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TP-LINK TL-SL2452 network switch

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1. g Disable Disable m F 10 Disable Disable EM F 11 Disable Disable ae d 12 Disable Disable Figure 5 3 Port Mirror Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Mirror Group Number Select the mirror group number you want to configure gt Mirroring Port Mirroring Port Select the mirroring port number 32 gt Mirrored Port Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select Select the desired port as a mirrored port It is multi optional Port Displays the port number Ingress Select Enable Disable the Ingress feature When the Ingress is enabled the incoming packets received by the mirrored port will be copied to the mirroring port Egress Select Enable Disable the Egress feature When the Egress is enabled the outgoing packets sent by the mirrored port will be copied to the mirroring port LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to The LAG member can not be selected as the mirrored port or mirroring port Mdnote 1 The LAG member can not be selected as the mirrored port or mirroring port 2 A port can not be set as the mirrored port and the mirroring port simultaneously 3 The Port Mirror function can take effect span the multiple VLANs 5 1 3 Port Security MAC Address Table maintains the mapping relationship between the port and the MAC address of the connected device which is the base
2. Figure 7 5 STP Summary 7 2 Port Config On this page you can configure the parameters of the ports for CIST Choose the menu Spanning Tree gt Port Config to load the following page 67 Port Config Select Port status Note O Disable O 1 Disable O 2 Disable O 3 Disable O 4 Disable O 5 Disable O 6 Disable O 7 Disable O 8 Disable O g Disable O 10 Disable O 11 Disable F 12 Disable O 13 Disable O 14 Disable O 15 Disable Priority ExtPath Cast IntPath Cost Edge Port 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 128 Disable Auto pot Select P2P Link MCheck STP Version PortRole Port Status LAG i Unchange v Auto Auto Disable Auto A Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto Auto Auto Disable Auto LAG1 Auto Auto Disable Auto LAG1 Auto Auto Disable Auto LAG1 Auto Auto Disable Auto LAG1 Auto Auto Disable Auto A Auto Auto Disable Auto Ifthe Path Cost of a portis setto 0 it will alter automatically according to the port s link speed Figure 7 6 Port Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Config Port Select Select Port Status P
3. TAG voice stream Tagged Supported The default VLAN of the port can not be Automatic Mode voice VLAN UNTAG voice Untagged Supported stream Tagged Not supported Untagged Not supported TAG voice stream Tagged Supported The default VLAN of the port should not Manual Mode be voice VLAN UNTAG voice Untagged Supported stream Tagged Not supported Table 9 2 Port voice VLAN mode and voice stream processing mode gt Security Mode of Voice VLAN When voice VLAN is enabled for a port you can configure its security mode to filter data stream If security mode is enabled the port just forwards voice packets and discards other packets whose source MAC addresses do not match OUI addresses If security mode is not enabled the port forwards all the packets Security Mode Packet Type Processing Mode UNTAG packet When the source MAC address of the packet is the OUI address that can be identified the packet can be Packet with voice transmitted in the voice VLAN Otherwise the packet will Enable VLAN TAG be discarded Packet with other The processing mode for the device to deal with the packet is determined by whether the port permits the VLAN or not VLAN TAG independent of voice VLAN security mode UNTAG packet Do not check the source MAC address of the packet and all Packet with voice the packets can be transmitted in the voice VLAN VLAN TAG Disable Packet with other The processing mo
4. gt Network Requirements e Switch Ais connecting to PC A and Server B e Switch B is connecting to PC B and Server A e PC Aand Server A is in the same VLAN e PCB and Server B is in the same VLAN e PCs in the two VLANs cannot communicate with each other gt Network Diagram Server B Server A Switch A Port 7 Switch B 58 gt Configuration Procedure e Configure Switch A Se Omen oson OOOO Configure the Required On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config page configure Link Type of the the link type of Port 2 Port 3 and Port 4 as Untagged Tagged and ports Untagged respectively 2 Create VLAN10 Required On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config page create a VLAN with its VLAN ID as 10 owning Port 2 and Port 3 3 Create VLAN20 Required On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config page create a VLAN with its VLAN ID as 20 owning Port 3 and Port 4 e Configure Switch B A oson OOOO Configure the Required On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config page configure Link Type of the the link type of Port 7 Port 6 and Port 8 as Untagged Tagged and ports Untagged respectively 2 Create VLAN10 Required On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config page create a VLAN with its VLAN ID as 10 owning Port 6 and Port 8 3 Create VLAN20 Required On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config page create a VLAN with its VLAN ID as 20 owning Port 6 and Port 7 Return to CONTENTS 59 Chapter 7 Spanning Tree STP Spanning Tree
5. Operation Click the Edit button to modify the Views in the entry and click the Modify button to apply MA note Every Group should contain a Read View The default Read View is viewDefault 11 1 4 SNMP User The User in an SNMP Group can manage the switch via the management station software The User and its Group have the same security level and access right You can configure the SNMP User on this page Choose the menu SNMP SNMP Config SNMP User to load the following page User Contig ser Mame 16 characters maximurn User Type Group Mame Security Model w e security Level noaAuthNoPriv w Auth Mode None Auth Password Oo K characters maximum Privacy Mode None ow Privacy Password 00000 16 characters maximum Liser Table select ser Mame User Type Group Mame ela security Level Auth Mode ery Operation all Note The security model and security level ofthe user should be the same with that of its group Figure 11 6 SNMP User 127 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt User Config User Name User Type Group Name Security Model Security Level Auth Mode Auth Password Privacy Mode Privacy Password User Table Select User Name User Type Group Name Security Model Security Level Auth Mode Privacy Mode Operation Md note The SNMP User and its Group should have the same Security Model and Security Level Enter the User Name
6. Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select Select the desired port for port protect configuration It is multi optional Port Displays the port number of the switch Loop Protect Loop Protect is to prevent the loops in the network brought by recalculating STP because of link failures and network congestions Root Protect Root Protect is to prevent wrong network topology change caused by the role change of the current legal root bridge TC Protect TC Protect is to prevent the decrease of the performance and stability of the switch brought by continuously removing MAC address entries upon receiving TC BPDUSs in the STP network BPDU Protect BPDU Protect is to prevent the edge port from being attacked by maliciously created BPDUs BPDU Filter BPDU Filter is to prevent BPDUs flood in the STP network LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to 7 4 2 TC Protect When TC Protect is enabled for the port on Port Protect page the TC threshold and TC protect cycle need to be configured on this page 19 Choose the menu Spanning Tree gt STP Security TC Protect to load the following page TC Protect TC Threshold packet 1 100 TC Protect Cycle sec 1 10 Figure 7 11 TC Protect The following entries are displayed on this screen gt TC Protect TC Threshold Enter a number from 1 to 100 It is the maximum number of the
7. TP LINK User Guide TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 Smart Switch TP LINK TP LINK es es REV1 2 0 1910010972 COPYRIGHT amp TRADEMARKS Specifications are subject to change without notice TP LINK is a registered trademark of TP LINK TECHNOLOGIES CO LTD Other brands and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders No part of the specifications may be reproduced in any form or by any means or used to make any derivative such as translation transformation or adaptation without permission from TP LINK TECHNOLOGIES CO LTD Copyright 2014 TP LINK TECHNOLOGIES CO LTD All rights reserved http www tp link com FCC STATEMENT FE 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 when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with 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 This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules Operation is subject to the follow
8. UL Control bps 05 Priority Join WYLAN 5 2 2 Static LAG On this page you can manually configure the LAG Choose the menu Switching LAG Static LAG to load the following page LAG Contig Group Mumber Description Member Port O 1 O 7 113 Jig 125 Note 1 LAG denotes the Link Aggregation Group which the port belongs to 2 i s not suggested to set 100M and 1000M ports in the same LAG O 2 O a 0114 O 20 126 Cosi Figure 5 8 Detailed Information LAG O3 O a Mis Ma 27 hl EA O 4 Jin 0116 O 22 028 3 The LAG created by LACP cant bhe modified Figure 5 9 Manually Config 39 O 5 0111 117 023 O 6 012 18 0724 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt LAG Config Group Number Select a Group Number for the LAG Description Displays the description of the LAG gt Member Port Member Port Select the port as the LAG member Clearing all the ports of the LAG will delete this LAG Tips 1 The LAG can be deleted by clearing its all member ports 2 A port can only be added to a LAG If a port is the member of a LAG the port number will be displayed in gray and can not be selected 5 2 3 LACP Config LACP Link Aggregation Control Protocol is defined in IEEE802 3ad and enables the dynamic link aggregation and disaggregation by exchanging LACP packets with its partner The switch can dynamically group similarly configured ports into a
9. 1 2 3 key Download computer to the switch Choose the 55H public key file to download into switch Ooo EXT The key type should accord with the type of the key file The SSH key downloading can not be interrupted Download the private key file to SSH client software Pageant Key List Pageant Enter Pass E Enter passphrase for key rza keu 201 007 20 cm HS Lashes 28 3 After the public key and private key are downloaded please log on to the interface of PuTTY and enter the IP address for login S Pull Configuration Category E Session Logging Terminal Keyboard Bell Features Window Appearance Behaviour Translation Selection Colours Connection Data Prov Telnet Alogin SSH Kes Auth TTY sli Basic options for your PuTTY session Specity the destination you want to connect to Host Hame or IF address Port 192 168 0 1 22 Connection type C Raw Telnet Blogin SSH Serial Load save or delete a stored session Saved Sessions Default Settings Load Save Delete Close window on exit CjAlways Neve 6 Only on clean exit After successful authentication please enter the login user name If you log on to the switch without entering password it indicates that the key has been successfully downloaded Z 192 168 0 1 PuTTY login as admin Further authenticati Authenticating wi TL S L24285
10. Chapter 6 VLAN This module is used to configure VLANs to control broadcast in LANs Here mainly introduces e 802 1Q VLAN Configure port based VLAN Chapter 7 Spanning Tree This module is used to configure spanning tree function of the switch Here mainly introduces STP Config Configure and view the global settings of spanning tree function Port Config Configure CIST parameters of ports e MSTP Instance Configure MSTP instances STP Security Configure protection function to prevent devices from any malicious attack against STP features Chapter 8 Multicast This module is used to configure multicast function of the switch Here mainly introduces e IGMP Snooping Configure global parameters of IGMP Snooping function port properties VLAN and multicast VLAN e Multicast IP Configure multicast IP table Multicast Filter Configure multicast filter feature to restrict users ordering multicast programs Packet Statistics View the multicast data traffic on each port of the switch which facilitates you to monitor the IGMP messages in the network Chapter Introduction Chapter 9 QoS This module is used to configure QoS function to provide different quality of service for various network applications and requirements Here mainly introduces e DiffServ Configure priorities port priority 802 1P priority and DSCP priority Bandwidth Control Configure rate limit feature to control the traffic rate on each port confi
11. Router lt 0 ee Multicast Source Switch Port 5 VLANS gt Configuration Procedure se nwt oat OO Create VLANs Create three VLANs with the VLAN ID 3 4 and 5 respectively and specify the description of VLAN3 as Multicast VLAN on VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN page Configure ports On VLAN gt 3 802 1Q VLAN function pages For port 3 configure its link type as Tagged and add it to VLAN3 VLAN4 and VLANS For port 4 configure its link type as Untagged and add it to VLAN3 and VLAN 4 For port 5 configure its link type as Untagged and add it to VLAN3 and VLAN 5 89 os et e OOO Enable IGMP Enable IGMP Snooping function globally on Multicast gt IGMP Snooping function Snooping Snooping Config page Enable IGMP Snooping function for port 3 port 4 and port 5 on Multicast IGMP Snooping Port Config page Enable Multicast Enable Multicast VLAN configure the VLAN ID of a multicast VLAN VLAN as 3 and keep the other parameters as default on Multicast IGMP Snooping Multicast VLAN page Check Multicast VLAN 3 5 and Multicast VLAN 3 will be displayed in the IGMP Snooping Status table on the Multicast IGMP Snooping Snooping Config page 8 2 Multicast IP In a network receivers can join different multicast groups appropriate to their needs The switch forwards multicast streams based on multicast address table The Multicast IP can be implemented on Multicast IP Table Static Multicast IP page 8
12. The problem above can be solved by configuring a multicast VLAN By adding switch ports to the multicast VLAN and enabling IGMP Snooping you can make users in different VLANs share the same multicast VLAN This saves the bandwidth since multicast streams are transmitted only within the multicast VLAN and also guarantees security because the multicast VLAN is isolated from user VLANS Before configuring a multicast VLAN you should firstly configure a VLAN as multicast VLAN and add the corresponding ports to the VLAN on the 802 1Q VLAN page If the multicast VLAN is enabled the multicast configuration for other VLANs on the VLAN Config page will be invalid that is the multicast streams will be transmitted only within the multicast VLAN Choose the menu Multicast IGMP Snooping Multicast VLAN to load the following page Multicast VLAN Multicast VLAN Enable Disable VLAN ID 2 4094 Router Port Time po sec 60 600 recommend 300 Member Port Time EE sec 60 600 recommend 60 Leave Time AAN sec 1 30 recommend 1 Router Ports fe Format 1 3 6 8 Note 1 ANIGMP packet will be processed in the Multicast VLAN after Multicast VLAN is created 2 The Multicast VLAN won t take effect unless you first complete the configuration on the VLAN Config page Figure 8 7 Multicast VLAN 87 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Multicast VLAN Multicast VLAN Select Enable Disable Multicast VLAN fe
13. Type Retry IS 11 255 Timeout ee 1 3 600 Notification Table Select IP Address IOF Fort User parle Security Level Type Timeout Retry Operation Al Figure 11 8 Notification Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Notification IP Address Enter the IP address of the management Host UDP Port Enter the number of the UDP port used to send notifications The UDP port functions with the IP address for the notification sending The default is 162 User Enter the User name of the management station Security Model Select the Security Model of the management station Security Level Select the Security Level for the SNMP v3 User e noAuthNoPriv No authentication and no privacy security level are used e authNoPriv Only the authentication security level is used e authPriv Both the authentication and the privacy security levels are used 131 Type Retry Timeout Notification Table Select the type for the notifications e Trap Indicates traps are sent e Inform Indicates informs are sent The Inform type has a higher security than the Trap type Specify the amount of times the switch resends an inform request The switch will resend the inform request if it doesn t get the response from the management station during the Timeout interval and it will terminate resending the inform request if the resending times reach the specified Retry times Specify the maximum time fo
14. gt Access Control Config Control Mode IP Address amp Mask MAC Address Port Select the control mode for users to log on to the Web management page Disable Disable the access control function IP based Select this option to limit the IP range of the users for login MAC based Select this option to limit the MAC address of the users for login Port based Select this option to limit the ports for login These fields can be available for configuration only when IP based mode is selected Only the users within the IP range you set here are allowed for login The field can be available for configuration only wnen MAC based mode is selected Only the user with this MAC address you set here are allowed for login The field can be available for configuration only when Port based mode is selected Only the users connected to these ports you set here are allowed for login 22 gt Session Config Session Timeout If you do nothing with the Web management page within the timeout time the system will log out automatically If you want to reconfigure please login again gt Access User Number Number Control Select Enable Disable the Number Control function Admin Number Enter the maximum number of the users logging on to the Web management page as Admin Guest Number Enter the maximum number of the users logging on to the Web management page as Guest 4 4 2 SSL Config SSL Secure Sockets Layer a
15. Calla T3 Lo poa Packets in TC3 are f preferentially Packets sent via this interface forwarded gt Ca Ca Ca Ca Yo 3 Egress interface seess E T a cece To aa Gas 1 Packets ul classification SP Mode Figure 9 4 SP Mode WRR Mode Weight Round Robin Mode In this mode packets in all the queues are sent in order based on the weight value for each queue and every queue can be assured of a certain service time The weight value indicates the occupied proportion of the resource WRR queue overcomes the disadvantage of SP queue that the packets in the queues with lower priority can not get service for a long time In WRR mode though the queues are scheduled in order the service time for each queue is not fixed that is to say if a queue is empty the next queue will be scheduled In this way the bandwidth resources are made full use of The default weight value ratio of TCO TC1 TC2 and TC3 is 1 2 4 8 Packets are mapped to different priority queues E wae TC E Packets in TCO TC3 are d forwarded following the Packets sent via this interface r ratio 1 2 4 8 IA al ot ol ada TC2 Egress interface SS NE a s TT K Ge y daa w Packets AROS classification Weight value TCO TC1 T1C2 TC3 1 2 4 8 Figure 9 5 WRR Mode SP WRR Mode Strict Priority Weight Round Robin Mode In this mode this switch provides two scheduling groups SP group and WRR gr
16. Figure 5 13 Address Table The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Search Option MAC Address Enter the MAC address of your desired entry VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID of your desired entry Port Select the corresponding port number of your desired entry Type Select the type of your desired entry e All This option allows the address table to display all the address entries 45 e Static This option allows the address table to display the static address entries only e Dynamic This option allows the address table to display the dynamic address entries only e Filtering This option allows the address table to display the filtering address entries only gt Address Table MAC Address Displays the MAC address learned by the switch VLAN ID Displays the corresponding VLAN ID of the MAC address Port Displays the corresponding Port number of the MAC address Type Displays the Type of the MAC address Aging Status Displays the Aging status of the MAC address 5 4 2 Static Address The static address table maintains the static address entries which can be added or removed manually independent of the aging time In the stable networks the static MAC address entries can facilitate the switch to reduce broadcast packets and remarkably enhance the efficiency of packets forwarding without learning the address The static MAC address learned by the port with Port Security enabled in the static learning mode w
17. Note twill take a few minutes to backup the log file Please wait without any operation Figure 12 6 Backup Log The following entry is displayed on this screen gt Backup Log Backup Log Click the Backup Log button to save the log as a file to your computer Mdnote It will take a few minutes to backup the log file Please wait without any operation 12 3 Device Diagnostics This switch provides Cable Test and Loopback functions for device diagnostics 12 3 1 Cable Test Cable Test functions to test the connection status of the cable connected to the switch which facilitates you to locate and diagnose the trouble spot of the network 141 Choose the menu Maintenance Device Diagnostics Cable Test to load the following page Cable Test a Unit meter Pair Status Length Error Fair A Fair B Pair E Pair D Note 1 The interval between two cable testfor one port must be more than 3 seconds 2 The resultis more reasonable when the cable pairis in the open status 3 The resultis justfor your information 4 ifthe portis 100M and its connection status is normal cable test cant get the length ofthe cable Figure 12 7 Cable Test The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Cable Test Port Select the port for cable testing Pair Displays the Pair number Status Displays the connection status of the cable connected to the port The test results of the cable include normal close open or imp
18. The community name can limit access to the SNMP agent from SNMP network management station functioning as a password If SNMP v1 or SNMP v2c is employed you can directly configure the SNMP Community on this page without configuring SNMP Group and User Choose the menu SNMP SNMP Config SNMP Community to load the following page Community config Community Mame Access MIB View Community Table 16 characters maximurn viewDefault w Select Community Mame ACCESS WIE View Operation Note The default MIB view of community is viewDefaullt Figure 11 7 SNMP Community The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Community Config Community Name Access MIB View gt Community Table Select Community Name Access MIB View Operation Mdnote Enter the Community Name here Defines the access rights of the community e read only Management right of the Community is restricted to read only and changes cannot be made to the corresponding View e read write Management right of the Community is read write and changes can be made to the corresponding View Select the MIB View for the community to access Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding Community It is multi optional Displays the Community Name here Displays the right of the Community to access the View Displays the Views which the Community can access Click the Edit button to modify the MIB V
19. running IGMPv2 or IGMPv3 sends IGMP leave message when leaving a multicast group to inform the multicast router of its leaving When receiving IGMP leave message the switch will forward IGMP group specific query message to check if other members in the multicast group of the port need this multicast and reset the member port time to the leave time When the leave time times out the switch will remove the port from the corresponding multicast group If no other member is in the group after the port is removed the switch will send IGMP leave message to the router and remove the whole multicast group gt IGMP Snooping Fundamentals 1 Ports Router Port Indicates the switch port directly connected to the multicast router Member Port Indicates a switch port connected to a multicast group member 2 Timers Router Port Time Within the time if the switch does not receive IGMP query message from the router port it will consider this port is not a router port any more The default value is 300 seconds Member Port Time Within the time if the switch does not receive IGMP report message from the member port it will consider this port is not a member port any more The default value is 260 seconds Leave Time Indicates the interval between the switch receiving a leave message from a host and the switch removing the host from the multicast groups The default value is 1 second The IGMP Snooping function can be implemented on Snooping Conf
20. 2 1 Multicast IP Table On this page you can view the multicast IP table on the switch Choose the menu Multicast gt Multicast IP Multicast IP Table to load the following page Search Option O MulticastiP strat 225 0 0 1 VLAN ID 1 4094 m 44099 F Fort C Type All Static Dynamic MulticastiP Table Multicast IP WYLAN ID Forward Port Type Total Multicast IP 0 Figure 8 8 Multicast IP Table The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Search Option Multicast IP Enter the multicast IP address the desired entry must carry VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID the desired entry must carry Port Select the port number the desired entry must carry Type Select the type the desired entry must carry eo All Displays all multicast IP entries eo Static Displays all static multicast IP entries e Dynamic Displays all dynamic multicast IP entries 90 gt Multicast IP Table Multicast IP Displays multicast IP address VLAN ID Displays the VLAN ID of the multicast group Forward Port Displays the forward port of the multicast group Type Displays the type of the multicast IP Mnote If the configuration on VLAN Config page and multicast VLAN page is changed the switch will clear up the dynamic multicast addresses in multicast address table and learn new addresses 8 2 2 Static Multicast IP Static Multicast IP table isolated from dynamic multicast group and multicast filter is not learned
21. Aging Status Al Total MAC Address 0 Note The maximum of the displayed entries is 100 by default please click the Search button to get the complete address entries Figure 5 16 Filtering Address The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Filtering Address MAC Address Enter the MAC address to be filtered VLAN ID Enter the corresponding VLAN ID of the MAC address gt Search Option Search Option Select a Search Option from the pull down list and click the Search button to find your desired entry in the Filtering Address Table e MAC Enter the MAC address of your desired entry 49 e VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID number of your desired entry gt Filtering Address Table Select Select the entry to delete the corresponding filtering address It is multi optional MAC Address Displays the filtering MAC address VLAN ID Displays the corresponding VLAN ID Port Here the symbol _ indicates no specified port Type Displays the Type of the MAC address Aging Status Displays the Aging Status of the MAC address Ad note The MAC address in the Filtering Address Table can not be added to the Static Address Table or bound to a port dynamically 9 5 DHCP Filtering Nowadays the network is getting larger and more complicated The amount of the PCs always exceeds that of the assigned IP addresses The wireless network and the laptops are widely used and the locations of the PCs are always ch
22. Choose the menu Switching MAC Address gt Dynamic Address to load the following page 47 Aging Contig Auto Aging Enable Disable ae Apply Aging Time sec 10 630 default 300 search Option Dynamic Address Table Select MAC Address VLAN ID Port Type Aging Status C H C 02 60 F5 4D 86 2 Dynamic Aging Total MAC Address 1 Note The maximum ofthe displayed entries is 100 by default please click the Search button to get the complete address entries Figure 5 15 Dynamic Address The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Aging Config Auto Aging Allows you to Enable Disable the Auto Aging feature Aging Time Enter the Aging Time for the dynamic address gt Search Option Search Option Select a Search Option from the pull down list and click the Search button to find your desired entry in the Dynamic Address Table e MAC Enter the MAC address of your desired entry e VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID number of your desired entry e Port Enter the Port number of your desired entry e LAG ID Enter the LAG ID of your desired entry gt Dynamic Address Table Select Select the entry to delete the dynamic address or to bind the MAC address to the corresponding port statically It is multi optional MAC Address Displays the dynamic MAC address VLAN ID Displays the corresponding VLAN ID of the MAC address Port Displays the corresponding port number of the MAC address Type Displays the Type of
23. Standard IP ACL and Extend IP ACL pages 10 1 1 ACL Summary On this page you can view the current ACLs configured in the switch Choose the menu ACL ACL Config ACL Summary to load the following page search Options Selecta Ach hi ACL Type Rule Order Fule Table Al Figure 10 1 ACL Summary The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Search Option Select ACL Select the ACL you have created ACL Type Displays the type of the ACL you select Rule Order Displays the rule order of the ACL you select gt Rule Table Display the rule table of the ACL you have selected Here you can edit the rules view the details of them and move them up and down 10 1 2 ACL Create On this page you can create ACLs Choose the menu ACL ACL Config ACL Create to load the following page 112 Create ACL ACL ID 0 99 MAC ACL 100 148 Standard IP ACL 200 299 Extend IP ACL Figure 10 2 ACL Create The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create ACL ACL ID Enter ACL ID of the ACL you want to create Rule Order User Config order is set to be match order in this ACL 10 1 3 MAC ACL MAC ACLs analyze and process packets based on a series of match conditions which can be the source MAC addresses and destination MAC addresses carried in the packets Choose the menu ACL ACL Config MAC ACL to load the following page Create M4C Rule ACL ID MAC ACL Rule ID A
