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ZyXEL Dimension ES-2008 User's Manual

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1. NO BORROWED SUBNET MASK NO NO HOSTS PER HOST BITS SUBNETS SUBNET 1 255 255 128 0 17 2 32766 2 255 255 192 0 18 4 16382 3 255 255 224 0 19 8 8190 4 255 255 240 0 20 16 4094 5 255 255 248 0 21 32 2046 6 255 255 252 0 22 64 1022 7 255 255 254 0 23 128 510 8 255 255 255 0 24 256 254 9 255 255 255 128 25 512 126 10 255 255 255 192 26 1024 62 11 255 255 255 224 27 2048 30 12 255 255 255 240 28 4096 14 13 255 255 255 248 29 8192 6 R IP Subnetting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chart 13 Class B Subnet Planning NO BORROWED SUBNET MASK NO NO HOSTS PER HOST BITS SUBNETS SUBNET 14 255 255 255 252 30 16384 2 15 255 255 255 254 31 32768 1 IP Subnetting S Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Appendix C Product Specifications General Standards IEEE802 3 10BASE T Ethernet twisted pair copper IEEE802 3u 100BASE TX Fast Ethernet twisted pair copper ANSI IEEE802 3 Auto negotiation IEEE802 3x Flow Control IEEE802 1p Priority Queues IEEE802 1Q VLAN IEEE802 1d Spanning Tree Interface Eight 10 100BASE T Ethernet port One SC connector for 100FX fiber ES 2008 SC ES 2008 SC30 One RJ 45 connector for 1000Base T ES 2008 GTP One console port Data Transfer Rate Ethernet 10Mbps half duplex 20Mbps full duplex Fast Ethernet 100Mbps half duplex 200Mbps full duplex
2. 2 The Ethernet device is connected at half duplex mode when the FD COL LED is off 3 Make sure you have the correct speed and flow control enabled for each port Refer to the Port Control chapter 3 This LED blinks if packet collisions are occurring Collisions are normal but if the FD COL LED blinks very frequently you may need to segment your network 19 2 Console Port I cannot access the switch through the console port Table 19 5 Troubleshooting Console Port STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION Check to see if the switch is connected to your computer using the RS 232 cable 2 Check to see if the communications program Emulation auto detect is configured correctly Set the Baud Rate 9600 bps communication parameters as stated here No Parity 8 data bits 1 stop bit Flow Control None 19 2 Troubleshooting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 19 5 Troubleshooting Console Port STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION Make sure you entered the correct username and password The default username is admin and the default password is 1234 If you have forgot your username or password refer to Section 19 5 19 3 Telnet I cannot telnet into the switch Table 19 6 Troubleshooting Telnet STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION Make sure you are using the correct IP address of the switch Check the IP address of the switch Ping the switch from your computer
3. FIELD DESCRIPTION VLAN Operation Select No VLAN 802 1Q with GVRP 802 1Q without GVRP or Mode Port Based from the drop down list box Select No VLAN to disable VLANs Select 802 1Q with GVRP to set up tag based VLAN groups that extend beyond the local switch Select 802 1Q without GVRP to set up tag based VLAN groups on the switch only Select Port Based to set up port based VLANs 9 2 VLAN Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 9 4 Port Based VLAN Configuration Follow the steps below to configure port based VLANs Step 1 In the Switch Configuration screen select Port Based from the VLAN Operation Mode drop down list box Then click Apply Step 2 Click VLAN Configuration in the navigation menu to display the setup screen as shown next VLAN Configuration Port Based LAN Information Add Edit Delete Previous Page Next Page Help Figure 9 2 VLAN Setup Port based VLAN Information Step 3 Click Add to configure a new port based VLAN The following screen displays VLAN Configuration Group Name VLAN ID 1 2 3 4 5 Add 6 7 8 Remove 9 Apply Help Figure 9 3 VLAN Setup Port based Configuration Follow the instructions in the table next to configure this screen VLAN 9 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 9 2 VLAN Setup Port based Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Group Name Enter a descriptive n
4. sscssssccscscssssccssesssesesccesscssssscessssees 1 1 1 1 Fe CALUEeS 202 is oes sascha es asec sae E een a a 1 1 1 2 Management Features v cc iicc sicccsceisivcescecussccasecetincdeccseetuvavenscevusnseseedvaseceecevsvae 1 1 1 3 Management Methods cccescessesssceseceecesecaecseecaeeeaeeeseeeeeseeeeeeneeneeeteeaees 1 2 14 Applications iccsccc sccscccccedics secs cdeceeses cece sbesnducaead seas e E a 1 2 Chapter 2 Hardware Description and Installation csscssscsscssssssssssssssessseesees 2 1 2 1 Hardware Installation inini ieii ausi 2 1 2 2 Hardware Connections c iccc ccccccceciesiasececccesedvesesdeccuceviacvseescecencedeesetcecdessseetietes 2 1 2 3 Front Panel LEDS 21 2235 aceite ae ein ty iia 2 3 2A Rear Patel nzcschacndecicncoriiwia enn einen TRR a aE 2 5 2 5 Purming On the S wit heec n nave coos weaned ates ee enw 2 6 Chapter 3 Introducing the Web Configurator csscssscsscscssssccscessssescccesessseseeee 3 1 3 1 Accessing the Web Configurator ccccccceesessseesceeseeeeeeeceeeceeeeseeneenseenaeenaes 3 1 3 2 Commonly Used Buttons resoneren r e E S EE 3 3 3 3 General Switch Information asessori o 3 4 3 4 Switch Console Port Setti g Senoren a E OE R EE 3 4 Chapter 4 Basic Switch Configuration eeseoeseossesseossecsoeesoesooescoesocsseossesssesseeseosseoesoe 4 1 4 1 Setting the IP Address of the Switch ssssssseesssesesseessseserssesrsreseesessreressesees 4 1 4 2 Cha
5. 14 4 Basic System Setup Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 4 Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 User Name Configuration User Name actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item CTRL A Action menu Enter Select Item Figure 14 5 SMT Username Configuration 14 2 4 Changing the System Password Follow the steps to change the default system password of the switch Step 1 Inthe Administration Configuration screen press TAB to select Password Configuration and press ENTER Step 2 Type in your existing system password in the Old Password field and press ENTER Step 3 Type in your new system password in the new Password field and press ENTER Step 4 Re type your new system password in the enter again field and press ENTER Dimension Switch ES 2008 Password Configuration Old Password new password enter again p rd changed succ y pre any key to return Esc Previous menu Figure 14 6 SMT Password Configuration Basic System Setup 14 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 15 Switch Configuration This chapter introduces various switch configurations 15 1 Port and Trunk Group Settings Refer to the Port Trunking chapter for background inf
6. rC Specify an IP address IP Address ror it Subnet Mask I i IV Detect connection to network media Corcel B Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 2 Click the DNS Configuration tab axl Mabe my be a DNS information DNS sane ta select Disable 3 If you know your DNS information select SEE Enable DNS and type the information in the Hes Danei fields below you may not need to fill them all DNS Server Search Order in QN Domain Suf 3 Click the Gateway tab zix If you do not know your gateway s IP address DNS nt ae ans Soa TEMOVS previously installed gateways The first gateway in the Installed Gateway list will be the default If you have a gateway IP address type it in The ses erder n the Iet wil be the order in which these the New gateway field and click Add New gateway Add r Installed gateways iz Remove l Cancel 4 Click OK to save and close the TCP IP Properties window 5 Click OK to close the Network window Insert the Windows CD if prompted 6 Turn on your Prestige and restart your computer when prompted Verifying Settings 1 Click Start and then Run 2 In the Run window type winipcfg and then click OK to open the IP Configuration window 3 Select your network adapter You should see your computer s IP address subnet mask and default gateway Settin
7. Cabling 10BASE T UTP Cat 3 4 5 100 m 100BASE TX UTP Cat 5 100 m max 1000Base T UTP Cat 5 100m Max ES 2008 GTP 100BASE FX ES 2008 SC ES 2008 SC30 50 62 5 125 micron multi mode fiber optics ES 2008 SC 8 10 125 micron single mode fiber optics ES 2008 SC30 Full Half Duplex Full Half duplex for 10 100Mbps speeds Media Interface Exchange All ports MDI II MDI X auto sensing Performance and Management Backplane Non blocking full wire speed forwarding rate at 3 8Gbps Packet Forwarding Rate 14880 PPS for 10BASE T 148800 PPS for 100BASE TX FX Product Specifications T Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Performance and Management Switching Method Store and forward MAC Address 8000 entries per main switch Table Data Buffer 256 Kbyte VLAN IEEE 802 1Q tag based VLAN 4095 Max Port based VLAN IEEE 802 1p 2 queues Priority Queues Port Trunking IEEE802 1ad port trunking up to 4 groups up to 8 ports for each group Port Security Static MAC address filtering Multicasting Support IGMP snooping Broadcast Storm Support broadcast storm control Port Mirroring All ports support port mirroring Management Local console Telnet Web Based management SNMP Management Username Password needed for Console Telnet and Web Security management authentication MIBs RFC 1213 MIB II RFC 1493 Bridge M
8. If you cannot ping the switch check the IP addresses of the switch and your computer Make sure that both IP addresses are in the same subnet Make sure you entered the correct username and password The default username is admin and the default password is 1234 If you have forgot your username or password refer to Section 19 5 If these steps fail to correct the problem contact the distributor 19 4 Web Configurator I cannot access the web configurator Table 19 7 Troubleshooting Web Configurator STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION Make sure you are using the correct IP address of the switch Check the IP address of the switch 2 Make sure you entered the correct username and password The default username is admin and the default password is 1234 If you have forgot your username or password refer to Section 19 5 3 Ping the switch from your computer If you cannot ping the switch check the IP addresses of the switch and your computer Make sure that both IP addresses are in the same subnet Troubleshooting 19 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch The web configurator does not display properly Table 19 8 Troubleshooting Internet Browser Display STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION 1 Make sure you are using Internet Explorer 5 0 and later versions Delete the temporary web files and log in again In Internet Explorer click Tools Internet Opt
9. actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item CTRL A Action menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 10 SMT Add SNMP Trap Manager Step 3 Enter the IP address of the trap management station in the IP field in dotted decimal notation Step 4 Enter a community string or password in the Community Name field of the trap management station Step 5 Save the changes 16 4 GVRP Configuration Refer to the VLAN chapter for more information on GVRP 16 6 Protocol Related Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Intelligent Switch GVRP Configuration GVRP Enabled actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Space Toggle Esc Action menu Figure 16 11 SMT GVRP Configuration To enable dynamic VLAN press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Enabled in the GVRP field 16 5 LACP Configuration Refer to the Port Trunking chapter for more information on LACP Link Aggregate Control Protocol Dimension Switch ES 2008 LACP Configuration LACP Group Setting Port State Activity LACP Group Status Previous Menu Configure LACP group setting Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 16 12 SMT LACP Configuration 16 5 1 LACP Group Setting Select LACP Group Setting in the LACP Configuration screen and press ENTER to display the screen shown nex
10. LED COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION Off No device is attached or the port is operating in half duplex mode 2 3 4 The Gigabit Port The gigabit port module is capable of transferring data at a speed up to 1000 mbps The gigabit port is not available on all switch models The following table describes the gigabit port LEDs Table 2 5 Gigabit Module LED Descriptions LED COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION 1000 Green On The port is connected at 1000 Mbps Off The port is not connected at 1000 Mbps LK ACT Orange On The fiber port is connected to an Ethernet device Blinking This fiber port is transmitting data Off No data is being transmitted FD COL Orange On The port is operating in full duplex mode Blinking Packet collision is occurring on this port Off No device is attached or the port is operating in half duplex mode 2 4 Rear Panel The console port and the power socket are located on the rear panel as shown in the next figure Figure 2 5 Rear Panel Hardware Description and Installation 2 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 2 4 1 Console Port Local switch management is done through the console port It requires a direct connection between the switch and a computer via an RS 232 console cable Refer to chapters on SMT configurations 2 5 Turning On the Switch Connect one end of the power cord to the power receptacle on the rear panel of the sw
11. s Guide This manual is designed to guide you through the configuration of your ES switch for its various applications All ES models are discussed together in this guide Unless specified images of the ES 2008 SC are used throughout this document Images that directly relate to the other two models are used when referring to the key differences between the models General Syntax Conventions Enter means for you to type one or more characters and press the carriage return Select or Choose means for you to use one from the predefined choices The SMT menu titles and labels are in Bold Times New Roman font Predefined field choices are in Bold Arial font Command and arrow keys are enclosed in square brackets ENTER means the Enter or carriage return key ESC means the Escape key and SPACE BAR means the Space Bar For brevity s sake we will use e g as shorthand for for instance and i e as shorthand for that is or in other words throughout this manual The Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch models will be referred to as the ES 2008 or simply as the switch in this manual Glossary www zyxel com contains an online glossary of networking terms xvi Preface Getting Started Part I Getting Started Part covers Getting to Know Your Switch Hardware Installation and Introducing the Web Configurator Dimension ES 2008
12. 100 N A Full N A On N A Figure 6 1 Port Configuration Follow the instructions in the next table to configure the Ethernet ports Table 6 1 Port Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Port Configuration Port Select a port to configure from the selection list State Select Enable from the drop down list box to activate the port Port Control 6 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 6 1 Port Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Auto Select Enable from the drop down list box to have the port detect the Negotiation speed of incoming transmission and adjust appropriately without manual intervention Speed Select from the drop down list box to set the transmission speed of the port Choices are 10 Mbps and 100 Mbps All ports are set to 100 Mbps by default Duplex Select either Full or Half from the drop down list box to set the duplex mode of the port All ports are set to Full duplex mode by default Flow Control Select Enable from the drop down list box to activate flow control on this port 6 2 View Port Status The bottom half of the Port Configuration screen displays status of all ports on the switch You may also view the port status information in the Port Status screen Refer to Table 6 1 for field descriptions The Config fields display the configured port settings while the Actual fields displays the real time status of the port 6 3 Port Statistics Click Port Statistics in the
13. Follow the steps below to access the SMT screens using a Telnet program Step 1 Launch a Telnet program In Windows click Start and then Run Step 2 Type telnet followed by a space and the IP address of the switch 192 168 1 1 is the default and then click OK to display the password screen Refer to Figure 13 3 C x Type the name of a program folder document or Internet resource and Windows will open it for you Open telnet 192 168 1 1 7 Cancel Browse Figure 13 1 Starting a Telnet Session 13 3 Accessing the SMT Using the Console Port The console configuration is for local management and initial configuration of the switch Use an RS 232 console cable with a female DB 9 connector to connect a terminal or computer to the console port Introducing the SMT 13 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 13 3 1 Establishing a Console Port Connection After the switch is directly connected to a computer turn on the computer and run a terminal emulation program for example Hyper Terminal in Windows and configure its communication parameters as follows gt 9600 bits per second gt Parity none 8 data bits 1 stop bit flow control none Port Settings Bits per second o o YS Databt 8 o m Parity None x Stopbits 1 H Flow control Noe st Restore Defaults Figure 13 2 HyperTerminal Communication Parameter Settings Example 13 4 Initial SMT Screen
14. MAX Age pena configuration message before initiating a topology change The number of seconds root bridge waits between STP configuration Hello Time aie message transmissions Forward The number of seconds the root bridge waits before changing from its STP Delay Time learning listening state to forwarding state 10 5 Configuring Spanning Tree Port Parameters Configure the port parameters in the Set Spanning Tree screen Configure Spanning Tree Port Parameters Apply Help Figure 10 4 Configuring STP Port Parameters Follow the steps below to configure the port parameters Step 1 Select a port number from the Port scroll down list menu Step 2 Enter a number between and 65535 in the Path Cost field The smaller the number the lower the path cost is for the port Refer to Table 10 1 for recommended path cost Step 3 Enter a number between 0 and 255 in the Priority field The smaller the number the higher the priority Step 4 Click Apply to save the changes 10 4 Spanning Tree Protocol Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 10 6 Viewing STP Port Status View the STP port status information at the bottom of the Spanning Tree screen STP Port Status DISABLED FORWARDING DISABLED DISABLED DISABLED DISABLED DISABLED DISABLED Figure 10 5 STP Port Status The following table describes the read only port status fields in this screen CO Oo A
15. Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item CTRL A Action menu Dimension Switch ES 2008 IP Configuration IP Address 192 168 1 1 Subnet Mask 255 255 255 0 Gateway 192 168 1 10 lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Figure 14 4 SMT IP Configuration Enter Select Item To move to the configuration menu press TAB to select lt Edit gt in the actions menu and press ENTER The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 14 3 SMT IP Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION EXAMPLE IP address Enter the LAN IP address for the switch in dotted 192 168 1 1 decimal notation Subnet mask Enter the subnet mask in dotted decimal notation Refer 255 255 255 0 to the Subnetting appendix to calculate a subnet mask if you are implementing subnetting Gateway Enter the LAN gateway IP address in dotted decimal 192 168 1 10 notation Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 14 2 3 Changing the System User Name Follow the steps to change the default system user name Step 1 Inthe Administration Configuration screen press TAB to select User Name Configuration and press ENTER Step 2 To move to the configuration menu press TAB to select lt Edit gt in the actions menu and press ENTER Step 3 Type in your new system user name in the User Name field
16. w N e Table 10 4 STP Port Status FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This field displays the port number on the switch Path Cost This field displays the cost of using this port to reach the root bridge The bigger the number the higher the path cost Priority This field displays the priority level of the port The higher the number the lower the priority level Port This field displays the state of the port The state can be FORWARDING State DISABLED BLOCKING LEARNING and LISTENING Spanning Tree Protocol 10 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 11 Port Mirroring This introduces the port mirroring or port sniffer feature of the switch 11 1 Introduction You can monitor traffic on the ports by duplicating or mirroring the traffic to a port You can monitor input traffic output traffic or both A port that mirrors the traffic of other ports is the analysis port or the sniffer port A port whose traffic is analyzed is the monitor port or the source port You can configure up to nine monitor ports but only one mirror port 11 2 Configuring Port Mirroring Click Administrator and then Port Mirroring to display the screen shown next Port Mirroring Port Mirroring State DISABLE z Analysis Port None z 1 O O 2 O O 3 O O 4 O O 5 O O 6 o o 7 rt p 8 O Oo 9 O O Apply Default Help Figure 1
17. 1 1 1 0 Class D addresses are used for multicasting There is also a class E address It is reserved for future use Chart 1 Classes of IP Addresses IP ADDRESS OCTET 1 OCTET 2 OCTET 3 OCTET 4 Class A 0 Network number Host ID Host ID Host ID Class B 10 Network number Network number Host ID Host ID Class C 110 Network number Network number Network number Host ID Host IDs of all zeros or all ones are not allowed Therefore gt A class C network 8 host bits can have 2 2 or 254 hosts gt A class B address 16 host bits can have 2 2 or 65534 hosts A class A address 24 host bits can have 2 2 hosts approximately 16 million hosts Since the first octet of a class A IP address must contain a 0 the first octet of a class A address can have a value of 0 to 127 L IP Subnetting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Similarly the first octet of a class B must begin with 10 therefore the first octet of a class B address has a valid range of 128 to 191 The first octet of a class C address begins with 110 and therefore has a range of 192 to 223 Chart 2 Allowed IP Address Range By Class CLASS ALLOWED RANGE OF FIRST ALLOWED RANGE OF FIRST OCTET BINARY OCTET DECIMAL Class A 00000000 to 01111111 0 to 127 Class B 10000000 to 10111111 128 to 191 Class C 11000000 to
