Chapter 8 Home Networking
VMG4380-B10A / VMG4325-B10A User’s Guide
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• Assigning lease times to mappings
Windows Messenger is an example of an application that supports NAT traversal and UPnP.
See the
for more information on NAT.
Cautions with UPnP
The automated nature of NAT traversal applications in establishing their own services and opening
firewall ports may present network security issues. Network information and configuration may also
be obtained and modified by users in some network environments.
When a UPnP device joins a network, it announces its presence with a multicast message. For
security reasons, the Device allows multicast messages on the LAN only.
All UPnP-enabled devices may communicate freely with each other without additional configuration.
Disable UPnP if this is not your intention.
UPnP and ZyXEL
ZyXEL has achieved UPnP certification from the Universal Plug and Play Forum UPnP™
Implementers Corp. (UIC). ZyXEL's UPnP implementation supports Internet Gateway Device (IGD)
1.0.
See
for examples of installing and using UPnP.
Finding Out More
See
for technical background information on LANs.
8.1.3 Before You Begin
Find out the MAC addresses of your network devices if you intend to add them to the DHCP Client
List screen.
8.2 The LAN Setup Screen
Use this screen to set the Local Area Network IP address and subnet mask of your Device. Click
Network Setting > Home Networking to open the LAN Setup screen.
Follow these steps to configure your LAN settings.
1
Enter an IP address into the IP Address field. The IP address must be in dotted decimal notation.
This will become the IP address of your Device.
2
Enter the IP subnet mask into the IP Subnet Mask field. Unless instructed otherwise it is best to
leave this alone, the configurator will automatically compute a subnet mask based upon the IP
address you entered.
Summary of Contents for VMG4325-B10A
Page 4: ...Contents Overview VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 4 Troubleshooting 283 ...
Page 14: ...Table of Contents VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 14 ...
Page 15: ...15 PART I User s Guide ...
Page 16: ...16 ...
Page 24: ...Chapter 1 Introducing the Device VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 24 ...
Page 69: ...69 PART II Technical Reference ...
Page 70: ...70 ...
Page 178: ...Chapter 10 Quality of Service QoS VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 178 ...
Page 204: ...Chapter 13 Interface Group VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 204 ...
Page 220: ...Chapter 15 Firewall VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 220 ...
Page 226: ...Chapter 17 Parental Control VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 226 ...
Page 236: ...Chapter 19 Certificates VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 236 ...
Page 240: ...Chapter 20 Log VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 240 ...
Page 244: ...Chapter 21 Traffic Status VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 244 ...
Page 250: ...Chapter 24 IGMP Status VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 250 ...
Page 254: ...Chapter 25 xDSL Statistics VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 254 ...
Page 256: ...Chapter 26 User Account VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 256 ...
Page 262: ...Chapter 29 TR 064 VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 262 ...
Page 266: ...Chapter 30 Time Settings VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 266 ...
Page 272: ...Chapter 32 Logs Setting VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 272 ...
Page 290: ...Chapter 36 Troubleshooting VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 290 ...
Page 344: ...Appendix D Wireless LANs VMG4380 B10A VMG4325 B10A User s Guide 344 ...