User Control
61
Controlling Telnet Users by Source and Destination IP Addresses
Controlling Telnet users by source and destination IP addresses is achieved by
applying advanced ACLs, which are numbered from 3000 to 3999.
Controlling Telnet Users by Source MAC Addresses
Controlling Telnet users by source MAC addresses is achieved by applying Layer 2
ACLs, which are numbered from 4000 to 4999.
Apply the ACL to
control Telnet users by
source IP addresses
acl
acl-number
{
inbound
|
outbound
}
Required
The
inbound
keyword specifies to
filter the users trying to Telnet to
the current switch.
The
outbound
keyword specifies
to filter users trying to Telnet to
other switches from the current
switch.
Table 31
Control Telnet users by source and destination IP addresses
Operation
Command
Description
Enter system view
system-view
-
Create an advanced
ACL or enter advanced
ACL view
acl number
acl-number
[
match-order
{
config
|
auto
} ]
As for the
acl number
command,
the
config
keyword is specified by
default.
Define rules for the
ACL
rule
[
rule-id
] {
deny
|
permit
}
protocol
[
rule-string
]
Required
You can define rules as needed to
filter by specific source and
destination IP addresses.
Quit to system view
quit
-
Enter user interface
view
user-interface
[
type
]
first-number
[
last-number
]
-
Apply the ACL to
control Telnet users by
specified source and
destination IP
addresses
acl
acl-number
{
inbound
|
outbound
}
Required
The
inbound
keyword specifies to
filter the users trying to Telnet to
the current switch.
The
outbound
keyword specifies
to filter users trying to Telnet to
other switches from the current
switch.
Table 32
Control Telnet users by source MAC addresses
Operation
Command
Description
Enter system view
system-view
-
Create or enter Layer 2
ACL view
acl number
acl-number
-
Define rules for the
ACL
rule
[
rule-id
] {
deny
|
permit
} [
rule-string
]
Required
You can define rules as needed to
filter by specific source MAC
addresses.
Quit to system view
quit
-
Table 30
Control Telnet users by source IP addresses
Operation Command
Description
Summary of Contents for Switch 4210 9-Port
Page 22: ...20 CHAPTER 1 CLI CONFIGURATION ...
Page 74: ...72 CHAPTER 3 CONFIGURATION FILE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 84: ...82 CHAPTER 5 VLAN CONFIGURATION ...
Page 96: ...94 CHAPTER 8 IP PERFORMANCE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 108: ...106 CHAPTER 9 PORT BASIC CONFIGURATION ...
Page 122: ...120 CHAPTER 11 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION ...
Page 140: ...138 CHAPTER 13 MAC ADDRESS TABLE MANAGEMENT ...
Page 234: ...232 CHAPTER 17 802 1X CONFIGURATION ...
Page 246: ...244 CHAPTER 20 AAA OVERVIEW ...
Page 270: ...268 CHAPTER 21 AAA CONFIGURATION ...
Page 292: ...290 CHAPTER 26 DHCP BOOTP CLIENT CONFIGURATION ...
Page 318: ...316 CHAPTER 29 MIRRORING CONFIGURATION ...
Page 340: ...338 CHAPTER 30 CLUSTER ...
Page 362: ...360 CHAPTER 33 SNMP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 368: ...366 CHAPTER 34 RMON CONFIGURATION ...
Page 450: ...448 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 451: ......
Page 452: ...450 CHAPTER 39 TFTP CONFIGURATION ...
Page 470: ...468 CHAPTER 40 INFORMATION CENTER ...
Page 496: ...494 CHAPTER 44 DEVICE MANAGEMENT ...