18. 11011111 192 to 223 Class D 11100000 to 11101111 224 to 239 Subnet Masks A subnet mask is used to determine which bits are part of the network number and which bits are part of the host ID using a logical AND operation A subnet mask has 32 bits each bit of the mask corresponds to a bit of the IP address If a bit in the subnet mask is a 1 then the corresponding bit in the IP address is part of the network number If a bit in the subnet mask is 0 then the corresponding bit in the IP address is part of the host ID Subnet masks are expressed in dotted decimal notation just as IP addresses are The natural masks for class A B and C IP addresses are as follows Chart 3 Natural Masks CLASS NATURAL MASK A 255 0 0 0 B 255 255 0 0 C 255 255 255 0 Subnetting With subnetting the class arrangement of an IP address is ignored For example a class C address no longer has to have 24 bits of network number and 8 bits of host ID With subnetting some of the host ID bits are converted into network number bits By convention subnet masks always consist of a continuous sequence of ones beginning from the left most bit of the mask followed by a continuous sequence of zeros for a total number of 32 bits Since the mask is always a continuous number of ones beginning from the left followed by a continuous number of zeros for the remainder of the 32 bit mask you can simply specify
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20. 5 1 Static MAC Address Follow the steps below to add a static MAC address Step 1 Inthe MAC Address Configuration screen select Static MAC Address and press ENTER to display the MAC address table Dimension Switch ES 2008 Static MAC Address MAC Address Port lt Edit gt lt Delete gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Enter Select Item Figure 15 10 SMT Static MAC Address Step 2 Press TAB to select lt Add gt and press ENTER to display screen as shown next 15 10 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Add Static MAC Address MAC Address Port No actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 11 SMT Add Static MAC Address Step 3 Select lt Edit gt and press ENTER to move the cursor to the configuration fields Step 4 Enter a MAC address in the MAC Address field Step 5 Press TAB and enter a port number in the Port Num field Step 6 Save the settings Editing a Static MAC Address To change a static MAC address entry in the table press TAB to select lt Edit gt and press ENTER Enter a new MAC address or change the port number and save the changes Deleting a Static MAC Address To remove a static MAC address entry from the table press TAB to select lt Delete gt and press ENTER Select the entry you want to remove and pre
21. Address E Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 6 Ifyou do not know your gateway s Advanced TCP IP Settings IP address remove any previously IP Settings DNS WINS Options installed gateways in the IP Settings piao tab and click OK IP address Subnet mask DHCP Enabled Do one or more of the following if you want to configure additional IP addresses In the IP Settings tab in IP Dorak gateni addresses click Add Daces Mene In TCP IP Address type an IP address in IP address and a subnet mask in Subnet mask and then click Add V Automatic metric Repeat the above two steps for each IP address you want to add Configure additional default on tance _ gateways in the IP Settings tab by clicking Add in Default gateways In TCP IP Gateway Address type the IP address of the default gateway in Gateway To manually configure a default metric the number of transmission hops clear the Automatic metric check box and type a metric in Metric Click Add Repeat the previous three steps for each default gateway you want to add Click OK when finished Add F Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 7 Inthe Internet Protocol TCP IP Internet Protocol TCP IP Properties PR Properties window the General tab Genea Atemate Configuration in Windows XP You can get IP settings assigned automatically if your network supports this capab
22. Enable STP Protocol check box under Protocol Enable Settings Protocol Enable Setting Enable Spanning Tree Protoco Il Enable IGMP Protocol IGMP Query Mode Auto z VLAN Operation Mode No VLAN 7 Apply Default Help Figure 10 1 Activating STP Step 3 Click Apply to save the changes 10 3 Configuring Spanning Tree Parameters To configure STP on the switch click Administrator and then Spanning Tree Spanning Tree Configure Spanning Tree Parameters Apply Figure 10 2 Configure Spanning Tree Parameters The following table describes the related fields to configure on a global basis for the entire switch Table 10 2 Configure STP Parameter FIELD DESCRIPTION EXAMPLE Priority To set the priority of this switch in a spanning tree enter a 32768 number between 1 and 65535 A higher value indicates a lower priority thus 0 means the highest priority The default is 32768 10 2 Spanning Tree Protocol Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 10 2 Configure STP Parameter FIELD DESCRIPTION EXAMPLE MAX Age A time interval in seconds a root bridge waits without 20 receiving a STP configuration message before initiating a topology change Specify a number between 6 and 40 Hello Time The number of seconds the switch waits between STP 2 configuration message transmissions Specify a number between 1 and 10 Forward The number of seconds t
23. Ethernet Switch Chapter 1 Getting to Know Your ES 2008 The ES 2008 is a multi port switch that can be used to build high performance switched workgroup networks This switch uses a store and forward switching scheme in which incoming data frames are first stored in buffer memory and checked for errors before being forwarded thus offering minimum delay for high speed networking It is the ideal switch for small to medium sized enterprise workgroups departments or backbone computing environments The embedded web configurator makes managing and configuring the ES 2008 easy enabling system management as well as individual port control and monitoring In addition the ES 2008 can be managed via Telnet the console port or SNMP 1 1 Features gt gt gt v VV VV V gt gt Conforms to IEEE 802 3 802 3u and 802 3x Ethernet Standards IEEE802 3ab Gigabit copper for ES models with a gigabit port 8 auto negotiating 100M Full half duplex or 10M Full half duplex mode Ethernet RJ 45 ports Auto MDI MDIX auto sensing Ethernet ports One fixed 100Mbps Fiber SC SC single mode or gigabit port not available on all switch models One console port for local configuration Full duplex and half duplex mode flow control Store and Forward switching scheme 2 megabits memory buffer Automatic MAC address learning MAC address table can contain up to 8 000 entries Performs non blocking full wire speed switch fabri
24. General Switch Information section for field descriptions Status and Counters 17 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 18 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance This chapter shows you how to upgrade the firmware and configuration file and create configuration backup files 18 1 Filename Convention The firmware or the configuration files do not have any filename conventions There is not specific file extension or filenames that you need to follow Therefore you can specify any names or file extensions for the firmware and the configuration files However it is recommended to use the bin file extension for the firmware file and rom for the configuration file to manage the files The filename must be less than 15 ASCII characters if you use the web configurator Visit www zyxel com to download the latest version of firmware for your switch 18 2 Firmware Upgrade This section shows you how to perform firmware upgrades Download the correct firmware for your switch model from www zyxel com Upgrading wrong firmware version will render the fiber gigabit port useless for switch models with a fiber gigabit port WARNING DO NOT INTERRUPT THE FILE TRANSFER PROCESS AS THIS MAY PERMANENTLY DAMAGE YOUR SWITCH To upload firmware to your switch via the web configurator you need to run tftp server on your computer In the event of your network being down uploading files is only p
25. Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 15 16 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 16 Protocol Related Configuration This chapter shows you how to configure STP SNMP GVRP and LACP 16 1 Introduction In the main menu press TAB to select Protocol Related Configuration and press ENTER The following screen displays Dimension Switch ES 2008 Protocol Related Configuration STP Configuration SNMP Configuration GVRP Configuration LACP Configuration Previous Menu Configure the Spanning Tree Protocol Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 16 1 SMT Protocol Related Configuration 16 2 STP Configuration To access the STP menus select STP Configuration in the Protocol Related Configuration screen Refer to the STP chapter for more background information Protocol Related Configuration 16 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 STP Configuration Enable Disable STP Function STP Parameters Setup STP Per Port Setting Previous Menu Enable or disable the Spanning Tree P otocol Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 16 2 SMT STP Configuration 16 2 1 Enable STP To enable STP select Enable Disable STP Function in the STP Configuration screen and press ENTER to display the
26. REE E E ee O R 8 11 84 MAC Address Filtering 2c ccoccccia eek ecteacesties nee S O eset 8 12 Chapter 9 VLAN ssissssessscicsssssisscsvevssssacessenssiecs soasseuostsntescegabaseedsedeessncsbadessecssoecadsbossosead s 9 1 9 1 Introd cti i res eiee ela e E E A EOE teste EE 9 1 9 2 VEAN Type Snati irei e r E E EEEE O EI KERERE 9 1 9 3 Selecting VLANSUpport eee E E E ec OE RE 9 2 9 4 Port Based VLAN Configuration s ss essseeessesesseeeesseseesresetsesseeressreresreserseeseene 9 3 9 5 Tag Based VLAN Configuration ccccecseesceescessceseceseeeaecseecseeeaeeeeeeneeeneeess 9 4 Chapter 10 Spanning Tree Protocol s esseeeseseseseseseeoesoeeeesoeseeeoeseeeenoeeeesoesereoeseeeoseeee 10 1 LOAD Introduction ea neia e i e i i E o erii iE 10 1 10 2 Activating Spanning Tree Protocol eeessesessseseesseserseessesessesressesessesressesees 10 2 10 3 Configuring Spanning Tree Parameters sessseeeeeieeeeseerseeereerrsesrsrrerersesses 10 2 10 4 Viewing Root Bridge Information s seseeesesessseesessesersreseesessesressesessesressesees 10 3 10 5 Configuring Spanning Tree Port Parameters 0 0 0 cecceeecseeeeceeeeeceeeeeeeeeenees 10 4 10 6 Viewing STP Port Statis on enaa aar epi as 10 5 Chapter 11 Port Mirroring scsssccsscescsecscccesceeccsseescesscssescessscssescesssessescessoesee 11 1 TT Antu CH OM nemna a a A A a A e S E E 11 1 11 2 Configuring Port Mirroring eeesessesseeesreerseeessreresseserseseesesse
27. Status Port Statistics Administrator TFTP Update Firmware Configuration Backup Welcome to Dimension Switch ES 2008 Factory Default System Reboot Figure 3 2 Welcome Screen 3 1 1 The Navigation Panel The navigation panel on the left of all web pages provides a consistent way to access all program functions Click Administrator to expanded the menu and configure the switch MEMU MEMU Home Home Port Status Port Status Port Statistics Port Statistics Administrator Administrator System Download Configuration Backup Factory Default Network Configuration Switch Configuration Serial Port Information Port Configuration Trunking Filter Setup VLAN Configuration Spanning Tree Port Mirroring SNMP Management User Authentication Close t System Download System Reboot Figure 3 3 Menu 2 2 8 2 Oe 8 A Configuration Backup Factory Default System Reboot Figure 3 4 Expanded Menu 3 2 Introducing the Web Configurator Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 3 1 2 The Web Configurator Front Panel Display The front panel graphic is displayed on all web screens to indicate the real time port status of the switch Dimension ES 2008 Figure 3 5 Web Configurator Front Panel Display A port in green means a device is connected to the port To view port information click on the ports to open a read only status win
28. Virtual LANs on the switch 9 1 Introduction A Virtual LAN VLAN is a logical network grouping that limits the broadcast domain It allows you to isolate network traffic so only members of the VLAN group receive traffic from the same VLAN group members Members on a different VLAN group cannot communicate with each other even though they are physically connected to the same switch Your switch supports port based and tag based VLANs By default all ports belong to a default VLAN VLAN ID 1 You cannot delete the default VLAN 9 2 VLAN Types The following sections discussed the types of VLANs your switch supports 9 2 1 Port Based VLAN Port based VLAN is the most common and simplest form of VLAN In a port based VLAN some ports are assigned to a VLAN group A port can only belong to one VLAN group By default all the ports on the switch belong to a VLAN group VID 1 You cannot delete the default VLAN 9 2 2 Tag Based VLANs IEEE 802 1Q VLAN Tag based VLAN on the switch is based on the IEEE 802 1Q specification that allows you to create VLANs across switches from different vendors IEEE 802 1Q VLAN inserts a tag into the Ethernet frames The tag contains a VLAN Identifier VID that indicates the VLAN numbers The following lists the advantages of IEEE 802 1Q 1 Multicast data traffic across different Ethernet devices is contained thus improving performance 2 A port can belong to more than one IEEE 802 1Q
29. and Installation Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 2 2 3 Network Cable Types The following table describes the types of network cable used for the different connection speeds The fiber and gigabit ports are not available on all ES models Make sure the 10 100 Base TX and or 1000Base T cable length between connections does not exceed 100 meters 328 feet Table 2 1 Network Cable Types SPEED NETWORK CABLE TYPE 10 Base TX 100Q 2 pair UTP STP Category 3 4 or 5 100 Base TX 100Q 2 pair UTP STP Category 5 1000BASE T 100Q 4 pair UTP STP Category 5 100BASE FX 50 62 5 125 micron multi mode fiber optics multi mode 100BASE FX 8 10 125 micron single mode fiber optics single mode 2 3 Front Panel LEDs All the LEDs are found on the front panel of the switch to indicate real time status of the ports and the switch 2 3 1 The PWR LED The PWR LED on the front panel indicates whether the switch is receiving power Table 2 2 The Switch Power LED Description LED COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION Power Green On The switch is receiving power Off The switch is not receiving power 2 3 2 10 100M Ethernet Port LEDs The LEDs for the 10 100M Ethernet ports give real time system information and status Hardware Description and Installation 2 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Figure 2 4 Ethernet Port LEDs The following table describes the LEDs for the Ethernet
30. and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 15 12 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Editing MAC Address Filter To change a MAC address filter entry in the table press TAB to select lt Edit gt and press ENTER Enter a new MAC address or change the port number and save the changes Deleting MAC Address Filter To remove a MAC address filter entry from the table press TAB to select lt Delete gt and press ENTER Select the entry you want to remove and press ENTER and save the changes 15 6 Miscellaneous Configuration This section shows you configuration menus in Mise Configuration menu Dimension Switch ES 2008 Misc Configuration Port Security Aging Time Setting Broadcast Storm Filtering Bridge Transmit Delay Bound Previous Menu Configure the port security Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 15 14 SMT Misc Configuration 15 6 1 Port Security Refer to the section on Port Security for background information Switch Configuration 15 13 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Select Port Security and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next Dimension Switch ES 2008 Port Security Enable Security disable for MAC Learning Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the Action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous
31. cause to request the user to disconnect the equipment For their own protection users should ensure that the electrical ground connections of the power utility telephone lines and internal metallic water pipe system if present are connected together This precaution may be particularly important in rural areas Caution Users should not attempt to make such connections themselves but should contact the appropriate electrical inspection authority or electrician as appropriate Note This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class A limits for radio noise emissions from digital apparatus set out in the radio interference regulations of Industry iv Information For Canadian Users Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Interference Statements and Warnings FCC Interference Statement This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC rules Operation is subject to the following two conditions 1 This device may not cause harmful interference 2 This device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operations FCC Warning This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with
32. for SNMP 16 4 Protocol Related Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Intelligent Switch System Options System Name System Contact System Location actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt ect the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 7 SMT SNMP System Options Refer to the Configuring SNMP section for field descriptions 16 3 2 Community Strings Intelligent Switch Community Strings Read only actions gt lt Edit gt lt Delete gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Add Edit Del community strings Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 8SMT SNMP Community Strings Refer to the Configuring SNMP section for field descriptions 16 3 3 Trap Manager Follow the steps below to add trap management stations Step 1 Select Trap Managers in the SNMP Configuration screen and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next Protocol Related Configuration 16 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Intelligent Switch Trap Managers actions gt lt Edit gt lt Delete gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 9 SMT SNMP Trap Manager Step 2 Select lt Add gt and press ENTER to display the Add SNMP Trap Manager screen as shown Intelligent Switch Add SNMP Trap Manager Community Name
33. menu to display the screen as shown next 6 2 Port Control Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Port Statistics The following information provides a view of the current status of the unit 1 o 2 49 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 o 7 o 8 o Clear Figure 6 2 Port Statistics The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 6 2 Port Statistics FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This field displays the port number of each entry State This field indicates whether the port is connected On to an Ethernet device or not connected Off Link This field indicates whether the port has a successful connection Up or no connection Down TxGoodPKT This field displays the number of packets transmitted successfully TxBadPKT This field displays the number of packet transmission failures RxGoodPKT This field displays the number of packets received successfully RxBadPKT This field displays the number of bad packets received TxAbort This field displays the number of aborted data transmissions Collision This field displays the number of collisions that occurred on the port Click Clear to reset the counters Port Control 6 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 7 Port Trunking This chapter describes how to configure trunk groups and IEEE 802 3ad link aggregation 7 1 Introduction Port Trunking or link aggregation lets you gr
34. proof of purchase should the product have indications of failure due to faulty workmanship and or materials ZyXEL will at its discretion repair or replace the defective products or components without charge for either parts or labor and to whatever extent it shall deem necessary to restore the product or components to proper operating condition Any replacement will consist of a new or re manufactured functionally equivalent product of equal value and will be solely at the discretion of ZyXEL This warranty shall not apply if the product is modified misused tampered with damaged by an act of God or subjected to abnormal working conditions NOTE Repair or replacement as provided under this warranty is the exclusive remedy of the purchaser This warranty is in lieu of all other warranties express or implied including any implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular use or purpose ZyXEL shall in no event be held liable for indirect or consequential damages of any kind of character to the purchaser To obtain the services of this warranty contact ZyXEL s Service Center for your Return Material Authorization RMA number Products must be returned Postage Prepaid It is recommended that the unit be insured when shipped Any returned products without proof of purchase or those with an out dated warranty will be repaired or replaced at the discretion of ZyXEL and the customer will be billed for parts and labor All repair
35. sornreciircsri tennein ia 13 5 Figure 14 1 SMT Switch Configuration s sessssseseseseeessreeessesrsreseesessreressesersreeessesees 14 1 Figure 14 2 SMT Device Configuration sseesesesesesesssreeessesrrsresresessreressesersreressesees 14 2 Figure 14 3 SMT Device Information cc ceescssseeseeesceeeeeceseeeeeeeceeesecaeeaeesecaeeareneees 14 3 Figure 14 4 SMT IP Configuration ccccecccesscescessceesceseceeceeeceecaeecaeeeaeeeeesereeereeseens 14 4 Figure 14 5 SMT Username Configuration 0 cscecsscseecceseeeeeseeeeeeceaecaeesecaeeeeeneees 14 5 Figure 14 6 SMT Password Configuration c ccsesseceeeeceseceeeeeceeeeneeeeceaeeeeeaeeaees 14 5 Figure 15 1 SMT Port Trunk Configuration cceceeeeeeecceeceeeeeceeeeeneeeeceaeeeeeaeenees 15 1 Figure 15 2 SMT Port Monitoring Configuration cceccceseeseesseeeeeeceeeeeseeeeeenseees 15 3 Figure 15 3 SMT VLAN Configuration cesccssecssesecneeeeceseeeesecaeeseeneeereneeeeeereneees 15 4 Figure 15 4 SMT VLAN Support Configuration Setting VLAN Mode eeee 15 5 Figure 15 5 SMT VLAN Support Configuration 802 1Q ecscsssseseceeeereneeeeeereneees 15 5 Figure 15 6 SMT Add a VLAN Group eccecesesssesecseesecsecseeecneesecsaeeeesaecatenecaeeateneees 15 6 Figure 15 7 SMT Edit Delete a VLAN Group ou eeeeeesecseeeeceeeeececeeecaeeaeeseeneeereneees 15 8 Figure 15 8 SMT Priority Configuration cccceesceesceseceseceseceeecneeeseeen
