Configuring An Rtsp Inspection Policy Map For Additional Inspection Control - Cisco PIX 500 Series Configuration Manual

Security appliance command line
Hide thumbs Also See for PIX 500 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 25
Configuring Application Layer Protocol Inspection

Configuring an RTSP Inspection Policy Map for Additional Inspection Control

To specify actions when a message violates a parameter, create an RTSP inspection policy map. You can
then apply the inspection policy map when you enable RTSP inspection according to the
Application Inspection" section on page
To create an RTSP inspection policy map, perform the following steps:
(Optional) Add one or more regular expressions for use in traffic matching commands according to the
Step 1
"Creating a Regular Expression" section on page
commands described in
(Optional) Create one or more regular expression class maps to group regular expressions according to
Step 2
the
(Optional) Create an RTSP inspection class map by performing the following steps.
Step 3
A class map groups multiple traffic matches. Traffic must match all of the match commands to match
the class map. You can alternatively identify match commands directly in the policy map. The difference
between creating a class map and defining the traffic match directly in the inspection policy map is that
the class map lets you create more complex match criteria, and you can reuse class maps.
To specify traffic that should not match the class map, use the match not command. For example, if the
match not command specifies the string "example.com," then any traffic that includes "example.com"
does not match the class map.
For the traffic that you identify in this class map, you can specify actions such as drop-connection and/or
log the connection in the inspection policy map.
If you want to perform different actions for each match command, you should identify the traffic directly
in the policy map.
a.
b.
c.
d.
OL-12172-03
You can configure NAT for Apple QuickTime 4 or RealPlayer. Cisco IP/TV only works with NAT
if the Viewer and Content Manager are on the outside network and the server is on the inside
network.
Step
3.
"Creating a Regular Expression Class Map" section on page
Create the class map by entering the following command:
hostname(config)# class-map type inspect rtsp [match-all | match-any] class_map_name
hostname(config-cmap)#
Where class_map_name is the name of the class map. The match-all keyword is the default, and
specifies that traffic must match all criteria to match the class map. The match-any keyword
specifies that the traffic matches the class map if it matches at least one of the criteria. The CLI
enters class-map configuration mode, where you can enter one or more match commands.
(Optional) To add a description to the class map, enter the following command:
hostname(config-cmap)# description string
(Optional) To match an RTSP request method, enter the following command:
hostname(config-cmap)# match [not] request-method method
Where method is the type of method to match (announce, describe, get_parameter, options, pause,
play, record, redirect, setup, set_parameter, teardown).
(Optional) To match URL filtering, enter the following command:
hostname(config-cmap)# match [not] url-filter regex {class class_name | regex_name }
25-5.
21-6. See the types of text you can match in the match
21-9.
Cisco Security Appliance Command Line Configuration Guide
RTSP Inspection
"Configuring
25-63

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Asa 5500 series

Table of Contents