From: mani poopal (mani_ccie@yahoo.com)
Date: Tue May 10 2005 - 16:34:54 GMT-3
Hi Bob,
Thanks a lot for labbing it up for your good explanation.
Mani
Bob Sinclair <bsinclair@netmasterclass.net> wrote:
Mani,
I just labbed this up. My results show that a profile with just a deny, permits all others. A profile with just a permit denies all others. The lesson appears to be: if you specify any permitted range, you must specify all permitted ranges. If you specify any denied ranges, you must specify all denied ranges.
HTH,
Bob Sinclair
CCIE #10427, CCSI 30427, CISSP
www.netmasterclass.net
----- Original Message -----
From: mani poopal
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 2:09 PM
Subject: igmp profile command
Hi Guyse,
In the following igmp profile (equivalent to L3 method of ip igmp access-group) example, if we configure deny a range say 229.9.9.0, what will happen to other rage, are they allowed by default or like access-list there is an implicit deny and the following commands deny all group access to fast ethernet port.
=====================================
Switch # config t
Switch(config) # ip igmp profile 4
Switch(config-igmp-profile)# deny
Switch(config-igmp-profile)# range 229.9.9.0
Switch(config)# interface fastethernet2/12
Switch(config-if)# ip igmp filter 4
======================================
Mani
B.ENG,A+,CCNA,CCNP,CCNP-VOICE, CSS1,CNA,MCSE
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