Pismolabs Technology P1AC6 Peplink/ Pepwave/ Pismo Labs wireless product User Manual 1 revised
Pismo Labs Technology Limited Peplink/ Pepwave/ Pismo Labs wireless product 1 revised
Contents
- 1. User manual-1-revised
- 2. User manual-2-revised
User manual-1-revised
Pepwave AP One Series: AP One Enterprise / AP One AC mini / AP One In-Wall / AP One Rugged / AP One Flex 300M Pepwave AP Pro Series: AP Pro / AP Pro 300M / AP Pro Duo May 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. Table of Contents Introduction and Scope ......................................................................................... 4 Product Features and Benefits ............................................................................. 5 Package Contents .................................................................................................. 5 3.1 AP One Enterprise .............................................................................................. 6 3.2 AP One AC mini .................................................................................................. 6 3.3 AP One In-Wall .................................................................................................... 6 3.4 AP One Rugged .................................................................................................. 6 3.5 AP One Flex 300M .............................................................................................. 6 3.6 AP Pro / AP Pro 300M / AP Pro Duo .................................................................. 6 Hardware Overview ................................................................................................ 6 4.1 AP One Enterprise .............................................................................................. 7 4.2 AP One AC mini .................................................................................................. 8 4.3 AP One In-Wall .................................................................................................... 9 4.4 AP One Rugged ................................................................................................ 10 4.5 AP One Flex 300M ............................................................................................ 11 4.6 AP Pro / AP Pro 300M / AP Pro Duo ................................................................ 12 Installation ............................................................................................................ 13 5.1 Installation Procedures .................................................................................... 14 Using the Dashboard ........................................................................................... 15 6.1 General .............................................................................................................. 15 6.2 AP ...................................................................................................................... 17 Configuration ........................................................................................................ 18 7.1 System ............................................................................................................... 19 7.1.1 Admin Security .............................................................................................. 19 7.1.2 Firmware ........................................................................................................ 20 7.1.3 Time ............................................................................................................... 21 7.1.4 Event Log ....................................................................................................... 21 7.1.5 SNMP ............................................................................................................. 22 7.1.6 Controller ....................................................................................................... 25 7.1.7 Configuration ................................................................................................ 25 7.1.8 Reboot............................................................................................................ 26 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 7.2 AP ...................................................................................................................... 27 7.2.1 Wireless SSID ................................................................................................ 27 7.2.2 Settings .......................................................................................................... 37 7.2.3 WDS ............................................................................................................... 39 7.3 Network ............................................................................................................. 41 7.3.1 WAN ............................................................................................................... 41 7.3.2 LAN ................................................................................................................ 43 7.3.3 PepVPN .......................................................................................................... 46 Tools ..................................................................................................................... 48 8.1 Ping .................................................................................................................... 48 8.2 Traceroute ......................................................................................................... 49 8.3 Nslookup ........................................................................................................... 50 Monitoring Device Status .................................................................................... 50 9.1 Device ................................................................................................................ 