Defining Access Lists And Groups; Configuring An Ip Access List - Motorola BSR 2000 Configuration And Management Manual

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BSR 2000 Configuration and Management Guide
The commands below apply the route map to a BGP neighbor:

Defining Access Lists and Groups

An access list is a sequential collection of permit and deny conditions. The BSR tests
each condition against conditions in an access list, and supports the following access
lists.
Use the following sections to configure access lists and access groups on the BSR:

Configuring an IP Access List

1. Use the access-list command in Global Configuration mode to configure an IP
2. Permit and deny conditions in an IP access list apply to IP addresses. Use the
8-6
router bgp 100
neighbor 160.20.30.4 route-map locpref in
Configuring an IP Access List
Configuring an AS-path Access-list
Configuring an IP Access Group
access list:
MOT (config)#access-list {<1-99>| <100-199> | <1300-1999> |
<2000-2699>}{deny | permit} {<A.B.C.D>
where:
1-99 is the standard access list number.
100-199 is the extended access list number.
1300-1999 is the expanded range standard access list number.
2000-2699 is the expanded range extended access list number.
A.B.C.D is the source IP address.
A.B.C.D is the wildcard bits of the source address.
A.B.C.D is the destination IP address.
A.B.C.D is the wildcard bits of the destination address.
neighbor distribute-list command to apply an access list to a neighbor router:
MOT (config)#neighbor distribute-list
<
A.B.C.D
MGBI
Release 1.0
>
<
| any | host
A.B.C.D
526360-001-00 Rev. B
>
}

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