24. TC BPDUs received by the switch in a TC Protect Cycle The default value is 20 TC Protect Cycle Enter a value from 1 to 10 to specify the TC Protect Cycle The default value is 5 7 5 Application Example for STP Function gt Network Requirements Switch A B C D and E all support MSTP function A is the central switch B and C are switches in the convergence layer D E and F are switches in the access layer There are 6 VLANs labeled as VLAN101 VLAN106 in the network All switches run MSTP and belong to the same MST region The data in VLAN101 103 and 105 are transmitted in the STP with B as the root bridge The data in VLAN102 104 and 106 are transmitted in the STP with C as the root bridge Network Diagram m Switch A Y Switch B Switch C Y Switch D Switch E Switch F 76 gt Configuration Procedure e Configure Switch A Configure ports On VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN page configure the link type of the related ports as Tagged and add the ports to VLAN101 VLAN106 The detailed instructions can be found in the section 802 1Q VLAN Enable STP function On Spanning Tree STP Config STP Config page enable STP function and select MSTP version On Spanning Tree gt STP Config Port Config page enable MSTP function for the port Configure the region name and On Spanning Tree gt MSTP Instance gt Region the revision of MST region Config page configure the region as TP LINK and
25. TT e Configure Switch C Configure ports On VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN page configure the link type of the related ports as Tagged and add the ports to VLAN101 VLAN106 The detailed instructions can be found in the section 802 1Q VLAN Enable STP function On Spanning Tree gt STP Config STP Config page enable STP function and select MSTP version On Spanning Tree gt STP Config Port Config page enable MSTP function for the port Configure the region name and On Spanning Tree MSTP _ Instance Region the revision of MST region Config page configure the region as TP LINK and keep the default revision setting Configure VLAN to Instance On Spanning Tree MSTP Instance gt Instance mapping table of the MST region Config page configure VLAN to Instance mapping table Map VLAN101 103 and 105 to Instance 1 map VLAN102 104 and 106 to Instance 2 Configure switch C as the root On Spanning Tree gt MSTP Instance lInstance bridge of Instance 1 Config page configure the priority of Instance 1 to be 4096 Configure switch C as the root On Spanning Tree gt MSTP Instance lInstance bridge of Instance 2 Config page configure the priority of Instance 2 to be O Configure ports On VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN page configure the link type of the related ports as Tagged and add the ports to VLAN101 VLAN106 The detailed instructions can be found in the section 802 1Q VLAN Enable STP function On Spanning Tree gt STP Config STP Conf
26. Tadg id 05 1d Gueve TC id 0 TCI 1 TEO 2 TEO 3 TCI 4 Tt 5 Te E TE3 T TES note Among the Queue TC id TCO TC1 TC3 the bigger value the higher priority Figure 9 7 802 1P Priority The following entries are displayed on this screen gt 802 1P Priority Config 802 1P Priority Select Enable Disable 802 1P Priority gt Priority Level Tag id CoS id Indicates the precedence level defined by IEEE802 1P or the CoS ID Queue TC id Indicates the priority level of egress queue the packets with tag and CoS id are mapped to The priority levels of egress queue are labeled as TCO TC1 TC2 and TCs Mdnote To complete QoS function configuration you have to go to the Schedule Mode page to select a schedule mode after the configuration is finished on this page 100 Configuration Procedure sip Operation foen Log on to the 802 1P CoS Mapping page 2 Enable 802 1P priority Required By default the 802 1P priority function is function disabled 3 Map the 802 1P priority tag to Required Select 802 1P priority tag and the the priority level corresponding priority level 4 Select a schedule mode Required Log on to the Schedule Mode page to select a schedule mode 9 1 3 DSCP Priority On this page you can configure DSCP priority DSCP DiffServ Code Point is a new definition to IP ToS field given by IEEE This field is used to divide IP datagram into 64 priorities When DSCP Priority is enabled IP datagram are ma
27. VLAN the ingress port belongs to this packet will be dropped The packets forwarded by the untagged port are untagged 2 Tagged The tagged port can be added in multiple VLANs If a VLAN tagged packet arrives at a port and the VLAN ID in its VLAN tag does not match any of the VLAN the 99 ingress port belongs to this packet will be dropped When the VLAN tagged packets are forwarded by the Tagged port its VLAN tag will not be changed gt PVID PVID Port VLAN ID is the default VID of the port When the switch receives an un VLAN tagged packet it will add a VLAN tag to the packet according to the PVID of its received port and forward the packets When creating VLANs the PVID of each port indicating the default VLAN to which the port belongs is an important parameter with the following two purposes 1 When the switch receives an un VLAN tagged packet it will add a VLAN tag to the packet according to the PVID of its received port 2 PVID determines the default broadcast domain of the port i e when the port receives UL packets or broadcast packets the port will broadcast the packets in its default VLAN Different packets tagged or untagged will be processed in different ways after being received by ports of different link types which is illustrated in the following table Receiving Packets Forwarding Packets Untagged Tagged Untagged Packets Tagged Packets The packet The packet will be will be forwarded
28. above Transmission Medium 100Base FX MMF or SMF SFP Module Optional 1000Base T 4 pair UTP lt 100m of Cat 5 Cat 5e Cat 6 1000Base X MMF or SMF SFP Module Optional Power System 10 100Mbps LEDs 1000Mbps LEDs TL SL2210 TL SL2452 Power System 10 100M LEDs 1000M LEDs TL SL2218 TL SL2428 Transmission Method Store and Forward 10BASE T 14881pps port Packets Forwarding Rate 100BASE TX 148810pps port 1000Base T 1488095pps port Operating Temperature 0 C 40 C Operating Storage Temperature 40 C 70 C Environment Operating Humidity 10 90 RH Non condensing Storage Humidity 5 90 RH Non condensing Return to CONTENTS 146 Appendix B Configuring the PCs In this section we ll introduce how to install and configure the TCP IP correctly in Windows 2000 First make sure your Ethernet Adapter is working refer to the adapter s manual if necessary Configure TCP IP component 1 2 3 4 On the Windows taskbar click the Start button and then click Control Panel Click the Network and Internet Connections icon and then click on the Network Connections tab in the appearing window Right click the icon that showed below select Properties on the prompt page LAN or High Speed Internet ocal Area Connection Connected Firewalled NH a E Disable Status Repair Bridge Connections Create Shortcut Delete Rename Properties Figure B 1 In the prompt page
29. and better performance Go to http www tp link com to download the updated firmware Choose the menu System System Tools Firmware Upgrade to load the following page Firmware Upgrade You will get the new function after upgrading the firmware Firmware File Upgrade Firmware Version 1 0 0 Build 20120822 Rel 54711 Help _ Hardware Version TL SL2426 1 0 Note 1 Please select the proper software version matching with your hardware to upgrade 2 To avoid damage please dont turn off the device while upgrading 3 After upgrading the device will reboot automatically 4 You are suggested to backup the configuration before upgrading Figure 4 12 Firmware Upgrade adn ote 1 Dont interrupt the upgrade Please select the proper software version matching with your hardware to upgrade To avoid damage please don t turn off the device while upgrading After upgrading the device will reboot automatically OE CEED You are suggested to backup the configuration before upgrading 20 4 3 4 System Reboot On this page you can reboot the switch and return to the login page Please save the current configuration before rebooting to avoid losing the configuration unsaved Choose the menu System System Tools System Reboot to load the following page System Reboot Save Config Reboot Hote To avoid damage please dontturn off the device while rebooting Figure 4 13 System Reboot Md note To avoid damage please
30. bridge ID of X equals that of Y but the root path cost of X is smaller than that of Y X is superior to Y If the root bridge ID and the root path cost of X equal those of Y but the bridge ID of X is smaller than that of Y X is superior to Y If the root bridge ID the root path cost and bridge ID of X equal those of Y but the port ID of X is smaller than that of Y X is superior to Y gt STP Generation e Inthe beginning In the beginning each switch regards itself as the root and generates a configuration BPDU for each port on it as a root with the root path cost being O the ID of the designated bridge being that of the switch and the designated port being itself 61 e Comparing BPDUs Each switch sends out configuration BPDUs and receives a configuration BPDU on one of its ports from another switch The following table shows the comparing operations Step Operation If the priority of the BPDU received on the port is lower than that of the BPDU if of the port itself the switch discards the BPDU and does not change the BPDU of the port If the priority of the BPDU is higher than that of the BPDU of the port itself the switch replaces the BPDU of the port with the received one and compares it with those of other ports on the switch to obtain the one with the highest priority Table 7 1 Comparing BPDUs e Selecting the root bridge The root bridge is selected by BPDU comparing The switch with the smallest root ID is
31. can be used to group specific hosts When the physical position of a host changes within the range of the VLAN you do not need to change its network configuration A VLAN can span across multiple switches or even routers This enables hosts in a VLAN to be dispersed in a looser way That is hosts in a VLAN can belong to different physical network segments This switch supports 802 1Q VLAN to classify VLANs VLAN tags in the packets are necessary for the switch to identify packets of different VLANs 54 6 1 802 1Q VLAN VLAN tags in the packets are necessary for the switch to identify packets of different VLANs The switch works at the data link layer in OSI model and it can identify the data link layer encapsulation of the packet only so you can add the VLAN tag field into the data link layer encapsulation for identification In 1999 IEEE issues the IEEE 802 1Q protocol to standardize VLAN implementation defining the structure of VLAN tagged packets IEEE 802 1Q protocol defines that a 4 byte VLAN tag is encapsulated after the destination MAC address and source MAC address to show the information about VLAN As shown in the following figure a VLAN tag contains four fields including TPID Tag Protocol Identifier Priority CFI Canonical Format Indicator and VLAN ID VLAN Tag DA amp SA TPID riorit VLAN ID Figure 6 2 Format of VLAN Tag 1 TPID TPID is a 16 bit field indicating that this data frame is VLAN tagged By
32. chosen as the root bridge e Selecting the root port and designate port The operation is taken in the following way For each switch except the one chosen as the root bridge in a network the port that receives the BPDU with the highest priority is chosen as the root port of the switch Using the root port BPDU and the root path cost the switch generates a designated port BPDU for each of its ports Root ID is replaced with that of the root port Root path is replaced with the sum of the root path cost of the root port and the path cost between this port and the root port The ID of the designated bridge is replaced with that of the switch The ID of the designated port is replaced with that of the port The switch compares the resulting BPDU with the BPDU of the desired port whose role you want to determine If the resulting BPDU takes the precedence over the BPDU of the port the port is chosen as the designated port and the BPDU of this port is replaced with the resulting BPDU The port regularly sends out the resulting BPDU If the BPDU of this port takes the precedence over the resulting BPDU the BPDU of this port is not replaced and the port is blocked The port only can receive BPDUs Table 7 2 Selecting root port and designated port Tips In an STP with stable topology only the root port and designated port can forward data and the other ports are blocked The blocked ports only can receive BPDUs RSTP Ra
33. don t turn off the device while rebooting 4 3 5 System Reset On this page you can reset the switch to the default All the settings will be cleared after the switch is reset Choose the menu System System Tools System Reset to load the following page system Reset Reset Hote The System Reset option will restore the configuration to default and your current settings will be lost Figure 4 14 System Reset Mdnote After the system is reset the switch will be reset to the default and all the settings will be cleared 4 4 Access Security Access Security provides different security measures for the remote login so as to enhance the configuration management security It can be implemented on Access Control page 4 4 1 Access Control On this page you can control the users logging on to the Web management page to enhance the configuration management security The definitions of Admin and Guest refer to 4 2 User Management Choose the menu System Access Security Access Control to load the following page 21 Access Control Contig Control Mode IP Address mask MAC Address Cd Port 1 2 y 10 17 18 25 26 session Contig 11 19 Zt 4 5 E T 5 12 13 14 15 16 20 21 22 23 24 20 session Timeout min 5 30 Access User Number Number Control O Enable Disable Admin Murnber 1 16 Guest Number a 0 15 Figure 4 15 Access Control The following entries are displayed on this screen
34. e Update Rate Specify the rate fetching time from NTP server Synchronize with When this option is selected the administrator PC s clock is PC S Clock utilized Anote 1 The system time will be restored to the default when the switch is restarted and you need to reconfigure the system time of the switch 2 When Get Time from NTP Server is selected and no time server is configured the switch will get time from the time server of the Internet if it has connected to the Internet 4 1 4 Daylight Saving Time Here you can configure the Daylight Saving Time of the switch Choose the menu System System Info Daylight Saving Time to load the following page 14 DST Config DST Status O Predefined Mode LISA Recurring Mode Offset Start Time End Time Date Mode Offset start Time End Time Australia Europe New Zealand o minutes Week La Day Month loroo Week 3 Day Month oroo minutes MM DD HH MM MMDD HH MM Figure 4 6 Daylight Saving Time The following entries are displayed on this screen gt DST Config DST Status Predefined Mode Recurring Mode Date Mode Md note 1 2 configured Enable or disable the DST Select a predefined DST configuration e USA Second Sunday in March 02 00 First Sunday in November 02 00 e Australia First Sunday in October 02 00 First Sunday in April 03 00 e Europe Last Sunday in March 01 00 Last Sund
35. if you enter 1000Kbps for egress rate the system will automatically select 1024Kbps as the real Egress rate 3 When egress rate limit feature is enabled for one or more ports you are suggested to disable the flow control on each port to ensure the switch works normally 9 2 2 Storm Control Storm Control function allows the switch to filter broadcast multicast and UL frame in the network If the transmission rate of the three kind packets exceeds the set bandwidth the packets will be automatically discarded to avoid network broadcast storm Choose the menu QoS Bandwidth Control gt Storm Control to load the following page 104 storm Control Contig Broadcast Ratefbps Multicast Raterbpsi LIL Frame Ratetbps LAG Select Port LAGT LAG LAG hd pap pn aaa a Ri Note For one port you cannot enable the Storm Control and the Ingress rate control atthe same time Figure 9 11 Storm Control The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Storm Control Config Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select Select the desired port for Storm Control configuration It is multi optional Port Displays the port number of the switch Broadcast Rate Select the bandwidth for receiving broadcast packets on the port bps The packet traffic exceeding the bandwidth will be discarded Select Disable to disable the storm control function for
36. it forwards these BPDUs to the other switched in the network which may result in spanning trees being continuously regenerated In this case the switch occupying too much CPU or the protocol status of BPDUs is wrong With BPDU filter function enabled a port does not receive or forward BPDUs but it sends out its own BPDUs Such a mechanism prevents the switch from being attacked by BPDUs so as to guarantee generation the spanning trees correct Choose the menu Spanning Tree STP Security Port Protect to load the following page 74 Pon Protect select Port Loop Frotect Root Protect TE Protect BPODL Protect BPOL Filter LAG a F Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable 2 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable F 3 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable 4 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable 5 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable F E Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable T Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable F 5 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable F g Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable 10 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable LAG 1 F 11 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable LAG F 12 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable LAG 1 13 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable LAGI C 14 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable F 15 Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable l Figure 7 10 Port Protect The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Protect
37. of IGMPv3 report packets the port received Displays the number of leave packets the port received Displays the number of error packets the port received Return to CONTENTS 95 Chapter 9 QoS QoS Quality of Service functions to provide different quality of service for various network applications and requirements and optimize the bandwidth resource distribution so as to provide a network service experience of a better quality gt Qos This switch classifies the ingress packets maps the packets to different priority queues and then forwards the packets according to specified scheduling algorithms to implement QoS function Packets are mapped to different priority queues Ss Packets sent via this interface lt Packets are forwarded Ca Ca Ca Ca fof f of of Egress interface i ee ees a aa w Gs a a Gia a of ol Y Packets are forwarded Packets o according to the OA Scheduling schedule mode classification Figure 9 1 QoS function Traffic classification Identifies packets conforming to certain characters according to certain rules Map The user can map the ingress packets to different priority queues based on the priority modes This switch implements three priority modes based on port on 802 1P and on DSCP e Queue scheduling algorithm When the network is congested the problem that many packets compete for resources must be solved usually in the way of queue scheduling The sw
38. of MST region is used to describe the VLAN to Instance mapping configuration You can assign VLAN to different instances appropriate to your needs Every instance is a VLAN group independent of other instances and CIST Choose the menu Spanning Tree MSTP Instance gt Instance Config to load the following page Instance Table Instance ID select Instance status Priority VLAN ID O CO F 1 Disable 32768 Clear F 2 Disable 32768 Clear F 3 Disable 32768 Clear F 4 Disable 32768 Clear F 5 Disable 32768 Clear F 6 Disable 32768 Clear F 7 Disable 32768 Clear F g Disable 32768 Clear GST Enable 32768 1 4094 VLAN Instance Mapping vani 4094 Instance ID fe 0 8 0 is the cist Apply Note The format of input VLAN ID should be like 1 3 4 7 11 30 in the range from 1 to 4094 Figure 7 8 Instance Config 70 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Instance Table Instance ID Select Select Instance Status Priority VLAN ID Clear Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding Instance ID based on the ID number you entered Select the desired Instance ID for configuration It is multi optional Displays Instance ID of the switch Displays the status of the instance Enter the priority of the switch in the instance It is an important criterion on determining if the switch will be chosen as the root bridge in the specific instance Enter the VLAN ID which be
39. or radio Port Mirroring A method whereby data on a target port is mirrored to a monitor port for troubleshooting with a logic analyzer or RMON probe This allows data on the target port to be studied unobstructively Port Trunk Defines a network link aggregation and trunking method which specifies how to create a single high speed logical link that combines several lower speed physical links 150 Remote Authentication Dial in User Service RADIUS RADIUS is a logon authentication protocol that uses software running on a central server to control access to RADIUS compliant devices on the network Remote Monitoring RMON RMON provides comprehensive network monitoring capabilities It eliminates the polling required in standard SNMP and can set alarms on a variety of traffic conditions including specific error types Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol RSTP RSTP reduces the convergence time for network topology changes to about 10 of that required by the older IEEE 802 1D STP standard Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP The application protocol in the Internet suite of protocols which offers network management services Simple Network Time Protocol SNTP SNTP allows a device to set its internal clock based on periodic updates from a Network Time Protocol NTP server Updates can be requested from a specific NTP server or can be received via broadcasts sent by NTP servers Spanning Tree Algorithm STA A technology that ch
40. packets as well as learn MAC address Learning In this status the port can receive send BPDU packets and learn MAC address Blocking In this status the port can only receive BPDU packets Disconnected In this status the port is not participating in the STP Port Roles In an MSTP the following roles exist Root Port Indicates the port that has the lowest path cost from this bridge to the Root Bridge and forwards packets to the root Designated Port Indicates the port that forwards packets to a downstream network segment or switch Master Port Indicates the port that connects an MST region to the common root The path from the master port to the common root is the shortest path between this MST region and the common root Alternate Port Indicates the port that can be a backup port of a root or master port Backup Port Indicates the port that is the backup port of a designated port Disabled Indicates the port that is not participating in the STP 64 The following diagram shows the different port roles Connect to the root bridge Region edge port port 1 2 Master port port 1 Alternate port port 2 Designated port port 3 5 Backup port port 6 MST Region Switch B Figure 7 3 Port roles The Spanning Tree module is mainly for spanning tree configuration of the switch including four submenus STP Config Port Config MSTP Instance and STP Security 7 1 STP Config The STP Config function for globa
41. provides two access levels Guest and Admin The guest only can view the settings without the right to configure the switch the admin can configure all the functions of the switch The Web management pages contained in this guide are subject to the admin s login without any explanation 17 Choose the menu System User Management User Config to load the following page Liser Into User Name fo Access Level User status Enable Disable Password Po Confirm Password ee Password Display Mode ser Table Select ser ID Liser Mame Access Level Status Operation F admin Admin Enable Edit Hote The user name should not be more than 16 characters and password should not be more than 31 characters using digits English letters and underlines only Figure 4 9 User Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt User Info User Name Create a name for users login Access Level Select the access level to login e Admin Admin can edit modify and view all the settings of different functions e Guest Guest only can view the settings without the right to edit and modify User Status Select Enable Disable the user configuration Password Type a password for users login Confirm Password Retype the password Password Display Select the password display mode from the pull down list Mode e Simple Display the password with plaintext in configuration file e Cipher Display the password
42. rule Mask Enter IP address mask If it is set to 1 it must strictly match the address 10 1 5 Extend IP ACL Extend IP ACLs analyze and process data packets based on a series of match conditions which can be the source IP addresses destination IP addresses IP protocol and other information of this sort carried in the packets Choose the menu ACL ACL Config Extend IP ACL to load the following page 114 Create Extend IP Rule ACL ID Rule ID Operation O S F O Dap IP Protocol S Port D P ort Extend IP ACL Figure 10 5 Create Extend IP Rule The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Extend IP ACL ACL ID Rule ID Operation S IP D IP Mask IP Protocol S Port D Port Select the desired Extend IP ACL for configuration Enter the rule ID Select the operation for the switch to process packets which match the rules e Permit Forward packets e Deny Discard Packets Enter the source IP address contained in the rule Enter the destination IP address contained in the rule Enter IP address mask If it is set to 1 it must strictly match the address Select IP protocol contained in the rule Configure TCP IP source port contained in the rule when TCP UDP is selected from the pull down list of IP Protocol Configure TCP IP destination port contained in the rule when TCP UDP is selected from the pull down list of IP Protocol 10 2 Policy C
43. security protocol is to provide a secure connection for the application layer protocol e g HTTP communication based on TCP SSL is widely used to secure the data transmission between the Web browser and servers It is mainly applied through ecommerce and online banking SSL mainly provides the following services 1 Authenticate the users and the servers based on the certificates to ensure the data are transmitted to the correct users and servers 2 Encrypt the data transmission to prevent the data being intercepted 3 Maintain the integrality of the data to prevent the data being altered in the transmission Adopting asymmetrical encryption technology SSL uses key pair to encrypt decrypt information A key pair refers to a public key contained in the certificate and its corresponding private key By default the switch has a certificate self signed certificate and a corresponding private key The Certificate Key Download function enables the user to replace the default key pair After SSL is effective you can log on to the Web management page via https 192 168 0 1 For the first time you use HTTPS connection to log into the switch with the default certificate you will be prompted that The security certificate presented by this website was not issued by a trusted certificate authority or Certificate Errors Please add this certificate to trusted certificates or continue to this website On this page you can configure th
44. the port Mulitcast Rate Select the bandwidth for receiving multicast packets on the port bps The packet traffic exceeding the bandwidth will be discarded Select Disable to disable the storm control function for the port UL Frame Rate Select the bandwidth for receiving UL Frame on the port The bps packet traffic exceeding the bandwidth will be discarded Select Disable to disable the storm control function for the port LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to Anote If you enable storm control feature for the ingress rate limit enabled port ingress rate limit feature will be disabled for this port 105 9 3 Voice VLAN Voice VLANs are configured specially for voice data stream By configuring Voice VLANs and adding the ports with voice devices attached to voice VLANs you can perform QoS related configuration for voice data ensuring the transmission priority of voice data stream and voice quality gt OUl Address Organizationally unique identifier address The switch can determine whether a received packet is a voice packet by checking its source MAC address If the source MAC address of a packet complies with the OUI addresses configured by the system the packet is determined as voice packet and transmitted in voice VLAN An OUI address is a unique identifier assigned by IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers to a device vendor It comprises the first 24 bits of a MAC address You ca
45. 100MFD while select 1000MFD for gigabit module By default the Speed and Duplex mode of SFP port is 1000MFD 5 1 2 Port Mirror Port Mirror the packets obtaining technology functions to forward copies of packets from one multiple ports mirrored port to a specific port mirroring port Usually the mirroring port is connected to a data diagnose device which is used to analyze the mirrored packets for monitoring and troubleshooting the network Choose the menu Switching Port Port Mirror to load the following page Mirror Group List Group Mirroring Mode Mirrored Port Operation Ingress ane 1 Edit Egress s Ingress oes Z O Edit Egress a Ingress os 3 O Edit Egress sd Ingress ate 4 O Edit Eqress ae Figure 5 2 Mirror Group List 31 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Mirror Group List Group Displays the mirror group number Mirroring Displays the mirroring port number Mode Displays the mirror mode The value will be Ingress or Egress Mirrored Port Displays the mirrored ports Operation Click Edit to configure the mirror group Click Edit to display the following figure Mirror Group Number Mirroring Port Mirroring Port Mirrored Port Select Fort Ingress Eqress LAG a d 1 Disable Disable Fj 2 Disable Disable me d 3 Disable Disable m d 4 Disable Disable LJ 5 Disable Disable d B Disable Disable E d T Disable Disable dl B Disable Disable
46. 16 characters Figure 5 1Port Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Config Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select Select the desired port for configuration It is multi optional Port Displays the port number 30 Description Give a description to the port for identification Status Allows you to Enable Disable the port When Enable is selected the port can forward the packets normally Speed and Duplex Select the Speed and Duplex mode for the port The device connected to the switch should be in the same Speed and Duplex mode with the switch When Auto is selected the Speed and Duplex mode will be determined by auto negotiation For the SFP port this switch does not support auto negotiation Flow Control Allows you to Enable Disable the Flow Control feature When Flow Control is enabled the switch can synchronize the speed with its peer to avoid the packet loss caused by congestion LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to A Note The switch can not be managed through the disabled port Please enable the port which is used to manage the switch 2 The parameters of the port members in a LAG should be set as the same 3 When using the SFP port with a 100M module or a gigabit module you need to configure its corresponding Speed and Duplex mode For 100M module please select
