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Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement 

 
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 
15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference 
when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate 
radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause 
harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause 
harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense. 
 

FCC Radiation Exposure Statement 

This device complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment and it also 
complies with Part 15 of the FCC RF Rules. This equipment must be installed and operated in accordance with 
provided instructions and the antenna(s) used for this transmitter must be installed to provide a separation 
distance of at least 20 cm from all persons and must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other 
antenna or transmitter. End-users and installers must be provided with antenna installation instructions and 
consider removing the no-collocation statement. 
 
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation 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. 
 

Caution!   

 

Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the 
user's authority to operate the equipment. 
 

R&TTE Compliance Statement 

This equipment complies with all the requirements of DIRECTIVE 2014/30/EU OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT 
AND THE COUNCIL of March 9, 1999 on radio equipment and telecommunication terminal equipment and the 
mutual recognition of their conformity (R&TTE). The R&TTE Directive repeals and replaces in the directive 
98/13/EEC (Telecommunications Terminal Equipment and Satellite Earth Station Equipment) As of April 8, 2000. 
 

Safety 

This equipment is designed with the utmost care for the safety of those who install and use it. However, special 
attention must be paid to the dangers of electric shock and static electricity when working with electrical 
equipment. All guidelines of this and of the computer manufacture must therefore be allowed at all times to 
ensure the safe use of the equipment. 
 

EU Countries Intended for Use 

The ETSI version of this device is intended for home and office use in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech, 
Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, 
Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, and United Kingdom. The ETSI 
version of this device is also authorized for use in EFTA member states: Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and 
Switzerland. 
 

EU Countries Not Intended for Use 

None 

 
 
 
 
 
 

Summary of Contents for GS-5210PLG

Page 1: ...GS 5210PLG User Manual 03 2022 v1 0...

Page 2: ...stallation 3 II 1 Physically Setup 3 II 2 Connection 5 III Web based Configuration Utility 6 IV Web based Switch Configuration 8 IV 1 System 8 IV 2 Management 9 IV 3 Port 11 IV 4 Long Range Mode 12 IV...

Page 3: ...8 3 IEEE 802 1p QoS 19 IV 9 Broadcast Storm Control 20 IV 10 Rate Limiting 21 IV 11 Loop Detect Prevent 22 IV 12 IGMP Snooping 23 IV 13 PoE 24 IV 14 Password 25 IV 15 Logout 25 V Safety Instructions...

Page 4: ...brackets allow for integration with the most widely used mounting systems on the market The Edimax GS 5210PLG is a superb choice to boost your network environment s performance and efficiency You can...

Page 5: ...the package and contact your dealer to claim the missing item s I 2 Hardware Overview Power Cord Rack Mount Kit GS 5210PLG LED PoE Alert PWR LED Link Act 1 8 Reset Gigabit PoE Port 1 8 PoE LED Link A...

Page 6: ...R Green On Power on Off Power off Blinking Booting up PoE Alert Green On Total PoE power consumed is OVER PoE power budget Off Total PoE power consumed is under PoE power budget Link ACT Port 1 9 Gree...

Page 7: ...1U of space which is 1 75 inches 4 45 cm high A pair of extension brackets and screws are needed to adapt the switch to the rack size Align the mounting brackets with the mounting holes on the switch...

Page 8: ...AN server or core switch Note Make sure that the LED is green or amber 3 Connect devices Plug the standard Cat5e or above Ethernet cable into the LAN port and connect to any networking device with an...

Page 9: ...you have multiple IPv6 interfaces on your management station use the IPv6 global address instead of the IPv6 link local address to access the device from your browser Launching the Configuration Utili...

Page 10: ...7 3 The default username is admin and the default password is 1234 4 The first time that you log in with the default username and password you are required to change password...

Page 11: ...e the switch s features For the purposes of this manual of GS 5210PLG the user interface is separated into fifteen sections as shown in the following figure IV 1 System This page shows system current...

Page 12: ...AC Address Base MAC address of the switch IPv4 Address Current system IPv4 address Subnet Mask A 32 bit number that masks an IP address Gateway TCP IP protocol under the gateway Loop Status Displays w...

Page 13: ...ion The gateway must be in the same subnet with switch IP address configuration Item Description Management Reboot You can reboot the switch by pressing the Reboot button Reset You can reset the switc...

