ES-3124 User’s Guide

Syntax:

ip route <ip> <mask> <next-hop-ip>

ip route <ip> <mask> <next-hop-ip> [metric <metric>][name <name>] [inactive]

where

 

 

<ip>

=

Specifies the network IP address of the final destination.

<mask>

=

Specifies the subnet mask of this destination.

<next-hop-ip>

=

Specifies the IP address of the gateway. The gateway is an

 

 

immediate neighbor of your switch that will forward the

 

 

packet to the destination. The gateway must be a router on

 

 

the same segment as your switch.

[metric <metric>]

=

The metric represents the “cost” of transmission for routing

 

 

purposes. IP routing uses hop count as the measurement of

 

 

cost, with a minimum of 1 for directly connected networks.

 

 

Enter a number that approximates the cost for this link. The

 

 

number need not be precise, but it must be between 1 and

 

 

15. In practice, 2 or 3 is usually a good number.

[name <name>]

=

Specifies a descriptive name (up to 32 printable ASCII

 

 

characters) for identification purposes.

[inactive]

=

Deactivates a static route

An example is shown next.

Create a static route with the destination IP address of 172.21.1.104, subnet mask of 255.255.0.0 and the gateway IP address of 192.168.1.2.

Assigns a metric value of 2 to the static route.

Assigns the name “route1” to the static route.

ras(config)# ip route 172.21.1.104 255.255.0.0 192.168.1.2 ras(config)# ip route 172.21.1.104 255.255.0.0 192.168.1.2 metric 2 ras(config)# ip route 172.21.1.104 255.255.0.0 192.168.1.2 name route1

36.7 Enabling MAC Filtering

You can create a filter to drop packets based on the MAC address of the source or the destination.

Syntax:

mac-filter name <name> mac <mac-addr> vlan <vlan-id> drop <src/ dst/both>

Chapter 36 Configuration Mode Commands

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