Brocade Communications Systems 12.4.00a Manual De Usuario

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ServerIron ADX Security Guide
53-1002440-03
Configuring numbered and named ACLs
2
echo-reply
information-request
log
mask-reply
mask-request
parameter-problem
redirect
source-quench
time-exceeded
timestamp-reply
timestamp-request
unreachable
<num>
The <operator> parameter specifies a comparison operator for the TCP or UDP port number. This 
parameter applies only when you specify tcp or udp as the IP protocol. For example, if you are 
configuring an entry for HTTP, specify tcp eq http. You can enter one of the following operators:
eq – The policy applies to the TCP or UDP port name or number you enter after eq.
gt – The policy applies to TCP or UDP port numbers greater than the port number or the 
numeric equivalent of the port name you enter after gt.
lt – The policy applies to TCP or UDP port numbers that are less than the port number or the 
numeric equivalent of the port name you enter after lt.
neq – The policy applies to all TCP or UDP port numbers except the port number or port name 
you enter after neq.
range – The policy applies to all TCP or UDP port numbers that are between the first TCP or 
UDP port name or number and the second one you enter following the range parameter. The 
range includes the port names or numbers you enter. For example, to apply the policy to all 
ports between and including 23 (Telnet) and 53 (DNS), enter the following: range 23 53. The 
first port number in the range must be lower than the last number in the range.
established – This operator applies only to TCP packets. If you use this operator, the policy 
applies to TCP packets that have the ACK (Acknowledgment) or RST (Reset) bits set on (set to 
“1”) in the Control Bits field of the TCP packet header. Thus, the policy applies only to 
established TCP sessions, not to new sessions. Refer to Section 3.1, “Header Format”, in RFC 
793 for information about this field.
NOTE
This operator applies only to destination TCP ports, not source TCP ports.
The <tcp/udp-port> parameter specifies the TCP or UDP port number or well-known name. You can 
specify a well-known name for any application port whose number is less than 1024. For other 
application ports, you must enter the number. Enter “?” instead of a port to list the well-known 
names recognized by the CLI.
The in | out parameter specifies whether the ACL applies to incoming traffic or outgoing traffic on 
the interface to which you apply the ACL. You can apply the ACL to an Ethernet port.