Pismolabs Technology P1811AC Pepwave / Peplink / Pismo Labs Wireless Product User Manual Part 1 rev
Pismo Labs Technology Limited Pepwave / Peplink / Pismo Labs Wireless Product Part 1 rev
Contents
- 1. User Manual Part 1 rev
- 2. User Manual Part 2 rev
- 3. User Manual Part 3 rev
- 4. User Manual Part 4 rev
User Manual Part 1 rev
Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Pepwave Products: MAX 700/HD2 LTE/HD2 LTEA/HD2 IP67/HD2 mini/HD4/Transit/Hotspot/BR1/BR1 Mini/BR1 Slim/BR1 ENT/BR1 Pro LTE/BR1 IP55/BR2 IP55/On-The-Go/MAX HD2/HD4 with MediaFast/Device Connector/ Surf SOHO Pepwave Firmware 6.3 November 2016 COPYRIGHT & TRADEMARKS Specifications are subject to change without notice. Copyright © 2016 Pepwave Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Pepwave and the Pepwave logo are trademarks of Pepwave Ltd. Other brands or products mentioned may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Table of Contents INTRODUCTION AND SCOPE ............................................................................................. 6 GLOSSARY........................................................................................................................ 7 PRODUCT FEATURES ........................................................................................................ 8 3.1 3.2 PEPWAVE MAX MOBILE ROUTER OVERVIEW.................................................................. 11 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 DROP-IN MODE AND LAN BYPASS: TRANSPARENT DEPLOYMENT ........................................ 33 QOS: CLEARER VOIP .................................................................................................. 33 PER-USER BANDWIDTH CONTROL ................................................................................. 34 HIGH AVAILABILITY VIA VRRP ...................................................................................... 34 USB MODEM AND ANDROID TETHERING........................................................................ 35 BUILT-IN REMOTE USER VPN SUPPORT ......................................................................... 35 SIM-CARD USSD SUPPORT.......................................................................................... 36 INSTALLATION ............................................................................................................... 37 6.1 6.2 6.3 MAX 700 ................................................................................................................ 11 MAX HD2 LTE / LTEA .............................................................................................. 13 MAX HD2 IP67 ....................................................................................................... 15 MAX HD2 MINI ........................................................................................................ 16 MAX TRANSIT........................................................................................................... 18 MAX HOTSPOT ......................................................................................................... 19 MAX HD4 ............................................................................................................... 20 MAX BR1................................................................................................................ 22 MAX BR1 MINI ........................................................................................................ 24 MAX BR1 SLIM ........................................................................................................ 25 MAX BR1 ENT ........................................................................................................ 27 MAX BR1 PRO LTE ................................................................................................... 28 MAX BR1/2 IP55 .................................................................................................... 29 MAX ON-THE-GO ..................................................................................................... 31 SURF SOHO ............................................................................................................. 32 ADVANCED FEATURE SUMMARY .................................................................................... 33 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 SUPPORTED NETWORK FEATURES.................................................................................... 8 OTHER SUPPORTED FEATURES ...................................................................................... 10 PREPARATION ............................................................................................................ 37 CONSTRUCTING THE NETWORK ..................................................................................... 38 CONFIGURING THE NETWORK ENVIRONMENT .................................................................. 39 MOUNTING THE UNIT .................................................................................................... 40 7.1 7.2 WALL MOUNT........................................................................................................... 40 CAR MOUNT ............................................................................................................. 40 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 7.3 IP67 INSTALLATION GUIDE .......................................................................................... 40 CONNECTING TO THE WEB ADMIN INTERFACE ............................................................... 41 CONFIGURING THE LAN INTERFACE(S) ............................................................................ 43 9.1 9.2 BASIC SETTINGS ......................................................................................................... 43 CAPTIVE PORTAL ........................................................................................................ 53 10 CONFIGURING THE WAN INTERFACE(S) .......................................................................... 55 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 ETHERNET WAN ....................................................................................................... 56 CELLULAR WAN ........................................................................................................ 64 WI-FI WAN ............................................................................................................. 69 WAN HEALTH CHECK ................................................................................................. 75 DYNAMIC DNS SETTINGS ............................................................................................ 