Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C170 Referências técnicas

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CLI Reference Guide for AsyncOS 9.7 for Cisco Email Security Appliances
 
Chapter 3      The Commands: Reference Examples
  Networking Configuration / Network Tools
Routes consist of a nickname (for future reference), a destination, and a gateway. A gateway (the next 
hop) is an IP address such as 
10.1.1.2
. The destination can be one of two things:
an IP address, such as 
192.168.14.32
a subnet using CIDR notation. For example, 
192.168.5.0/24
 means the entire class C network from 
192.168.5.0
 to 
192.168.5.255
For IPv6 addresses, you can use the following formats:
2620:101:2004:4202::0-2620:101:2004:4202::ff
2620:101:2004:4202::
2620:101:2004:4202::23
2620:101:2004:4202::/64
The command presents a list of all currently configured TCP/IP routes for you to select from using the 
edit
 and 
delete
 subcommands. 
Usage
Commit: This command requires a ‘commit’.
Cluster Management: This command is restricted to machine mode.
Batch Command: This command supports a batch format.
Batch Format
The batch format of the 
smtproutes
 command can be used to perform all the fuctions of the traditional 
CLI command. You can choose whether to use IPv4 or IPv6 addresses for the route.
Creating a static route:
Editing a static route:
routeconfig new 4|6 <name> <destination_address> <gateway_ip>
Table 3-11
routeconfig Arguments
Argument
Description
4 | 6
The IP version (IPv4 or IPv6) to apply this command 
to. For 
clear
 and 
print
 this option can be omitted 
and the command applies to both versions.
name
The name of the route.
destination_address
The IP or CIDR address to match on for outgoing IP 
traffic.
gateway_ip
 The IP address to send this traffic to.
routeconfig edit 4|6 <name> <new_name> <destination_address> 
<gateway_ip>