Configures Telnet to use an ACL (Access Control List) policy or ACL rule for access control.
access_profile | Specifies an ACL policy. |
add | Specifies that an ACL rule is to be added to the Telnet application. |
rule | Specifies an ACL rule. |
first | Specifies that the new rule is to be added before all other rules. |
before | Specifies that the new rule is to be added before a previous rule. |
after | Specifies that the new rule is to be added after a previous rule. |
previous_rule | Specifies an existing rule in the application. |
delete | Specifies that one particular rule is to be deleted. |
none | Specifies that all the rules or a policy file is to be deleted. |
Telnet is enabled with no ACL policies and uses TCP port 23.
You must be logged in as administrator to configure Telnet parameters.
You can restrict Telnet access in the following ways:
Implement an ACL policy file that permits or denies a specific list of IP addresses and subnet masks for the Telnet port. You must create the ACL policy file before you can use this command. If the ACL policy file does not exist on the switch, the switch returns an error message indicating that the file does not exist.
In the ACL policy file for Telnet, the “source-address” field is the only supported match condition. Any other match conditions are ignored.
Use the none option to remove a previously configured ACL.
Add an ACL rule to the Telnet application through this command. Once an ACL is associated with Telnet, all the packets that reach a Telnet module are evaluated with this ACL and appropriate action (permit or deny) is taken, as is done using policy files.
The permit or deny counters are also updated accordingly regardless of whether the ACL is configured to add counters. To display counter statistics, use the show access-list counters process telnet command.
Only the following match conditions and actions are copied to the client memory. Others that may be in the rule are not copied.
When adding a new rule, use the first, before, and after previous_rule parameters to position it within the existing rules.
If the Telnet traffic does not match any of the rules, the default behavior is deny. To permit Telnet traffic that does not match any of the rules,add a permit all rule at the end of the rule list.
To create an ACL policy file, use the edit policy command. For more information about creating and implementing ACL policy files, see Policy Manager and ACLs in the ExtremeXOS 22.4 User Guide.
If you attempt to implement a policy that does not exist on the switch, an error message similar to the following appears:
Error: Policy /config/MyAccessProfile.pol does not exist on file system
If this occurs, make sure the policy you want to implement exists on the switch. To confirm the policies on the switch, use the configure snmp add community command. If the policy does not exist, create the ACL policy file.
To display the status of Telnet, including the current TCP port, the virtual router used to establish a Telnet session, and whether ACLs are controlling Telnet access, use the following command: show management.
The following example applies the ACL policy MyAccessProfile_2 to Telnet:
configure telnet access-profile MyAccessProfile_2
The following example applies the ACL rule DenyAccess to the Telnet application in the first position in the list:
configure telnet access-profile add DenyAccess first
The following example removes the association of a single ACL rule from the Telnet application:
configure telnet access-profile delete DenyAccess
The following example removes the association of an ACL policy or all ACL rules from the Telnet application:
configure telnet access-profile none
This command was first available in ExtremeXOS 11.2.
Support for ACL rules for Telnet was added in ExtremeXOS 12.5.
This command is available on the Summit X450-G2, X460-G2, X670-G2, X770, and ExtremeSwitching X440-G2, X620, X690, X870 series switches.