In this section:

To add or modify an ACL rule:

  1. In the WebUI, click the Settings tab.

  2. In the left navigation pane, click Protocols > IPv6 > Access Control Lists.

Creating a Rule Entry

  1. In the left navigation pane, click Protocols > IPv6 > Access Control Lists.

  2. Click the Create IPv6 Access Control List Entry ( ) icon.

  3. Enter the desired configuration. See General Information Panel - Field Definitions. For sample configurations, see Sample ACL Rule Configuration.

  4. Click OK.

    Create Rule Entry

Modifying a Rule

  1. Click the expand () Icon next to the entry you wish to modify.
  2. Edit the entry properties as required, see details below.

To delete an entry, select the checkbox next to the entry and then click the Delete () icon.

Restrictions on Deleting ACLs

An ACL may not be deleted if it is bound to any port or logical interface. However, you may delete or modify a rule within a bound ACL. Any modification or deletion is effective immediately.

Resequencing Rules

  1. Click the Resequence icon ( ) at the top of the table.
  2. Select the row(s) you want to move.
  3. Click the Move Selected Rows Up ( ) or Move Selected Rows Down ( ) icon to reposition the row(s) in the table.
  4. Click Apply.

General Information Panel - Field Definitions

Protocol

The protocol of the IP packets subject to this rule. Valid options: TCP, UDP, ICMP, OSPF, Any, or Other. Default value: TCP.

Action

Specifies the action to be taken upon packets matching this rule. Valid selections: Deny (default, packets matching this rule are not accepted) or Allow (packets matching this rule are accepted).

IANA IP Protocol Number

The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) port number for various protocols. This field is available only when Other is selected from the Protocol drop down box.

Port Selection Method

Either Service or Range. The Services option allows you to define the service for either UDP or TCP protocol. The Range option should be used to specify a specific source or destination port number or port number range. This field is available only when either TCP or UDP is selected from the Protocol drop down box.

Service

Services available for either TCP or UPD. Only those Ports for which the SBC 1000/2000 is a server are available as Services. This field is available only when UDP or TCP is selected from the Port Selection Method drop down box.

Source Panel - Field Definitions

IP Address

Specifies the IPv6 address of the destination host or subnet; this entry is in a colon-hex notation (i.e., 2001:db8:10::100).

Network Prefix

Specifies the network prefix of the destination host or subnet (i.e., 0 - 128).

Minimum Port Number

The minimum port number associated with the source packets subject to this rule. This field is available only when TCP or UDP is selected from the Protocol drop down box and Range is selected from the Port Selection Method drop down box.

Maximum Port Number

The maximum port number associated with the source packets subject to this rule. This field is available only when TCP or UDP is selected from the Protocol drop down box and Range is selected from the Port Selection Method drop down box.

Destination Panel - Field Definitions

IP Address

Specifies the IPv6 address of the destination host or subnet; this entry is in a colon-hex notation (i.e., 2001:db8:10::100).

Network Prefix

Specifies the network prefix of the destination host or subnet (i.e., 0 - 128).

Minimum Port Number

The minimum port number associated with the destination packets subject to this rule. This field is available only when TCP or UDP is selected from the Protocol drop down box and Range is selected from the Port Selection Method drop down box.

Maximum Port Number

The maximum port number associated with the destination packets subject to this rule. This field is available only when TCP or UDP is selected from the Protocol drop down box and Range is selected from the Port Selection Method drop down box.

Sample ACL Rule Configuration

Isolated Management Traffic

These are sample ACLs and should be customized for your specific deployment.

One use-case for access controls lists is to isolate management traffic on the SBC 2000 to accomplish the following: the SBC WebUI is available only through certain ports on the SBC (i.e., Admin port) and the SBC WebUI is not accessible on those ports.

In a hosted or multi-tenant environment, the SBC is managed by a service provider and is shared with multiple end-customers. The ADMIN port is used solely for managing the SBC by the service provider. In order to configure this ACL, you must do the following:

  • Create ACLs that describe the type of traffic that should be accepted or denied.
  • Bind the ACLs to the ports for the designated purpose.
Sample ACL "usertraffic"

This ACL allows packets related to VoIP application only and bound to all user ports. This example is for SBC 2000 and should be customized for your specific requirements.