77 11 ADVANCED WI-FI SETTINGS............................................................................................ 80 12 MEDIAFAST CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................ 83 12.1 12.2 12.3 SETTING UP MEDIAFAST CONTENT CACHING .................................................................. 83 SCHEDULING CONTENT PREFETCHING............................................................................. 84 VIEWING MEDIAFAST STATISTICS .................................................................................. 85 13 BANDWIDTH BONDING SPEEDFUSIONTM / PEPVPN ......................................................... 87 13.1 13.2 13.3 PEPVPN .................................................................................................................. 88 THE PEPWAVE ROUTER BEHIND A NAT ROUTER .............................................................. 94 SPEEDFUSIONTM STATUS ............................................................................................. 95 14 IPSEC VPN ...................................................................................................................... 96 14.1 IPSEC VPN SETTINGS.................................................................................................. 96 15 OUTBOUND POLICY MANAGEMENT ..............................................................................100 15.1 15.2 OUTBOUND POLICY .................................................................................................. 100 CUSTOM RULES FOR OUTBOUND POLICY ...................................................................... 101 16 INBOUND ACCESS .........................................................................................................110 16.1 PORT FORWARDING SERVICE ...................................................................................... 110 17 NAT MAPPINGS ............................................................................................................113 18 QOS 115 18.1 18.2 18.3 USER GROUPS ......................................................................................................... 115 BANDWIDTH CONTROL .............................................................................................. 116 APPLICATION ........................................................................................................... 116 19 FIREWALL .....................................................................................................................118 19.1 19.2 OUTBOUND AND INBOUND FIREWALL RULES ................................................................. 118 CONTENT BLOCKING ................................................................................................. 123 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 19.3 19.4 OSPF & RIPV2 ....................................................................................................... 124 REMOTE USER ACCESS .............................................................................................. 126 MISCELLANEOUS SETTINGS .................................................................................................128 19.5 19.6 19.7 19.8 19.9 19.10 HIGH AVAILABILITY ................................................................................................... 128 PPTP SERVER ......................................................................................................... 131 CERTIFICATE MANAGER ............................................................................................. 132 SERVICE FORWARDING .............................................................................................. 132 SERVICE PASSTHROUGH ............................................................................................. 135 GPS FORWARDING................................................................................................... 136 20 AP CONTROLLER ...........................................................................................................137 20.1 20.2 20.3 WIRELESS SSID ....................................................................................................... 137 SETTINGS ................................................................................................................ 141 TOOLBOX ................................................................................................................ 145 21 SYSTEM SETTINGS .........................................................................................................146 21.1 21.2 21.3 21.4 21.5 21.6 21.7 21.8 21.9 21.10 21.11 21.12 21.13 21.14 21.15 21.16 ADMIN SECURITY ..................................................................................................... 146 FIRMWARE.............................................................................................................. 151 TIME...................................................................................................................... 152 SCHEDULE............................................................................................................... 152 EMAIL NOTIFICATION ................................................................................................ 153 EVENT LOG ............................................................................................................. 155 SNMP................................................................................................................... 157 INCONTROL............................................................................................................. 159 CONFIGURATION ...................................................................................................... 159 FEATURE ADD-ONS ................................................................................................... 161 REBOOT ................................................................................................................. 161 PING...................................................................................................................... 162 TRACEROUTE TEST.................................................................................................... 163 PEPVPN TEST ......................................................................................................... 163 WAKE-ON-LAN ....................................................................................................... 164 CLI (COMMAND LINE INTERFACE SUPPORT) .................................................................. 164 22 STATUS .........................................................................................................................165 22.1 22.2 22.3 22.4 22.5 22.6 22.7 22.8 APPENDIX A. DEVICE ................................................................................................................... 