47. 37 5 2 1 Ao A E E E na siuante 38 522 Statt CAG li 39 zo ACE DON a a idos 40 Do Male MONO erotico prisas 42 5 3 1 Trame Sumnar spa odian 42 592 e lA ei T T E 43 DA MACAUS S dada 44 5 4 1 Address Tabla A 45 542 SAIC 28 0 Sch cid 46 5 4 3 Dynamic AOJO S Sua A en ce eee cee 47 5 4 4 Flema Adore 49 A O O 50 Chanter o VLAN A O 54 61 GOL TO VLAN ras a do e dd 55 6 1 1 A O ascadencadoaseacnaeat 56 6 2 Application Example for 302 10 VLAN ni as 58 Chapter 7 SPannind Tee ori A is 60 Tou SMP OMAN G citeenn coe sacetesmscare cadence cu cone sstagakebencnaneranse eescar ates aber anceendareseeebeaacevetariane te 65 7 1 1 SPC ONC siria 65 Fi OU OUI ANY soca ceo ite eta a 67 BL POR COMMG sn ceveeitosecs dio decicion 67 LS MSIE 1 2 Gs een tenet eee desea 69 7 3 1 REGION OMMNIG O ei oui eer ia othe eae leg ct Shieh Got lae 69 1 3 2 Mstance Cong sraa a RE ane a eani 70 7 3 3 lnStanGe POM COMM hi Ascenag coset hast oecebii engl ids Aes 71 TA STPS CCU a SN AAA seme etait 73 7 4 1 A Enee aea a teaut olsen rs iale races waite aabitv even eaiseeer nares 73 KAZ E 6 do SO EE O rams o O en T eg eee eer ee ee 75 7 5 Application Example for STP FUNCTION occcoccccncocncocnconcocncocnconocononononononcnonnconnnnnnoncnos 76 chapter g Multicast soii 80 8 1 IGMP SNOOPING 1 id 82 8 1 1 SMOOPING CONNO sa AAA 83 8 1 2 FO COIN Oy ens ra as 84 oa ae aie eS We CON sidad eee ee 85 OA Multicast VLAN cunado aia cade 87 62 Mulicas t
48. 4096 Hello Time Enter a value from 1 to 10 in seconds to specify the interval to send BPDU packets It is used to test the links 2 Hello Time 1 lt Max Age The default value is 2 seconds Max Age Enter a value from 6 to 40 in seconds to specify the maximum time the switch can wait without receiving a BPDU before attempting to reconfigure The default value is 20 seconds Forward Delay Enter a value from 4 to 30 in seconds to specify the time for the port to transit its state after the network topology is changed 2 Forward Delay 1 2 Max Age The default value is 15 seconds TxHold Count Enter a value from 1 to 20 to set the maximum number of BPDU packets transmitted per Hello Time interval The default value is Opps Max Hops Enter a value from 1 to 40 to set the maximum number of hops that occur in a specific region before the BPDU is discarded The default value is 20 hops Md note 1 The forward delay parameter and the network diameter are correlated A too small forward delay parameter may result in temporary loops A too large forward delay may cause a network unable to resume the normal state in time The default value is recommended An adequate hello time parameter can enable the switch to discover the link failures occurred in the network without occupying too much network resources A too large hello time parameter may result in normal links being regarded as invalid when packets drop occurred in the links w
49. 50 40 0 20 10 0 Current Utilization MAs Utilization MIM Ltilization Average Utilization 46 46 46 46 Figure 12 2 Memory Monitor Click the Monitor button to enable the switch to monitor and display its Memory utilization rate every four seconds 12 2 Log The Log system of switch can record classify and manage the system information effectively providing powerful support for network administrator to monitor network operation and diagnose malfunction The Logs of switch are classified into the following eight levels Table 12 1 Log Level 138 The Log function is implemented on the Log Table Local Log Remote Log and Backup Log pages 12 2 1 Log Table The switch supports logs output to two directions namely log buffer and log file The information in log buffer will be lost after the switch is rebooted or powered off whereas the information in log file will be kept effective even the switch is rebooted or powered off Log Table displays the system log information in log buffer Choose the menu Maintenance gt Log gt Log Table to load the following page Log Info Inder Time Module severity Content AII Module 1 2012 04 29 16 16 10 LAG level 6 Changed Link Aggregation Group 1 members 10 11 12 13 0 0 0 0 2 2012 04 29 16 15 54 LAG level_b Added new Link Aggregation Group 1 members 101112130000 3 2012 04 29 15 56 28 Fort level_5 Mirror group 4 is delete 4 2012 04 29 15 07 02 SMTP level 4 Setting system
50. 8 4 Packet Statistics On this page you can view the multicast data traffic on each port of the switch which facilitates you to monitor the IGMP messages in the network Choose the menu Multicast Packet Statistics to load the following page 94 Auto Refresh Auto Refresh Refresh Period IGMP Statistics Fot Query Packet CO A Gr om Be oo my E oo a O oOo o eo yy oy oy oY ey lees ey O be Enable Disable O seca Packetty 1 pot Select papel ay o P ann Leave Packet Error Packet O 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 E 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 4 Figure 8 12 Packet Statistics The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Auto Refresh Auto Refresh Refresh Period IGMP Statistics Port Select Port Query Packet Report Packet V1 Report Packet V2 Report Packet V3 Leave Packet Error Packet Select Enable Disable auto refresh feature Enter the time from 3 to 300 in seconds to specify the auto refresh period Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Displays the port number of the switch Displays the number of query packets the port received Displays the number of IGMPv1 report packets the port received Displays the number of IGMPv2 report packets the port received Displays the number
51. AG TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO TEO Oo SS Mm th E Ww RA y y gt FY a a a a a ae PA 4 note Among the Queue TC id TCO TC1 TC3 the bigger value the higher priority Figure 9 6 Port Priority Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Priority Config Select Select the desired port to configure its priority It is multi optional Port Displays the physical port number of the switch Priority Specify the priority for the port LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to 99 Configuration Procedure sip operai n pesn 1 Select the port priority Required On QoS DiffServ Port Priority page configure the port priority 3 Select a schedule mode Required On QoS DiffServ Schedule Mode page select a schedule mode 9 1 2 802 1P CoS Mapping On this page you can configure 802 1P priority 802 1P gives the Pri field in 802 1Q tag a recommended definition This field is used to divide packets into 8 priorities When 802 1P Priority is enabled the packets with 802 1Q tag are mapped to different priority levels based on 802 1P priority mode The untagged packets are mapped based on port priority mode Choose the menu QoS DiffServ gt 802 1P Priority to load the following page 202 1P Priority Config 802 1P Priority Enable Disable Apply Priority and CoS mapping Contig Tag idioS id Queue TC id v Tad id 05 1d Queue TE 1d
52. C address is needed to be used as the destination address As stipulated by IANA the high order 24 bits of a multicast MAC address begins with 01 00 5E while the low order 23 bits of a multicast MAC address are the low order 23 bits of the multicast IP address The mapping relationship is described as Figure 8 2 0 7 15 23 31 address 5bits ae 23 bit MAC Aderess pp f 01 00 5 Figure 8 2 Mapping relationship between multicast IP address and multicast MAC address The high order 4 bits of the IP multicast address are 1110 identifying the multicast group Only 23 bits of the remaining low order 28 bits are mapped to a multicast MAC address In that way 5 bits of the IP multicast address is not utilized As a result 32 IP multicast addresses are mapped to the same MAC addresses gt Multicast Address Table The switch is forwarding multicast packets based on the multicast address table As the transmission of multicast packets can not span the VLAN the first part of the multicast address table is VLAN ID based on which the received multicast packets are forwarded in the VLAN owning the receiving port The multicast address table is not mapped to an egress port but a group port list When forwarding a multicast packet the switch looks up the multicast address table based on the destination multicast address of the multicast packet If the corresponding entry can not be found in the table the switch will broadc
53. Config On this page you can configure Statistic Group and Alarm Group for RMON Choose the menu SNMP gt RMON Alarm Config to load the following page monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor monitor Select the desired entry for configuration Displays the index number of the entry Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Enter the name of the User or the community to which the event belongs Give a description to the event for identification Select the event type which determines the act way of the network device in response to an event e None No processing e Log Logging the event e Notify Sending trap messages to the management station e Log amp Notify Logging the event and sending trap messages to the management station Enter the name of the device or user that defined the entry Select Enable Disable the corresponding event entry 134 Alarm Table Select Index O O 1 O 2 F 3 O 4 O 5 di 6 O 7 dl 8 O 9 O 10 O 11 O 12 Variable Port DropEvents v J DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents DropEvents Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Port 1 Sample Type naan Rising Event oo Falling
54. Event Alarm Type Interval sec Owner Status Absolute A Mi HA fan Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Absolute 100 1 100 1 All 1800 monitor Disable Figure 11 11 Alarm Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Alarm Table Select Index Variable Port Sample Type Rising Threshold Rising Event Falling Threshold Falling Event Alarm Type Interval Select the desired entry for configuration Displays the index number of the entry Select the alarm variables from the pull down list Select the port on which the Alarm entry acts Specify the sampling method for the selected variable and comparing the value against the thresholds e Absolute Compares the values directly with the thresholds at the end of the sampling interval e Delta Subtracts the last sampled value from the current value The difference in the values is compared to the threshold Enter the rising counter value that trigge
55. For the member ports in an aggregation group their basic configuration must be the same The basic configuration includes STP QoS VLAN port attributes MAC Address Learning mode and other associated settings The further explains are following e If the ports which are enabled for the 802 1Q VLAN STP QoS and Port Configuration Speed and Duplex Flow Control are in a LAG their configurations should be the same e The ports which are enabled for the Port Security Port Mirror and MAC Address Filtering can not be added to the LAG If the LAG is needed you are suggested to configure the LAG function here before configuring the other functions for the member ports 37 Tips A Calculate the bandwidth for a LAG If a LAG consists of the four ports in the speed of 1000Mbps Full Duplex the whole bandwidth of the LAG is up to 8000Mbps 2000Mbps 4 because the bandwidth of each member port is 2000Mbps counting the up linked speed of 1000Mbps and the down linked speed of 1000Mbps 2 The traffic load of the LAG will be balanced among the ports according to the Aggregate Arithmetic If the connections of one or several ports are broken the traffic of these ports will be transmitted on the normal ports so as to guarantee the connection reliability The LAG function is implemented on the LAG Table Static LAG and LACP Config configuration pages 5 2 1 LAG Table On this page you can view the information of the current LAG of t
56. ID Displays the ID of the VLAN bound to the corresponding policy Direction Displays the binding direction Configuration Procedure Configure ACL rules Required On ACL gt 5ACL Config configuration pages configure ACL rules to match packets Configure Policy Required On ACL gt Policy Config configuration pages configure the policy to control the data packets those match the corresponding ACL rules Bind the policy to the Required On ACL gt Policy Binding configuration pages port VLAN bind the policy to the port VLAN to make the policy effective on the corresponding port VLAN 10 4 Application Example for ACL gt Network Requirements 1 The manager of the R amp D department can access to the forum of the company The MAC address of the manager is 00 64 A5 5D 12 C3 2 The staff of the R amp D department can visit the forum 3 The staff of the marketing department can not visit the forum 4 The R amp D department and marketing department can not communicate with each other 119 gt Network Diagram Switch WE Jm Jm Forum Server gt T 10 10 88 5 00 64 A5 32 4C 12 Marketing Department 10 10 50 0 R amp D Department 10 10 70 0 Manager 00 64 A5 5D 12 C3 gt Configuration Procedure Configure for On ACL ACL Config ACL Create page create ACL 11 requirement 1 On ACL ACL Config MAC ACL page select ACL 11 create Rule 1 configure the operation as Permit configure the S MAC a
57. L SL2428 and 100 240V 50 60Hz 1 0A for TL SL2452 Return to CONTENTS Chapter 3 Login to the Switch 3 1 Login 1 To access the configuration utility open a web browser and type in the default address http 192 168 0 1 in the address field of the browser then press the Enter key Address http 192 168 0 1 Figure 3 1 Web browser Tips To log in to the switch the IP address of your PC should be set in the same subnet addresses of the switch The IP address is 192 168 0 x x is any number from 2 to 254 Subnet Mask is 255 255 255 0 For the detailed instructions as to how to do this please refer to Appendix B 2 After a moment a login window will appear as shown in Figure 3 2 Enter admin for the User Name and Password both in lower case letters Then click the Login button or press the Enter key TP LINK Liser Mame admin Password canon Figure 3 2 Login 3 2 Configuration After a successful login the main page will appear as Figure 3 3 and you can configure the function by clicking the setup menu on the left side of the screen TP LINK Tera 428 System Summary Device Description System Time Daylight Saving Time System IP a 10 12 14 18 BS 20 22 2 26 28 aE aa a Amm a Aer kg Tet kepi ser Managemen AA Iss ei ss 25 27 System Tools Access Security Switching System Info VLAN System Description 24FE 4GE Smart Switch Spanning Tree Device Name TL SL2428 Multicas
58. MP Snooping is enabled you can specified the multicast IP range the ports can join so as to restrict users ordering multicast programs via configuring multicast filter rules When applying for a multicast group the host will send IGMP report message After receiving the report message the switch will firstly check the multicast filter rules configured for the receiving port If the port can be added to the multicast group it will be added to the multicast address table if the port can not be added to the multicast group the switch will drop the IGMP report message In that way the multicast streams will not be transmitted to this port which allows you to control hosts joining the multicast group 8 3 1 IP Range On this page you can figure the desired IP ranges to be filtered Choose the menu Multicast gt Multicast Filter IP Range to load the following page Create IP Ranqge IP Range ID Jaa Start MulticastIP Format 225 0 0 1 End Multicast Format 225 0 0 1 IP Range Table Select IP Range ID Start Multicast IP End Multicast IP a Total lP Range 0 Figure 8 10 Multicast Filter 92 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create IP Range IP Range ID Start Multicast IP End Multicast IP gt IP Range Table IP Range ID Select Select IP Range ID Start Multicast IP End Multicast IP 8 3 2 Port Filter Enter the IP range ID Enter start multicast IP of the IP r
59. Member State C F 1 Auto Disable Inactive F 2 Auto Disable Inactive F 3 Auto Disable Inactive F 4 Auto Disable Inactive F 5 Auto Disable Inactive F 6 Auto Disable Inactive F 7 Auto Disable Inactive C 8 Auto Disable Inactive C g Auto Disable Inactive d 10 Auto Disable Inactive Figure 9 13 Port Config 108 note To enable voice VLAN function for the LAG member port please ensure its member state accords with its port mode If a port is a member port of voice VLAN changing its port mode to be Auto will make the port leave the voice VLAN and will not join the voice VLAN automatically until it receives voice streams The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Config Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select Select the desired port for voice VLAN configuration It is multi optional Port Displays the port number of the switch Port Mode Select the mode for the port to join the voice VLAN e Auto In this mode the switch automatically adds a port to the voice VLAN or removes a port from the voice VLAN by checking whether the port receives voice data or not Manual In this mode you can manually add a port to the voice VLAN or remove a port from the voice VLAN Security Mode Configure the security mode for forwarding packets eo Disable All packets are forwarded e Enable Only voice data are fo
60. Operation O SMAC O D MAC Figure 10 3 Create MAC Rule The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create MAC ACL ACL ID Select the desired MAC ACL for configuration Rule ID Enter the rule ID Operation Select the operation for the switch to process packets which match the rules Permit Forward packets e Deny Discard Packets S MAC Enter the source MAC address contained in the rule D MAC Enter the destination MAC address contained in the rule 113 MASK Enter MAC address mask If it is set to 1 it must strictly match the address 10 1 4 Standard IP ACL Standard IP ACLs analyze and process data packets based on a series of match conditions which can be the source IP addresses and destination IP addresses carried in the packets Choose the menu ACL ACL Config Standard IP ACL to load the following page Create Standard IP Rule ACL ID Standard IP ACL vw Rule ID E Operation E Sup F DAP Mask Mask o Figure 10 4 Create Standard IP Rule The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Standard IP ACL ACL ID Select the desired Standard IP ACL for configuration Rule ID Enter the rule ID Operation Select the operation for the switch to process packets which match the rules Permit Forward packets e Deny Discard Packets S IP Enter the source IP address contained in the rule D IP Enter the destination IP address contained in the
61. Port 4 1500 monitor Disable Fj 5 Port 5 1500 monitor Disable F E Port E 1500 monitor Disable F y Port 1500 monitor Disable Fj g Ports 1500 monitor Disable F g Port Y 1500 monitor Disable F 10 Port 10 1500 monitor Disable F 11 Port 11 1600 monitor Disable 12 Pon 12 1500 monitor Disable Figure 11 9 History Control The following entries are displayed on this screen gt History Control Table Select Select the desired entry for configuration Index Displays the index number of the entry Port Specify the port from which the history samples were taken Interval Specify the interval to take samplings from the port Owner Enter the name of the device or user that defined the entry Status Select Enable Disable the corresponding sampling entry 133 11 3 2 Event Config On this page you can configure the RMON events Choose the menu SNMP gt RMON gt gt Event Config to load the following page Event Table Select Index d C 1 E 2 C 3 C 4 C 5 C E dl T C 8 E y E 10 E 11 C 12 Liser Description Type Owner Status E JE ne A 7 Diab e public public public public public public public public public public public public Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Mone Figure 11 10 Event Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Event Table Select Index User Description Type Owner Status 11 3 3 Alarm
62. Ports 25 28 are 10 100 1000Mbps ports among which ports 27 and 28 are Combo ports with SFP ports labeled 27F and 28F Choose the menu System System Info System Summary to load the following page 10 Es gt gt Fo J e System Info system Description Z4FE 4GE Smart Switch Device Marne Device Location System Contact Hardware Version Firmware Version TL SL2428 SHENZHEN wry p link com TL SL2426 1 0 1 0 0 Build 20120822 Rels4711 IP Address 192 168 0 1 Subnet Mask 155 255 255 0 Default Gateway MAC Address B4 70 02 81 54 87 System Time 2006 01 01 08 27 42 Run Time 0 day 0 hour 27 min 43 sec gt Port Status Figure 4 1 System Summary Indicates the 100Mbps port is not connected to a device Indicates the 100Mbps port is at the speed of 100Mbps Indicates the 100Mbps port is at the speed of 10Mbps Indicates the 1000Mbps port is not connected to a device Indicates the 1000Mbps port is at the speed of 1000Mbps Indicates the 1000Mbps port is at the speed of 10Mbps or 100Mbps Indicates the SFP port is not connected to a device Indicates the SFP port is at the speed of 1000Mbps Indicates the SFP port is at the speed of 100Mbps When the cursor moves on the port the detailed information of the port will be displayed Type 100M RJ45 speed 100M FullDuplex status Connected Enable Figure 4 2 Port Information gt Port Info Port Displays the port num
63. Protocol subject to IEEE 802 1D standard is to disbranch a ring network in the Data Link layer in a local network Devices running STP discover loops in the network and block ports by exchanging information in that way a ring network can be disbranched to form a tree topological ring free network to prevent packets from being duplicated and forwarded endlessly in the network BPDU Bridge Protocol Data Unit is the protocol data that STP and RSTP use Enough information is carried in BPDU to ensure the spanning tree generation STP is to determine the topology of the network via transferring BPDUs between devices To implement spanning tree function the switches in the network transfer BPDUs between each other to exchange information and all the switches supporting STP receive and process the received BPDUs BPDUs carry the information that is needed for switches to figure out the spanning tree gt STP Elements Bridge ID Bridge Identifier Indicates the value of the priority and MAC address of the bridge Bridge ID can be configured and the switch with the lower bridge ID has the higher priority Root Bridge Indicates the switch has the lowest bridge ID Configure the best PC in the ring network as the root bridge to ensure best network performance and reliability Designated Bridge Indicates the switch has the lowest path cost from the switch to the root bridge in each network segment BPDUs are forwarded to the network segment thro
64. Refresh Status enable disable Web Refresh Interval 3 seconds 3 100 Port confia Port Select Part Status Operation mode Recovers mode Loop status Block status LAG F disable w Alert v Auto w C 1 Disable Alert Auto a A dl J Disable Alert Auto sa Bee dan C 3 Disable Alert Auto za aus ES C 4 Disable Alert Auto as C 5 Disable Alert Auto E su E fi Disable Alert Auto Se ue ae C 7 Disable Alert Auto iss ae ZE C g Disable Alert Auto ses Bee cere E g Disable Alert Auto mee P C 10 Disable Aler Auto oe aie de C 11 Disable Alert Auto me sue M C 12 Disable Alert Auto one ES C 13 Disable Alert Auto z e ay C 14 Disable Alert Auto ia az RR E 15 Disable Alert Auto 2 de Apply Hote Recovery mode is just useful to process notin Alert process mode Loopback Detection must coordinate with storm control Figure 5 6 Loopback Detection Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config Loopback Detection Status Detection Interval Automatic Recovery Time Web Refresh Status Web Refresh Interval Here you can enable or disable loopback detection function globally Set a loopback detection interval between 1 and 1000 seconds By default it s 30 seconds Time allowed for automatic recovery when a loopback is detected It can be set as integral multiple of detection interval Here you can enable or disable web automatic refresh Set a web refresh int
65. The default value is recommended Enter the size of the sending data during Ping testing The default value is recommended Specify the interval to send ICMP request packets The default value is recommended Tracert test function is used to test the connectivity of the gateways during its journey from the source to destination of the test data When malfunctions occur to the network you can locate trouble spot of the network with this tracert test Choose the menu Maintenance Network Diagnostics Tracert to load the following page Tracert Contig Destination IP hax Hop Tracer Result hop 1 30 Figure 12 10 Tracert 144 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Tracert Config Destination IP Enter the IP address of the destination device Max Hop Specify the maximum number of the route hops the test data can pass through Return to CONTENTS 145 Appendix A Specifications IEEE802 3 10Base T Ethernet IEEE802 3u 100Base TX 100Base FX Fast Ethernet IEEE802 3ab 1000Base T Gigabit Ethernet IEEE802 3z 1000Base X Gigabit Ethernet PA IEEE802 3x Flow Control IEEE802 1p QoS IEEE802 1q VLAN IEEE802 1d Spanning Tree IEEE802 1s Multiple Spanning Tree IEEE802 1w Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Ethernet 10Mbps HD 20Mbps FD Transmission Rate Fast Ethernet 100Mbps HD 200Mbps FD Gigabit Ethernet 2000Mbps FD 10Base T UTP STP of Cat 3 or above 100Base TX UTP STP of Cat 5 or
66. Unicast 0 Alignment Errors 0 Collisions T UndersizePkts O Pktsb4Octets O PktsbStol 2 POctets O Pkts128to255Octets D Pkts256to5110Octets 0 Pkts91 2101023 0ctets 0 PktsOwerl0230ctets Figure 5 12 Traffic Statistics The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Auto Refresh Auto Refresh Allows you to Enable Disable refreshing the Traffic Summary automatically Refresh Rate Enter a value in seconds to specify the refresh interval 43 Statistics Port Received Sent Broadcast Multicast Unicast Alignment Errors Enter a port number and click the Select button to view the traffic statistics of the corresponding port Displays the details of the packets received on the port Displays the details of the packets transmitted on the port Displays the number of good broadcast packets received or transmitted on the port The error frames are not counted in Displays the number of good multicast packets received or transmitted on the port The error frames are not counted in Displays the number of good unicast packets received or transmitted on the port The error frames are not counted in Displays the number of the received packets that have a bad Frame Check Sequence FCS with a non integral octet Alignment Error The length of the packet is from 64 bytes to maximal bytes of the jumbo frame usually 9216 bytes UndersizePkts Displays the number of the received packets excluding error packet
67. User configured in an SNMP Group can manage the switch via the client program on management station The specified User Name and the Auth Privacy Password are used for SNMP Management Station to access the SNMP Agent functioning as the password SNMP module is used to configure the SNMP function of the switch including three submenus SNMP Config Notification and RMON 11 1 SNMP Config The SNMP Config can be implemented on the Global Config SNMP View SNMP Group SNMP User and SNMP Community pages 11 1 1 Global Config To enable SNMP function please configure the SNMP function globally on this page Choose the menu SNMP SNMP Config Global Config to load the following page Global Config SNMP O Enable Disable Apply Local Engine _ Default ID Local Engine ID S0002e5 O56ch26dSachh 10 64 Hex Apply Remote Engine l Apply Remote Engine ID po 0 or 10 64 Hex Help Note The total hexadecimal characters of Engine ID should be even Figure 11 3 Global Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config SNMP Enable Disable the SNMP function gt Local Engine Local Engine ID Specify the switch s Engine ID for the remote clients The Engine ID is a unique alphanumeric string used to identify the SNMP engine on the switch gt Remote Engine Remote Engine ID Specify the Remote Engine ID for switch The Engine ID is a unique alphanumeric string used to identify the SNMP engin
68. a ia i fa lo ae LAG is a au ls a E m g Figure 6 3 VLAN Table To ensure the normal communication of the factory switch the default VLAN of all ports is set to VLAN1 VLAN1 cannot be modified or deleted The following entries are displayed on this screen gt VLAN Create VLAN ID Name VLAN Table VLAN ID Select Select VLAN ID Name Untagged Ports Tagged Ports Operation VLAN Membership VLAN ID VLAN Name Port Enter the VLAN ID you want to create lt ranges from 2 to 4094 Give a name to the VLAN for identification Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding VLAN based on the VLAN ID you entered Select the desired port for configuration Displays the VLAN ID Displays the name of the specific VLAN Show the untagged ports of the specific VLAN Show the tagged ports of the specific VLAN You can delete the specific VLAN when you click the word Delete Displays the VLAN ID you choose Here you can set the name of the VLAN you choose Displays the port number 57 Untagged The port will be an untagged member of the specific VLAN if you select it Tagged The port will be an tagged member of the specific VLAN if you select it NotMember Ne port will not be a member of the specific VLAN if you select it PVID Here you can change the PVID of the specific port LAG Displays the LAG to which the port belongs to 6 2 Application Example for 802 1Q VLAN
69. able 1 L 32768 Passive Disable E 2 7 32768 Passive Disable E 3 1 32768 Passive Disable E 4 1 32768 Passive Disable e E 5 1 32766 Passive Disable LAG1 C 6 1 32766 Passive Disable LAG1 T 7 32768 Passive Disable LAG1 E 8 1 32766 Passive Disable LAG1 g 7 32768 Passive Disable E 10 1 32768 Passive Disable Note 1 To avoid any broadcast storm when LACP takes effect you are suggested to enable Spanning Tree function 2 LACP function cant be enabled for the port already in a static link aggregation group 3 The value of admin key cant be the same with the group number of any static link aggregation group in used and vice versa Figure 5 10 LACP Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config System Priority LACP Config Port Select Select Port Admin Key Port Priority Mode Specify the system priority for the switch The system priority and MAC address constitute the system identification ID A lower system priority value indicates a higher system priority When exchanging information between systems the system with higher priority determines which link aggregation a link belongs to and the system with lower priority adds the proper links to the link aggregation according to the selection of its partner Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select the desired port for LACP configurat
70. ange you set Enter end multicast IP of the IP range you set Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding IP range ID based on the ID number you entered Select the desired entry to delete or modify the corresponding IP range It is multi optional Displays IP range ID Displays start multicast IP of the IP range Displays end multicast IP of the IP range On this page you can configure the multicast filter rules for port Take the configuration on this page and the configuration on IP Range page together to function to implement multicast filter function on the switch Choose the menu Multicast gt Multicast Filter Port Filter to load the following page Port Filter Config Select Port Filter Disab Disab Disab Disab Disab Disab Disab Disab Oo oo sn om nH B Ww M S S S S S S a N a aS Note Disab Disable Disab le le le le le le le le le le Action Mode Bound IP Range ID Max Groups Permit Cd Ed permit 256 permit ES 256 EE permit 256 permit 256 permit 256 LAG1 permit e 256 LAG1 permit a 256 LAG1 permit 256 LAG1 permit 256 permit are 256 F 1 The port filter configuration here has no effect on static multicast IP 2 Up to 15 1P Ranges can be bound to one port Please input the Bound IP Range ID in the format like 1 3 5 3 Wax Groups works independently of port filter Figure 8 11 Port Filter The following