ID

Source IP/Mask

Dest IP Mask

Protocol

Source port

Destination port

Action

Notes

1

2001:db8:7:1::7/64

ANY

ANY

ANY

5060

ACCEPT

Accepts all traffic from Lync server to the SBC's SIP port 5060 or ASM's SIP port 5060.

2

2001:db8:7:1::7/64

ANY

UDP

53

ANY

ACCEPT

Accepts DNS traffic from the DNS server 2001:db8:7:1::7/64.

3

ANY

ANY

UDP

ANY

16000-17000

ACCEPT

Accepts all UDP traffic carrying RTP and RTCP payload from other devices to the SBC. The port range should be same as the range configured under Media System Configuration. See Configuring the Media System.

4

2001:db8:33:1::3/64

ANY

UDP

30000

30000

ACCEPT

Accepts control packets between ASM installed on the same SBC and the SBC CPU. UDP/30000 is a reserved port.

5

2001:db8:33:1::3/64

ANY

UDP

30001

30001

ACCEPT

Accepts control packets between ASM installed on the same SBC and the SBC CPU. UDP/30001 is a reserved port.

6

ANY

ANY

UDP

30000

30000

DROP

Drops any other source that uses the reserved port 30000.

7

ANY

ANY

UDP

30001

30001

DROP

Drops any other source that uses the reserved port 30001.

8

ANY

ANY

ANY

ANY

ANY

DROP

By default discards all traffic, if the above rules don't match.

Sample ACL "admintraffic"

This ACL accepts specified management traffic and discards all other packets. Also the ACLs should be bound to all ports used only for administration.This example is for SBC 2000 and should be customized for your specific requirements.

ID

Source IP Subnet

Dest IP Subnet

Protocol

Source port

Destination  port

Action

Notes

1

ANY

ANY

TCP

ANY

443

ACCEPT

Accepts incoming HTTPS request.

2

ANY

ANY

TCP

ANY

80

ACCEPT

Accepts incoming HTTP request.

3

ANY

ANY

UDP

ANY

161

ACCEPT

Accepts incoming SNMP requests.

4

ANY

ANY

TCP

ANY

22

ACCEPT

Accepts incoming SSH requests.

5

ANY

2001:db8:33:1::3/64

TCP

ANY

3389

ACCEPT

Accepts incoming RDP packets to ASM (assuming ASM's IP address is 2001:db8:33:1::3/64).

6

ANY

ANY

ANY

ANY

ANY

DROP

By default, drops all traffic, if the above rules don't match.

Sample ACL Binding

The ACLs in this example are applied only to the inbound direction of the ports. Once the ACLs are bound to the ports, ports Ethernet 1-4 are used only for VoIP and not for management. The ADMIN port is used only for management and not for user traffic.

Port

ACL Name

Direction

Notes

Ethernet 1

usertraffic

INBOUND

Ethernet 1 is used primarily only for user's traffic such as VoIP calls. The WebUI or any management traffic will be discarded.

Ethernet 2

usertraffic

INBOUND

same as above.

Ethernet 3

usertraffic

INBOUND

same as above.

Ethernet 4

usertraffic

INBOUND

same as above.

ADMIN

admintraffic

INBOUND

ADMIN port is used only for administration. All user traffic (i.e., SIP, RTP) is discarded.

Typical WAN/LAN Deployment

These are sample ACLs and should be customized for your specific deployment.

A typical SBC deployment may have two 'sides'.  One side is the LAN-side or the corporate-network side, and the other is the Internet-side, WAN-side or the provider-network side. Neither side should be trusted entirely.  ACLs must be configured so that only SIP/VOIP/RTP traffic is allowed on both sides. An additional task is usually to determine the IP interface WebUI/REST management is allowed on.

When configuring ACLs, it is possible to isolate the SBC out of the network. Ensure there are rules in place to accept HTTPS on at least one IP interface. The order of rules in the ACL is important.

