam
        RBL
        Junk
        Mail Rules
        Abuse
Use this form to make changes to the default site configuration.



General tab
Use this tab for general information about the Internet Services system setup and site connection.


Primary domain name
Your server's domain name. In outgoing mail, this will be added to the names of local users and to remote names that do not have a domain name specified. In the address user@huskyplanes.com, the domain name is huskyplanes.com.
Primary DNS
The IP address of your primary DNS (Domain Name Server). If you do not maintain your own DNS server, obtain this address from your Internet Service Provider (ISP). If you have more than one DNS server, enter their addresses on the Advanced DNS form.
Postmaster name
The name of the person responsible for Internet Services. All Internet mail addressed to "postmaster" will be sent to this person. In most cases, this is the administrator. We recommend that you create a separate mail address for the web administrator (for example, webadmin@huskyplanes.com). This way, rather than using the main administrator account for mail, you separate Internet and server administration.
Internet connection
Continuous
Select this if you have a full-time connection to the Internet. Outgoing mail will flow continuously and news and mail polling will be controlled by the Internet Service Account schedule that you specified on the Service Account form.
Intermittent or dialup
Select this if you do not have a continuous connection to the Internet. Specify the connection schedule on the Service Account form. You must also set routing information on the Advanced Mail form.
Before configuring Internet Services for dial-up connections, you must already have installed and appropriately configured dial-up software on the computer on which Internet Services is installed (for example, FreePPP on Mac and Dial-Up Networking on Windows). You must also configure the system to recognize these. For more information, see your system documentation. You must set a low timeout value when you configure this software. The Scheduling tab of the Service Account form controls when you dial into your Internet Service Provider (ISP). The timeout value of your dialup software is how you control when the connection is dropped.
Schedule
Opens the Scheduling tab of the Service Account form. If you selected "Intermittent or dial-up", set up your scheduling on this form.
Start Internet Services automatically
Starts Internet Services whenever you start your server as long as Internet Services and your server are installed on the same machine. You cannot select this if they are installed on separate machines or as a clustered service.
572004_44255_00.png Caution
Do not select this option if you have Internet Services running as a Windows NT service. Enabling both will result in two copies of Internet Services being started.




Mail - Main tab
Use this tab to set basic Internet mail protocols. You must at least enable SMTP mail if you want to send and receive Internet mail. You must also enable POP3 and IMAP4 options if you have users who send mail using third-party clients like Eudora or Outlook Express.


Enable SMTP
Allows FirstClass to make connections to and receive connections from other SMTP servers to transfer Internet mail.
SMTP server domain name
The domain name for your SMTP server. Normally, this will be in a format like mail.firstclass.com. This name must be defined in your DNS and must point to the IP address of the machine on which Internet Services is installed. For each protocol you enable in Basic Internet Setup that requires a server domain name, we recommend that you provide a separate server domain name, even if all the names point to the same server machine.
Max outgoing mail
The maximum number of messages you want to send simultaneously. Normally, you will accept the default 5. This is a large enough number to maintain significant mail flow but not so large as to cause memory problems. You may want to adjust this number if you notice mail overflow or low memory problems on your system, which you can monitor using the Internet Services Monitor. Increasing this number may require more memory resources.
Enable POP3
Enables the Internet Services POP3 server to serve out POP3 mail.
Enable IMAP4
Enables the Internet Services IMAP 4 server to serve out IMAP4 mail.




Mail - Import tab
Use this tab to enable POP3, IMAP4, or RSS feed imports.


