EverFocus Switch ESM316T002R User Manual

GIGABIT MANAGED  
ETHERNET SWITCH  
16 PoE+ PORTS  
PLUS TWO SFP PORTS  
USER MANUAL  
Part #ESM316T002R  
ESM316T002R  
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Content  
CHAPTER 1 The Introduction................................................................................ 5  
Web Browser........................................................................................................ 5  
Logging In............................................................................................................. 6  
CHAPTER 2 System ............................................................................................... 8  
System Information................................................................................................... 8  
IP Address Setting................................................................................................ 8  
IPv6 Address Setting............................................................................................ 9  
User Account...................................................................................................... 10  
Port Setting......................................................................................................... 10  
CHAPTER 3 Configuration...................................................................................... 12  
Trunk Group Setting ........................................................................................... 12  
Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting................................................................... 13  
LACP Setting...................................................................................................... 15  
Static VLAN Table Setting.................................................................................. 16  
VLAN Port Setting .............................................................................................. 17  
VLAN-Stacking Table Setting............................................................................. 18  
Vlan Stacking Setting ......................................................................................... 19  
IGMP Multicast Group Information ..................................................................... 21  
IGMP Snooping .................................................................................................. 22  
IGMP Global Setting........................................................................................... 23  
IGMP VLAN Setting............................................................................................ 24  
Spanning Tree.................................................................................................... 25  
Spanning Tree Port Setting ................................................................................ 27  
Quality of Service (QoS)..................................................................................... 29  
Port-based Priority Setting.................................................................................. 29  
DSCP-based Priority Setting .............................................................................. 30  
Priority to Queue Mapping Setting...................................................................... 31  
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Packet Scheduling Setting.................................................................................. 32  
LLDP Configurations .......................................................................................... 33  
LLDP Neighbors ................................................................................................. 34  
SNMP Setting..................................................................................................... 35  
Trap Receivers Setting....................................................................................... 36  
Port Mirroring Setting.......................................................................................... 37  
Port Security Setting........................................................................................... 38  
Bandwidth Control Setting.................................................................................. 40  
Jumbo Frame Setting ......................................................................................... 42  
Management Access Filter................................................................................. 43  
CHAPTER 4 Security............................................................................................... 45  
MAC Address Information .................................................................................. 45  
Static MAC Setting ............................................................................................. 46  
MAC Filtering Setting.......................................................................................... 47  
802.1x Setting..................................................................................................... 48  
802.1x Port Setting............................................................................................. 49  
IP Filter Configurations....................................................................................... 50  
Storm Control settings........................................................................................ 52  
Port Isolation....................................................................................................... 53  
Defence Engine.................................................................................................. 54  
CHAPTER 5 Monitoring........................................................................................ 55  
Port Statistics Information................................................................................... 55  
CHAPTER 6 Tools.................................................................................................... 56  
Http Upgrade ...................................................................................................... 56  
Reset Factory Defaults....................................................................................... 57  
Reboot................................................................................................................ 58  
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ABOUT THIS GUIDE  
This guide provides information about how to operate and use the management functions of the Web Management Switch.  
The switch features multiple functions as shown below:  
Features Overview  
Supports real-time status (link, speed, duplex) of each port  
Supports port setting for enable or disable operation (the 1st port can’t be disabled)  
Supports port setting for N-Way or force mode operation  
Supports Broadcast Storm Protection  
Supports Port-bases VLAN  
Supports priority queues for QoS  
Revision History  
Several documents prepared beforehand are consulted, this manual is released as the first  
edition. Date as August 2nd, 2011.  
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CHAPTER 1 The Introduction  
Web Browser  
You can log into the Web Management Switch through a Web browser and manage and maintain the switch  
intuitively by interacting with the built-in Web server. The home page is displayed as shown below. It displays  
the Main Menu on the left side of the screen and an image of the front panel on the right side. The Main Menu is  
used to navigate to other menus, and display configuration parameters and statistics.  
Figure 1: Home Page  
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Logging In  
Please follow the steps to configure this Web Smart switch. The configure procedure is as follows:  
Step 1: Use Ethernet Category 5 cable to connect this switch to your PC.  
Step 2: Check that your PC has an IP address on the same subnet as the switch. For example, the PC and the  
switch are on the same subnet if they both have addresses that start 192.168.1.x. The subnet mask is  
255.255.255.0.  
address, for example. If your PC is properly configured, you will see the login page like below:  
Figure 2: Login Popping Up Window  
NOTE: If you do not see the login page, check step 1 & 2.  
Step 4: Please key in both the default user name “admin” and the password “admin” to pass the authentication.  
After the authentication procedure, the switch can be used now, as the web home page appears as follows:  
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Figure 3: Web-Based Management Interface  
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CHAPTER 2 System  
System Information  
To lookup System Information in the Web browser, click System, then Information.  
Web Smart switch interface  
Figure 4: System Information  
IP Address Setting  
To set up static IP address of the switch.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click System, then IP Setting.  
2. Set the Mode to “Static IP”.  
3. Specify the IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 5: IP Setting  
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IPv6 Address Setting  
IPv6 is an Internet Layer protocol for packet-switched internetworking and provides end-to-end datagram  
transmission across multiple IP networks. IPv6 includes two distinct address types; link-local unicast and global  
unicast.  
Web Smart switch interface  
Figure 6: IPv6 Address Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are displayed on the IPv6 Address Setting page:  
Auto Configuration—Enable stateless auto configuration of IPv6 addresses on the interface and enables IPv6  
functionality on the interface.  
IPv6 Address—Manually sets up a global unicast address by specifying the full address and network prefix  
length (in the Prefix field). (Default: null)  
Prefix Length—Define the prefix length as a decimal value indicating how many contiguous bits (starting at  
the left) of the address comprise the prefix; that is, the network portion of the address. (Default: 0)  
Router—Set up the IPv6 address of the default next hop router. An IPv6 default gateway must be defined if the  
management station is located in a different IPv6 segment. An IPv6 default gateway can only be successfully set  
when a network interface that directly connects to the gateway has been configured on the switch.  
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User Account  
To set up the System Password in the Web browser:  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click System, then User Account.  
2. Enter the new user name.  
3. Enter the new password.  
4. Enter the new password again to confirm your input.  
5. Click Save.  
Figure 7: User Account Setting  
Port Setting  
To specify options for enabling auto-negotiation or manually setting the speed and duplex mode, or enabling flow  
control.  
