Automatically assigning – Cisco ASA 5505 User Manual

Page 222

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5-22

Cisco ASA 5500 Series Configuration Guide using the CLI

Chapter 5 Configuring Multiple Context Mode

Configuring Multiple Contexts

Examples

The following example sets the admin context to be “administrator,” creates a context called
“administrator” on the internal flash memory, and then adds two contexts from an FTP server:

hostname(config)# admin-context administrator

hostname(config)# context administrator

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/0.1

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/1.1

hostname(config-ctx)# config-url flash:/admin.cfg

hostname(config-ctx)# context test

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/0.100 int1

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/0.102 int2

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/0.110-gigabitethernet0/0.115

int3-int8

hostname(config-ctx)# config-url ftp://user1:[email protected]/configlets/test.cfg

hostname(config-ctx)# member gold

hostname(config-ctx)# context sample

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/1.200 int1

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/1.212 int2

hostname(config-ctx)# allocate-interface gigabitethernet0/1.230-gigabitethernet0/1.235

int3-int8

hostname(config-ctx)# config-url ftp://user1:[email protected]/configlets/sample.cfg

hostname(config-ctx)# member silver

Automatically Assigning MAC Addresses to Context Interfaces

This section describes how to configure auto-generation of MAC addresses.

The MAC address is used to classify packets within a context. See the

“Information About MAC

Addresses” section on page 5-11

for more information, especially if you are upgrading from an earlier

ASA version. See also the

“Viewing Assigned MAC Addresses” section on page 5-35

.

Guidelines

When you configure a nameif command for the interface in a context, the new MAC address is
generated immediately. If you enable this feature after you configure context interfaces, then MAC
addresses are generated for all interfaces immediately after you enable it. If you disable this feature,
the MAC address for each interface reverts to the default MAC address. For example, subinterfaces
of GigabitEthernet 0/1 revert to using the MAC address of GigabitEthernet 0/1.

In the rare circumstance that the generated MAC address conflicts with another private MAC
address in your network, you can manually set the MAC address for the interface within the context.
See the

“Configuring the MAC Address and MTU” section on page 8-9

to manually set the MAC

address.

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