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DES-3624 Series 

Stackable NWay Ethernet Switch 

User’s Guide 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Fifth Edition (December 2001) 

651S3624.055 

Printed In Taiwan 

 

RECYCLABLE 

 

Summary of Contents for DES-3624i

Page 1: ...DES 3624 Series Stackable NWay Ethernet Switch User s Guide Fifth Edition December 2001 651S3624 055 Printed In Taiwan RECYCLABLE ...

Page 2: ...ollten Sie es vom Stromnetz trennen Somit wird im Falle einer Überspannung eine Beschädigung vermieden 13 Durch die Lüftungsöffnungen dürfen niemals Gegenstände oder Flüssigkeiten in das Gerät gelangen Dies könnte einen Brand bzw Elektrischen Schlag auslösen 14 Öffnen Sie niemals das Gerät Das Gerät darf aus Gründen der elektrischen Sicherheit nur von authorisiertem Servicepersonal geöffnet werden...

Page 3: ...IN THE PRODUCT DOES NOT EXIST OR WAS CAUSED BY THE CUSTOMER S OR ANY THIRD PERSON S MISUSE NEGLECT IMPROPER INSTALLATION OR TESTING UNAUTHORIZED ATTEMPTS TO REPAIR OR ANY OTHER CAUSE BEYOND THE RANGE OF THE INTENDED USE OR BY ACCIDENT FIRE LIGHTNING OR OTHER HAZARD LIMITATION OF LIABILITY IN NO EVENT WILL D LINK BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES INCLUDING LOSS OF DATA LOSS OF PROFITS COST OF COVER OR OTHE...

Page 4: ...e within the applicable warranty period A list of D Link offices is provided at the back of this manual together with a copy of the Registration Card If a Registration Card for the product in question has not been returned to a D Link office then a proof of purchase such as a copy of the dated purchase invoice must be provided when requesting warranty service The term purchase in this software war...

Page 5: ...peration is subject to the following two conditions 1 This device may not cause harmful interference and 2 this device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operation CE Mark Warning This is a Class A product In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures Warnung Di...

Page 6: ... EXTERNAL COMPONENTS 17 FRONT PANEL 17 REAR PANEL 18 SIDE PANELS 18 STACK OPERATION 19 OPTIONAL PLUG IN MODULES 20 100BASE FX MT RJ Module 21 100BASE FX SC Module 21 100BASE TX Module 22 1000BASE SX Gigabit Module 22 1000BASE LX Gigabit Module 23 1000BASE T Copper Gigabit Module 23 LED INDICATORS 24 4 CONNECTING THE SWITCH 26 SWITCH TO END NODE 26 SWITCH TO HUB OR SWITCH 26 10BASE T Device 27 100B...

Page 7: ...nts Management 44 Save Changes 45 LOGIN ON THE SWITCH CONSOLE BY REGISTERED USERS 45 Create Modify User Accounts 45 User Accounts Control Table 47 SETTING UP THE SWITCH 48 System Configuration 48 Configure IP Address 48 Configure Console 49 Configure Switch Stack 50 Information of Individual Switch Unit 51 Advance Settings 52 Configure Port 53 Configure Trunk Groups 55 Configure Port Mirroring 56 ...

Page 8: ...K MANAGEMENT 102 INTRODUCTION 102 GETTING STARTED 102 MANAGEMENT 102 Configuration 103 IP Address 103 Switch Module 104 Switch Module Information 105 Advanced Settings 106 Port 107 Trunk Groups 109 Port Mirroring 110 Spanning Tree Protocol 110 STP Switch Settings 111 STP Port Settings 112 Forwarding and Filtering 112 Static Forwarding Table 114 MAC Address Filtering Table 116 Static Multicast Filt...

Page 9: ...tenance 155 Firmware and Configuration Update 156 Save Settings To TFTP Server 157 Save Switch History To TFTP Server 158 Clear Address Table 159 Save Changes 160 Factory Reset 161 Restart System 162 8 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS 163 9 RJ 45 PIN SPECIFICATION 166 10 SAMPLE CONFIGURATION FILE 168 Commands 168 Notes about the Configuration File 168 11 RUNTIME SOFTWARE DEFAULT SETTINGS 170 12 INDEX 171 ...

Page 10: ...d its features Chapter 2 Unpacking and Setup Helps you get started with the basic installation of the Switch Chapter 3 Identifying External Components Describes the front panel rear panel side panels optional plug in modules and LED indicators of the Switch Chapter 4 Connecting the Switch Tells how you can connect the Switch to your Ethernet network Chapter 5 Switch Management Concepts Talks about...

Page 11: ...ncrease over 10Mbps Ethernet Since it is compatible with all 10Mbps and 100Mbps Ethernet environments Gigabit Ethernet provides a straightforward upgrade without wasting a company s existing investment in hardware software and trained personnel The increased speed and extra bandwidth offered by Gigabit Ethernet is essential to coping with the network bottlenecks that frequently develop as computer...

Page 12: ...ps networks Switching LAN technology is a marked improvement over the previous generation of network bridges which were characterized by higher latencies Routers have also been used to segment local area networks but the cost of a router and the setup and maintenance required make routers relatively impractical Today s switches are an ideal solution to most kinds of local area network congestion p...

Page 13: ...e speed for 1000Mbps speed Data filtering rate eliminates all error packets runts etc at 14 880 pps per port at 100 of wire speed for 10Mbps speed Data filtering rate eliminates all error packets runts etc at 144 810 pps per port at 100 of wire speed for 100Mbps speed Data filtering rate eliminates all error packets runts etc at 1 488 100 pps per port at 100 of wire speed for 1000Mbps speed 12K ac...

Page 14: ...lease contact your local D Link reseller for replacement Setup The setup of the Switch can be performed using the following steps The surface must support at least 5 kg The power outlet should be within 1 82 meters 6 feet of the device Visually inspect the power cord and see that it is secured fully to the AC power connector Make sure that there is proper heat dissipation from and adequate ventila...

Page 15: ...ch rack which can be placed in a wiring closet with other equipment To install attach the mounting brackets on the Switch s side panels one on each side and secure them with the screws provided Figure 2 2A Attaching the mounting brackets to the Switch Then use the screws provided with the equipment rack to mount the Switch in the rack Figure 2 2B Installing the Switch in an equipment rack ...

Page 16: ...espond as follows All LED indicators will momentarily blink This blinking of the LED indicators represents a reset of the system The power LED indicator will blink while the Switch loads onboard software and performs a self test After approximately 40 seconds the LED will light continuously to indicate the Switch is in a ready state The console LED indicator will remain ON if there is a connection...

Page 17: ... indicators follows see LED Indicators An RS 232 DCE console port is used to diagnose the Switch via a connection to a PC and Local Console Management DES 3624i DES 3624iF and DES 3624iFM only Twenty or twenty two high performance NWay ports all operate at 10 100 Mbps for connection to servers and hubs All ports can be auto negotiated between 10Mbps or 100Mbps A slide in module slot labeled Slot1 ...

Page 18: ...a dependent interface port for uplink to another Switch DES 3624i DES 3624iF and DES 3624iFM only Two models are available one port and two port The Stacking input output port slide in module in the rear panel is for stacking to another device to implement a high port count manageable Switch The three port module is for a master device and a one port module is for a client device The AC power conn...

