Configuring Acls; Overview; Acl Categories; Match Order - HP 1920 Series User Manual

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Configuring ACLs

Unless otherwise stated, ACLs refer to both IPv4 and IPv6 ACLs throughout this document. Grayed-out
options on Web configuration pages cannot be configured.

Overview

An access control list (ACL) is a set of rules (or permit or deny statements) for identifying traffic based on
criteria such as source IP address, destination IP address, and port number.
ACLs are essentially used for packet filtering. A packet filter drops packets that match a deny rule and
permits packets that match a permit rule. ACLs are also widely used by many modules, for example, QoS
and IP routing, for traffic identification.

ACL categories

Match order

The rules in an ACL are sorted in certain order. When a packet matches a rule, the device stops the match
process and performs the action defined in the rule. If an ACL contains overlapping or conflicting rules,
the matching result and action to take depend on the rule order.
The following ACL match orders are available:
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Category
ACL number
Basic ACLs
2000 to 2999
Advanced ACLs
3000 to 3999
Ethernet frame
4000 to 4999
header ACLs
Config—Sorts ACL rules in ascending order of rule ID. A rule with a lower ID is matched before a
rule with a higher ID. If you use this method, check the rule content and order carefully.
Auto—Sorts ACL rules in depth-first order. Depth-first ordering makes sure any subset of a rule is
always matched before the rule.
uses to sort rules for each type of ACL.
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IP version
Match criteria
IPv4
Source IPv4 address
IPv6
Source IPv6 address
Source/destination IPv4 address, protocol number,
IPv4
and other Layer 3 and Layer 4 header fields
Source/destination IPv6 address, protocol number,
IPv6
and other Layer 3 and Layer 4 header fields
Layer 2 header fields, such as source and destination
IPv4 and
MAC addresses, 802.1p priority, and link layer
IPv6
protocol type
Table 136
lists the sequence of tie breakers that depth-first ordering
450

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