Some Protocols Also Use Filters, So Use Some Of The Length - Allied Telesis x900-24 series Function Manual

Configuring hardware filters
Hide thumbs Also See for x900-24 series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Okay length
For example, this set of filters would work:
source MAC address
source UDP port
destination IP address + destination TCP port
The total number of bytes for the switch to check in a packet would be:
source MAC address + IP protocol type + source TCP/UDP port +
destination IP address + destination TCP/UDP port =
6 + 1 + 2 + 4 + 2 = 15 bytes
Too long
But this set of filters would not work:
source MAC address
destination MAC address
destination IP address + destination TCP port
The total number of bytes for the switch to check in a packet would be:
source MAC address + destination MAC address + IP protocol type +
destination IP address + destination TCP/UDP port =
6 + 6 + 1 + 4 + 2 = 19 bytes

Some protocols also use filters, so use some of the length

The following protocols use filters, and therefore use up some of the available profile length
and filter entries:
EPSR
EPSR matches on VLAN ID, which uses 2 bytes. EPSR is disabled by default.
IGMP
IGMP snooping matches on the IP protocol type field (to identify IGMP packets and send
them to the CPU). This uses 1 byte. IGMP snooping is enabled by default.
snooping
DHCP
DHCP snooping matches on the IP protocol type field (1 byte) and the source and
snooping
destination UDP ports (2 bytes each). Therefore, it uses 5 bytes in total. DHCP snooping is
disabled by default.
MLD
MLD snooping matches on the IPv6 router alert option and its value (2 bytes). MLD snooping
snooping
is enabled by default. If you are not using IPv6, you can turn off MLD snooping with the
command disable mldsnooping.
Page 11 | AlliedWare™ OS How To Note: Hardware Filters
How many filters can you create?

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

At-9900 seriesX900-48 series

Table of Contents

Save Article as PDF