TP-Link TL-SG3210 TL-SG3210 V1 CLI Reference Guide - Page 144

acl edit rule mac-acl

Page 144 highlights

number. user-pri -- The user priority contained in the rule, ranging from 0 to 7. By default, it is not limited. time-segment -- The time-range for the rule to take effect. By default, it is not limited. Command Mode Global Configuration Mode Example Create a MAC ACL whose ID is 20, and add Rule 10 for it. In the rule, the source MAC address is 00:01:3F:48:16:23, the source MAC address mask is 11:11:11:11:11:00, VLAN ID is 2, the user priority is 5, the time-range for the rule to take effect is tSeg1, and the packets match this rule will be forwarded by the switch: TP-LINK(config)# acl create 20 TP-LINK(config)# acl rule mac-acl 20 10 op permit smac 00:01:3F:48:16:23 smask 11:11:11:11:11:00 vid 2 pri 5 tseg tSeg1 acl edit rule mac-acl Description The acl edit rule mac-acl command is used to edit MAC ACL rule. Syntax acl edit rule mac-acl {acl-id} {rule-id} [op {discard | permit}] [[smac source-mac] {smask source-mac-mask}] [[dmac destination-mac] {dmask destination-mac-mask}] [vid vlan-id] [type ethernet-type] [pri user-pri] [tseg time-segment] [index idx] Parameter acl-id -- The desired MAC ACL for configuration. rule-id -- The rule ID. op -- The operation for the switch to process packets which match the rules. There are two options, discard and permit. Discard means discarding packets, and permit means forwarding packets. By default, the option is permit. source-mac -- The source MAC address contained in the rule. source-mac-mask -- The source MAC address mask. It is required if you typed the source MAC address. 132

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132
number.
user-pri
——
The user priority contained in the rule, ranging from 0 to 7. By
default, it is not limited.
time-segment
——
The time-range for the rule to take effect. By default, it is
not limited.
Command Mode
Global Configuration Mode
Example
Create a MAC ACL whose ID is 20, and add Rule 10 for it. In the rule, the source
MAC address is 00:01:3F:48:16:23, the source MAC address mask is
11:11:11:11:11:00, VLAN ID is 2, the user priority is 5, the time-range for the rule
to take effect is tSeg1, and the packets match this rule will be forwarded by the
switch:
TP-LINK(config)# acl create
20
TP-LINK(config)# acl rule mac-acl
20 10
op
permit
smac
00:01:3F:48:16:23
smask
11:11:11:11:11:00
vid
2
pri
5
tseg
tSeg1
acl edit rule mac-acl
Description
The
acl edit rule mac-acl
command is used to edit MAC ACL rule.
Syntax
acl edit rule mac-acl
{
acl-id
} {
rule-id
} [
op
{discard | permit}] [[
smac
source-mac
]
{
smask
source-mac-mask
}] [[
dmac
destination-mac
] {
dmask
destination-mac-mask
}] [
vid
vlan-id
] [
type
ethernet-type
] [
pri
user-pri
] [
tseg
time-segment
] [
index
idx
]
Parameter
acl-id
——
The desired MAC ACL for configuration.
rule-id
——
The rule ID.
op
——
The operation for the switch to process packets which match the rules.
There are two options, discard and permit. Discard means discarding packets,
and permit means forwarding packets. By default, the option is permit.
source-mac
——
The source MAC address contained in the rule.
source-mac-mask
——
The source MAC address mask. It is required if you
typed the source MAC address.