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VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco
14 years 9 months ago #33559
by dxmen
VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco was created by dxmen
I have 4 VLANs on a Cisco 4500 L3 switch
VLAN 2
VLAN 3
VLAN 4
VLAN 5
I want to block in / out traffic from VLAN 4 & 5 to VLAN 3, any suggestions? thanks
VLAN 2
VLAN 3
VLAN 4
VLAN 5
I want to block in / out traffic from VLAN 4 & 5 to VLAN 3, any suggestions? thanks
14 years 9 months ago #33562
by ZiPPy
ZiPPy
Replied by ZiPPy on topic Re: VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco
Just curious about your switch...
Which 4500 series are you using?
Which Supervisor card?
What other cards do you have installed?
Cheers,
ZiPPy
Which 4500 series are you using?
Which Supervisor card?
What other cards do you have installed?
Cheers,
ZiPPy
ZiPPy
14 years 9 months ago #33569
by dxmen
Replied by dxmen on topic Re: VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco
I'm using a 4506-E with a Supervisor V 1000Base & 24 10/100/1000 port card
14 years 9 months ago #33575
by FlipRich
Rich
Network Engineer /CCNP, CCNA-S
Tallahassee, FL
Replied by FlipRich on topic Re: VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco
I'm not too familiar with that model switch but have tried just setting up extended ACL's?
Rich
Network Engineer /CCNP, CCNA-S
Tallahassee, FL
14 years 9 months ago #33577
by dxmen
Replied by dxmen on topic Re: VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco
No I have not Richard, I need suggestions on what would be the best option to complete this task, I'm starting to know my way arround Cisco IOS I will appreciate any help, thanks
14 years 9 months ago #33578
by S0lo
Studying CCNP...
Ammar Muqaddas
Forum Moderator
www.firewall.cx
Replied by S0lo on topic Re: VLAN traffic blocking from and to other VLANS Cisco
I assume here that the L3 switch is doing routing.
I did not work on the 4500. But generally, as FlipRich said, an extended access list will do well. Say for example you have VLAN1 as 192.168.1.x and VLAN2 as 192.168.2.x. To block traffic from VLAN1 to VLAN2 you would first define an ACL:
[code:1]access-list 100 deny ip 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 192.168.2.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 100 permit ip any any[/code:1]
This defines it but doesn't apply it. Now we will apply on Vlan1 interface:
[code:1]interface Vlan1
ip access-group 100 in[/code:1]
This will stop the traffic as soon as it enters Vlan1 interface so there is no overhead of routing occurring. The ACL can be defined in other ways, this is one way.
Tell us if you need further help.
I did not work on the 4500. But generally, as FlipRich said, an extended access list will do well. Say for example you have VLAN1 as 192.168.1.x and VLAN2 as 192.168.2.x. To block traffic from VLAN1 to VLAN2 you would first define an ACL:
[code:1]access-list 100 deny ip 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 192.168.2.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 100 permit ip any any[/code:1]
This defines it but doesn't apply it. Now we will apply on Vlan1 interface:
[code:1]interface Vlan1
ip access-group 100 in[/code:1]
This will stop the traffic as soon as it enters Vlan1 interface so there is no overhead of routing occurring. The ACL can be defined in other ways, this is one way.
Tell us if you need further help.
Studying CCNP...
Ammar Muqaddas
Forum Moderator
www.firewall.cx
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