165 ACTIVE SESSIONS ..................................................................................................... 167 CLIENT LIST ............................................................................................................. 169 WINS CLIENT ......................................................................................................... 169 UPNP / NAT-PMP ................................................................................................. 170 SPEEDFUSION STATUS ............................................................................................... 170 EVENT LOG ............................................................................................................. 174 BANDWIDTH ........................................................................................................... 174 RESTORATION OF FACTORY DEFAULTS......................................................180 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual APPENDIX B: DECLARATION ................................................................................................181 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Introduction and Scope Pepwave routers provide link aggregation and load balancing across multiple WAN connections, allowing a combination of technologies like 3G HSDPA, EVDO, 4G LTE, Wi-Fi, external WiMAX dongle, and satellite to be utilized to connect to the Internet. The MAX wireless SD-WAN router series has a wide range of products suitable for many different deployments and markets. Entry level SD-WAN models such as the MAX BR1 are suitable for SMEs or branch offices. High-capacity SD-WAN routers such as the MAX HD2 are suitable for larger organizations and head offices. This manual covers setting up Pepwave routers and provides an introduction to their features and usage. Tips Want to know more about Pepwave routers? Visit our YouTube Channel for a video introduction! http://youtu.be/UCkVQThLKO4 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Glossary The following terms, acronyms, and abbreviations are frequently used in this manual: Term Definition 3G 3rd Generation standards for wireless communications 4G 4th Generation standards for wireless communications DHCP DNS EVDO HSDPA Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Domain Name System Evolution-Data Optimized High-Speed Downlink Packet Access HTTP Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol ICMP Internet Control Message Protocol IP LAN MAC Address Internet Protocol Local Area Network Media Access Control Address MTU Maximum Transmission Unit MSS Maximum Segment Size NAT Network Address Translation PPPoE QoS SNMP Point to Point Protocol over Ethernet Quality of Service Simple Network Management Protocol TCP Transmission Control Protocol UDP User Datagram Protocol VPN Virtual Private Network VRRP Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol WAN Wide Area Network WINS Windows Internet Name Service WLAN Wireless Local Area Network http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Product Features Pepwave routers enable all LAN users to share broadband Internet connections, and they provide advanced features to enhance Internet access. Our Max BR wireless routers support multiple SIM cards. They can be configured to switch from using one SIM card to another SIM card according to different criteria, including wireless network reliability and data usage. Our MAX HD series wireless routers are embedded with multiple 4G LTE modems, and allow simultaneous wireless Internet connections through multiple wireless networks. The wireless Internet connections can be bonded together using our SpeedFusion technology. This allows better reliability, larger bandwidth, and increased wireless coverage are comparing to use only one 4G LTE modem. Below is a list of supported features on Pepwave routers. Features vary by model. For more information, please see peplink.com/products. 3.1 Supported Network Features 3.1.1 WAN Ethernet WAN connection in full/half duplex Static IP support for PPPoE Built-in HSPA and EVDO cellular modems USB mobile connection(s) Wi-Fi WAN connection Network address translation (NAT)/port address translation (PAT) Inbound and outbound NAT mapping IPsec NAT-T and PPTP packet passthrough MAC address clone and passthrough Customizable MTU and MSS values WAN connection health check Dynamic DNS (supported service providers: changeip.com, dyndns.org, noip.org, tzo.com and DNS-O-Matic) Ping, DNS lookup, and HTTP-based health check 3.1.2 LAN Wi-Fi AP Ethernet LAN ports DHCP server on LAN Extended DHCP option support Static routing rules VLAN on LAN support http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 3.1.3 VPN PepVPN with SpeedFusionTM PepVPN performance analyzer X.509 certificate support VPN load balancing and failover among selected WAN connections Bandwidth bonding and failover among selected WAN connections IPsec VPN for network-to-network connections (works with Cisco and Juniper only) Ability to route Internet traffic to a remote VPN peer Optional pre-shared key setting SpeedFusionTM throughput, ping, and traceroute tests PPTP server PPTP and IPsec passthrough 3.1.4 Firewall Outbound (LAN to WAN) firewall rules Inbound (WAN to LAN) firewall rules per WAN connection Intrusion detection and prevention Specification of NAT mappings Outbound firewall rules can be defined by destination domain name 3.1.5 Captive Portal Splash screen of open networks, login page for secure networks Customizable built-in captive portal Supports linking to outside page for captive portal 3.1.6 Outbound Policy Link load distribution per TCP/UDP service Persistent routing for specified source and/or destination IP addresses per TCP/UDP service Traffic prioritization and DSL optimization Prioritize and route traffic to VPN tunnels with Priority and Enforced algorithms 3.1.7 AP Controller Configure and manage Pepwave AP devices http://www.pepwave.com Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Review the status of connected APs 3.1.8 QoS 3.2 Quality of service for different applications and custom protocols User group classification for different service levels Bandwidth usage control and monitoring on group- and user-level Application prioritization for custom protocols and DSL/cable optimization Other Supported Features User-friendly web-based administration interface HTTP and HTTPS support for web admin interface Configurable web administration port and administrator password Firmware upgrades, configuration backups, ping, and traceroute via web admin interface Remote web-based configuration (via WAN and LAN interfaces) Time server synchronization SNMP Email notification Read-only user for web admin Shared IP drop-in mode Authentication and accounting by RADIUS server for web admin Built-in WINS servers* Syslog SIP passthrough PPTP packet passthrough Event log Active sessions Client list WINS client list * UPnP / NAT-PMP Real-time, hourly, daily, and monthly bandwidth usage reports and charts IPv6 support Support USB tethering on Android 2.2+ phones * Not supported on MAX Surf-On-The-Go, Surf SOHO, and BR1 variants http://www.pepwave.com 10 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Pepwave MAX Mobile Router Overview 4.1 MAX 700 4.1.1 Panel Appearance http://www.pepwave.com 11 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.1.