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ZyXEL Communications AMG1202-T10A Manual
12 pages 1.05 Mb
296 pages 9.78 Mb
1 IP Addresshttp://192.168.1.1 Password Copyright © ZyXEL Communications Corporation 3 About This User's Guide5 Document Conventions7 Safety Warnings9 Contents Overview11 Table of Contents21 Introduction27 The Web Configurator33 Status Screens3.1 Overview 3.2 The Status Screen34 Chapter 3 Status ScreensHost Name Model Number This is the model name of your device MAC Address This is the MAC (Media Access Control) or Ethernet address unique to your ZyXEL Device ZyNOS the screen where you can change it Version DSL Firmware This is the current version of the device’s DSL modem code WAN Information DSL Mode This is the DSL standard that your ZyXEL Device is using Annex Type This is the ADSL annex type that your ZyXEL Device is using IP Subnet This is the current subnet mask in the WAN Mask Default This is the IP address of the default gateway, if applicable Gateway VPI/VCI in the wizard or WAN screen LAN Information This is the current subnet mask in the LAN DHCP Choices are: to other computers in the LAN requests and responses between the remote server and the clients None - The ZyXEL Device is not providing any DHCP services to the LAN Click this to go to the screen where you can change it ESSID Channel This is the channel number used by the ZyXEL Device now can configure the settings This displays whether WLAN is activated go to the screen where you can change it System Status 35 Chapter 3 Status ScreensThis field displays how long the ZyXEL Device has been running since it last Uptime (Maintenance > Tools > Restart), or when you reset it ), or when you reset it Current Date This field displays the current date and time in the ZyXEL Device. You can Time change this in Maintenance > System > Time Setting change this in System Mode CPU Usage currently used. When this percentage is close to 100%, the ZyXEL Device is want some applications to have more throughput, you should turn off other applications (for example, using QoS; see Chapter 14 on page 159) Memory Usage (unplug the power) for a few seconds Interface Status Interface This column displays each interface the ZyXEL Device has This field indicates whether or not the ZyXEL Device is using the interface and Drop (dropping a call) if you're using PPPoE encapsulation interface and Down when the ZyXEL Device is not using the interface when WLAN is disabled Rate For the LAN interface, this displays the port speed and duplex setting rate is enabled or N/A when WLAN is disabled 37 Tutorials55 Internet and Wireless Setup Wizard5.1 Overview 5.2Internet Access Wizard Setup56 Chapter 5 Internet and Wireless Setup WizardINTERNET/WIRELESS SETUP Figure 11 Wizard Welcome Restart the INTERNET/WIRELESS SETUP Wizard Manually configure your Internet connection Section 5.2.1 on page Figure 12 Auto Detection: No DSL Connection 57 Figure 13 Auto-Detection:PPPoEFigure 14 Auto Detection: Failed 58 Figure 15 Internet Access Wizard Setup: ISP ParametersThe following table describes the fields in this screen Table 7 Internet Access Wizard Setup: ISP Parameters Device list box. Choices vary depending on what you select in the Mode field If you select Bridge in the Mode field, select either PPPoA or RFC or PPPoE Multiplexing box either VC-basedor LLC-based Virtual Circuit circuit. Refer to the appendix for more information VPI Enter the VPI assigned to you. This field may already be configured 59 Chapter 5 Internet and Wireless Setup WizardVCI Enter the VCI assigned to you. This field may already be configured Back Click this to return to the previous screen without saving Next depends on what protocol you chose above Exit Click this to close the wizard screen without saving Section 5.3 on page Figure 16 Internet Connection with PPPoE 60 Table 8 Internet Connection with PPPoEUser Name exactly as given Password Enter the password associated with the user name above Service Name Type the name of your PPPoE service here Click this to save your changes Figure 17 Internet Connection with RFC 61 Table 9 Internet Connection with RFCFigure 18 Internet Connection with ENET ENCAP 62 Table 10 Internet Connection with ENET ENCAPObtain an IP Address Automatically Static IP Select Static IP Address if your ISP gave you an IP address to use Enter your ISP assigned IP address Subnet Mask Enter a subnet mask in dotted decimal notation Refer to the appendix to calculate a subnet mask If you are implementing subnetting Gateway IP address ENCAP in the Encapsulation field in the previous screen First DNS Enter the IP addresses of the DNS servers. The DNS servers are