| Chapter
6: ACLs |
|
| 6.1 |
Access Control Lists (ACLs)
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| 6.2 |
ACL Configuration Tasks
| 6.2.1 |
Creating ACLs |
| 6.2.2 |
The purpose
and function of wildcard mask bits |
| 6.2.3 |
The any
command |
| 6.2.4 |
The host
command |
|
|
| 6.3 |
Standard ACLs
| 6.3.1 |
What are
standard ACLs |
| 6.3.2 |
Writing a
valid standard ACL command using all available parameters |
| 6.3.3 |
How to verify
access lists |
| 6.3.4 |
Writing a
standard ACL to permit traffic from a source network |
| 6.3.5 |
Writing a
standard ACL to deny a specific host |
| 6.3.6 |
Writing a
standard ACL to deny a specific subnet |
|
|
| 6.4 |
Extended
ACLs
| 6.4.1 |
What are
extended ACLs
Server
Access Lists |
| 6.4.2 |
Extended ACL
parameters |
| 6.4.3 |
UDP and TCP
port numbers |
| 6.4.4 |
Writing an
ACL for denying FTP on an Ethernet interface |
| 6.4.5 |
Writing an
ACL that denies Telnet out of an Ethernet port and permits all other
traffic |
|
|
| 6.5 |
Named ACLs
| 6.5.1 |
Configuring
named ACLs |
| 6.5.2 |
The deny
command |
| 6.5.3 |
The permit
command |
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|
| 6.6 |
Using
ACLs with protocols
| 6.6.1 |
Protocols for
which ACLs can be created |
|
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| 6.7 |
Placing ACLs
| 6.7.1 |
Rule:
"Putting the extended ACL as close as possible to the source of
traffic denied" |
| 6.7.2 |
Using ACLs in
firewall routers |
| 6.7.3 |
A firewall
architecture to protect you from intruders |
|
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| 6.8 |
Verifying
ACLs
| 6.8.1 |
How to verify
ACLs and interpret the output |
|
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| 6.9 |
Summary
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