Note
Access Control Lists (ACLs) for the Series 3400cl and Series 6400cl Switches
Configuring and Assigning a Numbered, Standard ACL
Configuring Named ACLs "Configuring a Named ACL" on page 10-54
Configuring Extended,
Numbered ACLs
To configure named ACLs, refer to "Configuring a Named ACL" on
■
page 10-54.
To configure extended, numbered ACLs, refer to "Configuring and
■
Assigning a Numbered, Extended ACL" on page 10-48.
A standard ACL uses only source IP addresses in its ACEs. This type of ACE
is useful when you need to:
■
Permit or deny traffic based on source IP address only.
■
Quickly control the IP traffic from a specific address, a group of
addresses, or a subnet. This allows you to isolate traffic problems
generated by a specific device, group of contiguous devices, or a
subnet threatening to degrade network performance. This gives you
an opportunity to troubleshoot without sacrificing performance for
users outside of the problem area.
You can identify each standard ACL with a number in the range of 1 - 99, or an
alphanumeric string of up to 64 characters. The CLI command process for
using an alphanumeric string to name an ACL differs from the command
process for a numeric name. For a description of how to name an ACL with
an alphanumeric character string, refer to "Configuring a Named ACL" on page
10-54. To view the command differences, refer to table 10-1, "Comprehensive
Command Summary" on page 10-5.
For a summary of ACL commands, refer to table 10-1, "Comprehensive Com
mand Summary", on page 10-5.
"Configuring and Assigning a Numbered, Extended ACL" on page
10-48
Configuring and Assigning an ACL
10-43