User's Manual

A
CCESS
C
ONTROL
L
IST
C
OMMANDS
4-126
[no] {permit | deny} tcp
{any | source address-bitmask | host source}
{any | destination address-bitmask | host destination}
[precedence precedence] [tos tos] [dscp dscp]
[source-port sport [bitmask]] [destination-port dport [port-bitmask]]
[control-flag control-flags flag-bitmask]
protocol-number – A specific protocol number. (Range: 0-255)
source – Source IP address.
destination – Destination IP address.
address-bitmask Decimal number representing the address bits to
match.
host – Keyword followed by a specific IP address.
precedence IP precedence level. (Range: 0-7)
tos – Type of Service level. (Range: 0-15)
dscp – DSCP priority level. (Range: 0-63)
sport – Protocol
25
source port number. (Range: 0-65535)
dport – Protocol
25
destination port number. (Range: 0-65535)
port-bitmask – Decimal number representing the port bits to match.
(Range: 0-65535)
control-flags – Decimal number (representing a bit string) that specifies
flag bits in byte 14 of the TCP header. (Range: 0-63)
flag-bitmask – Decimal number representing the code bits to match.
Default Setting
None
Command Mode
Extended ACL
Command Usage
All new rules are appended to the end of the list.
Address bitmasks are similar to a subnet mask, containing four integers
from 0 to 255, each separated by a period. The binary mask uses 1 bits
to indicate “match” and 0 bits to indicate “ignore.” The bitmask is
bitwise ANDed with the specified source IP address, and then compared
25. Includes TCP, UDP or other protocol types.