ZyXEL Communications 3.1 User Manual

Page of 386
Chapter 8 Route
ZyWALL (ZLD) CLI Reference Guide
100
The following table describes the commands available for policy route. You must use the 
configure terminal
 command to enter the configuration mode before you can use these 
commands. 
policy_number
The number of a policy route. 1 - X where X is the highest number of policy routes 
the ZyWALL model supports. See the ZyWALL’s User’s Guide for details.
schedule_object
The name of the schedule. You may use 1-31 alphanumeric characters, 
underscores(
_
), or dashes (-), but the first character cannot be a number. This value 
is case-sensitive. 
service_name
The name of the service (group). You may use 1-31 alphanumeric characters, 
underscores(
_
), or dashes (-), but the first character cannot be a number. This value 
is case-sensitive. 
user_name
The name of a user (group). You may use 1-31 alphanumeric characters, 
underscores(
_
), or dashes (-), but the first character cannot be a number. This value 
is case-sensitive. 
destv6
The IPv6 route prefix (subnet address) for the destination. 
prefix
The IPv6 prefix length, 0 - 128.
gatewayv6
The IPv6 address of the specified gateway.
ipv6_addr
An IPv6 address.
ipv6_global_address
An IPv6 address excluding the link-local address (fe80::).
ipv6_link_local
An fe80:: IPv6 address.
Table 43   
Input Values for General Policy Route Commands (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Table 44   
Command Summary: Policy Route
COMMAND
DESCRIPTION
[no] bwm activate
Globally enables bandwidth management. You must globally activate 
bandwidth management to have individual policy routes or application 
patrol policies apply bandwidth management. The no command 
globally disables bandwidth management.
policy {policy_number | append | insert 
policy_number}
Enters the policy-route sub-command mode to configure, add or insert 
a policy. 
[no] auto-destination
When you set tunnel as the next-hop type (using the next-hop 
tunnel
 command) for this route, you can use this command to have 
the ZyWALL use the local network of the peer router that initiated an 
incoming dynamic IPSec tunnel as the destination address of the policy 
instead of what you configure by using the destination command. 
The no command disables the setting. 
[no] auto-disable
When you set interface or trunk as the next-hop type (using the 
next-hop interface
 or next-hop trunk command) for this route, 
you can use this command to have the ZyWALL automatically disable 
this policy route when the next-hop’s connection is down. The no 
command disables the setting.
[no] bandwidth <1..1048576> priority 
<1..1024> [maximize-bandwidth-usage]
Sets the maximum bandwidth and priority for the policy. The no 
command removes bandwidth settings from the rule. You can also turn 
maximize bandwidth usage on or off.
[no] deactivate
Disables the specified policy. The no command enables the specified 
policy.
[no] description description
Sets a descriptive name for the policy. The no command removes the 
name for the policy.
[no] destination {address_object|any}
Sets the destination IP address the matched packets must have. The 
no command resets the destination IP address to the default (any). 
any
 means all IP addresses.