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Wi-Fi WAN Wi-Fi AP OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Wi-Fi AP and Wi-Fi WAN Indicators OFF Disconnected Blinking slowly Connecting to network Blinking Connected to network with traffic ON Connected to network without traffic OFF Disabled Blinking slowly Enabled but no client connected Blinking Connected to network with traffic ON Client(s) connected to wireless network LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 10 / 100/ 1000 Mbps Blinking Data is transferring No data is being transferred or port is not connected OFF Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 12 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.2 MAX HD2 LTE / LTEA 4.2.1 Panel Appearance http://www.pepwave.com 13 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.2.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Wi-Fi WAN / Cellular 1 / Cellular 2 OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Wi-Fi AP and Wi-Fi WAN Indicators OFF Disabled Intermittent Blinking slowly Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Blinking ON Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 10 / 100 / 1000 Mbps Blinking Data is transferring No data is being transferred or port is not connected OFF Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 14 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.3 MAX HD2 IP67 4.3.1 Panel Appearance The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status OFF Red Blinking red Green http://www.pepwave.com Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready 15 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.4 MAX HD2 mini 4.4.1 Panel Appearance http://www.pepwave.com 16 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.4.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Cellular 1 / Cellular 2 OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Cellular WAN Indicators OFF Disabled intermittent Blinking slowly Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Blinking ON Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 10 / 100 / 1000 Mbps Blinking Data is transferring No data is being transferred or port is not connected OFF Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 17 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.5 MAX Transit 4.5.1 Panel Appearance 4.5.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Cellular WAN Indicators OFF Disabled intermittent Blinking slowly Connecting to wireless network(s) Cellular 1 / Cellular 2* Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Blinking ON Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic * For MAX-TST_DUO LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 10 / 100 / 1000 Mbps Blinking Data is transferring No data is being transferred or port is not connected OFF Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 18 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.6 MAX Hotspot 4.6.1 Panel Appearance 4.6.2 LED Indications LED Indicators Status RED – Access point initializing GREEN – Access point ready LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking OFF Data is transferring Port is not connected Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 19 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.7 MAX HD4 4.7.1 Panel Appearance 4.7.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Wi-Fi WAN / Cellular 1 / Cellular 2 OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Wi-Fi AP and Wi-Fi WAN Indicators OFF Disabled Intermittent Blinking slowly Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Blinking ON Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED ON 10 / 100 / 1000 Mbps Blinking Data is transferring No data is being transferred or port is not connected OFF http://www.pepwave.com 20 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Port Type Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 21 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.8 MAX BR1 4.8.1 Panel Appearance 4.8.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Wi-Fi OFF Red Blinking red Green OFF Blinking slowly Blinking ON http://www.pepwave.com Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Wi-Fi Indicators Disabled intermittent Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic 22 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Cellular Cellular Indicators Disabled or no SIM card inserted Connecting or connected to network(s) OFF ON LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking OFF Data is transferring Port is not connected Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 23 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.9 MAX BR1 Mini 4.9.1 Panel Appearance 4.9.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Wi-Fi Cellular OFF Red Blinking red Green OFF Blinking slowly Blinking ON OFF ON http://www.pepwave.com Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Wi-Fi Indicators Disabled intermittent Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic Cellular Indicators Disabled or no SIM card inserted Connecting or connected to network(s) 24 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.10 MAX BR1 Slim 4.10.1 Panel Appearance 4.10.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Wi-Fi Cellular OFF Red Blinking red Green OFF Blinking slowly Blinking ON OFF ON http://www.pepwave.com Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Wi-Fi Indicators Disabled intermittent Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic Cellular Indicators Disabled or no SIM card inserted Connecting or connected to network(s) 25 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking OFF Data is transferring Port is not connected Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 26 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.11 MAX BR1 ENT 4.11.1 Panel Appearance 4.11.