Pro Nets Technology WA25TD2 ADSL 2 PLUS ROUTER WIRELESS User Manual WA25TC2

Pro-Nets Technology Corporation ADSL 2 PLUS ROUTER WIRELESS WA25TC2

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802.11g Wireless
Four Port Ethernet
ADSL2+ Router
User’s Manual
November 2007
FCC Warning
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device,
pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection
against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and
can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the
instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communication. However, there is no
guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause
harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the
equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of
the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. the receiver is
connected.
FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for
compliance could void the user’s authority to operate this equipment.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two
conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept
any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
FCC Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled
environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with a minimum distance of about
eight inches (20cm) between the radiator and your body.
This transmitter must not be co-located or operated in conjunction with any other antenna or
transmitter.
Notice
Changes or modifications to the equipment, which are not approved by the party responsible for
compliance could affect the user's authority to operate the equipment. Company has an on-going
policy of upgrading its products and it may be possible that information in this document is not
up-to-date. Please check with your local distributors for the latest information.
Copyright
2007 All Rights Reserved.
No part of this document can be copied or reproduced in any form without written consent from
the company.
Trademarks:
All trade names and trademarks are the properties of their respective companies.
Revision History
Revision
History
V1.1
1st release
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ........................................................................6
1.1
Introduction .................................................................................................. 6
1.2
Product Features ......................................................................................... 6
2. Hardware Installation........................................................10
2.1
System Requirements ............................................................................... 10
2.2
Package Contents ...................................................................................... 10
2.3
Front Panel Indicators and Description................................................... 10
2.4
Back Panel.................................................................................................. 11
2.5
Connect Related Devices .......................................................................... 11
3. Connecting Wireless ADSL2+ Router via Ethernet .............12
3.1
Setup Wireless ADSL2+ router via Ethernet Cable ................................. 12
3.2
Configure TCP/IP........................................................................................ 12
4. Configure Wireless ADSL2+ Router via HTML ....................26
4.1
Login ........................................................................................................... 26
4.2
Navigating the Web Configurator ............................................................. 27
5. Quick Start Wizard.............................................................28
5.1
Setting a New Password............................................................................ 30
5.2
Choose your Time Zone ............................................................................ 30
5.3
Set your Internet Connection .................................................................... 31
5.4
5.3.1
Configuring Dynamic IP Address................................................... 31
5.3.2
Configuring Static IP Address........................................................ 32
5.3.3
Configuring PPPoE ......................................................................... 33
5.3.4
Configuring PPPoA ......................................................................... 33
5.3.5
Configuring Bridge Mode ............................................................... 34
5.3.6
Multiplexing ..................................................................................... 35
5.3.7
VPI and VCI ...................................................................................... 35
Finishing the Wizard .................................................................................. 36
6. Interface Setup .................................................................37
6.1
Internet ........................................................................................................ 37
6.1.1 ATM VC & QoS.................................................................................... 38
6.1.2 Encapsulation..................................................................................... 39
6.2
LAN .............................................................................................................. 43
6.2.1 Router Local IP................................................................................... 43
6.2.2 Explaining RIP Setup ......................................................................... 44
6.2.3 DHCP Server....................................................................................... 44
6.2.4 DHCP Relay ........................................................................................ 45
6.2.5 DNS Relay........................................................................................... 46
6.3
Wireless....................................................................................................... 47
6.3.1 Access Point Settings ....................................................................... 47
6.3.2 Multiple SSIDs Settings ..................................................................... 48
6.3.3 MAC Address Filter............................................................................ 48