71. anged Therefore the corresponding IP address of the PC should be updated with a few configurations DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol functions to solve the above mentioned problems However during the working process of DHCP generally there is no authentication mechanism between Server and Client If there are several DHCP servers in the network network confusion and security problem will happen To protect the switch from being attacked by illegal DHCP servers you can configure the desired ports as trusted ports and only the clients connected to the trusted ports can receive DHCP packets from DHCP severs Here the DHCP Filtering function performs to monitor the process of hosts obtaining IP addresses from DHCP servers gt DHCP Working Principle DHCP works via the Client Server communication mode The Client applies to the Server for configuration The Server assigns the configuration information such as the IP address to the Client so as to reach a dynamic employ of the network source A Server can assign IP address for several Clients which is illustrated in the following figure 50 DHCP Server a to Access Layer Switch Central Switch e DHCP Client DHCP Client 2 DHCP Client 3 DHCP Client 4 Figure 5 17 Network diagram of DHCP For different DHCP clients DHCP server provides three IP address assigning methods 1 2 3 Manually assign the IP address Allows the administrator to
72. are scheduled strictly based on strict priority mode while the queues inside WRR group follow the WRR mode In SP WRR mode TC3 is in the SP group TCO TC1 and TC2 belong to the WRR group and the weight value ratio of TCO TC1 and TC2 is 1 2 4 In this way when scheduling queues the switch allows TC3 to occupy the whole bandwidth following the SP mode and the TCO TC1 and TC2 in the WRR group will take up the bandwidth according to their ratio 1 2 4 Equal Mode In this mode all the queues occupy the bandwidth equally The weight value ratio of all the queues is 1 1 1 1 9 2 Bandwidth Control Bandwidth function allowing you to control the traffic rate and broadcast flow on each port to ensure network in working order can be implemented on Rate Limit and Storm Control pages 9 2 1 Rate Limit Rate limit functions to control the ingress egress traffic rate on each port via configuring the available bandwidth of each port In this way the network bandwidth can be reasonably distributed and utilized Choose the menu QoS gt Bandwidth Control Rate Limit to load the following page Rate Limit Config Select i a e e a Hote Pon Oo Oo 4 amp th amp wh eee ees PR 54 Ingress Rater Kbps Egress RaterKbps LAG LAGI LAG LAG l 1 For one port you cannot enable the Storm Control and the Ingress rate control atthe same time 2 if you select Manual to setInaress Egress rate the system will auto
73. ast the packet in the VLAN owning the receiving port If the corresponding entry can be found in the table it indicates that the destination address 81 should be a group port list so the switch will duplicate this multicast data and deliver each port one copy The general format of the multicast address table is described as Figure 8 3 below VLANID MulticastIP_ Port Figure 8 3 Multicast Address Table gt IGMP Snooping In the network the hosts apply to the near router for joining leaving a multicast group by sending IGMP Internet Group Management Protocol messages When the up stream device forwards down the multicast data the switch is responsible for sending them to the hosts IGMP Snooping is a multicast control mechanism which can be used on the switch for dynamic registration of the multicast group The switch running IGMP Snooping manages and controls the multicast group via listening to and processing the IGMP messages transmitted between the hosts and the multicast router thereby effectively prevents multicast groups being broadcasted in the network The Multicast module is mainly for multicast management configuration of the switch including four submenus IGMP Snooping Multicast IP Multicast Filter and Packet Statistics 8 1 IGMP Snooping gt IGMP Snooping Process The switch running IGMP Snooping listens to the IGMP messages transmitted between the host and the router and tracks the IGMP messages and the r
74. ation is the workstation for running the SNMP client program providing a friendly management interface for the administrator to manage the most network devices conveniently SNMP Agent Agent is the server software operated on network devices with the responsibility of receiving and processing the request packets from SNMP Management Station In the meanwhile Agent will inform the SNMP Management Station of the events whenever the device status changes or the device encounters any abnormalities such as device reboot MIB MIB is the set of the managed objects MIB defines a few attributes of the managed objects including the names the access rights and the data types Every SNMP Agent has its own MIB The SNMP Management station can read write the MIB objects based on its management right SNMP Management Station is the manager of SNMP network while SNMP Agent is the managed object The information between SNMP Management Station and SNMP Agent are exchanged through SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol The relationship among SNMP Management Station SNMP Agent and MIB is illustrated in the following figure MIB 3 map Read Configure the iz MIB variables gt Send response and notification packets SNMP Management Station SNMP Agent Figure 11 1 Relationship among SNMP Network Elements gt SNMP Versions This switch supports SNMP v3 and is compatible with SNMP v1 and SNMP v2c The SNMP versions adopted by SNMP Manageme
75. ature VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID of the multicast VLAN Router Port Time Specify the aging time of the router port Within this time if the switch doesn t receive IGMP query message from the router port it will consider this port is not a router port any more Member Port Time Specify the aging time of the member port Within this time if the switch doesn t receive IGMP report message from the member port it will consider this port is not a member port any more Leave Time Specify the interval between the switch receiving a leave message from a host and the switch removing the host from the multicast groups Router Port Select the static router port which is mainly used in the network with stable topology Ad note 1 The router port should be in the multicast VLAN otherwise the member ports can not receive multicast streams 2 The Multicast VLAN won t take effect unless you first complete the configuration for the corresponding VLAN owning the port on the 802 1Q VLAN page 3 Configure the link type of the router port in the multicast VLAN as Tagged otherwise all the member ports in the multicast VLAN can not receive multicast streams 4 After a multicast VLAN is created all the IGMP packets will be processed only within the multicast VLAN Configuration procedure ip Operation Dusen Enable IGMP Snooping Required Enable IGMP Snooping globally on the switch function and for the port on Multicast IGMP Snoop
76. ay in October 01 00 e New Zealand Last Sunday in September 02 00 First Sunday in April 03 00 Specify the DST configuration in recurring mode This configuration is recurring in use e Offset Specify the time adding in minutes when Daylight Saving Time comes e Start End Time Select starting time and ending time of Daylight Saving Time Specify the DST configuration in Date mode This configuration is recurring in use e Offset Specify the time adding in minutes when Daylight Saving Time comes e Start End Time Select starting time and ending time of Daylight Saving Time When the DST is disabled the predefined mode recurring mode and date mode cannot be When the DST is enabled the default daylight saving time is of Europe in predefined mode 15 4 1 5 System IP Each device in the network possesses a unique IP address You can log on to the Web management page to operate the switch using this IP address The switch supports three modes to obtain an IP address Static IP DHCP and BOOTP The IP address obtained using a new mode will replace the original IP address On this page you can configure the system IP of the switch Choose the menu System System Info System IP to load the following page IF Contig MAC Address IP Address Mode Management LAN IP Address Subnet Mask Default Gateway Note 64 70 02 81 54 87 Static IP DHCP BOOTP 1 WLAN ID 1 4094 iw 192 168 0 1 He
77. ber of the switch Type Displays the type of the port Rate Displays the maximum transmission rate of the port Status Displays the connection status of the port Click a port to display the bandwidth utilization on this port The actual rate divided by theoretical maximum rate is the bandwidth utilization The following figure displays the bandwidth utilization monitored every four seconds Monitoring the bandwidth utilization on each port facilitates you to monitor the network traffic and analyze the network abnormities Run Time 464sec CurrentPorth Current Utilization 0 0 Graphic Example Rx A Tx Rx OT Figure 4 3 Bandwidth Utilization 12 gt Bandwidth Utilization Rx Select Rx to display the bandwidth utilization of receiving packets on this port Tx Select Tx to display the bandwidth utilization of sending packets on this port 4 1 2 Device Description On this page you can configure the description of the switch including device name device location and system contact Choose the menu System System Info Device Description to load the following page Devce Description Device Name TL SL2426 Device Location SHENZHEN Apply System Contact www tp link com Note The Device Name Location and Contact should be not more than 32 characters Figure 4 4 Device Description The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Device Description Device Name Enter the name of the switch D
78. bind the static IP address to a specific client e g WWW Server via the DHCP server Automatically assign the IP address DHCP server assigns the IP address without an expiry time limitation to the clients Dynamically assign the IP address DHCP server assigns the IP address with an expiry time When the time for the IP address expired the client should apply for a new one Most clients obtain IP addresses dynamically which is illustrated in the following figure 1 2 3 DHCP Client DHCP Server 1 DHCP DISCOVER 2 DHCP OFFER 3 DHCP REQUEST 4 DHCP ACK Figure 5 18 Interaction between a DHCP client and a DHCP server DHCP DISCOVER Stage The Client broadcasts the DHCP DISCOVER packet to find the DHCP server DHCP OFFER Stage Upon receiving the DHCP DISCOVER packet the DHCP server selects an IP address from the IP pool according to the assigning priority of the IP addresses and replies to the client with DHCP OFFER packet carrying the IP address and other information DHCP REQUEST Stage In the situation that there are several DHCP servers sending the DHCP OFFER packets the client will only respond to the first received DHCP OFFER 51 4 gt packet and broadcast the DHCP REQUEST packet which includes the assigned IP address of the DHCP OFFER packet DHCP ACK Stage Since the DHCP REQUEST packet is broadcasted all DHCP servers on the network segment can receive it However only the requested server p
79. by IGMP Snooping It can enhance the quality and security for information transmission in some fixed multicast groups Choose the menu Multicast gt Multicast IP Static Multicast IP to load the following page Create Static Multicast Multicast IP Format 225 0 0 1 VAN ID et create Forward Port Format 1 3 5 8 Search Option Search Option 05 Static MulticastlP Table Select Multicast IP VLAR ID Forward Port Total Static Multicast IP O Figure 8 9 Static Multicast IP Table The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Static Multicast Multicast IP Enter static multicast IP address VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID of the multicast IP Forward Port Enter the forward port of the multicast group 91 gt Search Option Search Option Select the rules for displaying multicast IP table to find the desired entries quickly All Displays all static multicast IP entries o Multicast IP Enter the multicast IP address the desired entry must carry VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID the desired entry must carry eo Port Enter the port number the desired entry must carry gt Static Multicast IP Table Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding static multicast IP It is multi optional Multicast IP Displays the multicast IP VLAN ID Displays the VLAN ID of the multicast group Forward Port Displays the forward port of the multicast group 38 3 Multicast Filter When IG
80. ceiving port will be processed if the receiving port is not a router port yet it will be added to the router port list with its router port time specified if the receiving port is already a router port its router port time will be directly reset When receiving IGMP group specific query message the switch will send the group specific query message to the members of the multicast group being queried 2 IGMP Report Message IGMP report message is sent by the host when it applies for joining a multicast group or responses to the IGMP query message from the router 82 When receiving IGMP report message the switch will send the report message via the router port in the VLAN as well as analyze the message to get the address of the multicast group the host applies for joining The receiving port will be processed if the receiving port is a new member port it will be added to the multicast address table with its member port time specified if the receiving port is already a member port its member port time will be directly reset 3 IGMP Leave Message The host running IGMPv1 does not send IGMP leave message when leaving a multicast group as a result the switch can not get the leave information of the host momentarily However after leaving the multicast group the host does not send IGMP report message any more so the switch will remove the port from the corresponding multicast address table when its member port time times out The host
81. creen gt Config Restore Restore Config Click the Restore Config button to restore the backup configuration file It will take effect after the switch automatically reboots Md Note 1 It will take a few minutes to restore the configuration Please wait without any operation 2 To avoid any damage please don t power down the switch while being restored 3 After being restored the current settings of the switch will be lost Wrong uploaded configuration file may cause the switch unmanaged 4 3 2 Config Backup On this page you can download the current configuration and save it as a file to your computer for your future configuration restore 19 Choose the menu System System Tools Config Backup to load the following page Contig Backup Backup System Contig Click the button Backup Contig you can save the contig to you computer Note twill take a long time to backup the config file Please wait without any operation Figure 4 11 Config Backup The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Config Backup Backup Config Click the Backup Config button to save the current configuration as a file to your computer You are suggested to take this measure before upgrading Mnote It will take a few minutes to backup the configuration Please wait without any operation 4 3 3 Firmware Upgrade The switch system can be upgraded via the Web management page To upgrade the system is to get more functions
82. cy Config lt Action Create to load the following page 116 Create Action Select Policy select Policy select ACL select ACL Figure 10 8 Action Create The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Action Select Policy Select the name of the policy Select ACL Select the ACL for configuration in the policy 10 3 Policy Binding Policy Binding function can have the policy take its effect on a specific port VLAN The policy will take effect only when it is bound to a port VLAN In the same way the port VLAN will receive the data packets and process them based on the policy only when the policy is bound to the port VLAN The Policy Binding can be implemented on Binding Table Port Binding and VLAN Binding pages 10 3 1 Binding Table On this page view the policy bound to port VLAN Choose the menu ACL gt Policy Binding Binding Table to load the following page Search Options Show tWode Shovy All Ww Policy Bind Table select index Policy Mame Interface Direction Figure 10 9 Binding Table The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Search Option Show Mode Select a show mode appropriate to your needs gt Policy Bind Table Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding binding policy Index Displays the index of the binding policy 117 Policy Name Displays the name of the binding policy Interface Displays the port number or VLAN ID bound to the pol
83. d 3 Map the DSCP priority to the Required Select DSCP priority and the priority level corresponding priority level 4 Select a schedule mode Required Log on to the Schedule Mode page to select a schedule mode 9 1 4 Schedule Mode On this page you can select a schedule mode for the switch When the network is congested the problem that many packets compete for resources must be solved usually in the way of queue scheduling The switch will control the forwarding sequence of the packets according to the priority queues and scheduling algorithms you set On this switch the priority levels are labeled as TCO TC1 TC3 Choose the menu QoS DiffServ Schedule Mode to load the following page Schedule Mode Contig Schedule Mode Figure 9 9 Schedule Mode The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Schedule Mode Config SP Mode Strict Priority Mode In this mode the queue with higher priority will occupy the whole bandwidth Packets in the queue with lower priority are sent only when the queue with higher priority is empty WRR Mode Weight Round Robin Mode In this mode packets in all the queues are sent in order based on the weight value for each queue The weight value ratio of TCO TC1 TC2 and TC3 is 1 2 4 8 102 SP WRR Mode Equ Mode Strict Priority Weight Round Robin Mode In this mode this switch provides two scheduling groups SP group and WRR group Queues in SP group and WRR group
84. d the Subnet mask as 255 255 255 0 Now Click OK to save your settings Return to CONTENTS 148 Appendix C Glossary Boot Protocol BOOTP BOOTP is used to provide bootup information for network devices including IP address information the address of the TFTP server that contains the devices system files and the name of the boot file Class of Service CoS CoS is supported by prioritizing packets based on the required level of service and then placing them in the appropriate output queue Data is transmitted from the queues using weighted round robin service to enforce priority service and prevent blockage of lower level queues Priority may be set according to the port default the packet s priority bit in the VLAN tag TCP UDP port number or DSCP priority bit Differentiated Services Code Point DSCP DSCP uses a six bit tag to provide for up to 64 different forwarding behaviors Based on network policies different kinds of traffic can be marked for different kinds of forwarding The DSCP bits are mapped to the Class of Service categories and then into the output queues Domain Name Service DNS A system used for translating host names for network nodes into IP addresses Dynamic Host Control Protocol DHCP Provides a framework for passing configuration information to hosts on a TCP IP network DHCP is based on the Bootstrap Protocol BOOTP adding the capability of automatic allocation of reusable network addre
85. de for the device to deal with the packet VLAN TAG is determined by whether the port permits the VLAN or not independent of voice VLAN security mode Table 9 3 Security mode and packets processing mode Ad Note Don t transmit voice stream together with other business packets in the voice VLAN except for some special requirements The Voice VLAN function can be implemented on Global Config Port Config and OUI Config pages 107 9 3 1 Global Config On this page you can configure the global parameters of the voice VLAN including VLAN ID and aging time Choose the menu QoS gt Voice VLAN gt Global Config to load the following page Global Config O Enable Disable WLAN ID ang Apply Aging Time 1440 min 1 43200 default 1440 Help Priority Voice VLAN Figure 9 12 Global Configuration The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config Voice VLAN Select Enable Disable Voice VLAN function VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID of the voice VLAN Aging Time Specifies the living time of the member port in auto mode after the OUI address is aging out Priority Select the priority of the port when sending voice data 9 3 2 Port Config Before the voice VLAN function is enabled the parameters of the ports in the voice VLAN should be configured on this page Choose the menu QoS Voice VLAN gt Port Config to load the following page Port Config Select Port Port Mode Security Mode
86. default it is 0x8100 in this switch 2 Priority Priority is a 3 bit field referring to 802 1p priority Refer to section QoS amp QoS profile for details 3 CFI CFI is a 1 bit field indicating whether the MAC address is encapsulated in the standard format in different transmission media This field is not described in detail in this chapter 4 VLAN ID VLAN ID is a 12 bit field indicating the ID of the VLAN to which this packet belongs It is in the range of 0 to 4 095 Generally O and 4 095 is not used so the field is in the range of 1 to 4 094 VLAN ID identifies the VLAN to which a packet belongs When the switch receives an un VLAN tagged packet it will encapsulate a VLAN tag with the default VLAN ID of the inbound port for the packet and the packet will be assigned to the default VLAN of the inbound port for transmission In this User Guide the tagged packet refers to the packet with VLAN tag whereas the untagged packet refers to the packet without VLAN tag and the priority tagged packet refers to the packet with VLAN tag whose VLAN ID is 0 gt Link Types of ports When creating the 802 1Q VLAN you should set the link type for the port according to its connected device The link types of port including the following two types Untagged and Tagged 1 Untagged The untagged port can be added in multiple VLANs If a VLAN tagged packet arrives at a port and the VLAN ID in its VLAN tag does not match any of the
87. e on the remote device which receives traps and informs from switch Md note The amount of Engine ID characters must be even 124 11 1 2 SNMP View The OID Object Identifier of the SNMP packets is used to describe the managed objects of the switch and the MIB Management Information Base is the set of the OIDs The SNMP View is created for the SNMP management station to manage MIB objects Choose the menu SNMP SNMP Config gt SNMP View to load the following page View Config View Mame fr 16 characters maximum MIB Object ID ll 61 characters maximum View Type Include Exclude View Table Select View Mame View Type MIB Object ID C viewDefault Include 1 F viewDefault Exclude 1 3 6 1 6 3 15 C viewDefault Exclude 13616316 F viewDefault Exclude 136 16 3108 An Figure 11 4 SNMP View The following entries are displayed on this screen gt View Config View Name Give a name to the View for identification Each View can include several entries with the same name MIB Object ID Enter the Object Identifier OID for the entry of View View Type Select the type for the view entry e Include The view entry can be managed by the SNMP management station e Exclude The view entry can not be managed by the SNMP management station gt View Table Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding view All the entries of a View will be deleted together View Name Displays the na
88. e SSL function 23 Choose the menu System lt Access Security gt SSL Config to load the following page Global Contig SSL Enable Disable Certificate Download Key Download Hote 1 The S amp L certificate and key downloaded will not take effect until the switch is rebooted The SSL certificate and key downloaded must match each other otherwise the HTTPS connection will not work Figure 4 16 SSL Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config SSL select Enable Disable the SSL function on the switch gt Certificate Download Certificate File Select the desired certificate to download to the switch The certificate must be BASE64 encoded gt Key Download Key File Select the desired SSL key to download to the switch The key must be BASE64 encoded Anote 1 The SSL certificate and key downloaded must match each other otherwise the HTTPS connection will not work 2 The SSL certificate and key downloaded will not take effect until the switch is rebooted ve To establish a secured connection using https please enter https into the URL field of the browser 4 lt may take more time for https connection than that for http connection because https connection involves authentication encryption and decryption etc 4 4 3 SSH Config As stipulated by IF TF Internet Engineering Task Force SSH Secure Shell is a security protocol established on application a
89. e ed O 122 ME ASINMIP SC OMIIG rick aceeet anatase scale al he ioe sct iat ee 124 TEEL GOD te ae 124 2 SNMP VIEW aein E ch ase dcadac useaed E ER 125 111 3 SNMP GOUD e E E e N EE 125 eA A A test as saa Sees 127 TEES SSNMPYC OM MUAY scada dinced ss bosccaserteactassseeauetaaeass 129 TRZ NOU Ca dat 131 A Na 132 A nn aacansdoaaedes 133 MESZ EVEN ONO e dt dl 134 MEA A A ea tedden eed Aa 134 Chapter 12 Malten aces AA A alee eee 137 1221 System MORO o nl Ed AA sts 137 ANA CPU MONIO einna acces ciecnctel ado Sonirasea EN 137 AZ ee MOMO RIO boca 138 122 a a o 138 27 A a E AA enc dec casio a a E 139 PAE MOG Al LOO A A e ment onaieerate 139 1229 Remote Log ze classi ads 140 W224 BACKUP LOQ auren nunaa a a a a e iii 141 12 3 Device DIAGNOSTICS iii id 141 2 Sable Testi ds 141 T232 ooo e AAA e 5 ye 142 12 4 Network DIAGMOSIICS rai 143 aT Peer ree oi ce Te ee een er Seale ee ene eT eee ere ee 143 124 2 WEACC q PO PC o O OO A 144 Appendix A SpecCalONS ta ea en anes 146 Appendix B Configuring the PES da 147 PD DEMGIX GF OGOS SaN orna A E oie eade Geena scans eeeane 149 VI Package Contents The following items should be found in your box gt One TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 Smart Switch One power cord Two mounting brackets and other fittings Installation Guide Resource CD for TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 switch including Y VV WV e This User Guide e Other Helpful In
90. ecks your network for any loops A loop can often occur in complicated or backup linked network systems Spanning Tree detects and directs data along the shortest available path maximizing the performance and efficiency of the network Telnet Defines a remote communication facility for interfacing to a terminal device over TCP IP Transmission Control Protocol Internet Protocol TCP IP Protocol suite that includes TCP as the primary transport protocol and IP as the network layer protocol Trivial File Transfer Protocol TFTP A TCP IP protocol commonly used for software downloads User Datagram Protocol UDP UDP provides a datagram mode for packet switched communications It uses IP as the underlying transport mechanism to provide access to IP like services UDP packets are delivered just like IP packets connection less datagrams that may be discarded before reaching their targets UDP is useful when TCP would be too complex too slow or just unnecessary Virtual LAN VLAN A Virtual LAN is a collection of network nodes that share the same collision domain regardless of their physical location or connection point in the network A VLAN serves as a logical workgroup with no physical barriers and allows users to share information and resources as though located on the same LAN Return to CONTENTS 151
91. edance Length If the connection status is normal here displays the length range of the cable Error If the connection status is close open or impedance here displays the error length of the cable Mdnote 1 The interval between two cable tests for one port must be more than 3 seconds 2 The result is more reasonable when the cable pair is in the open status 3 The test result is just for your reference A If the port is 100Mbps and its connection status is normal cable test can t get the length of the cable 12 3 2 Loopback Loopback test function looping the sender and the receiver of the signal is used to test whether the port of the switch is available as well as to check and analyze the physical connection status of the port to help you locate and solve network malfunctions Choose the menu Maintenance Device Diagnostics Loopback to load the following page 142 Loopback Type Loopback Type Loopback Port E dp Fl mE L113 74 L19 L20 L25 126 Loopback Result Porth Type MiA Result MiA Internal l3 la 15 0121 E27 Figure 12 8 Loopback External Da Tio 0116 22 728 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Loopback Type Internal External gt Loopback Port Loopback Port Test 12 4 Network Diagnostics 15 E 1 Lar LJ 23 mE 12 Jig 124 Select Internal to test whether the port is available Select External to test whet
92. egistered port When receiving IGMP report message the switch adds the port to the multicast address table when the switch listens to IGMP leave message from the host the router sends the Group Specific Query message of the port to check if other hosts need this multicast if yes the router will receive IGMP report message if no the router will receive no response from the hosts and the switch will remove the port from the multicast address table The router regularly sends IGMP query messages After receiving the IGMP query messages the switch will remove the port from the multicast address table if the switch receives no IGMP report message from the host within a period of time gt IGMP Messages The switch running IGMP Snooping processes the IGMP messages of different types as follows 1 IGMP Query Message IGMP query message sent by the router falls into two types IGMP general query message and IGMP group specific query message The router regularly sends IGMP general message to query if the multicast groups contain any member When receiving IGMP leave message the receiving port of the router will send IGMP group specific query message to the multicast group and the switch will forward IGMP group specific query message to check if other members in the multicast group of the port need this multicast When receiving IGMP general query message the switch will forward them to all other ports in the VLAN owning the receiving port The re