36. that come with a fiber port you can also use the fiber port to connect to other network switches The distance between two switches via fiber cable can be up to 2 Km multi mode or 30 Km single mode 1 2 Getting to Know Your ES 2008 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 1 4 1 Standalone Workgroup The switch can be used as a standalone switch to which computers servers and printer servers are directly connected to form a small workgroup Print Server Figure 1 1 Standalone Workgroup Example Server 1 4 2 Bridging Application For enterprise networks where large data broadcasts are constantly processed this switch is an ideal solution for department users to connect to the corporate backbone In the next illustration two Ethernet switches with attached computers print server and local server are all connected to the switch All devices in this network can communicate with each other through the switch and also access the server Getting to Know Your ES 2008 1 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch i us Workgroup B Workgroup A Server Figure 1 2 Bridging Application Example 1 4 3 VLAN Application VLAN Virtual Local Area Network allows a physical network to be partitioned into multiple logical networks Stations on a logical network belong to one group A station can belong to more than one group With VLAN a station cannot directly talk to or hear from stations tha
37. the TCP IP Control Panel 6 Click Save if prompted to save changes to your configuration 7 Turn on your Prestige and restart your computer if prompted Verifying Settings Check your TCP IP properties in the TCP IP Control Panel window Macintosh OS X 1 Click the Apple menu and click System Preferences to open System Preferences window the WH Grab File Edit Capt About This Mac Get Mac OS X Software System Preferences Dock gt Location 2 Click Network in the eo icon bar J Select Automatic from the Location list Select Built in Ethernet from the Show list 0 Click the TCP IP tab Subnet Mask Router Network al lt lt A Show All Displays Network Startup Disk Location Automatic lca Show Built in Ethernet ica PPPoE AppleTalk Proxies q Configure Using DHCP lia Baman Nameservers Optional IP Address 192 168 11 12 168 95 1 1 Provided by DHCP Server 255 255 254 0 Search Domains Optional 192 168 10 11 DHCP Client ID Ethernet Address Optional Example apple com earthlink net 00 05 02 43 93 ff Click the lock to prevent further changes 3 For dynamically assigned settings select Using DHCP from the Configure list Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 4 For statically assigned settings do the following From the Configure box se
38. the instruction manual may cause harmful interference to radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense CE Mark Warning This is a class A product In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures Taiwanese BCIQ A Warning Saha ie PMB Aeon TAERA oe AS ARES ERATE DEAT AAS Re SSSR Certifications Refer to the product page at www zyxel com Interference Statements and Warnings v Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch information ready Customer Support When contacting your Customer Support Representative please have the following gt Product model and serial number VV VV METHOD E MAIL SUPPORT SALES LOCATION WORLDWIDE support zyxel com tw sales zyxel com tw NORTH support zyxel com AMERICA sales zyxel com SCANDINAVIA support zyxel dk sales zyxel dk GERMANY support zyxel de sales zyxel de Warranty Information Firmware version information Date you received your product TELEPHONE FAX 886 3 578 3942 886 3 578 2439 1 714 632 0882 800 255 4101 1 714 632 0858 45 3955 0700 45 3955 0707 49 2405 6909 0 49 2405 6909 99 WEB SITE FTP SITE www zyxel com www europe zyxel com Brief description of the problem and the steps you took to
39. 1 1 Port Mirroring Follow the instructions in the table next to configure this screen Port Mirroring 11 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 11 1 Port Mirroring FIELD DESCRIPTION Port Mirroring State Select ENABLE from the drop down list box to activate port mirroring feature Select DISABLE to deactivate port mirroring This is the default setting Analysis Port You must select a port from the drop down list box to act as the sniffer port when you select ENABLE in the Port Mirroring State field This field is NONE if the Port Mirroring State field is DISABLE Monitor Ports This read only field displays the port number of the switch Monitor Rx Select this check box to monitor incoming traffic of the port Monitor Tx Select this check box to monitor outgoing traffic of the port 11 2 Port Mirroring Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 12 SNMP This chapter explains SNMP in the web configurator 12 1 About SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP is a protocol used for exchanging management information between network devices SNMP is a member of the TCP IP protocol suite Your switch supports SNMP version one SNMPv1 The next figure illustrates an SNMP management operation MANAGER SNMP AGENT AGENT AGENT Managed Device Managed Device Managed Device Figure 12 1 SNMP Management Model An SNMP managed network co
40. 11 11111111 11111111 11000000 Subnet Address 192 168 1 0 Lowest Host ID 192 168 1 1 Broadcast Address 192 168 1 63 Highest Host ID 192 168 1 62 Chart 8 Subnet 2 NETWORK NUMBER LAST OCTET BIT VALUE IP Address 192 168 1 64 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 01000000 Subnet Mask Binary 11111111 11111111 11111111 11000000 Subnet Address 192 168 1 64 Lowest Host ID 192 168 1 65 Broadcast Address 192 168 1 127 Highest Host ID 192 168 1 126 Chart 9 Subnet 3 NETWORK NUMBER LAST OCTET BIT VALUE IP Address 192 168 1 128 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 10000000 Subnet Mask Binary 11111111 11111111 11111111 11000000 Subnet Address 192 168 1 128 Lowest Host ID 192 168 1 129 Broadcast Address 192 168 1 191 Highest Host ID 192 168 1 190 IP Subnetting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chart 10 Subnet 4 NETWORK NUMBER LAST OCTET BIT VALUE IP Address 192 168 1 192 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 11000000 Subnet Mask Binary 11111111 11111111 11111111 11000000 Subnet Address 192 168 1 192 Lowest Host ID 192 168 1 193 Broadcast Address 192 168 1 255 Highest Host ID 192 168 1 254 Example Eight Subnets Similarly use a 27 bit mask to create 8 subnets 001 010 011 100 101 110 The following ta
41. 4 Troubleshooting FD COL LED Q eee eeeeccescceseeeeceseceeceeecaeeeseeneeenseeneees 19 2 Table 19 5 Troubleshooting Console Port cccccccsseesseesseesceeseeeseeeeeeecesecesecneeeaeeeneeees 19 2 Table 19 6 Troubleshooting Telnet ceeeceesessecesecesecenecseecaeeeseeeeeesneeseseneenaeenseeeseees 19 3 Table 19 7 Troubleshooting Web Configurator cccccecceesseesceesceeseeseceecesecneeeneeeneenes 19 3 Table 19 8 Troubleshooting Internet Browser Display ccsscesseecseeseeeseeeeeeseesseees 19 4 Table 19 9 Troubleshooting Login Username and Password cssecsssseeeeeeeeeeeseeeees 19 4 Table 19 10 Troubleshooting Improper Network Cabling and Topology 06 19 5 List of Tables XV Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Preface Congratulations on your purchase of the ES 2008 Ethernet Switch About The ES 2008 Series Switches The ES 2008 switch allows you to easily configure and manage your network via a web browser Just click your mouse instead of typing cryptic command strings Moreover the ES 2008 can also be managed via SNMP There are four ES 2008 Ethernet switch models MODEL DESCRIPTION ES 2008 Eight port 10 100M Ethernet switch ES 2008 SC Eight port 10 100M Ethernet switch with multi mode fiber port ES 2008 SC30 Eight port 10 100M Ethernet switch with single mode fiber port ES 2008 GTP Eight port 10 100M Ethernet switch with one gigabit port About this User
42. 802 1Q with GVRP to set up tag based VLAN groups that extend beyond the local switch Select 802 1Q without GVRP to set up tag based VLAN groups on the switch only Select Port Based to set up port based VLANs Refer to the chapter on VLANs Advanced Switch Configuration 5 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 6 Port Control This chapter shows you how to configure the Ethernet ports and view port status 6 1 Configuring the Ethernet Ports The Port Configuration screen allows you to configure settings for individual Ethernet ports on the switch and view the status of all the ports Click Administrator and then Port Configuration to display the screen as shown next Port Configuration Enable z Enable z Moo z Fa z Enable z 7 2 3 4 zi mw Port Status The following information provides a view of the current status of the unit al 2 On off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 3 On off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 4 On off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 5 On Off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 6 On off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 7 On off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 8 On off Down Auto N A 100 N A Full N A On N A 9 On Off Down N A
43. AE 8 10 15 10 Advantages cccccesceeseeeeseeteens 8 10 Setting Max Bridge Transmit Delay Static MAC Address ccccceeee 15 10 Bound ceeietsecige haeilin wee eee 15 16 Static Trunk Group Information 7 3 Setting up Your Computer s IP Address STP inate st E O E TI 10 1 AE E E E O A Activating 0 0 0 10 2 16 2 Macintosh OS 8 9 ccsccsesesseseseees H Configuring 5 00 dvi aonnine 16 1 Macintosh OS Xo eee cesses I Forward Delay Time 10 3 Windows 2000 NT XP cceceeee D Hello Time cece 10 3 Windows 95 98 Me eeeeeeeeees A MAX A Geaa 10 3 Simple Network Management Protocol Parameters c ccceeseeeees 10 2 16 2 E EEE P EEEE EEEE EEO 12 1 Port Configuration 10 4 SMNP Community Strings 16 5 Pott States drann iien at 10 5 SMT See System Management Terminal Port Status c ccccscscseseeeeeees 10 5 Control KG Yap ccsii tomcctovcctisertyve 13 4 Priority aieeaa e 10 3 Idle time OU eee 13 1 Root Bridge cccccccceseeeeeenees 10 3 Login Screen seeeeseeeeeseeseeeeeeee 13 2 Root Path Cost cceceeeceeeeeseeee 10 4 Main VICI fcincssssemmmnonamanseiverore 13 5 Root Botha aceasah ashe daeteeueies 10 4 Menu Breakdown cc c00 13 4 STP Parameters Per Port 16 3 Navigations eoe en 13 3 Subnet MaskS c ccceesesssseseseseecseeeees M OVEEVIE Wiiro 13 3 Switch Configuration ccccceeee 5 1 Sniffer port See Mirror Port Switch Inf
44. Counters e 08 fetes kc a eet E R EEE ensues 17 2 Figure 17 4 SMT Switch Information ceeeescsssseseceseceeeeceeeeceeeeceaeeeeesecaeeeeeneees 17 3 Figure 18 1 SMT Startup Message ccccesccsssesecsseeseeeseeseceeeeeseeeseenseeaecaeceeeaeeeneeees 18 2 Figure 18 2 1K Xmodem Firmware Upload Example ccccccesceeseeseeeteesseeseeeneees 18 2 Figure 18 3 SMT Firmware Upload Process csssssessesesceeeeeceseneeeeceaeeeeeaecaeeeeeneees 18 3 Figure 18 4 Web Configurator Firmware Upgrade cceeeccscssceseseeeseceeeecneseecaenees 18 3 Figure 18 5 Web Configurator Successful Firmware Retrieval ec eeeeeseeeeeeeeees 18 4 Figure 18 6 Backup Configuration ccccesecssesceeeeeeecseeseceeeeceaeceeseecaeeseeaeeaeeeeeneees 18 4 Figure 18 7 Web Configurator Backup Configuration File Successful 0 0 eee 18 5 Figure 18 8 Web Configurator Restore Configuration ecceecceseeecesecseeeecnecneeeeneees 18 5 Figure 18 9 Web Configurator Successful Configuration File Retrieval s 18 6 List of Figures xiii Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch List of Tables Table 2 1 Network Cable Types cccccceessessseeseeeseesecesecesecaecaeecseesaeseneeeeeseresrenseenaeenaes 2 3 Table 2 2 The Switch Power LED Description 0 ccccesceseesseesseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeneenseenaes 2 3 Table 2 3 Ethernet Port LED Descriptions c ecccesccesececeesceeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeseenseenseenaes 2 4 T
45. D2 AA A Ae e ete t 01 DZ M A te te e eee 01 OZ H H E te t mt e 01 02 tt te te te te ee ae 239 255 255 253 239 255 255 254 0001 0001 D1 02 sett te te te ee ee 01 02 ttt te te ne ee ee Figure 8 5 IGMP Snooping The following table describes the read only fields in this screen Filter and Security Setup 8 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 8 3 IGMP Snooping FIELD DESCRIPTION IP Address This field displays the IP multicast address in the range 224 0 0 0 through 239 255 255 254 VLAN ID This field displays the VLAN or multicast group ID Member Port This field displays the port number to which the Ethernet device is connected 8 2 Static MAC Address You can add a MAC address to the MAC address table on the switch A static MAC address will remain in the MAC address table permanently even if the Ethernet device is not connected to the switch With static MAC addresses the switch avoids re learning the MAC addresses of the Ethernet devices every time the switch reboots or disconnects from the network 8 2 1 Adding Static MAC Address Follow the steps to add static MAC addresses Step 1 Click Administrator and then Filter Setup Step 2 Click the Static MAC Addresses tab to display the screen as shown in the figure below 8 6 Filter and Security Setup Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Filter Setup IGMP Snooping Static MAC Addresses Port Securi
46. Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch User s Guide Version 1 02 March 2003 YA Networking Power Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Copyright Copyright 2003 by ZyXEL Communications Corporation The contents of this publication may not be reproduced in any part or as a whole transcribed stored in a retrieval system translated into any language or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic mechanical magnetic optical chemical photocopying manual or otherwise without the prior written permission of ZyXEL Communications Corporation Published by ZyXEL Communications Corporation All rights reserved Disclaimer ZyXEL does not assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any products or software described herein Neither does it convey any license under its patent rights nor the patents rights of others ZyXEL further reserves the right to make changes in any products described herein without notice This publication is subject to change without notice Trademarks Trademarks mentioned in this publication are used for identification purposes only and may be properties of their respective owners ii Copyright Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch ZyXEL Limited Warranty ZyXEL warrants to the original end user purchaser that this product is free from any defects in materials or workmanship for a period of up to two 2 years from the date of purchase During the warranty period and upon
47. Frame Type si a 4 1 1 13 a 1 i Disable actions gt lt Quit gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt Select the Action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Space Toggle Esc Action menu Figure 15 5 SMT VLAN Support Configuration 802 1Q The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 15 3 SMT VLAN Support Configuration 802 1Q FIELD DESCRIPTION VLAN Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select either 802 1Q or Mode 802 1QwithGVRP The following fields display on the screen Switch Configuration 15 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 15 3 SMT VLAN Support Configuration 802 1Q FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This read only field displays the port number or the trunk group on the switch Note This field is 0 to indicate that a port is in a trunk group VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID number that will be assigned to untagged traffic on a given port For example if the default VLAN ID of port 10 is 100 all untagged packets on port 10 will belong to VLAN 100 The default setting for all ports is 1 This feature is useful to accommodate devices that you want to participate in the VLAN but that don t support tagging Only one untagged VLAN is allowed per port Ingress Select Enable from the drop down list box to forward frames belonging to a Filtering specific VLAN if the port belongs to that VLAN Select Disable to forward all frames regardless of the port s VLAN s
48. IB RFC 1643 RMON Support RMON 4 groups 1 2 3 9 Console Port DB 9 RS 232C Physical and Environmental Weight Main switch 1 08Kg Product Specifications Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Physical and Environmental LED Main switch power 10 100Mbps LK ACT FD COL 100FX Fiber ES 2008 SC and ES 2008 SC30 LK ACT FD COL 1000Base T ES 2008 GTP 1000M LK ACT FD COL Dimensions 250 W x 132 D x 37 H mm Power Supply 100 240VAC 50 60Hz internal universal power supply Power 17W max Consumption Operating 0 C 45 C 32 F to 113 F Temperature Operational 10 to 90 Non condensing Humidity EMI FCC Class A CE Safety UL cUL Product Specifications Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch A Acceptable Frame Type 9 7 15 6 Accessing the SMT Console POT inesi 13 1 Me lnc tres cities cleat 13 1 Aggregator Information 7 3 All High Before Low cesses 5 2 Analysis Port 11 2 15 3 Auto Negotiation 6 2 B Bridge Transmit Delay Bound 5 2 Broadcast Storm Filter Mode 5 2 15 15 C Cabling Length seese 19 5 Calculating Subnet Mask M Change Switch IP Address 14 3 Change System Password 14 5 Change System Username 14 4 Classes of IP Addresses eeeeeeee L Configuration File Restoran naiss 18 5 Configuration File eee 18 4 RESO
49. Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 15 SMT Port Security The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 15 7 SMT Port Security FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This read only field displays the port number or the trunk group on the switch Note This field is 0 to indicate that a port is in a trunk group Enable Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Enable to prevent the port from Security learning new MAC addresses Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 15 6 2 MAC Address Time Out To specify the time out period for inactive MAC addresses select Aging Time Setting to display the screen as shown next Enter a time interval between 300 and 765 in seconds in the MAC Age Interval sec field If you enter 0 the MAC addresses will never timeout 15 14 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Aging Time Setting MAC Age Interval sec 300 0 300 765 actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt gt ct the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 16 SMT Aging Time Setting 15 6 3 Broadcast Storm Filter Mode In the Broadcast Strom Filter Mode filed press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Yes to activate broadcast storm filter Dimension Swit
50. O K Press X key to start Xmodem receiver Key 78 Download IMAGE through console 1K Xmodem baudrate 57600bps Start Xmodem Receiver CCCCCCCCC Download IMAGE Update firmware Update Firmware Note console baudrate of new image is 9600bps Reboot gt Figure 18 3 SMT Firmware Upload Process After the firmware upload process has completed the switch will automatically restart You must change the console port rate back to 9600bps Check the System Information screen to confirm that you have uploaded the correct firmware version 18 2 2 Firmware Upgrade Using the Web Configurator Follow the steps below to upgrade firmware via the web configurator Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Follow the steps in the Accessing the Web Configurator section to log in to the web configurator Run a TFTP server program on the computer and specify the location of the firmware file and the communication mode Click TFTP Update Firmware to display the screen as shown next Firmware Download a s E Ee Figure 18 4 Web Configurator Firmware Upgrade Enter the IP address of the TFTP server where the new firmware file resides in the TFTP Server IP Address field Specify the name of the firmware file in the Firmware File Name field The firmware filename must not be more than 15 ASCH characters and must be exactly the same as the firmware file on the computer Fir
51. Press ENTER to display the login screen For your first login enter the default user name admin and default password 1234 and then press ENTER The user name and password are case sensitive Dimension Switch ES 2008 User Name Password Figure 13 3 SMT Login Screen 13 2 Introducing the SMT Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 13 5 The SMT Overview The following figure gives you an overview of the various SMT menu screens of your switch Switch ea PortTrunk Port Mirroring Configuration Administration Configuration Password Configuration Priori Configuration Broadcast Storm Filtering Bridge Transmit Delay Bound Configuration System Reset Factory Defatul Enable Disable STP Function rameter g STP Per Port Setting al i Community Strings LACP Group Setti 3 z g 5 z Figure 13 4 SMT Overview 13 6 Navigating the SMT Interface Familiarize yourself with the SMT operations before you attempt to modify the configuration 13 6 1 SMT Screen Navigation The following figure shows the breakdown of most SMT screens Introducing the SMT 13 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Intelligent Switch Device Information Screen Title Device Name ES 2008SC Intelligent Switch The configuration Device Location 8TP 1FX Ports menu Device Content Earth Device Description ES 2008SC Intelligent Switch The actions a
52. Quit gt lt Previous Page gt lt Next Page gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 15 SMT LACP Group Status The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 16 4 SMT LACP Group Status FIELD DESCRIPTION Group Key This read only field displays the static trunk group number Port This read only field displays the port number in the static trunk group Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 16 10 Protocol Related Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 17 Status and Counters This chapter describes how to view port status and statistics and general switch information 17 1 Status and Counters In the SMT main screen select Status and Counters and press ENTER A screen displays as shown Dimension Switch ES 2008 Status and Counters Port Status Port Counters System Information Main Menu Displays current status of all the switc ports Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 17 1 SMT Status and Counters 17 1 1 Port Status In the Status and Counters screen select Port Status and press ENTER to display the Port Status screen Status and Counters 17 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Port Statu
