Dell MX5108n OS10 Enterprise Edition User Guide for PowerEdge MX IO Modules Re - Page 504
Access Control Lists, IP ACLs
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9 Access Control Lists OS10 uses two types of access policies - hardware-based ACLs and software-based route-maps. Use an ACL to filter traffic and drop or forward matching packets. To redistribute routes that match configured criteria, use a route-map. ACLs ACLs are a filter containing criterion to match; for example, examine IP, TCP, or UDP packets, and an action to take such as forwarding or dropping packets at the NPU. ACLs permit or deny traffic based on MAC and/or IP addresses. The number of ACL entries is hardwaredependent. ACLs have only two actions - forward or drop. Route-maps not only permit or block redistributed routes but also modify information associated with the route when it is redistributed into another protocol. When a packet matches a filter, the device drops or forwards the packet based on the filter's specified action. If the packet does not match any of the filters in the ACL, the packet drops (implicit deny). ACL rules do not consume hardware resources until you apply the ACL to an interface. ACLs process in sequence. If a packet does not match the criterion in the first filter, the second filter applies. If you configured multiple hardware-based ACLs, filter rules apply on the packet content based on the priority NPU rule. Route maps Route-maps are software-based filtering in a routing protocol redistributing routes from one protocol to another and used in decision criterion in route advertisements. A route-map defines which of the routes from the specified routing protocol redistributed into the target routing process, see Route-maps. Route-maps with more than one match criterion, two or more matches within the same route-map sequence have different match commands. Matching a packet against this criterion is an AND operation. If no match is found in a route-map sequence, the process moves to the next route-map sequence until a match is found, or until there are no more sequences. When a match is found, the packet is forwarded and no additional route-map sequences process. If you include a continue clause in the route-map sequence, the next route-map sequence also processes after a match is found. IP ACLs An ACL filters packets based on the: • IP protocol number • Source and destination IP address • Source and destination TCP port number • Source and destination UDP port number For ACL, TCP, and UDP filters, match criteria on specific TCP or UDP ports. For ACL TCP filters, you can also match criteria on established TCP sessions. When creating an ACL, the sequence of the filters is important. You can assign sequence numbers to the filters as you enter them or OS10 can assign numbers in the order you create the filters. The sequence numbers display in the show running-configuration and show ip access-lists [in | out] command output. Ingress and egress hot-lock ACLs allow you to append or delete new rules into an existing ACL without disrupting traffic flow. Existing entries in the CAM shuffle to accommodate the new entries. Hot-lock ACLs are enabled by default and support ACLs on all platforms. 504 Access Control Lists