Page 19: ...are all intelligent Switches capable of acting as a master for up to three slave Switches DES 3624 DES 3624F or DES 3624FM Each port is referred to by unit ID and port number in your DES 3624 Series stack To set up a stack a one port Stacking input output module is needed for each client Switch and a three port Stacking input output module is needed for the master Switch Once the modules have been...

Page 20: ...l Components Figure 3 5 Switch stack with example of possible connections Optional Plug in Modules The DES 3624i DES 3624iF DES 3624iFM Stackable NWay Ethernet Switch is able to accommodate a range of plug in modules in order to increase functionality and performance ...

Page 21: ...evices at full or half duplex Supports multi mode fiber optic cable connections of up to 412 meters in half duplex or 2 km in full duplex mode 100BASE FX SC Module Figure 3 7 One port 100BASE FX SC module One port front panel module Connects to a 100BASE FX device at full or half duplex Supports multi mode fiber optic cable connections of up to 412 meters in half duplex or 2 km in full duplex mode...

Page 22: ... Connects to 100BASE TX devices at full or half duplex Supports Category 5 UTP or STP cable connections of up to 100 meters 1000BASE SX Gigabit Module Figure 3 9 One port 1000BASE SX gigabit module One or two port rear panel module Connects to 1000BASE SX devices at full duplex Allows connections using multi mode fiber optic cable in the following configurations ...

Page 23: ...2 33 2 53 3 25 3 43 1000BASE LX Gigabit Module Figure 3 10 One port 1000BASE LX gigabit module One or two port rear panel module Connects to a 1000BASE LX device at full duplex Allows connections up to 5 km in length using single mode fiber optic cable 1000BASE T Copper Gigabit Module Figure 3 11 One port 1000BASE T gigabit module One or two port rear panel module Connects to 1000BASE T devices at...

Page 24: ...being managed via out of band local console management through the RS 232 console port using a straight through serial cable When a secured connection is established this LED is lit The indicator blinks when the console RS 232 is accessed Slot2 This indicator is lit green when a slide in module is present in the rear panel of the Switch Slot3 This indicator is lit green when a slide in module is p...

Page 25: ... 2 ports or uplink port If a 10 Mbps device is connected to any of the 24 ports or uplink port these LEDs remain dark When a port is active these indicators will blink green Link Act These indicators are lit when there is a secure connection or link to a device at any of the ports The LEDs blink whenever there is reception or transmission i e Activity Act of data occurring at a port ...

Page 26: ...port unless using a crossover cable and if the top Uplink port is in use Port 1x must remain vacant if the bottom Uplink port is in use Port 2x cannot be used Figure 4 1 Switch connected to an End Node The LED indicators for the port the end node is connected to are lit according to the capabilities of the NIC If LED indicators are not illuminated after making a proper connection check the PC s LA...

Page 27: ...other device does not have an unused Uplink port make the connection with a normal straight through cable from one of the Uplink ports on the switch to any normal crossed port on the hub Alternatively if you have a crossover cable you can save the Uplink ports for other connections and make thisone from a crossed port to another crossed port Figure 4 2 Switch connected to a normal non Uplink port ...

Page 28: ...s in the Switch allow it to be an active part of a manageable network These components include a CPU memory for data storage other related hardware and SNMP agent firmware Activities on the Switch can be monitored with these components while the Switch can be manipulated to carry out specific tasks Diagnostic Console Port RS 232 DCE Out of band management requires connecting a terminal such as a V...

Page 29: ...eceive traps from the Switch by setting a list of IP Addresses of the authorized network managers Trap managers are special users of the network who are given certain rights and access in overseeing the maintenance of the network Trap managers will receive traps sent from the Switch they must immediately take certain actions to avoid future failure or breakdown of the network The following are tra...

Page 30: ...s usually related to user customized configurations Examples of these are the Switch s IP Address Spanning Tree Algorithm parameters and port status If you use a third party vendors SNMP software to manage the Switch a diskette listing the Switch s propriety enterprise MIBs can be obtained by request If your software provides functions to browse or modify MIBs you can also get the MIB values and c...

Page 31: ...er types of bridges in your network These backup paths are idle until the Switch determines that a problem has developed in the primary paths When a primary path is lost the switch providing the alternative path will automatically go into service with no operator intervention This automatic network reconfiguration provides maximum uptime to network users The concept of the Spanning Tree Algorithm ...

Page 32: ...l be selected as the Root Port Path Cost This is a changeable parameter and may be modified according to STA specifications The 1000Mbps segment has an assigned Path Cost of 4 the 100Mbps segment has an assigned Path Cost of 19 and each 10Mbps segment has an assigned cost of 100 These values will change dynamically when port trunking is enabled User Changeable STA Parameters The factory default se...

Page 33: ...tely in a loop causing a serious network failure To alleviate network loop problems STA can be applied as shown in Figure 5 2 In this example STA breaks the loop by blocking the connection between Bridge 1 and 2 The decision to block a particular connection is based on the STA calculation of the most current Bridge and Port settings Now if Bridge 1 broadcasts a packet to Bridge 3 then Bridge 3 wil...

Page 34: ...of become Root Port Table 5 1 User selective STA parameters Port Trunking Port trunking is used to combine a number of ports together to make a single high bandwidth data pipeline The participating parts are called members of a trunk group with one port designated as the anchor of the group Since all members of the trunk group must be configured to operate in the same manner all settings changes m...

Page 35: ... choose the type of VLAN or broadcast domain you wish to setup on your network and configure the Switch accordingly 802 1Q VLANs support IEEE 802 1Q tagging which enables them to span the entire network assuming all switches on the network are IEEE 802 1Q compliant In contrast MAC based broadcast domains are limited to the Switch and devices directly connected to them All VLANs allow a network to ...

Page 36: ...ngs to whether there is a single computer directly connected to a switch or an entire department On 802 1Q VLANs NICs do not need to be able to identify 802 1Q tags in packet headers NICs send and receive normal Ethernet packets If the packet s destination lies on the same segment communications take place using normal Ethernet protocols Even though this is always the case when the destination for...

Page 37: ...2 3 7 2 7 11 12 3 1 2 3 7 11 12 Table 5 2 VLAN assignments for Figure 5 4 The server attached to Port 7 is shared by VLAN 1 and VLAN 2 because Port 7 is a member of both VLANs it is listed as a member of VID 1 and 2 Since it can receive packets from both VLANs all ports can successfully send packets to it to be printed Ports 1 2 and 3 send these packets on VLAN 1 their PVID 1 and Ports 11 and 12 s...

Page 38: ... packet will be dropped if the port is a member of a VLAN then the packet will be forwarded Otherwise if the Ingress Filter is disabled then the switch will process any packet received at this port in its normal fashion Egress port A port on a switch where packets are flowing out of the switch either to another switch or to an end station and tagging decisions must be made If an egress port is con...

Page 39: ...re implementation make sure that end stations are directly connected to the switch Attaching a hub switch or other repeater to the port causes all stations attached to the repeater to become members of the Port based VLAN To setup port based VLANs simply select one of 24 VLAN ID numbers name the VLAN and specify which ports will be members All other ports will automatically be forbidden membership...