passed to the DHCP clients along with the IP address and the subnet mask Second DNS As above Figure 19 Internet Connection with PPPoA Table 11 Internet Connection with PPPoA Enter the login name that your ISP gives you 63 5.3 Wireless Connection Wizard Setup65 Configure your wireless settings in this screen. ClickTable 13 Wireless LAN Setup Wizard Name(SSID) same SSID in order to access the network Selection on page 66 for more information page 66 for more information 66 Manually assign akey Pre- Shared Key Figure 25 Manually Assign a WPA-PSKkey Table 14 Manually Assign a WPA-PSKkey Pre-Shared Key configure an authentication server to do this Choose Manually assign a WEP key to setup WEP Encryption parameters Figure 26 Manually Assign a WEP key 67 Table 15 Manually Assign a WEP keystations must use the same WEP key for data transmission F") for a 64-bitor 128-bitWEP key respectively 5Click Apply to save your wireless LAN settings. Figure 27 Wireless LAN Setup Finish 69 WAN Setup6.1 Overview 71 6.2 The Internet Access Setup Screen72 Table 16 Network > WAN > Internet Access Setup (continued)NAT on the ZyXEL Device box. Choices vary depending on the mode you select in the Mode field If you select Routing in the Mode field, select PPPoA, RFC 1483, ENET ENCAP or PPPoE assigned. If assigned a name in the form user@domain where domain identifies a service name, then enter both components exactly as given user name above (PPPoE only) Type the name of your PPPoE service here Choices are VC or LLC This field is not available if you set the WAN type to Ethernet Virtual Circuit ID These fields are not available if you set the WAN type to Ethernet The valid range for the VPI is 0 to 255. Enter the VPI assigned to you The valid range for the VCI is 32 to 65535 (0 to 31 is reserved for local management of ATM traffic). Enter the VCI assigned to you This option is available if you select Routing in the Mode field Internet Select Obtain an IP Address Automatically if you have a dynamic IP Select if you have a dynamic IP address in the IP Address field below Specify a gateway IP address (supplied by your ISP) Connection (PPPoA and PPPoE encapsulation only) Keep Alive Connect on Demand time and specify an idle time-outin the Max Idle Timeout field Max Idle Timeout Specify an idle time-outin the Max Idle Timeout field when you select Connect on Demand. The default setting is 0, which means the Internet session will not timeout 73 Internet Access SetupFigure 31 Network > WAN > Internet Access Setup: Advanced Setup Table 17 Network > WAN > Internet Access Setup: Advanced Setup Both In Only Out Only RIP-1 RIP-2B RIP-2M 74 6.3 The More Connections Screen75 WAN > Internet Access SetupFigure 32 Network > WAN > More Connections Table 18 Network > WAN > More Connections This field indicates whether the connection is active or not Name This is the name you gave to the Internet connection (VCI) numbers configured for this WAN connection This field indicates the encapsulation method of the Internet connection Modify Access Setup screen to edit it empty configuration to add a new Internet access setup list 77 Table 19 Network > WAN > More Connections: Edit (continued)list box. Choices vary depending on the mode you select in the Mode field list. Choices are VC or LLC By prior agreement, a protocol is assigned a specific virtual circuit, for numbers for each protocol protocols with protocol identifying information being contained in each specified for all protocols A static IP address is a fixed IP that your ISP gives you. A dynamic IP connect to the Internet Address field below Address field Connection Nailed-UpConnection it is disconnected Connect on Demand the time and specify an idle time-outin the Max Idle Timeout field mapping set Otherwise, select None to disable NAT 78 More Connections Edit79 6.4 WAN Technical Reference81 6.5 Traffic Shaping85 LAN Setup97 Wireless LAN8.1 Overview98 Chapter 8 Wireless LANSection 8.8 on page Section 8.1.2 on page Do the other wireless devices in your network support WPS 99 8.2 The AP Screen100 EditClick this to go to the MAC Filter screen to configure MAC filter settings. See Section 8.2.6 on page 106 for more details Select this check box to activate Quality of Service (QoS) your WLAN setup. See Section 8.2.5 on page 104 for more details In the screen, select from the Figure 44 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: No Security Table 27 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: No Security LABEL DESCRIPTION Security Mode Choose No Security from the drop-downlist box Static WEP 101 Figure 45 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: Static