12-4
Traffic/Security Filters and Monitors
Filter Types and Operation
■ You can include all destination ports and trunks in the switch on a 
single source-port filter.
■ Each source-port filter includes: 
• One source port or port trunk (trk1, trk2, ...trkn)
• A set of destination ports and/or port trunks that includes all 
untrunked LAN ports and port trunks on the switch
• An action (forward or drop) for each destination port or port trunk
When you create a source-port filter, the switch automatically sets the 
filter to forward traffic from the designated source to all destinations for 
which you do not specifically configure a “drop” action. Thus, it is not 
necessary to configure a source-port filter for traffic you want the switch 
to forward unless the filter was previously configured to drop the desired 
traffic.
■ When you create a source port filter, all ports and port trunks (if any) 
on the switch appear as destinations on the list for that filter, even if 
routing is disabled and separate VLANs and/or subnets exist. Where 
traffic would normally be allowed between ports and/or trunks, the 
switch automatically forwards traffic to the outbound ports and/or 
trunks you do not specifically configure to drop traffic. (Destination 
ports that comprise a trunk are listed collectively by the trunk name—
such as Trk1— instead of by individual port name.) 
■ Packets allowed for forwarding by a source-port filter are subject to 
the same operation as inbound packets on a port that is not configured 
for source-port filtering.
■ With multiple IP addresses configured on a VLAN, and routing 
enabled on the switch, a single port or trunk can be both the source 
and destination of packets moving between subnets in that same 
VLAN. In this case, you can prevent the traffic of one subnet from 
being routed to another subnet of the same port by configuring the 
port or trunk as both the source and destination for traffic to drop.
Example
If you wanted to prevent server “A” from receiving traffic sent by workstation 
“X”, but do not want to prevent any other servers or end nodes from receiving 
traffic from workstation “X”, you would configure a filter to drop traffic from 
port 5 to port 7. The resulting filter would drop traffic from port 5 to port 7, 
but would forward all other traffic from any source port to any destination 
port. (Refer to figures 12-2 and 12-3.