7 Advanced Setup..................................................................49
7.1
Firewall ........................................................................................................ 49
7.2
Routing........................................................................................................ 49
7.3
NAT .............................................................................................................. 51
7.3.1
What NAT Does................................................................................ 52
7.3.2
How NAT Works............................................................................... 52
7.3.3
NAT Application............................................................................... 53
7.3.4
NAT Mapping Types ........................................................................ 54
7.3.5
DMZ................................................................................................... 54
7.3.6
Virtual Server ................................................................................... 55
7.3.7
IP Address Mapping ........................................................................ 56
7.4
QoS .............................................................................................................. 58
7.5
VLAN ........................................................................................................... 59
7.6
ADSL ........................................................................................................... 60
8. Access Management ..........................................................61
8.1
ACL .............................................................................................................. 61
8.2
Filter ............................................................................................................ 62
8.3
SNMP ........................................................................................................... 66
8.4
UPnP............................................................................................................ 66
8.5
DDNS ........................................................................................................... 67
8.6
CWMP .......................................................................................................... 68
9. Maintenance ......................................................................70
9.1
Administration ............................................................................................ 70
9.2
Time Zone ................................................................................................... 70
9.3
Firmware ..................................................................................................... 72
9.4
System Restart ........................................................................................... 72
9.5
Diagnostic ................................................................................................... 73
10. Status ..............................................................................74
10.1
Device Info ................................................................................................ 74
10.2
System Log ............................................................................................... 76
10.3
Statistics ................................................................................................... 77
11. Troubleshooting ..............................................................79
11.1
Using LEDs to Diagnose Problems ........................................................ 79
11.1.1
Power LED...................................................................................... 79
11.1.2
LAN LED ......................................................................................... 79
11.1.3
ADSL LED....................................................................................... 79
11.2
Problems with the Web Interface ............................................................ 80
11.3
Problems with the Login Username and Password .............................. 80
11.4
Problems with LAN Interface................................................................... 81
11.5
Problems with WAN Interface.................................................................. 81
11.6
Problems with the Internet Access......................................................... 82
1. Introduction
1.1 Introduction
This full rate Wireless ADSL2+ router is an all-in-one gateway for Home and SOHO
applications. This gateway are with full-featured ADSL router that provides high-speed Internet
access, 4-port Ethernet switch direct connections to individual PCs or local area network with
10/100 Base-T Ethernet and 54Mbps IEEE802.11g wireless connectivity. This device uses
advanced ADSL chipset solution with complete set of industry standard features for high-speed
Internet access. Also built-in 54Mbps IEEE802.11g wireless service can provide you easy and
convenient way to connect the PCs and Internet. User can enjoy higher quality multimedia and
real-time applications such as online gaming, Video-on-Demand, VoIP and other bandwidth
consuming services. Also the feature-rich routing functions are seamlessly integrated to ADSL
service for existing corporate or home users. This product is made in ISO9001 approved factory
and complies with FCC part15 regulations and CE approval.
1.2 Product Features
‹ Application Diagram
IP Phone / Video Phone
Wireless Router
‹
IP Phone / PDA / NB
High Speed Internet Access
This Wireless ADSL2+ router complies with ADSL / ADSL2 / ADSL2+ standards. It can
support downstream rates of up to 24Mbps and upstream rates of up to 1Mbps. This ADSL2+
router is compliant with the following standards.
‹
ANSI T1.413 issue 2
ITU-T G.992.1 (G.dmt)
ITU-T G.992.2 (G.lite)
G.994.1 (G.hs, Multimode)
ITU-T G.992.3 (ADSL2 G.dmt.bis)
ITU-T G.992.4 (ADSL2 G.lite.bis)
ITU-T G.992.5 (ADSL2+; Annex A, B, I, J, L & M)
Reach Extended ADSL (RE ADSL)
Quick Setup Wizard
Support Quick Setup Wizard Web GUI and Easy setup software to install this Wireless
ADSL2+ router easily and quickly.
‹
‹
Multi-connection protocol support
Multi Protocol over AAL5 (RFC1483 / 2684)
Classical IP over ATM (RFC 1577)
VC and LLC Multiplexing
PPP over Ethernet (RFC 2516)
PPP over ATM (RFC 2364)
Supports OAM F4/F5 loop-back, AIS and RDI OAM cells.