To set up port configuration in the Web browser:  
1. Click System, Port Setting.  
2. Select one or more ports to configure.  
3. Make any required changes to the connection settings.  
4. Click Apply.  
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Figure 8: Port Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are displayed on the Port Setting configuration:  
Port—Set up one or more ports. Hold down the CTRL key and click port numbers to select multiple ports.  
Hold down the SHIFT key to select a range of ports.  
State—Set the link state of port interfaces. (Default: Enabled)  
Speed/Duplex—Configure the port speed and duplex mode using auto-negotiation or manual selection.  
(Default: Auto-negotiation enabled)  
Auto - Enable auto-negotiation. When using auto-negotiation, the optimal settings will be negotiated between  
the link partners based on their advertised capabilities. Auto must be enabled for all 1 Gbps connections.  
100M/Full - Support 100 Mbps full-duplex operation  
100M/Half - Support 100 Mbps half-duplex operation  
10M/Full - Support 10 Mbps full-duplex operation  
10M/Half - Support 10 Mbps half-duplex operation  
Flow Control—Display the following:  
Config – The configured flow control mode of the port.  
Actual – Indicate the link status of the port. When a link is up, indicates the operating flow control mode.  
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CHAPTER 3 Configuration  
Trunk Group Setting  
To configure a trunk group.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click Configuration, Link Aggregation, Trunk Group Setting.  
2. Select the trunk group ID to be created or modified.  
3. Select the trunk type; Static or LACP.  
4. Assign up to four port members to the trunk.  
5. Click Add/Modify.  
Figure 9: Trunk Group Setting  
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Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting  
To configure a trunk’s load-balancing settings.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click Configuration, Link Aggregation, Trunk Setting.  
2. Select the trunk group ID to be configured or modified.  
3. Select the trunk Distribution Algorithm Parameters as required.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 10: Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting  
Hint§  
The switch provides five load-balancing methods to distribute a balanced load across all links in a trunk. The  
following parameters are displayed on the Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting:  
Distribution Algorithm Parameters—To ensure the switch traffic load is distributed evenly across all links in  
a trunk, the hash methods used in the load-balance calculation can be selected to provide the best result for trunk  
connections. The following options are supported:  
Source Port - All traffic with the same source and destination TCP/UDP port number is output on the same  
link in a trunk. Avoid using his mode as a lone option. It may overload a single port member of the trunk for  
application traffic of a specific type, such as web browsing. However, it can be used effectively in  
combination with the IP Address option.  
Source MAC - All traffic with the same source MAC address is output on the same link in a trunk. This  
mode works best for switch-to-switch trunk links where traffic through the switch is received from many  
different hosts.  
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Destination MAC - All traffic with the same destination MAC address is output on the same link in a trunk.  
This mode works best for switch-to-switch trunk links where traffic through the switch is destined for many  
different hosts. Do not use this mode for switch-to-router trunk links where the destination MAC address is the  
same for all traffic.  
Source IP - All traffic with the same source and destination IP address is output on the same link in a trunk.  
This mode works best for switch-to-router trunk links where traffic through the switch is destined for many  
different hosts. Do not use this mode for switch-to-server trunk links where the destination IP address is the  
same for all traffic.  
Destination IP - All traffic with the same source and destination IP address is output on the same link in a  
trunk. This mode works best for switch-to-router trunk links where traffic through the switch is destined for  
many different hosts. Do not use this mode for switch-to-server trunk links where the destination IP address is  
the same for all traffic.  
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LACP Setting  
The LACP (link aggregation control protocol) dynamically aggregates ports and removes aggregations. LACP  
interacts with its peer by sending LACPDUs (link aggregation control protocol data units).  
Web Smart switch interface  
To arrange LACP settings,  
1. Click Configuration, Link Aggregation, LACP Setting.  
2. Enable LACP on the switch.  
3. Specify the LACP System Priority to identify LAGs (link aggregation group) on the switch.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 11: LACP Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LACP Setting:  
LACP Status – Specify whether LACP is enabled on this switch. LACP will aggregate two or more ports if  
they belong to the same group. LACP can form up to 8 trunks per switch.  
System Priority – LACP system priority is used to identify LAGs membership of this switch to other switches  
during LAG negotiations. (Range: 0-65535, Default: 32768)  
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Static VLAN Table Setting  
The VLAN (virtual local area network) technology is developed for switches to control broadcast operations in  
LANs. By creating VLANs in a physical LAN, you can divide the LAN into multiple logical LANs, each of  
which has a broadcast domain of its own. Hosts in the same VLAN communicate with each other as if they are in  
a LAN. However, hosts in different VLANs cannot communicate with each other directly. In this way, broadcast  
packets are confined within a VLAN.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To manage VLAN groups,  
1. Click Configuration, VLAN, Static VLAN.  
2. Select a VLAN ID number.  
3. Define a name to identify the VLAN.  
4. Mark the ports to be assigned to the new VLAN as tagged or untagged members.  
5. Click Add/Modify.  
Figure 12: Static VLAN Table Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Static VLAN Table Setting:  
Port – Select VLAN membership for each interface by marking the appropriate radio button for a port or trunk  
as Untagged, Tagged, or Not Member  
VLAN ID – VLAN Identifier. (Range: 1-4094)  
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VLAN Name – Name of the VLAN (1-100 characters)  
VLAN Port Setting  
Arranging VLAN attributes for specific interfaces, including the default Port VLAN identifier (PVID).  
Web Smart switch interface  
To specify attributes for VLAN port members,  
1. Click Configuration, VLAN, VLAN Setting.  
2. Select one or more ports or trunks to configure.  
3. Configure the required PVID setting.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 13: VLAN Port Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Static VLAN Table Setting:  
Port –Select one or more ports to configure. Hold down the CTRL key and click port numbers to select  
multiple ports. Hold down the SHIFT key to select a range of ports.  
PVID - The VLAN ID assigned to untagged frames received on the interface. (Range: 1-4095, Default: 1) Ports  
must be a member of the same VLAN as the Port VLAN ID.  
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VLAN-Stacking Table Setting  
Set the stacking VLAN membership for selected interfaces to be part of the Service Provider VLAN (S-VLAN),  
that is uplink ports for a 802.1Q Tunnel. This stacking VLAN is used to segregate and preserve customer VLAN  
IDs for traffic crossing the service provider network. The switch supports up to 64 S-VLAN IDs.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To manage stacking VLAN port members,  
1. Click Configuration, VLAN Stacking, S-VLAN Table.  
2. Specify the S-VLAN ID number.  
3. Mark the ports to be included as stacking VLAN port members for specified S-VLAN.  
4. Click Add.  
Figure 14: VLAN-Stacking Table Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the VLAN-Stacking Table Setting:  
S-VLAN ID - The VLAN identifier of a stacking VLAN. (Range: 1-4094)  
Member Ports - Switch ports that are members of the stacking VLAN. That is, ports that will double tag  
ingress and egress packets.  
