Allied Telesis x908 manual

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21

Go to page of

A good user manual

The rules should oblige the seller to give the purchaser an operating instrucion of Allied Telesis x908, along with an item. The lack of an instruction or false information given to customer shall constitute grounds to apply for a complaint because of nonconformity of goods with the contract. In accordance with the law, a customer can receive an instruction in non-paper form; lately graphic and electronic forms of the manuals, as well as instructional videos have been majorly used. A necessary precondition for this is the unmistakable, legible character of an instruction.

What is an instruction?

The term originates from the Latin word „instructio”, which means organizing. Therefore, in an instruction of Allied Telesis x908 one could find a process description. An instruction's purpose is to teach, to ease the start-up and an item's use or performance of certain activities. An instruction is a compilation of information about an item/a service, it is a clue.

Unfortunately, only a few customers devote their time to read an instruction of Allied Telesis x908. A good user manual introduces us to a number of additional functionalities of the purchased item, and also helps us to avoid the formation of most of the defects.

What should a perfect user manual contain?

First and foremost, an user manual of Allied Telesis x908 should contain:
- informations concerning technical data of Allied Telesis x908
- name of the manufacturer and a year of construction of the Allied Telesis x908 item
- rules of operation, control and maintenance of the Allied Telesis x908 item
- safety signs and mark certificates which confirm compatibility with appropriate standards

Why don't we read the manuals?

Usually it results from the lack of time and certainty about functionalities of purchased items. Unfortunately, networking and start-up of Allied Telesis x908 alone are not enough. An instruction contains a number of clues concerning respective functionalities, safety rules, maintenance methods (what means should be used), eventual defects of Allied Telesis x908, and methods of problem resolution. Eventually, when one still can't find the answer to his problems, he will be directed to the Allied Telesis service. Lately animated manuals and instructional videos are quite popular among customers. These kinds of user manuals are effective; they assure that a customer will familiarize himself with the whole material, and won't skip complicated, technical information of Allied Telesis x908.

Why one should read the manuals?

It is mostly in the manuals where we will find the details concerning construction and possibility of the Allied Telesis x908 item, and its use of respective accessory, as well as information concerning all the functions and facilities.

After a successful purchase of an item one should find a moment and get to know with every part of an instruction. Currently the manuals are carefully prearranged and translated, so they could be fully understood by its users. The manuals will serve as an informational aid.

Table of contents for the manual

  • Page 1

    C613-16119-00 REV A www .alliedtelesis.com AlliedW ar e Plus TM OS How T o | Intr oduction The SwitchBlade x908 , x900-12XT/S, and x90 0-24 series switches supp or t a pow erful hardwar e based packet-filtering facility . These switches can filter on a range of La yer 2, La yer 3, and La y er 4 pac k et attributes, and perform a variety of differ e[...]

  • Page 2

    Page 2 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Intr oduction Contents Intr oduction .......... .................................................................... .................................... ............................ 1 Which pr oducts and software version does this Note apply to? ......................................... 2 Creating har [...]

  • Page 3

    Page 3 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Creating hardwar e A CLs Cr eating hardwar e A CLs Hardwar e A CLs contain both the match criteria and the action to take on matching traffic. Ther e are two types of har dware A CL: IP ad dress and MA C address. These are index ed by their ID number . IP hardwar e A CLs ha ve a number in the range 3000[...]

  • Page 4

    Page 4 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Creating hardwar e A CLs IP pack ets Y ou can filter IP packets on the basis of thei r source and/or destination IP addr esses. The command syntax is: awplus(config)#access-lis t <3000-3699> < action > ip < source-ip-address > < destination-ip-address > The sour ce and destinatio[...]

  • Page 5

    Page 5 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Creating hardwar e A CLs TCP and UDP packets Y ou can filter TCP and UDP packets on the basis of: z sour ce IP address and/or destination IP ad dress (using the same syntax as when filtering IP pack ets) z sour ce and/or destination TCP/UDP por ts. The command syntax is: awplus(config)#access-lis t <[...]

  • Page 6

    Page 6 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note The effects of the action k eyw ords in A CL s Cr eating MA C addr ess hardwar e A CLs MA C addr ess hardware A CLs filter pack ets on the basis of their source or destination MA C addr ess. The command syntax is: awplus(config)#access-lis t <4000-4699> < action > < source-mac-address >[...]

  • Page 7

    Page 7 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Making fi lters by a pplying har dware A CLs to ports Making filters by a pplying har dware A CLs to por ts Y ou can create a filter by simpl y applying one or more ACLs to a port, as long as y ou can select the matching traffic thr ough hard ware A CL ke ywor ds, a s described abov e . A CLs can be app[...]

