Network Router User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Router Platform User Interface Reference
- NAT Policy Page
- Router Interfaces Page
- Advanced Interface Settings Page
- AIM-IPS Interface Settings Page
- Dialer Policy Page
- ADSL Policy Page
- SHDSL Policy Page
- PVC Policy Page
- PPP/MLP Policy Page
- AAA Policy Page
- Accounts and Credential s Policy Page
- Bridging Policy Page
- Clock Policy Page
- CPU Policy Page
- HTTP Policy Page
- Console Policy Page
- VTY Policy Page
- Secure Shell Policy Page
- SNMP Policy Page
- DNS Policy Page
- Hostname Policy Page
- Memory Policy Page
- Secure Device Provisioning Policy Page
- DHCP Policy Page
- NTP Policy Page
- 802.1x Policy Page
- Network Admission Control Policy Page
- Logging Setup Policy Page
- Syslog Servers Policy Page
- Quality of Service Policy Page
- BGP Routing Policy Page
- EIGRP Routing Policy Page
- OSPF Interface Policy Page
- OSPF Process Policy Page
- RIP Routing Policy Page
- Static Routing Policy Page

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User Guide for Cisco Security Manager 3.2
OL-16066-01
Appendix K Router Platform User Interface Reference
AAA Policy Page
AAA Policy Page
Use the AAA page to define the default authentication, authorization, and
accounting methods to use on the router. You do this by configuring method lists,
which define which methods to use and the sequence in which to use them.
Note You can use the method lists defined in this policy as default settings when you
configure AAA on the router’s console port and VTY lines. See Console Policy
Page, page K-117 and VTY Policy Page, page K-129.
Navigation Path
• (Device view) Select Platform > Device Admin > AAA from the Policy
selector.
• (Policy view) Select Router Platform > Device Admin > AAA from the
Policy Type selector. Right-click AAA to create a policy, or select an existing
policy from the Shared Policy selector.
Related Topics
• AAA on Cisco IOS Routers, page 15-66
• Understanding AAA Server Objects, page 9-22
• Understanding AAA Server Group Objects, page 9-15
• Console Policy Page, page K-117
MRRU Remote Peer The maximum receive reconstructed unit (MRRU) value of the remote peer.
This value represents the maximum size packet that the remote peer is
capable of receiving.
Valid values range from 128 to 16384 bytes. The default is 1524 bytes.
Maximum FIFO Queue
Size
The maximum queue depth when the bundle uses first-in, first-out (FIFO)
queuing. Valid values range from 2 to 255 packets. The default is 8.
Maximum QoS Queue
Size
The maximum queue depth when the bundle uses non-FIFO queuing. Valid
values range from 2 to 255 packets. The default is 2.
Table K-36 PPP Dialog Box—MLP Tab (Continued)










