The tnrhdb database can assign a security template to a particular host either directly or indirectly. Direct assignment assigns a template to a host's IP address. Indirect assignment is handled by a fallback mechanism. The trusted network software first looks for an entry that specifically assigns the host's IP address to a template. If the software does not find a specific entry for the host, it looks for the “longest prefix of matching bits”. You can indirectly assign a host to a security template when the IP address of the host falls within the “longest prefix of matching bits” of an IP address with a fixed prefix length.
In IPv4, you can make an indirect assignment by subnet. When you make an indirect assignment by using 4, 3, 2, or 1 trailing zero (0) octets, the software calculates a prefix length of 0, 8, 16, or 24, respectively. Entries 3 – 6 in Table 12–1 illustrate this fallback mechanism.
You can also set a fixed prefix length by adding a slash (/) followed by the number of fixed bits. IPv4 network addresses can have a prefix length between 1 – 32. IPv6 network addresses can have a prefix length between 1 – 128.
The following table provides fallback address and host address examples. If an address within the set of fallback addresses is directly assigned, the fallback mechanism is not used for that address.
Table 12–1 tnrhdb Host Address and Fallback Mechanism Entries
IP Version |
tnrhdb Entry |
Addresses Covered |
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IPv4 |
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The /32 sets a prefix length of 32 fixed bits. |
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From 192.168.118.0 through 192.168.118.63 |
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All addresses on 192.168.118. network |
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All addresses on 192.168.0. network. |
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All addresses on 192.168. network |
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All addresses on 192. network |
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Network address 192.168.0.0. Not a wildcard address. |
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Network address 192.168.118.0. Not a wildcard address. |
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Network address 192.0.0.0. Not a wildcard address. |
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Host address 0.0.0.0. Not a wildcard address. |
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All addresses on all networks |
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IPv6 |
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|
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From 2001:DB8:22:5000::0 through 2001:DB8:22:5fff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff |
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All addresses on all networks |
Note that the 0.0.0.0/32 address matches the specific address, 0.0.0.0. The tnrhdb entry 0.0.0.0/32:admin_low is useful on a system where the literal address, 0.0.0.0, is used as a source IP address. For example, DHCP clients contact the DHCP server as 0.0.0.0 before the server provides the clients with an IP address.
To create a tnrhdb entry on a Sun Ray server that serves DHCP clients, see Example 13–13. Because 0.0.0.0:admin_low is the default wildcard entry, see How to Limit the Hosts That Can Be Contacted on the Trusted Network for issues to consider before removing or changing this default.
For more information about prefix lengths in IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, see Designing Your CIDR IPv4 Addressing Scheme in System Administration Guide: IP Services and IPv6 Addressing Overview in System Administration Guide: IP Services.