Delete Group
To remove the selected group entry from the Tag-based group table, click on the
Delete
button in the
Tag-based Group screen.
Edit a group
Just select a group entry and press the
Edit
button, then you can modify a group’s description, member and
untag settings.
4.8.3 P
VID
In PVID Setting, user can input VID number to each port. The range of VID number is from 1 to 4094. User
also can choose ingress filtering rule (Rule 2) to each port. The Ingress Filtering Rule 2 is
drop untagged
frame
. While Rule 2 is enabled, the port will discard all Untagged-frames.
Table 4-23. PVID screen options.
Parameter Description
Port No.
Shows the number of each port.
PVID
This PVID range will be 1-4094. Before you set a number x as
PVID, you have to create a Tag-based VLAN with VID x. For
example, if port x receives an untagged packet, the switch will
apply the PVID (assume as VID y) of port x to tag this packet, the
packet then will be forwarded as the tagged packet with VID y.
Default Priority
It bases on 802.1p QoS and affects untagged packets. When the
packets enter the switch, it would get the priority precedence
according to your Default Priority setting and map to 802.1p priority
setting in QoS function. For example, while you set Default Priority
of port 2 with 2 and transmit untagged packets to port 2, these
packets will own priority 2 precedence due to your default 802.1p
Priority Mapping setting in QoS function and be put into Queue 1.
Drop Untag
Drop untagged frame. You can configure a given port to accept all
frames (Tagged and Untagged) or just receive tagged frame. If the
former is the case, then the packets with tagged or untagged will
be processed. If the later is the case, only the packets carrying
VLAN tag will be processed, the rest packets will be discarded.
4.8.4 P
ORT
-B
ASED
G
ROUP
It shows the information of the existed Port-based VLAN Groups. You can easily create, edit and delete a
Port-based VLAN group by pressing
Add
,
Edit
and
Delete
function buttons. User can add a new VLAN group
by inputting a new VLAN name.
CHAPTER 4: Web-Based Management
57