Reference Guide

Route Map Commands
When you create an access-list without any rule and then applied to an interface, the ACL behavior
reflects implicit permit.
To configure route maps and their redistribution criteria, use the following commands.
continue
Configure a route-map to go to a route-map entry with a higher sequence number.
S5000
Syntax
continue [sequence-number]
Parameters
sequence-
number
(OPTIONAL) Enter the route map sequence number. The
range is from 1 to 65535.
Defaults Not configured.
Command
Modes
ROUTE-MAP
Command
History
Version 9.0(1.3) Introduced on the S5000.
Usage
Information
The continue feature allows movement from one route-map entry to a specific
route-map entry (the sequence number). If you do not specify the sequence
number, the continue feature simply moves to the next sequence number (also
known as an implied continue). If a match clause exists, the continue feature
executes only after a successful match occurs. If there are no successful matches,
the
continue feature is ignored.
Match clause with Continue clause
The continue feature can exist without a match clause. A continue clause without
a match clause executes and jumps to the specified route-map entry.
With a match clause and a continue clause, the match clause executes first and the
continue clause next in a specified route map entry. The continue clause launches
only after a successful match. The behavior is:
A successful match with a continue clause, the route map executes the set
clauses and then goes to the specified route map entry upon execution of the
continue clause.
If the next route map entry contains a continue clause, the route map executes
the continue clause if a successful match occurs.
If the next route map entry does not contain a continue clause, the route map
evaluates normally. If a match does not occur, the route map does not
continue and falls through to the next sequence number, if one exists.
Set Clause with Continue Clause
Access Control Lists (ACL)
235