380
C
HAPTER
19: C
ONFIGURING
AND
M
ANAGING
S
ECURITY
ACL
S
Selection of User ACLs
Identity-based ACLs (ACLs mapped to users) take precedence over
location-based ACLs (ACLs mapped to VLANs, ports, virtual ports, or
Distributed MAPs).
ACLs can be mapped to a user in the following ways:
Location policy (
inacl
or
outacl
is configured on the location policy)
User group (
attr filter-id
acl-name
.in
or
attr filter-id
acl-name
.out
is
configured on the user group)
Individual user attribute (
attr filter-id
acl-name
.in
or
attr filter-id
acl-name
.out
is configured on the individual user)
SSID default (
attr filter-id
acl-name
.in
or
attr filter-id
acl-name
.out
is configured on the SSID’s service profile)
The user’s ACL comes from only one of these sources. The sources are
listed in order from highest precedence to lowest precedence. For
example, if a user associates with an SSID that has a default ACL
configured, but a location policy is also applicable to the user, the ACL
configured on the location policy is used.
Creating and
Committing a
Security ACL
The security ACLs you create can filter packets by source address, IP
protocol, port type, and other characteristics. When you configure an
ACE for a security ACL, MSS stores the ACE in the edit buffer until you
commit the ACL to be saved to the permanent configuration. You must
commit a security ACL before you can apply it to an authenticated user’s
session or map it to a port, VLAN, virtual port, or Distributed MAP. Every
security ACL must have a name.
Setting a Source IP
ACL
You can create an ACE that filters packets based on the source IP address
and optionally applies CoS packet handling. (For CoS details, see “Class
of Service” on page 382.) You can also determine where the ACE is
placed in the security ACL by using the
before
editbuffer
-
index
or
modify
editbuffer-index
variables with an index number. You can use the
hits
counter to track how many packets the ACL filters.
Summary of Contents for 3CRWX120695A
Page 138: ...138 CHAPTER 6 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING IP INTERFACES AND SERVICES ...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 11 CONFIGURING RF LOAD BALANCING FOR MAPS ...
Page 310: ...310 CHAPTER 13 CONFIGURING USER ENCRYPTION ...
Page 322: ...322 CHAPTER 14 CONFIGURING RF AUTO TUNING ...
Page 350: ...350 CHAPTER 16 CONFIGURING QUALITY OF SERVICE ...
Page 368: ...368 CHAPTER 17 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL ...
Page 412: ...412 CHAPTER 19 CONFIGURING AND MANAGING SECURITY ACLS ...
Page 518: ...518 CHAPTER 21 CONFIGURING AAA FOR NETWORK USERS ...
Page 530: ...530 CHAPTER 22 CONFIGURING COMMUNICATION WITH RADIUS ...
Page 542: ...542 CHAPTER 23 MANAGING 802 1X ON THE WX SWITCH ...
Page 598: ...598 CHAPTER 26 ROGUE DETECTION AND COUNTERMEASURES ...
Page 706: ...706 GLOSSARY ...