WEPChoose Static WEP from the drop-downlist box Passphrase Device automatically generates a WEP key WEP Key The WEP key is used to encrypt data. Both the ZyXEL Device and the wireless If you want to manually set the WEP key, enter any 5 or 13 characters (ASCII string) or 10 or 26 hexadecimal characters ("0-9", "A-F")for a 64-bitor 128-bit WEP key respectively 102 Network > Wireless LANFigure 46 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: WPA(2)-PSK The following table describes the wireless LAN security labels in this screen Table 29 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: WPA(2)-PSK Choose WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK from the drop-downlist box Encryption Select the encryption type (TKIP, AES or TKIP/AES) for data encryption Select TKIP if your wireless clients can all use TKIP Select AES if your wireless clients can all use AES Select TKIP/AES to allow the wireless clients to use either TKIP or AES Enable Key Pre-SharedKey The only difference between the two is that WPA(2)-PSK uses a simple common password, instead of user-specificcredentials spaces and symbols) WPA Group Key Update Timer WLAN on a periodic basis 103 WPAMixed104 Authentication Servernotation Port Number Enter the port number of the external authentication server to do so with additional information Shared Secret between the external authentication server and the ZyXEL Device The key must be the same on the external authentication server and your ZyXEL Device. The key is not sent over the network Section 8.8.2 on page Table 31 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: Advanced Setup RTS/CTS Enter a value between 0 and Threshold Fragmentation 256 and Output Power of the following: 100%, 75%, 50% or 25% 105 Chapter 8 Wireless LANPreamble See the Appendix D on page 269 for more information 802.11 Mode Select 802.11b Only to allow only IEEE 802.11b compliant WLAN devices to associate with the ZyXEL Device Select 802.11g Only to allow only IEEE 802.11g compliant WLAN devices to Device might be reduced with the ZyXEL Device Select 802.11b+g+n to allow IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g or IEEE802.11n of your ZyXEL Device might be reduced Bandwidth 40MHz A standard 20MHz channel offers transfer speeds of up to 150Mbps whereas a increase throughput. The wireless clients must also support 40 MHz. It is often wireless signal in your neighborhood or the wireless clients do not support channel bonding 106 Figure 49 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: MAC Address FilterTable 32 Network > Wireless LAN > AP: MAC Address Filter Active MAC Select the check box to enable MAC address filtering Filter Action MAC Address allowed to access the ZyXEL Device denied access to the ZyXEL Device Set This is the index number of the MAC address address format, that is, six hexadecimal character pairs, for example 12:34:56:78:9a:bc 107 8.3 The More AP Screen108 8.4 The WPS Screen109 Click Network > Wireless LAN > WPS. The following screen displaysFigure 52 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS Table 35 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS WPS Setup Select the check box to activate WPS on the ZyXEL Device PIN Number WPS The PIN is not necessary when you use WPS push-buttonmethod Generate Click this to have the ZyXEL Device create a new PIN WPS Status also appear in the screen This displays Unconfigured if WPS is disabled and there is no wireless or the configured wireless and wireless security settings Release This button is available when the WPS status is Configured for WPS connections on the ZyXEL Device 110 8.5 The WPS Station Screen8.6 The WDS Screen111 Click Network > Wireless LAN > WDS. The following screen displaysFigure 54 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS Table 37 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS WDS Security (including the ZyXEL Device) must use the same pre-sharedkey for data transmission The option is available only when you set the security mode to WPA(2) or WPA(2)-PSK in the Wireless LAN > AP screen in the TKIP Select this to use TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol) encryption AES Select this to use AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) encryption This is the index number of the individual WDS link Remote Bridge Type the MAC address of the peer device in a valid MAC address format (six hexadecimal character pairs, for example 12:34:56:78:9a:bc) PSK Enter a Pre-SharedKey (PSK) from 8 to 63 case-sensitiveASCII characters (including spaces and symbols) 112 8.7 The Scheduling Screen8.8 Wireless LAN Technical Reference 127 Network