CLI Guide

Table Of Contents
Version Description
9.12(0.0) Introduced the ttl parameter.
9.11(2.0P0) Included support for using logical names of a protocol to configure an IP access list
in both TCP and UDP on the S6000, S6000ON, S6100ON, Z9100ON.
9.11(0.0) Added support for sessionID to the monitor parameter.
9.10(0.1) Introduced on the S6010-ON and S4048T-ON.
9.10(0.0) Introduced on the S3148.
9.10(0.0) Introduced on the S6100-ON.
9.8(2.0) Introduced on the S3100 series.
9.8(1.0) Introduced on the Z9100ON.
9.8(0.0P5) Introduced on the S4048-ON.
9.8(0.0P2) Introduced on the S3048-ON.
9.8(0.0) Added the no-drop parameter.
9.7(0.0) Introduced on the S6000ON.
9.2(1.0) Introduced on the Z9500.
9.0.2.0 Introduced on the S6000.
8.3.19.0 Introduced on the S4820T.
8.3.11.1 Introduced on the Z9000.
8.3.7.0 Introduced on the S4810.
8.3.1.0 Add the DSCP value for ACL matching.
8.2.1.0 Allows ACL control of fragmented packets for IP (Layer 3) ACLs.
8.1.1.0 Introduced on the E-Series.
7.6.1.0 Introduced on the S-Series.
7.5.1.0 Introduced on the C-Series.
7.4.1.0 Added support for the non-contiguous mask and added the monitor option.
Deprecated the keyword established.
6.5.10 Expanded to include the optional QoS order priority for the ACL entry.
Usage
Information
The monitor option is relevant in the context of flow-based monitoring only. For more information, refer
to Port Monitoring.
The order option is relevant in the context of the Policy QoS feature only. The following applies:
The seq sequence-number command is applicable only in an ACL group.
The order option works across ACL groups that are applied on an interface via the QoS policy
framework.
The order option takes precedence over seq sequence-number.
If you do not configure sequence-number, the rules with the same order value are ordered
according to their configuration order.
If you configure sequence-number, the sequence-number is used as a tie breaker for rules with the
same order.
When you use the log option, the CP processor logs details about the packets that match. Depending on
how many packets match the log entry and at what rate, the CP may become busy as it has to log these
packets details.
If you configure the sequence-number, the sequence-number is used as a tie breaker for rules with
the same order.
NOTE: When you configure ACL logging and byte counters simultaneously, byte counters may display
an incorrect value. Configure packet counters with logging instead.
Access Control Lists (ACL) 219