93. em Monitor Monitor the utilization status of the memory and the CPU of switch Log View the configuration parameters of the switch and find out the errors via the Logs Device Diagnostics Test whether the ports of the switch and its peer device are available Network Diagnostics Test whether the destination device is reachable and detect the route hops from the switch to the destination device 12 1 System Monitor System Monitor functions to display the utilization status of the memory and the CPU of switch via the data graph The CPU utilization rate and the memory utilization rate should fluctuate stably around a specific value If the CPU utilization rate or the memory utilization rate increases markedly please detect whether the network is being attacked The System Monitor function is implemented on the CPU Monitor and Memory Monitor pages 12 1 1 CPU Monitor Choose the menu Maintenance gt System Monitor CPU Monitor to load the following page CPU Monitor Run Time blsec 100 30 a0 r BO 50 40 30 20 10 0 Current Utilization MAS Utilization MIM Utilization Average Utilization 5 5 45 5 Figure 12 1 CPU Monitor Click the Monitor button to enable the switch to monitor and display its CPU utilization rate every four seconds 137 12 1 2 Memory Monitor Choose the menu Maintenance gt System Monitor Memory Monitor to load the following page Memory Monitor Run Time 1325ec 100 30 a0 FO BO
94. entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Filter Config Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered 93 Select Select the desired port for multicast filtering It is multi optional Port Displays the port number Filter Select Enable Disable multicast filtering feature on the port Action Mode Select the action mode to process multicast packets when the multicast IP is in the filtering IP range e Permit Only the multicast packets whose multicast IP is in the IP range will be processed e Deny Only the multicast packets whose multicast IP is not in the IP range will be processed Bound IP Range ID Enter the IP rang ID the port will be bound to Max Groups Specify the maximum number of multicast groups to prevent some ports taking up too much bandwidth LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to note 1 Multicast Filter feature can only have effect on the VLAN with IGMP Snooping enabled 2 Multicast Filter feature has no effect on static multicast IP 3 Upto 15 IP Ranges can be bound to one port Configuration Procedure Step Operation pesen 1 Configure IP Range Required Configure IP Range to be filtered on Multicast Multicast Filter IP Range page 2 Configure multicast filter Optional Configure multicast filter rules for ports on rules for ports Multicast Multicast Filter Port Filter page
95. erval between 3 and 100 seconds By default its 3 seconds 36 gt Port Config Port Select Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select Select the desired port for loopback detection configuration It is multi optional Port Displays the port number Status Enable or disable loopback detection function for the port Operation Mode Select the mode how the switch processes the detected loops e Alert When a loop is detected displays an alert e Port based When a loopback is detected displays an alert and blocks the port Recovery Mode Select the mode how the blocked port recovers to normal status e Auto Block status can be automatically removed after recovery time e Manual Block status only can be removed manually Loop Status Displays the port status whether a loopback is detected Block Status Displays the port status about block or unblock LAG Displays the LAG number the port belongs to Manual Recover Manually remove the block status of selected ports Mdnote 1 Recovery Mode is not selectable when Alert is chosen in Operation Mode 2 Loopback Detection must coordinate with storm control 5 2 LAG LAG Link Aggregation Group is to combine a number of ports together to make a single high bandwidth data path so as to implement the traffic load sharing among the member ports in the group and to enhance the connection reliability
96. estination is reachable and the account of router hops from the switch to the destination Appendix A Specifications Lists the hardware specifications of the switch Appendix B Configure the PCs Introduces how to configure the PCs Appendix C Glossary Lists the glossary used in this manual Return to CONTENTS Chapter 2 Introduction Thanks for choosing the TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 Smart Switch 2 1 Overview of the Switch Designed for workgroups and departments TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 from TP LINK provides wire speed performance and full set of layer 2 management features lt provides a variety of service features and multiple powerful functions with high security The ElA standardized framework and smart configuration capacity can provide flexible solutions for a variable scale of networks QoS and IGMP snooping filtering optimize voice and video application Link aggregation LACP increase aggregated bandwidth optimizing the transport of business critical data SNMP RMON WEB Telnet Log in bring abundant management policies TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 switch integrates multiple functions with excellent performance and is friendly to manage which can fully meet the need of the users demanding higher networking performance 2 2 Main Features e Resiliency and Availability IEEE 802 1s Multiple Spanning Tree provides high link availability in multiple VLAN environments Multicast sno
97. evice Location Enter the location of the switch System Contact Enter your contact information 4 1 3 System Time System Time is the time displayed while the switch is running On this page you can configure the system time and the settings here will be used for other time based functions You can manually set the system time or synchronize with PC s clock as the system time 13 Choose the menu System System Info System Time to load the following page Time Info Current System Date 2006 01 01 09 38 34 Sunday Current Time Source Manual Time Config Manual Date Time Get Time from NTP Server Time Zone UTC 08 00 Beijing Chongqing Hong Kong Urumqi Singapore Primary Sever Secondary Sever 139 768 100 163 Update Rate hour s Synchronize with PC s Clock Figure 4 5 System Time The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Time Info Current System Date Displays the current date and time of the switch Current Time Source Displays the current time source of the switch gt Time Config Manual When this option is selected you can set the date and time manually Get Time from NTP When this option is selected you can configure the time zone Server and the IP address for the NTP Server The switch will get UTC automatically if it has connected to an NTP Server e Time Zone Select your local time e Primary Secondary NTP Server Enter the IP address for the NTP Server
98. ff or power supply is abnormal Flashing The switch is working normally The switch is powered off or the switch is working On Off abnormally A device is linked to the corresponding port 2 3 2 Rear Panel The rear panel of TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 features a power socket and a Grounding Terminal marked with The rear panel of TL SL2210 is shown as the following figure Figure 2 5 Rear Panel of TL SL2210 The rear panel of TL SL2218 is shown as the following figure 100 240V 50 60Hz 0 3A O Figure 2 6 Rear Panel of TL SL2218 The rear panel of TL SL2428 is shown as the following figure 100 240V 50 60Hz 0 6A Figure 2 7 Rear Panel of TL SL2428 The rear panel of TL SL2452 is shown as the following figure 100 240V 50 60Hz 1 0A Figure 2 8 Rear Panel of TL SL2452 gt Grounding Terminal TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 already comes with Lightning Protection Mechanism You can also ground the switch through the PE Protecting Earth cable of AC cord or with Ground Cable gt AC Power Socket Connect the female connector of the power cord here and the male connector to the AC power outlet Please make sure the voltage of the power supply meets the requirement of the input voltage 100 240V 50 60Hz 0 3A for TL SL2210 TL SL2218 100 240V 50 60Hz 0 6A for T
99. formation Md note Make sure that the package contains the above items If any of the listed items are damaged or missing please contact your distributor Chapter 1 About this Guide This User Guide contains information for setup and management of TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 Smart Switch Please read this guide carefully before operation 1 1 Intended Readers This Guide is intended for network managers familiar with IT concepts and network terminologies 1 2 Conventions In this Guide the following conventions are used gt The four devices of TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 and TL SL2452 are sharing this User Guide For simplicity we will take TL SL2428 for example throughout the configuration chapters TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 and TL SL2452 just differ in the number of LED indicators and ports and all figures in this guide are of TL SL2428 gt The switch or TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 mentioned in this Guide stands for TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 Smart Switch without any explanation gt Menu Name Submenu Name gt Tab page indicates the menu structure System System Info System Summary means the System Summary page under the System Info menu option that is located under the System menu gt Bold font indicates a button a toolbar icon menu or menu item Symbols in this Guide Ignoring this type of note might result in a malfunction or damage to the device This forma
100. forwarded after If the VID of packet is unchanged removing its When untagged allowed by the port VLAN tag packets are received the packet will be Untagged the port will add the received The packet default VLAN tag i e lf the VID of me will be The packet the PVID of the S v Ol packet IS forwarded will be ingress port to the forbidden by the port the packet will be With the forwarded dropped PVID of with its egress port current as its VLAN VLAN tag tag Table 6 1 Relationship between Port Types and VLAN Packets Processing IEEE 802 1Q VLAN function is implemented on the VLAN Config pages 6 1 1 VLAN Config On this page you can configure the 802 1Q VLAN and its ports Choose the menu VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN VLAN Config to load the following page 56 VLAN Create VLAN ID 2 4094 Name 16 characters maximum VLAN Table VLAN ID Select VLAN ID Name Untagged Ports Tagged Ports Operation B 1 Default VLAN 1 28 Delete YLAN Membership VLAN ID VLAN Name Port 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Untagged C C C C c C O C O C c C Tagged C C C C C C o Cc C C C C C NotMember e G G G e e e e pro 1 Aaa aa ia ee ek aa aaa ia aa laa laa 1 Pot 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 untagged C C c C C C C C C C C C Tagged C C C C O C C C 6 NotMember O O O O O al oe O O G E ec al pro 4 al l ia aia a a ia li
101. ge select ACL 101 create Rule 5 configure operation as Deny configure S IP as 10 10 50 0 and mask as 255 255 255 0 configure D IP as 10 10 88 5 and mask as 255 255 255 255 On ACL Policy Config Policy Create page create a policy named limit2 On ACL gt Policy Config Action Create page add ACL 101 to Policy limit2 On ACL gt Policy Binding Port Binding page select Policy limit2 to bind to port 4 Return to CONTENTS 121 Chapter 11 SNMP gt SNMP Overview SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol has gained the most extensive application on the UDP IP networks SNMP provides a management frame to monitor and maintain the network devices It is used for automatically managing the various network devices no matter the physical differences of the devices Currently the most network management systems are based on SNMP SNMP is simply designed and convenient for use with no need of complex fulfillment procedures and too much network resources With SNMP function enabled network administrators can easily monitor the network performance detect the malfunctions and configure the network devices In the meantime they can locate faults promptly and implement the fault diagnosis capacity planning and report generating gt SNMP Management Frame SNMP management frame includes three network elements SNMP Management Station SNMP Agent and MIB Management Information Base SNMP Management Station SNMP Management St
102. gure MSTP parameters for ports on for ports Spanning Tree Port Config Port Config page Configure the MST region Required Create MST region and configure the role the switch plays in the MST region on Spanning Tree MSTP Instance Region Config and Instance Config page Configure MSTP parameters Optional Configure different instances in the MST region for instance ports and configure MSTP parameters for instance ports on Spanning Tree gt MSTP Instance lInstance Port Config page 7 4 STP Security Configuring protection function for devices can prevent devices from any malicious attack against STP features The STP Security function can be implemented on Port Protect and TC Protect pages Port Protect function is to prevent the devices from any malicious attack against STP features 7 4 1 Port Protect On this page you can configure loop protect feature root protect feature TC protect feature BPDU protect feature and BPDU filter feature for ports You are suggested to enable corresponding protection feature for the qualified ports gt Loop Protect In a stable network a switch maintains the states of ports by receiving and processing BPDU packets from the upstream switch However when link congestions or link failures occurred to the network a down stream switch does not receive BPDU packets for certain period which results in spanning trees being regenerated and roles of ports being reselected and causes the bloc
103. gure storm control feature to filter broadcast multicast and UL frame in the network Voice VLAN Configure voice VLAN to transmit voice data stream within the specified VLAN so as to ensure the transmission priority of voice data stream and voice quality Chapter 10 ACL This module is used to configure match rules and process policies of packets to filter packets in order to control the access of the illegal users to the network Here mainly introduces e ACL Config ACL rules e Policy Config Configure operation policies e Policy Binding Bind the policy to a port VLAN to take its effect on a specific port VLAN Chapter 11 SNMP This module is used to configure SNMP function to provide a management frame to monitor and maintain the network devices Here mainly introduces SNMP Config Configure global settings of SNMP function Notification Configure notification function for the management station to monitor and process the events RMON Configure RMON function to monitor network more efficiently Chapter 12 Maintenance This module is used to assemble the commonly used system tools to manage the switch Here mainly introduces System Monitor Monitor the memory and CPU of the switch Log View configuration parameters on the switch Device Diagnostics Test the connection status of the cable connected to the switch test if the port of the switch and the connected device are available Network Diagnostics Test if the d
104. he following entries are displayed on this screen gt Auto Refresh Auto Refresh Refresh Rate Traffic Summary Port Select 42 Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Statistics Enter a value in seconds to specify the refresh interval Allows you to Enable Disable refreshing the Traffic Summary automatically Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Port Displays the port number Packets Rx Displays the number of packets received on the port The error packets are not counted in Packets Tx Displays the number of packets transmitted on the port Octets Rx Displays the number of octets received on the port The error octets are counted in Octets Tx Displays the number of octets transmitted on the port Statistics Click the Statistics button to view the detailed traffic statistics of the port 5 3 2 Traffic Statistics Traffic Statistics screen displays the detailed traffic information of each port which facilitates you to monitor the traffic and locate faults promptly Choose the menu Switching Traffic Monitor Traffic Statistics to load the following page Auto Refresh Auto Refresh Enable Disable Apply Refresh Rate o sec 3 30 Statistics Por Received sent Broadcast O Broadcast 0 Multicast O Multicast 0 Unicast O
105. he switch Choose the menu Switching LAG LAG Table to load the following page Global Config Hash Algorithm LAG Table Select L Description Member Operation Number F LAG1 Static LAG 3 6 7 0 Edit Detail Note 1 The LAG created by LACP cant be deleted Figure 5 7 LAG Table The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config Hash Algorithm Select the applied scope of Aggregate Arithmetic which results in choosing a port to transfer the packets e SRC MAC DST MAC When this option is selected the Aggregate Arithmetic will apply to the source and destination MAC addresses of the packets e SRC IP DST IP When this option is selected the Aggregate Arithmetic will apply to the source and destination IP addresses of the packets gt LAG Table Select Select the desired LAG It is multi optional Group Number Displays the LAG number here Description Displays the description of LAG Member Displays the LAG member 38 Operation Click the Detail button for the detailed information of your selected LAG Detail Into Group Number LAG Type Fort Status Rate Port mirror Allows you to view or modify the information for each LAG Edit Click to modify the settings of the LAG Detail Click to get the information of the LAG LAG Static Enable Auto Disable Ingress Bandwidth tops Egress Bandwidth bps Broadcast control bps Multicast Control bpsj
106. her the device connected to the port of the switch is available Select the desired port for loopback test Click the Test button to start the loopback test for the port This switch provides Ping test and Tracert test functions for network diagnostics 12 4 1 Ping Ping test function testing the connectivity between the switch and one node of the network facilitates you to test the network connectivity and reachability of the host so as to locate the network malfunctions Choose the menu Maintenance Network Diagnostics Ping to load the following page 143 Pina Contig Destination IP Ping Times Data Site Interval Ping Result 192 168 0 1 byte 1 1024 millisec 100 1000 Hein Pinging 192 168 0 1 with 64 bytes of data Reply trom 192 168 0 1 gt byrles 64 time 1bms TTL 64 Reply trom 192 168 0 1 gt byrles 64 time 1bms TTL 64 Reply trom 192 168 0 1 byrles 64 time 1bms TTL 64 Reply trom 192 168 0 1 byrles 64 time 1bms TTL 64 Ping statistics for 192 166 0 1 Packets Sent 4 Receivad 4 Lost 0 0 loss Approximate round trip times in milli seconds Minimum Oms Maximum 0ms Average Oms Figure 12 9 Ping The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Ping Config Destination IP Ping Times Data Size Interval 12 4 2 Tracert Enter the IP address of the destination node for Ping test Enter the amount of times to send test data during Ping testing
107. here Select the type for the User e Local User Indicates that the user is connected to a local SNMP engine e Remote User Indicates that the user is connected to a remote SNMP engine Select the Group Name of the User The User is classified to the corresponding Group according to its Group Name Security Model and Security Level Select the Security Model for the User Select the Security Level for the SNMP v3 User Select the Authentication Mode for the SNMP v3 User e None No authentication method is used e MD5 The port authentication is performed via HMAC MD5d algorithm e SHA The port authentication is performed via SHA Secure Hash Algorithm This authentication mode has a higher security than MD5 mode Enter the password for authentication Select the Privacy Mode for the SNMP v3 User e None No privacy method is used e DES DES encryption method is used Enter the Privacy Password Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding User It is multi optional Displays the name of the User Displays the User Type Displays the Group Name of the User Displays the Security Model of the User Displays the Security Level of the User Displays the Authentication Mode of the User Displays the Privacy Mode of the User Click the Edit button to modify the Group of the User and click the Modify button to apply 128 11 1 5 SNMP Community SNMP v1 and SNMP v2c adopt community name authentication
108. hich in turn result in spanning tree being regenerated A too small hello time parameter may result in duplicated configuration being sent frequently which increases the network load of the switches and wastes network resources The default value is recommended A too small max age parameter may result in the switches regenerating spanning trees frequently and cause network congestions to be falsely regarded as link problems A too large max age parameter result in the switches unable to find the link problems in time which in turn handicaps spanning trees being regenerated in time and makes the network less adaptive The default value is recommended If the TxHold Count parameter is too large the number of MSTP packets being sent in each hello time may be increased with occupying too much network resources The default value is recommended 66 7 1 2 STP Summary On this page you can view the related parameters for Spanning Tree function Choose the menu Spanning Tree gt STP Config STP Summary to load the following page SIF Summary STP Status Disable OTP Version Local Bridge Root Bridge External Fath Cost Region Root Internal Path Cost Designated Bridge Root Port Latest TC Time E TC Count 0 MSTP Instance Summary Instance ID Instance Status Disable Local Bridge Region Root Internal Path Cost Designated Bridge Root Port Latest TC Time TC Count
109. icy Direction Displays the binding direction 10 3 2 Port Binding On this page you can bind a policy to a port Choose the menu ACL gt 5Policy Binding Port Binding to load the following page Port Bind Contig Policy Mame select Policy se Port Foma Port Bind Table Index Policy Mame Port Direction Figure 10 10 Bind the policy to the port The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Bind Config Policy Name Select the name of the policy you want to bind Port Enter the number of the port you want to bind gt Port Bind Table Index Displays the index of the binding policy Policy Name Displays the name of the binding policy Port Displays the number of the port bound to the corresponding policy Direction Displays the binding direction 10 3 3 VLAN Binding On this page you can bind a policy to a VLAN Choose the menu ACL gt Policy Binding VLAN Binding to load the following page VLAN Bind Contig Policy Mame Select Policy we WLAN ID Formmat 2 10 100 VLAN Bind Table Index Policy Mame VLAN IC Direction Figure 10 11 Bind the policy to the VLAN 118 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt VLAN Bind Config Policy Name Select the name of the policy you want to bind VLAN ID Enter the ID of the VLAN you want to bind gt VLAN Bind Table Index Displays the index of the binding policy Policy Name Displays the name of the binding policy VLAN
110. iew and the Access right of the Community and then click the Modify button to apply The default MIB View of SNMP Community is viewDefault 129 Configuration Procedure e If SNMPv3 is employed please take the following steps Enable SNMP function globally Required On the SNMP gt SNMP Config Global Config page enable SNMP function globally Create SNMP View Required On the SNMP gt SNMP Config SNMP View page create SNMP View of the management agent The default View Name is viewDefault and the default OID is 1 Create SNMP Group Required On the SNMP SNMP Config SNMP Group page create SNMP Group for SNMPv3 and specify SNMP Views with various access levels for SNMP Group Create SNMP User Required On the SNMP gt SNMP Config SNMP User page create SNMP User in the Group and configure the auth privacy mode and auth privacy password for the User Required On the SNMP SNMP Config Global Config page enable SNMP function globally Required On the SNMP SNMP Config SNMP View page create SNMP View of the management agent The default View Name is viewDefault and the default OID is 1 Create SNMP Required alternatively Community e Create SNMP Community directly directly On the SNMP SNMP Config gt SNMP Community page create SNMP Community based on SNMP vi and SNMP v2c Create SNMP Group and SNMP User ss ev Similar to the configuration way based on for the User Create SNMP SNMPv3
111. iew the detailed information OUI Displays the OUI address of the voice device Mask Displays the OUI address mask of the voice device Description Displays the description of the OUI Configuration Procedure of Voice VLAN Step Operation Description 1 Configure the link type of Required On VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN gt VLAN Config the port page configure the link type of ports of the voice device Create VLAN Required On VLAN gt 802 1Q VLAN gt VLAN Config page click the Create button to create a VLAN Add OUI address Optional On QoS Voice VLAN OUI Config page you can check whether the switch is supporting the OUI template or not If not please add the OUI address 4 Configure the parameters Required On QoS Voice VLAN gt Port Config page of the ports in voice VLAN configure the parameters of the ports in voice VLAN 110 ip operation ese 5 Enable Voice VLAN Required On QoS Voice VLAN gt Global Config page configure the global parameters of voice VLAN Return to CONTENTS 111 Chapter 10 ACL 10 1 ACL Config An ACL may contain a number of rules and each rule specifies a different package range Packets are matched in match order Once a rule is matched the switch processes the matched packets taking the operation specified in the rule without considering the other rules which can enhance the performance of the switch The ACL Config function can be implemented on ACL Summary ACL Create MAC ACL
112. ify the port number to which the MAC address is bound The new port should be in the same VLAN Displays the Type of the MAC address Displays the Aging Status of the MAC address 1 If the corresponding port number of the MAC address is not correct or the connected port or the device has been changed the switch can not be forward the packets correctly Please reset the static address entry appropriately 2 Ifthe MAC address of a device has been added to the Static Address Table connecting the device to another port will cause its address not to be recognized dynamically by the switch Therefore please ensure the entries in the Static Address Table are correct and valid 3 The MAC address in the Static Address Table can not be added to the Filtering Address Table or bound to a port dynamically 4 This static MAC address bound function is not available if the 802 1X feature is enabled 5 4 3 Dynamic Address The dynamic address can be generated by the auto learning mechanism of the switch The Dynamic Address Table can update automatically by auto learning or the MAC address aging out mechanism To fully utilize the MAC address table which has a limited capacity the switch adopts an aging mechanism for updating the table That is the switch removes the MAC address entries related to a network device if no packet is received from the device within the aging time On this page you can configure the dynamic MAC address entry
113. ig Port Config VLAN Config and Multicast VLAN pages 8 1 1 Snooping Config To configure the IGMP Snooping on the switch please firstly configure IGMP global configuration and related parameters on this page If the multicast address of the received multicast data is not in the multicast address table the switch will broadcast the data in the VLAN When Unknown Multicast Discard feature is enabled the switch drops the received unknown multicast so as to save the bandwidth and enhance the process efficiency of the system Please configure this feature appropriate to your needs Choose the menu Multicast IGMP Snooping Snooping Config to load the following page 83 Global Contig IGMP Snooping Enable Disable Unknown Multicast Forward Discard SMP Snooping Status Description Member Enabled Port Enabled VLAN Hote SMP Snooping will take effect only when Global Contig Port Contig and VLAN Config are all enabled Figure 8 4 Basic Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config IGMP Snooping Select Enable Disable IGMP Snooping function globally on the switch Unknown Multicast Select the operation for the switch to process unknown multicast Forward or Discard gt IGMP Snooping Status Description Displays IGMP Snooping status Member Displays the member of the corresponding status 8 1 2 Port Config On this page you can configure the IGMP feature for ports of the
114. ig page enable STP function and select MSTP version On Spanning Tree gt STP Config Port Config page enable MSTP function for the port Configure the region name and On Spanning Tree MSTP _ Instance Region the revision of MST region Config page configure the region as TP LINK and keep the default revision setting Configure VLAN to Instance On Spanning Tree gt MSTP Instance gt Instance mapping table of the MST region Config page configure VLAN to Instance mapping table Map VLAN101 103 and 105 to Instance 1 map VLAN102 104 and 106 to Instance 2 78 e The configuration procedure for switch E and F is the same with that for switch D gt The topology diagram of the two instances after the topology is stable e For Instance 1 VLAN101 103 and 105 the red paths in the following figure are connected links the gray paths are the blocked links Switch A gt aaa zag Switch C Switch D Switch E Switch F e For Instance 2 VLAN102 104 and 106 the blue paths in the following figure are connected links the gray paths are the blocked links Switch D gt Suggestion for Configuration e Enable TC Protect function for all the ports of switches e Enable Root Protect function for all the ports of root bridges e Enable Loop Protect function for the non edge ports Enable BPDU Protect function or BPDU Filter function for the edge ports which are connected to the PC and server Ret
115. iguration Procedure 1 Select the key type and key length and generate SSH key i PuTlY Key Generator File Key Conversions Help kep No ken Actions Generate a public private key pair Load an existing private key file Save the generated key Parameters Number of bits in a generated key d note 1 The key length is in the range of 256 to 3072 bits 2 During the key generation randomly moving the mouse quickly can accelerate the key generation 3 After the key is successfully generated please save the public key and private key to the computer 2 G pa Pull key Generator File Key Conversions Help Key Public key for pasting into OpenSSH authorzed_keys file zsh r2a AAN zal cc Bota Dar slaScshh nyowoll micas 347A 4yevidF yA AG zsaE CMM S5wll AD wOBObb FA Sime r FL nal 0H49Nokrp BmzlSAOSHIWeT Cel nan idpu2zePeS95U beba Ter tOviweAZeS TCT Dwe MN El rea key 201 00120 Key fingerprint ssh rsa 1023 38 c0d 9e 14 da b1 ba de b0 fh 4s 69 5 4 460 Key comment rea key 201001 20 Key passphrase Confirm passphrase Actions Generate a public private key pair Generate Load an existing private key file Load Save the generated key Save public key Save private key Parameters Type of key to generate 55H 1 ASA SSH 2 ASA O 55H 2 D54 Number of bite in a generated key 1024 2 On the Web management page of the switch download the public key file saved in the Md note