Enable POP3 import
Enables importing of mail from POP3 servers.
Mail server
The name of the POP3 server from which your users import their POP mail. The server you enter in this field will be used unless another one is specified on a user's Mail Import form in personal preferences.
Message cap
The maximum number of messages to retrieve before logging out and back in again.
Byte cap
The maximum number of bytes to retrieve before logging out and back in again.
IO limit
How often POP3 import will give up control to other tasks. A lower number gives up control more often.
Enable IMAP4 import
Enables importing of mail from IMAP4 servers.
Message cap
The maximum number of messages to retrieve before logging out and back in again.
Byte cap
The maximum number of bytes to retrieve before logging out and back in again.
IO limit
How often IMAP4 import will give up control to other tasks. A lower number gives up control more often.
Enable RSS import
Enables importing of items from RSS feeds.
Default import interval
The number of minutes between polling of RSS feeds for new items.



Web tab
Use this tab to set up your web server.


Enable HTTP
Lets you publish HTML documents from your web server by enabling the HTTP protocol on your server.
HTTP server domain name
Enter your site domain name (for example, www.firstclass.com).




File tab
Use this tab to configure the File Transfer Protocol (FTP).


Enable FTP
Allows users to download files from your server and from users' home pages with an FTP client. To make files available for FTP, place them in the Internet Services/FTP folder.
FTP server domain name
The domain name you want associated with your FTP server. This name must resolve to your FTP server machine, be defined in your DNS server, and point to the IP address of the machine on which Internet Services is installed. We recommend that you provide a separate server domain name for each protocol you enable that requires a domain name.




Directory tab
Use this tab to enable the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) to give users with LDAP clients access to your FirstClass Directory.
06092010_122716_1.png        Note
You can enable Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) support for LDAP on the LDAP tab of the Advanced Directory form.


Enable LDAP
Allows Internet users to search the Directory using an LDAP client.




Notifications tab
Use this tab to set up the push notification service.


Enable push notifications
Enables the push notification service.




Proxy tab
Use this tab to set up the FCP proxy service.


Enable FCP proxy
Enables the FCP proxy service.
IP addresses
A list of IP addresses on which the FCP Proxy module will accept connections. Separate each address with a semicolon. If left blank, Internet Services will accept FCP connections on all available addresses.
Port
The port on which the FCP Proxy module will listen for connections.
Timeout
The maximum length of time that a proxied FCP connection can be idle.
Inbound buffer size
The amount of data the proxy should buffer going from the client to the server.
Outbound buffer size
The amount of data the proxy should buffer going from the server to the client.



UCE/Spam - Relaying & Authentication tab
Use this tab to set up rules for SMTP mail relaying and SMTP AUTH.


Disable all relaying, including SMTP AUTH and trusted IPs
Disallows all relaying through your system.
We recommend you enable relaying only in cases where you need to support POP3 or IMAP4 users who send mail outside your organization, or in cases where your Internet Services acts as the Internet contact point for a group of SMTP servers.




UCE/Spam - RBL tab
Use this tab to enable the Realtime Blackhole Lists (RBL) option to handle problem addresses found on your RBL services.


Enable RBL lookups
Rejects connections from any IP address listed on the RBL hosts to which you are subscribed. Connection requests from an IP address found on one of your RBL services are cached for an hour to avoid the system having to look up a bad IP address repeatedly.
Inject X-RBL-Warning header instead of NDN
Internet Services sends a 550 error message, followed by information in the "Help text" field. A message goes to the recipient at your site who can use personal mail rules to filter messages of this type.
RBL host name
Example: rbl.spamcop.org
NDN text
Example: You have been tagged by our RBL service. Message not delivered. Please contact yourRBLhost.com for further information.
Enable SURBL lookups
Rejects connections from any IP address listed on the SURBL host to which you are subscribed.
SURBL host name
Example: multi.surbl.org
572004_44255_00.pngCaution
IP addresses or domains listed as trusted in your Internet Services Filters folder override your RBL/SURBL settings. Even if an IP address or domain is identified as a spammer, if you've listed it as trusted Internet Services will pass it to the server for processing.




UCE/Spam - Junk tab
Use this tab to configure junk mail handling.


