– 789 –
C
HAPTER
30
| General Security Measures
IP Source Guard
ip source-guard
This command configures the switch to filter inbound traffic based source
IP address, or source IP address and corresponding MAC address. Use the
no
form to disable this function.
S
YNTAX
ip source-guard
{
sip
|
sip-mac
}
no ip source-guard
sip
- Filters traffic based on IP addresses stored in the binding
table.
sip-mac
- Filters traffic based on IP addresses and corresponding
MAC addresses stored in the binding table.
D
EFAULT
S
ETTING
Disabled
C
OMMAND
M
ODE
Interface Configuration (Ethernet)
C
OMMAND
U
SAGE
◆
Source guard is used to filter traffic on an insecure port which receives
messages from outside the network or fire wall, and therefore may be
subject to traffic attacks caused by a host trying to use the IP address
of a neighbor.
◆
Setting source guard mode to “sip” or “sip-mac” enables this function
on the selected port. Use the “sip” option to check the VLAN ID, source
IP address, and port number against all entries in the binding table.
Use the “sip-mac” option to check these same parameters, plus the
source MAC address. Use the
no ip source guard
command to disable
this function on the selected port.
◆
When enabled, traffic is filtered based upon dynamic entries learned via
DHCP snooping, or static addresses configured in the source guard
binding table.
◆
Table entries include a MAC address, IP address, lease time, entry type
(Static-IP-SG-Binding, Dynamic-DHCP-Binding, VLAN identifier, and
port identifier.
◆
Static addresses entered in the source guard binding table with the
ip
source-guard binding
command (
page 787
) are automatically
configured with an infinite lease time. Dynamic entries learned via
DHCP snooping are configured by the DHCP server itself.
◆
If the IP source guard is enabled, an inbound packet’s IP address (sip
option) or both its IP address and corresponding MAC address (sip-mac
option) will be checked against the binding table. If no matching entry
is found, the packet will be dropped.
Summary of Contents for LGB6026A
Page 6: ...ABOUT THIS GUIDE 4...
Page 40: ...38 CONTENTS...
Page 60: ...58 SECTION I Getting Started...
Page 86: ...84 SECTION II Web Configuration Unicast Routing on page 517 Multicast Routing on page 575...
Page 162: ...160 CHAPTER 5 Interface Configuration VLAN Trunking...
Page 196: ...194 CHAPTER 6 VLAN Configuration Configuring MAC based VLANs...
Page 204: ...CHAPTER 7 Address Table Settings Clearing the Dynamic Address Table 202...
Page 238: ...CHAPTER 11 Class of Service Layer 2 Queue Settings 236...
Page 254: ...252 CHAPTER 12 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port...
Page 448: ...446 CHAPTER 16 Multicast Filtering Multicast VLAN Registration...
Page 470: ...468 CHAPTER 17 IP Configuration Setting the Switch s IP Address IP Version 6...
Page 576: ...574 CHAPTER 21 Unicast Routing Configuring the Open Shortest Path First Protocol Version 2...
Page 606: ...604 CHAPTER 22 Multicast Routing Configuring PIMv6 for IPv6...
Page 620: ...618 CHAPTER 23 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups...
Page 672: ...670 CHAPTER 25 System Management Commands Time Range...
Page 692: ...690 CHAPTER 26 SNMP Commands...
Page 700: ...698 CHAPTER 27 Remote Monitoring Commands...
Page 854: ...CHAPTER 34 Port Mirroring Commands Local Port Mirroring Commands 852...
Page 862: ...860 CHAPTER 36 Address Table Commands...
Page 958: ...956 CHAPTER 40 Quality of Service Commands...
Page 1034: ...1032 CHAPTER 42 LLDP Commands...
Page 1044: ...1042 CHAPTER 43 Domain Name Service Commands...
Page 1062: ...1060 CHAPTER 44 DHCP Commands DHCP Server...
Page 1206: ...CHAPTER 47 IP Routing Commands Open Shortest Path First OSPFv3 1204...
Page 1250: ...1248 SECTION IV Appendices...
Page 1256: ...1254 APPENDIX A Software Specifications Management Information Bases...
Page 1278: ...1276 COMMAND LIST...