IP Address
http://192.168.1.1
User Name
admin
Password
Page
About This User's Guide
Page
Page
Document Conventions
Page
Safety Warnings
Contents Overview
Page
Table of Contents
Part I: User’s Guide
Chapter
The Web Configurator
Basic Setting
Static Multicast Forward Setup
Configure Multiple Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
Multiple Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Status
Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol Status
Link Aggregation
Port Authentication
Port Security
Classifier
Policy Rule
21.2.1 Viewing and Editing Policy Configuration
Loop Guard
PPPoE
Error Disable
29.1.1 What You Can Do
29.1.2 What You Need to Know
30.1.1 What You Can Do
31.1.1 What You Can Do
31.1.2 What You Need to Know
Access Control
Diagnostic
Cluster Management
MAC Table
ARP Table
Appendix
A Changing a Fuse
Page
Page
Getting to Know Your Switch
1.1 Introduction
Sales
Figure 3 High Performance Switched Workgroup Application
For more information on VLANs, refer to Chapter 9 on page
1.2 Ways to Manage the Switch
1.3Good Habits for Managing the Switch
Hardware Installation and Connection
2.1 Installation Scenarios
2.2Desktop Installation Procedure
2.3Mounting the Switch on a Rack
Page
2.4Wall Mounting (for GS2200-8only)
Page
Hardware Panels
3.1 Overview
3.2 Front Panels
Chapter 3 Hardware Panels
Figure 11 Front Panel (GS2200-24)
Ports
Figure 12 Front Panel (GS2200-24P)
PoE Ethernet Ports Dual Personality Interfaces
Chapter 3 Hardware Panels
Table 2 Front Panel Connections (continued)
2 or 4 Dual
Personality
Interfaces
•Speed: Auto
•Duplex: Auto
•Flow control: Off
•Link Aggregation: Disabled
•Type: SFP connection interface
Figure
Figure 14 Connecting the Fiber Optic Cables
Use the following steps to remove a mini-GBICtransceiver (SFP module)
1Remove the fiber optic cables from the transceiver
2Open the transceiver’s latch (latch styles vary)
3.3 LEDs
Page
Page
The Web Configurator
4.1 Overview
4.2System Login
4.3 The Status Screen
In the navigation panel, click a main link to reveal a list of submenu links
Table 4 Navigation Panel Sub-linksOverview
BASIC SETTING
ADVANCED
IP APPLICATION
Table 5 Navigation Panel Links (continued)
VLAN
This link takes you to screens where you can configure port-basedor 802.1Q VLAN
protocol based VLAN or a subnet based VLAN in these screens
Static MAC
Chapter 4 The Web Configurator
DiffServ
and set DSCP-to-IEEE802.1pmappings
DHCP
This link takes you to screens where you can configure the DHCP settings
4.4 Saving Your Configuration
4.5 Switch Lockout
4.6Resetting the Switch
4.7 Logging Out of the Web Configurator
4.8 Help
Initial Setup Example
5.1 Overview
Chapter 5 Initial Setup Example
Advanced Application
In the
ACTIVE
VLAN Group ID
5.2 Configuring Switch
Management IP Address
Section 4.2 on page
3Click Basic Setting > IP Setup in the navigation panel
in the navigation panel
4Configure the related fields in the IP Setup screen
For the
Tutorials
6.1 Overview
6.2How to Use DHCP Snooping on the Switch
Control
Tx Tagging
VLAN Port Setting
Page
6.3 How to Use DHCP Relay on the Switch
Figure 32 Tutorial: DHCP Relay Scenario
PVID=102
Follow the steps below to configure port 2 as a member of VLAN
1Access the web configurator through the Switch’s management port
802.1Q
3Click Advanced Application > VLAN > Static VLAN
TX Tagging
VLAN Status
PVID
IP Application > DHCP
Global
DHCP Relay
2Select the Active check box
Enter the DHCP server’s IP address (192.168.2.3 in this example) in the
1Client A is connected to the Switch’s port 2 in VLAN
3You clicked the Save link on the Switch to have your settings take effect
System Status and Port Statistics
7.1 Overview
7.2 Port Status Summary
Table 7 Status
(continued)
Link
the combo ports
State
Figure 40 Status > Port Details
Table 8 Status: Port Details
Port Info
Port NO
