Supported Acls - Cisco 3020 - Catalyst Blade Switch Configuration Manual

Cisco catalyst blade switch 3020 for hp software configuration guide, rel. 12.2(25)sef1
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Understanding ACLs
You configure access lists on a switch to provide basic security for your network. If you do not configure
ACLs, all packets passing through the switch could be allowed onto all parts of the network. You can use
ACLs to control which hosts can access different parts of a network or to decide which types of traffic
are forwarded or blocked. For example, you can allow e-mail traffic to be forwarded but not Telnet
traffic.
An ACL contains an ordered list of access control entries (ACEs). Each ACE specifies permit or deny
and a set of conditions the packet must satisfy in order to match the ACE. The meaning of permit or deny
depends on the context in which the ACL is used.
The switch supports IP ACLs and Ethernet (MAC) ACLs:
This switch also supports quality of service (QoS) classification ACLs. For more information, see the
"Classification Based on QoS ACLs" section on page
These sections contain this conceptual information:

Supported ACLs

The switch supports two applications of ACLs to filter traffic:
You can use input port ACLs and VLAN maps on the same switch. However, a port ACL takes
precedence over a VLAN map. When an input port ACL is applied to an interface that belongs to a
VLAN that has a VLAN map applied, incoming packets received at the interface are filtered by the port
ACL. Other packets are filtered by the VLAN map.
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 for HP Software Configuration Guide
26-2
IP ACLs filter IPv4 traffic, including TCP, User Datagram Protocol (UDP), Internet Group
Management Protocol (IGMP), and Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP).
Ethernet ACLs filter non-IP traffic.
Supported ACLs, page 26-2
Handling Fragmented and Unfragmented Traffic, page 26-4
Port ACLs access-control traffic entering a Layer 2 interface. The switch does not support port ACLs
in the outbound direction. You can apply only one IP access list and one MAC access list to a Layer
2 interface. For more information, see the
VLAN ACLs or VLAN maps access-control all packets (bridged and routed). You can use VLAN
maps to filter traffic between devices in the same VLAN. VLAN maps are configured to provide
access control based on Layer 3 addresses for IPv4. Unsupported protocols are access-controlled
through MAC addresses using Ethernet ACEs. After a VLAN map is applied to a VLAN, all packets
(routed or bridged) entering the VLAN are checked against the VLAN map. Packets can either enter
the VLAN through a switch port or through a routed port after being routed. For more information,
see the
"VLAN Maps" section on page
Chapter 26
Configuring Network Security with ACLs
27-7.
"Port ACLs" section on page
26-4.
26-3.
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