Rule Comment (For Ipv6) - HP E4510-48G Command Reference Manual

4510g series
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When defining ACL rules, you do not need to assign them IDs; the system can automatically assign
rule IDs starting with 0 and increasing in certain rule numbering steps. A rule ID thus assigned is the
smallest multiple of the step that is bigger than the current biggest number. For example, if the rule
numbering step is 5 and the current highest rule ID is 28, the next rule will be numbered 30.
You cannot create a rule with, or modify a rule to have, the same permit/deny statement as an existing
rule in the ACL.
You can only modify the existing rules of an ACL that uses the match order of config. When modifying
a rule of such an ACL, you may choose to change just some of the settings, in which case the other
settings remain the same.
When the ACL match order is auto, a newly created rule will be inserted among the existing rules in
the depth-first match order. Note that the IDs of the rules still remain the same.
For an advanced IPv6 ACL to be referenced by a QoS policy for traffic classification,
The logging and fragment keywords are not supported.
The operator cannot be neq if the ACL is for the inbound traffic.
The operator cannot be gt, lt, neq, or range if the ACL is for the outbound traffic.
Related commands: display acl ipv6.
Examples
# Configure IPv6 ACL 3000 to permit TCP packets with the source address of 2030:5060::9050/64.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] acl ipv6 number 3000
[Sysname-acl6-adv-3000] rule permit tcp source 2030:5060::9050/64

rule comment (for IPv6)

Syntax
rule rule-id comment text
undo rule rule-id comment
View
Basic IPv6 ACL view, advanced IPv6 ACL view
Default Level
2: System level
Parameters
rule-id: IPv6 ACL rule number, in the range 0 to 65534.
text: IPv6 ACL rule description, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 127 characters.
14-30

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