Page 40: ...shold an action can be triggered When enabled the usual action is to block the port to broadcast frames which discards all broadcast frames arriving at the port from the attached segment Not only does this isolate the broadcast domain but it actually starts removing broadcast packets from the affected segment When the number of broadcast packets falls to an acceptable level below a falling thresho...

Page 41: ...ing communications software set to emulate a VT100 The console must be connected to the Diagnostics port This is an RS 232 port with a 9 socket D shell connector and DCE type wiring Make the connection as follows 1 Obtain suitable cabling for the connection You can use either a a null modem RS 232 cable or b an ordinary RS 232 cable and a null modem adapter One end of the cable or cable adapter co...

Page 42: ...d the Backspace key can be used to move between selected items It is recommended that you use the tab key and backspace key for moving around the console 4 Items in UPPERCASE are commands Moving the selection to a command and pressing Enter will execute that command e g SAVE or EXIT Please note that the command APPLY only applies for the current session Use Save Changes from the main menu for perm...

Page 43: ...re 6 2 Initial Screen first time connecting to the Switch Note There is no initial username or password Leave the username and password fields blank Press Enter or Return in the username and password fields You will be given access to the main menu shown below Figure 6 3 Main Menu ...

Page 44: ...n choose User Accounts Control Table The User Accounts Control Table screen appears Administrator and Normal User Privileges There are two levels of user privileges Administrator and Normal User Some menu selections available to users with Administrator privileges may not be available to Normal Users The main menus shown are the menus for the two types of users The following table summarizes Admin...

Page 45: ...is necessary to choose Save Changes from the main menu The following screen will appear to indicate your new settings have been processed Figure 6 4 Save Changes screen After the settings have been saved to NV RAM they will become the default settings for the Switch and they will be used every time it is powered on reset or rebooted The only exception to this is a factory reset which will clear al...

Page 46: ... Interface 1 Choose Users Accounts Management from the main menu The following User Accounts Management menu appears Figure 6 5 User Accounts Management menu 2 Choose Create Modify User Accounts The following screen appears Figure 6 6 Add Modify User Accounts screen ...

Page 47: ...another user s password User Accounts Control Table Access to the console whether using the console port or via Telnet is controlled using a user name and password Up to three of these user names can be defined The console interface will not let you delete the current logged in user however in order to prevent accidentally deleting all of the users with Administrator privilege Only users with the ...

Page 48: ...e Switch from an SNMP based Network Management System such as SNMP v1 or to be able to access the Switch using the Telnet protocol See the next chapter for Web based network management information Configure IP Address The Switch needs to have a TCP IP address assigned to it so that an in band network management system or Telnet client can find it on the network The IP Address Configuration screen ...

Page 49: ... address used by the Switch for receiving SNMP and Telnet communications These fields should be of the form xxx xxx xxx xxx where each xxx is a number represented in decimal between 0 and 255 This address should be a unique address on a network assigned to you by the central Internet authorities The same IP address is shared by both the SLIP and Ethernet network interfaces Subnet Mask Bitmask that...

Page 50: ...en SLIP or Console port type settings Baud Rate Determines the serial port bit rate that will be used the next time the Switch is restarted Applies only when the serial port is being used for out of band SLIP management it does not apply when the port is used for the console port Available speeds are 2400 9600 19200 and 38400 bits per second The default setting in this Switch version is9600 The to...

Page 51: ...d a name has been assigned System Location Corresponds to the SNMP MIB II variable system sysLocation and is used to indicate the physical location of the Switch for administrative purposes System Contact Corresponds to the SNMP MIB II variable sysContact and is used to give the name and contact information for the person responsible for administering the Switch Information of Individual Switch Un...

Page 52: ...to select the desired Switch in your stack Advance Settings The Configure Advanced Switch Stack Features screen allows you to set an expiration time for MAC address entries and enable or disable auto partitioning on all ports Press ADVANCE SETTINGS on the Switch Stack Configuration screen to access the Configure Advanced Switch Stack Features screen ...

Page 53: ...to Ports 2 and 3 If Port 2 is occupied causing the packet to be held in memory until the port is free the packet destined for Port 3 will also be delayed even though the port may be free Cumulatively these delays can have a noticeable effect on overall network performance Enabling HOL Blocking Prevention prevents Head of Line blocking from occurring meaning that the packet destined for Port 3 gets...

Page 54: ...the Switch will intervene and tell the transmitting device to pause to allow the information in the port buffer to be sent Confirm that Flow Control is in force by checking the Status field Priority Selects Normal High or Low The Switch has two packet queues where incoming packets wait to be processed for forwarding a high priority and low priority queue The high priority queue should only be used...

Page 55: ...ting can be configured to Do Nothing Forward or Forward Trap The Do Nothing setting causes the switch to operate normally that is to ignore the situation If the port had met the Broadcast Storm Rising Action criteria and started Blocking broadcast packets it will continue doing so The Forwarding setting causes the port to begin forwarding broadcast frames thus removing the Blocking state imposed b...

Page 56: ...above containing 5 ports in the first trunk the ports in the trunk group will include ports anchor 5 6 7 10 and 11 The third entry used for 2 port front panel modules has a permanent setting of 2 ports State Enabled Disabled or Clear Be careful when clearing trunk groups as the connections will return to normal operation and may cause signal loops Port Range is a read only field which lists the po...

Page 57: ...ing frames from should always support an equal or lower speed than the port to which you are sending the copies Also the target port cannot be a member of a trunk group Configure Spanning Tree Protocol The Spanning Tree Algorithm P arameters can be used for creating alternative paths in your network The Protocol Parameters allow you to change the behind the scene parameters of the Spanning Tree Al...

Page 58: ...g the Console Interface Figure 6 17 Configure Spanning Tree Protocol menu 2 Choose STP Parameter Setting to access the following screen Figure 6 18 STP Parameter Setting screen 3 Change the Disabled setting to Enabled in the Spanning Tree Protocol field ...

Page 59: ...wards the forwarding state The value determines how long the port stays in each of the listening and learning states which precede the forwarding state Hold Time sec Read only object displays the time interval during which no more than two configuration BPDUs shall be transmitted by the bridge Root Priority Read only object displays the priority number of the root bridge of the Spanning Tree The v...

Page 60: ...tings To change the parameters on individual ports 1 Choose Configure Spanning Tree Protocol from the System Configuration menu 2 Choose STP Port Settings from the Configure Spanning Tree Protocol menu The following screen appears Figure 6 19 STP Port Settings screen Items in the above window are described as follows STP Status Sets the Spanning Tree Protocol on a particular port to Enabled or Dis...

Page 61: ...the selected address table This screen also permits you to access three additional configuration screens from the menu at the bottom of the window Choose Configure Filtering and Forwarding Table from the System Configuration menu to access the following screen Figure 6 20 Configure Filtering and Forwarding Table screen The following fields at the top of the screen can be set Lock Address Table Mos...

Page 62: ...rt even after long periods of network inactivity or during times of network congestion The following fields at the top of the screen can be set Action Choose Add or Remove for each entry from the table MAC Address Enter a MAC address in this field at the top of the screen This is the MAC address of the device that you are creating a permanent forwarding address for A total of ten destination addre...

