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Appendex b glossary, Appendex b : glossary – PLANET WGSD-8020 User Manual

Page 360

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User’s Manual of WGSD-8020

360

APPENDEX B : GLOSSARY

A

ACE

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.

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.

Aggregation

Using multiple ports in parallel to increase the link speed beyond the limits of a port and to increase the redundancy for

higher availability.

(Also Port Aggregation, Link Aggregation).

ARP

ARP is an acronym for Address Resolution Protocol. It is a protocol that used to convert an IP address into a physical

address, such as an Ethernet address. ARP allows a host to communicate with other hosts when only the Internet

address of its neighbors is known. Before using IP, the host sends a broadcast ARP request containing the Internet

address of the desired destination system.

ARP Inspection

ARP Inspection is a secure feautre. Several types of attacks can be launched against a host or devices connected to

Layer 2 networks by "poisoning" the ARP caches. This feature is used to block such attacks. Only valid ARP requests

and responses can go through DUT.