116. ill be displayed in the Static Address Table Choose the menu Switching MAC Address gt Static Address to load the following page Create Static Address MAC Address po Format 00 00 00 00 00 01 VLAN ID at Search Option Static Address Table Select MAC Address VLAN ID Port Type Aging Status z Total MAC Address 0 Hote The maximum ofthe displayed entries is 100 by default please click the Search button to get the complete address entries Figure 5 14 Static Address The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Static Address MAC Address Enter the static MAC address to be bound 46 VLAN ID Port gt Search Option Search Option gt Static Address Table Select MAC Address VLAN ID Port Type Aging Status Mdnote Enter the corresponding VLAN ID of the MAC address Select a port from the pull down list to be bound Select a Search Option from the pull down list and click the Search button to find your desired entry in the Static Address Table e MAC Enter the MAC address of your desired entry e VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID number of your desired entry e Port Enter the Port number of your desired entry Select the entry to delete or modify the corresponding port number It is multi optional Displays the static MAC address Displays the corresponding VLAN ID of the MAC address Displays the corresponding Port number of the MAC address Here you can mod
117. ing Snooping Config and Port Config page Create a multicast VLAN Required Create a multicast VLAN and add all the member ports and router ports to the VLAN on the VLAN 802 1Q VLAN page e Configure the link type of the router ports as Tagged Configure parameters for Optional Enable and configure a multicast VLAN on the multicast VLAN Multicast IGMP Snooping Multicast VLAN page It is recommended to keep the default time parameters Look over the configuration If it is successfully configured the VLAN ID of the multicast VLAN will be displayed in the IGMP Snooping Status table on the Multicast IGMP Snooping Snooping Config page 88 Application Example for Multicast VLAN gt Network Requirements Multicast source sends multicast streams via the router and the streams are transmitted to user A and user B through the switch Router Its WAN port is connected to the multicast source its LAN port is connected to the switch The multicast packets are transmitted in VLAN3 Switch Port 3 is connected to the router and the packets are transmitted in VLAN3 port 4 is connected to user A and the packets are transmitted in VLAN4 port 5 is connected to user B and the packets are transmitted in VLAN5 User A Connected to Port 4 of the switch User B Connected to port 5 of the switch Configure a multicast VLAN and user A and B receive multicast streams through the multicast VLAN gt Network Diagram
118. ing two conditions 1 This device may not cause harmful interference 2 This device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operation Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user s authority to operate the equipment CE Mark Warning CE 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 y MlpoAaykT ceptucpikoBaHo 3riaHo c npaBunamu cuctemu YkpCEMNPO Ha BIAnoBiAHicTe BUMOraM HOPpMaTuUBHUX AOKYMeHTIB Ta BuMOraM uo NepenbayeHi UMHHUMM 3akoHOonaB4uMM akTamn YkpalHn ERL Safety Information e When product has power button the power button is one of the way to shut off the product When there is no power button the only way to completely shut off power is to disconnect the product or the power adapter from the power source e Don t disassemble the product or make repairs yourself You run the risk of electric shock and voiding the limited warranty If you need service please contact us e Avoid water and wet locations This product can be used in the following countries CONTENTS Package COMES Pe ea Ce Chapter ABOUT IMIS GUISA 1 1 INtended Readers sms ancien eaadasauasnataveruencesesiananteesataeiast 1 2 CONVENON Siurana ibi tidad NS Overview Of This Guide oocococccconcccncoccnconcn
119. ion Port Isolation provides a method of restricting traffic flow to improve the network security by forbidding the port to forward packets to the ports that are not on its forward portlist Choose the menu Switching Port gt Port Isolation to load the following page Port Isolation Contig Port ia Forward Portlist Pi F 2 Fi 3 Ol 4 Dl 5 O 6 Ol 7 O 8 Fig l10 L11 12 Mia 0114 145 116 liz lig lig 130 gt Dlz2 23 24 135 0136 Pilar 29 An Port Isolation List Port Forward Portlist 1 1 28 a 2 1 28 3 1 28 4 1 28 5 1 28 1 28 T 1 28 z 1 28 d y 1 28 10 1 28 11 1 28 12 1 28 13 1 28 14 1 28 15 1 28 w Figure 5 5 Port Isolation The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Isolation Config Port Select the port number to set its forwardlist Forward Portlist Select the port that to be forwarded to gt Port Isolation List Port Display the port number Forward Portlist Display the forwardlist 35 5 1 5 Loopback Detection With loopback detection feature enabled the switch can detect loops using loopback detection packets When a loop is detected the switch will display an alert or further block the corresponding port according to the port configuration Choose the menu Switching gt Port gt Loopback Detection to load the following page Global contig Loopback Detection ue C enable te disable Detection Interval 30 seconds 1 1000 ll merwe E detection timest1 1003 Apply Web
120. ion It is multi optional Displays the port number Specify an admin key for the port The member ports in a dynamic aggregation group must have the same admin key Specify a Port Priority for the port This value determines the priority of the port to be selected as the dynamic aggregation group member The port with smaller Port Priority will be considered as the preferred one If the two port priorities are equal the port with smaller port number is preferred Specify LACP mode for your selected port 41 Status LAG 5 3 Traffic Monitor The Traffic Monitor function monitoring the traffic of each port is implemented on the Traffic Summary and Traffic Statistics pages 5 3 1 Traffic Summary Enable Disable the LACP feature for your selected port Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to Traffic Summary screen displays the traffic information of each port which facilitates you to monitor the traffic and analyze the network abnormity Choose the menu Switching Traffic Monitor gt Traffic Summary to load the following page Auto Refresh Auto Refresh Refresh Rate Traffic Summary Part Packets Rx 0 2 4613 3 0 4 0 5 0 E 0 T 0 z 0 g 0 10 0 11 0 12 D O Enable Packets Tx o 4386 O Oa O O O O O OJ Ol O Disable see 3 300 Octets Rx 0 BSD0254 DO Oaj O O O O O O O O Octets Tx o 2072355 D fF A O A A A A Figure 5 11 Traffic Summary T
121. itch supports four schedule modes SP WRR SP WRR and Equ gt Priority Mode This switch implements three priority modes based on port on 802 1P and on DSCP By default the priority mode based on port is enabled and the other two modes are optional 1 Port Priority Port priority is a priority level of the port After port priority is configured the data stream will be mapped to the egress queues directly according to the priority level of the port 96 2 802 1P Priority TAG 4 bytes Ethernet Frame 3bit for CoS 802 1p priority PRI CFI VLAN ID 802 1 O p Tag Figure 9 2 802 1Q frame As shown in the figure above each 802 1Q Tag has a Pri field comprising 3 bits The 3 bit priority field is 802 1p priority in the range of O to 7 802 1P priority determines the priority of the packets based on the Pri value On the Web management page of the switch you can configure different priority tags mapping to the corresponding priority levels and then the switch determine which packet is sent preferentially when forwarding packets The switch processes untagged packets based on the default priority mode 3 DSCP Priority ao si4 3 2 1 0 gt TITS TE a a a r Frececence Figure 9 3 IP datagram As shown in the figure above the ToS Type of Service in an IP header contains 8 bits The first three bits indicate IP precedence in the range of 0 to 7 RFC2474 re defines the ToS field in the IP packet heade
122. itch receiving a leave message from a host and the switch removing the host from the multicast groups Select the static router port which is mainly used in the network with stable topology Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding VLAN ID based on the ID number you entered Select the desired VLAN ID for configuration It is multi optional Displays the VLAN ID Displays the router port time of the VLAN Displays the member port time of the VLAN Displays the leave time of the VLAN 86 Router Port Displays the router port of the VLAN note The settings here will be invalid when multicast VLAN is enabled Configuration procedure a OOOO Enable IGMP Snooping Required Enable IGMP Snooping globally on the switch function and for the port on Multicast IGMP Snooping Snooping Config and Port Config page Configure the multicast Optional Configure the multicast parameters for VLANs parameters for VLANs on Multicast IGMP Snooping VLAN Config page If a VLAN has no multicast parameters configuration it indicates the IGMP Snooping is not enabled in the VLAN thus the multicast data in the VLAN will be broadcasted 8 1 4 Multicast VLAN In old multicast transmission mode when users in different VLANs apply for join the same multicast group the multicast router will duplicate this multicast information and deliver each VLAN owning a receiver one copy This mode wastes a lot of bandwidth
123. ked ports to transit to forwarding state Therefore loops may be incurred in the network The loop protect function can suppresses loops With this function enabled a port regardless of the role it plays in instances is always set to blocking state when the port does not receive BPDU packets from the upstream switch and spanning trees are regenerated and thereby loops can be prevented gt Root Protect A CIST and its secondary root bridges are usually located in the high bandwidth core region Wrong configuration or malicious attacks may result in configuration BPDU packets with higher priorities being received by the legal root bridge which causes the current legal root bridge to lose 73 its position and network topology jitter to occur In this case flows that should travel along high speed links may lead to low speed links and network congestion may occur To avoid this MSTP provides root protect function Ports with this function enabled can only be set as designated ports in all spanning tree instances When a port of this type receives BDPU packets with higher priority it transits its state to blocking state and stops forwarding packets as if it is disconnected from the link The port resumes the normal state if it does not receive any configuration BPDU packets with higher priorities for a period of two times of forward delay gt TC Protect A switch removes MAC address entries upon receiving TC BPDU packets If a user
124. keep the default revision setting Configure VLAN to Instance On Spanning Tree MSTP _Instance lInstance mapping table of the MST region Config page configure VLAN to Instance mapping table Map VLAN 101 103 and 105 to Instance 1 map VLAN 102 104 and 106 to Instance 2 Configure ports On VLAN 802 1Q VLAN page configure the link type of the related ports as Tagged and add the ports to VLAN101 VLAN106 The detailed instructions can be found in the section 802 1Q VLAN Enable STP function On Spanning Tree STP Config STP Config page enable STP function and select MSTP version On Spanning Tree gt STP Config Port Config page enable MSTP function for the port Configure the region name and On Spanning Tree MSTP Instance Region the revision of MST region Config page configure the region as TP LINK and keep the default revision setting Configure VLAN to Instance On Spanning Tree MSTP Instance gt Instance mapping table of the MST region Config page configure VLAN to Instance mapping table Map VLAN 101 103 and 105 to Instance 1 map VLAN 102 104 and 106 to Instance 2 Configure switch B as the root On Spanning Tree MSTP _Instance lInstance bridge of Instance 1 Config page configure the priority of Instance 1 to be O Configure switch B as the On Spanning Tree MSTP Instance gt instance designated bridge of Instance 2 Config page configure the priority of Instance 2 to be 4096
125. l configuration of spanning trees on the switch can be implemented on STP Config and STP Summary pages 7 1 1 STP Config Before configuring spanning trees you should make clear the roles each switch plays in each Spanning tree instance Only one switch can be the root bridge in each spanning tree instance On this page you can globally configure the spanning tree function and related parameters Choose the menu Spanning Tree gt STP Config STP Config to load the following page Global Contig STP Enable Disable Version STF Parameters Contig CIST Priority 32768 0 61440 Hello Time sec 1 10 Max Age sec 6 40 Forward Delay sec 4 30 TeHoldCount pps 1 20 Wax Hops hop 1 40 Figure 7 4 STP Config 65 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config STP Select Enable Disable STP function globally on the switch Version Select the desired STP version on the switch e STP Spanning Tree Protocol e RSTP Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol eo MSTP Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol Parameters Config CIST Priority Enter a value from 0 to 61440 to specify the priority of the switch for comparison in the CIST CIST priority is an important criterion on determining the root bridge In the same condition the switch with the highest priority will be chosen as the root bridge The lower value has the higher priority The default value is 32768 and should be exact divisor of
126. longs to the corresponding instance ID After modification here the previous VLAN ID will be cleared and mapped to the CIST Click the Clear button to clear up all VLAN IDs from the instance ID The cleared VLAN ID will be automatically mapped to the CIST gt VLAN Instance Mapping VLAN ID Instance ID Enter the desired VLAN ID After modification here the new VLAN ID will be added to the corresponding instance ID and the previous VLAN ID won t be replaced Enter the corresponding instance ID 7 3 3 Instance Port Config A port can play different roles in different spanning tree instance On this page you can configure the parameters of the ports in different instance IDs as well as view status of the ports in the specified instance 71 Choose the menu Spanning Tree gt MSTP Instance Instance Port Config to load the following page Port Contig Instance ID Select FREESE See ese eo oq Note Part pe met ee ce ee UN p TEN o mM OO 1 hh th Se Wo PR Priority Path Cost Port Role Port Status LAG 125 Auto oe ne x 125 Auto 125 Auto 125 Auto 125 Auto 125 Auto 128 Auto 125 Auto 128 Auto 120 Auto LAGI 120 Auto nn LAGI 120 Auto LAGI 128 Auto LAGI 128 Auto 128 Auto aus eee Ifthe Path Cost ofa portis setto 0 it will alter automatically according to the ports link speed Figure 7 9 Instance Port Config The following entries are displayed on thi
127. lp 755 255 255 0 Po Changing IP address to a differentiP segment will interrupt the network communication so please keep the new IF address in the same IF segment with the local network Figure 4 7 System IP The following entries are displayed on this screen gt IP Config MAC Address IP Address Mode Management VLAN IP Address Subnet Mask Default Gateway Mote Displays MAC address of the switch Select the mode to obtain IP address for the switch e Static IP When this option is selected you should enter IP address Subnet Mask and Default Gateway manually e DHCP When this option is selected the switch will obtain network parameters from the DHCP Server e BOOTP When this option is selected the switch will obtain network parameters from the BOOTP Server Enter the ID of management VLAN the only VLAN through which you can get access to the switch By default VLAN1 owning all the ports is the Management VLAN and you can access the switch via any port on the switch However if another VLAN is created and set to be the Management VLAN you may have to reconnect the management station to a port that is a member of the Management VLAN Enter the system IP of the switch The default system IP is 192 168 0 1 and you can change it appropriate to your needs Enter the subnet mask of the switch Enter the default gateway of the switch 1 Changing the IP address to a different IP segment will in
128. maliciously sends a large amount of TC BPDU packets to a switch in a short period the switch will be busy with removing MAC address entries which may decrease the performance and stability of the network To prevent the switch from frequently removing MAC address entries you can enable the TC protect function on the switch With TC protect function enabled if the account number of the received TC BPDUs exceeds the maximum number you set in the TC threshold field the switch will not performs the removing operation in the TC protect cycle Such a mechanism prevents the switch from frequently removing MAC address entries gt BPDU Protect Ports of the switch directly connected to PCs or servers are configured as edge ports to rapidly transit their states When these ports receive BPDUs the system automatically configures these ports as non edge ports and regenerates spanning trees which may cause network topology jitter Normally these ports do not receive BPDUs but if a user maliciously attacks the switch by sending BPDUs network topology jitter occurs To prevent this attack MSTP provides BPDU protect function With this function enabled on the switch the switch shuts down the edge ports that receive BPDUs and reports these cases to the administrator If a port is shut down only the administrator can restore it gt BPDU Filter BPDU filter function is to prevent BPDUs flood in the STP network If a switch receives malicious BPDUs
129. matically select integral multiple of h4K bps that closestto the rate you entered as the real Ingress Egress rate Figure 9 10 Rate Limit 103 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Rate Limit Config Port Select Select Port Ingress Rate bps Egress Rate bps LAG Anote Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select the desired port for Rate configuration It is multi optional Displays the port number of the switch Configure the bandwidth for receiving packets on the port You can select a rate from the dropdown list or select Manual to set Ingress rate the system will automatically select integral multiple of 64Kbps that closest to the rate you entered as the real Ingress rate Configure the bandwidth for sending packets on the port You can select a rate from the dropdown list or select Manual to set Egress rate the system will automatically select integral multiple of 64Kbps that closest to the rate you entered as the real Egress rate Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to 1 If you enable ingress rate limit feature for the storm control enabled port storm control feature will be disabled for this port 2 When selecting Manual to set Ingress Egress rate the system will automatically select integral multiple of 64Kbps that closest to the rate you entered as the real Ingress Egress rate For example
130. me of the View entry View Type Displays the type of the View entry MIB Object ID Displays the OID of the View entry 11 1 3 SNMP Group On this page you can configure SNMP Group to control the network access by providing the users in various groups with different management rights via the Read View Write View and Notify View Choose the menu SNMP gt SNMP Config SNMP Group to load the following page 125 Group Contig Group Hare 16 characters maximurn Security Model ul security Level Read View viewDefault w Group Table security A l mee Select Group Mame security Level Read View Write View Motity View Operation ode Al Note A group should contain a read view and the default read view is viewDefault Figure 11 5 SNMP Group The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Group Name Group Config the same Security Model Select the Security Model for the SNMP Group e vi SNMPv1 is defined for the group In this model the Community Name is used for authentication SNMP v1 can be configured on the SNMP Community page directly e v2c SNMPv2c is defined for the group In this model the Community Name is used for authentication SNMP v2c can be configured on the SNMP Community page directly e v3 SNMPv3 is defined for the group In this model the USM mechanism is used for authentication If SNMPv3 is enabled the Security Level field is enabled for configuratio
131. mic Disable E C 10 64 0 Dynamic Disable C 11 Ed 0 Dynamic Disable F 12 B4 0 Dynamic Disable Hote The maximum number of MAC addresses learned trom individual port can be setto 64 Figure 5 4 Port Security The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Security Select Select the desired port for Port Security configuration It is multi optional Port Displays the port number Max Learned MAC Specify the maximum number of MAC addresses that can be learned on the port Learned Num Displays the number of MAC addresses that have been learned on the port Learn Mode Select the Learn Mode for the port e Dynamic When Dynamic mode is selected the learned MAC address will be deleted automatically after the aging time e Static When Static mode is selected the learned MAC address will be out of the influence of the aging time and can only be deleted manually The learned entries will be cleared after the switch is rebooted e Permanent When Permanent mode is selected the learned MAC address will be out of the influence of the aging time and can only be deleted manually The learned entries will be saved even the switch is rebooted Status Mnote The Port Security function is disabled for the LAG port member Only the port is removed from the LAG will the Port Security function be available for the port Select Enable Disable the Port Security feature for the port 34 5 1 4 Port Isolat
132. n Security Level Select the Security Level for the SNMP v3 Group e noAuthNoPriv No authentication and no privacy security level is used e authNoPriv Only the authentication security level is used e authPriv Both the authentication and the privacy security levels are used Read View Select the View to be the Read View The management access is restricted to read only and changes cannot be made to the assigned SNMP View Write View Select the View to be the Write View The management access is writing only and changes can be made to the assigned SNMP View The View defined both as the Read View and the Write View can be read and modified 126 Enter the SNMP Group name The Group Name Security Model and Security Level compose the identifier of the SNMP Group The Groups with these three items the same are considered to be Notify View Select the View to be the Notify View The management station can receive trap messages of the assigned SNMP view generated by the switch s SNMP agent gt Group Table Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding group It is multi optional Group Name Displays the Group Name here Security Model Displays the Security Model of the group Security Level Displays the Security Level of the group Read View Displays the Read View name in the entry Write View Displays the Write View name in the entry Notify View Displays the Notify View name in the entry
133. n recognize which vendor a device belongs to according to the OUI address The following table shows the OUI addresses of several manufacturers The following OUI addresses are preset of the switch by default humour Vendor e _ oneorsanon00 Porn pra Table 9 1 OUI addresses on the switch gt Port Voice VLAN Mode A voice VLAN can operate in two modes automatic mode and manual mode Automatic Mode In this mode the switch automatically adds a port which receives voice packets to voice VLAN and determines the priority of the packets through learning the source MAC of the UNTAG packets sent from IP phone when it is powered on The aging time of voice VLAN can be configured on the switch If the switch does not receive any voice packet on the ingress port within the aging time the switch will remove this port from voice VLAN Voice ports are automatically added into or removed from voice VLAN Manual Mode You need to manually add the port of IP phone to voice VLAN and then the switch will assign ACL rules and configure the priority of the packets through learning the source MAC address of packets and matching OUI address 106 In practice the port voice VLAN mode is configured according to the type of packets sent out from voice device and the link type of the port The following table shows the detailed information Port Voice Voice VLAN Mode Stream Type Link type of the port and processing mode Untagged Not supported
134. n this page you can set the output channel for logs 139 Choose the menu Maintenance gt Log gt Local Log to load the following page Local Log Config select Channel Severity Status m C Log Buffer level 7 Enable C Log File level_4 Enable Note 1 Local log includes 2 channels log buffer and log file 2 here are 6 severity levels marked with values 0 7 The smaller value has the higher priority Figure 12 4 Local Log The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Local Log Config Select Select the desired entry to configure the corresponding local log Log Buffer Indicates the RAM for saving system log The inforamtion in the log buffer is displayed on the Log Table page It will be lost when the switch is restarted Log File Indicates the flash sector for saving system log The inforamtion in the log file will not be lost after the switch is restarted and can be exported on the Backup Log page Severity Specify the severity level of the log information output to each channel Only the log with the same or smaller severity level value will be output Status Enable Disable the channel 12 2 3 Remote Log Remote log feature enables the switch to send system logs to the Log Server Log Server is to centralize the system logs from various devices for the administrator to monitor and manage the whole network Choose the menu Maintenance Log Remote Log to load the following page Log Host Select Inde
135. nd transport layers SSH encrypted connection is similar to a telnet connection but essentially the old telnet remote management method is not safe because the password and data transmitted with plain text can be easily intercepted SSH can provide information security and powerful authentication when you log on to the switch remotely through 24 an insecure network environment lt can encrypt all the transmission data and prevent the information in a remote management being leaked Comprising server and client SSH has two versions V1 and V2 which are not compatible with each other In the communication SSH server and client can auto negotiate the SSH version and the encryption algorithm After getting a successful negotiation the client sends authentication request to the server for login and then the two can communicate with each other after successful authentication This switch supports SSH server and you can log on to the switch via SSH connection using SSH client software SSH key can be downloaded into the switch If the key is successfully downloaded the certificate authentication will be preferred for SSH access to the switch Choose the menu System Access Security SSH Config to load the following page Global Contig SSH Protocol 1 Protocol Wa Idle Timeout Max Connect Key Download Enable Disable Enable Disable Enable Disable Apply sec 1 120 as Choose the SSH public key file t
136. noncnnnnonnnnonnnnnnnnnennnnnns Chapteriz INTOdUCHON ess 2 1 Overview of the Switch oocococcocccccococccconcnnoncnnononnnnonnonononnnnnnnnns 22 IVI UR O A A NEEN 2 3 Appearance Description ooccoocconcoccconconconconnconcnnconicnncaninncnnnns 2 3 1 FONU PANO agrei on did roda 2 3 2 Redrado Chapter 3 Login to the Switch ccooccccccccocccocnoccnocononannnnononanocononaninnnnos 3 1 A A A Ree ee 3 2 COMUN ted et ee e a Chapter 4 System sirosti E E E AT OySem NiO eaa a a ee ee ene 4 1 1 System SUMMA osen a dae eta 4 1 2 Device DescriptiON anusan aa aN AAO System Mie liarla 4 1 4 Daylight SAVING TIME ooccoccccocncccnicccncocnconnncncnconnonaninnnnnos ETS O A A 4 2 User Management iis dia as 4 2 1 User talle 4 2 2 USEF COMNG 43323 otis a eE ecules eee MO A ea ee saa ee eho eee tate 4 3 1 CONG RES idad 4 3 2 CONTIG BackUDiivniiii iii 4 3 3 Firmware Upgrade iia ed 43 4 System Reboot ccooccccccccccccocccocncconoconocncnonanonannnnnnonanenanenos 4 3 5 SYSIEM ROSSO diia i dnd AA ACCESS OCCUM alara ceo ela ad el ae 4 4 1 ACCESS CONI OL ranan E eee AZ SOM a a aus AAS 9 e ee en N Chapter Mos id E a A oo mE O o eh egeaaatasa tedmnen ean a staatieutian cents 5 1 1 PORE CON A Ad 30 9 1 2 FOMIO A E E EN 31 5 1 3 POOE CU o e oo eee eee een eer eee 33 9 1 4 A A realnata da E cencora sede mune tao aaah ra suanaaedeest 35 5 1 5 Wola 9 ae dB a a ee 36 52 LAB aa
137. nt Station and SNMP Agent should be the same Otherwise SNMP Management Station and SNMP Agent can not communicate with each other normally You can select the management mode with proper security level according to your actual application requirement 122 SNMP v1 SNMP v1 adopts Community Name authentication The community name is used to define the relation between SNMP Management Station and SNMP Agent The SNMP packets failing to pass community name authentication are discarded The community name can limit access to SNMP Agent from SNMP NMS functioning as a password SNMP v2c SNMP v2c also adopts community name authentication It is compatible with SNMP v1 while enlarges the function of SNMP v1 SNMP v3 Based on SNMP v1 and SNMP v2c SNMP v3 extremely enhances the security and manageability It adopts VACM View based Access Control Model and USM User Based Security Model authentication The user can configure the authentication and the encryption functions The authentication function is to limit the access of the illegal user by authenticating the senders of packets Meanwhile the encryption function is used to encrypt the packets transmitted between SNMP Management Station and SNMP Agent so as to prevent any information being stolen The multiple combinations of authentication function and encryption function can guarantee a more reliable communication between SNMP Management station and SNMP Agent gt MIB Introduction To uniq
138. o download into switch key Type key File Note SSH 2 RSAIDSA v Browse lt will take a long time to download the key file Please wait without any operation Figure 4 17 SSH Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Global Config SSH Protocol V1 Protocol V2 Idle Timeout Max Connect Select Enable Disable SSH function Select Enable Disable SSH V1 to be the supported protocol Select Enable Disable SSH V2 to be the supported protocol Specify the idle timeout time The system will automatically release the connection when the time is up The default time is 120 seconds Specify the maximum number of the connections to the SSH server No new connection will be established when the number of the connections reaches the maximum number you set The default value is 5 gt Key Download Key Type Select the type of SSH key to download The switch supports three types SSH 1 RSA SSH 2 RSA and SSH 2 DSA Key File Select the desired key file to download Download Click the Download button to down the desired key file to the switch Md note 1 Please ensure the key length of the downloaded file is in the range of 256 to 3072 bits 2 After the key file is downloaded the user s original key of the same type will be replaced The wrong uploaded file will result in the SSH access to the switch via Password authentication Application Example 1 for SSH gt Network Requiremen