53. Setup 802 1Q VLAN Port Tagging cccceccseeseeseeeeceeeceeeeeseenseentes 9 5 List of Figures xi Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Figure 9 7 Tag Based VLAN Port VLAN ID ce eccesesssesecseeeeceeeeceneceeesecaeeeeeneeaeeerenee 9 6 Figure 10 1 Activating STP o ifcciscciets case occu teiecsie eve tea dinaran nei s 10 2 Figure 10 2 Configure Spanning Tree Parameters ececesescesseceeeeeeeeeeeceeeeeeeeneees 10 2 Figure 10 3 View STP Root Bridge Information ceccececcsseecesseceeeeeeeeeeeeneeeeeeaeneees 10 3 Figure 10 4 Configuring STP Port Parameters ceeeceeseeccesecreeeeceeeeeceeeeecaeeeeeaeeaees 10 4 Figure 1025 STP Port Status nineio ionien e e i a a 10 5 Fig re 11 1 Port Mirroring eneen ols oh A A O ees 11 1 Figure 12 1 SNMP Management Model s nessesseesssseseessreeessesrsresersessrereseesessrenessesees 12 1 Figure 12 2 SNMP Management eesessseseseeeesssesestseerrseststeretsssstsrstersesesstsrserereessss 12 3 Figure 13 1 Starting a Telnet Session ec eecesessessecseeeecneeeceaeeecaecaeeeeaecaeeseeaeeeteneees 13 1 Figure 13 2 HyperTerminal Communication Parameter Settings Example 13 2 Figure 13 3 SMT Login Screen ysssets te tccoseevessbeocenssasesteveha A EREE OEA RES 13 2 Figure 13 4 SMT OVerViEW neiise e a i E a E E 13 3 Figure 13 5 SMT Menu Breakdown ecessccsseessssecseesecneeeecaeeecsecaeeseeaecateeecaeeeeeneees 13 4 Figure 13 6 SMT Main Menu
54. Siena a aaa Ee 18 5 Backup ise6ssecseets ae e 18 4 Console Port Communication Settings E E E AAE ESE NE 19 2 Console Port Settings 006 13 2 D Data path loop 19 5 Index Device Information c ee 14 3 Dynamic Port Trunking 7 1 Advantages ccceesceeseeeeeseeteenees 7 1 Requirements ccesseeseeseeeeees 7 1 Dynamic VLAN 9 2 E Enable Delay Bound eee 5 2 F Faulty cables ccescessesseeseeeteeees 19 5 FIFO See First Come First Served Filename Convention Firmware and Configuration Files 18 1 Note for web configurator 18 1 Firmware Upgrade cccseseee 18 1 Requirement for web configurator 18 1 Via Console Port cesses 18 2 Waning osien seeerei ares 18 1 Web Configurator cee 18 3 Firmware Version eseese 17 3 Firmware Version Warning 18 1 First Come First Served e0e 5 2 Flow Control ccceeeeeeeee 6 2 13 2 Forgot My Login Password 19 4 G GARP 3 esse seek See Generic Attribute Registration Protocol GARP VLAN Registration Protocol 9 2 General Switch Setup 6 14 2 W Index Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Generic Attribute Registration Protocol LACP Work Ports 7 3 sedesde shdevigetied T 9 2 Link Aggregate Control Protocol 7 1 GVRP See GARP VLAN Registration Link Aggregation See Port Trunking Protoco
55. State eee 11 2 Protocol Port Security sinerien 8 11 Port State Activity ccecee 16 9 Port Security eeeeeeeeeeeeeeceees 15 13 Status woes sieesbhsnce tess E 7 4 Port Statistics cceeseeseeeee 6 2 17 2 LACP Group Setting Port Status cece eiseres 17 1 SM Teee a 16 7 Port Stats neonne 6 2 LACP State Activity c cece 7 4 Port Trunking 7 1 LACP Status Configurating ceeeee 7 2 15 1 SM Tae a aaea eet 16 9 System Priority sesssseesseseeseeseeee 7 2 Index X Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Port VLAN ID siesccsdesesdecsccssnetecutsnesece 9 6 Get E dialencesiatetlenies 12 2 Port Based VLAN 9 1 9 3 15 7 Managert ionieni 12 1 Priority Configuration 15 8 Traprain o cyte ec cto 12 2 Priority Level sc 5 sche tieccicetesceceos 15 8 Trap Manager 12 2 Priority Queue Assignment 5 3 Trap Managers ceceeseeceeee 12 4 Protocol Enable Settings 5 3 VETSIOM Sscestececceee ee 12 1 Protocol Related Configuration 16 1 SNMP A geht onnie 12 1 SNMP Configuration SMi anran tevevecteedeteess os 16 4 R SNMP Manager ossee 12 1 SNMP System Options 0 16 4 Recommended Path Cost 10 1 SNMP Trap Managet eee 16 5 Root Path Cost sser 10 1 Source port o s See Monitor Port ROOUP OM fede nia heer 10 1 Spanning Tree Protocol See STP Speed ha coccinea en ainis 19 1 Static MAC Address seseeeeeeee 8 10 S Nad ina a R
56. Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 7 SMT Edit Delete a VLAN Group Step 2 Press TAB to select lt Edit gt in the actions menu and press ENTER Step 3 Follow the steps in Section 15 3 2 for tag based VLAN or Section 15 3 3 for port based VLAN to make changes 15 3 6 Deleting a VLAN Group Use the Edit Delete a VLAN Group screen to delete an existing VLAN Follow the steps below to delete a VLAN group Step 1 Inthe VLAN Configuration main menu select Edit Delete a VLAN Group and press ENTER to display the screen as shown in Figure 15 7 Step 2 Press TAB to select lt Delete gt in the actions menu and press ENTER Step 3 Select an entry and press ENTER to delete the VLAN group Step 4 Press ESC and select lt Save gt in the actions menu to save the settings back to the switch 15 4 Priority Configuration Priority is a value between 0 and 7 assigned to each frame with 7 being the highest priority Frames assigned a higher priority are transmitted before frames with a lower priority Each priority number is mapped either the Low or High traffic class or queue and frames are transmitted based on what queue they are in Frames in the High queue are transmitted out a port first In the Switch Configuration screen select Priority Configuration and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next 15 8 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Swi
57. VLAN 3 Improved security with logical grouping of users VLAN 9 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dynamic VLANs GARP VLAN Registration Protocol GVRP is a Generic Attribute Registration Protocol GARP application that provides VLAN registration services through dynamic configuration or registration and distribution of VLAN membership information across the network With GVRP the switch is able to register necessary VLAN members to create IEEE 802 1Q compliant VLANs on links with other devices that are running GVRP GVRP automatically provides consistent VLAN ID across the network to reduce VLAN configuration errors GVRP propagates VLAN information to other GVRP aware devices automatically without the need to manually configure the VLANs on each device In addition if the VLAN configuration on a device changes GVRP automatically changes the VLAN configurations of the affected devices 9 3 Selecting VLANSupport Select the type of VLANs to support in the Switch Configuration screen Click Administrator Switch Configuration and then the Advanced tab to set the VLAN Operation Mode field Protocol Enable Setting I Enable Spanning Tree Protocol I Enable IGMP Protocol IGMP Query Mode Auto VLAN Operation Mode No VLAN hd Apply Default Help Figure 9 1 Switch Configuration Enable Protocols Follow the instructions in the table next to select the VLAN mode Table 9 1 VLAN Operation Mode
58. VLAN Configuration Group Name test VLAN ID 2 Port Setting Port Setting 1 N A 6 N A 2 N A 7 Tag S 3 N A 8 Tag 7 4 N A 9 N A 5 N A Figure 9 6 VLAN Setup 802 1Q VLAN Port Tagging Follow the instructions in the next table to set the fields in this screen VLAN 9 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 9 3 VLAN Setup 802 1Q VLAN Port Tagging FIELD DESCRIPTION VLAN This read only field displays the name of the VLAN Name VLAN ID This read only field displays the identification number of the VLAN group Port No This read only field displays the port number on the switch Setting Select Tag from the drop down list box to add VLAN ID to the outgoing frames on this port Otherwise select Untag 9 5 1 Configure Port Settings Click Administration VLAN Configuration and then Port VLAN ID to display the screen as shown next VLAN Configuration Basic Port LAN ID Assign a Port VLAN ID 1510 for untagged traffic Sn aaoh port the chang thi al fi Disable z al z Disable z fi Disable z E z Disable z 2 a fi Disable z all z Disable z 4 fi Disable z E z Disable z Disable Apply Default Figure 9 7 Tag Based VLAN Port VLAN ID The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 9 4 Tag Based VLAN Port VLAN ID FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This read only field displays the port number on the switc
59. able 2 4 100FX Module LED Descriptions cesccesecesecsceereeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeneenseenaes 2 4 Table 2 5 Gigabit Module LED Descriptions cesccesecseeseeeseeeeeeeseeeeceeeneeneenseenaes 2 5 Table 3 1 Commonly Used Button cccecccesseessceseceseceseceecseeeseeseeeeeeeeeeseenseeneenseenaes 3 3 Table 3 2 View Switch Information ccccecceesessscessceseceseceecseesseeeeeeeeeeeeeseeseeneesseenaes 3 4 Table 4 1 Network Configuration cccecceescessceseceseceseceseceecaeesseeeeeeeeeeeseeeenaeenseceaeenaes 4 1 Table 4 2 User Authentication neccs an a i i 4 2 Table 5 1 Switching Configuration Advanced ccccecccssessseeseeesceesceeeeseensecsseeneeeneeenes 5 2 Table 6 1 Port Comfi guration oo ccceecceesceesceseceeceseceecaeecseeeaeeeecesseeneseeeeeeeeenaeenseesaeenaes 6 1 Table 6 2 Port Statistics rccnatu win n NE EGEA RE E R 6 3 Table 7 1 Trunking Aggregator Setting esesesesseeseseeeessteressesersresersesseeressesresreserseeseene 7 2 Table 7 2 Aggregator Information cccceeceeseesscesecesecesecaeecaeeeneeeneeeeeseeeeeeneeneenaeenaes 7 3 Table 7 3 Trunk State Activity soisin isisi ieii e EE E E E aS 7 4 Table 8 1 IGMP Message Descriptions cccesccesscesecesecseecseeeseeeneeeseeeseeseenaeenseenaeenaes 8 5 Table 8 2 IGMP Query Modernisieren iii ia ii iina 8 6 Table 8 3 IGMP Snooping sneri rinii e E E E e i na 8 10 Table 9 1 VLAN Operation Mode cecccecccessceseeeeceseese
60. ame to identify the VLAN VLAN ID Enter a VLAN identification number The number must be between 1 and 4094 Add Select a port number from the left selection list and click Add to add the port to the VLAN Remove Select a port number from the right selection list and click Remove to remove the port from the VLAN Ports in the same VLAN must be in the same trunk group 9 5 Tag Based VLAN Configuration Follow the steps below to configure VLANs on the switch Step 1 In the Switch Configuration screen select either 802 1Q with GVRP or 802 1Q without GVRP from the VLAN Operation Mode drop down list box Then click Apply Step 2 Click Administrator and then VLAN Configuration to display the basic VLAN screen as shown next VLAN Configuration Basic Port VLAN ID 802 1Q with without GVRP LAN Information default__1 Add Edit Delete Previous Page Next Page Help Figure 9 4 VLAN Setup 802 1Q with without GVRP VLAN Information VLAN Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 3 Click Add to add a new VLAN A setup screen displays VLAN Configuration Basic Port LAN ID Group Name VLAN ID Add Remove 0 w m o e a N Next Help Figure 9 5 Tag Based VLAN 802 1 Q VLAN Basic Setup Follow the instructions in Table 9 2 to set the fields in this screen All ports in the same VLAN must be in the same trunk group Step 4 Click Next to continue
61. and Counters Displays system or port statistics and information Switch Static Use this menu to perform switch configuration such as port and Configuration VLAN settings and change login information Protocol Related Use this menu to configure STP SNMP GVRP and LACP Configuration settings System Reset Select this option to reset the switch Configuration Logout Select this option to log out of the SMT menus Introducing the SMT 13 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 14 Basic System Setup This chapter shows you how to set up the switch for administrative purposes 14 1 Introduction Use the menus in the Switch Configurations screen to configure the switch In the main menu press TAB to select Switch Configuration and press ENTER to display the Switch Configuration menu as shown next Dimension Switch ES 2008 Switch Configuration Administration Configuration Port Trunk Configuration Port Mirroring Configuration VLAN Configuration Priority Configuration MAC Address Configuration Misc Configuration Main Menu Configure the system IP and passi ord Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 14 1 SMT Switch Configuration The following table describes each submenu in this screen Table 14 1 Switch Configuration Menu Choice SUBMENU DESCRIPTION Administration Use this menu to set the system name IP address and Configuration password Port Trunk Conf
62. ate Activity Passive Passive Passive Passive Active Active actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 14 SMT LACP State Activity The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 16 3 SMT LACP State Activity FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This read only field displays only the port number in a dynamic trunk group For example in Figure 16 14 port 5 and 6 not shown are not ina dynamic trunk group State Activity Press SPACE BAR to select either Passive or Active and press ENTER Select Active to have the port automatically send LACP packets to another trunk port on the other side of the link to negotiate a trunk link configuration Select Passive to have the port respond to LACP packets but cannot negotiate a trunk link configuration with another trunk port on the other end of the link This is the default setting for all ports Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 16 5 3 LACP Group Status The LACP Group Status screen displays the ports in a static trunk group Protocol Related Configuration 16 9 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Intelligent Switch LACP Group Status Static Trunking Group Group Key Port_No actions gt lt
63. ble shows class C IP address last octet values for each subnet Chart 11 Eight Subnets SUBNET SUBNET FIRST LAST BROADCAST ADDRESS ADDRESS ADDRESS ADDRESS 1 0 1 30 31 2 32 33 62 63 3 64 65 94 95 4 96 97 126 127 5 128 129 158 159 6 160 161 190 191 7 192 193 222 223 8 224 223 254 255 The following table is a summary for class C subnet planning Chart 12 Class C Subnet Planning NO BORROWED SUBNET MASK NO NO HOSTS PER HOST BITS SUBNETS SUBNET 1 255 255 255 128 25 2 126 2 255 255 255 192 26 4 62 3 255 255 255 224 27 8 30 IP Subnetting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chart 12 Class C Subnet Planning NO BORROWED SUBNET MASK NO NO HOSTS PER HOST BITS SUBNETS SUBNET 4 255 255 255 240 28 16 14 5 255 255 255 248 29 32 6 6 255 255 255 252 30 64 2 7 255 255 255 254 31 128 1 Subnetting With Class A and Class B Networks For class A and class B addresses the subnet mask also determines which bits are part of the network number and which are part of the host ID A class B address has two host ID octets available for subnetting and a class A address has three host ID octets see Chart 1 available for subnetting The following table is a summary for class B subnet planning Chart 13 Class B Subnet Planning
64. by the agent to inform the manager of some events 12 1 1 Trap Manager A trap manager is a management station that receives traps the system alerts generated If no trap manager is defined then no traps are generated 12 2 Configuring SNMP Click Administrator and then SNMP Management to display the screen shown next 12 2 SNMP Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch SNMP Management System Options Name Location Contact Apply Help Community Strings Current Strings New Community String public__FRO Add String Remove RO RW Trap Managers Current Managers New Manager none Add IP Address EE Community Figure 12 2 SNMP Management The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 12 1 SNMP Management FIELD DESCRIPTION System Options You must fill in all three fields Name Enter a descriptive name for the switch for identification purposes Location Enter the location of the switch Contact Enter the name of the contact person for the switch Community Strings Current This list box displays the current configured community strings of the Strings switch To remove a string select the string in the list and click Remove New Fill in the field below to add a new community string or password and Community click Add Strings String Enter a new community string or password SNMP Dimension ES 2008 Ethern
65. c bandwidth 3 8 Gbps switching PWR 100M LK ACT and FD COL LEDs Ten inch desktop size design 1 2 Management Features gt gt Web based management SNMP network management Getting to Know Your ES 2008 1 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch gt Supports port based and tagged VLAN Groups Port Trunking and IEEE 802 3ad LACP MIB II RFC1213 supported IP multicast IGMP snooping Quality of Service QoS Supports port mirror broadcast filter static MAC address port security and GVRP Configure Manage individual ports gt Enable Disable individual ports VV VV V WV v 1 3 Management Methods The switch supports the following management methods e Local console management e Telnet management e Web configurator e SNMP network management 1 3 1 Console and Telnet Management Managing the switch through the console port requires a direct connection between the computer and the switch using an RS 232 console cable You can also telnet into the switch from any computer on your network provided you know the IP address of the switch 1 3 2 Web Configurator The switch comes with an embedded HTML web configurator It offers advanced management features and allows you to manage the switch from anywhere on the network through Microsoft Internet Explorer version 5 0 or later 1 4 Applications The switch is ideally suited as a workgroup switch or a bridge for large network segmentation For ES 2008 models
66. cciecdicceccseecssesccdeeeecesdtesdsngancvucesteceteedeeesscocsesoeeeds 15 8 15 5 MAC Address Configuration ccccecccesecesecssecseeeseeeseeeeeeeseeeecsaeeeeeneeeneeees 15 9 15 6 Miscellaneous Configuration ccceesccesecsseeseeeseeeseeeeeeeseeereeeeeeceeenseenaes 15 13 Chapter 16 Protocol Related Configuration sscssccscsssesssssesssessessssesesesseees 16 1 Table of Contents ix Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Lod Introduction mongira nn ii eran laces taace hegre Ade sheen eat aca nde 16 1 16 2 STP Configuration c c0 5 ceiscee seteccsesv recteencssts eee E cetd cuss E 16 1 16 3 SNMP Configuration 223 6085 Sect actegte eget hice eo 16 4 16 4 GVRP Configurations enean tok obs E A eS 16 6 165 LACP Configuration eie eoni e eed eas ee ee 16 7 Chapter 17 Status and Counters sscccsscsssscsccssssccscesesseesscsssseesssesssseesseesesseseoes 17 1 IAI Status and Counters onesie a a a a e a es 17 1 Chapter 18 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance scsscsssssssssseees 18 1 18 1 Eil jame Convention aisre topsin iniii a a i a 18 1 18 2 Firmware Upgraden E EA S ER E 18 1 18 3 Configuration File Maintenance sssseseseesseeeesseeeessesersreseesersreresseseeseeseesesses 18 4 Chapter 19 Troubleshooting sccssccscsscsssccscsecsscccccesesesscesssssscccesessesccessesesesoes 19 1 19 1 Using LEDs to Diagnose Problems eccceecceseceseeeseceeeeee
67. centage of the port s total bandwidth used by Storm Filter broadcast traffic When broadcast traffic for a port increases above the Mode threshold broadcast storm control becomes active Select a percentage number from the drop down list box to set the threshold of the ports Select OFF to disable this feature This is the default setting Priority Queue Select a priority Service queuing type First Come Select this option to send packets in the order of arrival First Served All High Select this option to send all high priority packets before sending packet Before Low with low priority WRR Select the Weighted Round Robin WRR option to send packets depending on the weight or priority in the Packet Weight field For example if Packet Weight is 2 then the switch sends out two packets with higher priority for every one low priority packet sent Packet This is the high weight and low weight ratio Weight High Specify the number of high priority packets to send The number must be Low bigger than 1 Note The default value for the low weight value is 1 You cannot change this number Enable Delay Select this option and specify a time in the Max Delay Time field in Bound milliseconds to specify a time period a low priority packet is allowed to queue in the switch 5 2 Advanced Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 5 1 Switching Configuration Advance
68. cesecsnecseeeseeeneeeneeeeeseenseenseenaeenaes 9 2 Table 9 2 VLAN Setup Port based Configuration cccccccsceesseesceeeceseceeeeseenseeasenaes 9 4 Table 9 3 VLAN Setup 802 1Q VLAN Port Tagging cccccseesessssseceseceseceseesseeeenees 9 6 Table 9 4 Tag Based VLAN Port VLAN ID ou ee eeceeeeeseeeeceseeesecaecenecaeeeneeeseeeneenneeaes 9 6 Table 10 1 Recommended Path Cost ceecsecssssssssecseeeecneeeeceseeeeecaeeeessecaeeeeeaeeeeeneees 10 1 Table 10 2 Configure STP Parameter cerise e a E E R 10 2 Table 10 3 View STP Root Bridge Information s sssesssseeessesersreseesesersessersessreeessesees 10 3 Table 10 4 STP Port Status niiseni irioiieciesroinirii rein eean ES E iN 10 5 Table ti l Port Mirror o eenia i E EREE RE A E 11 2 Table 12 1 SNMP Managementa moiin e E a E O E E EES 12 3 Table 13 1 Control Key Descriptions ses ssssessseesseeeessesersreseesesstsesseserssseesessreressesees 13 4 Table 13 2 SMT Menu Summary cccecccecesscessceeeceseceseceseceecaeeeaeeeseeeeeseseseeeseenseens 13 5 Table 14 1 Switch Configuration Menu Choice c ccccesseesseeseceeeeeeceeeeeeseeneeensees 14 1 Table 14 2 SMT Device Information cccceecceeseessceseceseceseeeecseeaecaeeeaeeeseesaeenseeseeees 14 3 Table 14 3 SMT IP Configuration cccccccceescessceeeceeeceecesecenecseecaeeeneeeaeeseeseeeeereneens 14 4 Table 15 1 SMT Port Trunk Configuration cceecceccesecesecesecneeeseeeneeseeeeeeserensee
69. ch ES 2008 Broadcast Storm Filtering Broadcast Storm Filter Mode NO actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt gt ct the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 17 SMT Broadcast Storm Filter Mode Switch Configuration 15 15 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 15 6 4 Setting Max Bridge Transmit Delay Bound Dimension Switch ES 2008 Bridge Transmit Delay Bound Bridge Transmit Delay Bound OFF Enable Delay Bound Disable Max Delay Time 0 actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 18 SMT Max Bridge Transmit Delay Bound Follow the instructions in this table to configure this screen Table 15 8 SMT Max Bridge Transmit Delay Bound FIELD DESCRIPTIONS Bridge Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select one of 1 sec 2 sec and 4 Transmit sec to set the packets queuing time in the switch Packets queued Delay Bound beyond the time period will be dropped Select off to disable this feature Default is 1 sec Enable Delay Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Enable and specify a time in Bound the MAC Delay Time ms in milliseconds to limit the time a low priority packet is allowed to queue in the switch Max Delay Specify a time interval a low priority packet is allowed to queue in the Time switch
70. cs 300 765 Bridge Transmit Delay Bound OFF 7 Broadcast Storm Filter Mode OFF z Priority Queue Service First Come First Served All High Before Low C WRR Packet Weight High Low fo oT I Enable Delay Bound Max Delay Time ob ms Priority Queue Assignment Checked for High Priority l LevelOl Levelil Level2T Level3 M Level4 M Levels M Level6 M Level Protocol Enable Setting I Enable Spanning Tree Protocol I Enable IGMP Protocol IGMP Query Mode Auto x VLAN Operation Mode No VLAN z Apply Default Help Figure 5 1 Switching Configuration Advanced Advanced Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Follow the instructions in the table below to configure this screen Table 5 1 Switching Configuration Advanced FIELD DESCRIPTION MAC Table Address Entry Age out time Select this check box to remove a MAC address from the MAC address table after a duration specified in the field provided Enter the duration in seconds between 300 and 765 that an inactive MAC address remains in the switch s MAC address table The default is 300 seconds Bridge Select 1 sec 2 sec or 4 sec from the pull down list box to limit the packet Transmit queuing time in the switch If enabled the packets queued beyond the Delay Bound time period specified here will be dropped Select OFF to disable this feature This is the default setting Broadcast Threshold is the per
