Appendix B. Tutorial: Access Lists
Access lists are probably misnamed these days. As the name implies, the original intention of an access list was to permit or deny access of packets into, out of, or through a router. Access lists have become powerful tools for controlling the behavior of packets and frames. Their use falls into three categories (see Figure B-1):
• Security filters protect the integrity of the router and the networks to which they are passing traffic. Typically, security filters permit the passage of a few, well-understood packets and deny the passage of everything else.
• Traffic filters prevent unnecessary packets from passing onto limited-bandwidth links. These filters look and behave much like security filters, but the logic ...
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