139. of the packet forwarding The capacity of MAC Address Table is fixed MAC Address Attack is the attack method that the attacker takes to obtain the network information illegally The attacker uses tools to generate the cheating MAC address and quickly occupy the MAC Address Table When the MAC Address Table is full the switch will broadcast the packets to all the ports At this moment the attacker can obtain the network information via various sniffers and attacks When the MAC Address Table is full the packets traffic will flood to all the ports which results in overload lower speed packets drop and even breakdown of the system Port Security is to protect the switch from the malicious MAC Address Attack by limiting the maximum number of MAC addresses that can be learned on the port The port with Port Security feature enabled will learn the MAC address dynamically When the learned MAC address number reaches the maximum the port will stop learning Thereafter the other devices with the MAC address unlearned can not access to the network via this port Choose the menu Switching Port Port Security to load the following page 33 Port Security select Port Wax Learned MAC Learned Nurmi Learn Mode status AS C 1 64 0 Dinamic Disable idad F 2 64 0 Dynamic Disable F 3 64 0 Dynamic Disable F 4 6d 0 Dynamic Disable C 5 6d 0 Dynamic Disable C b Bd 0 Dinamic Disable F 7 6d 0 Dynamic Disable C 8 64 0 Dinamic Disable F g G4 0 Dyna
140. of the port played in the STP Instance e Root Port Indicates the port that has the lowest path cost from this bridge to the Root Bridge and forwards packets to the root e Designated Port Indicates the port that forwards packets to a downstream network segment or switch Master Port Indicates the port that connects an MST region to the common root The path from the master port to the common root is the shortest path between this MST region and the common root o Alternate Port Indicates the port that can be a backup port of a root or master port e Backup Port Indicates the port that is the backup port of a designated port Disabled Indicates the port that is not participating in the STP Port Status Displays the working status of the port e Forwarding In this status the port can receive forward data receive send BPDU packets as well as learn MAC address eo Learning In this status the port can receive send BPDU packets and learn MAC address e Blocking In this status the port can only receive BPDU packets Disconnected In this status the port is not participating in the STP LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to Anote 1 Configure the ports connected directly to terminals as edge ports and enable the BPDU protection function as well This not only enables these ports to transit to forwarding state rapidly but also secures your network 2 All the links of ports in a LAG can be config
141. onfig A Policy is used to control the data packets those match the corresponding ACL rules by configuring ACLs and actions together for effect The operations here include stream mirror stream condition QoS remarking and redirect The Policy Config can be implemented on Policy Summary Police Create and Action Create pages 10 2 1 Policy Summary On this page you can view the ACL and the corresponding operations in the policy 115 Choose the menu ACL gt 5Policy Config gt Policy Summary to load the following page Select Options Select a Policy Action Table Select Index Figure 10 6 Policy Summary The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Search Option Select Policy Select name of the desired policy for view If you want to delete the desired policy please click the Delete button gt Action Table Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding policy Index Displays the index of the policy ACL ID Displays the ID of the ACL contained in the policy 10 2 2 Policy Create On this page you can create the policy Choose the menu ACL gt Policy Config Policy Create to load the following page Create Policy Policy Mame Figure 10 7 Create Policy The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create Policy Policy Name Enter the name of the policy 10 2 3 Action Create On this page you can add ACLs for the policy Choose the menu ACL gt Poli
142. oping automatically prevents flooding of IP multicast traffic Root Guard protects root bridge from malicious attack or configuration mistakes e Layer 2 Switching Supports up to 512 VLANs simultaneously out of 4K VLAN IDs e Quality of Service Supports L2 L3 granular CoS with 4 priority queues per port Rate limiting confines the traffic flow accurately according to the preset value e Manageability Supports Telnet SNMP v1 v2c v3 RMON and web access Port Mirroring enables monitoring selected ingress egress traffic 2 3 Appearance Description 2 3 1 Front Panel The front panel of TL SL2210 is shown as Figure 2 1 1000Mbps TP LINK i si2210 8 Port10 100Mbps 2 Port Gigabit Smart Switch 10 100Mb 1 3 4 5 M1 2 6 Y 8 9 EN a2 6 4 o SA OO 10 OOOO NOM ORO Reset System O O 100Mbps e 1000Mbps 0 10 100M E 10Mbps 1000M e 10 100Mops 28 activity 8 activity 10 100Mbps 10100 1000Mbps 1000Base X Figure 2 1 Front Panel of TL SL2210 The front panel of TL SL2218 is shown as Figure 2 2 Figure 2 2 Front Panel of TL SL2218 The front panel of TL SL2428 is shown as Figure 2 3 TL SL2428 Smart Switch Figure 2 3 Front Panel of TL SL2428 The front panel of TL SL2452 is show as Figure 2 4 Oo a stem Figure 2 4 Front Panel of TL SL2452 The following parts are located on the front panel of the switch gt Reset Pres
143. oup Queues in SP group and WRR group are scheduled strictly based on strict priority mode while the queues inside WRR group follow the WRR mode In SP WRR mode TC3 is in the SP group TCO TC1 and TC2 belong to the WRR group and the weight value ratio of TCO TC1 and TC2 is 1 2 4 In this way when scheduling queues the switch allows TC3 to occupy the whole bandwidth following the SP mode and the TCO TC1 and TC2 in the WRR group will take up the bandwidth according to their ratio 1 2 4 Equ Mode Equal Mode In this mode all the queues occupy the bandwidth equally The weight value ratio of all the queues is 1 1 1 1 98 The QoS module is mainly for traffic control and priority configuration including two submenus DiffServ and Bandwidth Control 9 1 DiffServ This switch classifies the ingress packets maps the packets to different priority queues and then forwards the packets according to specified scheduling algorithms to implement QoS function This switch implements three priority modes based on port on 802 1P and on DSCP and supports four queue scheduling algorithms The port priorities are labeled as TCO TC1 TC2 and TC3 The DiffServ function can be implemented on Port Priority 802 1P Priority DSCP Priority and Schedule Mode pages 9 1 1 Port Priority On this page you can configure the port priority Choose the menu QoS DiffServ Port Priority to load the following page Port Priority Contig Select Port Priority L
144. pid Spanning Tree Protocol evolved from the 802 1D STP standard enable Ethernet ports to transit their states rapidly The premises for the port in the RSTP to transit its state rapidly are as follows 62 e The condition for the root port to transit its port state rapidly The old root port of the switch stops forwarding data and the designated port of the upstream switch begins to forward data e The condition for the designated port to transit its port state rapidly The designated port is an edge port or connecting to a point to point link If the designated port is an edge port it can directly transit to forwarding state if the designated port is connecting to a point to point link it can transit to forwarding state after getting response from the downstream switch through handshake gt RSTP Elements Edge Port Indicates the port connected directly to terminals P2P Link Indicates the link between two switches directly connected MSTP Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol compatible with both STP and RSTP and subject to IEEE 802 1s standard not only enables spanning trees to converge rapidly but also enables packets of different VLANs to be forwarded along their respective paths so as to provide redundant links with a better load balancing mechanism Features of MSTP e MSTP combines VLANs and spanning tree together via VLAN to instance mapping table It binds several VLANs to an instance to save communication cost and network re
145. pped to different priority levels based on DSCP priority mode non IP datagram with 802 1Q tag are mapped to different priority levels based on 802 1P priority mode if 802 1P Priority mode is enabled the untagged non IP datagram are mapped based on port priority mode Choose the menu QoS DiffServ DSCP Priority to load the following page DSCP Priority Config DSCP Priority Enable Disable Apply Priority Level DSCP Priority Level Esla Priority Level See Priority Level 0 TED 1 TED 3 2 TED 3 TED 4 TCO 5 TED G TED T TED E 8 TED g TED 10 TED 11 TED 12 TED 13 TED 14 TED 15 TED 16 Tt 17 TO 18 Tt 14 TEI e Apply note Among the priority levels TCO 121 1 63 the bigger value the higher priority Figure 9 8 DSCP Priority The following entries are displayed on this screen gt DSCP Priority Config DSCP Priority Select Enable or Disable DSCP Priority 101 gt Priority Level DSCP Indicates the priority determined by the DS region of IP datagram It ranges from 0 to 63 Priority Level Indicates the priority level the packets with tag are mapped to The priority levels are labeled as TCO TC1 TC2 and TC3 Md note To complete QoS function configuration you have to go to the Schedule Mode page to select a schedule mode after the configuration is finished on this page Configuration procedure sip Operation amen Enable DP priority function Required By default the DSCP priority function is disable
146. r which is called the DS field The first six bits bit O bit 5 of the DS field indicate DSCP precedence in the range of 0 to 63 The last 2 bits bit 6 and bit 7 are reserved On the Web management page you can configure different DS field mapping to the corresponding priority levels Non IP datagram with 802 1Q tag are mapped to different priority levels based on 802 1P priority mode the untagged non IP datagram are mapped based on port priority mode gt Schedule Mode When the network is congested the problem that many packets compete for resources must be solved usually in the way of queue scheduling The switch implements four scheduling queues TCO TC1 TC2 and TC3 TCO has the lowest priority while TC3 has the highest priority The switch provides four schedule modes SP WRR SP WRR and Equ 1 SP Mode Strict Priority Mode In this mode the queue with higher priority will occupy the whole bandwidth Packets in the queue with lower priority are sent only when the queue with higher priority is empty The switch has four egress queues labeled as TCO TC1 TC2 and TC3 In SP mode their priorities increase in order TC3 has the highest priority The disadvantage of SP queue is that if there are packets in the queues with higher priority for a long time in congestion the packets in the queues with lower priority will be starved to death because they are not served 97 Packets are mapped to different priority queues pa Vos
147. r the switch to wait for the response from the management station before resending a request Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding management station IP Address Displays the IP address of the management host UDP Port Displays the UDP port used to send notifications User Displays the User name of the management station Security Model Displays the Security Model of the management station Security Level Displays the Security Level for the SNMP v3 User Type Displays the type of the notifications Timeout Displays the maximum time for the switch to wait for the response from the management station before resending a request Retry Displays the amount of times the switch resends an inform request Operation Click the Edit button to modify the corresponding entry and click the Modify button to apply 11 3 RMON RMON Remote Monitoring based on SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol architecture functions to monitor the network RMON is currently a commonly used network management standard defined by Internet Engineering Task Force IETF which is mainly used to monitor the data traffic across a network segment or even the entire network so as to enable the network administrator to take the protection measures in time to avoid any network malfunction In addition RMON MIB records network statistics information of network performance and malfunction periodically based on which the management s
148. rat cata 90 8 2 1 MualticastlP Table a a a a 90 922 Statie NIC AS IP csr ae EE E E E 91 S Multicast FINOP oa a E le aes 92 8 3 1 lalo AP o PP a hes Sone sea uae eee ee eee 92 PE o 93 OA Packet SIAUSNCS add 94 Cate OS ai a daa 96 Oot DIM SONY asara aiaa e a a bliutelavanondeg dues 99 9 1 1 A ce cea Oe ee eee ee eee 99 9 1 2 802 TP COS WADING caia 100 ga B 2 eld AN eee ena strc ee eee eee aera mee 101 OANA Scnequle Mode dama dia 102 92 Bandwidth COn lara dni 103 9 2 1 Rato EIM A e O o ene eS en NC ee ST 103 O22 SIONN CONTO ansni a EEEN 104 Tor NVOC EVAN ssaa EAE A E E ON 106 9 3 1 Global Conds canso ao aio letal o cide dio E 108 9 3 2 Do A E En A neieohaseas saacen estas 108 disc QUCM Gason roer lane 109 Chapter O AGL oral di cia 112 O AR ol 112 10 14 ACL SUMMGNY essa il 112 VEZ AECI Al da 112 ia MACACE A E a ere DP te eens Pre ee near eer ee e 113 1004 standard Alias AS O 114 TOTS SEMEN ACE ss ee eee eee eer ee 114 FOZ POINT 115 TOZ xRONCY SUMMA yee a e es tan be 115 10 22 SPONGY Grea estes secact cascestanteaaeah ubsedlasate E E a 116 10023 WACOM Cheale cerdito 116 10 3 o e alo la Lo ecicsihe 22 A sue tiecmasae he uanataeue th aceanuet asset 117 IES BINAIMO Tal is id 117 10 332 POBAN odas 118 NOES Se VEAN BGI esp te tod acne ese cee er ee eee ee 118 10 4 Application Example for ACL oocooccccccocccocccoccccccoccnonocononcnoncoconocanonrocnnonanonanonnnnaronanos 119 Chapter lI NI VIE airactuatt
149. rey 20100120 from agent Return to CONTENTS 29 Chapter 5 Switching Switching module is used to configure the basic functions of the switch including four submenus Port LAG Traffic Monitor and MAC Address 5 1 Port The Port function allowing you to configure the basic features for the port is implemented on the Port Config Port Mirror Port Security Port Isolation and Loopback Detection pages 5 1 1 Port Config On this page you can configure the basic parameters for the ports When the port is disabled the packets on the port will be discarded Disabling the port which is vacant for a long time can reduce the power consumption effectively And you can enable the port when it is in need The parameters will affect the working mode of the port please set the parameters appropriate to your needs Choose the menu Switching Port gt Port Config to load the following page Port Config Port select Port Description Status Speed and Duplex Flow Contral LAG C 1 Enable Auto Disable A C 2 Enable Auto Disable dl 3 Enable Auto Disable C 4 Enable Auto Disable C 5 Enable Auto Disable C Ai Enable Auto Disable T Enable Auto Disable C G Enable Auto Disable C g Enable Auto Disable C 10 Enable Auto Disable E 11 Enable Auto Disable d 12 Enable Auto Disable S C 13 Enable Auto Disable 14 Enable Auto Disable C 15 Enable Auto Disable v Note The Port Description should be not more than
150. riority ExtPath IntPath Edge Port P2P Link MCheck STP Version Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select the desired port for STP configuration It is multi optional Displays the port number of the switch Select Enable Disable STP function for the desired port Enter a value from O to 240 divisible by 16 Port priority is an important criterion on determining if the port connected to this port will be chosen as the root port The lower value has the higher priority ExtPath Cost is used to choose the path and calculate the path costs of ports in different MST regions It is an important criterion on determining the root port The lower value has the higher priority IntPath Cost is used to choose the path and calculate the path costs of ports in an MST region It is an important criterion on determining the root port The lower value has the higher priority Select Enable Disable Edge Port The edge port can transit its state from blocking to forwarding rapidly without waiting for forward delay Select the P2P link status If the two ports in the P2P link are root port or designated port they can transit their states to forwarding rapidly to reduce the unnecessary forward delay Select Enable to perform MCheck operation on the port Unchange means no MCheck operation Displays the STP version of the port 68 Port Role Displays the role
151. rocesses the request If the DHCP server acknowledges assigning this IP address to the client it will send the DHCP ACK packet back to the client Otherwise the Server will send the DHCP NAK packet to refuse assigning this IP address to the client DHCP Cheating Attack During the working process of DHCP generally there is no authentication mechanism between Server and Client If there are several DHCP servers in the network network confusion and security problem will happen The common cases incurring the illegal DHCP servers are the following two 1 2 Its common that the illegal DHCP server is manually configured by the user by mistake Hacker exhausted the IP addresses of the normal DHCP server and then pretended to be a legal DHCP server to assign the IP addresses and the other parameters to Clients For example hacker used the pretended DHCP server to assign a modified DNS server address to users so as to induce the users to the evil financial website or electronic trading website and cheat the users of their accounts and passwords The following figure illustrates the DHCP Cheating Attack implementation procedure Switch with DHCP Snooping Function disabled lllegal DHCP Response Packets DHCP Client Illegal DHCP Server DHCP Server Figure 5 19 DHCP Cheating Attack Implementation Procedure DHCP Filtering feature allows only the trusted ports to forward DHCP packets and thereby ensures that users get proper IP addre
152. rs the Rising Threshold alarm Select the index of the corresponding event which will be triggered if the sampled value is larger than the Rising Threshold Enter the falling counter value that triggers the Falling Threshold alarm Select the index of the corresponding event which will be triggered if the sampled value is lower than the Falling Threshold Specify the type of the alarm e All The alarm event will be triggered either the sampled value exceeds the Rising Threshold or is under the Falling Threshold e Rising When the sampled value exceeds the Rising Threshold an alarm event is triggered e Falling When the sampled value is under the Falling Threshold an alarm event is triggered Enter the alarm interval time in seconds 135 Owner Enter the name of the device or user that defined the entry Status Select Enable Disable the corresponding alarm entry Mdnote When alarm variables exceed the Threshold on the same direction continuously for several times an alarm event will only be generated on the first time that is the Rising Alarm and Falling Alarm are triggered alternately for that the alarm following to Rising Alarm is certainly a Falling Alarm and vice versa Return to CONTENTS 136 Chapter 12 Maintenance Maintenance module assembling the commonly used system tools to manage the switch provides the convenient method to locate and solve the network problem 1 2 3 4 Syst
153. rwarded Member State Displays the state of the port in the current voice VLAN LAG Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to 9 3 3 OUI Config The switch supports OUI creation and adds the MAC address of the special voice device to the OUI table of the switch The switch determines whether a received packet is a voice packet by checking its OUI address The switch analyzes the received packets If the packets recognized as voice packets the access port will be automatically added to the Voice VLAN Choose the menu QoS Voice VLAN OUI Config to load the following page 109 Create DI our Format 00 00 00 00 00 013 Mask FF FF FF 00 00 00 Default FF FF FF 00 00 003 Description a 16 characters maximum OUI Table Select GOL Wask Description O D0 01 e3 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 o00 Siemens Phone O o0 03 6b 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 00 Cisco Phone O 00 04 0d 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 00 Avaya Phone O 00 60 b9 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 00 Philips Phone O DO0 d0 1e 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 00 Pingtel Phone O 00 e0 75 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 00 PolwCom Phone O 00 e0 bb 00 00 00 ff ff ff 00 00 00 3Com Phone All Figure 9 14 OUI Configuration The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Create OUI OUI Enter the OUI address of the voice device Mask Enter the OUI address mask of the voice device Description Give a description to the OUI for identification gt OUI Table Select Select the desired entry to v
154. s 00 46 A5 5D 12 C3 and mask as FF FF FF FF FF FF On ACL Policy Config Policy Create page create a policy named manager On ACL gt Policy Config lt Action Create page add ACL 11 to Policy manager On ACL gt 5Policy Binding Port Binding page select Policy manager to bind to port 3 Configure for On ACL ACL Config ACL Create page create ACL 100 requirement 2 On ACL gt ACL Config Standard IP ACL page select ACL 100 and 4 create Rule 1 configure operation as Deny configure S IP as 10 10 70 0 and mask as 255 255 255 0 configure D IP as 10 10 50 1 and mask as 255 255 255 0 On ACL ACL Config Standard IP ACL page select ACL 100 create Rule 2 configure operation as Permit configure S IP as 10 10 70 0 and mask as 255 255 255 0 configure D IP as 10 10 88 5 and mask as 255 255 255 255 On ACL gt Policy Config Policy Create page create a policy named limit On ACL gt Policy Config Action Create page add ACL 100 to Policy limitt On ACL gt Policy Binding Port Binding page select Policy limit1 to bind to port 3 120 ip operation bases Configure for On ACL ACL Config ACL Create page create ACL 101 requirement 3 On ACL gt ACL Config Standard IP ACL page select ACL 101 and 4 create Rule 4 configure operation as Deny configure S IP as 10 10 50 0 and mask as 255 255 255 0 configure D IP as 10 10 70 0 and mask as 255 255 255 0 On ACL ACL Config Standard IP ACL pa
155. s that are less than 64 bytes long Pkts64Octets Displays the number of the received packets including error packets that are 64 bytes long Pkts65to127Octets Displays the number of the received packets including error packets that are between 65 and 127 bytes long Pkts128to255Octets Displays the number of the received packets including error packets that are between 128 and 255 bytes long Pkts256to511Octets Displays the number of the received packets including error packets that are between 256 and 511 bytes long Pkts512to1023Octets Displays the number of the received packets including error packets that are between 512 and 1023 bytes long PktsOver1023Octets Displays the number of the received packets including error packets that the size of the packets is from 1024 bytes to 1518 bytes 1522 bytes if the packets have VLAN tag fields Collisions Displays the number of collisions experienced by a port during packet transmissions 5 4 MAC Address The main function of the switch is forwarding the packets to the correct ports based on the destination MAC address of the packets Address Table contains the port based MAC address information which is the base for the switch to forward packets quickly The entries in the Address Table can be updated by auto learning or configured manually Most the entries are generated and updated by auto learning In the stable networks the static MAC address entries can facilitate the s
156. s screen gt Port Config Instance ID Port Select Select Port Priority Path Cost Port Role Port Status LAG Anote Select the desired instance ID for its port configuration Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select the desired port to specify its priority and path cost It is multi optional Displays the port number of the switch Enter the priority of the port in the instance It is an important criterion on determining if the port connected to this port will be chosen as the root port Path Cost is used to choose the path and calculate the path costs of ports in an MST region It is an important criterion on determining the root port The lower value has the higher priority Displays the role of the port played in the MSTP Instance Displays the working status of the port Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to The port status of one port in different spanning tree instances can be different 12 Global configuration Procedure for Spanning Tree function sep operation Deseipion 1 Make clear roles the switches Preparation play in spanning tree instances root bridge or designated bridge 2 Globally configure MSTP Required Enable Spanning Tree function on the switch parameters and configure MSTP parameters on Spanning Tree gt STP Config STP Config page 3 Configure MSTP parameters Required Confi
157. s this button for five seconds or above to reset the software setting back to factory default setting gt 10 100Mbps Ports Designed to connect to the device with a bandwidth of 10Mbps or 100Mbps Each has a corresponding 10 100M 10 100Mbps LED gt 10 100 1000Mbps Ports Designed to connect to the device with a bandwidth of 10Mbps 100Mbps or 1000Mbps Each has a corresponding 1000M 1000Mbps LED gt SFP Ports Designed to install the SFP module TL SL2218 TL SL2428 features some SFP transceiver slots that are shared with the associated RJ45 ports The associated two ports are referred as a Combo port which means they cannot be used simultaneously otherwise only SFP port works Meanwhile the associated two ports share the same LED For TL SL2218 Port 17 shares the same LED with Port 17F and Port 18 shares the same LED with Port 18F for TL SL2428 Port 27 shares the same LED with Port 27F and Port 28 shares the same LED with Port 28F note When using the SFP port with a 100Mbps module or a gigabit module you need to configure its corresponding Speed and Duplex mode on Switching Port Port Config page or through Telnet For 100M module please select 100MFD while select 1000MFD for gigabit module By 6 default the Speed and Duplex mode of SFP port is 1000MFD For TL SL2210 TL SL2452 the SFP port can only be used with a gigabit module The switch is powered on Flashing Off Flashing Off The switch is powered o
158. single logical link which will highly extend the bandwidth and flexibly balance the load With the LACP feature enabled the port will notify its partner of the system priority system MAC port priority port number and operation key operation key is determined by the physical properties of the port upper layer protocol and admin key The device with higher priority will lead the aggregation and disaggregation System priority and system MAC decide the priority of the device The smaller the system priority the higher the priority of the device is With the same system priority the device owning the smaller system MAC has the higher priority The device with the higher priority will choose the ports to be aggregated based on the port priority port number and operation key Only the ports with the same operation key can be selected into the same aggregation group In an aggregation group the port with smaller port priority will be considered as the preferred one If the two port priorities are equal the port with smaller port number is preferred After an aggregation group is established the selected ports can be aggregated together as one port to transmit packets On this page you can configure the LACP feature of the switch Choose the menu Switching LAG LACP Config to load the following page 40 Global Config system Priority 32768 0 65535 Apply LACP Config select Port Admin Key Port Priority 0 65535 Mode Do s
159. sion in the multicast mode PC Features of multicast 1 The number of receivers is not certain Usually point to multipoint transmission is needed 2 Multiple users receiving the same information form a multicast group The multicast information sender just need to send the information to the network device once 3 Each user can join and leave the multicast group at any time 4 Real time is highly demanded and certain packets drop is allowed 80 gt Multicast Address 1 Multicast IP Address As specified by IANA Internet Assigned Numbers Authority Class D IP addresses are used as destination addresses of multicast packets The multicast IP addresses range from 224 0 0 0 239 255 255 255 The following table displays the range and description of several special multicast IP addresses 224 0 0 0 224 0 0 255 Reserved multicast addresses for routing protocols and other network protocols 224 0 1 0 224 0 1 255 Addresses for video conferencing 239 0 0 0 239 255 255 255 Local management multicast addresses which are used in the local network only Table 8 1 Range of the special multicast IP 2 Multicast MAC Address When a unicast packet is transmitted in an Ethernet network the destination MAC address is the MAC address of the receiver When a multicast packet is transmitted in an Ethernet network the destination is not a receiver but a group with uncertain number of members so a multicast MAC address a logical MA
160. sources e MSTP divides a spanning tree network into several regions Each region has several internal spanning trees which are independent of each other e MSTP provides a load balancing mechanism for the packets transmission in the VLAN e MSTP is compatible with both STP and RSTP gt MSTP Elements MST Region Multiple Spanning Tree Region An MST Region comprises switches with the same region configuration and VLAN to Instances mapping relationship IST Internal Spanning Tree An IST is a spanning tree in an MST CST Common Spanning Tree ACST is the spanning tree in a switched network that connects all MST regions in the network CIST Common and Internal Spanning Tree A CIST comprising IST and CST is the spanning tree in a switched network that connects all switches in the network 63 The following figure shows the network diagram in MSTP Figure 7 2 Basic MSTP diagram gt MSTP MSTP divides a network into several MST regions The CST is generated between these MST regions and multiple spanning trees can be generated in each MST region Each spanning tree is called an instance As well as STP MSTP uses BPDUs to generate spanning tree The only difference is that the BPDU for MSTP carries the MSTP configuration information on the switches gt Port States In an MSTP ports can be in the following four states O O O gt Forwarding In this status the port can receive forward data receive send BPDU