Reject unknown domain names
Internet Services does a reverse Domain Name Server (DNS) lookup on the IP address of any connecting SMTP server to find an associated domain name and, if no domain name is found, rejects mail from that server.
06092010_122716_1.png        Notes
The connecting IP address may not be the address of the original server. For example, if server A routes a message to your system through server B, Internet Services will try to resolve the IP address of server B.
Querying the DNS server on every inbound SMTP connection can put extra load on your system, but Internet Services caches lookups so that SMTP servers that send you a lot of mail won't increase your system load.
Received header limit
The maximum number of Received: headers that a message can contain before being rejected. A large number of Received: headers may indicate a mail loop.
Strike list
Fill in this section to specify the maximum number of strikes to allow, when to reset the strike counter, and how long to block struck-out IP addresses.



UCE/Spam - Mail Rules tab
Use this tab to control how the rules.MailRules document scores spam. The required statements must be present in the rules.MailRules document for these options to work.
To enable the score fields, you must make a change and close the form. If you don't touch a spam-score field, that field is not enabled and Internet Services will use the fallback scores configured in the rules.MailRules file.


Low spam score
The minimum and maximum score for a message to be flagged as "Low".
Medium spam score
The maximum score for a message to be flagged as "Medium".
High spam score
The maximum score for a message to be flagged as "High". Messages scoring higher than this value are flagged as "Extreme".
Extreme causes NDN
Select this field to automatically reject a message that exceeds the High spam maximum score.
SubjectBlock causes NDN
Select this field to automatically reject a message if the subject contains words in the rules.SubjectBlock file.
Crosspost limit
Increases the spam score for any message that has more than this number of recipients.




UCE/Spam - Abuse tab
Use this tab to configure the behaviour of the Security tab located on the Internet Services Monitor.


Abuse note level
Internet Services will note IP addresses whose abuse score exceeds this amount to identify any further suspicious activity.
Abuse warning level
Internet Services will mark IP addresses whose abuse score exceeds this amount with a yellow warning light on the Security tab located on the Internet Services Monitor.
Abuse danger level
Internet Services will mark IP addresses whose abuse score exceeds this amount with a red light.
Abuse autoblock level
Internet Services will add IP addresses whose abuse score exceeds this amount to the temporary IP blocklist.
Abuse block time
The period of time that IP addresses will remain on the temporary IP blocklist.
Abuse reset interval
The time after which Internet Services will reset the score for IP addresses that have not engaged in suspicious activity during this period.




Connections tab
Use this tab to reject connections based on filter documents in your Filters folder and to enable the black hole option.


Reject connections based on Filters
Rejects connections based on entries in filter documents in your Filters folder.
Connection black hole
Fill in the fields in this section to lock down connections attempting to deliver spam to your site or launch denial of service attacks against your system.
06092010_122716_1.png        Note
You must select "Reject connections based on Filters" to use the black hole feature.



Service tab
Use this tab to specify additional Internet Services settings.


Service account
The account to which automatched addresses are linked and which Internet Services uses for mail and news routings and for public access through HTTP, FTP, and LDAP. This name must match the name on the Gateway Settings form in order for the gateway to connect to the server. Do not change the default name unless you reconfigure the Internet account, and do not change it to the name of a third party gateway.
Internet Services priority
The priority of Internet Services operations on this machine.
High
Select this if Internet Services is running on a dedicated machine or on a system with multiple CPUs.
Medium
Select this if the server and Internet Services are running on the same machine.
Low
Select this to allow other software to run on this machine with little performance impact. Only do this temporarily, because Internet Services' performance will be significantly reduced.
Configuration refresh interval
Determines how often the configuration module will query the server to locate new configuration resources. Set to 0 to disable.
Internet sessions
The maximum number of incoming Internet protocol connections that Internet Services will accept. Each session uses only one connection. Because Internet Services uses caching, the actual number of sessions used may be less than the number of requests. Check the Internet Monitor to see whether the number of sessions you have set is appropriate or connections are being rejected.
Configure
Opens the Service Account form. Use this form to view or update the gateway settings for the Internet account.