Page 63: ...iltering and Forwarding Table from the System Configuration menu Then selectConfigure MAC Address Filtering from the bottom of the Configure Filtering and Forwarding Table screen The following screen appears Figure 6 22 Static Filtering Table screen To make a change to this screen choose Add or Remove in the Action field Then enter the MAC Address and VID Press APPLY to let the changes take effect...

Page 64: ...effect Configure IGMP Internet Group Management Protocol IGMP allows multicasting on your network When IP Multicast Filtering is enabled the Switch can intelligently forward rather that broadcast IGMP queries and reports sent between devices connected to the Switch and an IGMP enabled device hosting IGMP on your network Basically in these submenus you define whether the Switch can intelligently fo...

Page 65: ...he IGMP host on your network IP Multicast Filtering IGMP Snooping This enables or disables the Switch to intelligently forward IGMP and Multicast packets instead of broadcasting flooding them on all ports This setting also enables IGMP Snooping which enables the Switch to read IGMP packets being forwarded through the Switch in order to obtain forwarding information from them learn which ports cont...

Page 66: ...Using the Console Interface Figure 6 25 IEEE 802 1Q IGMP Configuration screen Choose Add Remove IGMP Entry from the screen above to define up to 12 VLANs on the Switch which can send and receive IGMP packets Figure 6 26 Add Remove IGMP Entry screen ...

Page 67: ...settings for them The following IEEE 802 1Q IGMP Configuration screen appears Figure 6 27 IEEE 802 1Q IGMP Configuration screen This allows you to enable or disable these agents and set aging timers for them Items in the above screen are defined as follows VLAN ID This is the VID number for the VLAN that has an agent attached to it which enables IGMP packets to be sent and received Age out Timer I...

Page 68: ...MP Vlan If IEEE 802 1Q VLANs is selected you must also enter a SNMP VLAN ID number in this field This is a special VLAN that you designate for SNMP management packets Make sure the Switch port that the management station is connected to has this PVID number and is a static member of this VLAN Configure MAC based Broadcast Domains To create MAC based broadcast domains simply create the broadcast do...

Page 69: ...ng the Console Interface 69 Figure 6 29 MAC Based Broadcast Domains Configuration menu Choose Add Remove MAC based Broadcast Domains to access the following screen Figure 6 30 Add Remove MAC based Broadcast Domains screen The fields you can set are ...

Page 70: ...mains and Number of Members reflect the current status They are read only fields and cannot be changed Choose Add Remove MAC based Broadcast Domain Members from the MAC Based Broadcast Domains Configuration menu to access the following screen Figure 6 31 Add Remove MAC based Broadcast Domain Members screen To configure a broadcast domain highlight the desired entry on the screen above and press En...

Page 71: ... MAC based broadcast domain mode the MAC addresses will be applied meaning that the broadcast domain is active Current Broadcast Domain Number of members MAC Address in the lower part of the screen and Status reflect the current conditions They are read only fields and cannot be changed Configure Port based VLANs Choose Configure Port based VLANs on the VLAN Configuration screen System Configurati...

Page 72: ...Interface Figure 6 33 Port based VLAN Configuration menu The field you can set is Management Vlan ID Enter a VLAN ID VID from 1 to 12 for use with management packets Select Configure Port based VLAN Entry at the bottom of the menu above to access the following screen ...

Page 73: ... automatically members of VLAN 1 VLAN Name Description of the VLAN Port Assignments To change port VLAN assignments you must first enter a VLAN ID number in the VLAN ID field and press Enter Next position the cursor over the dash representing the appropriate port number and press space bar to select V for member Pressing space bar again returns the V back into a A dash means the port is not given ...

Page 74: ...kets onto only one VLAN It can receive packets be a passive member on many VLANs Active VLANs are designations defined by assigning Port VLAN ID numbers PVIDs in the Default port VLAN assignment screen 3 Define the VLAN itself and which ports will be members able to receive packets from a port that has this PVID number At this point you need to designate whether a member port will be a Tagging or ...

Page 75: ... Filter to access the first item on the menu The following screen appears Figure 6 37 Ingress Filter screen This screen allows you to set Ingress filtering for each port to either Enabled or Disabled When a packet arrives at the port and Ingress filtering isEnabled the port will check the VLAN ID number of the packet and its own VIDs If there is a ...

Page 76: ...he anchor port Choose Configure Port VLAN ID PVID to access the second item on the 802 1Q VLAN Configuration menu The following screen appears Figure 6 38 Port VLAN PVID Assignment screen This screen allows you to set a Default port VLAN ID number PVID for each port Press APPLY to let the changes take effect Note If a port is a member of a trunk group but is not the anchor the items shown in the a...

Page 77: ...ual ports GVRP updates dynamic VLAN registration entries and communicates the new VLAN information across the network This allows among other things for stations to physically move to other switch ports and keep their same VLAN settings without having to reconfigure VLAN settings on the Switch Press APPLY to let your changes take effect Choose Configure 802 1Q Static VLANs to access the fourth ite...

Page 78: ... Toggle between T for tag and U for untag for each port Egress Forbidden Non member Position the cursor over the dash representing the appropriate port number and press space bar to select E for Egress membership or leave the dash An E designates the specified port as a static member of the VLAN A dash means the port is not given VLAN membership for the VID entered above Choose Browse existing 802...

Page 79: ... Member status for all 802 1Q static VLAN entries Configure GMRP Group Multicast Registration Protocol GMRP allows multicasts to be sent on a single VLAN without affecting other VLANs or broadcast domains Group registration entries indicate for each port whether frames to be sent to a group MAC address and on a certain VLAN should be filtered or discarded Use the GMRP Configuration screen to enabl...

Page 80: ...lows you to either enable or disable GMRP on the Switch by toggling between the two choices and then pressing APPLY to let the change take effect Once GMRP is enabled for the Switch you then must enable specific ports by selecting Configure Port GMRP Settings from the GMRP Configuration menu above The GMRP Configuration screen appears ...

Page 81: ... Configuration screen Use this screen to enable or disable GMRP on individual ports Press APPLY to let your changes take effect Choose Configure Static Multicast Forwarding from the GMRP Configuration menu to access the Static Multicast Forwarding Table Configuration screen that appears below ...

Page 82: ...4 MAC Address The MAC addressof the newly created Static Multicast Forwarding Table entry Egress Forbidden Position the cursor over the dash representing the appropriate port number and press the space bar to select E for Egress F for Forbidden or leave the dash An E designates the specified port as a static member of the VLAN A dash means the port is not given VLAN membership for the VID entered ...

Page 83: ...s The Switch is capable of obtaining its configuration settings the same settings defined in this console program as well as updated versions of its internal switching software the console program itself using TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol You can use the Update Firmware and Configuration Files screen to control this feature Choose Update Firmware and Configuration Files to access the fourth...

Page 84: ...me of the runtime image file on your TFTP server to be uploaded to the Switch Use Config File Toggle to Enabled to use the settings in a configuration text file when the switch is reset rebooted The configuration file is explained in detail in the Sample Configuration File Appendix Config File Name The complete path and filename on the TFTP server for the configuration file to use Last TFTP Server...

