10 acl, 1 mac-based acl, 1 mac‐based acl – Interlogix NS3500-28T-4S User Manual User Manual
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4.10 ACL
ACL
is an acronym for Access Control List. It is the list table of ACEs, containing access control entries that specify
individual users or groups permitted or denied to specific traffic objects, such as a process or a program. Each
accessible traffic object contains an identifier to its ACL. The privileges determine whether there are specific traffic
object access rights.
ACL implementations can be quite complex, for example, when the ACEs are prioritized for the various situation. In
networking, the ACL refers to a list of service ports or network services that are available on a host or server, each with
a list of hosts or servers permitted or denied to use the service. ACL can generally be configured to control inbound
traffic, and in this context, they are similar to firewalls.
ACE
is an acronym for Access Control Entry. It describes access permission associated with a particular ACE ID.
There are three ACE frame types (Ethernet Type, ARP, and IPv4) and two ACE actions (permit and deny). The ACE
also contains many detailed, different parameter options that are available for individual application.
The ACL page contains links to the following main topics:
MAC-based ACL
Configuration MAC-based ACL setting
MAC-based ACE
Add / Edit / Delete the MAC-based ACE (Access Control Entry) setting
IPv4-based ACL
Configuration IPv4-based ACL setting
IPv4-based ACE
Add / Edit / Delete the IPv4-based ACE (Access Control Entry) setting
IPv6-based ACL
Configuration IPv6-based ACL setting
IPv6-based ACE
Add / Edit / Delete the IPv6-based ACE (Access Control Entry) setting
ACL Binding
Configure the ACL parameters (ACE) of each switch port.
4.10.1 MAC-based ACL
This page shows the ACL status by different ACL users. Each row describes the ACE that is defined. It is a conflict if a
specific ACE is not applied to the hardware due to hardware limitations. MAC-based ACL screens in
Figure 4-10-1
&
Figure 4-10-2
appear.