Page
50
301 Fulling Mill Road, Suite G
©Copyright 2012 by Legrand,
Middletown, PA 17057
Inc All Rights Reserved.
(800)-321-2343
www.onqlegrand.com
WEP Key Format
-
You can select
ASCII
or
Hexadecimal
format. ASCII format stands for
any combination of keyboard characters in the specified length. Hexadecimal format stands
for any combination of hexadecimal digits (0-9, a-f, A-F) in the specified length.
WEP Key
- Select which of the four keys will be used and enter the matching WEP key
information for your network in the selected key radio button. These values must be identical
on all wireless stations in your network.
Key Type
- You can select the WEP key length (
64-bit
, or
128-bit
, or
152-bit
.) for encryption.
"Disabled" means this WEP key entry is invalid.
4)
For
64-bit
encryption
-
You can enter 10 hexadecimal digits (any combination of 0-9, a-f, A-
F, zero key is not permitted) or 5 ASCII characters.
5)
For
128-bit
encryption
-
You can enter 26 hexadecimal digits (any combination of 0-9, a-f, A-
F, zero key is not permitted) or 13 ASCII characters.
6)
For
152-bit
encryption
-
You can enter 32 hexadecimal digits (any combination of 0-9, a-f, A-
F, zero key is not permitted) or 16 ASCII characters.
Note:
1. If you do not set the key, the wireless security function is still disabled even if you have
selected Shared Key as Authentication Type.
2. You will be reminded to reboot the device after clicking the Save button.
4.7.3 Wireless MAC Filtering
Selecting
Wireless
>
Wireless MAC Filtering
will allow you to set up some filtering rules to control
wireless stations accessing the device. The filtering depends
on the station’s own MAC address as
shown in Figure 4-20. This function is not available when the operation is set to Client. Since this
configuration is the same for each operational mode, the Access Point mode is used for the example.
Figure 4-20 Wireless MAC address Filtering