Page 85: ... port to which the TFTP server is connected is not a tagging port System Utilities The Utilities menu offers four system utility options Ping Test Save Settings to TFTP Server Save Switch History to TFTP Server and Clear Address Table Choose System Utilities on the main menu to access the Utilities menu seen below Figure 6 47 Utilities menu Ping Test Choose Ping Test to access the following screen...

Page 86: ...ddress The IP address of the device to be Pinged No of Pings Amount of times the Switch should send the Ping 1 255 If zero is chosen the Switch will continue Pinging indefinitely In the lower part of the Ping Test screen you can view the Result of the ping test Save Settings to TFTP Server Choose Save Settings to TFTP Server from the Utilities menu under System Utilities on the main menu to access...

Page 87: ...in the lower partof the screen The fields you can set are Server IP Address The IP address of the TFTP server where you wish to save the settings for the Switch File Name The complete path and filename for the file Save Switch History to TFTP Server Choose Save Switch History to TFTP Server from the Utilities menu under System Utilities on the main menu to access the following screen ...

Page 88: ...r certain exceptional events occur such as when the Switch is turned on or when a system reset occurs The Switch allows traps to be routed to up to four different network management hosts For a detailed list of trap types used for this Switch see the Traps section in the Switch Management Concepts chapter SNMP version 1 implements a rudimentary form of security by requiring that each request inclu...

Page 89: ...or Read Write which allows the member to change settings in the switch Status Trap Status Determines whether this community name entry is Valid or Invalid An entry can be disabled by changing its status to Invalid IP Address The IP address of the network management station to receive traps Switch Monitoring The Switch uses an SNMP agent which monitors different aspects of network traffic The SNMP ...

Page 90: ...2 Network Monitoring menu The first item on this menu permits you to access four different tables that observe the condition of each individual port Traffic Statistics To display the Traffic Statistics menu choose the first item on the Network Monitoring menu The following menu appears ...

Page 91: ... s Guide Using the Console Interface 91 Figure 6 53 Traffic Statistics menu Port Utilization To access the first item on the Traffic Statistics menu choose Port Utilization The following table appears Figure 6 54 Port Utilization screen ...

Page 92: ...Traffic Statistics menu choose Port Traffic Statistics The following table appears Figure 6 55 Port Traffic Statistics screen Select the desired device in the Switch field the desired setting in the Ports field and the desired increment setting in the Update Interval field 5 sec 15 sec 30 sec 1 min or Suspend Press CLEAR COUNTERS to clear all counters for a desired port group The statistic counter...

Page 93: ...6 56 Port Packet Error Statistics table Select the desired device in the Switch field the desired setting in the Ports field and the desired increment setting in the Update Interval field 5 sec 15 sec 30 sec 1 min or Suspend Press CLEAR COUNTERS to clear all counters for a desired port group The statistic counters displayed are defined as follows Speed If the link is up the speed and duplex status...

Page 94: ...or Oversize Frames Bad Fragment Jabber Late Collision Mac Rx Error Dropped Frames and Undersize Frames counters Collisions The number of times packets have collided on this port Port Packet Analysis Statistics To access the fourth item on the Traffic Statistics menu choose Port Packet Analysis Statistics The following table appears Figure 6 57 Packet Analysis Statistics table Select the desired de...

Page 95: ...d broadcast frames received and sent This includes dropped broadcast packets Browse Address Table The Browse Address Table screen allows the user to view which Switch port s a specific network device uses to communicate on the network You can sort this table by MAC address port VLAN ID and sequence This is useful for viewing which ports one device is using or which devices are using one port To di...

Page 96: ...switch history includes when the system is rebooted when a console session is timed out when a new link is established and when configuration is saved to flash memory To display the Switch History screen choose Network Monitoring from the main menu and then choose Switch History The following screen appears Figure 6 59 Switch History screen The switch history entries are listed chronologically fro...

Page 97: ...MP snooping isEnabled or Disabled Age out Timer Displays the time the Switch waits between IGMP queries VID Enter the desired VLAN ID number Multicast IP Add The Multicast IP address of the Multicast group being displayed Multicast MAC Addr The Multicast MAC address of the multicast group being displayed Queries Tx The number of IGMP requests sent by the switch Queries Rx The number of IGMP reques...

Page 98: ...en appears Figure 6 61 GVRP Status screen This screen contains information pertaining to GVRP Press N to view the status of additional IEEE 802 1Q VLANs Browse GMRP Status The Browse GMRP Status screen allows you to browse Group Multicast Registration Protocol GMRP To display the GMRP Status screen choose Network Monitoring from the main menu and then choose Browse GMRP Status The following screen...

Page 99: ...the GMRP status of IEEE 802 1Q VLANs Resetting the Switch You can use the console interface to reset the Switch either performing a Restart System or a Factory Reset which sets all of the Switch s parameters to what they were when the Switch was delivered from the factory Restart System To perform a system reset choose Restart System from the main menu ...

Page 100: ...ings stored in NV RAM including TCP IP parameters SNMP parameters the enabled disabled settings of ports security settings etc will be erased and restored to values present when the Switch was purchased Note After performing the Factory Reset make sure to redefine the IP settings for the Switch in the Configure IP Address menu Then perform a Restart System on the Switch After these three procedure...

Page 101: ...et NV RAM to Default Value screen Logout To exit the console program choose Logout from the main menu Make sure you have performed a Save Changes if you have made changes to the settings and wish them to become defaults for the switch After logging out you will be returned to the opening login screen ...

Page 102: ...ator 4 x or later or Microsoft Internet Explorer 4 x or later Follow the installation instructions for the browser The second and last step is to configure the IP interface of the Switch Thiscan be done manually through a console see the Configure IP Address section in the Using The Console Interface chapter Management To begin managing your Switch simply run the browser you have installed on your...

Page 103: ...are explained below Configuration This first category includes IP Address Switch Module Switch Module Information and Advanced Settings Port Trunk Groups Port Mirroring Spanning Tree Protocol STP Switch Settings and STP Port Settings Forwarding and Filtering Static Forwarding Table MAC Address Filtering Table and Static Multicast Filtering IGMP IGMP Settings and 802 1Q IGMP and VLANs 802 1Q VLANs ...

Page 104: ...entral BOOTP server If this option is set the Switch will first look for a BOOTP server to provide it with this information before using the supplied settings If DHCP is chosen a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol request will be sent when the Switch is powered up IP Address The host address for the device on the TCP IP network Subnet Mask The subnet maskthat controls subnetting on your TCP IP ne...

Page 105: ...The Ethernet address for the device Boot PROM Version Version number for the PROM code Firmware Version Version number of the firmware installed on the Switch This can be updated by using the Firmware and Configuration Update window in the Maintenance section System Name A user assigned name for the Switch System Location A user assigned description of the physical location of the Switch System Co...

Page 106: ...ndow The first setting allows you to enable or disable port auto partitioning by the Auto Partition Capability on All Ports function If you enable auto partitioning on all ports when more than 62 collisions occur while a port is transmitting data the port automatically stops transmissions The second setting allows you to enable or disable the Head of Line HOL Blocking Prevention function which is ...

Page 107: ...itch purges their addresses from its address table after the MAC address aging time elapses The Switch won t purge addresses if you define them as permanent entries in the Static Forwarding Table 2 Configure the Speed Duplex setting for the port Select Auto for Auto Negotiation This allows the port to select the best transmission speed and duplex mode based on the capabilities of the device at the...

