Configuring A Policy Map - Cisco 4700M Configuration Manual

Application control engine appliance security
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Chapter 5
Configuring Network Address Translation
Configuring Static NAT and Static Port Redirection
The name argument is a unique identifier for the class map, specified as an
unquoted text string with a maximum of 64 alphanumeric characters.
For example, enter:
host1/C1(config)# class-map match-any NAT_CLASS
host1/C1(config-cmap)#
To remove a class-map from the configuration, enter:
host1/C1(config)# no class-map match-any NAT_CLASS
Enter match criteria as required using the match command in class-map
configuration mode. For example, enter:
host1/C1(config-cmap)# match access-list NAT_ACCESS
or
host1/C1(config-cmap)# match source address 192.168.12.15
To remove a match statement from a class map, enter:
host1/C1(config-cmap)# no match access-list NAT_ACCESS

Configuring a Policy Map

You can configure a traffic policy for NAT by using the policy-map command in
configuration mode. For more information about policy maps, see the Cisco 4700
Series Application Control Engine Appliance Administration Guide.
The syntax of this command is as follows:
policy-map multi-match name
The name argument is the name assigned to the policy map. Enter an unquoted
text string with no spaces and a maximum of 64 alphanumeric characters.
For example, enter:
host1/C1(config)# policy-map multi-match NAT_POLICY
host1/C1(config-pmap)#
To remove a policy map from the configuration, enter:
host1/C1(config)# no policy-map multi-match NAT_POLICY
Cisco 4700 Series Application Control Engine Appliance Security Configuration Guide
5-36
OL-16202-01

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