From: Scott Morris (swm@emanon.com)
Date: Thu Oct 07 2004 - 15:42:13 GMT-3
If you are looking to deny H.323 traffic, it may be easier simply to block
tcp/1720. Without the call setup working, you likely won't get transiting
voice data. :)
As far as "all" voice traffic, I'd say that would completely depend on your
scenario. Voice deals in so many different protocols, most of which simply
aren't testable on the R&S lab. Sooooo.....
HTH,
Scott Morris, CCIE4 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713, CISSP,
JNCIP, et al.
IPExpert CCIE Program Manager
IPExpert Sr. Technical Instructor
swm@emanon.com/smorris@ipexpert.net
http://www.ipexpert.net
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of high
spirit
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2004 2:23 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Voice Traffic ACL
hi groups ,
if i am to make an acl to block all voice traffic then ....
access-list 121 deny udp any any range 16384 32767
will the above acl deny all voice traffice and allow rest of the traffic or
there is another way to write the acl ????
Thanx ,
imran .
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat Nov 06 2004 - 17:11:44 GMT-3