51 9.2 Client List .......................................................................................................... 51 9.3 WDS Info............................................................................................................ 51 9.4 Portal ................................................................................................................. 52 9.5 Rogue AP .......................................................................................................... 52 9.6 Event Log .......................................................................................................... 53 10 Restoring Factory Defaults .............................................................................. 53 11 Appendix ........................................................................................................... 55 12 Datasheets ........................................................................................................ 55 http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 1 Introduction and Scope Our AP Series of enterprise-grade 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi access points is engineered to provide fast, dependable, and flexible operation in a variety of environments, all controlled by an easy-to-use centralized management system. From the small but powerful AP One AC mini to the top-of-the-line AP One 300M our AP Series offers wireless networking solutions to suit any business need, and every access point is loaded with essential features such as multiple SSIDs, VLAN, WDS, and Guest Protect. A single access point provides as many as 32 virtual access points (16 on single-radio models), each with its own security policy (WPA, WPA2, etc.) and authentication mechanism (802.1x, open, captive portal, etc.), allowing faster, easier, and more costeffective network builds. Each member of the AP Series family also features a highpowered Wi-Fi transmitter that greatly enhances coverage and performance while reducing equipment costs and maintenance. http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 2 Product Features and Benefits Key features and benefits of AP Series access points: • High-powered Wi-Fi transmitter enhances coverage and lowers cost of ownership. • Independent security policies and encryption mechanisms for each virtual access point allow fast, flexible, cost-effective network builds. • Centralized management via InControl reduces maintenance expense and time. • WDS support allows secure and fast network expansion. • Guest Protect support guards sensitive business data and subnetworks. • WMM (Wi-Fi Multimedia) and QoS (Quality of Service) support keeps video and other bandwidth-intensive data flowing fast and lag-free. Package Contents http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 1x AP One Enterprise 1 x Instruction sheet 3.2 AP One AC mini 1 x AP One mini 1 x Omni-directional antenna 1 x Power supply 1 x Instruction sheet 3.3 AP One In-Wall 1 x AP One In-Wall 1 x Mounting kit 1 x Instruction sheet 3.4 AP One Rugged 1 x AP One Rugged 3 x Omni-directional antennas 1 x Power supply 1 x Instruction sheet 3.5 AP One Flex 300M 1 x AP One Flex 300M 1 x Instruction sheet 3.6 AP Pro / AP Pro 300M / AP Pro Duo 1 x AP Pro / AP Pro 300M / AP Pro Duo 1 x Instruction sheet 1 x Installation guide Hardware Overview http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Bottom View Top View Front View LED Indicators Status RED – Access point initializing GREEN – Access point ready OFF – No device connected to Ethernet port LAN 1 BLINKING – Ethernet port sending/receiving data ON – Powered-on device connected to Ethernet port Note that LAN 5 displays the status of the uplink connection http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 4.2 AP One AC mini Rear Panel View Front View LED Indicators RED – Access point initializing Status GREEN – Access point ready OFF – 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi radio off BLINKING – AP sending/receiving data Wi-Fi GREEN – 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi radio on Note that this model includes a 2.4GHz Wi-Fi radio and a 5GHz Wi-Fi radio that can operate simultaneously to increase speed and reduce interference. http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 4.3 AP One In-Wall Front View (US) Front View (International) Rear Panel View Top View LED Indicators RED – Access point initializing Status GREEN – Access point ready OFF – 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi radio off BLINKING – AP sending/receiving data GREEN – 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi radio on WLAN 1/2 Note that this model includes a 2.4GHz Wi-Fi radio and a 5GHz Wi-Fi radio that can operate simultaneously to increase speed and reduce interference. WLAN1 displays the status of the 2.4GHz Wi-Fi radio, while WLAN2 displays the status of the 5GHz WiFi radio. OFF – No device connected to Ethernet port BLINKING – Ethernet port sending/receiving data LAN 1-5 ON – Powered-on device connected to Ethernet port Note that LAN 5 displays the status of the uplink connection http://www.pepwave.com Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 4.4 AP One Rugged Front View Rear Panel View LED Indicators On – Power On Power OFF – Power Off RED – Access point initializing Status GREEN – Access point ready OFF – 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi radio off BLINKING – AP sending/receiving data Wireless GREEN – 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi radio on Note that this model includes a 2.4GHz Wi-Fi radio and a 5GHz Wi-Fi radio that can operate simultaneously to increase speed and reduce interference. http://www.pepwave.com 10 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 4.5 AP One Flex 300M Front View Rear Panel View Connector Panel (Inside the Lid) LED Indicators RED – Access point initializing Status GREEN – Access point ready OFF – No device connected to Ethernet port LAN BLINKING – Ethernet port sending/receiving data ON – Powered-on device connected to Ethernet port Number of connected clients (1-10, 11-20, 21-30, 31-40) http://www.pepwave.com 11 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 4.6 AP Pro / AP Pro 300M / AP Pro Duo Front/Top View http://www.pepwave.com Rear Panel View 12 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 5 Installation Your access point acts as a bridge between wireless and wired Ethernet interfaces. A typical setup follows: http://www.pepwave.com 13 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 5.1 Installation Procedures 1. Connect the Ethernet port on the unit to the backbone network using an Ethernet cable. The port should auto sense whether the cable is straightthrough or crossover. 