Handling Fragmented And Unfragmented Traffic - Cisco Catalyst 2950 Software Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for Catalyst 2950:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 28
Configuring Network Security with ACLs
ACLs permit or deny packet forwarding based on how the packet matches the entries in the ACL. For
example, you can use ACLs to allow one host to access a part of a network, but to prevent another host
from accessing the same part. In
the Human Resources network, but prevent Host B from accessing the same network.
Figure 28-1

Handling Fragmented and Unfragmented Traffic

IP packets can be fragmented as they cross the network. When this happens, only the fragment
containing the beginning of the packet contains the Layer 4 information, such as TCP or UDP port
numbers, Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) type and code, and so on. All other fragments are
missing this information.
Some ACEs do not check Layer 4 information and therefore can be applied to all packet fragments. ACEs
that do test Layer 4 information cannot be applied in the standard manner to most of the fragments in a
fragmented IP packet. When the fragment contains no Layer 4 information and the ACE tests some
Layer 4 information, the matching rules are modified:
Consider access list 102, configured with these commands, applied to three fragmented packets:
Switch (config)# access-list 102 permit tcp any host 10.1.1.1 eq smtp
Switch (config)# access-list 102 deny tcp any host 10.1.1.2 eq telnet
Switch (config)# access-list 102 deny tcp any any
78-11380-12
Using ACLs to Control Traffic to a Network
Human
Resources
network
= ACL denying traffic from Host B
and permitting traffic from Host A
= Packet
Permit ACEs that check the Layer 3 information in the fragment (including protocol type, such as
TCP, UDP, and so on) are considered to match the fragment regardless of what the missing Layer 4
information might have been.
Deny ACEs that check Layer 4 information never match a fragment unless the fragment contains
Layer 4 information.
Figure
28-1, ACLs applied at the switch input allow Host A to access
Host A
Host B
Research &
Development
network
Catalyst 2950 and Catalyst 2955 Switch Software Configuration Guide
Understanding ACLs
28-3

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Catalyst 2955

Table of Contents