Awe, you gotta let the guy do his own work. He doesn't learn from cutting
and pasting...
andy
On Wed, 13 Dec 2000, Scott McClure, CCNP, CCDA, MCNE wrote:
> Andy and Edward are both correct. It is much easier if you were trying to
> block address that fall on specific subnet blocks. To specifically block
> your range 192.168.100.100 - 192.168.100.254 you would need:
>
> The basic concept of access list wildcard masks is that any 0 in the mask
> means the address bit has to match, and any 1 in the mask means you don't
> care.
<snip>
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