Cisco Systems 2955 Switch User Manual


 
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Catalyst 2950 and Catalyst 2955 Switch Software Configuration Guide
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Chapter 28 Configuring Network Security with ACLs
Configuring ACLs
Fast Ethernet ports support up to 75 ACEs per 1 ACL across a range of 8 Fast Ethernet ports.
This means that ports 1 to 8 support a combined total of 75 ACEs, ports 9 to 16 support a
combined total of 75 ACEs, and so on.
If you exceed the limit of ACEs over the range of ports, the switch will return an Error:Out of
Rule Resources
message.
For more information, see the ip access-group interface command in the command reference for this
release.
All ACEs in an ACL must have the same user-defined mask. However, ACEs can have different rules
that use the same mask. On a given interface, only one type of user-defined mask is allowed, but you
can apply any number of system-defined masks. For more information on system-defined masks, see
the
“Understanding Access Control Parameters” section on page 28-4.
This example shows the same mask in an ACL:
Switch (config)# ip access-list extended acl2
Switch (config-ext-nacl)# permit tcp 10.1.1.1 0.0.0.0 any eq 80
Switch (config-ext-nacl)# permit tcp 20.1.1.1 0.0.0.0 any eq 23
In this example, the first ACE permits all the TCP packets coming from host 10.1.1.1 with a
destination TCP port number of 80. The second ACE permits all TCP packets coming from host
20.1.1.1 with a destination TCP port number of 23. Both the ACEs use the same mask; therefore, a
switch supports this ACL.
When you apply an ACL to a physical interface, some keywords are not supported and certain mask
restrictions apply to the ACLs. See the
“Creating a Numbered Standard ACL” section on page 28-8
and the “Creating a Numbered Extended ACL” section on page 28-10 for creating these ACLs.
Note You can also apply ACLs to a management interface without the above limitations. For information, see
the “Configuring IP Services” section of the Cisco IOS IP and IP Routing Configuration Guide, Cisco
IOS Release 12.1 and the Cisco IOS IP and IP Routing Command Reference, Cisco IOS Release 12.1.
Configuring ACLs
This section includes these topics:
“Unsupported Features” section on page 28-7
“Creating Standard and Extended IP ACLs” section on page 28-7
“Creating Named MAC Extended ACLs” section on page 28-17
“Creating MAC Access Groups” section on page 28-18
Configuring ACLs on a Layer 2 interface is the same as configuring ACLs on Cisco routers. The process
is briefly described here. For more detailed information about configuring router ACLs, see the
“Configuring IP Services” chapter in the Cisco IP and IP Routing Configuration Guide, Cisco IOS
Release
12.1. For detailed information about the commands, see the Cisco IOS IP and IP Routing
Command Reference, Cisco IOS Release 12.1. For a list of Cisco IOS features not supported on the
switch, see the
“Unsupported Features” section on page 28-7.