Sun Java Communications Suite 5 Deployment Planning Guide

Anti-Spam and Anti-Virus Considerations

This section describes issues to keep in mind when planning your deployment to use anti-spam or anti-virus technologies.

Architecture Issues with Anti-Spam and Anti-Virus Deployments

The Messaging Server MTA can reside on the same system as the mail filtering system, such as Brightmail or SpamAssassin, or you can use separate systems. One of the advantages of separating the MTA from the mail filtering servers is that you can add more processing power for the filtering simply by adding more hardware and cloning the servers. While the system is capable and not overloaded, you can have the mail filtering server software collocated with the MTA.

In general, consider deploying a “farm” of Brightmail severs that the MTAs utilize to filter mail. You can configure MTAs to use a list of Brightmail server names, which essentially the MTAs will load balance on. (This load balancing functionality is provided by the Brightmail SDK.) The advantage of having the Brightmail server farm is that when you need more processing power, you can simply add more Brightmail servers.

Mail filtering products tend to be CPU-intensive. Creating an architecture that separates the MTA and the mail filtering products onto their own machines provides for better overall performance of the messaging deployment.


Note –

Because mail filtering servers tend to be CPU-intensive in nature, you could end up with an architecture consisting of more mail filtering systems than the MTA hosts they are filtering for.


In larger deployments, consider also creating inbound and outbound mail filtering pools of servers that are associated with the respective inbound and outbound MTA pools. You can also create a “swing” pool that can be utilized as either an inbound or outbound pool, in response to need in either area.

As with the rest of the deployment, you need to monitor the mail filtering tier. A threshold of 50 percent CPU utilization is a good rule of thumb to follow. Once this threshold has been met, you need to consider adding more capacity to the mail filtering tier.

Security Issues with Anti-Spam and Anti-Virus Deployments

When planning to deploy anti-spam or anti-virus technology, keep in mind that an incorrect deployment can defeat your security measures. Figure 14–1 shows an incorrect deployment of an anti-spam/anti-virus filter solution.

Figure 14–1 Incorrect Deployment of Anti-Spam/Virus Solution

This diagrams shows an incorrect deployment of an anti-spam/virus
solution.

Figure 14–2 shows a correct deployment of an anti-spam/virus filter solution.

Figure 14–2 Correct Deployment of Anti-Spam/Virus Solution

This diagram shows a correct deployment of an anti-spam/virus
solution.

The MTA performs certain functions well, including:

The anti-spam/virus filter is good at determining if an email is spam or has a virus, but is generally not nearly as good at doing the things expected of a good MTA. Thus, do not depend on an anti-spam/virus filter to do those things. Your deployment is more “correct” when the anti-spam/virus filter is well integrated with the MTA, which is the case with Messaging Server. Messaging Server spam filter plug-in support provides all the potential reasons to reject a message early and applies all reasons at the same time.

A robust MTA, such as Messaging Server's, contains security features (SSL/TLS, traffic partitioning by IP address, early address rejection to reduce denial-of-service attacks, connection throttling by IP address/domain, and so on), which are defeated when an anti-spam/virus filter is deployed in front. Furthermore, anti-spam/virus filters that communicate by using the SMTP protocol often do not follow the robustness requirements of SMTP and thus lose email when they shouldn't. A correct deployment should have the anti-spam/virus filter working in conjunction with a robust MTA.

Implementing an RBL

In general, implementing an RBL provides the most immediate benefit to reducing spam traffic. A good RBL implemented by your MTAs immediately reduces spam by a minimum of 10 percent. In some cases, this number could approach 50 percent.

You can use your RBL and Brightmail together. If Brightmail takes care of 95 out of 100 emails for a certain IP address within some amount of time you should add that IP address to your RBL. You can adjust the RBLs for Brightmail’s false positives when you do your Brightmail analysis. That makes the RBL much more proactive in handling a specific wave of spam.