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Vlan Stacking Setting  
After configuring port members for stacking VLANs on the switch, the ports connected to a service provider  
network need to be enabled as doubled tagged ports. Also the Tag Protocol Identifier (TPID) value must be set  
for the doubled-tagged ports to identify 802.1Q tagged frames.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To manage stacking VLAN port settings,  
1. Click Configuration, VLAN Stacking, S-VLAN Setting.  
2. Specify the Tag Protocol ID number.  
3. Set the stacking PVID for service provider ports and configure them as “Enabled.”  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 15: VLAN Stacking Setting  
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Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the VLAN-Stacking Table Setting:  
Tag Protocol ID - Tag Protocol Identifier specifies the Ether type of incoming packets on a tunnel port. (Range:  
0x0600~0xFFFF hexadecimal, Default: 0x88a8)  
PVID - The stacking VLAN Port VLAN Identifier. The PVID determines the stacking VLAN tag for  
single-tagged packets forwarded to an enabled S-VLAN port.  
Provider Network Port - Set the S-VLAN membership mode for the selected interface. This mode is used to  
segregate and preserve customer VLAN IDs for traffic crossing the service provider network.(Default: Disable)  
Enable - Indicate a port linked to a service provider (an 802.1Q Tunnel port).  
Disable - Indicate a port linked to a customer.  
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IGMP Multicast Group Information  
To display multicast group and router port information, click Configuration, IGMP Snooping, Multicast Entry  
Table.  
The IGMP Multicast Router Information table displays the current multicast groups learned through IGMP  
Snooping. Multicast routers that are attached to ports on the switch use information obtained from IGMP, along  
with a multicast routing protocol such as DVMRP or PIM, to support IP multicasting across the Internet. You can  
use the IGMP Multicast Router Information table to see which ports on the switch are attached to a neighboring  
multicast router.  
Figure 16: Multicast Entry Table  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Multicast Entry Table page:  
VID - A VLAN on the switch that is forwarding multicast traffic to downstream ports for the specified  
multicast group address.  
VLAN Name – The name of the VLAN on the switch that is forwarding multicast traffic.  
Source IP - The IP address of one of the multicast servers transmitting traffic to the specified group.  
Group Address – IP multicast group address with subscribers directly attached or downstream from the switch,  
or a static multicast group assigned to this interface.  
Member Port – An downstream port that is receiving traffic for the specified multicast group.  
Dynamic Router Port – The port interfaces dynamically discovered by the switch to be attached to Multicast  
routers.  
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IGMP Snooping  
IGMP Snooping (Internet Group Management Protocol Snooping) is a multicast constraining mechanism that  
runs on Layer 2 switch to manage and control multicast groups.  
Figure 17: IGMP Snooping  
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IGMP Global Setting  
Web Smart switch interface  
To manage IGMP Snooping global settings,  
1. Click Configuration, IGMP Snooping, IGMP Snooping Setting.  
2. Enable IGMP Snooping on the switch.  
3. Modify other IGMP global settings as required.  
4. Click Update.  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the IGMP Snooping global settings page:  
IGMP Snooping - When enabled, the switch will monitor network traffic to determine which hosts want to  
receive multicast traffic. (Default: Disabled) This switch can passively snoop on IGMP Query and Report packets  
transferred between IP multicast routers/switches and IP multicast host groups to identify the IP multicast group  
members. The switch monitors the IGMP packets passing through it, picks out the group registration information,  
and configures the multicast filters accordingly.  
IGMP Fast-Leave - Immediately deletes a member port of a multicast service if a leave packet is received on  
that port. Fast Leave can improve bandwidth usage for a network which frequently experiences many IGMP host  
add and leave requests. (Default: Disabled)  
Unknown Multicast - When the table used to store multicast entries for IGMP snooping is filled, no new  
entries are learned. If no router port is configured in the attached VLAN, any subsequent multicast traffic not  
found in the table is either dropped or flooded throughout the VLAN. (Default: Drop)  
Query Interval - Sets the frequency at which the switch sends IGMP host-query messages. (Range: 60-600  
seconds, Default: 125)  
Response Time - Set the time between receiving an IGMP Report for an IP multicast address on a port before  
the switch sends an IGMP Query out of that port and removes the entry from its list. (Range: 10-25 seconds,  
Default: 10)  
Router Timeout - On a multicast network running IGMP, a Layer 3 multicast switch may exist that serves as  
an IGMP querier responsible for sending IGMP query messages. The time the switch waits after the previous  
querier stops before it considers it to have expired. (Range: 60-600 seconds, Default: 125)  
Last Member Query Interval - The interval to wait for a response to a group-specific or  
group-and-source-specific query message. (Range: 1-25 seconds, Default: 1 second)  
Robustness Variable - Specify the robustness or expected packet loss for interfaces. The robustness value is  
used in calculating the appropriate range for other IGMP variables. (Range: 1-255, Default: 2)  
Host Timeout - The time the switch waits for an IGMP report from a host for a multicast group. When IGMP  
reports are not received, host ports are removed from the member list of that multicast group.  
Querier Election Time - The time the switch waits to receive IGMP queries from other routers. If no queries  
are received, the switch itself will become the querier (when enabled).  
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IGMP VLAN Setting  
Web Smart switch interface  
To manage IGMP Snooping settings,  
1. Click Configuration, IGMP Snooping, IGMP Snooping Setting.  
2. Specify the VLAN ID.  
3. Enable IGMP Snooping on the VLAN.  
4. Enable IGMP Querier on the VLAN if you want this switch to be elected as querier.  
5. Click Apply.  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the IGMP Snooping VLAN settings page:  
VLAN ID - Specify the ID of a configured VLAN on the switch. (Range: 1-4094)  
VLAN Name - Display the name of the VLAN.  