This field displays the port number you are viewing
Section 13.1 on page
If STP is disabled, this field displays
FORWARDING
if the link is up, otherwise, it displays
STOP
Chapter 7 System Status and Port Statistics
Table 8 Status: Port Details (continued)
128 and 255 octets in length
256 and 511 octets in length
512 and 1023 octets in length
Basic Setting
8.1 Overview
8.2 System Information
Table 9 Basic Setting > System Info (continued)
Fan Speed
(RPM)
the threshold shown
Note: The fan speed information is available only on the GS2200-8HPand
8.3 General Setup
8.4 Introduction to VLANs
8.5 Switch Setup Screen
8.6 IP Setup
Note: You must configure a VLAN first
Figure 44 Basic Setting > IP Setup
Table 12 Basic Setting > IP Setup
Domain Name
use a domain name instead of an IP address
Table 12 Basic Setting > IP Setup (continued)
DHCP Client
subnet mask, a default gateway IP address and a domain name server IP address
automatically
Static IP Address
8.7 Port Setup
8.8 PoE Status
Figure 46 Powered Device Examples
PoE
Figure 47 Basic Setting > PoE Status
Table 14 Basic Setting > PoE Status
PoE Status
PoE Mode
Class
This shows the IEEE 802.3af power classification of the PD
current (mA) that the PD requires to function. The ranges are as follows
Class 0 - Default
0.44 to
Basic Setting > PoE Status
Table 15 Basic Setting > PoE > PoE Setup
Select the power management mode you want the Switch to use
out, PDs with lower priority do not get power to function
power than those with lower priority levels
Chapter 8 Basic Setting
Basic Setting > PoE > PoE Setup (continued)
Page
VLAN
9.1 Overview
Chapter 9 VLAN
Please refer to the following table for common IEEE 802.1Q VLAN terminology
Table 16 IEEE 802.1Q VLAN Terminology
VLAN PARAMETER
TERM
VLAN Trunking
Figure 49 Port VLAN Trunking
Select a VLAN type in the Basic Setting > Switch Setup screen
Figure 50 Switch Setup > Select VLAN Type
9.2 VLAN Status
Table 17 Advanced Application > VLAN: VLAN Status (continued)
This field shows how this VLAN was added to the Switch
dynamic: using GVRP
static: added as a permanent entry
Change Pages
9.3 Configure a Static VLAN
Advanced Application > VLAN > Static VLAN (continued)
default selection
Select Fixed for the port to be a permanent member of this VLAN group
Select Forbidden if you want to prohibit the port from joining this VLAN group
Tagging
9.4 Configure VLAN Port Settings
9.5 Subnet Based VLANs
Figure 55 Subnet Based VLAN Application Example
Tagged Frames
Internet
Untagged
Frames
Figure 56 Advanced Application > VLAN > VLAN Port Setting > Subnet Based VLAN
Check this box to activate this subnet based VLANs on the Switch
DHCP-Vlan
Override
VLAN or via another DHCP server on the subnet based VLAN
9.6 Protocol Based VLANs
Figure 58 Advanced Application > VLAN > VLAN Port Setting > Protocol Based VLAN
Check this box to activate this protocol based VLAN
Type a port to be included in this protocol based VLAN
Chapter 9 on page 83 for more details on setting up VLANs
Enter up to 32 alpha numeric characters to identify this protocol based VLAN
9.7 Port-basedVLAN Setup
Page
Page
9.8 Technical Reference
Page
Static MAC Forward Setup
10.1 Overview
10.2 Configuring Static MAC Forwarding
Chapter 10 Static MAC Forward Setup
Table 24 Advanced Application > Static MAC Forwarding
deleting it by clearing this check box
rule
MAC Address
Static Multicast Forward Setup
11.1 Overview
11.2 Configuring Static Multicast Forwarding
to display the configuration screen as shown
Figure 66 Advanced Application > Static Multicast Forwarding
Table 25 Advanced Application > Static Multicast Forwarding
address forwarding rule. This is for identification only
00000001 is 01 and 00000011 is 03 in hexadecimal, so 01:00:5e:00:00:0A and
Table 25 Advanced Application > Static Multicast Forwarding (continued)