ATM Forum UNI 3.1/4.0 PVC
Support up to 8PVCs.
Traffic Shaping (ATM QoS) UBR, CBR, VBR-rt, VBR-nrt
Network Address Translation (NAT)
Network Address Translation (NAT) allows the translation of an Internet protocol address
used within one network (for example a private IP address used in a local network) to a different
IP address known within another network (for example a public IP address used on the Internet).
‹
Universal Plug and Play (UPnP)
Universal Plug and Play is a standard that uses Internet and Web protocols to enable
devices such as PCs, peripherals, intelligent appliances, and wireless devices to be plugged into
a network and automatically know about each other. This protocol is used to enable simple and
robust connectivity among stand-alone devices and PCs.
‹
Dynamic DNS Support
With Dynamic DNS support, you can have a static hostname alias for a dynamic IP
address, allowing the host to be more easily accessible from various locations on the Internet.
You must register for this service with a Dynamic DNS client.
‹
DHCP Support
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) allows individual clients to obtain TCP/IP
configuration at start-up from a centralized DHCP server. The ADSL router has built-in DHCP
server capability enabled by default. It can assign IP addresses, an IP default gateway and DNS
servers to DHCP clients. It can also act as a surrogate DHCP server (DHCP Relay) where it
relays IP address assignment from the actual real DHCP server to the clients.
‹
‹
Device Management
Web-based GUI Configuration / Management
Command-line Interpreter (CLI)
SNMP support (V.1 and V.2C)
Telnet Remote Management
Firmware upgrade via FTP / TFTP (Web-based GUI)
Built-in Diagnostic tool
TR-069 support (CPE WAN Management Protocol) (Optional)
10/100M Auto-negotiation Fast Ethernet switch
This auto-negotiation feature allows the router to detect the speed of incoming
transmissions and adjust appropriately without manual intervention. It allows data transfer of
either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps in either half-duplex or full-duplex mode depending on your Ethernet
network.
‹
‹
Bridging / Routing support
Ethernet to ADSL self-learning Transparent Bridging (IEEE 802.1D)
IP routing-RIPv2 (backward compatible with RIPv1)
Static IP routing
Routing (TCP/IP/UDP/ARP/ICMP)
IP Multicast IGMP v1/v2
Wireless
IEEE802.11g compliance, backward compatible with 802.11b (at 11Mbps)
64/128-bit WEP, WPA, WPA2 security
Dynamic date rate scaling at 54, 48, 36, 24, 18, 12, 9 and 6Mbps for IEEE802.11g
Dynamic date rate scaling at 11, 5.5, 2 and 1Mbps for IEEE802.11b
‹
Supports Quality of Service (QoS), 802.11e, WMM
MAC Address Filtering
Security
PPP over PAP (Password Authentication Protocol; RFC1334)
PPP over CHAP (Challenge Authentication Protocol; RFC1994)
DoS Protection
Stateful Packet Inspection (SPI)
VPN (IPSec, PPTP, L2TP) pass through
Built-in NAT Firewall
IP-based Packet filtering
Password Protected System Management
2. Hardware Installation
2.1 System Requirements
Pentium III 266 MHz processor or higher
128 MB RAM minimum
20 MB of free disk space minimum
RJ45 Ethernet Port
2.2 Package Contents
Wireless ADSL2+ Router
RJ-45 Ethernet cable
RJ-11 Phone cable
Power Adapter
Quick Installation Guide
One External Antenna (for detachable model)
2.3 Front Panel Indicators and Description
Front panel of this Wireless ADSL2+ router has LED indicators to display router’s
operating status.
Descriptions of LED status
PWR
WLAN
ADSL
When an active power adapter is connected with this router, this LED will light up.
When WLAN card installed properly, this LED will be flashing. When transferring data,
the LED will be steadily.
When connection with Internet (ADSL Connected) is established, this LED will light up.