Snooping State - Enable IGMP snooping on the VLAN. (Default: Disabled)  
Querier State - Enable IGMP querier on the VLAN. (Default: Disabled)  
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Spanning Tree  
The spanning tree protocol is used to eliminate loops in a local area network. A switch running this protocol  
detects any loop in the network by exchanging information with one another and eliminates the possible loop by  
blocking certain ports until the loop network is pruned into a loop-free tree, thereby avoiding infinite recycling of  
packets in a loop network.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To manage global settings for Spanning Tree,  
1. Click Configuration, Spanning Tree, STP Global Setting.  
2. Set the Spanning Tree Status to enabled.  
3. Modify other required parameters.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 18: spanning tree settings  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Spanning Tree settings page:  
Spanning Tree Status - Enable Spanning Tree on the switch. (Default: Disabled)  
Force Version - Select the type of spanning tree used on this switch. Options: RSTP or STP, Default: RSTP  
Priority - Bridge priority is used in selecting the root switch, root port, and designated port. The switch with  
the highest priority becomes the STP root switch. However, if all switches have the same priority, the switch with  
the lowest MAC address will then become the root switch. Note that lower numeric values indicate higher  
priority. (Options: 0-61440, in steps of 4096; Default: 32768)  
Maximum Age - The maximum time (in seconds) a switch can wait without receiving a configuration  
message before attempting to reconfigure. All switch ports (except for designated ports) should receive  
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configuration messages at regular intervals. Any port that ages out STP information (provided in the last  
configuration message) becomes the designated port for the attached LAN. If it is a root port, a new root port  
is selected from among the switch ports attached to the network. (Note that references to “ports” in this section  
mean “interfaces,” which includes both ports and trunks.)  
Minimum: The higher of 6 or [2 x (Hello Time + 1)]  
Maximum: The lower of 40 or [2 x (Forward Delay - 1)]  
Default: 20  
Hello Time - The interval (in seconds) at which the root switch transmits a configuration message.  
Default: 2  
Minimum: 1  
Maximum: The lower of 10 or [(Max. Message Age / 2) -1]  
Forward Delay - The maximum time (in seconds) this switch will wait before changing states (i.e.,  
discarding to learning to forwarding). This delay is required because every switch must receive information  
about topology changes before it starts to forward frames. In addition, each port needs time to listen for  
conflicting information that would make it return to a discarding state; otherwise, temporary data loops might  
result.  
Minimum: The higher of 4 or [(Max. Message Age / 2) + 1]  
Maximum: 30  
Default: 15  
Root Priority - The priority of the switch in the Spanning Tree that this switch has accepted as the root  
switch.  
Root MAC Address - The MAC address of the switch in the Spanning Tree that this switch has accepted as  
the root switch.  
Root Path Cost - The path cost from the root port on this switch to the root switch.  
Root Port - The number of the port on this switch that is closest to the root. This switch communicates with  
the root switch through this port. If there is no root port, then this switch has been accepted as the root switch  
of the Spanning Tree network.  
Root Maximum Age - The maximum time (in seconds) this switch can wait without receiving a  
configuration message before attempting to reconfigure. All switch ports (except for designated ports) should  
receive configuration messages at regular intervals. If the root port ages out STA information (provided in the  
last configuration message), a new root port is selected from among the switch ports attached to the network.  
(References to “ports” in this section means “interfaces,” which includes both ports and trunks.)  
Root Hello Time - The interval (in seconds) at which this switch transmits a configuration message.  
Root Forward Delay - The maximum time (in seconds) this switch will wait before changing states (i.e.,  
discarding to learning to forwarding). This delay is required because every switch must receive information  
about topology changes before it starts to forward frames. In addition, each port needs time to listen for  
conflicting information that would make it return to a discarding state; otherwise, temporary data loops might  
result.  
Topology Changes — The number of times the Spanning Tree has been reconfigured.  
Last Topology Change Time - The time since the Spanning Tree was last reconfigured.  
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Spanning Tree Port Setting  
Use the STP Port Setting page to configure Spanning Tree attributes for specific interfaces, including path cost,  
port priority, edge port (for fast forwarding), automatic detection of an edge port, and point-to-point link type.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure port settings for Spanning Tree,  
1. Click Configuration, Spanning Tree, STP Port Setting.  
2. Modify the required attributes for one or a group of ports.  
3. Click Apply.  
Figure 19: spanning tree port settings  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Spanning Tree Port settings page:  
Path Cost — This parameter is used by the STP to determine the best path between devices. Therefore, lower  
values should be assigned to ports attached to faster media, and higher values assigned to ports with slower media.  
(Path cost takes precedence over port priority.)  
Priority — Specify the priority used for this port in the Spanning Tree Protocol. If the path cost for all ports on  
a switch are the same, the port with the highest priority (i.e., lowest value) will be configured as an active link in  
the Spanning Tree. This makes a port with higher priority less likely to be blocked if the Spanning Tree Protocol  
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is detecting network loops. Where more than one port is assigned the highest priority, the port with lowest  
numeric identifier will be enabled. (Range: 0-240, in steps of 16; Default: 128)  
P2P - The link type attached to an interface can be set to automatically detect the link type, or manually  
configured as point-to-point or shared medium. Transition to the forwarding state is faster for  
point-to-point links than for shared media. These options are described below:  
Auto - The switch automatically determines if the interface is attached to a point-to-point link or to shared  
medium. (This is the default setting.)  
True - A point-to-point connection to exactly one other bridge.  
False - A shared connection to two or more bridges.  
Edge (Fast Forwarding) — You can enable this option if an interface is attached to a LAN segment that is at  
the end of a bridged LAN or to an end node. Since end nodes cannot cause forwarding loops, they can pass  
directly through to the spanning tree forwarding state. Specifying edge ports provides quicker convergence for  
devices such as workstations or servers, retains the current forwarding database to reduce the amount of frame  
flooding required to rebuild address tables during reconfiguration events, does not cause the spanning tree to  
initiate reconfiguration when the interface changes state, and also overcomes other STP-related timeout problems.  
However, remember that this feature should only be enabled for ports connected to an endnode device. (Default:  
False)  
State - Displays current state of this port within the Spanning Tree.  
Disabled - There is no connection on the port.  
Discarding - Port receives STP configuration messages, but does not forward packets.  
Learning - Port has transmitted configuration messages for an interval set by the Forward Delay parameter  
without receiving contradictory information. Port address table is cleared, and the port begins learning  
addresses.  
Forwarding - Port forwards packets, and continues learning addresses.  
Role - Roles are assigned according to whether the port is part of the active topology connecting the bridge to  
the root bridge (that is, root port), connecting a LAN through the bridge to the root bridge (that is, designated  
port), or is an alternate or backup port that may provide connectivity if other bridges, bridge ports, or LANs fail  
or are removed. The role is set to disabled (that is, disabled port) if a port has no role within the spanning tree.  
Path Cost - The path cost setting for the port,  
Config - The administrator configured path cost setting.  
Actual - The contribution of this port to the path cost of paths towards the spanning tree root which include  
this port.  
P2P - The point-to-point setting for the port,  
Config - The administrator configured P2P setting.  