71. ctions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt menu Status Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter S TIe Actions menu esc aie Figure 13 5 SMT Menu Breakdown 13 6 2 The Control Keys The following table describes common control keys that you use in the SMT screens Table 13 1 Control Key Descriptions KEY DESCRIPTION TAB To move down through fields in the configuration menu To move through fields in the actions menu BACK To move up through fields in the configuration menu SPACE To move back through fields in the actions menu ENTER To select an item in the menu SPACE BAR To cycle through the available choices in a field ESC Press ESC to go back to the previous screen Press ESC to move from the configuration menu to the actions menu 13 4 Introducing the SMT Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Do NOT use the arrow keys to move between SMT menus Changes will be lost once you move to another menu using the arrow keys 13 7 SMT Main Menu Main Menu Status and Counters Switch Static Configuration Protocol Related Configuration System Reset Configuration Logout Show the status of the switch Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 13 6 SMT Main Menu 13 7 1 SMT Main Menu Summary Table 13 2 SMT Menu Summary MENU TITLE FUNCTION Status
72. d FIELD DESCRIPTION Max Delay Specify a time period a low priority packet is allowed to queue in the Time switch before the packet is dropped Priority Queue Assignment Checked for High Priority With QoS Quality of Service organizations can differentiate traffic by setting the precedence values in the IP header at the periphery of the network to enable the backbone to prioritize traffic Level Level7 Select the check box es to add the packets with the level bits to the high priority queue Protocol Enabl e Settings Enable Select this option to activate Spanning Tree Protocol STP Refer to the Spanning STP chapter for more information Tree Protocol Enable IGMP _ Select this option to activate Internet Group Multicast Protocol IGMP Protocol Refer to Section 8 1 for more information IGMP Query Select Auto to allow the network to automatically find the IGMP server Mode The multicast device with the lowest numerical IP address to be the IGMP server This is the default setting Select Enable to force this switch to be the IGMP server even when there is already an IGMP server on the network Selecting this option may affect network performance Select Disable to forcibly disallow this switch from being an IGMP server VLAN Select No VLAN 802 1Q with GVRP 802 1Q without GVRP or Port Operation Based from the drop down list box Mode Select No VLAN to disable VLANs Select
73. d ooe orai an 9 3 SMT Configuration 06 15 4 TYPES E ei es 9 1 VLAN erated taints 15 4 VLAN Identifier eee eeeeeeees 9 1 VLAN Mode cece 5 3 9 2 15 4 VLAN Type ccecececceceeeereeeeees 9 2 15 4 Port Based ccccceeeees 9 1 15 7 Tag Based oo ceeeeeeeeneees 9 1 15 5 wW Weighted Round Robin 04 5 2 WRR See Weighted Round Robin Z ZYNOS F W Version 18 4 Index
74. ditionally IP packets are transmitted in one of either two ways Unicast 1 sender to 1 recipient or Broadcast 1 sender to everybody on the network Multicast delivers IP packets to just a group of hosts on the network IGMP Internet Group Multicast Protocol is a session layer protocol used to establish membership in a multicast group it is not used to carry user data Refer to RFC 1112 and RFC 2236 for information on IGMP versions and 2 respectively A layer 2 switch can passively snoop on IGMP Query Report and Leave IGMP version 2 packets transferred between IP multicast routers switches and IP multicast hosts to learn the IP multicast group membership It checks IGMP packets passing through it picks out the group registration information and configures multicasting accordingly Without IGMP snooping multicast traffic is treated in the same manner as broadcast traffic that is it is forwarded to all ports With IGMP snooping group multicast traffic is only forwarded to ports that are members of that group IGMP Snooping generates no additional network traffic allowing you to significantly reduce multicast traffic passing through your switch For each attached network an IGMP server periodically sends a query message to request for group membership information Hosts on the network that are members of a multicast group send report messages back to the IGMP server When a host leaves a group it sends a leave group message The f
75. dow as shown next Figure 3 6 Port Status Refer to the Port Statistics section for field descriptions 3 2 Commonly Used Buttons The following table describes the buttons found in most screens Table 3 1 Commonly Used Button BUTTON DESCRIPTION Apply Click Apply to save the changes Default Click Default to set the screen settings back to factory defaults Delete Click Delete to remove a selected item Help Click Help to open a web based HTML help window The Help button is not available in all web configurator screens Introducing the Web Configurator 3 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 3 3 General Switch Information To view general information such as firmware version and MAC address click Administrator Switch Configuration and click on the Basic tab The following screen displays as shown Switch Configuration Dimension Switch ES 2008 Figure 3 7 Web Configurator View Switch Information The table below describes the read only fields in this screen Table 3 2 View Switch Information FIELD DESCRIPTION Description This field displays a short description of the switch MAC Address This field displays the MAC address of the switch without the separator Firmware Version This field displays the version of the firmware the switch is using Hardware Version This field displays the hardware version of the sw
76. eceeeeceaecaeesecaeeeeesecaesereeaeeeeaeeataes 6 1 Figure 6 2 Port Statisties vs ccs es sesegsescteresved is o E EEEE TANE OTE ee 6 3 Figure 7 1 Trunking Aggregator Setting e esssseseseseesesseeresseseesrestesessesrestesesseeressesreses 7 2 Figure 7 2 Trunking Aggregator Information sseessseesssesrseeersssrstsrsrrereessrsrsrerreseses 7 3 Figure 7 3 Tronk State Activity ecen ean A E ack dees Pacers ecco 7 4 Figure s i Configuring IGMP erone itia A O E vaeesas beeecees 8 6 Figure 8 2 IGMP Example Desniisioiriiieiiia tia E ea EAEN 8 7 Figur 8 3 IGMP Example 2ni iA E EEEE 8 8 Figure 8S4 IGMP Example 2 eac eiae EE A ER E EAN R SE 8 9 Figure 8 5 IGMP Snooping rs i a a E EE EE E N 8 9 Figure 8 6 Static MAC Address saroien a E E E e 8 11 Fig re 8 7 Port SECUrtY eeaeee eia oA aaa Eaa Heese EE Ta A es ease e iaae 8 12 Figure 8 8 MAC Address Filtering c sssesesssssreeesesserieeiresessssrresessesestserstdenessesreirteessses 8 13 Figure 9 1 Switch Configuration Enable Protocols eseseseeeeseseieressssersreessrsrsrrerereesses 9 2 Figure 9 2 VLAN Setup Port based VLAN Information seeseeeeseeerererrsrrrrrrerersesse 9 3 Figure 9 3 VLAN Setup Port based Configuration c cessssseceeeeeeeeeeeseeceeeeeeeaeentenes 9 3 Figure 9 4 VLAN Setup 802 1Q with without GVRP VLAN Information 9 4 Figure 9 5 Tag Based VLAN 802 1 Q VLAN Basic Setup ccessseeceeerceeeeeeeseeeteees 9 5 Figure 9 6 VLAN
77. ed or replaced products will be shipped by ZyXEL to the corresponding return address Postage Paid This warranty gives you specific legal rights and you may also have other rights that vary from country to country Online Registration Register online at www zyxel com for free future product updates and information ZyXEL Limited Warranty iii Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Information for Canadian Users The Industry Canada label identifies certified equipment This certification means that the equipment meets certain telecommunications network protective operation and safety requirements The Industry Canada does not guarantee that the equipment will operate to a user s satisfaction Before installing this equipment users should ensure that it is permissible to be connected to the facilities of the local telecommunications company The equipment must also be installed using an acceptable method of connection In some cases the company s inside wiring associated with a single line individual service may be extended by means of a certified connector assembly The customer should be aware that compliance with the above conditions may not prevent degradation of service in some situations Repairs to certified equipment should be made by an authorized Canadian maintenance facility designated by the supplier Any repairs or alterations made by the user to this equipment or equipment malfunctions may give the telecommunications company
78. eeeeeeseeeereeeens 15 9 Figure 15 9 SMT MAC Address Configuration ceccecesseeseeeeseceeeeecnereeeeeneeerenee 15 10 Figure 15 10 SMT Static MAC Address cecseesecseeescseeeececeeeeecsaeeeeesecateseeneearenee 15 10 Figure 15 11 SMT Add Static MAC Address cccceessesssesceseceeecenecesecnseenneeneeeeeenes 15 11 Figure 15 12 SMT MAC Address Filtering c eecceeseeseesceesceeeceeceeceseenseeneeeeeenes 15 12 Figure 15 13 SMT Edit MAC Address Filtering 0 ccc eceeccssesceeeceseeeeesecateeeeeeeenee 15 12 Figure 15 14 SMT Misc Configuration cccessssssecseesecseeeeceseeeeesecaeesecnesecnaeaeeaeenee 15 13 Figure 15 15 SMT Port Security cccccsseessessceesceesceeeceeceseceaecaecsaecseecaecaecaeeneeenes 15 14 Figure 15 16 SMT Aging Time Setting 0 cc ceececcssecreseecneeeeceeeecaeeeeesecaeeeeeneeaeenee 15 15 Figure 15 17 SMT Broadcast Storm Filter Mode 0 eeeeeeseecseeeecneeeeceseeeeeseeeeeeeens 15 15 Figure 15 18 SMT Max Bridge Transmit Delay Bound cceeesecceseereeeeeneeerenee 15 16 Figure 16 1 SMT Protocol Related Configuration cecccesceeeeceeeeeceseeeeeseeteeeenees 16 1 Figure 16 2 SMT STP Configuration 0 ccccessssssecseesecneeeeceeeeceseceeesecaeeeeenaeeeeeeeneees 16 2 Fig re 16 3 SMT Enable STP 2 5 20 ccsectecdiec dh esedievecsgiee save ccestivsepee ed ecvessiedeeneireneeees 16 2 Figure 16 4 SMT STP Parameters Setup ecscsssssssceeeeeceseeeceseceee
79. ep 1 Click Factory Default to display the screen shown next Factory Default Click the Default button to reset the switch back to factory default configuration All your custom configuration will be erased Default Figure 4 3 Factory Default Step 2 Click the Factory Default button and wait until the switch finishes rebooting before accessing the switch again 4 2 Basic Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 4 4 Rebooting the Switch You must reboot the switch after you make changes to the switch s IP address and uploads a firmware or configuration file Step 1 Click System Reboot to display the screen as shown next System Reboot Reboot Help Figure 4 4 System Reboot Step 2 Click Reboot and wait until the switch finishes rebooting before accessing the switch again Basic Switch Configuration 4 3 Advanced Settings Part II Advanced Settings Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 5 Advanced Switch Configuration This chapter shows you how to configure the Advanced Switch Settings screen 5 1 Switch Configuration Use the Switch Configuration screen to configure advanced features of the switch From the main menu click Administrator Switch Configuration and then click on the Advanced tab to display the screen as shown next Switch Configuration Basic Advanced M MAC Table Address Entry Age Out Time 200 se
80. er the IP address of the TFTP server where a configuration file resides in the TFTP Server IP Address field Step 4 Specify the name of the configuration file in the Retore File Name field Step 5 Click Apply The switch will download the configuration file from the TFTP server Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance 18 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 6 Restart the switch Make sure you enter the correct IP address to access the web configurator The following message displays when the configuration file is retrieved successfully from the TFTP server Restore configuration is completed please reboot system reboot Figure 18 9 Web Configurator Successful Configuration File Retrieval Step 7 Click reboot to restart the switch 18 6 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance Additional Information Part V Additional Information aa Part V consists of troubleshooting product specifications appendices and an index Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 19 Troubleshooting 19 1 Using LEDs to Diagnose Problems The LEDs are useful aides for finding possible problem causes 19 1 1 Power LED The PWR LED on the front panel does not light up Table 19 1 Troubleshooting Power LED STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION 1 Check the connections from your switch to the power source Make sure you are using the supplied power cord and proper power supply Refe
81. eresseseesresreseeses 11 1 Chapter 12 SNMP E AA E E E T E EES 12 1 B About SNMP anna dale Al a ers a aa a s 12 1 12 2 Configura SNM E e a Seiad e Baie 12 2 Chapter 13 Introducing the SMT sscssssscssscesssecssscesesscssesceesscssesceesseseesersoeses 13 1 13 EE Ei O LLC ATO E EAE eel cossin E apd EE 13 1 13 2 Accessing the SMT Using Telnet 0 0 cccececcesecsseenseeeeeeeeceeeeaeeeneeeeeeseeeereees 13 1 13 3 Accessing the SMT Using the Console Port cccccesseesseeeseeseeereeerenseeeeeees 13 1 134 Initial SMT Sereen aa AE aE EER EATA 13 2 13 5 The SMT Overview e raean a til Aaa aanne bee doe aa AEAEE toes 13 3 13 6 Navigating the SMT Interface ececcescesecesecscecseeeeeeeseeseecseeeeeenseeneeeeeeess 13 3 137 SMT Ma MeN socteksoscec ie icone a a an a AA sony EESE ATER RNEER 13 5 Chapter 14 Basic System Setup e sesssessossoosseossecsseesseosoesoossoossooscosscossecssessoessoessssssssss 14 1 IE a PRA ETO LLANTO EREE EE AE E EEE 14 1 14 2 Administration Configuration esesseseseeeseeeessreressesrsreseesesseeresseseesreseeseeses 14 2 Chapter 15 Switch Configuration sesessseseesesseeeesoeseeeoeseeoeseeeoesoeeereoroesoeseeeoeseeeerseee 15 1 15 1 Port and Trunk Group Settings s ssssseseeseeseseesseeeessesersresessesrrsreseesessesressesees 15 1 15 2 Port Mirroring nee horeinece innein iin iE i EA E E R 15 2 15 3 e VLAN fervent ee een dee es ek 15 4 15 4 Priority Configuration s c c5 csc
82. eseeeeeeeeeeereeeees 19 1 19 27 Console Pontani a a a e a aa e e 19 2 TESES D KE rT EE E E T TEE A EET A AAT 19 3 19 4 Web Configurator a a a a aaee aa e e a aati 19 3 19 5 Login Username and Passwotd c cccccessesseceseeeeceeeceseceseceecseeeneeseeeneeensees 19 4 19 6 Improper Network Cabling and Topology cccecccsseesseecseeseeneeeeeeeeeeeseeerens 19 4 Appendix A Setting up Your Computer s IP Address sscsscssssssscsssssssersesssseeees A Appendix B cssccsssssscssecssenesessesssesssseessssssessensesnsessseesssesssessseessasssesseessesssessessesseseees L EP S bnettint iescsssccccesssncssecasssuns scence snsesseauesosneseasessesseaaaessnssoeuedsesedscevesoasoscesd once sosandesesssoueese L Appendix C Product Specifications csccccsssessscssscsssssssssesssssessseesssssssssssssssseseees T VIN OX ss ssvscsnndcicsnssoasescdatonvetesasessndosenss oosesscsnaseasescasvsnessnssaesbussvesedsnseSeseuesonsossest anes ossne sseaseanee Ww xX Table of Contents Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch List of Figures Figure 1 1 Standalone Workgroup Example c cccccessseeseeseeeseeeeeeeseeeeeneeeneeeeenseenaes 1 3 Figure 1 2 Bridging Application Example cccccsceessessseesceesceseeeeceeseeeeceseeneenseenseenaes 1 4 Figure 1 3 VLAN Application Example ccccesccscsescsseeeceseeseeeceeeeesecnevseceaseneeaeeateaes 1 5 Piste 2 ES 2008 a aE A E A E EAA E e T a SER 2 1 Figure 2 2 ES
83. eseens 15 1 Table 15 2 SMT Port Monitoring Configuration ccccescceseeececseeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeerens 15 3 Table 15 3 SMT VLAN Support Configuration 802 1Q cceccecesseeresseeeseeeseeeeeereees 15 5 Table 15 4 SMT Add a VLAN Group ou cceccesesseseescsseseescsseseecaeeecaeeaeeecaeeaeeecateaeereneeas 15 7 Table 15 5 SMT Priority Comfiguration cceecceseeeeceseceseceeeeeeeceecseeeeeeeeeeeeeeereeseens 15 9 Table 15 6 Edit MAC Address Filtering SMT Field Descriptions cceseeeeres 15 12 Table 15 7 SMT Port Security enen etna eitean e ei E n a EEE Ee einst 15 14 xiv List of Tables Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 15 8 SMT Max Bridge Transmit Delay Bound cece eeceseeeseeecneeeeeeeeeetenee 15 16 Table 16 1 SMT STP Per Port Setting cccceccesscsscceeeceseceseceseceeceeeaeeeseeeeeeseeenreees 16 4 Table 16 2 SMT LACP Group Setting cccccccecceesceescesecesecesecsseceeecseecseeeeeeeeeenseeereess 16 8 Table 16 3 SMT LACP State Activity cccccecccesecesecesecesecseecseeeseeeseeseeeeeeeereeeseneesereens 16 9 Table 16 4 SMT LACP Group Status eseo nsei 16 10 Table 19 1 Troubleshooting Power LED cecceeccsseesseeseessceeseeeeceseeeseeeseensecseeeaeeeneeees 19 1 Table 19 2 Troubleshooting LK ACT LED 1 0 0 eeceecceseceseesceeseceneceeeeneecneeeneeeeeeseeeeeees 19 1 Table 19 3 Troubleshooting 100 LED ee eccceseesseesceeeceeeeeeeenseeeseeaecaeceeeaeeeneeses 19 2 Table 19
84. et Switch Table 12 1 SNMP Management FIELD DESCRIPTION RO Select RO to enable the request accompanied by this string to display MIB information RW Select RW to enable the request accompanied by this string to display MIB information and set MIB objects on the switch Trap Managers Current This field displays the current configured management station the trap Manager manager on the switch To remove a trap manager select the trap manager in the list and click Remove New Manager Fill in the fields below to add a new trap manager and click Add IP Address Enter the IP address of the management station Community Enter the community string or the password of the management station 12 4 SNMP Using the SMT and System Maintenance Part IV Using the SMT and System Maintenance i Part IV introduces configuration using the SMT screens and firmware configuration maintenance Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 13 Introducing the SMT This chapter introduces the basics of managing the switch 13 1 Introduction The System Management Terminal SMT is a menu driven interface that you use to configure the switch You may access the SMT using either Telnet or the console port If there is no activity for longer than 5 minutes after you log in your switch will automatically log you out 13 2 Accessing the SMT Using Telnet
85. etting Acceptable Select All from the drop down list box to accept all untagged frames eee Select Tag Only to drop all untagged frames ype Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch Step 2 After saving the settings press any key to display the screen shown next Dimension Switch ES 2008 Create A VLAN Group VLAN ID 1 4094 actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt Select the Action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 6 SMT Add a VLAN Group 15 6 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Follow the instructions in the table below to configure this screen Table 15 4 SMT Add a VLAN Group FIELD DESCRIPTION VLAN Name Enter a descriptive name for the VLAN group for identification purposes VLAN ID Enter a number between 1 and 4049 as the identification number for the VLAN group Port This read only field displays the trunk group number or port numbers for ports not belonging to a trunk group Note This field is 0 to indicate that a port is in a trunk group Member Ports are assigned membership in a VLAN by associating a VLAN ID with the ports Press SPACE BAR to select Tagged UnTagged or No Select Tagged to tag all outgoing frames on this port Select Untagged not to tag all outgoing frames
86. etwork loops and provides backup links between switches bridges or routers It allows a device to interact with other STP aware devices in your network to ensure that only one path exists between any two stations on the network The root bridge is the base of the spanning tree it is the bridge with the lowest identifier value MAC address Path cost is the cost of transmitting a frame onto a LAN through that port It is assigned according to the speed of the link to which a port is attached The slower the media the higher the cost Refer to the following table for the recommended path cost in the allowed range between 1 and 65535 for each link speed Table 10 1 Recommended Path Cost LINK SPEED RECOMMENDED VALUE RECOMMENDED RANGE 4Mbps 250 100 to 1000 10Mbps 100 50 to 600 16Mbps 62 40 to 400 100Mbps 19 10 to 60 1Gbps 4 3 to 10 10Gbps 2 1to5 On each bridge the root port is the port through which a bridge communicates with the root It is the port on this switch with the lowest path cost to the root the root path cost If there is no root port then this switch has been accepted as the root bridge of the spanning tree network Spanning Tree Protocol 10 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 10 2 Activating Spanning Tree Protocol Use the Switch Configuration screen to activate STP on the switch Step 1 Click Administrator Switch Configuration and then the Advanced tab Step 2 Select the
87. evice to prevent network topology loops Port Trunking 7 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 7 2 Configuring Port Trunking Port trunking lets you group up to eight consecutive ports into a single dedicated connection To configure port trunking click Administrator Trunking and the Aggregator Setting tab Trunking Aggregator Setting Aggregator information State Activity Group ID Groupi Select LACP Disable Work Ports fo a Remove Apply Delete Help Figure 7 1 Trunking Aggregator Setting Follow the instruction in the table next to change the settings Table 7 1 Trunking Aggregator Setting FIELD DESCRIPTION System Enter a number to identify and set the priority of an active Link Aggregate Priority Control Protocol LACP The smaller the number the higher the priority level Group ID Select a trunk group ID from the drop down list menu and click Select to display the configured settings LACP Select Enable from the drop down list box to set the trunk group as a dynamic trunk group Select Disable to set the trunk group as a local trunk group 7 2 Port Trunking Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 7 1 Trunking Aggregator Setting FIELD DESCRIPTION Work Ports Enter the number of ports that to be aggregated If you select Enable in the LACP field then enter any number greater than 0 and smaller