When this LED is flashing: NO ADSL physical connection
LAN1
When port 1 connection with PC or Switch / Hub is established, this LED will light up.
LAN2
When port 2 connection with PC or Switch / Hub is established, this LED will light up.
LAN3
When port 3 connection with PC or Switch / Hub is established, this LED will light up.
LAN4
When port 4 connection with PC or Switch / Hub is established, this LED will light up.
10
2.4 Back Panel
PWR
Connect with power adapter
ON/OFF
Power switch button
LINE
Connect with phone cable
Connect with Ethernet Cable to Switch Hub or PC
Connect with Ethernet Cable to Switch Hub or PC
Connect with Ethernet Cable to Switch Hub or PC
Connect with Ethernet Cable to Switch Hub or PC
DEFAULT
Reset button
2.5 Connect Related Devices
1) Connect Router to LINE
Plug the provided RJ-11 phone cable into LINE port on the back panel of the router
and insert the other end into splitter or wall phone jack.
2) Connect Router to LAN
Plug RJ-45 Ethernet Cable into LAN port on the back panel of the router and insert
the other end of the Ethernet cable on your PC’s Ethernet port or switch / hub.
3) Connect Router to Power Adapter
Plug Power Adapter to PWR port on the back panel of the router and the other end to
a power outlet.
4) Press ON/OFF button to start the router
Warning! Only use the power adapter provided in the package, otherwise it may cause
hardware damage.
11
3. Connecting Wireless ADSL2+ Router via Ethernet
Your router can be managed from anywhere with the embedded Web configuration using a
Web browser, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator. Internet Explorer 6.0
and later or Netscape Navigator 7.0 and later versions with JavaScript enabled should be used.
3.1 Setup Wireless ADSL2+ router via Ethernet Cable
If there is an available LAN card present on your PC, you just simply connect ADSL router
and PC through the Ethernet cable. Once you establish Internet connection, you could browse
the Web through the Ethernet cable.
3.2 Configure TCP/IP
For Windows 98SE and ME
Step 1: Click Start then Settings and choose Control Panel
Step 2: Double click Network icon.
Step 3: Select Configuration tab, then choose TCP/IP from the list of installed network
Components and click Properties button.
Step 4: You can setup the following configurations in two methods:
12
Option1: Get an IP from Router Automatically
Select the IP Address tab.
In this page, click Obtain an IP address automatically radio button.
1)
Select Gateway tab and click OK
13
2)
Then, select DNS Configuration tab and select Disable DNS then click OK to
finish the configuration.
Option2: Configure IP Manually
1) At IP Address tab, select Specify an IP address, set default IP address for the
Router is 192.168.1.1, so use 192.168.1.X (X is a number between 2 to 254) for
IP Address field and 255.255.255.0 for Subnet Mask field.
14
2) Select Gateway tab and add default Router IP Address “192.168.1.1” in the New
gateway field and click Add.
Under DNS Configuration tab, select Enable DNS and add DNS values
(192.168.1.1) in DNS Server Search Order field then click Add.
15
For Windows 2000
Step 1: (a) Right-click My Network Places and select Properties in the main window screen
(b) Or, go to Start / Settings / Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click
on Network and Dial-up Connections.
Step 2: Right click Local Area Connection (your local network hooked up with ADSL
router) and select Properties:
16
Step 3: Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) then click Properties:
Configure IP Automatically:
Step 4: Select Obtain an IP address automatically and Obtain DNS server address
automatically then click OK to complete IP configuring process.
17
Configure IP Manually:
Step 4: Select Use the following IP address and Use the following DNS server
addresses.
IP address: Fill in IP address 192.168.1.x (x is a number between 2 to 254).
Subnet mask: Default value is 255.255.255.0.
Default gateway: Default value is 192.168.1.1.
Preferred DNS server: Fill in preferred DNS server IP address.
Alternate DNS server: Fill in alternate DNS server IP address.
For Windows XP
Step 1: Click Start then select Control Panel.