Address Translation (NAT)9.1 Overview 128 9.2 The NAT General Setup Screen129 9.3 The Port Forwarding Screen132 9.4 The Address Mapping Screen133 Network > NAT > Address MappingFigure 68 Network > NAT > Address Mapping Table 44 Network > NAT > Address Mapping This is the rule index number Local Start IP Server port mapping Local End IP then this field displays 0.0.0.0 as the Local Start IP address and and Server mapping types Global Start IP Server mapping types Global End IP one, Many-to-One and Server mapping types and mapping types Type that port numbers do not change for the One-to-oneNAT mapping type M-1: Many-to-Onemode maps multiple local IP addresses to one global IP Single User Account feature that previous ZyXEL routers supported only M-MOv (Overload): Many-to-ManyOverload mode maps multiple local IP addresses to shared global IP addresses MM No (No Overload): Many-to-ManyNo Overload mode maps each local IP address to unique global IP addresses the NAT to be accessible to the outside world Click the delete icon to delete an existing address mapping rule. Note that subsequent address mapping rules move up by one when you take this action 134 Figure 69 Network > NAT > Address Mapping: EditTable 45 Network > NAT > Address Mapping: Edit Choose the port mapping type from one of the following One-to-One: One-to-Onemode maps one local IP address to one global IP IP address to unique global IP addresses port mapping End IP address This field is N/A for One-to-One and Server mapping types This is the starting global IP address (IGA). Enter 0.0.0.0 here if you have a dynamic IP address from your ISP This is the ending global IP address (IGA). This field is N/A for One-to-One Many-to-One and Server mapping types Server Mapping Set that you have selected in the Server Mapping Set field Edit Details 135 9.5 The ALG Screen9.6 NAT Technical Reference136 NAT DefinitionsITEM Inside This refers to the host on the LAN Outside This refers to the host on the WAN Local Global WAN NAT never changes the IP address (either local or global) of an outside host Table 48 on page RFC The IP Network Address Translator (NAT) 137 Inside LocalInside Global Address (ILA) Address (IGA) 138 One to OneMany to One Many to Many Overload No Overload Server One-to-One TYPE IP MAPPING 139 Firewall143 Filters149 Static Route159 Quality of Service (QoS)14.1 OverviewVoIP: Queue Boss: Queue IP=192.168.1.23 160 14.2 The QoS Screen161 Click Advanced Setup > QoS to open the screen as shown nextFigure 85 Advanced Setup > QoS Table 58 Advanced Setup > QoS Use this field to turn on QoS to improve your network performance You can give priority to traffic that the ZyXEL Device forwards out through the WAN interface. Give high priority to voice and video to make them run more not reduce the quality of other applications on page 163 for more details Rule Rule Index Select the rule’s index number from the drop-downlist box 162 Applicationchoose Physical Ports Select Enet1 to apply the rule to the Ethernet port Destination MAC traffic containing this destination IP address. A blank destination IP address means any destination IP address Enter a destination subnet mask here Port Range number to which the rule should be applied Source MAC Type a source MAC address here. QoS is then applied to traffic containing this source MAC address. Leave it blank to apply the rule to all MAC addresses Enter a source subnet mask here numbers Protocol ID Select an IP protocol type from the drop-downlist box Vlan ID Range Enter the source VLAN ID in this field IPP/DS Field Select IPP/TOS to specify an IP precedence range and type of services Select DSCP to specify a DiffServ Code Point (DSCP) range IP Precedence Range is the highest Type of Service Select a type of service from the drop-downlist box Available options are: Normal service, Minimize delay, Maximize Available options are: throughput, Maximize reliability and Minimize monetary cost DSCP Range Specify a DSCP number between 0 and 63 in this field 802.1p Select a priority level (0 to 7) from the drop-downlist box Remarking the lowest priority and seven is the highest Select a type of service to re-assignthe priority level to matched traffic DSCP Specify a DSCP number between 0 and 63 to re-assignthe priority level to matched traffic 163 Advanced > QoSQoS Settings Summary Figure 86 Advanced Setup > QoS > QoS Settings Summary Table 59 Advanced Setup > QoS > QoS Settings Summary 164 14.3 QoS Technical Reference165 LAYERIEEE 802.1P USER TOS (IP IP PACKET QUEUE DSCP (ETHERNET PRECEDENCE) LENGTH (BYTE) PRIORITY) 167 Dynamic DNS Setup169 Remote Management16.1 Overview170 Chapter 16 Remote ManagementSection 16.2 