88. g Up Your Computer s IP Address C Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Windows 2000 NT XP 1 For Windows XP click start Control Panel In Windows 2000 NT click Start Settings Control Panel Internet Explorer D hy Donien Outlook Express Y Paint Files and Settings Transfer W D z E Command Prompt Z4 My Music a Acrobat Reader 4 0 ws My Computer Tour Windows xP 4 My Recent Documents gt a My Pictures E Windows Movie Maker amp S Printers and Faxes Help and Support Search All Programs gt W Run B Log Off Turn Off Computer untitled Paint 2 For Windows XP click Network 3 Right click Local Area Connection and Connections For Windows then click Properties 2000 NT click Network and Dial up Connections amp Control Panel s Network Connections File Edit Q id amp pe Search gt gt Folders E Fie Edit View Favorites Tools Advanced Help Q ex Q B x Search Folders Ez Tools View Favorites Help Address G Control Panel Address Network Connections x Vg Control Panel ES B Switch to Category view See Also s __LANor High Speed Internet Network Tasks Add Hardware E Create anew connection gt Set up a home or small 7 office network Fonts Game Disable this network Controllers device q Repair this connection EEES Rename this connection view status of this connec
89. h VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID between 2 and 4094 that will be assigned to untagged traffic on a given port For example if the default VLAN ID of port 5 is 100 all untagged packets on port 5 will belong to VLAN 100 9 6 VLAN Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch The default VLAN ID for all ports is 1 This feature is useful for accommodating devices that you want to participate in the VLAN but that don t support tagging Only one untagged VLAN is allowed per port Ingress Select Enable from the drop down list box to forward a frame whose VID is Filtering the same as the VID of the port Select Disable to forward all frames regardless of the port s VID Acceptable Select All from the drop down list box to accept all untagged or tagged Frame Type frames Select Tag Only to drop all untagged frames VLAN 9 7 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 10 Spanning Tree Protocol This chapter describes the basics and configuration of STP 10 1 Introduction Spanning Tree Protocol is a standardized method IEEE 802 1D that eliminates loops in a network by disabling some ports and allowing other ports to forward traffic based on the parameters you configured STP ensures that there is only one path between a specific source and destination so packets will not travel in loops STP provides path redundancy while preventing undesirable loops in the network STP detects and breaks n
90. he backup configuration file will be stored in the TFTP Server IP Address field 18 4 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 4 Specify the name of the configuration in the Backup File Name field Step 5 Click Apply The switch saves the system configuration file to the TFTP server The following screen displays when the backup process is successful Backup configuration is completed go to main Figure 18 7 Web Configurator Backup Configuration File Successful Step 6 Click on the message to go back to the main screen 18 3 2 Restore Configuration This section shows you how to restore a previously saved configuration WARNING DO NOT INTERRUPT THE FILE TRANSFER PROCESS AS THIS MAY PERMANENTLY DAMAGE YOUR SWITCH This function erases the current configuration before restoring a previous back up configuration please do not attempt to restore unless you have a backup configuration file stored on disk Step 1 Run a TFTP server program on the computer and specify the location of a previously saved configuration file and set the communication mode Step 2 Click Configuration Backup and then the TFTP Configuration Restore tab to display the screen as shown next Configuration Backup TFTP Restore Configuration TFTP Backup Configuration eee Me Apply Help Figure 18 8 Web Configurator Restore Configuration Step 3 Ent
91. he switch waits before changing from 15 Delay Time its STP learning listening state to forwarding state Specify a number between 4 and 30 10 4 Viewing Root Bridge Information View the STP root bridge information in the Spanning Tree screen These fields display the spanning tree parameter settings for the switch currently acting as the root Root Bridge Information 32768 00001c01016c 0 we are root 20 2 15 Figure 10 3 View STP Root Bridge Information Refer to the following table for the field descriptions Table 10 3 View STP Root Bridge Information FIELD DESCRIPTION This field displays the priority between 1 and 65535 of the root bridge in a Priority spanning tree A higher value indicates a lower priority thus 0 means the highest priority MAC Address This field displays the MAC address of the root bridge Spanning Tree Protocol 10 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 10 3 View STP Root Bridge Information FIELD DESCRIPTION This field displays the path cost from this switch to the root bridge The Root Path bigger the number the higher the path cost Cost This field is O to indicate that this switch is the root bridge in a spanning tree This field displays the port number through which your switch Root Port communicates with the root A time interval in seconds a root bridge waits without receiving a STP
92. ic System Setup Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Device Information Device Name ES 2008 Device Contact Device Location 2F RM105 Device Description Ethernet Switch actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Pre Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 14 3 SMT Device Information To move to the configuration menu press TAB to select lt Edit gt in the actions menu and press ENTER The following table describes the fields in this menu Table 14 2 SMT Device Information FIELD DESCRIPTION EXAMPLE Device Name Enter a descriptive name for identification purposes ES 2008 Device Contact Enter the name of the person in charge of this device Device Location Enter the location of the switch for administrative 2F RM105 purposes Device Enter a short description of the switch for administrative Ethernet Description purposes Switch Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 14 2 2 Ethernet IP Configuration Use the IP Configuration screen to change the TCP IP settings of the switch Step 1 In the Administration Configuration screen press TAB to select IP Configuration and press ENTER Basic System Setup 14 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch actions gt
93. iguration Use this menu to configure and display port settings and set up trunk groups Basic System Setup 14 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 14 1 Switch Configuration Menu Choice SUBMENU DESCRIPTION Port Mirror Configuration Use this menu to configure port mirroring VLAN Configuration Use this menu to display or set VLAN settings Priority Configuration Use this menu to set the priority of each port on the switch MAC Address Use this menu to add static MAC addresses to the MAC Configuration address table in the switch Misc Configuration Use this menu to set other switch related parameters 14 2 Administration Configuration The menus in Administration Configuration allow you to change administrative settings of the switch In the main menu select Switch Configuration and then Administration Configuration to display the screen as shown in the figure below Dimension Switch ES 2008 Administration Configuration Device Information IP Configuration User Name Configuration Password Configuration Previous Menu Configure the device infor ation Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 14 2 SMT Device Configuration 14 2 1 General Setup The Device Information menu contains system related information In the Administration Configuration screen select Device Information and press ENTER to display the screen shown next 14 2 Bas
94. ility Otherwise you need to ask your network administrator for Click Obtain DNS server address ETE automatically if you do not know Obtain an IP address automatically your DNS server IP address es Use the folowing IP adess If you Know your DNS server IP address es click Use the following DNS server addresses and type them in the Preferred DNS server Obtain DNS server address automatically and Alternate DNS server fields Use the following DNS server addresses If you have previously configured DNS servers click Advanced and then the DNS tab to order them 8 Click OK to close the Internet Protocol TCP IP Properties window Click OK to close the Local Area Connection Properties window 10 Turnon your Prestige and restart your computer if prompted Verifying Settings 1 Click Start All Programs Accessories and then Command Prompt 2 Inthe Command Prompt window type ipconfig and then press ENTER You can also open Network Connections right click a network connection click Status and then click the Support tab Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address G Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Macintosh OS 8 9 1 Click the Apple menu Control Panel and File Edit View Window Special Help About This Computer double click TCP IP to open the TCP IP Control Panel D Apple System Profiler H Calculator gt Chooser Control Panels i Favorites d Key Caps Network Bro
95. ions and then click the Delete 2 Files button When a Delete Files window displays select Delete all offline content and click OK Steps may vary depending on the version of your Internet browser 19 5 Login Username and Password I forgot my login username and or password Table 19 9 Troubleshooting Login Username and Password STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION You need to set the switch back to factory default settings This will erase all custom configurations 1 Use a terminal emulation program to connect your computer to the console port on the switch Refer to the Accessing the SMT Using the Console Port section At the login screen type superuser in the User Name field and zyxel in the 2 Password field When you see a INET gt prompt you are logged in with safe mode on At the INET gt prompt type flashdf and press ENTER A Writing flash to 2 default value please wait message displays When the INET gt prompt displays again unplug the power cord to turn off the 5 switch then turn on the switch The default switch IP address is 192 168 1 1 default user name is admin and the default password is 1234 6 It is highly recommended to change the default username and password Make sure you store the username and password in a save place 19 6 Improper Network Cabling and Topology Improper network cabling or topology setup a
96. itch Kernel Version This field displays the version of the kernel on which the firmware is based 3 4 Switch Console Port Settings To view the console port settings of the switch click Administrator and Serial Port Information Serial Port Information Figure 3 8 Web Configurator Serial Port Information 3 4 Introducing the Web Configurator Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Use the information in this screen to set the communication parameters of a terminal emulation program to access the switch via the console port Introducing the Web Configurator 3 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 4 Basic Switch Configuration This chapter describes how to set the IP address of the switch reset and reboot the switch 4 1 Setting the IP Address of the Switch To configure the Ethernet TCP IP settings of the switch click Administrator and then Network Configuration to display the screen shown next Network Configuration 192 168 1 1 255 255 255 0 0 0 0 0 Figure 4 1 Network Configuration Follow the instructions in the table below to set the fields in this screen Table 4 1 Network Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION EXAMPLE IP Address Enter a LAN IP address for the switch in dotted decimal 192 168 1 1 notation Subnet Enter a subnet mask in dotted decimal notation Refer to 255 255 255 0 Mask the Subnetting appendix to calcu
97. itch and the other end to the power outlet Refer to the product specifications for the right power source The PWR LED on the front panel turns on 2 6 Hardware Description and Installation Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 3 Introducing the Web Configurator This chapter describes how to access the embedded web configurator and view general switch information 3 1 Accessing the Web Configurator Follow the steps below to access the web configurator Step 1 Make sure your switch is properly connected refer to instructions in Chapter 2 Step 2 Prepare your computer to connect to the switch Set your computer to use a static IP address in the same subnet as the IP address of the switch refer to the Setting Your Computer s IP Address appendix Step 3 Launch your Internet Explorer You must use Internet Explorer 5 0 or later versions Step 4 Type 192 168 1 1 as the URL Step 5 Type admin default as the user name and 1234 default as the password and click OK Enter Network Password 2 x Please type your user name and password Site 192 168 1 1 Realm index htm UserName Password I Save this password in your password list Cancel Figure 3 1 Login Window Step 5 You should now see the welcome screen as shown next Introducing the Web Configurator 3 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch ZyXEL TOTAL INTERNET ACCESS SOLUTION MEMU Home Port
98. l GVRP Configuration SMT 16 6 M I MAC Address Filter ccccceeee 15 9 MAC Address Filtering 8 12 15 11 TEEE 802 IDni 10 1 MAC Address Time Out 5 15 14 IEEE 802 1Q See Tag Based VLAN MAC Table Address Entry Age out IEEE 802 1Q VLAN See Tag Based UME ane ed tetera Meet 5 2 VLAN Management Information Base MIB TEEE802 3ad 0 tesecesessesceceesescnsees Telp E E E aera teseelys 12 2 IGMP ineeie 5 3 8 5 MIUrror Poit saeti 11 1 Confistte cnhsinaaie as 8 6 Miscellaneous Configuration 15 13 Examples ennenen 8 6 Monitor port ceceseeseeseeeseeeeeeees 11 1 Message Types scccesseeeseeeeeeee 8 5 Monitor Ports ccsccsseesseeseeeeeeees 11 2 placement of multicast source 8 6 Query Mod craon iiis 8 6 IGMP Query Mode 5 3 8 6 N IGMP snooping ceceeeees 8 5 8 9 IGMP Snooping Non standard network cables 19 5 VIEW Sisson vs nik dates 8 9 Ingress Filtering cee 9 7 15 6 Internet Group Multicast Protocol See P IGMP Introducing the SMT ceee 13 1 PathiCost otcseitl se ion siete a des 10 1 IP Subnetting cccesecsseeeeeneeeees L Port Configuration ceeeees 6 1 IP Clashes cacichicicenaracconnaiokoornet L Port Mirror State 15 3 Port Mirroring 11 1 Configuring 11 1 15 2 L Mirror poite renarena ii 11 1 Monitor portt s essseesseesesseseeseeee 11 1 LACP See Link Aggregate Control Port Mirroring
99. late a subnet mask if you are implementing subnetting Gateway Enter the LAN IP address of the gateway device You must reboot the switch if you change the IP address to make the changes take effect 4 2 Changing System Username and Password Use the User Authentication screen to change the switch system username and password Basic Switch Configuration 4 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Click Administrator and then User Authentication to display the screen shown next User Authentication User Name Jadmin Assign Change Password fe Reconfirm Password fr Poy Figure 4 2 User Authentication Follow the instructions in the next table to set the fields in this screen Table 4 2 User Authentication FIELD DESCRIPTION User name Type in your new switch system user name Assign Change Type in your new switch system password Password Reconfirm Re type your new switch system password for confirmation password 4 3 Resetting the Switch Restoring to factory defaults resets the switch s parameters The user name will be reset to admin the password to 1234 and the LAN IP address to 192 168 1 1 This function erases the current configuration before restoring a previous back up configuration please do not attempt to restore unless you have a backup configuration file stored on disk Follow the steps to restore your switch back to factory defaults St
100. lect Manually Type your IP address in the IP Address box Type your subnet mask in the Subnet mask box Type the IP address of your Prestige in the Router address box Click Apply Now and close the window 6 Turn on your Prestige and restart your computer if prompted Verifying Settings Check your TCP IP properties in the Network window J Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Appendix B IP Subnetting Routers route based on the network number The router that delivers the data packet to the correct destination host uses the host ID IP Classes An IP address is made up of four octets eight bits written in dotted decimal notation for example 192 168 1 1 IP addresses are categorized into different classes The class of an address depends on the value of its first octet gt Class A addresses have a 0 in the left most bit In a class A address the first octet is the network number and the remaining three octets make up the host ID gt Class B addresses have a 1 in the left most bit and a 0 in the next left most bit In a class B address the first two octets make up the network number and the two remaining octets make up the host ID gt Class C addresses begin starting from the left with 1 1 0 In a class C address the first three octets make up the network number and the last octet is the host ID gt Class D addresses begin with
101. lowest numerical IP address to be the IGMP server This is the default setting Select Enable to force this switch to be the IGMP server even when there is already an IGMP server on the network Selecting this option may affect network performance Select Disable to forcibly disallow this switch from being an IGMP server 8 1 2 IGMP Examples This section presents IGMP examples for each IGMP query mode A source of multicasts such as the Video on Demand server in our examples should be as close to the IGMP server as possible in order to reduce broadcasts Example 1 Select an IGMP Server Automatically In the figure below when you select Auto in the IGMP Query Mode field on all switches Switch C will become the IGMP server since it has the lowest numerical IP address on the network 8 2 Filter and Security Setup Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Switch A 192 168 1 15 IGMP Auto Switch B 192 168 1 20 a IGMP Auto Computer Switch C 192 168 1 10 IGMP Auto Video on Demand Computer Server Figure 8 2 IGMP Example 1 Example 2 Select an IGMP Server Manually To force Switch A to be the IGMP server select Enable in the IGMP Query Mode field However if another multicast device is set to Auto and it has a numerically lower IP address it will act as the IGMP server also This results in duplicated IGMP messages that might decrease your network performance Unless you can di
102. mine the number of hosts each subnet can have Host IDs of all zeros represent the subnet itself and host IDs of all ones are the broadcast address for that subnet so the actual number of hosts available on each subnet in the example above is 2 2 or 126 hosts for each subnet 192 168 1 0 with mask 255 255 255 128 is the subnet itself and 192 168 1 127 with mask 255 255 255 128 is the directed broadcast address for the first subnet Therefore the lowest IP address that can be assigned to an actual host for the first subnet is 192 168 1 1 and the highest is 192 168 1 126 Similarly the host ID range for the second subnet is 192 168 1 129 to 192 168 1 254 Example Four Subnets The above example illustrated using a 25 bit subnet mask to divide a class C address space into two subnets Similarly to divide a class C address into four subnets you need to borrow two host ID bits to give four possible combinations of 00 01 10 and 11 The IP Subnetting O Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch subnet mask is 26 bits 11111111 11111111 11111111 11000000 or 255 255 255 192 Each subnet contains 6 host ID bits giving 2 2 or 62 hosts for each subnet all 0 s is the subnet itself all 1 s is the broadcast address on the subnet Chart 7 Subnet 1 NETWORK NUMBER LAST OCTET BIT VALUE IP Address 192 168 1 0 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 00000000 Subnet Mask Binary 111111
103. mware and Configuration File Maintenance 18 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 6 Click Apply The switch will download the new firmware file from the TFTP server The following screen displays when the firmware is retrieved successfully from the TFTP server Image download complete click to finish upgrade Update Firmware Figure 18 5 Web Configurator Successful Firmware Retrieval Step 7 Click Update Firmware to save the firmware file to the switch Step 8 Click Reboot to restart the switch Step 9 Check the Firmware Version field in Switch Setting Basic screen to confirm that you have uploaded the correct firmware version 18 3 Configuration File Maintenance You can only use the web configurator to perform configuration file backup and restore WARNING DO NOT INTERRUPT THE FILE TRANSFER PROCESS AS THIS MAY PERMANENTLY DAMAGE YOUR SWITCH 18 3 1 Backup Configuration Backup is highly recommended once your switch is functioning properly Step 1 Run a TFTP server program on a computer and specify the location for saving the configuration file and set the communication mode Step 2 Click Configuration Backup and click on the TFTP Backup Configuration tab to display the screen as shown next Configuration Backup TFTP Restore Configuration TETP Back nfi tion Apply Help Figure 18 6 Backup Configuration Step 3 Enter the IP address of the TFTP server where t
104. nfiguration screen to configure VLANs In the main menu press TAB to select Switch Configuration VLAN Configuration and press ENTER to display the screen as shown in the figure below Dimension Switch ES 2008 VLAN Configuration Configure VLAN Type Create VLAN Group Edit Delete VLAN Group Previous Menu Configure the VLAN PVID and Ingress Rule Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 3 SMT VLAN Configuration Refer to the VLAN chapter for more information 15 3 1 Setting VLAN Mode In the VLAN Configuration screen select Configure VLAN Type and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next Select Disabled 802 1Q 802 1QwithGVRP or Port Based in the VLAN Mode field 15 4 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Intelligent Switch VLAN Support Configuraton VLAN Mode Disabled actions gt lt Quit gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Previous Page gt lt Next Page gt Select the Action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Space Toggle Ctrl A Action menu Figure 15 4 SMT VLAN Support Configuration Setting VLAN Mode The following sections describe how to configure various VLAN modes 15 3 2 Tag Based VLAN Configuration Step 1 Inthe Configure VLAN Type screen select either 802 1Q or 802 1Q with GVRP in the VLAN Mode field Dimension Switch ES 2008 Configure VLAN Type VLAN Mode 802 10 Ingress Acceptable Filter