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Cellular OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Cellular Indicators Disabled or no SIM card inserted Connecting or connected to network(s) OFF ON LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking OFF Data is transferring Port is not connected Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 27 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.12 MAX BR1 Pro LTE 4.12.1 Panel Appearence 4.12.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status Cellular OFF Red Blinking red Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready Cellular Indicators Disabled or no SIM card inserted Connecting or connected to network(s) OFF ON LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking OFF Data is transferring Port is not connected Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 28 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.13 MAX BR1/2 IP55 4.13.1 Panel Appearance 4.13.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Status OFF Red Blinking red Green http://www.pepwave.com Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Boot up error Ready 29 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Wi-Fi Cellular OFF Blinking slowly Blinking ON Wi-Fi Indicators Disabled Intermittent Connecting to wireless network(s) Connected to wireless network(s) with traffic Connected to wireless network(s) without traffic Cellular Indicators Disabled or no SIM card inserted Connecting or connected to network(s) OFF ON LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking OFF Data is transferring Port is not connected Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 30 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.14 MAX On-The-Go 4.14.1 Panel Appearance 4.14.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: WAN Wi-Fi Status Cellular Indicators Modem is not attached to the port Modem is attached to the port OFF Green Wi-Fi Indicators Disconnected from AP Connected to AP OFF Green Status Indicators System initializing Booting up or busy Ready OFF Red Green LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port Type ON 100 Mbps OFF 10 Mbps ON Port is connected without traffic Blinking Data is transferring Auto MDI/MDI-X ports http://www.pepwave.com 31 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 4.15 Surf SOHO 4.15.1 Panel Appearance 4.15.2 LED Indicators The statuses indicated by the front panel LEDs are as follows: Wi-Fi Status Wi-Fi and Status Indicators OFF Disabled Intermittent Blinking Enabled but no client connected ON Client(s) connected to wireless network Continuous Transferring data to wireless network blinking OFF System initializing Red Booting up or busy Green Ready state LAN and Ethernet WAN Ports Green LED Orange LED Port type ON 100/1000 Mbps Blinking Data is transferring No data is being transferred or port is not connected OFF Auto MDI/MDI-X ports Wi-Fi Signal Off Signal strength No connection Wi-Fi signal strength (low, medium, and high) http://www.pepwave.com 32 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Advanced Feature Summary 5.1 Drop-in Mode and LAN Bypass: Transparent Deployment As your organization grows, it needs more bandwidth. But modifying your network would require effort better spent elsewhere. In Drop-in Mode, you can conveniently install your Peplink router without making any changes to your network. And if the Peplink router loses power for any reason, LAN Bypass will safely and automatically bypass the Peplink router to resume your original network connection. Compatible with: MAX 700, MAX HD2 (All variants), HD4 (All Variants) 5.2 QoS: Clearer VoIP VoIP and videoconferencing are highly sensitive to latency. With QoS, Peplink routers can detect VoIP traffic and assign it the highest priority, giving you crystal-clear calls. http://www.pepwave.com 33 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 5.3 Per-User Bandwidth Control With per-user bandwidth control, you can define bandwidth control policies for up to 3 groups of users to prevent network congestion. Define groups by IP address and subnet, and set bandwidth limits for every user in the group. 5.4 High Availability via VRRP When your organization has a corporate requirement demanding the highest availability with no single point of failure, you can deploy two Peplink routers in High Availability mode. With High Availability mode, the second device will take over when needed. Compatible with: MAX 700, MAX HD2 (All variants), HD4 (All Variants) http://www.pepwave.com 34 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 5.5 USB Modem and Android Tethering For increased WAN diversity, plug in a USB LTE modem as backup. Peplink routers are compatible with over 200 modem types. You can also tether to smartphones running Android 4.1.X and above. Compatible with: MAX 700, HD2 (all variants except IP67), HD4 (All variants) 5.6 Built-In Remote User VPN Support Use L2TP with IPsec to safely and conveniently connect remote clients to your private network. L2TP with IPsec is supported by most devices, but legacy devices can also connect using PPTP. Click here for full instructions on setting up L2TP with IPsec. http://www.pepwave.com 35 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 5.7 SIM-card USSD support Cellular-enabled routers can now use USSD to check their SIM card’s balance, process pre-paid cards, and configure carrier-specific services.Click here for full instructions on using USSD. http://www.pepwave.com 36 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Installation The following section details connecting Pepwave routers to your network. 6.1 Preparation Before installing your Pepwave router, please prepare the following as appropriate for your installation: At least one Internet/WAN access account and/or Wi-Fi access information Depending on network connection type(s), one or more of the following: Ethernet WAN: A 10/100/1000BaseT UTP cable with RJ45 connector USB: A USB modem Embedded modem: A SIM card for GSM/HSPA service Wi-Fi WAN: Wi-Fi antennas PC Card/Express Card WAN: A PC Card/ExpressCard for the corresponding card slot A computer installed with the TCP/IP network protocol and a supported web browser. Supported browsers include Microsoft Internet Explorer 8.0 or above, Mozilla Firefox 10.0 or above, Apple Safari 5.1 or above, and Google Chrome 18 or above. http://www.pepwave.com 37 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 6.2 Constructing the Network At a high level, construct the network according to the following steps: 1. 2. 