Page 108: ...the port from learning the MAC addresses of new hosts This will help keep intruders off your network since any packet coming from an unknown source address will be dropped by the Switch that is not added to your MAC Address Forwarding Table SelectEnabled or Disabled 6 Configure the Rising Action setting under Broadcast Storm from three choices Do Nothing Blocking or Blocking Trap and enter a Risin...

Page 109: ... data pipe Items in the above window are defined as follows Anchor The Anchor port for the trunk group All configuration settings changes made to the anchor port will automatically be made to the other ports in the trunk Name The user assigned name of the trunk group Members The continuous number of ports that will be members of the trunk group State Allows the trunk group to be Enabled or Disable...

Page 110: ... is the port where you will connect a monitoring troubleshooting device such as a sniffer or an RMON probe To complete the port mirroring selectEnable in the Status field and click Apply Note You should not mirror a fast port onto a slower port For example if you try to mirror the traffic from a 100 Mbps port onto a 10 Mbps port this can cause throughput problems The port you are copying frames fr...

Page 111: ...dge your Switch will start sending its own BPDU to all other switches for permission to become the Root Bridge If it turns out that your Switch has the lowest Bridge Identifier it will become the Root Bridge Hello Time 1 10 sec The Hello Time can be from 1 to 10 seconds This is the interval between two transmissions of BPDU packets sent by the Root Bridge to tell all other switches that it is inde...

Page 112: ... and may be modified according to the Spanning Tree Algorithm specification Each 10 Mbps and 100Mbps segment has an assigned Path Cost of 19 Priority Priority is a read write object that can be set from 0 to 255 This is the priority number of the port The lower the port priority the more chance the bridge has of becoming the root port Zero is the highest priority Forwarding and Filtering When apac...

Page 113: ...ed for security purposes when the forwarding table is locked the Switch will no longer learn the MAC addresses for new hosts If your network configuration doesn t change locking the forwarding table helps keep intruders off your network since any packet coming from an unknown source address will be dropped by the Switch Address Lookup Mode Select from Level 0 Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level ...

Page 114: ...1 Static Forwarding Table window MAC forwarding allows the Switch to permanently forward outbound traffic to specific destination MAC addresses over a specified port You can also use this feature to restrict inbound traffic based on source MAC addresses Click New to access the Static Forwarding Table Edit window ...

Page 115: ...ow To use the MAC forwarding function enter the MAC address switch and module of the device to which the specified port permanently forwards traffic in the MAC Address field enter a VLAN ID if applicable and enter the port number that permanently forwards traffic from the specified device in the Port field Then click Apply ...

Page 116: ...ddress Filtering Table Figure 7 13 Static MAC Address Filtering window The static filtering function allows the Switch to block inbound traffic from unknown or unwanted devices by mapping a port to a source MAC address Click New to access the Static MAC Address Filtering Edit window ...

Page 117: ...sed Network Management 117 Figure 7 14 Static MAC Address Filtering Edit window To use the static filtering function enter the MAC address of the device allowed to send traffic in the MAC Address field enter a VLAN ID if applicable and then click Apply ...

Page 118: ...e 7 15 Static Multicast Filtering window Static multicast filtering blocks or forwards traffic over each port for one multicast group You can configure each port on the Switch to forward traffic for the specified multicast group Click New or the pointer icon to access the Static Multicast Filtering Edit window ...

Page 119: ... the specified multicast group Click Apply to activate the filter IGMP Internet Group Management Protocol IGMP snooping allows the Switch to recognize IGMP queries and reports sent between network stations or devices and an IGMP router IGMP is used for managing IP multicast groups The Switch will send IGMP query messages and get the IGMP response from hosts to learn the source port members of that...

Page 120: ...igure 7 17 IGMP Configuration window To configure the IGMP enter a value between 30 and 999 seconds in the IP Multicast Filtering Age out Timer field and then change the IP Multicast Filtering IGMP Snooping setting from Disabled to Enabled Click the Apply button to let the changes take effect ...

Page 121: ...ased Network Management 121 802 1Q IGMP Figure 7 18 Add Remove IGMP Entries window Click the X in the Delete column next to an entry to remove it from the table Click the pointer icon on the far right to access the Add Remove IGMP Entries Edit window ...

Page 122: ...Way Ethernet Switch User s Guide 122 Web Based Network Management Figure 7 19 Add Remove IGMP Entries Edit window To edit an 802 1Q IGMP entry enter a value from 1 to 4094 in the VLAN ID field and then click Apply ...

Page 123: ...t Switch User s Guide Web Based Network Management 123 Figure 7 20 Configure IGMP Entries window To edit an IGMP Entry on the table above click the pointer icon on the right side The Configure IGMP Entries Edit window opens ...

Page 124: ...number in the first field enter an IGMP entry aging time in the next field disable or enable IGMP status and click Apply to let your changes take effect VLANs This section allows you to create port based VLANs IEEE 802 1Q VLANs and MAC based Broadcast Domains If unsure about this material please consult Chapter 5 Switch Management Concepts ...

Page 125: ...st Domains or 802 1Q or Port based VLANs under Restart VLAN Mode otherwise leave the setting atDisabled Then click Apply and reboot the Switch MAC Based Broadcast Domains To use MAC based Broadcast Domains you must first create a MAC based Broadcast Domain using the add remove function and then add members to the Broadcast Domain using the add remove member function ...

Page 126: ...tems in this window are defined as follows Description Lists all MAC based broadcast domains Number of MAC address members The number of MAC addresses belonging to the Broadcast Domains Click the X in the Delete column next to an entry to remove it from the table Click New to access the Create Remove MAC based Broadcast Domain Entries Edit window ...

Page 127: ... Management 127 Figure 7 24 Create Remove MAC based Broadcast Domain Entries Edit window To add a MAC based broadcast domain enter a Description in the field offered Click Apply to let the change take effect Description The name of the Broadcast Domainto be added ...

Page 128: ...this window are defined as follows MAC Address The MAC Address of the broadcast domain member Description Lists all MAC based broadcast domains Status Not Apply or Active will be displayed here Click the X in the Delete column next to an entry to remove it from the table Click New to access the Configure MAC based Broadcast Domain Member Edit window ...

Page 129: ...a MAC based broadcast domain member enter the MAC Address in the first field and use the drop down Description menu to select the desired broadcast domain Click Apply to let the changes take effect Items in this window are defined as follows MAC Address The MAC address of the member you wish to add Description The name of the broadcast domainto add a member to ...

Page 130: ...LANs Figure 7 27 Port based VLAN window Click the pointer icon on the right of the window above to be able to create or change a port based VLAN entry on the Port Based VLAN Entry window A read only version of this window appears when you click the magnifying glass icon in the Browse column ...

Page 131: ... Figure 7 28 Port Based VLAN Entry window To either create or make a change to a pre existing port based VLAN enter a VLAN name and make the desired changes by checking or unchecking port membership for all members of the switch stack Click Apply to let your changes take effect ...

Page 132: ...29 Port Ingress Filter window Use this window to enable or disable the ingress filtering check for each desired port Ingress filtering means that a receiving port will check to see if it is a member of the VLAN ID in the packet before forwarding the packet Click Apply to let the settings take effect ...