specified multicast MAC address will be forwarded
Filtering
12.1 Overview
12.2 Configure a Filtering Rule
Chapter 12 Filtering
Table 26 Advanced Application > Filtering
without deleting it by deselecting this check box
identification only
Action
Spanning Tree Protocol
13.1 Overview
Note: In this user’s guide, “STP” refers to both STP and RSTP
The root bridge is the base of the spanning tree
Table 27 STP Path Costs
LINK SPEED
RECOMMENDED VALUE
Table 28 STP Port States
PORT STATE
Disabled
STP is disabled (default)
Blocking
13.2Spanning Tree Protocol Status Screen
13.3 Spanning Tree Configuration
13.4 Configure Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
13.5 Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Status
Note: This screen is only available after you activate RSTP on the Switch
Figure 72 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > Status: RSTP
Table 31 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > Status: RSTP
edit RSTP settings on the Switch
Bridge
13.6 Configure Multiple Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol
13.7 Multiple Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Status
Note: This screen is only available after you activate MRSTP on the Switch
Figure 74 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > Status: MRSTP
Table 33 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > Status: MRSTP
edit MRSTP settings on the Switch
Select which STP tree configuration you want to view
13.8 Configure Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol
Table 34 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > MSTP
Click Status to display the MSTP Status screen (see Figure 77 on page 124)
Click Port to display the MSTP Port Configuration screen (see Figure 76 on page
123)
Spanning Tree Protocol > Configuration screen to enable MSTP on the Switch
Table 34 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > MSTP (continued)
VLAN Range
add or remove from the VLAN range edit area in the End field
Next click:
• Add - to add this range of VLAN(s) to be mapped to the MST instance
13.9 Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol Status
Note: This screen is only available after you activate MSTP on the Switch
Figure 77 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > Status: MSTP
Table 36 Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol > Status: MSTP
MSTP settings on the Switch
CST
13.10 Technical Reference
Figure 78 STP/RSTP Network Example
Figure 79 MSTP Network Example
•Name of the MST region
•Revision level as the unique number for the MST region
•VLAN-to-MSTInstance mapping
Figure 80 MSTIs in Different Regions
Page
Bandwidth Control
14.1 Overview
14.2 Bandwidth Control Setup
Chapter 14 Bandwidth Control
Table 37 Advanced Application > Bandwidth Control (continued)
your changes to the non-volatilememory when you are done configuring
Broadcast Storm Control
15.1 Overview
15.2 Broadcast Storm Control Setup
Mirroring
16.1 Overview
16.2 Port Mirroring Setup
Advanced Application > Mirroring (continued)
Link Aggregation
17.1 Overview
17.2 Link Aggregation Status
Table 42 Advanced Application > Link Aggregation Status
Group ID
multiple ports
Enabled Ports
group
17.3 Link Aggregation Setting
Chapter 17 Link Aggregation
Advanced Application > Link Aggregation > Link Aggregation Setting (continued)
based on its IP address to make sure port trunking can work properly
Select src-mac to distribute traffic based on the packet’s source MAC address
destination MAC addresses
17.4 Link Aggregation Control Protocol
17.5 Technical Reference
Make your physical connections
Configure static trunking
Port Authentication
18.1 Overview
18.2 Port Authentication Configuration
18.3 Activate IEEE 802.1x Security
Table 45 Advanced Application > Port Authentication > 802.1x (continued)
Reauth
