Netgear GS510TP – ProSAFE 8-Port Gigabit Smart Switch with PoE and 2 fiber SFP ports 管理者ガイド

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Managing Device Security
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 GS510TP and GS110T Gigabit Smart Switches
MAC Rules
Use the MAC Rules page to define rules for MAC-based ACLs. The access list definition 
includes rules that specify whether traffic matching the criteria is forwarded normally or 
discarded. A default 'deny all' rule is the last rule of every list.
To display the MAC Rules page, click Security > ACL, then click the Basic > MAC Rules link.
To configure MAC ACL rules:
1. 
From the ACL Name field, specify the existing MAC ACL to which the rule will apply. To 
2. 
To add a new rule, enter an ID for the rule, configure the following settings, and click Add.
•     
Action. Specify what action should be taken if a packet matches the rule's criteria:
•     
Permit: Forwards packets that meet the ACL criteria.
•     
Deny: Drops packets that meet the ACL criteria.
•     
Assign Queue. Specifies the hardware egress queue identifier used to handle all 
packets matching this ACL rule. Enter an identifying number from 0–3 in this field. 
•     
Match Every. Requires a packet to match the criteria of this ACL. Select True or 
False from the drop down menu. Match Every is exclusive to the other filtering rules, 
so if Match Every is True, the other rules on the screen are not available. 
•     
CoS. Requires a packet’s class of service (CoS) to match the CoS value listed here. 
Enter a CoS value between 0–7 to apply this criteria.
•     
Destination MAC. Requires an Ethernet frame’s destination port MAC address to 
match the address listed here. Enter a MAC address in this field. The valid format is 
xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx. 
•     
Destination MAC Mask. If desired, enter the MAC Mask associated with the 
Destination MAC to match. The MAC address mask specifies which bits in the 
destination MAC to compare against an Ethernet frame. Use Fs and zeros in the MAC 
mask, which is in a wildcard format. An F means that the bit is not checked, and a 
zero in a bit position means that the data must equal the value given for that bit. For 
example, if the MAC address is aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, and the mask is 00:00:ff:ff:ff:ff, all 
MAC addresses with aa:bb:xx:xx:xx:xx result in a match (where x is any hexadecimal 
number). A MAC mask of 00:00:00:00:00:00 matches a single MAC address.