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9 Comments on “Which statement is true about terms in a policy?

  1. Brown Leaf says:

    The question make no sense to me 🙁

    I did the following:

    root@JuniperOlive1# edit policy-options policy-statement TEST-POLICY

    and

    root@JuniperOlive1# edit firewall filter TEST-FIREWALL

    both without any term.

    Then:

    root@JuniperOlive1# commit
    commit complete

    and at show | compare I get:

    root@JuniperOlive1# commit
    commit complete

    [edit policy-options]
    ‘policy-statement TEST’
    warning: statement has no contents; ignored

    [edit firewall]
    ‘filter TEST-FIREWALL’
    warning: statement has no contents; ignored

    So, you I could configure both, commit, but both are ignored as they don’t have a term in. They are not usable at all as I see and don’t even appear in the configuration.

    Yes, the terms are optional, but then you don’t get a functional policy…

    My 2 cents




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  2. traffikator says:

    https://learningportal.juniper.net/juniper/user_fasttrack_home.aspx
    JNCIA-Junos_SG_part2_09-16-2010 page 28 Building blocks of routing policy. A routing policy consists of ZERO or more terms. I don’t have the time to go into more details about it but there is more to it. Yes you can create a routing policy without terms. I wonder would happen if you later added terms to that same policy and tried to commit? I wonder if it would actually commit? Don’t know.
    D is correct.




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  3. Kiki says:

    Configuring a Policy Term (Required)

    Each routing policy term is identified by a term name. The name can contain letters, numbers, and hyphens (-) and can be up to 255 characters long. To include spaces in the name, enclose the entire name in double quotation marks.




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