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Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
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Chapter34 Configuring Network Securi ty with ACLs Configuring IPv4 ACLs
When you are creating standard extended ACLs, remember that, by default, the end of the ACL contains
an implicit deny statement for everything if it did not find a match before reaching the end. For standard
ACLs, if you omit the mask from an associated IP host address access list specification, 0.0.0.0 is
assumed to be the mask.
After you create an ACL, any additions are placed at the en d of t he list . You cannot selectively add A CL
entries to a specific ACL. However, you c an use no permi t and no deny access-list con figuration mode
commands to remove entries from a named ACL. This example shows how you can delete in dividual
ACEs from the named access list border-list:
Switch(config)# ip access-list extended border-list
Switch(config-ext-nacl)# no permit ip host 10.1.1.3 any
Being able to selectively remove lines from a named ACL is one reason you might use named ACLs
instead of numbered ACLs.
After creating a named ACL, you can apply it to interfaces (see the Applying an IPv4 ACL to an
Interface” section on page 34-20) or to VLANs (see the “Configuring VLAN Maps” section on
page 34-30).
Using Time Ranges with ACLs
You can selectively apply extended ACLs based on the time of day and the week by using the time-range
global configuration command. First, define a time-range name and set the times and the dates or the
days of the week in the time range. Then enter the time-range name when applying an ACL to set
restrictions to the access list. You can use the time range to define when the permit or deny statements
in the ACL are in effect, for example, during a specified time period or on specified days of the week.
The time-range keyword and argument are referenced in the named an d n umb er ed exten de d ACL task
tables in the previous sections, the “Creating Standard and Extended IPv4 ACLs” section on page 34-8,
and the “Creating Named Standard and Extended ACLs” section on pag e 34-15.
These are some of the many possible benefits of using time ranges:
You have more control over permitting or denying a user access to resources, such as an application
(identified by an IP address/mask pair and a port number).
You can control logging messages. ACL entries can be set to log traffic only at certain times of the
day. Therefore, you can simply deny access without needing to analyze many logs generated during
peak hours.
Time-based access lists trigger CPU activity because the new configuration of the access list must be
merged with other features and the combined configuration loaded into the hardware memory. For this
reason, you should be careful not to have several access lists configured to take af fect in close succe ssion
(within a small number of minutes of each other.)
Note The time range relies on the switch system clock; therefore, you need a reliable clock source. We
recommend that you use Network Time Protocol (NTP) to synchronize the swi tch cl ock. For mo re
information, see the “Managing the System Time and Date” section on page 6-1.