Actual - The operational point-to-point status of the LAN segment attached to this interface. This parameter  
is determined by manual configuration or by auto-detection.  
Edge — The Edge setting for the port,  
Config — The administrator configured Edge setting.  
Actual — This parameter is initialized to the port setting for Edge (that is, True or False), but will be set to  
false if a BPDU is received, indicating that another bridge is attached to this port.  
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Quality of Service (QoS)  
QoS is the evaluation on the service ability of network delivery or on the capacity of dealing with situations such  
as delay, delay jitter and packet loss rate in packet delivery.  
Port-based Priority Setting  
Management of the default port priority for each port on the switch.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure global settings for Spanning Tree:  
1. Click Configuration, QoS, Port-based Priority.  
2. For one or a group of ports, set the default priority value.  
3. Click Apply.  
Figure 20: Port-based Priority Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Port-based Priority Setting page:  
Priority - The default priority used when adding a tag to untagged frames. (Range: 0-7; Default: 0)  
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DSCP-based Priority Setting  
The Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) is a six-bit field in the IP header, allowing coding for up to 64  
different forwarding behaviors. The DSCP replaces the ToS bits, but it retains backward compatibility with the  
three precedence bits so that non-DSCP compliant, ToS-enabled devices, will not conflict with the DSCP  
mapping. Based on network policies, different kinds of traffic can be marked for different kinds of forwarding.  
Note that all the DSCP values that are not specified are mapped to priority value 0.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure port-level DSCP remarking,  
1. Click Configuration, QoS, DSCP-based Priority.  
2. Map one or more DSCP values to a priority value.  
3. Click Apply.  
Figure 21: DSCP-based Priority Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the DSCP-based Priority Setting page:  
DSCP - List the DSCP values. (Range: 0-63)  
Priority — Map a priority value to the selected DSCP Priority value.  
Note that “0” represents low priority and “7” represent high priority.  
DSCP Priority Table — Show the DSCP to Priority map.  
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Priority to Queue Mapping Setting  
The QoS technique known as class of service (CoS), is a 3-bit field within an Ethernet frame header when  
using tagged frames on an 802.1 network. So up to eight separate traffic priorities are defined in IEEE 802.1p.  
Always can map the priority levels to the switch’s output queues in any way that benefits application traffic  
for our own network.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure port-level DSCP remarking,  
1. Click Configuration, QoS, Priority to Queue Mapping.  
2. Map one or more priority values to a queue ID.  
3. Click Apply.  
Figure 22: Priority to Queue Mapping Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the DSCP-based Priority Setting page:  
Priority - CoS value. (Range: 0-7, where 7 is the highest priority)  
Queue ID - Output queue buffer. (Range: 1-8, where 8 is the highest priority queue)  
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Packet Scheduling Setting  
You can set the switch to service the queues based on a strict rule that requires all traffic in a higher priority  
queue to be processed before lower priority queues are serviced, Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ), or Weighted  
Round-Robin (WRR) queuing that specifies a relative weight of each queue. The traffic classes are mapped to  
one of the eight egress queues provided for each port. You can assign a weight to each of these queues (and  
thereby to the corresponding traffic priorities). This weight sets the frequency at which each queue will be polled  
for service, and subsequently affects the response time for software applications assigned a specific priority  
value.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure port-level DSCP remarking,  
1. Click Configuration, QoS, Packet Scheduling.  
2. Select the scheduling algorithm, WFQ or WRR.  
3. Map scheduling weights to a queue ID, or select “Strict.”  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 23: Packet Scheduling Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the DSCP-based Priority Setting page:  
Scheduling Algorithm - Select the service method used for port egress queues.  
Weight-fair-queue - Service the egress queues containing data based on the weight of the queue compared  
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to the sum of the weights of all queues. (This is the default selection.)  
Weight-round-robin - Share bandwidth at the egress ports by using the scheduling weights for queues 1  
through 8 respectively. WRR specifies a relative weight for each queue that determines the percentage of  
service time the switch services each queue before moving on to the next queue.  
Queue ID - Output queue buffer. (Range: 1-8, where 8 is the highest priority queue)  
Weight - Set a new weight for the selected traffic class. (Range: Strict or 1-15)  
Use queue weights 1-15 for queues to allocate service time based on WFQ or WRR. Queue weights must be  
configured in ascendant manner, assigning more weight to each higher numbered queue.  
Strict priority requires all traffic in the queue to be processed before lower priority queues are serviced.  
LLDP Configurations  
LLDP is a Layer 2 protocol that uses periodic broadcasts to advertise information about the sending device.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure global and port settings for LLDP:  
1. Click Configuration, LLDP, LLDP Settings.  
2. Enable LLDP for the switch.  
3. If required, modified other LLDP parameters.  
4. For one or a group of ports, set the LLDP mode.  
5. Click Apply.  
Figure 24: LLDP Settings  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Settings.  
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LLDP Status - Enable LLDP on the switch. (Default: Disabled)  
Transmission Interval - Configure the periodic transmit interval for LLDP advertisements. (Range: 5-32768  
seconds; Default: 30 seconds)  
This attribute must comply with the following rule: (Transmission Interval * Transmission Hold Time) 65536,  
and Transmission Interval (4 * Transmission Delay)  
Hold Time Multiplier - Configure the time-to-live (TTL) value sent in LLDP advertisements as shown in the  
formula below. (Range: 2-10; Default: 3)  
The time-to-live tells the receiving LLDP agent how long to retain all information pertaining to the sending  
LLDP agent if it does not transmit updates in a timely manner. TTL in seconds is based on the following rule:  
(Transmission Interval * Transmission Hold Time) 65536. Therefore, the default TTL is 30*3 = 90 seconds.  
Port - Port identifier. (Range: 1-18)  
State - Enable LLDP message transmit and receive modes for LLDP Protocol Data Units. (Options: Disabled,  
Tx/Rx, Rx only, Tx only; Default: Disabled)  
LLDP Neighbors  
To display information about devices connected directly to the switch’s ports which are advertising information  
through LLDP.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To display LLDP neighbors, click Configuration, LLDP, LLDP Neighbors.  
Click the Refresh button to update the LLDP information.  
Figure 25: LLDP Neighbors  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
Local Port - The local port to which a remote LLDP-capable device is attached.  
Chassis ID - An octet string indicating the specific identifier for the particular chassis in this system.  
TTL - Indicate the time (in seconds) the remote device’s information should be treated as valid.  
LLDP Entry Number - The number of the LLDP table entry.  
