2
ADSL2+ Router
2.0 Specification
ADSL Standards supported
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Compliant to ITU-T G.992.1 (G.dmt), G.992.2 (G.lite), G.992.3 (ADSL2), G.992.4
(splitterless ADSL2), G.992.5 (ADSL2+) for Annex A, B
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G.lite (G.992.2) with line rate support of up to 1.5Mbps downstream and 512Kbps
upstream.
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Supports Multi-Mode standard (ANSI T1.413, Issue 2; G.dmt (G.992.1); G.994.1 and
G.996.1(for ISDN only); G.991.1;G.lite (G992.2)).
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Supports OAM F4/F5 loop-back, AIS and RDI OAM cells.
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ATM Forum UNI 3.1/4.0 PVC.
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Supports up to 8 PVCs (UBR, CBR, VBR).
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Multiple Protocols over AAL5 (RFC 1483).
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PPP over AAL5 (RFC 2364).
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PPP over Ethernet (RFC 2516).
Network Address Translation (NAT)
Network Address Translation (NAT) allows the translation of an Internet protocol address
used within one network (for example a private IP address used in a local network) to a
different IP address known within another network (for example a public IP address used
on the Internet).
Universal Plug and Play (UPnP)
Using the standard TCP/IP protocol, the ADSL2+ Router and other UPnP enabled devices
can dynamically join a network, obtain an IP address and convey its capabilities to other
devices on the network.
10/100M Auto-negotiation Ethernet/Fast Ethernet Interface
This auto-negotiation feature allows the ADSL2+ Router to detect the speed of incoming
transmissions and adjust appropriately without manual intervention. It allows data transfer
of either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps in either half-duplex or full-duplex mode depending on your
Ethernet network.
Dynamic DNS Support
With Dynamic DNS support, you can have a static hostname alias for a dynamic IP
address.
Multiple PVC (Permanent Virtual Circuits) Support
Your ADSL2+ Router supports up to 8 PVC’s.
DHCP Support
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) allows individual clients (computers) to
obtain TCP/IP configuration at start-up from a centralized DHCP server. The ADSL2+
Router has built-in DHCP server capability enabled by default. It can assign IP addresses,
an IP default gateway and DNS servers to DHCP clients. The ADSL2+ Router can now also
act as a surrogate DHCP server (DHCP Relay) where it relays IP address assignment from
the actual real DHCP server to the clients.