Page 133: ...Way Ethernet Switch User s Guide Web Based Network Management 133 Figure 7 30 Port VLAN ID PVID window Use this window to assign a default VLAN ID for each desired port Click Apply to let the settings take effect ...

Page 134: ...NWay Ethernet Switch User s Guide 134 Web Based Network Management Figure 7 31 Port GVRP Settings window Use this window to enable or disable GVRP for each desired port Click Apply to let the settings take effect ...

Page 135: ...r s Guide Web Based Network Management 135 Figure 7 32 802 1Q Static VLANs window Click the X in the Delete column next to an entry to remove it from the table Click the pointer icon to access the second 802 1Q Static VLANs Edit window ...

Page 136: ...for each member port you wish to be a tagging port None should be checked if you don t want a port to belong to a VLAN Check Egress to statically set a port to belong to a VLAN Checking Forbidden prevents the port from joining a VLAN dynamically as well as defining the port as a non member Click Apply to let the changes take effect GMRP This section features three parts GMRP Settings Port GMRP Set...

Page 137: ...able NWay Ethernet Switch User s Guide Web Based Network Management 137 Figure 7 34 GMRP Configuration window Use this window to disable or enable GMRP on the Switch Click Apply to let the change take effect ...

Page 138: ... NWay Ethernet Switch User s Guide 138 Web Based Network Management Figure 7 35 Port GMRP Settings window Use this window to enable or disable GMRP on individual ports Click Apply to let your changes take effect ...

Page 139: ...icast Forwarding window This function forwards traffic over each port for one multicast group You can configure each port on the Switch to forward traffic for the specified multicast group Click the pointer icon on the right side of the table above to access the Static Multicast Forwarding Edit window ...

Page 140: ...ll as the VLAN ID in the first two fields respectively Next select the desired Switch from the drop down menu None Egress or Forbidden for each port and select a State Permanent Invalid Delete on Reset or Delete on Timeout Click Apply to let the changes take effect Management This second main category of the Switch Web based management program includes Community Strings and Trap Receivers User Acc...

Page 141: ...nt application to receive and store traps Then click Apply to put the settings into effect The SNMP Access Policy Setting information is described as follows Community String A user defined SNMP community name Access Right The permitted access of Read Only or Read Write using the SNMP community name Status Option to set the current community string to Valid or Invalid The SNMP Trap Manager Configu...

Page 142: ...net Switch User s Guide 142 Web Based Network Management User Accounts Management Figure 7 39 User Accounts Control Table window Click the pointer icon on the rightside to access the User Accounts Control Table Edit window ...

Page 143: ... add or change a User Account fill in the appropriate information in the User Name Old Password if applicable New Password and Confirm New Password fields Then select the desired access Normal User or Administrator in the Access Level control and click Apply To delete a User Account enter the requested information and click Delete ...

Page 144: ...LIP in the Serial Port field Use SLIP for out of band management If SLIP is being used you may also set the Baud Rate in the last field Click Apply and then reboot the Switch for console port settings to take effect The default serial port settings are Baud Rate 9600 Data Bits 8 Flow Control X on X off Parity None Stop Bits 1 Monitoring This third main category of the Switch Web based management p...

Page 145: ...nds 30 seconds 60 seconds or Suspend Port The selected port to be monitored TX frames sec Counts the total number of frames transmitted from a selected port per second since the Switch was last rebooted RX frames sec Counts all valid framesreceived on the port per second since the Switch was last rebooted of Utilization This shows the percentage of available bandwidth each port is using over the a...

Page 146: ... Utilization Figure 7 43 Port Utilization window The information is described as follows Update Interval Choose the desired setting 5 seconds 15 seconds 30 seconds 60 seconds or Suspend Last Detected Source Address The MAC address of the last device that sent packets over this port ...

Page 147: ...he desired setting 5 seconds 15 seconds 30 seconds 60 seconds or Suspend Link Status Indicates whether the port is online and working On or not Off Utilization Current utilization for the port as a percentage of total available bandwidth Last Seen MAC The last MAC address learned by the Switch Traffic in Bytes Bytes Sent Counts the number of bytes successfully sent from the port Bytes Received Cou...

Page 148: ...tics window The information is described as follows Update Interval Choose the desired setting 5 seconds 15 seconds 30 seconds 60 seconds or Suspend Link Status Indicates the current link status Other errors CRC Error Counts otherwise valid frames that did not end on a byte octet boundary Oversize Frames Counts packets received that were longer than 1536 octets excluding framing bits but including...

Page 149: ...ol errors bit patterns with illegal encodings This may indicate noise on the line Dropped Frames The number of frames which are dropped by this port since the last Switch reboot Undersize Frames The number of frames detected that are less than the minimum permitted frame size of 64 bytes and have a good CRC Undersize frames usually indicate collision fragments a normal network occurrence Total Err...

Page 150: ...23 octets in length inclusive excluding framing bits but including FCS octets 1024 1536 The total number of packets including bad packets received that were between 1024 and 1536 octets in length inclusive excluding framing bits but including FCS octets Rx good The number of good frames received This also includes local and dropped packets Tx good The number of good frames sent from the respective...

Page 151: ...lows you to display a table containing Switch ports MAC addresses VIDs and respective learned statuses If the table doesn t display the information you want fill in the requested information in the Search Table By VID Search Table By MAC Address or Search Table By Port sections above and then click the Find button on the right side of the section used ...

Page 152: ... 48 IP Multicast IGMP Information window This window allows you to enter a VID at the top of the window and then display the Queries Tx Rx IGMP Snooping status and current Age out Time setting for that VLAN ID The bottom of the window displays Multicast IP Address Multicast MAC Address and Reports in a table format ...

Page 153: ...3 Browse GVRP Status Figure 7 49 GVRP Status window This window contains information pertaining to GARP Generic Attribute Registration Protocol VLAN Registration Protocol GVRP Click the Next button at the bottom of the window to view the status of additional IEEE 802 1Q VLANs ...

Page 154: ... Switch User s Guide 154 Web Based Network Management Browse GMRP Status Figure 7 50 GMRP Status window This window contains information pertaining to the Group Multicast Registration Protocol GMRP status of IEEE 802 1Q VLANs ...

Page 155: ...ap and event receiver except it only captures trap events generated by the Switch itself Click the Next button to view additional pages Maintenance The fourth and last main category of the Switch Web based management program includes Firmware and Configuration Update Save Settings To TFTP Server Save Switch History To TFTP Server Clear Address Table Save Changes Factory Reset and Restart System ...

Page 156: ...her Network or SLIP Determines whether the new firmware code should be obtained through the Ethernet network or through the console port TFTP Server Address The IP address of the TFTP server where the new firmware code is Last TFTP Server Address This read only field displays the IP address of the last TFTP server accessed Update Management Module Firmware Firmware Update Determines whether or not...

Page 157: ... Save Settings To TFTP Server window To upload a configuration file enter the Server IP Address where the configuration file is located and the File Name and file path Then click the Apply button The information is described as follows Server IP Address The IP address of the TFTP server where the configuration file is File Name The path and configuration name on the TFTP server Last Upload Status ...

