Htttp access rule configuration – Brocade Mobility RFS Controller System Reference Guide (Supporting software release 5.5.0.0 and later) User Manual

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Brocade Mobility RFS Controller System Reference Guide

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Review the following HTTP Access Rules to determine whether a rule configuration requires
creation or modification:

Select Add to create a new HTTP access rule configuration, Edit to modify an existing configuration
or Delete to remove an existing configuration.

HTTTP Access Rule Configuration

Set HTTP access rules as a set of access control rules determining whether to permit or deny an
HTTP request.

To define a smart caching policy’s HTTP access rule configuration:

1. From the HTTP Access Rules screen, select Add to create a new HTTP access rule

configuration, Edit to modify an existing configuration or Delete to remove an existing
configuration.

Precedence

Precedence value (1 - 100) of each listed HTTP access rule.

Permit

A green check mark defines Permit as enabled. A red “X” defines Permit as disabled (denied). When
enabled, HTTP requests that match this rule are permitted. If not enabled, HTTP requests that match
this rule are denied.

Source IP

Match against the source (origination) IP address of the HTTP request.

Destination IP

Match against the origin server's IP address obtained from the HTTP request URL.

Destination Domain

Displays the destination domain to match against the hostname in the HTTP request URL.

Destination Domain
Regex

The destination domain regex is the same as the destination domain parameter, but the destination
domain regex allows an administrator to use regular expressions matching on origin server names.

URL Regex

A green check mark column defines the URL regex as enabled. A red “X” defines the URL regex as
disabled. When enabled, regular expressions are used to match any part of a requested URL, including
the transfer protocol and origin server hostname.

Mimetype Regex

A green check mark defines the mimetype regex as enabled. A red “X” defines the mimetype regex as
disabled. When enabled, regular expressions are used to match the mimetype of a HTTP request. A
MIME type matches when the regular expression property matches the string pattern described by the
regular expression.

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