18
Step 2: Double-click Network Connections icon.
Step 3: Right-click Local Area Connection (local network your ADSL hooked up with) and
select Properties:
19
Step 4: Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) then click Properties:
Configure IP address Automatically:
Step 5: Select Obtain an IP address automatically and Obtain DNS server address
automatically. Click OK to finish the configuration.
20
Configure IP Address Manually:
Step 5: Select Use the following IP address and Use the following DNS server
addresses.
IP address: Fill in IP address 192.168.1.x (x is a number between 2 to 254).
Subnet mask: Default value is 255.255.255.0.
Default gateway: Default value is 192.168.1.1.
Preferred DNS server: Fill in preferred DNS server IP address.
Alternate DNS server: Fill in alternate DNS server IP address.
You can use ping command under DOS prompt to check if you have setup TCP/IP
protocol correctly and if your computer has successfully connected to this router.
1) Type ping 192.168.1.1 under DOS prompt and the following messages will appear:
Pinging 192.168.1.1 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes=32 times<2ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes=32 times<1ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes=32 times<10ms TTL=64
2) If the communication link between your computer and router is not setup correctly,
after you type ping 192.168.1.1 under DOS prompt following messages will appear:
Pinging 192.168.1.1 with 32 bytes of data:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Cable issue or something wrong might cause this failure in configuration procedure.
21
For Windows Vista
Step 1: Click Start then select Control Panel (in the Classic View).
Step 2: Double-click Network and Sharing Center icon.
22
Step 3: Select “Manage Network connections”.
Step 4: Right-click Local Area Connection (local network your ADSL hooked up with) and
select Properties:
23
Step 5: Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) then click Properties:
Configure IP address Automatically:
Step 6: Select Obtain an IP address automatically and Obtain DNS server address
automatically. Click OK to finish the configuration.
24
Configure IP Address Manually:
Step 7: Select Use the following IP address and Use the following DNS server
addresses.
IP address: Fill in IP address 192.168.1.x (x is a number between 2 to 254).
Subnet mask: Default value is 255.255.255.0.
Default gateway: Default value is 192.168.1.1.
Preferred DNS server: Fill in preferred DNS server IP address.
Alternate DNS server: Fill in alternate DNS server IP address.
You can use ping command under DOS prompt to check if you have setup TCP/IP
protocol correctly and if your computer has successfully connected to this router.
2) Type ping 192.168.1.1 under DOS prompt and the following messages will appear:
Pinging 192.168.1.1 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes=32 times<2ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes=32 times<1ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes=32 times<10ms TTL=64
If the communication link between your computer and router is not setup correctly, after
you type ping 192.168.1.1 under DOS prompt following messages will appear:
Pinging 192.168.1.1 with 32 bytes of data:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
This failure might be caused by cable issue or something wrong in configuration procedure.
25
4. Configure Wireless ADSL2+ Router via HTML
This device supports a Web-based (HTML) GUI to allow users to configure Router setting
via Web browser.
4.1 Login
1) Launch the Web browser.
2) Enter the default IP address http://192.168.1.1
3) Entry of the username and password will be displayed. Enter the default login
User Name and Password:
The default login User Name of the administrator is admin, and the default
login password is admin.
26
4.2 Navigating the Web Configurator
Steps to navigate the Web configuration from the Site Map are summarized as below.
Steps to navigate the Web configuration from the Site Map are summarized below.
¾
Click on Quick Start to begin a wizard that helps to configure your router.
¾
Click on Interface Setup to configure Internet and LAN functions.
¾
Click on Advanced Setup to configure advanced features.
¾
Click on Access Management to manage Internet access options.
¾
Click on Maintenance to set a new password, to set the time zone, to upgrade or reload
firmware and to run diagnostic tests on the router
¾
Click on Status to see router device information, system logs and performance statistics.
¾
Click on Help to see available help topics.
