Planning An Acl Application; Ipv4 Traffic Management And Improved Network Performance - HP 3500yl Series Access Security Manual

Switch software
Hide thumbs Also See for 3500yl Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Note
It is important to remember that all IPv4 ACLs configurable on the switch
include an implicit deny ip any. That is, IPv4 packets that the ACL does not
explicitly permit or deny will be implicitly denied, and therefore dropped
instead of forwarded on the interface. If you want to preempt the implicit deny
so that IPv4 packets not explicitly denied by other ACEs in the ACL will be
permitted, insert an explicit "permit any" as the last ACE in the ACL. Doing so
permits any packet not explicitly denied by earlier entries. (Note that this
solution does not apply in the preceding example, where the intention is for
the switch to forward only explicitly permitted IPv4 packets routed on VLAN
12.)

Planning an ACL Application

Before creating and implementing ACLs, you need to define the policies you
want your ACLs to enforce, and understand how the ACL assignments will
impact your network users.
All IPv4 traffic entering the switch on a given interface is filtered by all ACLs
configured for inbound traffic on that interface. For this reason, an inbound
IPv4 packet will be denied (dropped) if it has a match with either an implicit
or explicit deny in any of the inbound ACLs applied to the interface. (This does
not apply to traffic leaving the switch because only one type of ACL—an
RACL—can be applied, and only to routed IPv4 traffic.)
(Refer to "Multiple ACLs on an Interface" on page 10-19.)
IPv4 Traffic Management and Improved Network
Performance
You can use ACLs to block traffic from individual hosts, workgroups, or
subnets, and to block access to VLANs, subnets, devices, and services. Traffic
criteria for ACLs include:
Switched and/or routed traffic
Any traffic of a specific IPv4 protocol type (0-255)
IPv4 Access Control Lists (ACLs)
Planning an ACL Application
10-29

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents