E-mail notifications are useful for keeping SharePoint users informed about changes that have occurred to their attachments due to virus cleaning and filtering, as well as informing users of infections that exist when a virus is detected and not cleaned. E-mail notifications are also important to administrators who prefer to have information delivered directly to their mailbox instead of continually checking logs for activity.
Configuring notifications
Microsoft Forefront Protection 2010 for SharePoint (FPSP) uses two types of notifications:
- Incident notifications—Notifications
that FPSP sends about a malware or filter incident. You can
customize these notifications and configure them to be sent to the
file's author. For more information about each type of incident
notification, see About
incident notifications.
- Event notifications—Notifications that
FPSP sends to an administrator about its status. You can disable or
customize these notifications. For more information about each type
of event notification, see About
event notifications.
-
In the Forefront Protection 2010 for SharePoint Administrator Console, click Monitoring, and then click Notifications.
The Configuration - Notifications pane contains the default notifications, listed under their notification type. Each notification is configured individually.
-
Right-click the notification you want to configure, and then click Edit Notification. (For more information about the purpose of each notification, see About notifications.
-
In the Edit notification dialog box, select the notification role for which you are configuring the notification by clicking one of the following:
- Administrator—Configures event
notifications to be sent to administrators when an incident or
event occurs. You can configure all notification types for
administrators. This is the default notification role.
- Author—Configures incident event
notifications to be sent to the author of a document that generated
an incident. This role is only available for incident
notifications.
- Last Modified User— Configures
incident event notifications to be sent to the last person who
modified a document that generated an incident. This role is only
available for incident notifications.
- Administrator—Configures event
notifications to be sent to administrators when an incident or
event occurs. You can configure all notification types for
administrators. This is the default notification role.
-
Configure the following settings for the selected notification role:
- Enabled—Selecting this check box
enables the notification. By default, all incident notifications
are disabled (except for Maximum file size exceeded), and
all event notifications are enabled (except for Engine
updated). For more information about suppressing individual
enabled notifications for antimalware scans and filters, see the
“Related Topics” section at the end of this topic.
- To—A semicolon-separated list of
people and groups who will receive the notification. This list can
only be changed for the Administrator notification role. It
can include Exchange names, aliases, and groups. If you right-click
and select Insert Field, you can select a keyword
substitution macro; for more information, see Keyword substitution
macros.
- Cc—A semicolon-separated list of
people and groups who will receive a "courtesy copy" of the
notification. This list can include Exchange names, aliases, and
groups. If you right-click and select Insert Field, you can
select a keyword substitution macro; for more information, see
Keyword
substitution macros.
- Bcc—A semicolon-separated list of
people and groups who will receive a "blind courtesy copy" of the
notification. This list can include Exchange names, aliases, and
groups. If you right-click and select Insert Field, you can
select a keyword substitution macro; for more information, see
Keyword
substitution macros.
- Subject—The message that is sent on
the subject line of the notification. If you right-click and select
Insert Field, you can select a keyword substitution macro;
for more information, see Keyword substitution
macros.
- Message body—The message that is sent
as the body of the notification. If you right-click and select
Insert Field, you can select a keyword substitution macro;
for more information, see Keyword substitution
macros.
You can optionally configure additional notification roles for an incident notification.
- Enabled—Selecting this check box
enables the notification. By default, all incident notifications
are disabled (except for Maximum file size exceeded), and
all event notifications are enabled (except for Engine
updated). For more information about suppressing individual
enabled notifications for antimalware scans and filters, see the
“Related Topics” section at the end of this topic.
-
Click Apply and Close to return to the Configuration - Notifications pane and then click Save.
About notifications
The following sections describe the various notifications for each notification type.
About incident notifications
Incident notifications are typically used for reporting the who, what, where, and when details of an infection, including the disposition of the malware or the document. You can also use incident notifications to keep track of the results of filtering. The following types of incident notifications are available:
- Virus found—Sent when malware is
detected.
- Spyware found—Sent when spyware is
detected.
- File filter matched—Sent when a file
filter is matched.
- Keyword filter matched—Sent when a
keyword filter is matched.
- File Error—Sent when a configured file
setting is encountered during scanning (for example, if a file is
found to be ExceedinglyNested or a CorruptedCompressedFile). For
more information about the types of incidents that may trigger this
notification, see Incidents
reported.
- Scan Error—Sent when an error occurs
during scanning. For more information about the types of incidents
that may trigger this notification, see Incidents
reported.
- Maximum file size exceeded—Sent when
the maximum file size is exceeded.
About event notifications
Event notifications report on FPSP functionality and issues. They include events like scan startup, licensing warnings, engine updates, and engine selections. The following are the available event notifications:
- Scan startup—Sent whenever a scan is
started.
- License warning—Sent when the product
license nears expiration.
- License expired—Sent when the product
license has expired.
- Database size warning—Sent when the
incidents database nears its maximum configured size. For more
information, see "Configuring the incidents database size warning"
in Managing
incidents.
- Engine updated—Sent when any engine
has been successfully updated.
- Engine update failed—Sent when any
engine encountered an error while updating.
- Engine update not available—Sent when
an engine update attempt found no new definitions.
- Critical error—Sent when FPSP
encounters a critical error. Critical event notifications cannot be
disabled and the subject and message body text cannot be
modified.
- Health change to green—Sent when a
health monitoring point changes to green.
- Health change to red—Sent when a
health monitoring point changes to red.
- Health change to yellow—Sent when a
health monitoring point changes to yellow.
Changing the From address for notifications
FPSP utilizes SMTP messaging for notification purposes, sending the message through an SMTP server. By default, the server profile used for identifying notifications is: ForefrontServerProtection@servername.server. However, you can change this server profile by modifying the FromAddress registry value.
To modify the FromAddress registry value-
Open the Registry Editor and navigate to the following registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Forefront Server Security\Notifications\
-
Modify the default value of FromAddress to the sender name you would like. Alphanumeric characters are acceptable. You may also use the at sign (@) or a period (.), but these characters cannot be the first or last character. Any illegal characters will be replaced with an underscore (_).
-
You must restart the Microsoft Forefront Server Protection service in order for this change to take effect.
Note: |
---|
To ensure that notifications are always delivered to the inbox and are not mistakenly detected as spam by Microsoft Outlook, the FromAddress of the notifications must be added to the safe senders list of all mailboxes that expect to receive these notifications. (To access the safe senders list in Outlook 2007, click Tools and then Options, click the Junk E-mail button, and then click the Safe Senders tab.) |
Configuring SMTP server settings
You can specify which SMTP server settings to use when sending e-mail notifications. You can either use the default SMTP server settings in SharePoint or enter your own SMTP server settings.
To configure SMTP server settings-
In the Configuration - Notifications pane, in the SMTP server settings section, select from the following options:
Use the SMTP server settings in SharePoint—This is the default. If your SharePoint server has been configured with an outbound SMTP server address, it is displayed for you.
Specify your own SMTP server settings—If you want to specify your own SMTP server settings, enter the following data:
- Server address—The SMTP server address. It can be either
an IP address or a fully-qualified domain name. It cannot contain
spaces.
- Port—The SMTP server port. Enter a whole number between
1 and 65535. The default is 25.
- User—The name of a user with access rights to the SMTP
server specified in the Server address field. Enter a string
of no more than 128 characters; it cannot contain any spaces. The
default is blank. If a password is required, click Edit
Credentials and enter it.
- Transport Layer Security (TLS) required—Specifies that
Transport Layer Security (TLS) is required.
- Server address—The SMTP server address. It can be either
an IP address or a fully-qualified domain name. It cannot contain
spaces.
-
Click Save.