on page Telnet Section 16.3 on page Section 16.4 on page Section 16.5 on page Section 16.6 on page Section 16.7 on page Remote management does not work when: •You have disabled that service in one of the remote management screens The IP address in the Secured Client IP Address •There is a firewall rule that blocks it When NAT is enabled: •Use the ZyXEL Device’s WAN IP address when configuring from the WAN •Use the ZyXEL Device’s LAN IP address when configuring from the LAN 171 16.2 The WWW Screen16.3 The Telnet Screen 172 16.4 The FTP Screen173 16.5 The SNMP Screen174 Figure 92 SNMP Management Model•Get - Allows the manager to retrieve an object variable from the agent •Set - Allows the manager to set values for object variables within an agent •Trap - Used by the agent to inform the manager of some events 175 Figure 93 Advanced > Remote MGMT > SNMPTable 66 Advanced > Remote MGMT > SNMP on the ZyXEL Device Select All to allow any computer to access the SNMP agent to access the SNMP agent SNMP Configuration Get Community Enter the Get Community, which is the password for the incoming Get and all requests Set Community the management station. The default is public and allows all requests manager. The default is public and allows all requests Trap Destination Type the IP address of the station to send your SNMP traps to 176 16.6 The DNS Screen177 16.7 The ICMP Screen178 Universal Plug-and-Play(UPnP)189 System Settings18.1 Overview 18.2 The General Screen 190 18.3 The Time and Date Screen191 Chapter 18 System SettingsTable 71 Maintenance > System > Time and Date (continued) Manual settings do not affect it New Time (hh:mm:ss) configured manually and then click Apply New Date (yyyy/mm/dd) Get from Time the time server you specified below Time Server of this information Time Zone Setup Time Zone your time zone and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) Daylight Savings the evening Select this option if you use Daylight Saving Time Start Date couple of examples: Sunday of March. Each time zone in the United States starts using Daylight Saving Time at 2 A.M. local time. So in the United States you would select Second, Sunday, March and type 2 in the o'clock field time zone is one hour ahead of GMT or UTC (GMT+1) End Date Configure the day and time when Daylight Saving Time ends if you selected and type 2 in the o'clock field on your time zone. In Germany for instance, you would type 2 because Germany's time zone is one hour ahead of GMT or UTC (GMT+1) 193 Logs19.1 Overview 19.2 The System Log Screen 194 19.3 Log Descriptions195 Table 73 System Maintenance Logs (continued)DHCP client IP expired DHCP server assigns %s Successful WEB login WEB login failed Successful TELNET login TELNET login failed Successful FTP login FTP login failed NAT Session Table is Full Starting Connectivity Monitor Time initialized by Daytime Server Time initialized by Time server Time initialized by NTP Connect to Daytime server fail Connect to Time server fail Connect to NTP server fail Too large ICMP packet has been dropped Configuration Change: PC 0x%x, Task ID = 0x%x Successful SSH login SSH login failed Successful HTTPS login HTTPS login failed Table 74 System Error Logs %s exceeds the max number of session per host setNetBIOSFilter: calloc error 196 Table 74 System Error Logs (continued)readNetBIOSFilter: calloc WAN connection is down Table 75 Access Control Logs Firewall default policy: [ TCP | UDP | IGMP | ESP | GRE | OSPF ] <Packet Direction Firewall rule [NOT] match:[ TCP | UDP | IGMP | ESP | GRE | OSPF ] <Packet Direction>, <rule:%d Triangle route packet forwarded: [ TCP | UDP | IGMP | ESP | GRE | OSPF ] Packet without a NAT table entry blocked: [ TCP | UDP | IGMP | ESP | GRE | OSPF ] Router sent blocked web site message: TCP Table 76 TCP Reset Logs Under SYN flood attack sent TCP RST Exceed TCP MAX incomplete, sent TCP RST Peer TCP state out of order, sent TCP RST Firewall session time out, sent TCP RST 197 Table 76 TCP Reset Logs (continued)Exceed MAX incomplete Access block, sent TCP RST Table 77 Packet Filter Logs [ TCP | UDP | ICMP | IGMP | Generic ] packet filter matched (set: %d, rule: %d) For type and code details, see Table 86 on page Table 78 ICMP Logs ICMP Logs Firewall default policy: ICMP <Packet Direction>, <type:%d <code:%d Firewall rule [NOT] match: ICMP <Packet Direction>, <rule:%d <type:%d>, <code:%d blocked: ICMP Unsupported/out-of-orderICMP: Router reply ICMP packet: ICMP Table 79 CDR Logs CDR Logs board %d line %d channel %d call %d, %s C01 Outgoing Call dev=%x ch=%x %s 198 Table 79 CDR Logs (continued)call %d, %s C02 OutCall Connected %d %s call %d, %s C02 Call Terminated Table 80 