stay connected to the port
Reauth-period
username and password to stay connected to the port
Figure 94 Advanced Application > Port Authentication > 802.1x > Guest VLAN
Table 46 Advanced Application > Port Authentication > 802.1x > Guest VLAN
This field displays a port number
Select this checkbox to enable the guest VLAN feature on this port
services
Multi-Secure
Num
1 and 9) that the Switch will authenticate on this port
Port Security
19.1 Overview
19.2 Port Security Setup
Table 47 Advanced Application > Port Security (continued)
matching MAC address(es) are dropped
on this port
Address Learning
occur on a port, the port itself must be active with address learning enabled
Classifier
20.1 Overview
20.2Configuring the Classifier
Chapter 20 Classifier
Figure 96 Advanced Application > Classifier
Table 48 Advanced Application > Classifier
Select this option to enable this rule
Enter a descriptive name for this rule for identifying purposes
Advanced Application > Classifier (continued)
Destination
Specify the fields below to configure a layer 3 classifier
IP Protocol
to Table 51 on page 157 for more information
Figure 97 Advanced Application > Classifier: Summary Table
Table 49 Classifier: Summary Table
Table 50 Common Ethernet Types and Protocol Numbers
ETHERNET TYPE
PROTOCOL NUMBER
20.3 Classifier Example
Policy
Policy Rule
21.1 Policy Rules Overview
21.2 Configuring Policy Rules
Chapter 21 Policy Rule
Advanced Applications
Policy Rule
Figure 99 Advanced Application > Policy Rule
Table 53 Advanced Application > Policy Rule
Table 53 Advanced Application > Policy Rule (continued)
Rate Limit
Bandwidth
Select No change to forward the packets
Select Discard the packet to drop the packets
Advanced Application > Policy Rule (continued)
Figure 100 Advanced Application > Policy Rule: Summary Table
21.3 Policy Example
Queuing Method
22.1 Overview
22.2 Configuring Queuing
Table 54 Advanced Application > Queuing Method
This label shows the port you are configuring
Robin)
lowest
weights get more guaranteed bandwidth than queues with smaller weights
Multicast
23.1 Overview
Chapter 23 Multicast
Figure 103 MVR Network Example
23.2 Multicast Status
23.3 Multicast Setting
Table 56 Advanced Application > Multicast > Multicast Setting
IGMP Snooping
Use these settings to configure IGMP Snooping
that are members of that group
Querier
Table 56 Advanced Application > Multicast > Multicast Setting (continued)
Max Group Num
is dropped on this port
Throttling
number of the IGMP groups a port can join is reached
23.4 IGMP Snooping VLAN
23.5 IGMP Filtering Profile
23.6 The MVR Screen
Figure 109 Advanced Application > Multicast > Multicast Setting > MVR
Table 59 Advanced Application > Multicast > Multicast Setting > MVR
among different subscriber VLANs on the network
purposes
Multicast VLAN
Table 59 Advanced Application > Multicast > Multicast Setting > MVR (continued)
Source Port
traffic. All source ports must belong to a single multicast VLAN
Receiver Port
None
box
address for a multicast group
MVLAN
This field displays the starting IP address of the multicast group
This field displays the ending IP address of the multicast group
Page
Page
AAA
24.1 Overview
24.2 AAA Screens
24.3 RADIUS Server Setup
Figure 117 Advanced Application > AAA > RADIUS Server Setup
Table 62 Advanced Application > AAA > RADIUS Server Setup
Use this section to configure your RADIUS authentication settings
This field is only valid if you configure multiple RADIUS servers
RADIUS server, if the RADIUS server does not respond then the Switch tries to
Table 62 Advanced Application > AAA > RADIUS Server Setup (continued)
Shared Secret
must be the same on the external RADIUS server and the Switch
This entry is deleted when you click Apply
Accounting
24.4 TACACS+ Server Setup
Table 63 Advanced Application > AAA > TACACS+ Server Setup (continued)
