LeaseTime
: [Default: 720 minutes (12 hours)] The lease time specifies how long DHCP-enabled computers will wait before requesting a new
DHCP lease. Smaller values are better suited to busy environments.
CustomOptions
: Input a custom DHCP option by first clicking the
CustomOptions
field to enable it and then clicking “Add” at the top of the
table that appears. There are close to 200 possible DHCP options available. One of the more common uses is to assign a VoIP phone server using
option 66 (Server name).
Figure 81: IPv4 DHCP Custom Options
•
Option
: Select an option from the dropdown list or manually enter the number of an option. A complete list of options is available from
IANA.
•
Value
: Generally this field should be a string, IP address, or numeric value. Some fields can accept both IP addresses and hostnames – in
these cases you may need to wrap this value in quotes. For example, option 66 (Server name) requires quotes around IP addresses.
DHCP Relay
: DHCP Relay communicates with a DHCP server and acts as a proxy for DHCP broadcast messages that must be routed to remote
segments. This is accomplished by converting broadcast DHCP messages to unicast messages to communicate between clients and servers.
DHCP ServerAddress
: An optional DHCP server address if more than one DHCP server is located on the network. This field is only available
when
DHCP Relay
is enabled.
IPv6Addressing AddressConfigurationMode
: Select from the following dropdown options:
•
SLAAC Only
–
SLAAC
stands for stateless address autoconfiguration. The router regularly generates a router advertisement that includes
network prefix and routing information, allowing clients to autogenerate an address and start communicating on the network. Clients utilize
neighbor discovery protocols to ensure multiple clients on the subnet have not chosen an identical address.
•
SLAAC withDHCP
– (Default) IPv6 DHCP provides an additional client configuration method and is regularly combined with SLAAC to
provide DNS servers (a shortcoming in the original SLAAC specification) and additional options not supported by SLAAC. By defaulting to
SLAAC with DHCPv6, all IPv6-capable clients on the network should be configurable with IPv6 connectivity.
– DHCP RangeStart
: The beginning of the range that will be used for IPV6 DHCP addresses. The IPv6 range will always start at 1.
– DHCP RangeEnd
: The ending IP address in the DHCP Server range is the end of the reserved pool of IP addresses that will be given
to any DHCP-enabled computers on your network.
– IPv6DHCP LeaseTime
: This specifies how long DHCP-enabled computers will wait before requesting a new DHCP lease.
•
DisableSLAAC andDHCP
– Disable both IPv6 address configuration modes.
MulticastProxy
IGMP
(Internet Group Management Protocol) multicast proxy allows a single packet to reroute to multiple destinations (see the
Wikipedia explanation of
multicast
). This may be used for
IPTV
, for example.
MulticastProxy
: Select to enable IGMP proxy support to allow multicast streams to flow across this network.
QuickLeaveMode
: Disable quick leave mode if it’s vital that the daemon should act exactly as a real multicast client on the upstream interface.
However, disabling this function increases the risk of bandwidth saturation.
By default, enabling multicast proxy enables a multicast connection with devices within the LAN. In rare cases, additional IP address ranges need
access to the multicast streams. Click
Add
and input the
IP Address
and
Netmask
for an additional IP address range.
64
Summary of Contents for COR IBR350
Page 7: ...Figure 3 COR IBR350 Lights Ports Figure 4 COR IBR350 SIM Door USB Antenna Connectors 7 ...
Page 14: ...Figure 12 Router UI Figure 13 Cradlepoint logo Figure 14 Quick links 14 ...
Page 18: ...Figure 19 Enterprise Cloud Manager Login Page 18 ...
Page 25: ...Figure 27 COR IBR350 Status Dashboard Figure 28 Cradlepoint Logo 25 ...
Page 29: ...Figure 32 Internet Connection Status Figure 33 Modem Status Figure 34 QoS Status 29 ...
Page 32: ...Figure 39 Failover Failback Load Banlance Statistics Figure 40 System Log 32 ...
Page 34: ...Figure 41 VPN Tunnel Status 34 ...
Page 43: ...Figure 57 Zone Firewall Settings Figure 58 Port Forwarding Rules 43 ...
Page 46: ...Figure 62 Remote Admin Access Figure 63 Add Edit Remote Admin Access 46 ...
Page 52: ...Figure 70 Add Network Filter Policy 52 ...
Page 53: ...Figure 71 Filter Rule Editer 53 ...
Page 56: ...Figure 74 Local IP Networks 56 ...
Page 58: ...Figure 76 IPv4 Settings Editor 58 ...
Page 60: ...Figure 77 IPv6 Settings Editor 60 ...
Page 61: ...Figure 78 Network Interface Editor 61 ...
Page 62: ...Figure 79 Local Network Access Editor 62 ...
Page 63: ...Figure 80 IPv4 DHCP Editor 63 ...
Page 65: ...Figure 82 IPv6 Network Adressing Editor 65 ...
Page 66: ...Figure 83 Multicast Proxy Editor Figure 84 Add Multicast Proxy 66 ...
Page 76: ...Figure 99 Static Routes Figure 100 Static Route Editor 76 ...
Page 86: ...Figure 111 Modem Settings 86 ...
Page 90: ...Figure 115 Modem Update Activation Figure 116 Modem Update Error 90 ...
Page 92: ...Figure 118 WAN Configuration Rules 92 ...
Page 96: ...Figure 122 Data Usage Rules Figure 123 Data Usage Rule Editor Page 1 96 ...
Page 99: ...Figure 127 Historical Data Usage Figure 128 Add Historical Data Usage 99 ...
Page 101: ...Figure 130 GRE Tunnel Editor 101 ...
Page 103: ...Figure 131 GRE Tunnel Toute Editor Figure 132 Keep Alive GRE TUnnel 103 ...
Page 106: ...Figure 135 Add VPN Tunnel 106 ...
Page 112: ...Figure 141 Add Edit VPN Tunnel IKE Phase 2 112 ...
Page 117: ...Figure 145 Local User Settings Figure 146 TACACS Settings 117 ...
Page 121: ...Figure 151 GPS Settings 121 ...
Page 126: ...Figure 156 GPS Client Settings 126 ...
Page 135: ...Figure 161 Create PKCS12 Format Certificates 135 ...
Page 138: ...Figure 163 Local Certificates Figure 164 Import PEM CA Certificate 138 ...
Page 141: ...Figure 168 Device Alert Configuration Figure 169 SMTP Mail Server Configuration 141 ...
Page 146: ...Figure 175 Device Control Figure 176 System Ping 146 ...
Page 148: ...Figure 179 Firmware System Config Restore Page 148 ...