PPP Logs PPP Logs ppp:LCP Starting ppp:LCP Opening ppp:CHAP Opening ppp:IPCP Starting ppp:IPCP Opening ppp:LCP Closing ppp:IPCP Closing Table 81 UPnP Logs UPnP Logs UPnP pass through Firewall Table 82 Content Filtering Logs %s: block keyword Table 83 Attack Logs attack [ TCP | UDP | IGMP | ESP | GRE | OSPF ] attack ICMP (type:%d code:%d) land [ TCP | UDP | IGMP | land ICMP (type:%d 199 Table 83 Attack Logs (continued)ip spoofing - WAN [ TCP | UDP | IGMP | ESP | GRE | ip spoofing - WAN ICMP (type:%d, code:%d) icmp echo : ICMP syn flood TCP ports scan TCP teardrop TCP teardrop UDP teardrop ICMP (type:%d illegal command TCP NetBIOS TCP ip spoofing - no routing entry [ TCP | UDP | IGMP entry ICMP (type:%d vulnerability ICMP traceroute ICMP (type:%d Table 84 802.1X Logs RADIUS accepts user RADIUS rejects user. Pls check RADIUS Server User logout because of session timeout expired User logout because of user deassociation User logout because of no authentication response from user User logout because of idle request No response from RADIUS. Pls check RADIUS Server 200 Table 84 802.1X Logs (continued)Use RADIUS to authenticate user No Server to authenticate user Table 85 ACL Setting Notes PACKET DIRECTION DIRECTION ICMP Notes CODE 201 Table 86 ICMP Notes (continued)TYPE CODE DESCRIPTION Table 87 Syslog Logs <Facility*8 + Severity>Mon dd hr:mm:ss hostname src="<srcIP:srcPort dst="<dstIP:dstPort msg="<msg>" note="<note devID="<mac address last three numbers>" cat="<category Table 88 RFC-2408ISAKMP Payload Types LOG DISPLAY PAYLOAD TYPE PROP TRANS CER CER_REQ HASH SIG NONCE NOTFY DEL VID 203 Tools20.1 Overview 20.2 The Firmware Screen204 Chapter 20 ToolsFigure 100 Maintenance > Tools > Firmware Table 89 Maintenance > Tools > Firmware Current This is the present Firmware version and the date created File Path to find it Browse Click this to find the .bin file you want to upload. Remember that you must decompress compressed (.zip) files before you can upload them Upload Firmware Upload in Progress Figure 101 Firmware Upload In Progress 205 Return 206 20.3 The Configuration Screen207 Chapter 20 Toolscompressed (.ZIP) files before you can upload them Click this to begin the upload process Figure 105 Configuration Upload Successful Figure 106 Network Temporarily Disconnected Appendix A on page Configuration Figure 107 Configuration Upload Error 208 20.4 The Restart Screen209 Diagnostic21.1 Overview 21.2 The General Screen 210 21.3 The DSL Line Screen211 Table 92 Maintenance > Diagnostic > DSL LineATM Status Click this to view your DSL connection’s Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) ATM uses fixed-sizepackets of information called cells. With ATM, a high QoS (Quality of Service) can be guaranteed It also receives ATM cells and reassembles them into packets These counters are set back to zero whenever the device starts up inPkts is the number of good ATM cells that have been received inDiscards is the number of received ATM cells that were rejected outPkts is the number of ATM cells that have been sent outDiscards is the number of ATM cells sent that were rejected inF4Pkts is the number of ATM Operations, Administration, and Management on OAM for ATM outF4Pkts is the number of ATM OAM F4 cells that have been sent inF5Pkts is the number of ATM OAM F5 cells that have been received outF5Pkts is the number of ATM OAM F5 cells that have been sent channel txRate is the number of bytes transmitted per second rxRate is the number of bytes received per second ATM Loopback Test with the DSLAM and ATM network 212 Table 92 Maintenance > Diagnostic > DSL Line (continued)DSL Line Status Click this to view statistics about the DSL connections output power upstream attenuation downstream Reset ADSL Line progress and results of this operation, for example: "Start to reset ADSL Loading ADSL modem F/W Reset ADSL Line Successfully Capture All Logs Click this to display information and statistics about your ZyXEL Device’s ATM gateway IP address, VPI/VCI and LAN IP address 213 Troubleshooting217 Product Specifications225 Setting up Your Computer’s IP Address247 IP Addresses and Subnetting255 Pop-upWindows, JavaScripts and Java Permissions265 Wireless LANs279 Services283 Legal Information285 1Go to http://www.zyxel.com2Select your product on the ZyXEL home page to go to that product's page 3Select the certification you wish to view from this page 287 types 133, 134CBR 74, 78 288 104DHCP 86, 89 106 URL 143 86, 89, 93 289 FTP 21IGMP 70, 86, 88 290 74, 78291 RIP 73, 86, 88, 92SCR 74, 78 173 SSID 98, 99, 108 86, 93 27 30 81 292 UBR 74, 78VCI 72, 77 293 WPA 103, 116
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