105. nging System Username and Password ccsccessceseeeeeeseeneeeeeeeeenseenes 4 1 4 3 Resetting the Switch pontine n E E E oe eee ees 4 2 4 4 1 Rebooting the SWitehieszenonee neei o EE E AE E 4 3 Chapter 5 Advanced Switch Configuration e seseesseseseoeseeoeeseeoesoeseeeoeseeeoeseeoesoeeeesoesee 5 1 5 1 Switch Configuratio N senres ee eraa ar eataa rioari iaie Eert 5 1 Chapter 6 Port Control cssccsscssssssssssesssccsesssessssssssssssesscsssesssesessssesssssssssessssesees 6 1 6 1 Configuring the Ethernet Ports ccccecseeeseesseeseceeceseceecaeeeseeeeeeseeeeeeeereeeeens 6 1 6 2 View Port Status ct ei ek ach ete ctesteece a abit asthe aes ae 6 2 6 3 Port Statistics Siea hapa ac fee oss Dae n a sete estes A 6 2 Chapter 7 Port Trunking ccscsssssccscsssessccssscssssssssesessssescessesssesssessssecsesnsesssees 7 1 7 1 Tpit AUCH OTN 5 fav E E E E E T E ayes 7 1 7 2 Configuring Port Trunking nesei eeri ops 7 2 7 3 Viewing Static Trunk Group Information esesesessseeeessesessreeessrseessesersreseese 7 3 7 4 State ACHVIY re e E E ee ie eaS E Eaire cued 7 4 viii Table of Contents Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 8 Filter and Security Setup ccsccsssssssssssssssssssessssscsssssesssesssssssessesssees 8 5 8 1 IGMP seis fee ea apia n a Sen ect Bienes eae tel ata ein ae eee 8 5 8 2 Static MAC Address cth schseis cera lect Rae a E EE ENE EA EERE 8 10 8 3 Port Securty E E
106. nsists of two main components agents and a manager An agent is a management software module that resides in a managed device An agent translates the local management information from the managed device into a form compatible with SNMP The manager is the console through which network SNMP 12 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch administrators perform network management functions It executes applications that control and monitor managed devices The managed devices contain object variables managed objects that define each piece of information to be collected about a device Examples of variables include such as number of packets received node port status etc A Management Information Base MIB is a collection of managed objects SNMP allows a manager and agents to communicate for the purpose of accessing these objects SNMP itself is a simple request response protocol based on the manager agent model The manager issues a request and the agent returns responses using the following protocol operations e Get Allows the manager to retrieve an object variable from the agent e GetNext Allows the manager to retrieve the next object variable from a table or list within an agent In SNMPv1 when a manager wants to retrieve all elements of a table from an agent it initiates a Get operation followed by a series of GetNext operations e Set Allows the manager to set values for object variables within an agent e Trap Used
107. ollowing table describes the types of IGMP messages Table 8 1 IGMP Message Descriptions TYPE DESCRIPTION Query An IGMP server sends query messages asking for a response from each host belonging to the multicast group Report A host sends report messages to the IGMP server to indicate that the host wants to be or is a member of a given group indicated in the report message Leave Group Ahost sends a leave group message to the IGMP server to indicate that the host has terminated its membership of a specific multicast group Filter and Security Setup 8 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 8 1 1 Configuring IGMP Follow the steps below to activate IGMP on the switch Step 1 Click Administrator and then Switch Configuration Step 2 In the Switch Configuration screen click the Advanced tab Step 3 Select the Enable IGMP Protocol check box under Protocol Enable Setting Step 4 Select a choice from the IGMP Query Mode field drop down list box Protocol Enable Setting I Enable Spanning Tree Protocol I Enable IGMP Protocol GMP Query Mode Auto z VLAN Operation Mode Port_Based Apply Default Help Figure 8 1 Configuring IGMP The following table describes the options in the IGMP Query Mode field Table 8 2 IGMP Query Mode FIELD DESCRIPTION IGMP Query Select Auto to allow the network to automatically find the IGMP server Mode The multicast device with the
108. on Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Enabled to activate the auto negotiation feature on the port Speed Duplex Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select one 10 Half 10 Full 100 Config Half or 100 Full to set the speed and duplex mode of the port Flow Control Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select On to activate the flow control feature on the port Group Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select a trunk group this port belongs to Trunk group choices are Trunk1 Trunk2 Trunk3 and Trunk4 Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch The Type field for port 9 varies depending on your switch model 15 2 Port Mirroring The port mirroring feature allows you to monitor port traffic on the switch Refer to the Port Mirroring chapter for more information Select Port Mirroring Configuration and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next 15 2 Switch Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Port Mirroring Configuration Port Mirroring State Enable Analysis Port 1 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 100FX actions gt lt Quit gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt Edit the mirroring configuration Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Space Toqqle Esc Action menu Figure 15 2 SMT Port Monitoring Config
109. on this port Select No to prevent a port from joining a VLAN group Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 15 3 3 Port Based VLAN Configuration Step 1 Inthe Configure VLAN Type screen and select Port Based in the VLAN Mode field Step 2 Press any key to display the screen as shown in Figure 15 6 Follow the instruction in Table 15 3 to set the fields in the Create a VLAN Group screen 15 3 4 Creating a New VLAN Group You can add a new port based or tag based VLAN group Follow the steps below to create a new tag based VLAN group Step 1 Inthe Configure VLAN Type screen select Create a VLAN Group and press ENTER to display the Create a VLAN Group screen as shown in Figure 15 6 Step 2 Select Add a VLAN Group Refer to Table 15 3 to set the fields 15 3 5 Changing VLAN Group Settings Follow the steps below to change VLAN group settings or delete a VLAN group Switch Configuration 15 7 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 1 Inthe VLAN Configuration main menu select Edit Delete VLAN Group and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next Dimension Switch ES 2008 Edit Delete VLAN Group Group Name VLAN ID Group Name VLAN ID default test actions gt lt Edit gt lt Delete gt lt Save gt lt Previous Page gt lt Next Page gt lt Quit gt Select VLAN Group to be modified
110. or 100M Ethernet adapter card and TCP IP installed Windows 95 98 Me NT 2000 XP Macintosh OS 7 and later operating systems and all versions of UNIX LINUX include the software components you need to install and use TCP IP on your computer Windows 3 1 requires the purchase of a third party TCP IP application package TCP IP should already be installed on computers using Windows NT 2000 XP Macintosh OS 7 and later operating systems After the appropriate TCP IP components are installed configure the TCP IP settings in order to communicate with your network If you manually assign IP information instead of using dynamic assignment make sure that your computers have IP addresses that place them in the same subnet as the Prestige s LAN port Windows 95 98 Me Click Start Settings Control Panel and i ax double click the Network icon to open the Eon ieee oer rl Network window The following network components are installed Y TCP IP gt Accton EN1207D TX PCI Fast Ethemet Adaptd hy TCP IP gt Dial Up Adapter f7 TCPAP gt ZyAIR 100 Wireless PCMCIA gt Add Remove Properties Primary Network Logon Client for Microsoft Networks ped Eile and Print Sharing r Description wide area networks l P ZyAIR 100 Wireless PCMCIA n YT NDISWAN gt lt nothing gt TCP IP is the protocol you use to connect to the Intemet and Installing Components m The Network window Config
111. ormation cccccecceee 17 3 SNMP heset aragui See Simple Network System Management Terminal 13 1 Management Protocol ACCME et en e aE 12 1 Community strings eeeseeeeeeeeee 12 3 Configuring 12 2 Y Index Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch T Tag Based VLAN 9 1 9 4 15 5 Advantages ccccescceseeeseeseeseeeeee 9 1 Port SettingS cceeseeceeeeeteeeeees 9 6 Tag Based VLAN Member 15 7 Traffic Class iise ieis 15 8 Trap ManagerS cceeeesseceereees 12 4 Troubleshooting 100M TUE Dee 19 1 FD COL LED osssssessseseseseeesseee 19 2 Troubleshooting Console Port n se 19 2 Improper Network Cabling and Topology 19 5 Internet Browser Display 19 4 LK ACT LED ceccciongioteni 19 1 Login Password cccesceeeee 19 4 Power LED oniicnreneenrans 19 1 Telnet iis shieist ators nan 19 3 Web Configurator cceeee 19 3 Trunk groups ccceeceeseeeseeeeeeteeeees 7 1 Trunk States acevernietsasceeiet 7 4 Trunking wees eccencceeicseccsevieveded 7 1 State ACtiVItY cceceecseesteeseeeees 7 4 U Using LEDs To Diagnose Problems 19 1 yV MID iitisatettatees See VLAN Identifier Virtual LAN See VLAN VLAN Create New Group ceeeeeeees 15 7 Dynamit ienne etini a 9 2 Tag Based 0 ceeeeseecsteereeneeeees 9 4 VLAN vec a o ch etisiastase conte ase 9 1 Change Group Settings 15 7 Delete Group cceeeeeesteereee 15 8 Port Base
112. ormation on trunking Follow the steps below to configure port parameters and set up trunk groups Step 1 Inthe Switch Configuration screen select Port Trunk Configuration and press ENTER to display the screen as shown next Step 2 Select lt Edit gt in the actions menu and press ENTER to move the cursor to the configuration fields Dimension Switch ES 2008 Port Trunk Configuration Enabled Auto Speed Duplex Flow Negotiate Control 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 10 100TX Enabled 100FX Disabled 1 2 ic 4 Os 6 Te 8 9 actions gt lt Quit gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt Select the Action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 1 SMT Port Trunk Configuration Follow the instructions in the next table to set the fields in this screen Table 15 1 SMT Port Trunk Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This read only field displays the port number from 1 to 9 including the fiber gigabit port on the switch Switch Configuration 15 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 15 1 SMT Port Trunk Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Type This read only field displays the type of the port 10 100TX for Ethernet ports or 100FX for the fiber port Enabled Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Yes to activate the port Auto Negotiati
113. ossible with a direct connection to your switch via the console port Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance 18 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 18 2 1 Firmware Upgrade Via Console Port Connect your computer to the console port on the switch Step 1 Run a terminal emulation program Hyper Terminal in Windows screen shots are used in this User s Guide and configure its communication parameters Refer to the section on Accessing the SMT Using the Console Port Step 2 Reboot the switch The following screen displays Switch LOADER Checksum O K Press X key to start Xmodem receiver Key 78 Download IMAGE through console 1K Xmodem baudrate 57600bps Start Xmodem Receiver Figure 18 1 SMT Startup Message Step 3 Atthe S Press X key to start Xmodem receiver 6699 message press x Step 4 You must change your terminal emulation program console port baud rate setting to 57600bps Step 5 Click Transfer then Send File to display the following screen i 5end Fie 2x Folder C Program Files Windows NT HyperT erminal click Browse to look for it Type the firmware s file location or Filename Ic SES2008 Fw Image bir Browse Protocol Choose the 1K Xmodem protocol Then click Send Figure 18 2 1K Xmodem Firmware Upload Example 18 2 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Step 6 Step 7 Switch LOADER Checksum
114. oup physical ports into one logical high capacity link It may be more cost effective to group multiple lower speed ports than to under utilize a higher speed but more costly port However the more ports you aggregate the higher bandwidth capacity you obtain but the fewer available ports you have 7 1 1 Trunk Groups Trunk groups are manually configured aggregate links containing multiple ports 7 1 2 Dynamic Port Trunking The switch supports IEEE 802 3ad standard for port trunking This standard describes the Link Aggregate Control Protocol LACP which is a protocol that allows a switch to dynamically create and manage trunk groups When you enable LACP trunking on a port the port can automatically negotiate with the ports at the remote end of a link to establish trunk groups Besides dynamic trunking LACP provides port redundancy When an operational port fails one of the standby ports becomes operational without user intervention 7 1 3 Requirements When you configure the settings note the following points 1 You cannot add a port to a trunk group if LACP is enabled on the port 2 You must connect all ports point to point to the same Ethernet device and configure them for LACP trunking if required LACP only works on full duplex links All ports on the same trunk group must have the same media type speed duplex mode and flow control settings 5 Configure trunk groups or LACP before you connect the Ethernet d
115. p 7 4 State Activity Ports in a dynamic trunk group can be in either active or passive state If a port is in active state the port automatically sends LACP packets to negotiate a trunk link configuration with another link aggregation port on the other side of the link If a port is in passive state the port only responds to LACP packets but cannot negotiate a trunk link configuration with another trunk port on the other end of the link Use the State Activity screen to set the state of the port s in a dynamic trunk group Trunking Aggregator Setting Aggregator information State Activity I Active 5 N A 2 I Active 6 N A 3 I Active 7 M Active 4 I Active 8 M Active Apply Default Help Figure 7 3 Trunk State Activity The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 7 3 Trunk State Activity FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This field displays the port numbers LACP State This field is N A for ports not in a dynamic trunk group Activity Select the Status check box to set the port to active state If the Status check box is not selected the port is set to passive state This is the default setting for all ports in a dynamic trunk group 7 4 Port Trunking Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 8 Filter and Security Setup This chapter shows you how to set IGMP and MAC filters and port security 8 1 IGMP Tra
116. ports on the front panel Table 2 3 Ethernet Port LED Descriptions LED COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION 100 Green On The port is operating at 100Mbps Off No device is attached or the port is operating at 10Mbps LK ACT Green On The port is connecting with a device Blinking The port is receiving or transmitting data Off No device is attached FD COL Orange On The port is operating in full duplex mode Blinking Packet collisions are occurring Off No device is attached or the device is in half duplex mode 2 3 3 The Fiber Port The 100FX fiber module is designed to extend the distance between the switch and other Ethernet devices by up to 2 km using multi mode fiber or 30 km using single mode fibers The fiber port is not available on all switch models The LEDs provide real time system status information of the fiber port The following table is a summary of LED status and meaning Table 2 4 100FX Module LED Descriptions LED COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION LK ACT Orange On The fiber port is connected to an Ethernet device Blinking This fiber port is transmitting data Off No data is being transmitted FD COL Orange On The port is operating in full duplex mode Blinking Packet collision is occurring on this port 2 4 Hardware Description and Installation Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 2 4 100FX Module LED Descriptions
117. r cord Do not block the ventilation holes Leave space between switches when stacking 2 2 Hardware Connections 2 2 1 Front Panel The front panel of the switch consists of eight auto sensing auto negotiating 10 100Base TX Ethernet RJ 45 ports and or one 100Base FX fiber or gigabit port The LEDs are also located on the front panel of the switch Figure 2 1 ES 2008 Hardware Description and Installation 2 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Figure 2 2 ES 2008 with Fiber Port Figure 2 3 ES 2008 with Gigabit Port 2 2 2 The Ethernet Connections Auto Sensing 10 100Base TX RJ 45 Ports Auto MDI MDIX The ES 2008 has eight auto negotiating auto sensing 10 100Base TX Ethernet RJ 45 ports All these ports support auto sensing a built in function that automatically recognizes the type straight crossover of the attached cable This feature effectively removes all wiring troubles caused by a cable type mismatch Although a crossover cable is usually required to cascade a switch to another switch auto MDI MDI X lets you use a normal straight cable to do the task Auto Negotiating 10 100Base TX RJ 45 Ports The auto negotiation feature allows the switch to detect the speed of incoming transmission and adjust appropriately without manual intervention It allows data transfers of either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps in either half duplex or full duplex mode depending on your Ethernet network 2 2 Hardware Description
118. r to the product specifications 2 Make sure the power source is turned on and that the switch is receiving sufficient power 3 If these steps fail to correct the problem contact your local distributor for assistance 19 1 2 The LK ACT LED The LK ACT LED does not light up when a device is connected Table 19 2 Troubleshooting LK ACT LED STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION 1 Verify that the attached device s is turned on and properly connected to the switch 2 Make sure the network adapters are working on the attached devices 3 Verify that 10 100 1000 M Ethernet cable length does not exceed 100 meters For more information on network cables see the section on network cable types 19 1 3 The 100 LED The 100 LED does not show the speed of my Ethernet device Troubleshooting 19 1 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 19 3 Troubleshooting 100 LED STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION Check the connection between the switch and your Ethernet device s Check that the port is enabled Make sure you re using the correct table type and that the distance between the switch and the device does not exceed 100 meters 19 1 4 The FD COL LED Use this LED to check the duplex mode of the attached Ethernet device Table 19 4 Troubleshooting FD COL LED STEPS CORRECTIVE ACTION The Ethernet device is connected at full duplex mode if the FD COL LED is yellow
119. re common causes of poor network performance or even network failure 19 4 Troubleshooting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 19 10 Troubleshooting Improper Network Cabling and Topology DESCRIPTION PROBLEMS AND CORRECTIVE ACTION Faulty cables Using faulty network cables may affect data rates and have an impact on your network performance Replace with new standard network cables Non standard network cables Non standard cables may increase the number of network collisions and cause other network problems that affect your network performance refer to Chapter 2 Cabling Length If you use longer cables than are needed transmission quality may be affected The network cables should not be longer than the limit of 100 meters Too many hubs between the computers in the network Too many hubs or repeaters between the connected computers in the network may increase the number of network collision or other network problems Remove unnecessary hubs from the network A loop in the data path A data path loop forms when there is more than one path or route between two networked computers This results in broadcast storms that will severely affect your network performance Make sure there are no loops in your network topology Troubleshooting 19 5 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Appendix A Setting up Your Computer s IP Address All computers must have a 10M
120. s FlowCtrl 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 10 100TX 100FX OMDIAAUBWHNH actions gt lt Quit gt t the on u Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 17 2 SMT Port Status Refer to the Port Control chapter for field descriptions 17 1 2 Port Statistics In the Status and Counters screen select Port Counters and press ENTER to display the Port Counters screen Dimension Switch ES 2008 Port Counters RxBadPkt TxAbort Collision 388925 632292 i Dis N 4 5 6 Tes 8 9 COCO COWOCO ooo oon ononone COCO COWOCO COCO COWCOO ooo ononononone oooo0oorACSO actions gt lt Refresh gt lt Clear gt lt Quit gt Configure th ction menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 17 3 SMT Port Counters 17 2 Status and Counters Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Refer to the Port Control chapter for field descriptions 17 1 3 General Switch Information In the Statistics and Counter screen select Switch Information and press ENTER to display the Switch Information screen Dimension Switch ES 2008 System Information System Description Dimension Switch ES 2008 MAC Address 00001C01016C Firmware Version vl 02 Hardware Version A3 00 Kernel Version vl 06 Display the switch system Esc Previous menu Figure 17 4 SMT Switch Information Refer to the
121. sable IGMP on the other multicast devices on your network it is not recommended you select the Enable option Filter and Security Setup 8 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Switch A 192 168 1 15 IGMP Disable 4 Computer Video on Demand Server Switch B z 192 168 1 20 lt IGMP Enable Switch C 192 168 1 10 IGMP Disable Computer Computer Figure 8 3 IGMP Example 2 Example 3 Disable IGMP on the Switch When you want to set a multicast router on your network to be the IGMP server but the router does not have the lowest IP address disable IGMP on all other multicast devices Filter and Security Setup Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Switch A 192 168 1 20 IGMP Disable Switch B 192 168 1 10 IGMP Disable Router 192 168 1 15 Computer Video on Demand Server Computer Computer Figure 8 4 IGMP Example 2 8 1 3 Viewing IGMP Snooping Information Click Filter Setup and then IGMP Snooping to display IGMP snooping information Filter Setup IGMP Snooping IP Address 224 000 000 002 224 000 000 009 Static MAC Addresses Multicast Group LAN ID 0001 Port Security MAC Filtering Member Port O1 02 tt tt tt tt ae ee ee 01 02 tt tt te te ne ee ee 224 000 000 012 224 000 001 022 224 000 001 024 224 000 001 060 239 255 255 250 0001 0001 0001 0001 0001 D1 OZ tte atte e e D1
