GS716Tv2 and GS724Tv3 Software Administration Manual
•Deny: Drops packets that meet the ACL criteria.
•Assign Queue. Specifies the hardware egress queue identifier used to handle all packets matching this ACL rule. Enter an identifying number from
•Redirect Interface. Specifies the specific egress interface where the matching traffic stream is forced, bypassing any forwarding decision normally performed by the device.
•Match Every. Requires a packet to match the criteria of this ACL. Select True or False from the
•CoS. Requires a packet’s class of service (CoS) to match the CoS value listed here. Enter a CoS value between
•Secondary CoS. Requires a packet’s secondary 802.1p priority value, which is the dot1p value in the secondary (i.e. inner) tag of a
•CPU Notification Mode. This field is configurable only when the action is denied.
•Enable. The switch to turn off PoE power to the port if the user is rejected by ACL. When the rule is hit and the PoE component receives this notification, the PoE component turns off PoE power for the port. To turn on the port power, you must manually enable the PoE port Admin Mode.
•Disable: When a packet matches the ACL rule, the CPU is not notified, and the port continues to provide power.
•Destination MAC. Requires an Ethernet frame’s destination port MAC address to match the address listed here. Enter a MAC address in this field. The valid format is xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx.
•Destination MAC Mask. If desired, enter the MAC Mask associated with the Destination MAC to match. The MAC address mask specifies which bits in the destination MAC to compare against an Ethernet frame. Use Fs and zeros in the MAC mask, which is in a wildcard format. An F means that the bit is not checked, and a zero in a bit position means that the data must equal the value given for that bit. For example, if the MAC address is aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, and the mask is 00:00:ff:ff:ff:ff, all MAC addresses with aa:bb:xx:xx:xx:xx result in a match (where x is any hexadecimal number). A MAC mask of 00:00:00:00:00:00 matches a single MAC address.
•EtherType Key. Requires a packet’s EtherType to match the EtherType you select. Select the EtherType value from the drop down menu. If you select User Value, you can enter a custom EtherType value.
•EtherType User Value. This field is configurable if you select User Value from the EtherType drop down menu. The value you enter specifies a customized Ethertype to compare against an Ethernet frame. The valid range of values is
•Source MAC. Requires a packet’s source port MAC address to match the address listed here. Enter a MAC address in the this field. The valid format is xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx.
•Source MAC Mask. If desired, enter the MAC mask for the source MAC address to match. Use Fs and zeros in the MAC mask, which is in a wildcard format. An F means that the bit is not checked, and a zero in a bit position means that the data must equal
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