Netgear GSM4248P User Manual - Page 471
Secondary VLAN, Ethernet Type, Value, Source MAC, Address, Destination MAC, Protocol Type, Other
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AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series Main User Manual • Secondary VLAN: Select this radio button to require a packet's VLAN ID to match a secondary VLAN ID. The VLAN value is in the range from 1 to 4093. • Ethernet Type: Select this radio button to require the EtherType value in the Ethernet frame header to match the specified EtherType value. After you select the radio button, select the EtherType keyword from the menu of common protocols that are mapped to their Ethertype value. You can also select User Value from the menu and enter a value in the hexadecimal range from 600 to ffff. • Source MAC: Select this radio button to require a packet's source MAC address to match the specified MAC address. After you select this radio button, use the following fields to configure the source MAC address match criteria: • Address: The source MAC address to match. The source MAC address is specified as six two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated by colons. • Mask: The MAC mask, which specifies the bits in the source MAC address to compare against the Ethernet frame. Use Fs and zeros to configure the MAC mask. An F means that the bit is checked, and a zero in a bit position means that the data is not significant. For example, if the MAC address is aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, and the mask is ff:ff:00:00:00:00, all MAC addresses with aa:bb:xx:xx:xx:xx result in a match (where x is any hexadecimal number). Note that this is not a wildcard mask, which ACLs use. • Destination MAC: Select this radio button to require a packet's destination MAC address to match the specified MAC address. After you select the radio button, use the following fields to configure the destination MAC address match criteria: • Address: The destination MAC address to match. The destination MAC address is specified as six two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated by colons. • Mask: The MAC mask, which specifies the bits in the destination MAC address to compare against an Ethernet frame. Use Fs and zeros to configure the MAC mask. An F means that the bit is checked, and a zero in a bit position means that the data is not significant. For example, if the MAC address is aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, and the mask is ff:ff:00:00:00:00, all MAC addresses with aa:bb:xx:xx:xx:xx result in a match (where x is any hexadecimal number). Note that this is not a wildcard mask, which ACLs use. • Protocol Type: Select this radio button to require a packet's Layer 4 protocol to match the specified protocol, which you must select from the menu. You can also select Other from the menu and enter a protocol number from 0 to 255. • Source IP: Select this radio button to require a packet's source IP address to match the specified IP address. After you select the radio button, use the following fields to configure the source IP address match criteria: • Address: The source IP address format to match in dotted-decimal. Configure Quality of Service 471 Main User Manual