RE: Filtering direction

From: Tarek Sabry (tsabry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu May 09 2002 - 19:26:42 GMT-3


   
Elsayed

You are not blocking netbios "hosts". You are blocking the netbios service
from being sent over your DLSW peer going to 2.2.2.2, so 2.2.2.2 can reach
any SNA hosts but no netbios services on 1.1.1.1. In other words, to answer
your question, ALL netbios hosts will be blocked.

Do you have Windows station connected to your T/R interfaces? If so you can
see how this works. Otherwise, you can search for those dspu commands that
you can configure on additional routers configured as hosts. I am not sure
if that holds for Netbios as well as SNA though.

HTH
Tarek

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Sam.MicroGate@usa.telekom.de
Sent: Thursday, May 09, 2002 2:43 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Filtering direction

Hello group,

I have the following scenario:

Netbios_hosts--R1----------------------R2----Netbios_hosts

R1 config:
dlsw local-peer peer-id 1.1.1.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 2..2.2.2 lsap-output-list 200

access-list 200 deny 0xF0F0 0x0101
access-list 200 permit any

R2 config:
dlsw local-peer peer-id 2.2.2.2
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 1.1.1.1

Regarding the above config: which netbios hosts will be blocked from
reaching the other side? or both won't be able to reach each other. I am not
able to verify this in the lab. Each time I have different result. Thanks



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