TCP Port
key must be the same on the external TACACS+ server and the Switch
Accounting Server
Use this section to configure your TACACS+ accounting settings
24.5 AAA Setup
Table 64 Advanced Application > AAA > AAA Setup (continued)
Login
authenticate administrator accounts (users for Switch management)
up the corresponding database correctly first
Method 2 and Method 3 fields
24.6 Technical Reference
FUNCTION
ATTRIBUTE
"shell:priv-lvl=N
FUNCTIONATTRIBUTE
VLAN(13)
$enab
Ethernet(15)
IP Source Guard
25.1 Overview
25.2 IP Source Guard
25.3 IP Source Guard Static Binding
25.4 DHCP Snooping
Figure 122 DHCP Snooping
Table 69 DHCP Snooping
Database Status
Agent URL
This field displays the location of the DHCP snooping database
Table 69 DHCP Snooping (continued)
Agent running
database
none: The Switch is not accessing the DHCP snooping database
write: The Switch is updating the DHCP snooping database
25.5 DHCP Snooping Configure
Advanced Application > IP Source Guard > DHCP Snooping > Configure
Figure 123 DHCP Snooping Configure
Table 70 DHCP Snooping Configure
snooping on specific VLAN and specify trusted ports
Note: If DHCP is enabled and there are no trusted ports, DHCP requests will not
Table 70 DHCP Snooping Configure (continued)
Timeout interval
in the DHCP snooping database before it gives up
Write delay interval
update is scheduled, additional changes in current bindings are automatically
Advanced Application > IP Source Guard > DHCP Snooping > Configure > Port
Figure 124 DHCP Snooping Port Configure
Table 71 DHCP Snooping Port Configure
applied to all of the ports
Server Trusted state
Chapter 25 IP Source Guard
Table 71 DHCP Snooping Port Configure (continued)
Chapter 32 on page
Advanced Application > IP Source Guard > DHCP Snooping > Configure > VLAN
Figure 125 DHCP Snooping VLAN Configure
25.6 ARP Inspection Status
25.7 ARP Inspection VLAN Status
25.8 ARP Inspection Log Status
25.9 ARP Inspection Configure
Table 76 ARP Inspection Configure
inspection on specific VLAN and specify trusted ports
Filter Aging Time
Filter aging time
This setting has no effect on existing MAC address filters
open this screen, click
Figure 130 ARP Inspection Port Configure
Table 77 ARP Inspection Port Configure
to all of the ports
Trusted State
Table 77 ARP Inspection Port Configure (continued)
Advanced Application > IP Source Guard > ARP Inspection > Configure > VLAN
Figure 131 ARP Inspection VLAN Configure
Table 78 ARP Inspection VLAN Configure
the VLAN
25.10 Technical Reference
Page
Follow these steps to configure DHCP snooping on the Switch
1Enable DHCP snooping on the Switch
2Enable DHCP snooping on each VLAN, and configure DHCP relay option
4Configure static bindings
Figure 133 Example: Man-in-the-middleAttack
Page
Loop Guard
26.1 Overview
Chapter 26 Loop Guard
•It will receive broadcast messages sent out from the switch in loop state
Figure 135 Switch in Loop State
Figure 136 Loop Guard - Probe Packet
26.2 Loop Guard Setup
Table 79 Advanced Application > Loop Guard
Select this option to enable loop guard on the Switch
down a port via the loop guard feature
adjustments on a port-by-portbasis
Clear this check box to disable the loop guard feature
Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling
27.1 Overview
Access
Tunnel
27.2 Configuring Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling
Table 80 Advanced Application > Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling (continued)
CDP
other Cisco devices can be discovered through the service provider’s network
STP
based on bridge information from all (local and remote) networks
PPPoE
28.1 PPPoE Intermediate Agent Overview
Chapter 28 PPPoE
Table 82 PPPoE IA Circuit ID Sub-optionFormat: User-definedString
Table 83 PPPoE IA Remote ID Sub-optionFormat
PPPoE > Intermediate Agent
