Users Guide
to the monitored interface. For more information, refer to the “Flow-based
Monitoring” section in the Port Monitoring chapter of the Dell Networking OS
Conguration Guide.
Defaults Not congured.
Command Modes CONFIGURATION-MAC ACCESS LIST-STANDARD
Command History
This guide is platform-specic. For command information about other platforms, refer to the relevant Dell
Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
The following is a list of the Dell Networking OS version history for this command.
Version Description
9.8(0.0P5) Introduced on the S4048-ON.
9.8(0.0P2) Introduced on the S3048-ON.
9.7(0.0) Introduced on the S6000–ON.
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.
8.1.1.0 Introduced on the E-Series ExaScale.
7.6.1.0 Introduced on the S-Series.
7.5.1.0 Introduced on the C-Series.
6.1.1.0 Introduced on the E-Series.
Usage Information
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.
NOTE: When you congure the ACL logging and byte counters simultaneously, byte counters may
display an incorrect value. Congure packet counters with logging instead.
Related Commands
deny — congures a MAC ACL lter to drop packets.
seq —congure a MAC ACL lter with a specied sequence number.
seq
To a deny or permit lter in a MAC access list while creating the lter, assign a sequence number.
Syntax
deny {any | mac-source-address [mac-source-address-mask]} [count [byte]]
[log [interval minutes] [threshold-in-msgs [count]] [monitor]
To remove this lter, you have two choices:
• Use the no seq sequence-number command if you know the lter’s sequence number.
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Access Control Lists (ACL)