ProCurve 6200yl User's Guide Page 216

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7-10
Configuring RADIUS Server Support for Switch Services
Configuring and Using RADIUS-Assigned Access Control Lists
by other ACEs configured sequentially earlier in the ACL. Unless other-
wise noted, “implicit deny IP any” refers to the “deny” action enforced by
both standard and extended ACLs.
Inbound Traffic: For the purpose of defining where the switch applies ACLs
to filter traffic, inbound traffic is any IP packet that enters the switch from
a given client on a given port.
NAS (Network Attached Server): In this context, refers to a ProCurve
switch configured for RADIUS operation.
Outbound Traffic: For defining the points where the switch applies an ACL
to filter traffic, outbound traffic is routed traffic leaving the switch
through a VLAN interface (or a subnet in a multinetted VLAN). “Outbound
traffic” can also apply to switched traffic leaving the switch on a VLAN
interface, but VACLs do not filter outbound switched traffic.
Permit: An ACE configured with this action allows the switch to forward an
inbound packet for which there is a match within an applicable ACL.
Permit Any Any: An abbreviated form of permit in ip from any to any, which
permits any inbound IP traffic from any source to any destination.
RADIUS-Based ACL: See “Dynamic Port ACL”.
Routed ACL (RACL): An ACL applied to routed traffic that is entering or
leaving the switch on a given VLAN. See also “Access Control List”.
Static Port ACL: An ACL statically configured on a specific port, group of
ports, or trunk. A static port ACL filters all incoming traffic on the port,
regardless of whether it is switched or routed.
VLAN ACL (VACL): An ACL applied to traffic entering the switch on a given
VLAN interface. See also “Access Control List”.
VSA (Vendor-Specific-Attribute): A value used in a RADIUS-based config-
uration to uniquely identify a networking feature that can be applied to a
port on a given vendor’s switch during an authenticated client session.
Wildcard: The part of a mask that indicates the bits in a packet’s IP addressing
that do not need to match the corresponding bits specified in an ACL. See
also ACL Mask on page 7-9.
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