161. sses DHCP Filtering is to monitor the process of hosts obtaining the IP addresses from DHCP servers and record the IP address MAC address VLAN and the connected Port number of the Host for automatic binding DHCP Filtering feature prevents the network from the DHCP Server Cheating Attack by discarding the DHCP packets on the distrusted port so as to enhance the network security Choose the menu Switching DHCP Filtering to load the following page 52 DHCP Filtering DHCP Filtering Enable Disable Apply Trusted Port Dl 4 Ol 2 Fl 3 O 7 LAGc1 O 8 LAG1 E 9 Al Ol 5 LAG1 Fl B LAG1 Figure 5 20 DHCP Filtering The following entries are displayed on this screen gt DHCP Filtering DHCP Filtering Enable Disable the DHCP Filtering function globally Trusted Port Here you can select the desired port s to be Trusted Port s Only the Trusted Port s can receive DHCP packets from DHCP Servers Click All button to select all ports Click Clear button to select none Return to CONTENTS 53 Chapter 6 VLAN The traditional Ethernet is a data network communication technology based on CSMA CD Carrier Sense Multiple Access Collision Detect via shared communication medium Through the traditional Ethernet the overfull hosts in LAN will result in serious collision flooding broadcasts poor performance or even breakdown of the Internet Though connecting the LANs through switches can avoid the serious collision
162. sses and additional configuration options IEEE 802 1D Specifies a general method for the operation of MAC bridges including the Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802 1Q VLAN Tagging Defines Ethernet frame tags which carry VLAN information It allows switches to assign endstations to different virtual LANs and defines a standard way for VLANs to communicate across switched networks IEEE 802 1p An IEEE standard for providing quality of service QoS in Ethernet networks The standard uses packet tags that define up to eight traffic classes and allows switches to transmit packets based on the tagged priority value IEEE 802 3ac Defines frame extensions for VLAN tagging IEEE 802 3x Defines Ethernet frame start stop requests and timers used for flow control on full duplex links Now incorporated in IEEE 802 3 2002 149 Internet Group Management Protocol IGMP A protocol through which hosts can register with their local router for multicast services If there is more than one multicast switch router on a given subnetwork one of the devices is made the querier and assumes responsibility for keeping track of group membership IGMP Snooping Listening to IGMP Query and IGMP Report packets transferred between IP Multicast routers and IP Multicast host groups to identify IP Multicast group members IGMP Query On each subnetwork one IGMP capable device will act as the querier that is the device that asks all hosts to repor
163. switch 84 Choose the menu Multicast IGMP Snooping Port Config to load the following page Port Contig Select i sa n 009 5 Port Pi mM CoO HS DA th FS to Ba IGMP Snooping Fast Leave LAG Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable Disable LAG Disable Disable LAGI Disable Disable LAGI Figure 8 5 Port Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Port Config Port Select Select Port IGMP Snooping Fast Leave LAG Mdnote Click the Select button to quick select the corresponding port based on the port number you entered Select the desired port for IGMP Snooping feature configuration It is multi optional Displays the port of the switch Select Enable Disable IGMP Snooping for the desired port Select Enable Disable Fast Leave feature for the desired port If Fast Leave is enabled for a port the switch will immediately remove this port from the multicast group upon receiving IGMP leave messages Displays the LAG number which the port belongs to 1 Fast Leave on the port is effective only when the host supports IGMPv2 or IGMPvs 2 When both Fast Leave feature and Unknown Multicast Discard feature are enabled the leaving of a user connected to a port owning multi user will result in the other users intermitting the m
164. t Device Location SHENZHEN QoS System Contact vwaw tp link cam act oo Hardware Version TL SL2428 1 0 SNMP Firmware Version 1 0 0 Build 20120822 Rel 54711 Maintenance IP Address 192 168 0 1 Subnet Mask 255 255 255 0 Default Gateway Logout MAC Address 64 70 02 81 54 87 System Time 2006 01 01 08 25 29 Run Time 0 day 0 hour 25 min 29 sec Copyright 2013 TP LINK Technologies Co Ltd All rights reserved Figure 3 3 Main Setup Menu Anote Clicking Apply can only make the new configurations effective before the switch is rebooted If you want to keep the configurations effective even the switch is rebooted please click Save Config You are suggested to click Save Config before cutting off the power or rebooting the switch to avoid losing the new configurations Return to CONTENTS 10 Chapter 4 System The System module is mainly for system configuration of the switch including four submenus System Info User Manage System Tools and Access Security 4 1 System Info The System Info mainly for basic properties configuration can be implemented on System Summary Device Description System Time Daylight Saving Time and System IP pages 4 1 1 System Summary On this page you can view the port connection status and the system information The port status diagram shows the working status of 24 10 100Mbps RJ45 ports 4 10 100 1000Mbps RJ45 ports and 2 SFP ports of the switch Ports 1 to 24 are 10 100Mbps ports
165. t indicates important information that helps you make better use of Tips your device 1 3 Overview of This Guide Chapter Introduction Chapter 1 About This Guide Introduces the guide structure and conventions Chapter 2 Introduction Introduces the features application and appearance of TL SL2210 TL SL2218 TL SL2428 TL SL2452 switch Chapter 3 Login to the Switch Introduces how to log on to the Web management page Chapter Introduction Chapter 4 System This module is used to configure system properties of the switch Here mainly introduces e System Info Configure the description system time and network parameters of the switch User Management Configure the user name and password for users to log on to the Web management page with a certain access level System Tools Manage the configuration file of the switch e Access Security Provide different security measures for the login to enhance the configuration management security Chapter 5 Switching This module is used to configure basic functions of the switch Here mainly introduces e Port Configure the basic features for the port e LAG Configure Link Aggregation Group LAG is to combine a number of ports together to make a single high bandwidth data path e Traffic Monitor Monitor the traffic of each port e MAC Address Configure the address table of the switch DHCP Filtering Monitor the process of the host obtaining the IP address from DHCP server
166. t on the IP multicast groups they wish to join or to which they already belong The elected querier will be the device with the lowest IP address in the subnetwork IP Multicast Filtering It is a feature to allow or deny the Client to add the specified multicast group Multicast Switching A process whereby the switch filters incoming multicast frames for services forwhich no attached host has registered or forwards them to all ports contained within the designated multicast group Layer 2 Data Link layer in the ISO 7 Layer Data Communications Protocol This is related directly to the hardware interface for network devices and passes on traffic based on MAC addresses Link Aggregation See Port Trunk Management Information Base MIB An acronym for Management Information Base It is a set of database objects that contains information about a specific device MD5 Message Digest Algorithm An algorithm that is used to create digital signatures It is intended for use with 32 bit machines and is safer than the MD4 algorithm which has been broken MD5 is a one way hash function meaning that it takes a message and converts it into a fixed string of digits also called a message digest Network Time Protocol NTP NTP provides the mechanisms to synchronize time across the network The time servers operate in a hierarchical master slave configuration in order to synchronize local clocks within the subnet and to national time standards via wire
167. tation can monitor network at any time effectively RMON is helpful for network administrator to manage the large scale network since it reduces the communication traffic between management station and managed agent gt RMON Group This switch supports the following four RMON Groups defined on the RMON standard RFC1757 History Group Event Group Statistic Group and Alarm Group 132 History Group After a history group is configured the switch collects and records network statistics information periodically based on which the management station can monitor network effectively Event Group Event Group is used to define RMON events Alarms occur when an event is detected Statistic Group Statistic Group is set to monitor the statistic of alarm variables on the specific ports Alarm Group Alarm Group is configured to monitor the specific alarm variables When the value of a monitored variable exceeds the threshold an alarm event is generated which triggers the switch to act in the set way The RMON Groups can be configured on the History Control Event Config and Alarm Config pages 11 3 1 History Control On this page you can configure the History Group for RMON Choose the menu SNMP RMON History Control to load the following page History Control Table Select Index Port Interval sec Owner Status a dl 1 Port 1 1500 monitor Disable F 2 Port 2 1500 monitor Disable F 3 Port 3 1500 monitor Disable F 4
168. terrupt the network communication so please keep the new IP address in the same IP segment with the local network 16 2 The switch only possesses an IP address The IP address configured will replace the original IP address 3 Ifthe switch gets the IP address from DHCP server you can see the configuration of the switch in the DHCP server if DHCP option is selected but no DHCP server exists in the network the switch will keep obtaining IP address from DHCP server until success 4 If DHCP or BOOTP option is selected the switch will get network parameters dynamically from the Internet which means that IP address subnet mask and default gateway can not be configured 5 By default the IP address is 192 168 0 1 4 2 User Management User Management functions to configure the user name and password for users to log on to the Web management page with a certain access level so as to protect the settings of the switch from being randomly changed The User Management function can be implemented on User Table and User Config pages 4 2 1 User Table On this page you can view the information about the current users of the switch Choose the menu System User Management User Table to load the following page Liser Table LiserlD User Mame Access Level Status 1 admin Admin Enable Figure 4 8 User Table 4 2 2 User Config On this page you can configure the access level of the user to log on to the Web management page The switch
169. that showed below double click on the Internet Protocol TCP IP t Local Area Connection Properties General Advanced Connect using Eg Realtek ATL9139 810 Family Fast E This connection uses the following tems SF AEGIS Protocol IEEE 802 1 v3 7 5 0 W OOK PACKET Protocol Internet Protocol TCP IP Description Transmission Control Protocol ntermet Protocol The default Wide area network protocol that provides communication across diverse interconnected networks Show icon in notification area when connected Notify me when this connection has limited or no connectivity Figure B 2 147 5 The following TCP IP Properties window will display and the IP Address tab is open on this wndow by default Internet Protocol TCP IP Properties General fou can gel IF settings assigned automatically if your network supports this capability Otherwise you need to ask your network administrator hor the appropriate P settings Obtain an IP address automatically Use the following IP address IP address 192 163 0 241 Subnet mask 255 200 255 0 Default gatear 192 168 1 Use the following DNS server addresses Preferred ONS server al 3b 134 133 Alternate DNS server MIA Figure B 3 6 Select Use the following IP address And the following items will be available If the switch s IP address is 192 168 0 1 specify IP address as 192 168 0 x x is from 2 to 254 an
170. the MAC address Aging Status Displays the Aging Status of the MAC address 48 Bind Click the Bind button to bind the MAC address of your selected entry to the corresponding port statically Tips Setting aging time properly helps implement effective MAC address aging The aging time that is too long or too short results decreases the performance of the switch If the aging time is too long excessive invalid MAC address entries maintained by the switch may fill up the MAC address table This prevents the MAC address table from updating with network changes in time If the aging time is too short the switch may remove valid MAC address entries This decreases the forwarding performance of the switch It is recommended to keep the default value 5 4 4 Filtering Address The filtering address is to forbid the undesired packets to be forwarded The filtering address can be added or removed manually independent of the aging time The filtering MAC address allows the switch to filter the packets which includes this MAC address as the source address or destination address so as to guarantee the network security The filtering MAC address entries act on all the ports in the corresponding VLAN Choose the menu Switching MAC Address Filtering Address to load the following page Create Filtering Address MAC Address fe Format 00 00 00 00 00 013 VLAN ID e038 Search Option Filtering Address Table Select MAC Address WYLAN ID Port Type
171. the flooding broadcasts can not be prevented which will occupy plenty of bandwidth resources causing potential serious security problems A Virtual Local Area Network VLAN is a network topology configured according to a logical scheme rather than the physical layout The VLAN technology is developed for switches to control broadcast in LANs By creating VLANs in a physical LAN you can divide the LAN into multiple logical LANs each of which has a broadcast domain of its own Hosts in the same VLAN communicate with one another as if they are in a LAN However hosts in different VLANs cannot communicate with one another directly Therefore broadcast packets are limited in a VLAN Hosts in the same VLAN communicate with one another via Ethernet whereas hosts in different VLANs communicate with one another through the Internet devices such as router the Layer 3 switch etc The following figure illustrates a VLAN implementation VLAN 2 Router VLAN 6 Figure 6 1 VLAN implementation Compared with the traditional Ethernet VLAN enjoys the following advantages 1 Broadcasts are confined to VLANs This decreases bandwidth utilization and improves network performance 2 Network security is improved VLANs cannot communicate with one another directly That is a host in a VLAN cannot access resources in another VLAN directly unless routers or Layer 3 switches are used 3 Network configuration workload for the host is reduced VLAN
172. time OE 5 2006 01 01 08 00 15 SMMP level_5 SMMP initialization OK E 2006 01 01 08 00 00 a05 level_5 05 module initialization OE Note 1 There are amp severity levels marked with value 0 7 The smaller value has the higher priority 2 Thig page displays logs inthe log buffer and atmost512 logs are displayed Figure 12 3 Log Table The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Log Info Index Displays the index of the log information Time Displays the time when the log event occurs The log can get the correct time after you configure on the System gt System Info gt System Time Web management page Module Displays the module which the log information belongs to You can select a module from the drop down list to display the corresponding log information Severity Displays the severity level of the log information You can select a severity level to display the log information whose severity level value is the same or smaller Content Displays the content of the log information Mnote 1 The logs are classified into eight levels based on severity The higher the information severity is the lower the corresponding level is 2 This page displays logs in the log buffer and at most 512 logs are displayed 12 2 2 Local Log Local Log is the log information saved in switch By default all system logs are saved in log buffer and the logs with severities from level_0 to level_ 4 are saved in log file meanwhile O
173. ts 1 Log on to the switch via password authentication using SSH and the SSH function is enabled on the switch 2 PuTTY client software is recommended gt Configuration Procedure 1 Open the software to log on to the interface of PUTTY Enter the IP address of the switch into Host Name field keep the default value 22 in the Port field select SSH as the Connection type 2 Pull Configuration Category Session Basic options for your Pul TY session Logging Specify the destination you want to connect to B Terminal aches Host Hame or IP address Port Features Connection type E Window C Raw O Telnet Alogin SSH Serial Appearance Behaviour i Translation Saved Sessions Load save or delete a stored session Selection Colours D efault Settings Load E Connection Prom Alogir SSH kex Close window on exit O Away Never 2 Only on clean exit 11 2 Click the Open button in the above figure to log on to the switch Enter the login user name and password and then you can continue to configure the switch 26 192 168 0 1 PullI login as admin Further authentication required admin i s2 165 0 1 s password TL L2428 gt Application Example 2 for SSH gt Network Requirements 1 Log on to the switch via password authentication using SSH and the SSH function is enabled on the switch 2 PuTTY client software is recommended Conf
174. uely identify the management objects of the device in SNMP messages SNMP adopts the hierarchical architecture to identify the managed objects It is like a tree and each tree node represents a managed object as shown in the following figure Thus the object can be identified with the unique path starting from the root and indicated by a string of numbers The number string is the Object Identifier of the managed object In the following figure the OID of the managed object B is 1 2 1 1 While the OID of the managed object A is 1 2 1 1 5 Figure 11 2 Architecture of the MIB tree gt SNMP Configuration Outline 1 Create View The SNMP View is created for the SNMP Management Station to manage MIB objects The managed object uniquely identified by OID can be set to under or out of the management of SNMP Management Station by configuring its view type included excluded The OID of managed object can be found on the SNMP client program running on the SNMP Management Station 2 Create SNMP Group After creating the SNMP View it s required to create an SNMP Group The Group Name Security Model and Security Level compose the identifier of the SNMP Group The Groups with these three items the same are considered to be the same You can configure SNMP Group to control the network access by providing the users in various groups with different management rights via the Read View Write View and Notify View 3 Create SNMP User 123 The
175. ugh the designated bridge The switch with the lowest bridge ID will be chosen as the designated bridge Root Path Cost Indicates the sum of the path cost of the root port and the path cost of all the switches that packets pass through The root path cost of the root bridge is 0 Bridge Priority The bridge priority can be set to a value in the range of 0 32768 The lower value priority has the higher priority The switch with the higher priority has more chance to be chosen as the root bridge Root Port Indicates the port that has the lowest path cost from this bridge to the Root Bridge and forwards packets to the root Designated Port Indicates the port that forwards packets to a downstream network segment or switch Port Priority The port priority can be set to a value in the range of 0 255 The lower value priority has the higher priority The port with the higher priority has more chance to be chosen as the root port Path Cost Indicates the parameter for choosing the link path by STP By calculating the path cost STP chooses the better links and blocks the redundant links so as to disbranch the ring network to form a tree topological ring free network The following network diagram shows the sketch map of spanning tree Switch A B and C are connected together in order After STP generation switch A is chosen as root bridge the path from port 2 to port 6 is blocked e Bridge Switch A is the root bridge in the whole network s
176. ulticast business 8 1 3 VLAN Config Multicast groups established by IGMP Snooping are based on VLANs On this page you can configure different IGMP parameters for different VLANs Choose the menu Multicast IGMP Snooping VLAN Config to load the following page 85 VLAN Config VLAN ID 1 4098 Router Port Time sec 60 600 recommend 300 Member Port Time sec 60 600 recommend 260 Leave Time sec 1 30 recommend 1 Static Router Ports po Format 1 3 6 8 WLAN Table VLANID Select VLANID RouterPortTime Member Port Time Leave Time Router Port a _ A A Note The settings here will be invalid when multicast VLAN is enabled Figure 8 6 VLAN Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt VLAN Config VLAN ID Router Port Time Member Port Time Leave Time Static Router Port gt VLAN Table VLAN ID Select Select VLAN ID Router Port Time Member Port Time Leave Time Enter the VLAN ID to enable IGMP Snooping for the desired VLAN Specify the aging time of the router port Within this time if the switch doesn t receive IGMP query message from the router port it will consider this port is not a router port any more Specify the aging time of the member port Within this time if the switch doesn t receive IGMP report message from the member port it will consider this port is not a member port any more Specify the interval between the sw
177. ured as point to point links 3 When the link of a port is configured as a point to point link the spanning tree instances owning this port are configured as point to point links If the physical link of a port is not a point to point link and you forcibly configure the link as a point to point link temporary loops may be incurred 7 3 MSTP Instance MSTP combines VLANs and spanning tree together via VLAN to instance mapping table VLAN to spanning tree mapping By adding MSTP instances it binds several VLANs to an instance to realize the load balance based on instances Only when the switches have the same MST region name MST region revision and VLAN to Instance mapping table the switches can be regarded as in the same MST region The MSTP Instance function can be implemented on Region Config Instance Config and Instance Port Config pages 7 3 1 Region Config On this page you can configure the name and revision of the MST region Choose the menu Spanning Tree MSTP Instance Region Config to load the following page 69 Region Config Region Name 00 21 Bc ea 4e d3 Apply Revision boo o 0 655 35 Help Figure 7 7 Region Config The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Region Config Region Name Create a name for MST region identification using up to 32 characters Revision Enter the revision from O to 65535 for MST region identification 7 3 2 Instance Config Instance Configuration a property
178. urn to CONTENTS 19 Chapter 8 Multicast gt Multicast Overview In the network packets are sent in three modes unicast broadcast and multicast In unicast the source server sends separate copy information to each receiver When a large number of users require this information the server must send many pieces of information with the same content to the users Therefore large bandwidth will be occupied In broadcast the system transmits information to all users in a network Any user in the network can receive the information no matter the information is needed or not Point to multipoint multimedia business such as video conferences and VoD video on demand plays an important part in the information transmission field Suppose a point to multi point service is required unicast is suitable for networks with sparsely users whereas broadcast is suitable for networks with densely distributed users When the number of users requiring this information is not certain unicast and broadcast deliver a low efficiency Multicast solves this problem It can deliver a high efficiency to send data in the point to multi point service which can save large bandwidth and reduce the network load In multicast the packets are transmitted in the following way as shown in Figure 8 1 Multicast Source Multicast Streams Router Switch 1 Switch 2 Switch 3 Receiver Receiver 2 Figure 8 1 Information transmis
179. witch B is the designated bridge of switch C e Port Port 3 is the root port of switch B and port 5 is the root port of switch C port 1 is the designated port of switch A and port 4 is the designated port of switch B port 6 is the blocked port of switch C 60 Switch A Switch B Switch C Figure 7 1 Basic STP diagram gt STP Timers Hello Time Hello Time ranges from 1 to 10 seconds It specifies the interval to send BPDU packets It is used to test the links Max Age Max Age ranges from 6 to 40 seconds It specifies the maximum time the switch can wait without receiving a BPDU before attempting to reconfigure Forward Delay Forward Delay ranges from 4 to 30 seconds It specifies the time for the port to transit its state after the network topology is changed When the STP regeneration caused by network malfunction occurs the STP structure will get some corresponding change However as the new configuration BPDUs cannot be spread in the whole network at once the temporal loop will occur if the port transits its state immediately Therefore STP adopts a state transit mechanism that is the new root port and the designated port begins to forward data after twice forward delay which ensures the new configuration BPDUs are spread in the whole network gt BPDU Comparing Principle in STP mode Assuming two BPDUs BPDU X and BPDU Y If the root bridge ID of X is smaller than that of Y X is superior to Y If the root
180. witch to reduce broadcast packets and enhance the efficiency of packets forwarding remarkably The address filtering feature allows the switch to filter the undesired packets and forbid its forwarding so as to improve the network security The types and the features of the MAC Address Table are listed as the following 44 Being kept after Relationship between the Configuration reboot bound MAC address and Way if the configuration the port is saved The bound MAC address Address Table configuring can not be learned by the other ports in the same VLAN Automatically The bound MAC address Address Table learning can be learned by the other ports in the same VLAN Filtering Manually No Yes Address Table configuring Table 5 1 Types and features of Address Table This function includes four submenus Address Table Static Address Dynamic Address and Filtering Address 5 4 1 Address Table On this page you can view all the information of the Address Table Choose the menu Switching MAC Address Address Table to load the following page Search Option Cl mac address Format 00 00 00 00 00 01 O vano Sd a Port C Type All Static Dynamic Filtering Address Table WAC Address VLAN ID Fort Type Aging Status Bl 6Y BD F5 9D 66 1 Fi Dynamic Aging Total MAC Address 1 Note The maximum atthe displayed entries is 100 by default please click the Search button to get the complete address entries
181. with ciphertext in configuration file gt User Table Select Select the desired entry to delete the corresponding user information It is multi optional The current user information can t be deleted User ID Name Displays the current user ID user name access level and user Access Level and status status 18 Operation Click the Edit button of the desired entry and you can edit the corresponding user information After modifying the settings please click the Modify button to make the modification effective Access level and user status of the current user information can t be modified Md note Password Display Mode is not supported by TL SL2210 4 3 System Tools The System Tools function allowing you to manage the configuration file of the switch can be implemented on Config Restore Config Backup Firmware Upgrade System Reboot and System Reset pages 4 3 1 Config Restore On this page you can upload a backup configuration file to restore your switch to this previous configuration Choose the menu System System Tools gt Config Restore to load the following page Config Restore Restore the contig from the saved config file Select a backup contig file and clickthe Restore Config button and then you can restore to the previous config Hote twill take along time to restore the contig file Please wait without any operation Figure 4 10 Config Restore The following entries are displayed on this s
182. x Host IF OF Fort Severity Status C C 1 0 0 0 0 514 level_6 Disable C 2 0 0 0 0 514 level_6 Disable C 3 0 0 0 0 514 level 6 Disable C 4 0 0 0 0 514 lewel_6 Disable Apply Note 1 Lip to 4 log hosts are supported 2 here are E severity levels marked with values 0 7 The smaller value has the higher priority Figure 12 5 Log Host 140 The following entries are displayed on this screen gt Log Host Index Displays the index of the log host The switch supports 4 log hosts Host IP Configure the IP for the log host UDP Port Displays the UDP port used for receiving sending log information Here we use the standard port 514 Severity Specify the severity level of the log information sent to each log host Only the log with the same or smaller severity level value will be sent to the corresponding log host Status Enable Disable the log host Mdnote The Log Server software is not provided If necessary please download it on the Internet 12 2 4 Backup Log Backup Log feature enables the system logs saved in the switch to be output as a file for device diagnosis and statistics analysis When a critical error results in the breakdown of the system you can export the logs to get some related important information about the error for device diagnosis after the switch is restarted Choose the menu Maintenance gt Log gt Backup Log to load the following page Backup Log Click the button here to backup the log file
183. you can create SNMP Group and Group and SNMP SNMP User of SNMP v1 v2c The User name can limit access to the SNMP agent from SNMP network management station functioning aS a community name The users can manage the device via the Read View Write View and Notify View defined in the SNMP Group Configure User 130 11 2 Notification With the Notification function enabled the switch can initiatively report to the management station about the important events that occur on the Views e g the managed device is rebooted which allows the management station to monitor and process the events in time The notification information includes the following two types Trap Trap is the information that the managed device initiatively sends to the Network management station without request Inform Inform packet is sent to inform the management station and ask for the reply The switch will resend the inform request if it doesn t get the response from the management station during the Timeout interval and it will terminate resending the inform request if the resending times reach the specified Retry times The Inform type employed on SNMPv2c and SNMPv3 has a higher security than the Trap type On this page you can configure the notification function of SNMP Choose the menu SNMP Notification Notification to load the following page Create Notification IP Address DP Port Security Model w w Security Level noAuthNoPriv w

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