HP 6125G HP 6125G & 6125G/XG Blade Switches ACL and QoS Command Refere - Page 38

time-range, Description, Examples, Syntax, Default level, Parameters

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Description Use step to set a rule numbering step for an ACL. The rule numbering step sets the increment by which the system numbers rules automatically. For example, the default ACL rule numbering step is 5. If you do not assign IDs to rules you are creating, they are numbered 0, 5, 10, 15, and so on. The wider the numbering step, the more rules you can insert between two rules. Whenever the step changes, the rules are renumbered, starting from 0. For example, if there are five rules numbered 5, 10, 13, 15, and 20, changing the step from 5 to 2 causes the rules to be renumbered 0, 2, 4, 6 and 8. Use undo step to restore the default. The default rule numbering step is 5. After you restore the default numbering step by the undo step command, the rules are renumbered in steps of 5. Related commands: display acl and display acl ipv6. Examples # Set the rule numbering step to 2 for IPv4 basic ACL 2000. system-view [Sysname] acl number 2000 [Sysname-acl-basic-2000] step 2 # Set the rule numbering step to 2 for IPv6 basic ACL 2000. system-view [Sysname] acl ipv6 number 2000 [Sysname-acl6-basic-2000] step 2 time-range Syntax time-range time-range-name { start-time to end-time days [ from time1 date1 ] [ to time2 date2 ] | from time1 date1 [ to time2 date2 ] | to time2 date2 } View undo time-range time-range-name [ start-time to end-time days [ from time1 date1 ] [ to time2 date2 ] | from time1 date1 [ to time2 date2 ] | to time2 date2 ] System view Default level 2: System level Parameters time-range-name: Specifies a time range name. The name is a case-insensitive string of 1 to 32 characters. It must start with an English letter and to avoid confusion, cannot be all. start-time to end-time: Specifies a periodic statement. Both start-time and end-time are in hh:mm format (24-hour clock), and each value is in the range of 00:00 to 23:59. The end time must be greater than the start time. days: Specifies the day or days of the week (in words or digits) on which the periodic statement is valid. If you specify multiple values, separate each value with a space, and make sure that they do not overlap. These values can take one of the following forms: • A digit in the range of 0 to 6, for Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, respectively. 33

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Description
Use
step
to set a rule numbering step for an ACL. The rule numbering step sets the increment by which the
system numbers rules automatically. For example, the default ACL rule numbering step is 5. If you do not
assign IDs to rules you are creating, they are numbered 0, 5, 10, 15, and so on. The wider the numbering
step, the more rules you can insert between two rules. Whenever the step changes, the rules are
renumbered, starting from 0. For example, if there are five rules numbered 5, 10, 13, 15, and 20,
changing the step from 5 to 2 causes the rules to be renumbered 0, 2, 4, 6 and 8.
Use
undo step
to restore the default.
The default rule numbering step is 5. After you restore the default numbering step by the
undo step
command, the rules are renumbered in steps of 5.
Related commands:
display acl
and
display acl ipv6
.
Examples
# Set the rule numbering step to 2 for IPv4 basic ACL 2000.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] acl number 2000
[Sysname-acl-basic-2000] step 2
# Set the rule numbering step to 2 for IPv6 basic ACL 2000.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] acl ipv6 number 2000
[Sysname-acl6-basic-2000] step 2
time-range
Syntax
time-range
time-range-name
{
start-time
to
end-time
days
[
from
time1 date1
] [
to
time2 date2
] |
from
time1 date1
[
to
time2 date2
] |
to
time2 date2
}
undo
time-range
time-range-name
[
start-time
to
end-time
days
[
from
time1 date1
] [
to
time2 date2
]
|
from
time1 date1
[
to
time2 date2
] |
to
time2 date2
]
View
System view
Default level
2: System level
Parameters
time-range-name
: Specifies a time range name. The name is a case-insensitive string of 1 to 32
characters. It must start with an English letter and to avoid confusion, cannot be
all
.
start-time
to
end-time
: Specifies a periodic statement. Both
start-time
and
end-time
are in hh:mm format
(24-hour clock), and each value is in the range of 00:00 to 23:59. The end time must be greater than the
start time.
days
: Specifies the day or days of the week (in words or digits) on which the periodic statement is valid.
If you specify multiple values, separate each value with a space, and make sure that they do not overlap.
These values can take one of the following forms:
A digit in the range of 0 to 6, for Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and
Saturday, respectively.