2. Connect the power adapter to the power connector of the unit. Plug the power adapter into a power source. 3. Wait for the status LED to turn green. 4. Connect a PC to the backbone network. Configure the IP address of the PC to be any IP address between 192.168.0.4 and 192.168.0.254, with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. 5. Using Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 or above, Mozilla Firefox 2.0 or above, or Google Chrome 2.0 or above, connect to https://192.168.0.3. 6. Enter the default admin login ID and password, admin and public respectively. 7. After logging in, the Dashboard appears. Click the System tab to begin setting up your access point. http://www.pepwave.com 14 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave The Dashboard section contains a number of displays to keep you up-to-date on your access point’s status and operation. Remote assistance can also be enabled here. 6.1 General This section contains WAN status and general device information. WAN When your access point is connected to a WAN, this field displays the WAN IP address. For more information, click the Details… link, which displays the following: IP Address Status http://www.pepwave.com This field displays the current WAN connection status. 15 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Device Information Model Firmware Uptime http://www.pepwave.com This field displays your access point’s model number. The firmware version currently running on your access point appears here. This field displays your access point’s uptime since the last reboot or shutdown. 16 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 6.2 AP This section displays a variety of information about your wireless network. AP Status Wireless Network SSID Radio Security Policy Channel VLAN http://www.pepwave.com This field displays your access point’s SSID. The radio frequency currently used by your access point appears here. If you’re using the AP One AC mini or the AP One In-Wall and have configured both radios, this displays both radios in use. This field displays the security policy your access point is currently using. If you’re using the AP One AC mini and have configured both radios, this displays channels in use for the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands. The channel currently used by your access point is displayed in this field. If your access point is using a VLAN ID for management traffic, it will appear here. A value of 0 indicates that a VLAN ID is not being used. 17 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 7 Configuration http://www.pepwave.com 18 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave The options on the System tab control login and security settings, firmware upgrades, SNMP settings, and other settings. 7.1.1 Admin Security The Admin Security section allows you to set up your access point’s name, password, security settings, and other options. Admin Security AP Name Enter a name to identify your access point. This name can be retrieved via SNMP. Location Enter a name to identify the location of your access point. This name can be retrieved via SNMP. Admin User Name This field specifies the administrator username of the web admin. It is set as admin by default. Admin Password This field allows you to specify a new administrator password. The default password is public. http://www.pepwave.com 19 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 7.1.2 Firmware http://www.pepwave.com 20 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave access point, as well as check for and install new firmware via online download. You can also upgrade your firmware using a firmware file stored locally. To check for new firmware, click the Check for Firmware button. If new firmware is available, your access point will automatically download and install it. To upgrade your access point using a firmware file on your network, click Choose File to select the firmware file. Then click Manual Upgrade to initiate the firmware upgrade process using the selected file. Note that your access point can store two different firmware versions in two different partitions. A firmware upgrade will always replace the inactive partition. If you want to keep the inactive firmware, simply reboot your device with the inactive firmware and then perform the firmware upgrade. 7.1.3 Time The settings in this section govern the access point’s system time zone and allow you to specify a custom timeserver. Time Time Zone Time Server Time region used by the system. All choices are based on UTC. To choose a time server other than the default, enter the URL here. To restore the default time server, click the Default button. 7.1.4 Event Log http://www.pepwave.com 21 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Event Log Remote Syslog Check this box to turn on remote system logging. Remote Syslog Host Enter the IP address or hostname of the remote syslog server, as well as the port number. 