Cisco ASA
Use the Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance Software integration to manage interfaces, rules, and network objects.
Network Security · Cisco ASA
Configuration parameters
server— Server URL (e.g. https://192.168.0.1) (required)credentials— Credentials (required)proxy— Use system proxy settingsinsecure— Trust any certificate (not secure)isASAv— Is ASAv
Commands (16)
-
cisco-asa-backupCreates a backup of the current settings (i.e., the backup.cfg file).
-
cisco-asa-create-network-objectCreates a network object.
-
cisco-asa-create-ruleCreates a rule.
-
cisco-asa-delete-ruleDeletes a rule.
-
cisco-asa-edit-ruleUpdates an existing rule.
-
cisco-asa-get-rule-by-idGets a specific rule by rule ID.
-
cisco-asa-list-interfacesGets a list of all interfaces.
-
cisco-asa-list-local-userRetrieve information about individual local user accounts within a network system. These local users can be part of local user groups and groups imported from Active Directory.
-
cisco-asa-list-local-user-groupRetrieve information about local user groups, which are collections of user accounts, either from the local database or imported from Active Directory, that manage access to network resources not defined globally.
-
cisco-asa-list-network-object-groupRetrieve information about network object groups. Network object groups can contain multiple network objects as well as inline networks or hosts. Network object groups can include a mix of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses/network.
-
cisco-asa-list-network-objectsGets a list all configured network objects.
-
cisco-asa-list-rulesGets a list all rules for the supplied interface.
-
cisco-asa-list-security-object-groupRetrieve information about security groups, which are collections of security groups or identifiers that manage access and permissions to network resources. These groups can be used in features like Cisco TrustSec and are often part of extended access control lists, enabling centralized and localized security policy management.
-
cisco-asa-list-time-rangeRetrieve information about time range objects. A time range object defines a specific time consisting of a start time, an end time, and optional recurring entries. You use these objects on ACL rules to provide time-based access to certain features or assets. For example, you could create an access rule that allows access to a particular server during working hours only.
-
cisco-asa-list-user-objectRetrieve information about user definitions within the system. This helps in managing and configuring user access and permissions in a network security context.
-
cisco-asa-write-memorySaves the running configuration to the default location for the startup configuration.