28.2The PPPoE Screen
28.3 PPPoE Intermediate Agent
Table 86 Advanced Application > PPPoE > Intermediate Agent (continued)
option
into the PADI and PADR packets for the slot value
forward slash (/) or space
Figure 144 Advanced Application > PPPoE > Intermediate Agent > Port
Table 87 Advanced Application > PPPoE > Intermediate Agent > Port
Server Trusted
Untrusted
Trusted ports are uplink ports connected to PPPoE servers
Switch forwards it to other trusted port(s)
Intermediate Agent > Port
Table 88 Advanced Application > PPPoE > Intermediate Agent > Port > VLAN
Show Port
VLAN(s) on the port
Enter the lowest VLAN ID you want to configure in the section below
Figure 146 Advanced Application > PPPoE > Intermediate Agent > VLAN
Table 89 Advanced Application > PPPoE > Intermediate Agent > VLAN
Select this option to turn on the PPPoE Intermediate Agent on a VLAN
Error Disable
29.1 Overview
29.2 The Error Disable Screen
29.3 CPU Protection Configuration
29.4 Error-DisableDetect Configuration
29.5 Error-DisableRecovery Configuration
Table 92 Advanced Application > Errdisable > Errdisable Recovery (continued)
Timer Status
this rule
Interval
Enter the number of seconds (from 30 to 2592000) for the time interval
Page
Static Route
30.1 Overview
30.2 Configuring Static Routing
Table 93 IP Application > Static Routing (continued)
This field displays the IP network address of the final destination
Subnet Mask
This field displays the subnet mask for this destination
Gateway
Differentiated Services
31.1 Overview
P - Platinum
G - Gold
S - Silver
31.2 Activating DiffServ
31.3 DSCP-to-IEEE802.1p Priority Settings
Table 96 IP Application > DiffServ > DSCP Setting
0 …
This is the DSCP classification identification number
DHCP
32.1 DHCP Overview
32.2 DHCP Status
32.3 Configuring DHCP Global Relay
32.4 Configuring DHCP VLAN Settings
Section 8.6 on page
Table 100 IP Application > DHCP > VLAN
Enter the ID number of the VLAN to which these DHCP settings apply
that it relays to a DHCP server
This field displays the DHCP mode (Relay)
DHCP:192.168.1.100
DHCP:172.23.10.100
ARP Learning
33.1 ARP Overview
Chapter 33 ARP Learning
ARP Request
ARP Reply
ICMP Request
ICMP Reply
33.2 Configuring ARP Learning
Table 101 IP Application > ARP Learning
Select the ARP learning mode the Switch uses on the port
ARP requests sent by the Switch
gratuitous ARP request
ARP-Request
Page
Maintenance
34.1 Overview
34.2 The Maintenance Screen
Chapter 34 Maintenance
Table 102 Management > Maintenance (continued)
Restore
Click Click Here to go to the Restore Configuration screen
Backup
34.3Firmware Upgrade
34.4 Restore a Configuration File
34.5 Backup a Configuration File
34.6 Technical Reference
3Press [ENTER] when prompted for a username
[ENTER]
4Enter your password as requested (the default is “1234”)
5Enter bin to set transfer mode to binary
Use
Access Control
35.1 Overview
35.2 The Access Control Main Screen
35.3 Configuring SNMP
Chapter 35 Access Control
Table 105 Management > Access Control > SNMP (continued)
Get Community
Enter the Get Community string, which is the password for the incoming Get- and
GetNext- requests from the management station
to view the screen as shown
Management > Access Control > SNMP > Trap Group
(GS2200-24P)
Table 106 Management > Access Control > SNMP > Trap Group
Setting screen
User
Figure 174 Management > Access Control > SNMP > User
Table 107 Management > Access Control > SNMP > User
User
create accounts on the SNMP v3 manager
Specify the username of a login account on the Switch
Security Level
Select whether you want to implement authentication and/or encryption for SNMP
35.4 Setting Up Login Accounts
Click Management > Access Control > Logins to view the screen as shown next
Figure 175 Management > Access Control > Logins
Table 108 Management > Access Control > Logins
LABELDESCRIPTION
