Total 18 results found for the keyword of "eos section 24 3 service acls"
... often use prefix lists to filter routes.
The RACL divergence optimizes hardware resource usage on each forwarding ASIC. eos installs acls only on the hardware components corresponding to the member interfaces ...
Quality of service
This chapter describes the eos Quality of service (QoS) implementation, including configuration instructions and command descriptions. Topics covered by this chapter include ...
... timestamp
Drop count
Device ID
Egress
interface
FCS type
Reserved
TAP Aggregation Extra MPLS Pop (4 to 6 Labels)
Available starting with eos Release 4.23.1F extra MPLS pop for TAP
Aggregation ...
... a GRE tunnel, the payload of the outgoing GRE packet contains the payload of
the incoming source packet starting from the MPLS header. eos
strips L2 and outer L3 headers from the mirror copy. When the
MPLS ...
IGMP and IGMP Snooping
IGMP Snooping
IGMP Host Proxy
Description
Supported Features
IGMP Protocols
Configuring IGMP
Configuring IGMP Snooping
IGMP Host Proxy
IGMP and IGMP Snooping
Commands ...
... STP state. When an interface used as an Ethernet segment does not have a forwarding
state, eos considers the interface to be inactive. For a VLAN-based service, the port must be in a forwarding state
on ...
... This allows eos to direct specific services over the specified RIB domains, overriding the default behavior. Further, this feature, through the use of user-defined tunnel RIBs, empowers an administrator ...
... Beginning with eos Release 4.25.0F, MLDv2 snooping is supported on MLAG deployments.
Limitations
The extraneous “Switch” interface should be ignored in show mld
snooping counters and show mld snooping
counters ...
... arp 172.22.30.52 0025.900e.c63c arpa
switch(config)#
The arp proxy max-delay
command enables delaying proxy ARP requests on the configuration mode
interface. eos disables Proxy ARP by default. When ...
VRRP and VARP
A virtual IP (VIP) address
is an IP address that does not directly connect to a specific interface.
Inbound packets sent to a Virtual IP address are redirected to a physical
network ...
... that are configured by a custom agent using the eos SDK or eAPI
and age out (expire) after a specified time period.
For example, if you are using a custom agent that reacts to traffic sent to the CPU ...
... Mac Address Type Ports
---- ----------- ---- -----
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 0
Beginning with eos Release 4.26.0F,
PortSec-Protect enforces a limit on ...
... Configuration
Procedures
VLAN Configuration
Commands
VLAN Introduction
Arista switches support industry standard 802.1q VLANs. Arista eos provides tools to manage and extend VLANs throughout the ...
... SR
Policy IdentificationThe following identifies an SR
policy.
Endpoint - An IPv4 or IPv6 address which
refers to the destination of the policy. eos
allows 0/0 and 0:: and calls these IP addresses
null ...
... (also configured as a dynamic LAG) on the partner switch. The maximum number of ports per LAG varies by platform; numbers for each platform in the latest eos release are available here: https://www.arista.com/en/support/product-documentation/supported-features. ...
... control access to eos commands. Three data services conduct authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) activities: a local security database, TACACS+ servers, and RADIUS servers.
The Configuring ...
... the successor to Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), is a security protocol used to communicate between client and server. It establishes an encrypted communication channel to secure data.
By default, eos uses ...
... eXtended Packet Numbering (XPN) cipher suites.
MACsec Limitations
The following are the limitations of MACsec:
eos supports MACsec only on point-to-point links unless static SAK is ...