Cisco Cisco WAP371 Wireless-AC N Access Point with Single Point Setup Manual De Mantenimiento

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Cisco Small Business WAP371 Wireless Access Point Administration Guide 
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Match to Port—Matches the destination port in the datagram header with an IANA 
port number that you specify. The port range is from 0 to 65535 and includes three 
different types of ports:
0 to 1023—Well Known Ports
1024 to 49151—Registered Ports
49152 to 65535—Dynamic and/or Private Ports
EtherType—Compares the match criteria against the value in the header of an Ethernet 
frame. 
Select an EtherType keyword or enter an EtherType value to specify the match criteria.
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Select from List—Matches the Ethertype in the datagram header with the selected 
protocol types: appletalk, arp, ipv4, ipv6, ipx, netbios, pppoe.
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Match to Value—Matches the Ethertype in the datagram header with a custom 
protocol identifier that you specify. The value can be a four-digit hexadecimal 
number in the range of 0600 to FFFF.
Class of Service—A class of service 802.1p user priority value to be matched for the 
packets. The valid range is from 0 to 7.
Source MAC Address—A source MAC address to compare against an Ethernet frame.
Source MAC Mask—The source MAC address mask specifying which bits in the 
source MAC to compare against an Ethernet frame.
For each bit position in the MAC mask, a 1 indicates that the corresponding address bit 
is significant and a 0 indicates that the address bit is ignored. For example, to check only 
the first four octets of a MAC address, a MAC mask of ff:ff:ff:ff:00:00 is used. A MAC 
mask of ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff checks all address bits and is used to match a single MAC 
address. 
Destination MAC Address—The destination MAC address to compare against an 
Ethernet frame.
Destination MAC Mask—The destination MAC address mask specifying which bits in 
the destination MAC to compare against an Ethernet frame.
For each bit position in the MAC mask, a 1 indicates that the corresponding address bit 
is significant and a 0 indicates that the address bit is ignored. For example, to check only 
the first four octets of a MAC address, a MAC mask of ff:ff:ff:ff:00:00 is used. A MAC 
mask of ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff checks all address bits and is used to match a single MAC 
address.