Page 158: ...le to your TFTP server fill the fields in above and then click Apply The information is described as follows Server IP Address The IP address of the TFTP server where the log file will be saved File Name The path and file name for the file to be saved on the TFTP server Last Upload Status Shows whether the attempt to upload software was successful or not by displaying either Success or Failed ...

Page 159: ...Stackable NWay Ethernet Switch User s Guide Web Based Network Management 159 Clear Address Table Figure 7 55 Clear Address Table window Click Apply to clear the address table ...

Page 160: ...ernet Switch User s Guide 160 Web Based Network Management Save Changes Figure 7 56 Save Changes window To save all the changes made in the current session to the Switch s flash memory click the Save Configuration button ...

Page 161: ...ment 161 Factory Reset Figure 7 57 Factory Reset to Default Value window Doing a remote reset is equivalent to turning the Switch off and on again All parameters are returned to the values stored in EEPROM Click the Reset to Factory Default button to initiate the reset ...

Page 162: ...ackable NWay Ethernet Switch User s Guide 162 Web Based Network Management Restart System Figure 7 58 Restart System window To perform a reboot of the Switch which resets the system click the Reset button ...

Page 163: ...thernet IEEE 802 3z 1000BASE Ethernet IEEE 802 3z 1000BASE SX LX Gigabit Ethernet IEEE 802 3ab 1000BASE T Gigabit Ethernet IEEE 802 1 P Q VLAN IEEE 802 3x Full duplex Flow Control Protocol CSMA CD Data Transfer Rates Ethernet Fast Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet Half duplex Full duplex 10 Mbps 20Mbps 100Mbps 200Mbps N A 2000Mbps 1000BASE T can be negotiated to 1000M Half Topology Star ...

Page 164: ...f Ports 24x or 22x 10 100 Mbps NWay ports Media Interface Exchange Connectors 1x and 2x in client devices are MDI X jacks for ports 1 and 2 Connector 1x in the master device is an MDI X jack for port 1 Physical and Environmental AC inputs 100 240 VAC 50 60 Hz internal universal power supply Power Consumption 46 watts maximum DC fans 2 built in 40 x 40 mm fan Operating Temperature 0 to 50 degrees C...

Page 165: ...CI Class A BSMI Class A C Tick Class A Safety UL CSA TUV GS Performance Transmission Method Store and forward RAM Buffer 12 Mbytes per device Filtering Address Table 96 MAC addresses per device optimized condition Packet Filtering Forwarding Rate 148 800 pps per port for 100Mbps MAC Address Learning Aging time 10 to 9999 seconds ...

Page 166: ...ified crossover cable is necessary Please review these products for matching cable pin assignment The following diagram and table show the standard RJ 45 receptacle connector and their pin assignments for the switch to network adapter card connection and the straight crossover cable for the switch to switch hub bridge connection Figure B 1 The standard RJ 45 receptacle connector ...

Page 167: ...t used 5 Not used 6 Rx receive 7 Not used 8 Not used Table B 1 The standard Category 3 cable RJ 45 pin assignment The following shows straight cable and crossover cable connection Figure B 2 Straight cable for Switch uplink MDI II port to switch Hub or other devices connection Figure B 3 Crossover cable for Switch MDI X port to switch hub or other network devices MDI X port connection ...

Page 168: ...g software update file CONFIG Image file of switch settings created by the settings backup procedure Image_file This command tells the switch the complete path and filename for the file to be loaded into the switch For example e 3624 3624prom tfp Make sure double quotes are used as in the example file below Ip_addr This is the IP address that will be assigned to the switch This command is included...

Page 169: ... will be uploaded to the switch The Config image file which contains all configuration settings and was created by the switch is prefixed with the version number of the runtime software to help with file management Sample Config File Code_type PROM Image_file e 3624 3624prom tfp specify IP address Ip_addr 10 12 19 102 specify subnet mask Subnet_mask 255 128 0 0 specify default gateway Default_gate...

Page 170: ... name Blank Password Blank Device STP Disable Port STP Enable Port enable Enable Bridge max age 20 secs Bridge hello time 2 sec Bridge forward delay 15 sec Bridge priority 32768 Port STP cost 19 Gigabit 4 Port STP priority 128 Forwarding MAC address aging time 300 secs Address lookup mode Level 1 NWay Enable Flow control Enable Backpressure Disable Port lock Disable Port priority Normal Broadcast ...

Page 171: ... GMRP Status 98 Browse GVRP Status 98 Changing the Protocol Parameters 61 Changing theSNMP Manager Configuration parameters settings 89 Changing your Password 46 47 Community name definition of 88 Community names Private 89 Public 89 Configure GMRP 80 Configure Port GVRP Settings 77 Connecting The Switch 26 27 Console 100M LED indicator 25 Console Giga1 LED indicator 24 Console Giga2 LED indicator...

Page 172: ...erature 164 Out of band management and console settings 51 Out of Band Console Setting menu 51 Overview of this User s Guide 10 Packet Forwarding 30 Performance features 13 Performing a factory reset 100 Performing a System Reset 99 Port Configuration menu 54 Port Level STA Operation Level Designated Port 32 Path Cost 32 Port Priority 32 Root Bridge 32 Port Lock 56 Port Priority 34 Port Trunking 3...

Page 173: ...ettings 49 TCP IP TELNET protocol 41 TELNET program 42 TFTP the Trivial File Transfer Protocol 83 Third party vendors SNMP software 30 Transmission Methods 165 Trap Recipient 56 Trap Type Authentication Failure 29 Broadcast Storm 30 Cold Start 29 Link Change Event 30 New Root 29 Port Partition 30 Topology Change 30 Warm Start 29 Traps 29 Traps definition of 29 Unpacking 14 Unpacking and Setup 14 1...

Page 174: ...IL support dlink me com fateen dlink me com Finland D Link Finland Thlli ja Pakkahuone Katajanokanlaituri 5 FIN 00160 Helsinki TEL 358 9 622 91660 FAX 358 9 622 91661 URL www dlink fi com France D Link France Le Florilege 2 Allee de la Fresnerie 78330 Fontenay le Fleury France TEL 33 1 3023 8688 FAX 33 1 3023 8689 URL www dlink france fr E MAIL info dlink france fr Germany D Link Central Europe D ...

Page 175: ... Link Iberia Gran Via de Carlos III 843º Edificio Trade 08028 Barcelona Spain TEL 34 93 4965751 FAX 34 93 4965701 URL www dlinkiberia es Sweden D Link Sweden P O Box 15036 S 167 15 Bromma Sweden TEL 46 0 8 564 61900 FAX 46 0 8 564 61901 E MAIL info dlink se URL www dlink se Taiwan D Link Taiwan 2F No 119 Pao Chung Rd Hsin Tien Taipei Taiwan TEL 886 2 2910 2626 FAX 886 2 2910 1515 URL www dlinktw c...

Page 176: ...o support your product 1 Where and how will the product primarily be used oHome oOffice oTravel oCompany Business oHome Business oPersonal Use 2 How many employees work at installation site o1 employee o2 9 o10 49 o50 99 o100 499 o500 999 o1000 or more 3 What network protocol s does your organization use oXNS IPX oTCP IP oDECnet oOthers_____________________________ 4 What network operating system ...

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