3. With an Ethernet cable, connect a computer to one of the LAN ports on the Pepwave router. Repeat with different cables for up to 4 computers to be connected. With another Ethernet cable or a USB modem/Wi-Fi antenna/PC Card/Express Card, connect to one of the WAN ports on the Pepwave router. Repeat the same procedure for other WAN ports. Connect the power adapter to the power connector on the rear panel of the Pepwave router, and then plug it into a power outlet. The following figure schematically illustrates the resulting configuration: http://www.pepwave.com 38 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 6.3 Configuring the Network Environment To ensure that the Pepwave router works properly in the LAN environment and can access the Internet via WAN connections, please refer to the following setup procedures: LAN configuration For basic configuration, refer to Section 8, Connecting to the Web Admin Interface. For advanced configuration, go to Section 9, Configuring the LAN Interface(s). WAN configuration For basic configuration, refer to Section 8, Connecting to the Web Admin Interface. For advanced configuration, go to Section 9.2, Captive Portal. http://www.pepwave.com 39 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Mounting the Unit 7.1 Wall Mount The Pepwave MAX 700/HD2/On-The-Go can be wall mounted using screws. After adding the screw on the wall, slide the MAX in the screw hole socket as indicated below. Recommeneded screw specification: M3.5 x 20mm, head diameter 6mm, head thickness 2.4mm. The Pepwave MAX BR1 requires four screws for wall mounting. 7.2 Car Mount The Pepwave MAX700/HD2 can be mounted in a vehicle using the included mounting brackets. Place the mounting brackets by the two sides and screw them onto the device. 7.3 IP67 Installation Guide Installation instructions for IP67 devices can be found here: http://download.peplink.com/manual/IP67_Installation_Guide.pdf http://www.pepwave.com 40 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Connecting to the Web Admin Interface 1. Start a web browser on a computer that is connected with the Pepwave router through the LAN. 2. To connect to the router’s web admin interface, enter the following LAN IP address in the address field of the web browser: http://192.168.50.1 (This is the default LAN IP address for Pepwave routers.) 3. Enter the following to access the web admin interface. Username: admin Password: admin (This is the default username and password for Pepwave routers. The admin and read-only user passwords can be changed at System>Admin Security.) 4. After successful login, the Dashboard will be displayed. The Dashboard shows current WAN, LAN, and Wi-Fi AP statuses. Here, you can change WAN connection priority and switch on/off the Wi-Fi AP. For further information on setting up these connections, please refer to Sections 8 and 9. http://www.pepwave.com 41 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Device Information displays details about the device, including model name, firmware version, and uptime. For further information, please refer to Section 22. Important Note Configuration changes (e.g. WAN, LAN, admin settings, etc.) will take effect only after clicking the Save button at the bottom of each page. The Apply Changes button causes the changes to be saved and applied. http://www.pepwave.com 42 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Configuring the LAN Interface(s) 9.1 Basic Settings LAN interface settings are located at Network>LAN>Basic Settings. Navigating to that page will result in the following dashboard: This represents the LAN interfaces that are active on your router (including VLAN). A grey “X” means that the VLAN is used in other settings and cannot be deleted. You can find which settings are using the VLAN by hovering over the grey “X”. Alternatively, a red “X” means that there are no settings using the VLAN. You can delete that VLAN by clicking the red “X” Clicking any of the existing LAN interfaces (or creating a new one) will result in the following IP Settings IP Address The IP address and subnet mask of the Pepwave router on the LAN. Network Settings Name VLAN ID Inter-VLAN routing Enter a name for the LAN. Enter a number for your VLAN. Check this box to enable routing between virtual LANs. http://www.pepwave.com 43 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Captive Portal Check this box to turn on captive portals. http://www.pepwave.com 44 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Drop-in Mode Settings Enable Drop-in mode eases the installation of Peplink routers on a live network between the existing firewall and router, such that no configuration changes are required on existing equipment. Check the box to enable the drop-in mode feature, if available on your model. WAN for DropIn Mode Select the WAN port to be used for drop-in mode. If WAN 1 with LAN Bypass is selected, the high availability feature will be disabled automatically. Share Drop-In IPA Shared IP AddressA WAN Default Gateway WAN DNS Servers When this option is enabled, the passthrough IP address will be used to connect to WAN hosts (email notification, remote syslog, etc.). The Pepwave router will listen for this IP address when WAN hosts access services provided by the Pepwave router (web admin access from the WAN, DNS server requests, etc.). To connect to hosts on the LAN (email notification, remote syslog, etc.), the default gateway address will be used. The Pepwave router will listen for this IP address when LAN hosts access services provided by the Pepwave router (web admin access from the WAN, DNS proxy, etc.). Access to this IP address will be passed through to the LAN port if this device is not serving the service being accessed. The shared IP address will be used in connecting to hosts on the WAN (email notification, remote syslog, etc.) The device will also listen on the IP address when hosts on the WAN access services served on this device (web admin access from the WAN, DNS server, etc.) Enter the WAN router's IP address in this field. If there are more hosts in addition to the router on the WAN segment, check the I have other host(s) on WAN segment box and enter the IP address of the hosts that need to access LAN devices or be accessed by others. Enter the selected WAN's corresponding DNS server IP addresses. - Advanced feature, please click the button on the top right-hand corner to activate. Layer 2 PepVPN Bridging PepVPN Profiles to Bridge Spanning Tree Protocol Override IP The remote network of the selected PepVPN profiles will be bridged with this local LAN, creating a Layer 2 PepVPN, they will be connected and operate like a single LAN, and any broadcast or multicast packets will be sent over the VPN. Click the box will enable STP for this layer 2 profile bridge. Select "Do not override" if the LAN IP address and local DHCP server should remain unchanged after the Layer 2 PepVPN is up. http://www.pepwave.com 45 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Address when bridge connected If you choose to override IP address when the VPN is