Optionally, filter Layer 2 traffic on a physical Layer 2 interface using MAC addresses. A MAC firewall rule uses source and destination MAC addresses for matching operations, where the result is a typical allow, deny or mark designation to packet traffic.
Note
Once defined, a set of MAC firewall rules must be applied to an interface to be a functional filtering tool.To add or edit a MAC based firewall rule policy:
Allow | Every MAC firewall rule is made up
of matching criteria rules. The action defines what to do
with the packet if it matches the specified criteria. The
following actions are supported:
|
Source and Destination MAC | Enter both source and destination MAC addresses. Access points use the source IP address, destination MAC address as basic matching criteria. Provide a subnet mask if using a mask. |
Action | The following actions are
supported:
|
Precedence | Use the spinner control to specify a precedence for this MAC firewall rule between 1 - 1500. Rules with lower precedence are always applied first to packets. |
VLAN ID | Enter a VLAN ID representative of the shared SSID each user employs to interoperate within the network (once authenticated by the local RADIUS server). The VLAN ID can be from 1 - 4094. |
Traffic Class | Select this option to enable filtering using Traffic Class. Use the spinner control to specify a traffic class. Traffic class can be from 1 - 10. |
Match 802.1P | Configures IP DSCP to 802.1p priority mapping for untagged frames. Use the spinner control to define a setting between 0 - 7. |
Ethertype | Use the drop-down menu to specify an Ethertype of either other, ipv4, arp, rarp, appletalk, aarp, mint, wisp,ipx, 802.1q and ipv6. An Ethertype is a twooctet field within an Ethernet frame. It is used to indicate which protocol is encapsulated in the payload of an Ethernet frame. |
Description | Provide a description (up to 64 characters) for the rule to help differentiate it from others with similar configurations. |