Ruby Tech GS-1224L manual Bytes

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User Manual

Ethernet MAC transmits frames in half-duplex and full-duplex ways. In half- duplex operation mode, the MAC can either transmit or receive frame at a moment, but cannot do both jobs at the same time.

As the transmission of a MAC frame with the half-duplex operation exists only in the same collision domain, the carrier signal needs to spend time to travel to reach the targeted device. For two most-distant devices in the same collision domain, when one sends the frame first, and the second sends the frame, in worst- case, just before the frame from the first device arrives. The collision happens and will be detected by the second device immediately. Because of the medium delay, this corrupted signal needs to spend some time to propagate back to the first device. The maximum time to detect a collision is approximately twice the signal propagation time between the two most-distant devices. This maximum time is traded-off by the collision recovery time and the diameter of the LAN.

In the original 802.3 specification, Ethernet operates in half duplex only. Under this condition, when in 10Mbps LAN, it’s 2500 meters, in 100Mbps LAN, it’s approximately 200 meters and in 1000Mbps, 200 meters. According to the theory, it should be 20 meters. But it’s not practical, so the LAN diameter is kept by using to increase the minimum frame size with a variable-length non-data extension bit field which is removed at the receiving MAC. The following tables are the frame format suitable for 10M, 100M and 1000M Ethernet, and some parameter values that shall be applied to all of these three types of Ethernet.

Actually, the practice Gigabit Ethernet chips do not feature this so far. They all have their chips supported full-duplex mode only, as well as all network vendors’ devices. So this criterion should not exist at the present time and in the future. The switch’s Gigabit module supports only full-duplex mode.

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Fig. 3-4 Gigabit Ethernet Frame

Publication date: March, 2007

Revision A1

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Contents Page Page GS-1224L Duration of Hardware Warranty Iii Table of Contents 100 Revision History 02/10/2007 03/13/2007Vii Electronic Emission Notices Federal Communications Commission FCC StatementAbout this user’s manual Key Features in the Device Overview of 24-Port GbE Web Smart SwitchVlan Checklist FeaturesHardware ManagementPublication date March View of 24-Port GbE Web Smart Switch User Interfaces on the Front Panel Button, LEDs and PlugsLED Indicators User Interfaces on the Rear PanelSystem LED 10/100/1000Ethernet TP Port 1 to 24 LEDView of the Optional Modules Front View of 1000Base-SX/LX LC, SFP Fiber TransceiverHardware and Cable Installation Starting 24-Port GbE Web Smart Switch UpConnecting the SFP Module to the Chassis TP Port and Cable Installation Power OnCabling Requirements Firmware LoadingCabling Requirements for TP Ports Cabling Requirements for 1000SX/LX SFP Module1000Base-X TP, Fiber 100Base-TX TP 100Base-FX Fiber Typical Network Topology in DeploymentNo Vlan Configuration Diagram Case 2b Port-based Vlan See -4 Publication date March Managing 24-Port GbE Web Smart Switch through Ethernet Port Port GBE WEB Smart SwitchLogin Screen for Web IP Address Assignment110 10000000.00000001.00000010.1 Prefix Length No. of IP matched No. of Addressable IP Publication date March Typical Applications 10 Network Connection between Remote Site and Central Site11 Peer-to-peer Network Connection Basic Concept Management What’s the EthernetIEEE802.3 CSMA/CD MAC STP Bpdu SnapARP Media Access Control MAC SAP FormatPRE SFD FCSPublication date March How does a MAC work? Bytes DTE Flow Control Publication date March Revision A1 Bits How does a switch work? Collision Domain Publication date March Revision A1 Publication date March Virtual LAN Publication date March CFI Tag FormatPublication date March Publication date March Revision A1 VID Link Aggregation 10 Example of Link Aggregation Application Operation of Web-based Management Web Management Home Overview Information of Page Layout Lacp Rstp SnmpSystem Configuration Function descriptionPublication date March Publication date March Revision A1 Ports Configuration ON/OFFVlan Mode Configuration Port ConfigurationSelect Vlan Mode Vlan Group Configuration VIDAdd or Remove Vlan Member Port-Based Vlan Configuration 10 Aggregation/Trunking Configuration Aggregation11 Lacp Port Configuration LacpRstp Rstp Port Configuration Publication date March Publication date March Revision A1 Publication date March Port Mode Port Control Authentication Port Status Radius IP 16 802.1X Configuration 802.1x Parameters Igmp Snooping Vlan IDMirror Configuration 20 Mirror ports configurationQoSQuality of Service Configuration 21 QoS ConfigurationQoS Configuration Dscp Setting Filter Dhcp24 Filter Configuration 25 Rate Limit Configuration Rate Limit26 Storm Control Configuration Storm ControlPublication date March Snmp Parameters description27 Snmp Configuration Monitoring Statistics Overview28 Statistics Overview for all ports Detailed Statistics Publication date March 29 Detailed Statistics for each port Lacp Status 30 Lacp StatusRstp Status 31 Rstp Status Igmp Status Ping Status 32 Igmp Status33 Ping Maintenance Warm Restart 34 Warm RestartFactory Default Software Upgrade 36 Software UpgradeConfiguration File Transfer Function descriptionLogout Resolving No Link Condition Q&AAppendix a Technical Specifications Network Interface SFPMAC Address and Self-learning 8K MAC address Cable and Maximum LengthDiagnostic LED Power RequirementAmbient Temperature DimensionsManagement Software Specifications PRIVATE-GS1224L-MIB Definitions = Begin Imports From RFC1213-MIBFrom RFC1155-SMI OBJECT-TYPE