connected, the device will not act as a router, and most Layer 3 routing functions will cease to work. DHCP Server Settings DHCP Server When this setting is enabled, the DHCP server automatically assigns an IP address to each computer that is connected via LAN and configured to obtain an IP address via DHCP. The Pepwave router’s DHCP server can prevent IP address collision on the LAN. IP Range & Subnet Mask These settings allocate a range of IP addresses that will be assigned to LAN computers by the Pepwave router’s DHCP server. Lease Time This setting specifies the length of time throughout which an IP address of a DHCP client remains valid. Upon expiration of the lease time, the assigned IP address will no longer be valid and renewal of the IP address assignment will be required. DNS Servers This option allows you to input the DNS server addresses to be offered to DHCP clients. If Assign DNS server automatically is selected, the Pepwave router’s built-in DNS server address (i.e., LAN IP address) will be offered. WINS Server This option allows you to optionally specify a Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) server. You may choose to use the built-in WINS server or external WINS servers. When this unit is connected using SpeedFusionTM, other VPN peers can share this unit's built-in WINS server by entering this unit's LAN IP address in their DHCP WINS Server setting. Afterward, all PC clients in the VPN can resolve the NetBIOS names of other clients in remote peers. If you have enabled this option, a list of WINS clients will be displayed at Status>WINS Clients. BOOTP Extended DHCP Option Check this box to enable BOOTP on older networks that still require it. In addition to standard DHCP options (e.g., DNS server address, gateway address, subnet mask), you can specify the value of additional extended DHCP options, as defined in RFC 2132. With these extended options enabled, you can pass additional configuration information to LAN hosts. To define an extended DHCP option, click the Add button, choose the option to define and http://www.pepwave.com 46 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual enter its value. For values that are in IP address list format, you can enter one IP address per line in the provided text area input control. Each option can be defined once only. DHCP Reservation This setting reserves the assignment of fixed IP addresses for a list of computers on the LAN. The computers to be assigned fixed IP addresses on the LAN are identified by their MAC addresses. The fixed IP address assignment is displayed as a cross-reference list between the computers’ names, MAC addresses, and fixed IP addresses. Name (an optional field) allows you to specify a name to represent the device. MAC addresses should be in the format of 00:AA:BB:CC:DD:EE. Press to create a new record. Press to remove a record. Reserved client information can be imported from the Client List, located at Status>Client List. For more details, please refer to Section 22.3. LAN Physical Settings Speed This is the port speed of the LAN interface. It should be set to the same speed as the connected device to avoid port negotiation problems. When a static speed is set, you may choose whether to advertise its speed to the peer device. Auto is selected by default. You can choose not to advertise the port speed if the port has difficulty negotiating with the peer device. Static Route Settings Static Route This table is for defining static routing rules for the LAN segment. A static route consists of the network address, subnet mask, and gateway address. The address and subnet mask values are in w.x.y.z format. The local LAN subnet and subnets behind the LAN will be advertised to the VPN. Remote routes sent over the VPN will also be accepted. Any VPN member will be able to route to the local subnets. Press to create a new route. Press to remove a route. WINS Server Settings Enable Check the box to enable the WINS server. A list of WINS clients will be displayed at Status>WINS Clients. http://www.pepwave.com 47 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual DNS Proxy Settings Enable To enable the DNS proxy feature, check this box, and then set up the feature at Network>LAN>DNS Proxy Settings. A DNS proxy server can be enabled to serve DNS requests originating from LAN/PPTP/SpeedFusionTM peers. Requests are forwarded to the DNS servers/resolvers defined for each WAN connection. DNS Caching This field is to enable DNS caching on the built-in DNS proxy server. When the option is enabled, queried DNS replies will be cached until the records’ TTL has been reached. This feature can help improve DNS lookup time. However, it cannot return the most up-to-date result for those frequently updated DNS records. By default, DNS Caching is disabled. Include Google Public DNS Servers When this option is enabled, the DNS proxy server will also forward DNS requests to Google's Public DNS Servers, in addition to the DNS servers defined in each WAN. This could increase the DNS service's availability. This setting is disabled by default. Local DNS Records This table is for defining custom local DNS records. A static local DNS record consists of a host name and IP address. When looking up the host name from the LAN to LAN IP of the Pepwave router, the corresponding IP address will be returned. Press DNS Resolvers A to create a new record. Press to remove a record. Check the box to enable the WINS server. A list of WINS clients will be displayed at Network>LAN>DNS Proxy Settings>DNS Resolvers. This field specifies which DNS resolvers will receive forwarded DNS requests. If no WAN/VPN/LAN DNS resolver is selected, all of the WAN’s DNS resolvers will be selected. If a SpeedFusionTM peer is selected, you may enter the VPN peer’s DNS resolver IP address(es). Queries will be forwarded to the selected connections’ resolvers. If all of the selected connections are down, queries will be forwarded to all resolvers on healthy WAN connections. - Advanced feature, please click the button on the top right hand corner to activate. Finally, if needed, configure Bonjour forwarding, Apple’s zero configuration networking http://www.pepwave.com 48 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual protocol. Once VLAN configuration is complete, click Save to store your changes. Bonjour Forwarding Settings Enable Bonjour Service Check this box to turn on Bonjour forwarding. Choose Service and Client networks from the drop-down menus, and then click add the networks. To delete an existing Bonjour listing, click http://www.pepwave.com 49 to Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual To enable VLAN configuration, click the button in the IP Settings section. To add a new LAN, click the New LAN