Configuring and Managing Security ACLs 359

Setting TCP and UDP ACLs

Security ACLs can filter TCP and UDP packets by source and destination IP address, precedence, and TOS level. You can apply a TCP ACL to established TCP sessions only, not to new TCP sessions. In addition, security ACLs for TCP and UDP can filter packets according to a source port on the source IP address and/or a destination port on the destina- tion IP address, if you specify a port number and an operator in the ACE. (For a list of TCP and UDP port numbers, see http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers.)

The operator indicates whether to filter packets arriving from or destined for a port whose number is equal to (eq), greater than (gt), less than (lt), not equal to (neq), or in a range that includes (range) the specified port. To specify a range of TCP or UDP ports, you enter the beginning and ending port numbers.

Note. The CLI does not accept port names in ACLs. To filter on ports by name, you must use WLAN Management Software . For more information, see the Nortel WLAN Management Software Reference Manual.

Setting a TCP ACL

The following command filters TCP packets:

set security acl ip acl-name {permit [cos cos] deny} tcp {source-ip-addr mask [operator port [port2]] destination-ip-addr mask [operator port [port2]]} [precedence precedence] [tos tos] [established] [before editbuffer-index modify editbuffer-index] [hits]

For example, the following command permits packets sent from IP address 192.168.1.5 to 192.168.1.6 with the TCP destination port equal to 524, a precedence of 7, and a type of service of 15, on an established TCP session, and counts the number of hits generated by the ACE:

23x0# set security acl ip acl-4 permit tcp 192.168.1.5 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.6 0.0.0.0 eq 524 precedence 7 tos 15 established hits

(For information about TOS and precedence levels, see the Nortel Mobility System Software Command Reference. For CoS details, see “Class of Service” on page 355.)

Setting a UDP ACL

The following command filters UDP packets:

set security acl ip acl-name {permit [cos cos] deny} udp {source-ip-addr mask [operator port [port2]] destination-ip-addr mask [operator port [port2]]} [precedence precedence] [tos tos] [before editbuffer-index modify editbuffer-index] [hits]

For example, the following command permits UDP packets sent from IP address 192.168.1.7 to IP address 192.168.1.8, with any UDP destination port less than 65,535. It puts this ACE first in the ACL, and counts the number of hits generated by the ACE.

23x0# set security acl ip acl-5 permit udp 192.168.1.7 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.8 0.0.0.0 lt 65535 precedence 7 tos 15 before 1 hits

Nortel WLAN Security Switch 2300 Series Configuration Guide

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Nortel Networks 2300 manual Setting TCP and UDP ACLs, Setting a TCP ACL, Setting a UDP ACL