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SNMP Setting  
SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) monitor network switches through TCP/IP protocol suite. It  
offers automatic network management and avoids the physical differences between various switches, and thus  
provides automatic management of products from different manufacturers.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To specify SNMP system settings:  
1. Click Configuration, SNMP Setting.  
2. Enable SNMP for the switch.  
3. Configure the Name, Location, and Contact information.  
4. Define at least one new community string with read-write access.  
5. Delete the default “private” string for security reasons.  
6. Click Apply.  
Figure 26: SNMP Setting, Community Strings Setting, Trap Receivers Setting  
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Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the SNMP Setting, Community Strings Setting.  
SNMP Status - Enable or disable SNMP service. (Default: Disabled)  
System Name - A name assigned to the switch system.  
System Location - Specify the system location.  
System Contact - An administrator responsible for the system.  
String – A community string that acts like a password and permits access to the SNMP protocol.  
Default strings: “public” (read-only access), “private” (read-write access) Range: 1-32 characters, case sensitive  
Type - Specifies the access rights for the community string:  
Read-Only - Authorized management stations are only able to retrieve MIB objects.  
Read-Write - Authorized management stations are able to both retrieve and modify MIB objects.  
Trap Receivers Setting  
Traps indicating status changes are issued by the switch to specified trap managers. You must specify trap  
managers so that key events are reported by this switch to your management station (using network management  
software).  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure SNMP system settings:  
1. Click Configuration, SNMP Setting.  
2. Specify the IP address of management station that will receive SNMP trap messages.  
3. Specify a configured community string for the trap receiver.  
4. Click Apply.  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Trap Receivers Setting.  
IP Address - IP address of a new management station to receive notification messages.  
Community String – Specify a valid community string for the new trap manager entry. The string must  
already be defined in the Community String Setting section. (Range: 1-32 characters, case sensitive)  
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Port Mirroring Setting  
Port mirroring includes local mirroring groups, remote source mirroring groups and remote destination mirroring  
groups.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure port mirroring:  
1. Click Configuration, Port Mirroring.  
2. Select the Mirror Set Index.  
3. Select the Mirror Direction.  
4. Select the Mirroring (target) port.  
5. Select the one or more mirrored (source) ports.  
6. Click Apply.  
Figure 27: Port mirroring  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
Mirror Set Index — Display a list of current mirror sessions.  
Mirror Direction — Allow you to select which traffic to mirror to the target port, Rx (receive) or Tx (transmit).  
(Default: Rx)  
Mirrored Port List — One or more source ports whose traffic will be monitored. (Range: 1-18 and configured  
trunks)  
Mirroring Port — The target port that will mirror the traffic on the source ports. (Range: 1-18)  
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Port Security Setting  
Port security is a feature that allows you to configure a switch port with a maximum number of MAC addresses  
that are authorized to access the network through that port. When port security is enabled on a port, the switch  
stops learning new MAC addresses on the specified port when it has reached a configured maximum number.  
Only incoming traffic with source addresses already stored in the dynamic or static address table will be accepted  
as authorized to access the network through that port. If a device with an unauthorized MAC address attempts to  
use the switch port, the intrusion will be detected and the switch can automatically take a specified action.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure port security:  
1. Click Configuration, Port Security.  
2. Select the ports to configure.  
3. Set Security to Enable.  
4. Configure the maximum number of MAC addresses allowed on the port.  
5. Set an action for port security violations.  
6. Click Apply.  
Figure 28: Port security  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Port security page.  
Port - Port number.  
Security — Enable or disable port security for the selected ports. (Default: Disabled)  
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Maximum L2 Entry — The maximum number of MAC addresses that can be learned on a port. (Range: 0 -  
16447, where 0 means disabled)  
Action — Indicate the action to be taken when a port security violation is detected:  
Trap to CPU: Send an SNMP trap message. (This is the default.)  
Drop: Drop other traffic from the port.  
Forward: No action is taken. Traffic is forwarded as normal.  
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Bandwidth Control Setting  
This function allows the network manager to control the maximum rate for traffic received on a port or  
transmitted from a port. Rate limiting is configured on ports at the edge of a network to limit traffic into or out of  
the switch. Packets that exceed the acceptable amount of traffic are dropped.  
Rate limiting can be applied to individual ports or trunks. When an interface is configured with this feature, the  
traffic rate will be monitored by the hardware to verify conformity. Non-conforming traffic is dropped,  
conforming traffic is forwarded without any changes. Input and output rate limits can be enabled or disabled for  
individual interfaces.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure bandwidth control:  
1. Click Configuration, Bandwidth Control.  
2. Select the ports to configure.  
3. Set Type to Ingress or Egress .  
4. Set State to Enable.  
5. Configure the maximum rate allowed on the ports.  
6. Click Apply.  
Figure 29: bandwidth control  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
Port - Display the port/trunk number.  
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Type - Specify ingress or egress traffic. (Default: Ingress)  
State - Enable or disable the rate limit. (Default: Disabled)  
Rate (Kbit/sec) - Set the rate limit level. (Range: 0 - 1048544 Kbps in steps of 16)  
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Jumbo Frame Setting  
The switch provides more efficient throughput for large sequential data transfers by supporting jumbo frames up  
to 9216 bytes.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure Jumbo Frames:  
1. Click Configuration, Jumbo Frame.  
2. Select the frame size to configure.  
3. Click Apply.  
Figure 30: Jumbo Frame Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
Jumbo Frame (Bytes) - Configure support for jumbo frames. (Options: 9216, 1522, 1536, 1552 Bytes; Default:  
9216 bytes)  
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Management Access Filter  
To create up to eight IP addresses or IP address groups that are allowed access to the switch through the Web  
browser.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click Configuration, Management Access Filter.  
2. Enter an IP address  
3. Specify a netmask to define a single IP address, or an address range.  
4. Select the table entry to activate the filter.  
5. Click Apply.  
Figure 31: Management Access Filter  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
IP Address - An IP address specifies a range, that is allowed management access to the switch.  
IP Netmask - A mask that specifies a single IP address, or a range of IP addresses. (Default: 255.255.255.255  
for a single IP address)  
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Power over Ethernet Setting  
Power over Ethernet (PoE) means that power sourcing equipment (PSE) supplies power to powered devices (PD)  
such as IP telephone, wireless LAN access point, and web camera from Ethernet interfaces through twisted pair  
cables.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click Configuration, Power over Ethernet.  
2. Select the port number of the connected PD.  
3. Specify the PD on.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 32: Power over Ethernet  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Power over Ethernet page.  
PD - Enable the powered devices. The consumption power in watt will be shown in the table below.  
Class – Indicate the PD classification.  
