Hardware And Software Treatment Of Ip Acls; Ipv4 Acl Configuration Examples - Cisco Catalyst 3120 Software Manual

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Configuring IPv4 ACLs

Hardware and Software Treatment of IP ACLs

ACL processing is primarily accomplished in hardware, but requires forwarding of some traffic flows to
the CPU for software processing. If the hardware reaches its capacity to store ACL configurations,
packets are sent to the CPU for forwarding. The forwarding rate for software-forwarded traffic is
substantially less than for hardware-forwarded traffic.
Note
If an ACL configuration cannot be implemented in hardware due to an out-of-resource condition on a
switch or stack member, then only the traffic in that VLAN arriving on that switch is affected (forwarded
in software). Software forwarding of packets might adversely impact the performance of the switch or
switch stack, depending on the number of CPU cycles that this consumes.
For router ACLs, other factors can cause packets to be sent to the CPU:
When traffic flows are both logged and forwarded, forwarding is done by hardware, but logging must be
done by software. Because of the difference in packet handling capacity between hardware and software,
if the sum of all flows being logged (both permitted flows and denied flows) is of great enough
bandwidth, not all of the packets that are forwarded can be logged.
If router ACL configuration cannot be applied in hardware, packets arriving in a VLAN that must be
routed are routed in software, but are bridged in hardware. If ACLs cause large numbers of packets to be
sent to the CPU, the switch performance can be negatively affected.
When you enter the show ip access-lists privileged EXEC command, the match count displayed does
not account for packets that are access controlled in hardware. Use the show access-lists hardware
counters privileged EXEC command to obtain some basic hardware ACL statistics for switched and
routed packets.
Router ACLs function as follows:

IPv4 ACL Configuration Examples

This section provides examples of configuring and applying IPv4 ACLs. For detailed information about
compiling ACLs, see the Cisco IOS Security Configuration Guide, Release 12.2 and to the Configuring
IP Services" section in the "IP Addressing and Services" chapter of the Cisco IOS IP Configuration
Guide, Release 12.2.
Figure 34-3
Server A, containing benefits and other information that all employees can access, and routed Port 1
connected to Blade Server B, containing confidential payroll data. All users can access Blade Server A,
but Blade Server B has restricted access.
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3120 for HP Software Configuration Guide
34-22
Using the log keyword
Generating ICMP unreachable messages
The hardware controls permit and deny actions of standard and extended ACLs (input and output)
for security access control.
If log has not been specified, the flows that match a deny statement in a security ACL are dropped
by the hardware if ip unreachables is disabled. The flows matching a permit statement are switched
in hardware.
Adding the log keyword to an ACE in a router ACL causes a copy of the packet to be sent to the
CPU for logging only. If the ACE is a permit statement, the packet is still switched and routed
in hardware.
shows a small networked office environment with routed Port 2 connected to Blade
Chapter 34
Configuring Network Security with ACLs
OL-12247-01

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