  • Page 8

    Page 8 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Making fil ters by using QoS class-maps Making filters by using QoS class-ma ps QoS class-maps allow y ou to match on a m uch wi der range of pack et attributes than A CLs by themselves. The y do this by determining the match criteria fr om an A CL, or from match commands, or fr om both in combination. [...]

  • Page 9

    Page 9 | AlliedW are Plus ™ OS How T o Note Making fil ters by using QoS class-maps 3. Specify what the class-map will match on (see page 9 ). This inv olves: z attaching the A CL to the class-map z using other match commands to further limi t what the traffic will match the class-map (unless the A CL ’ s se ttings wer e enough) 4. Attach the c[...]

  • Page 10

    Page 10 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Making fil ters by using QoS class-maps Matching on “inner” k eyw ords f or nested VLANs The match tpid , ma tch inner -tpid , match inner -vlan , and match inner -cos commands all appl y to nested VLAN configuration. In this situati on, the pack ets arriving at the core-facing port can ha ve tw o V[...]

  • Page 11

    Page 11 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Making fil ters by using QoS class-maps Matching on TCP flag Unlik e the other match commands, you can match on multiple TCP flags. The switch combines the specified flags by ANDing them together . T o specify the multiple flags, either mak e multiple match tcp-fla gs commands or specify the flags in on[...]

  • Page 12

    Page 12 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Making fil ters by using QoS class-maps Matching on eth-format and pr otocol Ethernet format and pr otocol are specified to ge ther , as a pair . Y ou can either specify the command as: match eth-format < keyword > protocol < keyword-or-number > or match protocol < keyword-o r-number >[...]

  • Page 13

    Page 13 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note The logic of the operation of the har dware filters The logic of the operation of the hardwar e filters The operation of the filters follows the standar d A CL log ic: if a pack et matches an A CL on the por t, the comparison pr ocess stops and the action attached to the A CL is performed. The switch ch[...]

  • Page 14

    Page 14 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Examples Examples Blocking all multicast traffic This example uses an interface A CL with an action of deny . Consider a situation where m ultiple clients ar e attached to the s witch, with each client attached to a differ ent por t. Each client has a sp ecific ser vice , which includes a set of allowed[...]

  • Page 15

    Page 15 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Examples Blocking all multicast tr affic except one ad dress This example uses two interface A CLs, one with an action of permit and one with an action of deny . Use this type of configuration when y ou want to discar d a wide range of traffic but want to forwar d a subset of traffic within tha t range.[...]

  • Page 16

    Page 16 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Examples Mirr oring ARP pack ets This example uses a QoS class-map . Use this type of configuration when y ou want to mirror a subset of the incoming traffic on a port, a nd y ou need to us e QoS match comm ands to select the mirr ored traffic. Consider a situation wh ere y ou want to captur e ARP packe[...]

  • Page 17

    Page 17 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Examples Blocking TCP sessions in one dir ection This example uses two QoS class-maps. Administrators often want to block the establis hment of TCP sessions in one direction, but allow TCP sessions to be established in the opposi te dir ection. T o do this, it is necessar y to block the ver y first pack[...]

  • Page 18

    Page 18 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Ho w many filters can you cr eate? How man y filters can you cr eate? The total number of filters that can be cr eate d is not an exact number , but depends on w hich fields the various filters are matching on. So , to understand how to w ork out whether the set of filters you ar e creating might run ou[...]

  • Page 19

    Page 19 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Ho w many filters can you cr eate? 2. The pr ofile (mask) The other item is called the pr of ile. Conceptually , this is a 16 -byte mask that decides which set of bytes should be extracted fr om a packet as it enters the filtering pr ocess, to be compared against all the interface A CLs and th e QoS cla[...]

  • Page 20

    Page 20 | AlliedW are Plus™ OS How T o Note Ho w many filters can you cr eate? Ar e there enough bytes f or your set of filters? Of course, the m ask cannot incr ease withou t limit—it has a maximum size of 16 b ytes. When it reaches the 16-b yte limit, no more A C Ls or QoS match commands can be created which would cause the mask to incr ease [...]

  • Page 21

    USA Headq u ar ters | 19800 Nor th Cr eek Parkwa y | S u ite 200 | Bothell | WA 98011 | USA | T: +1 800 424 4284 | F: +1 425 481 3895 E u r opea n Headq u ar ters | Via Motta 24 | 6830 Chiasso | Switzerla n d | T: +41 91 69769.00 | F: +41 91 69769.11 Asia-Paci f ic Headq u ar ters | 11 T ai Se ng Li n k | Si ng apor e | 534182 | T: +65 6383 3832 | [...]