Page 14: ...ed with Half Duplex 10M Full Speed with Full Duplex 100M Half Speed with Half Duplex 100M Full Speed with Full Duplex Connection Down Displays port is not in use Or link speed if it is in use TX Pkts...

Page 15: ...or Disable to enable or disable Long Range Mode NOTE Enable long range mode will double the cabling distance but reduce the speed to 10Mbps IV 5 VLAN This page allows user to configure each port of se...

Page 16: ...f a port which is a member of the VLAN Untag Egress Member Untag outgoing packets of a port which is a member of the VLAN Modify Modify port settings of a specific VLAN Delete Delete a specific VLAN N...

Page 17: ...ange the member state There are 3 VLAN member states Click on the box Default to change each the member state and click Apply SimpleClick Delete button to delete the targeted VLAN Note If the VLAN ID...

Page 18: ...the ports at the remote end of a link to establish trunk groups LACP also allows port redundancy that is if an operational port fails then one of the standby ports become operational without user int...

Page 19: ...Active By default the Switch uses the Passive mode Link Group Member The check box of ports would be checked after the port is added into the Link Group successfully Apply Click Apply to save your ch...

Page 20: ...d for traffic forwarding port based QoS and 802 1p QoS Users can switch to either of them on the Web page When Quality of Service QoS feature is enabled traffic will be forwarded according to the pred...

Page 21: ...Low Priority Queue1 Normal Priority Queue2 Medium Priority Queue3 High Priority Item Description Schedule Method WFQ Weighted Fair Queue Strict Priority Weight WFQ Method ONLY WFQ weight options Apply...

Page 22: ...ent queue for each PCP is configured as below PCP value Priority Acronym Traffic types 1 0 lowest BK Background 0 1 default BE Best effort 2 2 EE Excellent effort 3 3 CA Critical applications 4 4 VI V...

Page 23: ...raffic storm occurs when packets flood the network ports creating traffic and impacting network performance in a negative way The broadcast storm control feature prevents network ports from being disr...

Page 24: ...feature is enabled GS 5210PLG provides Ingress Egress traffic Rate Control per port for broadcast traffic type Enable this feature to reduce broadcast packets in your network Click on a port number to...

Page 25: ...to change the Ingress Egress rate and click Apply to apply the setting IV 11 Loop Detect Prevent Users can choose to enable Loop Detection or Loop Prevention Item Description Off By Default Loop Dete...

Page 26: ...protocol messages within a VLAN to discover which interfaces are connected to hosts or other devices interested in receiving this traffic Using the interface information IGMP snooping can reduce bandw...

Page 27: ...24 IV 13 PoE Click on a port number and the options are shown below Click the drop down menu to select whether to Turn on or Turn off PoE function Click Apply to apply the settings...

Page 28: ...25 IV 14 Password In this page you can change the user name and password Click the Confirm button to save the changes IV 15 Logout Click the Logout button to exit the Web Management UI of GS 5210PLG...

Page 29: ...body i e touching grounded bare metal before touching the product The device contains no user serviceable parts Do not attempt to service the product and never disassemble the product Do not spill fo...

Page 30: ...old or licensed as is Should the programs prove defective following their purchase the buyer and not this company its distributor or its dealer assumes the entire cost of all necessary servicing repai...

Page 31: ...nditions 1 this device may not cause harmful interference and 2 this device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operation Caution Any changes or modif...

Page 32: ...tlinien 2014 30 EU Espa ol El presente equipo cumple los requisitos esenciales de la Directiva 2014 30 EU Italiano Questo apparecchio conforme ai requisiti essenziali e alle altre disposizioni applica...

Page 33: ...quirements have been followed Directives 2014 30 EU EMC EN 55032 2015 AC 2016 EN 61000 3 2 2014 Class A EN 61000 3 3 2013 EN 55035 2017 Directives 2014 35 EU Safety LVD EN 62368 1 2014 A11 2017 Date P...

Page 34: ...lectromagnetic Compatibility Regulations 2016 S I 2016 1091 EMC EN 55032 2015 AC 2016 EN 61000 3 2 2014 Class A EN 61000 3 3 2013 EN 55035 2017 Electrical Equipment Safety Regulations 2016 S I 2016 11...

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