Intrusion Rules in Layers
You can view individual layer settings on the Rules page for the layer, or view the net effect of all settings on the policy view of the Rules page. When you modify rule settings on the policy view of the Rules page, you are modifying the highest user-configurable layer in the policy. You can switch to another layer using the layer drop-down list on any Rules page.
The following table describes the effects of configuring the same type of setting in multiple layers.
You can set... |
Of this setting type... |
To... |
---|---|---|
one |
rule state |
override a rule state set for the rule in a lower layer, and ignore all thresholds, suppressions, rate-based rule states, and alerts for that rule configured in lower layers. If you want a rule to inherit its state from the base policy or a lower layer, set the rule state to Inherit. Note that when you are working on the intrusion policy Rules page, you cannot set a rule state to Inherit because the intrusion policy Rules page is a composite view of the net effect of all rule settings. |
one |
threshold SNMP alert |
override a setting of the same type for the rule in a lower layer. Note that setting a threshold overwrites any existing threshold for the rule in the layer. |
one or more |
suppression rate-based rule state |
cumulatively combine settings of the same type for each selected rule down to the first layer where a rule state is set for the rule. Settings below the layer where a rule state is set are ignored. |
one or more |
comment |
add a comment to a rule. Comments are rule-specific, not policy- or layer-specific. You can add one or more comments to a rule in any layer. |
For example, if you set a rule state to Drop and Generate Events in one layer and to Disabled in a higher layer, the intrusion policy Rules page shows that the rule is disabled.
In another example, if you set a source-based suppression for a rule to 192.168.1.1 in one layer, and you also set a destination-based suppression for the rule to 192.168.1.2 in another layer, the Rules page shows that the cumulative effect is to suppress events for the source address 192.168.1.1 and the destination address 192.168.1.2. Note that suppression and rate-based rule state settings cumulatively combine settings of the same type for each selected rule down to the first layer where a rule state is set for the rule. Settings below the layer where a rule state is set are ignored.
Color-coding on each Rules page for a specific layer indicates whether the effective state is in a higher, lower, or the current layer, as follows:
-
red—the effective state is in a higher layer
-
yellow—the effective state is in a lower layer
-
unshaded—the effective state is in the current layer
Because the intrusion policy Rules page is a composite view of the net effect of all rule settings, rule states are not color-coded on this page.