7.1.5 SNMP SNMP, or simple network management protocol, is an open standard that can be used http://www.pepwave.com 22 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave settings to control simple network management protocol access. SNMP Settings SNMP Device Name SNMP Port This field shows the AP name defined at System>Admin Security. This option specifies the port which SNMP will use. The default port is 161. SNMPv1 This option allows you to enable SNMP version 1. SNMPv2c This option allows you to enable SNMP version 2c. SNMPv3 This option allows you to enable SNMP version 3. To add a community for either SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c, click the Add SNMP Community http://www.pepwave.com 23 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave SNMP Community Settings Community Name Enter a name for the SNMP community. IP Address/IP Mask These settings specify a subnet from which access to the SNMP server is allowed. Enter the subnet address here (e.g., 192.168.1.0) and select the appropriate subnet mask. Access Mode Select Read Only or Read and Write as the SNMP community access mode. Status Use these controls to enable or disable SNMP community access. To define a user name for SNMPv3, click Add SNMP User in the SNMPv3 User Name table, which displays the following screen: SNMPv3 User Settings SNMPv3 User Name Enter a user name to be used in SNMPv3. Select one of the following valid authentication protocols: Authentication Protocol • NONE • HMAC-MD5 • HMAC-SHA When HMAC-MD5 or HMAC-SHA is selected, an entry field will appear for the password. Authentication Password Enter a password to use with the selected authentication protocol. Confirm Authentication Password Re-enter the authentication password. Privacy Protocol Access Mode http://www.pepwave.com Select None or CBC-DES as the SNMPv3 privacy protocol. When CBC-DES is selected, an entry field will appear for the password. Select Read Only or Read and Write as the SNMPv3 access mode. 24 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 7.1.6 Controller In the Controller section, you can set up Peplink InControl or AP Controller remote management. Controller Management Settings Controller Management Controller Type Check this box to enable remote management. Select Auto, InControl, or AP Controller as your remote AP management method. When Auto is selected, your access point will automatically choose the appropriate mode. 7.1.7 Configuration In section, you can manage and backup access point configurations, as well as reset your access point to its factory configuration. Backing up your access point’s settings immediately after successful initial setup is strongly recommended. http://www.pepwave.com 25 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Configuration Restore Configuration to Factory Settings The Restore Factory Settings button resets the configuration to factory default settings. After clicking the button, click the Apply Changes button on the top right corner to make the settings effective. To save existing network settings when restoring factory settings, check the Network Settings box before clicking Restore Factory Settings. Download Active Configurations Click Download to backup the current active settings. Upload Configurations To restore or change settings based on a configuration file, click Choose File to locate the configuration file on the local computer, and then click Upload. The new settings can then be applied by clicking the Apply Changes button on the page header, or you can cancel the procedure by pressing discard on the main page of the web admin interface. 7.1.8 Reboot This section provides a reboot button for restarting the system. For maximum reliability, your access point can equip with two copies of firmware, and each copy can be a different version. You can select the firmware version you would like to reboot the device with. The firmware marked with (Running) is the current system boot up firmware. Please note that a firmware upgrade will always replace the inactive firmware partition. http://www.pepwave.com 26 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave 7.2 AP Use the controls on the AP tab to set the wireless SSID and AP settings, as well as wireless distribution system (WDS) settings. 7.2.1 Wireless SSID Wireless network settings, including the name of the network (SSID) and security policy, can be defined and managed in this section. http://www.pepwave.com 27 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave modify its settings. SSID Settings Enable Radio Selection SSID Broadcast SSID Data Rate Check this box to enable wireless SSID. Available only on the AP One AC mini, this setting, shown below, allows you to enable or disable either of the two on-board radios. This setting specifies the AP SSID that Wi-Fi clients will see when scanning. This setting specifies whether or not Wi-Fi clients can scan the SSID of this wireless network. Broadcast SSID is enabled by default. Select Auto to allow your access point to set the data rate automatically, or select Fixed and choose a rate from the drop-down menu. Click the MCS Index link to display a reference table containing MCS and matching HT20 and HT40 values. Multicast Filter This setting enables the filtering of multicast network traffic to the wireless SSID. Multicast Rate This setting specifies the transmit rate to be used for sending multicast network traffic. IGMP Snooping DHCP Setting DHCP Option 82 http://www.pepwave.com To allow your access point to convert multicast traffic to unicast traffic for associated clients, select this option. To set your access point as a DHCP server or relay, select Server or Relay. Otherwise, select None. If you use a distributed DHCP server/relay environment, you can enable this option to provide additional information on the manner in which clients are physically connected to the network. 28 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Security Settings Security Policy http://www.pepwave.com This setting configures the wireless authentication and encryption methods. Available options are Open (No Encryption), WEP, 802.1X, WPA2 – Personal, WPA2 – Enterprise, WPA/WPA2 - Personal, and WPA/WPA2 – Enterprise. To allow any Wi-Fi client to access your AP without authentication, select Open (No Encryption). Details on each of the available authentication methods follow. 