button. To change LAN settings, click the name of the LAN to change under the LAN heading. The following settings are displayed when creating a new LAN or editing an existing LAN. IP Settings IP Address & Subnet Mask Enter the Pepwave router’s IP address and subnet mask values to be used on the LAN. Network Settings Name VLAN ID Inter-VLAN routing Captive Portal Enter a name for the LAN. Enter a number for your VLAN. Check this box to enable routing between virtual LANs. Check this box to turn on captive portals. http://www.pepwave.com 50 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual DHCP Server Settings DHCP Server When this setting is enabled, the Pepwave router’s DHCP server automatically assigns an IP address to each computer that is connected via LAN and configured to obtain an IP address via DHCP. The Pepwave router’s DHCP server can prevent IP address collisions on the LAN. To enable DHCP bridge relay, please click the IP Range & Subnet Mask icon on this menu item. These settings allocate a range of IP address that will be assigned to LAN computers by the Pepwave router’s DHCP server. Lease Time This setting specifies the length of time throughout which an IP address of a DHCP client remains valid. Upon expiration of Lease Time, the assigned IP address will no longer be valid and the IP address assignment must be renewed. DNS Servers This option allows you to input the DNS server addresses to be offered to DHCP clients. If Assign DNS server automatically is selected, the Pepwave router’s built-in DNS server address (i.e., LAN IP address) will be offered. WINS Servers BOOTP Extended DHCP Option DHCP Reservation This option allows you to specify the Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) server. You may choose to use the built-in WINS server or external WINS servers. When this unit is connected using SpeedFusionTM, other VPN peers can share this unit's built-in WINS server by entering this unit's LAN IP address in their DHCP WINS Servers setting. Therefore, all PC clients in the VPN can resolve the NetBIOS names of other clients in remote peers. If you have enabled this option, a list of WINS clients will be displayed at Status>WINS Clients. Check this box to enable BOOTP on older networks that still require it. In addition to standard DHCP options (e.g. DNS server address, gateway address, subnet mask), you can specify the value of additional extended DHCP options, as defined in RFC 2132. With these extended options enabled, you can pass additional configuration information to LAN hosts. To define an extended DHCP option, click the Add button, choose the option to define, and then enter its value. For values that are in IP address list format, you can enter one IP address per line in the provided text area input control. Each option can be defined once only. This setting reserves the assignment of fixed IP addresses for a list of computers on the LAN. The computers to be assigned fixed IP addresses on the LAN are identified by their MAC addresses. The fixed IP address assignment is displayed as a cross-reference list between the computers’ names, MAC addresses, and fixed IP addresses. Name (an optional field) allows you to specify a name to represent the device. MAC addresses should be in the format of 00:AA:BB:CC:DD:EE. Press to create a new record. Press to remove a record. Reserved clients information can be imported from the Client List, located at Status>Client List. For more details, please refer to Section http://www.pepwave.com 51 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 22.3. To configure DHCP relay, first click the to display the settings. button found next to the DHCP Server option DHCP Relay Settings Enable Check this box to turn on DHCP relay. Click the icon to disable DHCP relay. DHCP Server IP Address Enter the IP addresses of one or two DHCP servers in the provided fields. The DHCP servers entered here will receive relayed DHCP requests from the LAN. For active-passive DHCP server configurations, enter active and passive DHCP server relay IP addresses in DHCP Server 1 and DHCP Server 2. DHCP Option 82 DCHP Option 82 includes device information as relay agent for the attached client when forwarding DHCP requests from client to server. This option also embeds the device’s MAC address and network name in circuit and remote IDs. Check this box to enable DHCP Option 82. Once DHCP is set up, configure LAN Physical Settings, Static Route Settings, WINS Server Settings, and DNS Proxy Settings as noted above. http://www.pepwave.com 52 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual 9.2 Captive Portal The captive portal serves as gateway that clients have to pass if they wish to access the internet using your router. To configure, navigate to Network>LAN>Captive Portal. Captive Portal Settings Enable Hostname Access Mode Check Enable and then, optionally, select the LANs/VLANs that will use the captive portal. To customize the portal’s form submission and redirection URL, enter a new URL in this field. To reset the URL to factory settings, click Default. Click Open Access to allow clients to freely access your router. Click User Authentication to force your clients to authenticate before accessing your router. This authenticates your clients through a RADIUS server. After selecting this option, you will see the following fields: RADIUS Server Fill in the necessary information to complete your connection to the server and enable authentication. This authenticates your clients through a LDAP server. Upon selecting this option, you will see the following fields: LDAP Server Fill in the necessary information to complete your connection to the server and enable authentication. http://www.pepwave.com 53 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave Pepwave MAX and Surf User Manual Access Quota Quota Reset Time Allowed Networks Splash Page Set a time and data cap to each user’s Internet usage. This menu determines how your usage quota resets. Setting it to Daily will reset it at a specified time every day. Setting a number of minutes after quota reached establish a timer for each user that begins after the quota has been reached. To whitelist a network, enter the domain name / IP address here and click delete an existing network from the list of allowed networks, click the to the listing. . To button next Here, you can choose between using the Pepwave router’s built-in captive portal and redirecting clients to a URL you define. The Portal Customization menu has two options: and . Clicking displays a pop-up previewing the captive portal that your clients will see. Clicking displays the following menu: http://www.pepwave.com 54 Copyright @ 2016 Pepwave
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