122. screen as shown next Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Enable in the STP field and save the settings Dimension Switch ES 2008 Enable Disable STP Function STP Enabled actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Space Toggle Esc Action menu Figure 16 3 SMT Enable STP 16 2 2 Configure System Parameters Use the STP Parameters Setup screen to configure the system parameters for STP Refer to the Configuring Spanning Tree Parameters section for field descriptions 16 2 Protocol Related Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 STP Parameters Setup Priority Priority 1 65535 32768 Mac Address 00001C01016C Root Path Cost 0 Max Age 6 40 20 Root Port Root Max Age 20 Hello Time 1 10 eZ Hello Time 22 Forward Delay 15 Forward Delay Time 4 30 15 actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt ct the on menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 4 SMT STP Parameters Setup 16 2 3 Configuring STP Parameters Per Port Use the STP Per Port Setting screen to set up STP parameters for each port on the switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 STP Per Port Setting Priority Disabled Forwarding 128 Disabled 128 Disabled 128 Disabled 128 Disabled 128 Disabled 128 Disabled 128 Disabled 128 ODINIDGOBWNHR actions gt lt Edi
123. seeaeeeeenecaeeeeeneees 16 3 xii List of Figures Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Figure 16 5 SMT STP Per Port Setting ees eessecseesecseseeceseeeeeseceeeeeceseeeeaeeeeeaeeaees 16 3 Figure 16 6 SMT SNMP Configuration cccesscsssssecseseeceseeeesseceeeseceeeeceaseeeeaeeates 16 4 Figure 16 7 SMT SNMP System Options cccccssecseeseeeseeeeceeeceeeeseeeseceeecseeeeesseeees 16 5 Figure 16 8SMT SNMP Community Strings ccccceecseesseesceeseeeeeeecsseensecseeeeeeneeees 16 5 Figure 16 9 SMT SNMP Trap Managet cccccesccssceeseeeseceeeeseeeseeeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeenseeereees 16 6 Figure 16 10 SMT Add SNMP Trap Manager cccsccssesssecseeeseeeseeeeeeseeeneeeeeesseeneeees 16 6 Figure 16 11 SMT GVRP Configuration ececcesesssesecseeeeceeeeeceseceeeecaeeeeeaecaeeeeeneees 16 7 Figure 16 12 SMT LACP Configuration eceecesesssssecseseeceeeeeceseeeessecaeeeeeneseeeeaeneees 16 7 Figure 16 13 SMT LACP Group Setting cccccccscecsseeseeeseeesceeseeeeeeseeeseceseeeeseeeneeees 16 8 Figure 16 14 SMT LACP State Activity 0 eececcssescsesecseseeceeeeeceaeceeeaecaeeseenesseeeaeenees 16 9 Figure 16 15 SMT LACP Group Status eeccesssessessecseeeececeeeceseceeesecaeseeeecaeeeeenee 16 10 Figure 17 1 SMT Status and Counters cccccescescessceseceeceseceseceecseeeaeeeaeeeeeenseesreees 17 1 Figure 17 2 SMT Port Status serren n feds pa E shots steg eae eee hee 17 2 Figure 17 3 SMT Pott
124. solve it REGULAR MAIL ftp europe zyxel com www zyxel com ftp zyxel com www zyxel dk ftp zyxel dk www zyxel de ZyXEL Communications Corp 6 Innovation Road II Science Based Industrial Park Hsinchu 300 Taiwan ZyXEL Communications Inc 1650 Miraloma Avenue Placentia CA 92870 U S A ZyXEL Communications A S Columbusvej 5 2860 Soeborg Denmark ZyXEL Deutschland GmbH Adenauerstr 20 A2 D 52146 Wuerselen Germany vi Customer Support Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table of Contents COPY W in dicccscecasssvvescunseseasseessoseascess sesnesdundes cveseutees sedeswnsso soeseesessoncetesess sseedeenssSessesenvosuesense ii ZYXEL Limited Warranty cscsiccsccccccsnvsccesssvsnsccssssvevssecss svvsvenacseuvssesnestesedsesesnassoeseswsssesesses iii Information for Camadian USers scssscscscsssccscsecssccesccesssscescessssesscessssssscccesssseees iv Interference Statements and Warnings sscccccscesscssscssseeccsesssssscscesesesssesesseseees v C stomer SUPPOrt sosser sess sisson onsen ioeie e ios e e ien vi List OF FISUrES eisses eutn EEEE Ea E Sie R EES xi List Of Tablles csscssscssscsssssscssscsssesssesssssssnsssnsesscesessseesscessssssessssssssccssonsesssesssseseneses xiv PrOLACO iss cccaccsscsssevcasencscetsetsseuseoucsosecesescsovansoceescdsontecssecescdcsouevessoddsteccveevaesseecstsseceospsenssests xvi Chapter 1 Getting to Know Your ES 2008
125. ss ENTER and save the changes 15 5 2 MAC Address Filtering Follow the steps below to set up MAC address filtering Step 1 Inthe MAC Address Configuration screen select Filtering MAC Address and press ENTER to display the screen as shown Switch Configuration 15 11 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Filtering MAC Address MAC Address VLAN ID MAC Address VLAN ID actions gt lt Edit gt lt Delete gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Add Edit Delete filter MAC addresse Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item igure 15 MT MAC Address Filtering Step 2 Press TAB to select lt Add gt and press ENTER Dimension Switch ES 2008 Add Filter MAC Address MAC Address VLAN ID actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Connection to host lost Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 13 SMT Edit MAC Address Filtering Follow the instruction in the table next to set the fields in this screen Table 15 6 Edit MAC Address Filtering SMT Field Descriptions FIELD DESCRIPTION MAC Address Enter the MAC address of the Ethernet device you wish to block in hexadecimal notation VLAN ID If VLAN is enabled enter the number of the VLAN group to which this port belongs in the VLAN ID field Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt
126. t Protocol Related Configuration 16 7 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 LACP Group Setting Enabled Disabled actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 13 SMT LACP Group Setting Before you configure LACP you must set the trunk groups first Refer to the chapter on Port Trunking The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 16 2 SMT LACP Group Setting FIELD DESCRIPTION Group This read only field displays the trunk group number LACP Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select Enable to activate dynamic trunking on this trunk group Work Port No Enter the number of ports in the trunk group If dynamic trunking is not activated on the trunk group then the number must be the same as the number of ports in the trunk group If dynamic trunking is activated you may enter a number bigger than the number of ports in a trunk group Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 16 8 Protocol Related Configuration Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 16 5 2 Port State Activity Select Port State Activity in the LACP Configuration screen and press ENTER to display the screen as shown Dimension Switch ES 2008 Port St
127. t are not in the same group s the traffic must first go through a router As well as security VLANs also increase network performance by limiting broadcasts to a smaller and more manageable logical broadcast domain In traditional switched environments all broadcast packets go to each and every individual port With VLAN broadcasts are confined to the members of the VLAN Note that VLANs are unidirectional they only govern outgoing traffic Port based VLANs are VLANs where the packet forwarding decision is based on the destination MAC address and its associated port 1 4 Getting to Know Your ES 2008 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch H gt VLAN Group 1 VLAN Group 2 Figure 1 3 VLAN Application Example Getting to Know Your ES 2008 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 2 Hardware Description and Installation This chapter describes the switch hardware and installation 2 1 Hardware Installation The switch is suitable for an office environment where it can be placed on a desktop Step 1 Make sure the switch is clean and dry Step 2 Attach the supply rubber feet to the bottom of the switch Step 3 Set the switch on a smooth and sturdy flat space strong enough to support the weight of the switch and the connected cables Make sure there is a power outlet nearby Step 4 Make sure there is enough clearance around the switch to allow air circulation and the attachment of cables and the powe
128. t gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt tion menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 16 5 SMT STP Per Port Setting The following table describes the fields in this screen Protocol Related Configuration 16 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 16 1 SMT STP Per Port Setting FIELD DESCRIPTION Port This read only field displays the port number on the switch State This read only field displays the state of the port The state can be Forward Disable Blocking Learning and Listening Path Cost Enter a number between 1 and 65535 in the Path Cost field The smaller the number the lower the path cost is for the port Priority Enter a number between 0 and 255 in the Priority field The smaller the number the higher the priority Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 16 3 SNMP Configuration Refer to the SVMP chapter for more information on SNMP To configure SNMP use the menus in the SNMP Configuration screen as shown next Intelligent Switch SNMP Configuration System Options Community Strings Trap Managers Previous Menu Configure the system information Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 16 6 SMT SNMP Configuration 16 3 1 System Options Use the System Options screen to set up system parameters
129. tch Dimension Switch ES 2008 Priority Configuration YRDUBWNERO High Low Queue Service Ratio H L H gt L actions gt lt Edit gt lt Save gt lt Quit gt Select the action menu Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Quit Previous menu Enter Select Item Figure 15 8 SMT Priority Configuration The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 15 5 SMT Priority Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Level 0 7 Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select High to set high priority for level High Low Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select the type of queue service Refer Queue to the Advanced Switch Configuration chapter for descriptions of each option Service Ratio H L Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 15 5 MAC Address Configuration Use the menus in the MAC Address Configuration screen to set static MAC addresses and configure MAC address filter In the Switch Configuration screen select MAC Address Configuration to display the screen as shown Switch Configuration 15 9 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Dimension Switch ES 2008 MAC Address Configuration Static MAC Address Filtering MAC Address Previous Menu Configure the MAC addr Tab Next Item BackSpace Previous Item Enter Select Item Figure 15 9 SMT MAC Address Configuration 15
130. than the total number of the trunk ports The excess ports are in standby and can be aggregated if any of the other ports fail If you select Disable in the LACP field then the number of ports must be the same as the number of the trunk ports By default the total number of trunk ports is displayed Add Select a port number on the right selection box and click Add to add the port to the trunk group on the left Any ports that remain on the right are ports not assigned to any trunk groups Remove Select a port number on the left selection box and click Remove to remove the port from the trunk group 7 3 Viewing Static Trunk Group Information The Aggregator Information screen displays static trunk groups with the LACP feature Click Administrator Trunking and then the Aggregator Information tab A screen displays as follows Trunking Aggregator Setting Aggregator information State Activity The following information provides a view of LACP current status Figure 7 2 Trunking Aggregator Information The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 7 2 Aggregator Information FIELD DESCRIPTION Group Key This field displays the trunk group number Port Trunking 7 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 7 2 Aggregator Information FIELD DESCRIPTION Port No This field displays the port number s belonging to a static trunk grou
131. the number of ones instead of writing the value of each octet This is usually specified by writing a followed by the number of bits in the mask after the address IP Subnetting M Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch For example 192 1 1 0 25 is equivalent to saying 192 1 1 0 with mask 255 255 255 128 The following table shows all possible subnet masks for a class C address using both notations Chart 4 Alternative Subnet Mask Notation SUBNET MASK IP SUBNET MASK 1 BITS LAST OCTET BIT ADDRESS VALUE 255 255 255 0 124 0000 0000 255 255 255 128 125 1000 0000 255 255 255 192 126 1100 0000 255 255 255 224 127 1110 0000 255 255 255 240 128 1111 0000 255 255 255 248 129 1111 1000 255 255 255 252 130 1111 1100 The first mask shown is the class C natural mask Normally if no mask is specified it is understood that the natural mask is being used Example Two Subnets As an example you have a class C address 192 168 1 0 with subnet mask of 255 255 255 0 NETWORK NUMBER HOST ID IP Address 192 168 1 0 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 00000000 Subnet Mask 255 255 255 0 Subnet Mask Binary 11111111 11111111 11111111 00000000 The first three octets of the address make up the network number class C You want to have two separate networks Divide the network 192 168 1 0 into two separate subnets by conver
132. ting one of the host ID bits of the IP address to a network number bit The borrowed host ID bit can be either 0 or 1 thus giving two subnets 192 168 1 0 with mask 255 255 255 128 and 192 168 1 128 with mask 255 255 255 128 In the following charts shaded bolded last octet bit values indicate host ID bits borrowed to form network ID bits The number of borrowed host ID bits determines the number of subnets you can have The remaining number of host ID bits after N IP Subnetting Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch borrowing determines the number of hosts you can have on each subnet Chart 5 Subnet 1 NETWORK NUMBER LAST OCTET BIT VALUE IP Address 192 168 1 0 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 00000000 Subnet Mask 255 255 255 128 Subnet Mask Binary 11111111 11111111 11111111 10000000 Subnet Address 192 168 1 0 Lowest Host ID 192 168 1 1 Broadcast Address 192 168 1 127 Highest Host ID 192 168 1 126 Chart 6 Subnet 2 NETWORK NUMBER LAST OCTET BIT VALUE IP Address 192 168 1 128 IP Address Binary 11000000 10101000 00000001 10000000 Subnet Mask 255 255 255 128 Subnet Mask Binary 11111111 11111111 11111111 10000000 Subnet Address 192 168 1 128 Lowest Host ID 192 168 1 129 Broadcast Address 192 168 1 255 Highest Host ID 192 168 1 254 The remaining 7 bits deter
133. tion gp Windows Update Create Shortcut Rename a Change settings of this connection Properties D Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch 4 Select Internet Protocol TCP IP 4 Local Area Connection Properties ales under the General tab in Win XP General Authentication Advanced and click Properties Connect using E9 Standard PCI Fast Ethemet Adapter This connection uses the following items M E Client for Microsoft Networks M 8 File and Printer Sharing for Microsoft Networks M JE QoS Packet Scheduler Intenet Protocol TCP IP Description Transmission Control Protocol Intemet Protocol The default wide area network protocol that provides communication across diverse interconnected networks Show icon in notification area when connected Cancel 5 The Internet Protocol TCP IP Internet Protocol TCP IP Properties PR Properties window opens the General Atemate Configuration General tab in Windows XP ti capabi Cerise yuesdt you nto cami or the appropriate IP settings If you have a dynamic IP address Obtain an IP address automatically click Obtain an IP address Sieg ee egpeie automatically If you have a static IP address click Use the following IP Address and fill in the IP address Subnet mask emt aa is and Default gateway fields Click Advanced Setting Up Your Computer s IP
134. tion 8 2 1 to define static MAC addresses on the ports to allow only the computers with the static MAC addresses to send packets through the ports If you do not configure static MAC address es on the port with port security feature the port will drop all packets 8 4 MAC Address Filtering You can set up the switch to drop packets from a computer based on the computer s MAC address Follow the steps set up MAC address filtering Step 1 Click Administrator Filter Setup and then the MAC Filtering tab 8 8 Filter and Security Setup Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Filter Setup IGMP Snooping Static MAC Addresses Port Security Specify a MAC address to filter MAC Address VLAN ID MAC Address Ex ABCDEF 123456 VLAN ID Add Delete Help m MAC Filtering Figure 8 8 MAC Address Filtering Step 2 Enter the MAC address without the separator of an Ethernet device in the MAC Address field Step 3 If VLAN is enabled enter the VLAN ID of a VLAN group the port belongs to in the VLAN ID field This field is N A if VLAN is not enabled Step 4 Click Apply to save the settings Filter and Security Setup 8 9 Advanced Applications Part III Advanced Applications Part III covers VLAN Port Mirroring STP SNMP and firmware and configuration maintenance Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Chapter 9 VLAN This chapter shows you how to set up
135. ty MAC Filtering Static addresses currently defined on the switch are listed below Click Add to add a new static entry to the address table MAC Address Port VLAN ID MAC Address OoOo o ooo Ex ABCDEF123456 Port No Delete Help Figure 8 6 Static MAC Address Step 3 Enter the MAC address without the separator of an Ethernet device in the MAC Address field Step 4 Enter the port number that the Ethernet device is connected to in the Port No field 8 3 Port Security A port with security mode turned on is prevented from re learning a new MAC address of an Ethernet device To secure a port disable the port from learning new MAC addresses and then define a list of MAC addresses that are allowed to use the secured port Thus only incoming packets with the defined MAC addresses will be forwarded Follow the steps below to secure the ports on the switch Step 1 Click Administrator and then Filter Setup Step 2 Click the Port Security tab to display the screen as shown next Filter and Security Setup 8 7 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Filter Setup IGMP Snooping Static MAC Addresses Port Security MAC Filtering 9 Apply Default Help Figure 8 7 Port Security 6 m 7 E 8 m nih WO Ne wija jimjima Step 3 Select the check box beside the port number to stop the port from learning new MAC addresses Step 4 Click Apply Step 5 Follow Sec
136. uration The Type field for port 9 varies depending on your switch model Follow the instructions in the table next to configure the fields in this screen Table 15 2 SMT Port Monitoring Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Port Mirror Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select YES to activate the port State mirroring feature and set the related fields below Analysis Port Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select a port number as the mirror port Port This read only field displays the trunk group number or port numbers for ports not in a trunk group Note This field is 0 to indicate that a port is in a trunk group Type This read only field displays either 10 100 TX for Ethernet ports or 100FX for the fiber port on the switch Switch Configuration 15 3 Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Table 15 2 SMT Port Monitoring Configuration FIELD DESCRIPTION Action Press SPACE BAR and ENTER to select direction of data traffic on the port to monitor Select RX to monitor only the incoming traffic on the port Select TX to monitor only the outgoing traffic on the port Select Both to monitor both the incoming and outgoing traffic on the port If this field is None no traffic on the port is monitored Press ESC to move the cursor back to the actions menu Press TAB to select lt Save gt and press ENTER to save the settings back to the switch 15 3 VLAN Use the VLAN Co
137. uration tab displays a list of installed components You need a network adapter the TCP IP protocol and Client for Microsoft Networks Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch If you need the adapter a In the Network window click Add b Select Adapter and then click Add C Select the manufacturer and model of your network adapter and then click OK If you need TCP IP a In the Network window click Add b Select Protocol and then click Add c Select Microsoft from the list of manufacturers d Select TCP IP from the list of network protocols and then click OK If you need Client for Microsoft Networks a Click Add b Select Client and then click Add C Select Microsoft from the list of manufacturers d Select Client for Microsoft Networks from the list of network clients and then click OK e Restart your computer so the changes you made take effect Configuring In the Network window Configuration tab select your network adapter s TCP IP entry and click Properties 1 Click the IP Address tab 2jxi If your IP address is dynamic select Obtain EE IP add i DNS Configuration Gateway WINS Configuration 1P Address an IP address automatically y An IP address can be automatically assigned to this computer If you have a static IP address select Specify soap clasts gh en an IP address and type your information into ar reiua the IP Address and Subnet Mask fields
138. wser G Recent Applications Al Recent Documents if Remote Access Status Scrapbook P Sherlock 2 Speakable Items ADSL Control and Status Appearance Apple Menu Options AppleTalk ColorSyne Control Strip Date amp Time DialAssist Energy Saver Extensions Manager File Exchange File Sharing General Controls Internet Keyboard Keychain Access Launcher Location Manager Memory Modem Monitors Mouse Multiple Users Numbers QuickTime Settings Remote Access Software Update Sound Speech Startup Disk Text USB Printer Sharing 2 Select o TCP IP Ethernet built Comect via Setup Ethernet z in from the Connect via list DHCP Client ID Using DHCP Server Eoo s will be supplied by server 7 Configure IP Address Subnet mask lt will be supplied by server gt Router address lt will be supplied by server gt Name server addr lt will be supplied by server gt a list 4 For statically assigned settings do the following From the Configure box select Manually Search comans For dynamically assigned settings select Using DHCP Server from the Configure Setting Up Your Computer s IP Address Dimension ES 2008 Ethernet Switch Type your IP address in the IP Address box Type your subnet mask in the Subnet mask box Type the IP address of your Prestige in the Router address box Close

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