Consumption Power (W) – Indicate the PD power consumption.  
Once the PSE has detected the PD’s power class, the PSE can manage the power allocation by subtracting the  
PD’s class maximum value from overall power budget. This allows for control and management of power  
allocation when there is not enough power available from the PSE to supply maximum power to all ports.  
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CHAPTER 4 Security  
MAC Address Information  
To display the MAC address forwarding table.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click Configuration.  
2. Then click Security, MAC Address, MAC Forwarding Table.  
Figure 33: MAC Address Information  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the MAC Address Information page.  
No. - The number of the address entry in the forwarding table.  
MAC Address - Physical address associated with this interface.  
VLAN ID - The ID of a configured VLAN (1-4094).  
Type - Indicate if the MAC address has been dynamically learned or configured as a static entry.  
Port - Indicate the port.  
Clear Dynamic Entries — Remove all dynamically learned addresses from the forwarding table.  
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Static MAC Setting  
A static address can be assigned to a specific interface on the switch. Static addresses are bound to the assigned  
interface and will not be moved.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure static MAC addresses:  
1. Click Security, MAC Address, Static MAC.  
2. Specify the MAC address to be statically assigned.  
3. Specify the VLAN ID.  
4. Select the port or trunk interface for the static assignment.  
5. Click Add.  
Figure 34: Static MAC Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Static MAC Setting page.  
MAC Address - Physical address of a device mapped to an interface.  
VLAN ID - The ID of a configured VLAN (1-4094).  
Port - Port or trunk associated with the device that is assigned as a static address.  
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MAC Filtering Setting  
The MAC Filtering pages are used to filter service to clients attempting to access the Internet based on protocol  
type, destination/source MAC address, and the direction of traffic for each packet.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure MAC Address Filtering:  
1. Click Security, MAC Address, MAC Address Filtering.  
2. Specify the MAC address to be filtered.  
3. Specify the VLAN ID.  
4. Select to filter the MAC address as the source, destination, or both.  
5. Set a name to describe the filter.  
6. Click Add.  
Figure 35: MAC Filtering Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
MAC Address - Physical address of a device.  
VLAN ID - The ID of a configured VLAN (1-4094).  
Filter - Filter traffic matching the MAC address in packets. (Options: Source MAC, Destination MAC, Both;  
Default: Source MAC)  
Destination MAC - Filter packets with a matching destination MAC address.  
Source MAC - Filter packets with a matching source MAC address.  
Both - Filter packets with a matching the source or destination MAC address.  
Name – A descriptive name for the MAC address filter.  
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802.1x Setting  
The 802.1X protocol provides port authentication. The 802.1X protocol must be enabled globally for the switch  
system before port settings are active.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure 802.1X global settings:  
1. Click Security, 802.1X, 802.1X Setting.  
2. Set 802.1X to Enabled.  
3. Specify the RADIUS server IP address.  
4. Specify the RADIUS server shared key.  
5. Modified other parameters as required.  
6. Click Apply.  
Figure 36: 802.1x Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
802.1X — Sets the global setting for 802.1X. (Default: Disabled)  
RADIUS Server IP — Address of the authentication server.  
Server Port — Network (UDP) port of RADIUS server used for authentication messages. (Range: 1024-65535;  
Default: 1812)  
Shared Key — Encryption key used for RADIUS server messages. Do not use blank spaces in the string.  
(Maximum length: 30 characters)  
Retype Shared Key — Re-type the string entered in the previous field to ensure no errors were made. The  
switch will not change the encryption key if these two fields do not match.  
ReauthEnabled — Set clients to be re-authenticated after the interval specified by the Reauth Period.  
Re-authentication can be used to detect if a new device is plugged into a switch port. (Default: Enabled)  
Reauth Period — Set the time period after which a connected client must be re-authenticated. (Range:  
30-65535 seconds; Default: 3600 seconds)  
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802.1x Port Setting  
When 802.1X is enabled, you need to configure the parameters for the authentication process that runs between  
the client and the switch (that is, authenticator), as well as the client identity lookup process that runs between the  
switch and authentication server.  
Web Smart switch interface  
1. Click Security, 802.1X, 802.1X Port Setting.  
2. Select one or more ports to configure.  
3. Set the 802.1X Mode to “Authentication.”  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 37: 802.1x Port Setting  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the 802.1X Port Setting page.  
Mode - Sets the authentication mode to one of the following options:  
Force-Authorized - Force the port to grant access to all clients, either dot1x-aware or otherwise.  
Force-Unauthorized - Force the port to deny access to all clients, either dot1x-aware or otherwise.  
Authentication - Require a dot1x-aware client to be authorized by the authentication server. Clients that are  
not dot1x-aware will be denied access.  
No Authentication - Disable 802.1X authentication on the port. (This is the default setting.)  
State - Show the current status of the 802.1X authentication process.  
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IP Filter Configurations  
IP Filter Security is a feature that filters IP traffic on port interfaces based on manually configured entries in the  
IP Filter table, or allowed IP address assignment through DHCP. IP Filter Security can be used to prevent traffic  
attacks caused when a host tries to use the IP address of a neighbor to access the network.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure IP Filter settings:  
1. Click Security, IP Filter Setting.  
2. Select one or more ports to configure.  
3. Select the mode Static and set an IP address, or select DHCP.  
4. Select ports on which to allow traffic to DHCP servers.  
5. Click Apply.  
Figure 38: IP Filter Configurations  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the IP Filter Configurations page.  
Mode – Configure the switch to filter traffic based on IP addresses. (Default: IP Filter Disable)  
IP Filter Disable – Disable IP filtering on the port.  
Static – Enable traffic filtering based on IP addresses configured in the table.  
DHCP – Enable traffic filtering based on IP addresses assigned through DHCP.  
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IP Address — An IP address, or an address specifying a range, that is allowed access through the switch.  
IP Netmask — A mask that specifies a single IP address, or defines a range of IP addresses. (Default:  
255.255.255.0)  
DHCP Server Allowed — Permit traffic from a DHCP server through the specified ports. (Default: All ports  
allowed)  
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Storm Control settings  
Broadcast storms may occur when a device on your network is malfunctioning, or if application programs are not  
well designed or properly configured. If there is too much broadcast traffic on your network, performance can be  
severely degraded or everything can come to complete halt.  