29 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave WEP Key Size Select 40 bits (64-bit WEP) or 104 bits (128-bit WEP). Key Format Choose ASCII or Hex format for the WEP key. ASCII can be applied only to encryption keys that are manually entered. Hex can be applied to encryption keys that are manually entered or automatically generated. Passphrase Enter a series of alphanumeric characters, and then click Generate Key to create a WEP key using the passphrase. Encryption Key The generated WEP key appears here. Click Hide / Show Passphrase to toggle visibility. Shared Key Authentication Check to enable shared key authentication. The default is disabled, meaning open authentication is used. 802.1X 802.1X Version Choose v1 or v2 of the 802.1x EAPOL. When v1 is selected, both v1 and v2 clients can associate with the access point. When v2 is selected, only v2 clients can associate with the access point. Most modern wireless clients support v2. For stations that do not support v2, select v1. The default is v2. WEP Key Size Select 40 bits (64-bit WEP) or 104 bits (128-bit WEP). Re-keying Period http://www.pepwave.com This option specifies the length of time throughout which the broadcast key remains valid. When the re-keying period expires, the broadcast key is no longer valid and broadcast key renewal is required. The default is 14400 seconds (four hours). 0 disables re-keying. 30 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave WPA/WPA2 – Personal Passphrase Enter a passphrase of between 8 and 63 alphanumeric characters to create a passphrase used for data encryption and authentication. Click Hide / Show Passphrase to toggle visibility. WPA/WPA2 – Enterprise 802.1X Version http://www.pepwave.com Choose v1 or v2 of the 802.1x EAPOL. When v1 is selected, both v1 and v2 clients can associate with the access point. When v2 is selected, only v2 clients can associate with the access point. Most modern wireless clients support v2. For stations that do not support v2, select v1. The default is v2. 31 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Web Portal Login Web Portal Authentication Method RADIUS Security Splash Page Select Enable to turn on your access point’s built-in web portal functionality. Choose Open Access to allow users to connect without authentication or RADIUS to require authentication. If RADIUS is selected, you’ll be given the opportunity to select a RADIUS security method in the next field. Select PAP, EAP-TTLS PAP, EAP-TTLS MSCHAPv2, or PEAPv0 EAP-MSCHAPv2. If your web portal will use a splash page, choose HTTP or HTTPS and enter the splash page’s URL. Landing Page If your web portal will use a landing page, check this box. Landing Page URL If you have checked Landing Page, enter your landing page’s URL here. Concurrent Login Access Quota Check this box to allow users to have more than one logged in session active at a time. Enter a value in minutes to limit access time on a given login or enter 0 to allow unlimited use time on a single login. Likewise, enter a value in MB for the total bandwidth allowed or enter 0 to allow unlimited bandwidth on a single login. Inactive Timeout Enter a value in minutes to logout following the specified period of inactivity or enter 0 to disable inactivity logouts. Quota Reset Time 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 establishes a timer for each user that begins after the quota has been reached. http://www.pepwave.com 32 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Access Control Restricted Mode MAC Address List http://www.pepwave.com The settings allow administrator to control access using Mac address filtering. Available options are None, Deny all except listed, Accept all except listed, and RADIUS MAC Authentication. Connections coming from the MAC addresses in this list will be either denied or accepted based on the option selected in the previous field. 33 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave RADIUS Server Settings Host Secret Authentication Port Enter the IP address of the primary RADIUS server and, if applicable, the secondary RADIUS server. Enter the RADIUS shared secret for the primary server and, if applicable, the secondary RADIUS server. Enter the UDP authentication port(s) used by your RADIUS server(s) or click the Default button to enter 1812. Accounting Port Enter the UDP accounting port(s) used by your RADIUS server(s) or click the Default button to enter 1813. Maximum Retransmission Enter the maximum number of allowed retransmissions. RADIUS Request Interval http://www.pepwave.com Enter a value in seconds to limit RADIUS request frequency. Note the initial value will double on each retransmission. 34 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave Guest Protect Block LAN Access Check this box to block access from the LAN. To specify a subnet to block, enter the IP address and choose a subnet mask from the Custom Subnet drop-down menu. To add the blocked subnet, click click . To delete a blocked subnet, To create an exception to a blocked subnet (above), enter the IP address and choose a Block Exception Block PepVPN subnet mask from the drop-down menu. To add the exception, click an exception, click . To delete To block PepVPN access, check this box. Bandwidth Management Bandwidth Management Upstream Limit Check this box to enable bandwidth management. Enter a value in kpbs to limit the wireless network’s upstream bandwidth. Enter 0 to allow unlimited upstream bandwidth. Downstream Limit Enter a value in kpbs to limit the wireless network’s downstream bandwidth. Enter 0 to allow unlimited downstream bandwidth. Client Upstream Limit Enter a value in kpbs to limit connected clients’ upstream bandwidth. Enter 0 to allow unlimited upstream bandwidth. Client http://www.pepwave.com Enter a value in kpbs to limit connected clients’ downstream bandwidth. Enter 0 to allow 35 Copyright © 5/23/16 Pepwave
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