3com WXR100 3CRWXR10095A User Manual

Page of 750
CLI Conventions
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Table 3 gives examples of user globs.
MAC Address Globs
A media access control (MAC) address glob is a similar method for 
matching some authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) and 
forwarding database (FDB) commands to one or more 6-byte MAC 
addresses. In a MAC address glob, you can use a single asterisk (*) as a 
wildcard to match all MAC addresses, or as follows to match from 1 byte 
to 5 bytes of the MAC address:
00:*
00:01:*
00:01:02:*
00:01:02:03:*
00:01:02:03:04:*
For example, the MAC address glob 02:06:8c* represents all MAC 
addresses starting with 02:06:8c. Specifying only the first 3 bytes of a 
MAC address allows you to apply commands to MAC addresses based on 
an organizationally unique identity (OUI).
Table 3   User Globs
User Glob
User(s) Designated
jose@example.com
User jose at example.com
*@example.com
All users at example.com whose usernames do not 
contain periods — for example, jose@example.com 
and tamara@example.com, but not 
nin.wong@example.com, because nin.wong 
contains a period
*@marketing.example.com
All marketing users at example.com whose 
usernames do not contain periods
*.*@marketing.example.com All marketing users at example.com whose 
usernames contain periods
*
All users with usernames that have no delimiters
EXAMPLE\*
All users in the Windows Domain EXAMPLE with 
usernames that have no delimiters
EXAMPLE\*.*
All users in the Windows Domain EXAMPLE whose 
usernames contain periods
**
All users