Access Control List Commands
26-10
26
e.g., in a hop-by-hop option. A flow is uniquely identified by the combination
of a source address and a non-zero flow label. Packets that do not belong to
a flow carry a flow label of zero.
Hosts or routers that do not support the functions specified by the flow label
must set the field to zero when originating a packet, pass the field on
unchanged when forwarding a packet, and ignore the field when receiving a
packet.
• Optional internet-layer information is encoded in separate headers that may
be placed between the IPv6 header and the upper-layer header in a packet.
There are a small number of such extension headers, each identified by a
distinct Next Header value. IPv6 supports the values defined for the IPv4
Protocol field in RFC 1700, including these commonly used headers:
0 : Hop-by-Hop Options
(RFC 2460)
6 : TCP Upper-layer Header
(RFC 1700)
17 : UDP Upper-layer Header
(RFC 1700)
43 : Routing
(RFC
2460)
44 : Fragment
(RFC
2460)
51 : Authentication
(RFC
2402)
50 : Encapsulating Security Payload
(RFC 2406)
60 : Destination Options
(RFC 2460)
Example
This example accepts any incoming packets if the destination address is
2009:DB9:2229::79/48.
This allows packets to any destination address when the DSCP value is 5.
This allows any packets sent to the destination 2009:DB9:2229::79/48 when the flow
label is 43.”
Related Commands
access-list ipv6 (26-7)
Console(config-ext-ipv6-acl)#permit 2009:DB9:2229::79/48
Console(config-ext-ipv6-acl)#
Console(config-ext-ipv6-acl)#permit any dscp 5
Console(config-ext-ipv6-acl)#
Console(config-ext-ipv6-acl)#permit 2009:DB9:2229::79/48 flow-label 43
Console(config-ext-ipv6-acl)#
Summary of Contents for 8926EM
Page 6: ...ii ...
Page 34: ...Getting Started ...
Page 44: ...Introduction 1 10 1 ...
Page 62: ...Initial Configuration 2 18 2 ...
Page 64: ...Switch Management ...
Page 76: ...Configuring the Switch 3 12 3 ...
Page 118: ...Basic Management Tasks 4 42 4 ...
Page 164: ...User Authentication 6 28 6 ...
Page 176: ...Access Control Lists 7 12 7 ...
Page 284: ...Quality of Service 14 8 14 ...
Page 294: ...Multicast Filtering 15 10 15 ...
Page 300: ...Domain Name Service 16 6 16 ...
Page 310: ...Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol 17 10 17 ...
Page 320: ...Configuring Router Redundancy 18 10 18 ...
Page 344: ...IP Routing 19 24 19 ...
Page 356: ...Unicast Routing 20 12 20 Web Click Routing Protocol RIP Statistics Figure 20 5 RIP Statistics ...
Page 386: ...Unicast Routing 20 42 20 ...
Page 388: ...Command Line Interface ...
Page 400: ...Overview of the Command Line Interface 21 12 21 ...
Page 466: ...SNMP Commands 24 16 24 ...
Page 520: ...Access Control List Commands 26 18 26 ...
Page 546: ...Rate Limit Commands 30 2 30 ...
Page 612: ...VLAN Commands 34 24 34 ...
Page 626: ...Class of Service Commands 35 14 35 ...
Page 670: ...DHCP Commands 39 16 39 ...
Page 716: ...IP Interface Commands 41 36 41 ...
Page 768: ...IP Routing Commands 42 52 42 ...
Page 770: ...Appendices ...
Page 791: ......