Chapter 47 Configuration Mode Commands
47.6 Static Route Commands
You can create and configure static routes on the Switch by using the ip route command. Syntax:
ip route <ip> <mask>
ip route <ip> <mask>
where
<ip> | = | Specifies the network IP address of the final destination. |
<mask> | = | Specifies the subnet mask of this destination. |
= | Specifies the IP address of the gateway. The gateway is an | |
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| immediate neighbor of your Switch that will forward the |
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| packet to the destination. The gateway must be a router on |
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| the same segment as your Switch. |
[metric <metric>] | = | The metric represents the “cost” of transmission for routing |
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| purposes. IP routing uses hop count as the measurement of |
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| cost, with a minimum of 1 for directly connected networks. |
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| Enter a number that approximates the cost for this link. The |
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| number need not be precise, but it must be between 1 and |
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| 15. In practice, 2 or 3 is usually a good number. |
[name <name>] | = | Specifies a descriptive name (up to 32 printable ASCII |
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| 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.
sysname(config)# ip route 172.21.1.104 255.255.0.0 192.168.1.2 sysname(config)# ip route 172.21.1.104 255.255.0.0 192.168.1.2 metric 2 sysname(config)# ip route 172.21.1.104 255.255.0.0 192.168.1.2 name route1
47.7 Enabling MAC Filtering
You can create a filter to drop packets based on the MAC address of the source or the destination.
Syntax:
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