Chapter 4 The Web Configurator
GS2200-24 User’s Guide
49
4.5 Switch Lockout
You could block yourself (and all others) from managing the Switch if you do one
of the following:
1
Delete the management VLAN (default is VLAN 1).
2
Delete all port-based VLANs with the CPU port as a member. The “CPU port” is the
management port of the Switch.
3
Filter all traffic to the CPU port.
4
Disable all ports.
5
Misconfigure the text configuration file.
6
Forget the password and/or IP address.
7
Prevent all services from accessing the Switch.
8
Change a service port number but forget it.
Note: Be careful not to lock yourself and others out of the Switch.
4.6 Resetting the Switch
If you lock yourself (and others) from the Switch or forget the administrator
password, you will need to reload the factory-default configuration file or reset the
Switch back to the factory defaults.
4.6.1 Reload the Configuration File
Uploading the factory-default configuration file replaces the current configuration
file with the factory-default configuration file. This means that you will lose all
previous configurations and the speed of the console port will be reset to the
default of 9600 bps with 8 data bits, no parity, one stop bit and flow control set to
none. The password will also be reset to “1234” and the IP address to
192.168.1.1.
To upload the configuration file, do the following:
1
Connect to the console port using a computer with terminal emulation software.
Summary of Contents for GS2200-24 Series
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings GS2200 24 User s Guide 8 ...
Page 22: ...Table of Contents GS2200 24 User s Guide 22 ...
Page 24: ...24 ...
Page 30: ...Chapter 1 Getting to Know Your Switch GS2200 24 User s Guide 30 ...
Page 34: ...Chapter 2 Hardware Installation and Connection GS2200 24 User s Guide 34 ...
Page 42: ...42 ...
Page 70: ...Chapter 7 System Status and Port Statistics GS2200 24 User s Guide 70 ...
Page 84: ...Chapter 8 Basic Setting GS2200 24 User s Guide 84 ...
Page 86: ...86 ...
Page 104: ...Chapter 9 VLAN GS2200 24 User s Guide 104 Figure 51 Port Based VLAN Setup Port Isolation ...
Page 110: ...Chapter 10 Static MAC Forward Setup GS2200 24 User s Guide 110 ...
Page 138: ...Chapter 13 Spanning Tree Protocol GS2200 24 User s Guide 138 ...
Page 142: ...Chapter 14 Bandwidth Control GS2200 24 User s Guide 142 ...
Page 146: ...Chapter 15 Broadcast Storm Control GS2200 24 User s Guide 146 ...
Page 150: ...Chapter 16 Mirroring GS2200 24 User s Guide 150 ...
Page 160: ...Chapter 17 Link Aggregation GS2200 24 User s Guide 160 ...
Page 168: ...Chapter 19 Port Security GS2200 24 User s Guide 168 ...
Page 180: ...Chapter 21 Policy Rule GS2200 24 User s Guide 180 ...
Page 192: ...Chapter 23 VLAN Stacking GS2200 24 User s Guide 192 ...
Page 214: ...Chapter 25 AAA GS2200 24 User s Guide 214 ...
Page 240: ...Chapter 26 IP Source Guard GS2200 24 User s Guide 240 ...
Page 250: ...Chapter 28 Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling GS2200 24 User s Guide 250 ...
Page 251: ...251 PART IV IP Application Static Route 253 Differentiated Services 257 DHCP 261 ...
Page 252: ...252 ...
Page 256: ...Chapter 29 Static Route GS2200 24 User s Guide 256 ...
Page 270: ...270 ...
Page 300: ...Chapter 33 Access Control GS2200 24 User s Guide 300 ...
Page 306: ...Chapter 35 Syslog GS2200 24 User s Guide 306 ...
Page 314: ...Chapter 36 Cluster Management GS2200 24 User s Guide 314 ...
Page 318: ...Chapter 37 MAC Table GS2200 24 User s Guide 318 ...
Page 324: ...324 ...
Page 336: ...Chapter 41 Product Specifications GS2200 24 User s Guide 336 ...
Page 338: ...338 ...
Page 340: ...Appendix A Changing a Fuse GS2200 24 User s Guide 340 ...
Page 348: ...Appendix C Legal Information GS2200 24 User s Guide 348 ...
Page 358: ...Index GS2200 24 User s Guide 358 ...