You can protect your network from broadcast storms by setting a threshold for broadcast traffic. Any broadcast  
packets exceeding the specified threshold will then be dropped.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure Storm Control settings:  
1. Click Security, Storm Control.  
2. Select the Storm Control type.  
3. Select one or more ports to configure.  
4. Set the State to “On” and set the threshold rate.  
5. Click Apply.  
Figure 39: Storm Control settings  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
Storm Type — Select the storm control type. (Broadcast, Multicast, Unknown Unicast, Unknown Multicast)  
Port — Select port and trunk interfaces. (Port Range: 1-18)  
State — Enable or disable storm control. (Default: Off)  
Rate — Threshold as packets per second (pps). (Range: 0-1000000)  
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Port Isolation  
The feature provides port-based security and isolation of local ports. The switch isolates port traffic by specifying  
those ports to which it can forward or receive traffic.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure Port Isolation settings:  
1. Click Security, Port Isolation.  
2. Select one or more ports to configure.  
3. Select one or more ports to which traffic can be forwarded and received.  
4. Click Apply.  
Figure 40: Port Isolation  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Port Isolation page.  
Port — Select port and trunk interfaces. (Port Range: 1-18)  
Port Isolation List — Select port and trunk interfaces to which traffic can be forwarded and received. (Port  
Range: 1-18; Default: All ports and trunks)  
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Defence Engine  
Defence Engine is a advanced feature that can prevent switch’s CPU from being overwhelmed by flooded packets,  
such as unknown unicast, unknown multicast, or broadcast packets. This function can be used to prevent  
malicious viruses or worm attacks.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To configure Defence Engine settings:  
1. Click Security, Defence Engine.  
2. Set Defence Engine status to Enabled.  
3. Click Apply.  
Figure 41: Defence Engine  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the LLDP Neighbors page.  
Defence Engine — Enable or disable the feature. (Default: Enabled)  
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CHAPTER 5 Monitoring  
Port Statistics Information  
You can display standard statistics on network traffic passing through each port. This information can be used to  
identify potential problems with the switch, such as a faulty port or unusually heavy loading. All values displayed  
have been accumulated since the last system reboot.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To click Monitoring, Port Statistics to display port statistics.  
Figure 42: Port Statistics Information  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Port Statistics Information page.  
Port - The port number.  
State - Display the link state of port interfaces (Enabled or Disabled).  
Link Status - Display the link state of the port interface (Link Up or Link Down).  
TxGoodPkt - The total number of packets transmitted out of the interface.  
TxBadPkt - The total number of outbound packets that could not be transmitted because of errors.  
RxGoodPkt - The total number of packets received on the interface.  
RxBadPkt - The total number of inbound packets that contained errors preventing them from being  
deliverable.  
Clear - Click the button to reset all counters.  
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CHAPTER 6 Tools  
Http Upgrade  
Use the HTTP Upgrade page to upgrade the switch’s system firmware by specifying a new software file. You can  
also use the HTTP Upgrade page to save the current configuration to a file on your computer, or to restore  
previously saved configuration settings to the switch.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To upgrade switch software:  
1. Click Tools, HTTP Upgrade.  
2. Click the Browse button, and select the firmware file.  
3. Click the Upgrade button to upgrade the switch’s firmware.  
After the software file is uploaded, the switch prompts for a reboot.  
Figure 43: Http Upgrade  
Hint§  
The following parameters are shown on the Http Upgrade page.  
HTTP Configuration Backup - Click the Backup button to save the current configuration settings to a file on  
the local web management station.  
HTTP Configuration Restore - Restore previously saved configuration settings to the switch from a file on  
the local web management station. Use the Browse button to locate the configuration file, then click Restore.  
HTTP Firmware Upgrade - Upgrade the switch software from a file on the local web management station.  
Use the Browse button to locate the software file, then click Upgrade.  
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Reset Factory Defaults  
To restore factory defaults.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To click Tools, Reset, then click the Reset button. The reset will be complete when the Web browser displays the  
login page.  
Figure 44: Reset  
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Reboot  
To restart the switch.  
Web Smart switch interface  
To click Tools, Reboot, then click the Reboot button. The reboot will be complete when the web  
interface displays the login page.  
Figure 45: Reboot  
SPECIFICATIONS  
Standards  
• IEEE 802.1d (Spanning Tree Protocol)  
• IEEE 802.1p (Traffic Prioritization)  
• IEEE 802.1q (VLAN Tagging)  
• IEEE 802.1w (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol)  
• IEEE 802.3ad (Link Aggregation)  
• IEEE 802.3 (10Base-T Ethernet)  
• IEEE 802.3ab (Twisted Pair Gigabit Ethernet)  
• IEEE 802.3ad (Link Aggregation Control Protocol LACP)  
• IEEE 802.3af (Power over Ethernet 802.3at Type 1)  
• IEEE 802.3at (Power over Ethernet 802.3at Type 2)  
• IEEE 802.3u (100Base-TX Fast Ethernet)  
• IEEE 802.3x (flow control, for full duplex mode)  
General  
• Media support:  
- 10Base-T Cat3, 4, 5 UTP/STP RJ45  
- 100Base-TX Cat5 UTP/STP RJ45  
- 1000Base-T Cat5e UTP/STP RJ45  
• Packet filter/forwarding rate:  
- 1,488,000 pps (1000 Mbps)  
- 148,800 pps (100 Mbps)  
- 14,880 pps (10 Mbps)  
• MAC address table: 16K  
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• Backplane speed: 36 Gbps  
• Switch architecture: store and forward  
• Configuration options:  
- Port link speed: 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps, 1000 Mbps or auto-negotiation  
- PoE on/off per port  
- Flow control on/off per port  
- VLAN  
- Rate limiting (ingress rate and egress rate)  
- Port Mirroring  
- Port Aggregation/LACP: 8 groups  
- Broadcast Storm configuration with broadcast rate, multicast rate, and flooded unicast rate  
- IGMP Snooping  
- Quality of Service (QoS): port-based or DSCP  
- Integrated ICMP Ping client sends ping requests to other network nodes  
- SNMPv1/v2c (Simple Network Management Protocol)  
- LAN settings (IP address, Gateway, etc.)  
• Certifications: FCC Class A, CE  
LEDs  
• PoE  
• Power  
• Link/activity  
Power  
• Input: 90 – 260 V AC, 50 – 60 Hz  
• Power consumption: 180 Watts (maximum)  
Environmental  
• Metal housing  
• Dimensions: 440 (W) x 220 (L) x 44 (H) mm (17.3 x 8.7 x 1.7 in.)  
• Weight: 3 kg (6.6 lbs.)  
• Operating temperature: 0 – 45°C (32 – 113°F)  
• Operating humidity: 10 – 90% RH, non-condensing  
• Storage temperature: -20 – 90°C (-4 – 194°F)  
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