Administrator
35.5 Service Port Access Control
35.6 Remote Management
Figure 177 Management > Access Control > Remote Management
Table 110 Management > Access Control > Remote Management
Entry
computers” from which an administrator may use a service to manage the Switch
temporarily disable the set without deleting it
35.7 Technical Reference
OPTION
OBJECT LABEL
OBJECT ID
Table 112 SNMP System Traps (continued)
Page
Table 113 SNMP InterfaceTraps
Table 114 AAA Traps
AAA Traps
Table 115 SNMP IP Traps
Table 116 SNMP Switch Traps
Page
Page
HTTP
Service Access Control
Internet Explorer
Security Alert
Yes
Continue to this website (not recommended)
Certificate Error
View certificates
Install Certificate
This Connection is Unstructed
I Understand the Risks
Add Exception
button
Figure 186 Security Alert (Mozilla Firefox)
Confirm Security Exception
Figure 187 Security Alert (Mozilla Firefox)
Page
Diagnostic
36.1 Overview
36.2 Diagnostic
Chapter 36 Diagnostic
Table 117 Management > Diagnostic (continued)
Ping
Port Test
Syslog
37.1 Overview
37.2 Syslog Setup
Chapter 37 Syslog
Figure 190 Management > Syslog
Table 119 Management > Syslog
Logging Type
Facility
37.3 Syslog Server Setup
Cluster Management
38.1 Overview
38.2 Cluster Management Status
38.3 Clustering Management Configuration
Table 123 Management > Cluster Management > Configuration
Clustering Manager
( ) appears in the member summary list below
Type a name to identify the Clustering Manager. You may use up to 32 printable
characters (spaces are allowed)
38.4 Technical Reference
FTP PARAMETER
MAC Table
39.1 Overview
39.2 Viewing the MAC Table
Table 125 Management > MAC Table
criteria you specified
Select All to display any entry in the MAC table of the Switch
Select Static to display the MAC entries manually configured on the Switch
the specified VLAN
ARP Table
40.1 Overview
40.2 Viewing the ARP Table
Chapter 40 ARP Table
Table 126 Management > ARP Table
Specify how you want the Switch to remove ARP entries when you click Flush
Select All to remove all of the dynamic entries from the ARP table
specified IP address
Configure Clone
41.1 Overview
41.2 Configure Clone
Chapter 41 Configure Clone
Table 127 Management > Configure Clone
Source
Source
separated by a comma or a range of ports by using a dash
Troubleshooting
42.1Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs
42.2Switch Access and Login
Advanced Suggestions
I can see the Login screen, but I cannot log in to the Switch
3Disconnect and re-connectthe cord to the Switch
Pop-upWindows, JavaScripts and Java Permissions
•Web browser pop-upwindows from your device
42.3 Switch Configuration
Product Specifications
Table 129 Firmware Specifications
FEATURE
Chapter 43 Product Specifications
Number of Login Accounts
4 management accounts configured on the Switch
Configurable on the Switch
Authentication via RADIUS and TACACS+ also available
Port Authentication and
For security, the Switch allows authentication using IEEE 802.1x with an
external RADIUS server and port security that allows only packets with
pass through a port on the Switch
Authenticatio and
Table 130 Feature Specifications (continued)
Table 131 Standards Supported
STANDARD
Table 131 Standards Supported (continued)
Page
Page
Appendix A Changing a Fuse
User-Defined
Port(s
Port(s)
•If the Protocol is TCP, UDP, or TCP/UDP, this is the IP port number
•If the Protocol is USER, this is the IP protocol number
Appendix B Common Services
Table 132 Commonly Used Services (continued)
Page
Page
Disclaimer
Trademarks
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Interference Statement
FCC Warning
CE Mark Warning:
Appendix C Legal Information
ZyXEL Limited Warranty
Note
Registration
92
250, 299, 301
140
250
194
Page
147
71
GVRP 84, 90
193
92, 94, 101
137
Page
setup 152, 217
44
STP 115
Index
70
86
85