For this example, consider that the Sonus SBC 1000 has two IP interfaces

  1. Ethernet 1 IP: 2001:db8:12:3:10::10  (LAN-side, office-side, branch-side, corporate network-side)
  2. Ethernet 2 IP: 2001:db8:10:1:10::10  (SIP trunk side, WAN-side, Provider-side, Internet-side)
LAN Side ACL

(For this example, this ACL must be applied to 'Ethernet 1 IP' as "Input ACL")

DescriptionProtocolAction

Port
Selection

Service

Source
IP

Source
Prefix Length

Source
Min Port

Source
Max Port
Dest
IP
Dest
Prefix Length
Dest
Min Port
Dest
Max Port
Description
Allow WebUI/HTTPSTCPAllowServiceHTTPS::0  ::0  For more security, replace the source IP and mask with the network addresses that is on the LAN-side. Also, consider the subnets used for VPN users of that corporate network.
Allow WebUI/HTTP to redirect to HTTPSTCPAllowServiceHTTP::0  ::0  Not strictly required, but this is good for convenience. SBC will redirect all HTTP requests to HTTPS.
Accept SIP Signaling over UDPUDPAllowRange 2001:db8:40:1:1::1128102465535::050605060

Create one rule for every SIP protocol/port combination on the SBC, based on all Signaling Groups. Source IP and mask, must match what is configured on the Federated-IP network as well.

In this example, perhaps 2001:db8:40:1:1::1 is a IP-PBX that supports SIP over UDP.

Accept SIP Signaling over TCP and TLSTCPAllowRange 

2001:db8:50:1:1::2

 

128102465535::050675067

Create one rule for every SIP protocol/port combination on the SBC, based on all Signaling Groups. Source IP and mask, must match what is configured on the Federated-IP network as well.

In this example, perhaps 2001:db8:50:1:1::2 is a Lync Mediation Server that supports SIP over TLS.

Accept SIP Signaling TCP and TLS ACKsTCPAllowRange 2001:db8:50:1:1::212850675067::0102465535

Create one rule for every SIP server. This rule allows the TCP ACKs to return to the SBC. Source IP and mask, must match what is configured on the Federated-IP network as well.

In this example, perhaps 2001:db8:50:1:1::2 is a Lync mediation server that supports SIP over TLS.

Accept RTP/RTCP packetsUDPAllowRange ::0102465535::01638417583Accept all RTP/SRTP packets. Note that the port-range must match that of Media System Configuration on the SBC.
Accept DNS responsesUDPAllowRange ::05353::0102465535Accept DNS responses for all DNS_requests initiated by the SBC.
Discard all other packetsANYDeny  ::0  ::0  Discard all other packets.
             (Destination IP and Prefix may be replaced with a specific IP address of 2001:db8:12:3:10::10  and  a prefix of 128 for ensuring all communications only use that specific IP address. )

 

SIP Trunk Side ACL

(For this example, this ACL must be applied to 'Ethernet 2 IP' as "Input ACL")

DescriptionProtocolAction

Port
Selection

Source
IP

Source
Prefix

Source
Min Port

Source
Max Port
Dest
IP
Dest
Prefix
Dest
Min Port
Dest
Max Port
Description
Accept SIP Signaling over UDPUDPAllowRange

2001:db8:20:5:1::20

128102465535

2001:db8:10:1:10::10

 

12850605060

Create one rule for every SIP protocol/port combination on the SBC, based on all Signaling Groups. Source IP and mask, must match what is configured on the Federated-IP network as well.

In this example, perhaps 2001:db8:20:5:1::20 is the IP address of the SIP-trunk peer.

Accept RTP/RTCP packetsUDPAllowRange2001:db8:20:5:1::201281024655352001:db8:10:1:10::101281638417583Accept all RTP/SRTP packets. Note that the port-range must match that of Media System Configuration on the SBC.
Accept DNS responsesUDPAllowRange::05353::0102465535Accept DNS responses for all DNS_requests initiated by the SBC.
Discard all other packetsANYDeny ::0  ::0  Discard all other packets.
            (Destination IP and mask may be replaced with a specific IP address of the SBC on the SIP-trunk side).