C H A P T E R
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Cisco ASA Series CLI Configuration Guide
1
Defining Route Maps
This chapter describes route maps and includes the following sections:
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Information About Route Maps, page 1-1
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Licensing Requirements for Route Maps, page 1-3
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Guidelines and Limitations, page 1-3
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Defining a Route Map, page 1-4
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Customizing a Route Map, page 1-4
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Configuration Example for Route Maps, page 1-6
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Feature History for Route Maps, page 1-7
Information About Route Maps
Route maps are used when redistributing routes into an OSPF, RIP, or EIGRP routing process. They are
also used when generating a default route into an OSPF routing process. A route map defines which of
the routes from the specified routing protocol are allowed to be redistributed into the target routing
process.
Route maps have many features in common with widely known ACLs. These are some of the traits
common to both:
•
They are an ordered sequence of individual statements, each has a permit or deny result. Evaluation
of ACL or route maps consists of a list scan, in a predetermined order, and an evaluation of the
criteria of each statement that matches. A list scan is aborted once the first statement match is found
and an action associated with the statement match is performed.
•
They are generic mechanisms—Criteria matches and match interpretation are dictated by the way
that they are applied. The same route map applied to different tasks might be interpreted differently.
These are some of the differences between route maps and ACLs:
•
Route maps frequently use ACLs as matching criteria.
•
The main result from the evaluation of an access list is a yes or no answer—An ACL either permits
or denies input data. Applied to redistribution, an ACL determines if a particular route can (route
matches ACLs permit statement) or can not (matches deny statement) be redistributed. Typical route
maps not only permit (some) redistributed routes but also modify information associated with the
route, when it is redistributed into another protocol.
•
Route maps are more flexible than ACLs and can verify routes based on criteria which ACLs can
not verify. For example, a route map can verify if the type of route is internal.
Summary of Contents for 5505 - ASA Firewall Edition Bundle
Page 28: ...Glossary GL 24 Cisco ASA Series CLI Configuration Guide ...
Page 61: ...P A R T 1 Getting Started with the ASA ...
Page 62: ......
Page 219: ...P A R T 2 Configuring High Availability and Scalability ...
Page 220: ......
Page 403: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Interfaces ...
Page 404: ......
Page 499: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Basic Settings ...
Page 500: ......
Page 533: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Objects and Access Lists ...
Page 534: ......
Page 601: ...P A R T 2 Configuring IP Routing ...
Page 602: ......
Page 745: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Network Address Translation ...
Page 746: ......
Page 845: ...P A R T 2 Configuring AAA Servers and the Local Database ...
Page 846: ......
Page 981: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Access Control ...
Page 982: ......
Page 1061: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Service Policies Using the Modular Policy Framework ...
Page 1062: ......
Page 1093: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Application Inspection ...
Page 1094: ......
Page 1191: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Unified Communications ...
Page 1192: ......
Page 1333: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Connection Settings and QoS ...
Page 1334: ......
Page 1379: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Advanced Network Protection ...
Page 1380: ......
Page 1475: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Modules ...
Page 1476: ......
Page 1549: ...P A R T 2 Configuring VPN ...
Page 1550: ......
Page 1965: ...P A R T 2 Configuring Logging SNMP and Smart Call Home ...
Page 1966: ......
Page 2059: ...P A R T 2 System Administration ...
Page 2060: ......
Page 2098: ...1 8 Cisco ASA Series CLI Configuration Guide Chapter 1 Troubleshooting Viewing the Coredump ...
Page 2099: ...P A R T 2 Reference ...
Page 2100: ......