Canadian SIN | Canadian Social Insurance Number. The format is three groups of three digits, such as 649 242 666. |
US SSN | United States Social Security number. The format is a nine digit number, such as 078051111. |
Credit Card | Major credit card number formats. |
ABA Routing | A routing transit number (RTN) is a nine digit bank code, used in the United States, which appears on the bottom of negotiable instruments such as checks identifying the financial institution on which it was drawn. |
CUSIP | CUSIP typically refers to both the Committee on Uniform Security Identification Procedures and the 9-character alphanumeric security identifiers that they distribute for all North American securities for the purposes of facilitating clearing and settlement of trades. |
ISIN | An International Securities Identification Number (ISIN) uniquely identifies a security. Securities for which ISINs are issued include bonds, commercial paper, equities and warrants. The ISIN code is a 12-character alpha-numerical code that does not contain information characterizing financial instruments but serves for uniform identification of a security at trading and settlement. |
GUI item | Description |
Export (button) | Select one dictionary check box and click Export. Follow the prompts to save the dictionary file. Note that you can only export one dictionary at a time. |
Import (button) | Select one dictionary check box and then click the import button to import dictionary entries into the existing dictionary. In the dialog, click Browse to locate a dictionary in text format. Click OK to upload the file. Note that you can only select one dictionary at a time and you can only import dictionary entries into an existing dictionary. |
Name | Displays the dictionary name. |
GUI item | Description |
Enable | Select to enable a pattern. |
Pattern | Type a word or phrase that you want the dictionary to match, expressed either verbatim, with wild cards, or as a regular expression. Regular expressions do not require slash ( / ) boundaries. For example, enter: v[i1]agr?a Matches are case insensitive and can occur over multiple lines as if the word were on a single line. (That is, Perl-style match modifier options i and s are in effect.) The FortiMail unit will convert the encoding and character set into UTF‑8, the same encoding in which dictionary patterns are stored, before evaluating an email for a match with the pattern. Because of this, your pattern must match the UTF‑8 string, not the originally encoded string. For example, if the original encoded string is: =?iso-8859-1?B?U2UgdHJhdGEgZGVsIHNwYW0uCg==?= the pattern must match: Se trata del spam. Entering the pattern *iso-8859-1* would not match. This option is not editable for predefined patterns. |
Pattern type | For a new dictionary entry, select either: • Wildcard: Pattern is verbatim or uses only simple wild cards (? or *). • Regex: Pattern is a Perl-style regular expression. This option is not editable for predefined patterns. |
Comments | Enter any descriptions for the pattern. |
Pattern weight | Enter a number by which an email’s dictionary match score will be incremented for each word or phrase it contains that matches this pattern. The dictionary match score may be used by content monitor profiles and antispam profiles to determine whether or not to apply the content action. For more information about antispam profiles, see “Configuring dictionary options”. For more information about content monitor profiles, see “Configuring content monitor and filtering”. |
Pattern max weight | Enter the maximum by which matches of this pattern can contribute to an email’s dictionary match score. This option applies only if Enable pattern max weight limit is enabled. |
Enable pattern max weight limit | Enable if the pattern must not increase an email’s dictionary match score more than the amount configured in Pattern max weight. |
Search header | Enable to match occurrences of the pattern when it is located in an email’s message headers, including the subject line. The FortiMail unit uses the full header string, including the header name and value, to match the pattern. Therefore, when you define the pattern, you can specify both the header name and value. For example, such a pattern entry as from: .*@example.com.* will block all email messages with the From header as xxx@example.com. |
Search body | Enable to match occurrences of the pattern when it is located in an email’s message body. |