27
5. Quick Start Wizard
Click Quick Start to guide you to configure the device to connect your ISP and have
Internet access within minutes. This Quick Start will guide you step by step to configure the
password, time zone, and WAN settings of you device. This Wizard is a helpful guide for first time
uses to the device.
NOTE: It is a strong recommendation that using Quick Start to configure your ADSL settings.
Click on the RUN WIZARD button to start the Quick Start wizard. The Quick Start wizard
will open a new browser window with the following screen.
28
.
The Quick Start Setup Wizard includes four quick steps: 1) Set your new password. 2)
Choose your time zone. 3) Set your Internet connection. 4) Re-start your ADSL router.
Please follow the quick start step by step to configure the device.
Note: If your ISP doesn’t provide DNS, after you complete Quick Start configuration, please go to
Interface Setup Æ Internet to configure your DNS settings.
Click on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without saving.
29
5.1 Setting a New Password
This screen helps you set a new password, replacing the default password.
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
New Password
Enter the password you wish to use here
Confirmed Password
Enter the password again to confirm
Click on BACK to return to the previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit
the wizard without saving.
5.2 Choose your Time Zone
This screen helps you set the time zone for your ADSL2+ Router.
Select the appropriate time zone for your location from the dropdown list. Click on BACK
to return to the previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without
saving.
30
5.3 Set your Internet Connection
This screen helps you select, then configure, your ISP connection type.
Select the Internet connection type you use to connect to your ISP. Click on BACK to return
to the previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard. The following screen
will vary depending on which connection type you chose.
Each screen is explained below:
5.3.1 Configuring Dynamic IP Address
A dynamic IP address connection requests a new IP address from your ISP each time you
connect to it.
31
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
VPI
Enter the VPI here. VPI can range from 0 to 255.
VCI
Enter the VCI here. VCI can range from 1 to 65535.
Connection Type
Select your connection type from the dropdown list.
Your ISP should provide the above information. Click on BACK to return to the
previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without saving.
5.3.2 Configuring Static IP Address
A static IP address connection uses the same IP each time you connect to your ISP.
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
VPI
Enter the VPI here. VPI can range from 0 to 255.
VCI
Enter the VCI here. VCI can range from 1 to 65535.
IP Address
Enter the IP address here.
Subnet Mask
Enter the Subnet Mask here.
ISP Gateway
Enter the ISP Gateway here.
Connection Type
Select your connection type from the dropdown list.
Your ISP should provide this information. Click on BACK to return to the previous
screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without saving.
32
5.3.3 Configuring PPPoE
PPPoE provides access control and billing functionality in a manner similar to dial-up
services using PPP. The router bridges a PPP session over Ethernet (PPP over Ethernet, RFC
2516) from your computer to an ATM Permanent Virtual Circuit (PVC) that connects to the ADSL
Access Concentrator, where the PPP session terminates. Single PVC can support any number
of PPP sessions from your LAN.
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Username
Enter your username here.
Password
Enter your password here.
VPI
Enter the VPI here. VPI can range from 0 to 255.
VCI
Enter the VCI here. VCI can range from 1 to 65535.
Connection Type
Select your connection type from the dropdown list.
Your ISP should provide the above information. Note that you must enter the user
name exactly as your ISP assigned it. If the assigned name is in the form of user@domain where
domain identifies a service name, enter it exactly as given. Click on BACK to return to the
previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without saving.
5.3.4 Configuring PPPoA
Point-to-Point Protocol over ATM Adaptation Layer 5 (AAL5) (PPPoA) provides access
control and billing functionality in a manner similar to dial-up services using PPP. The router
encapsulates the PPP session based on RFC1483 and sends it through ATM PVC to the ISP’s
DSLAM.
33
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Username
Enter your username here.
Password
Enter your password here.
VPI
Enter the VPI here. VPI can range from 0 to 255.
VCI
Enter the VCI here. VCI can range from 1 to 65535.
Connection Type
Select your connection type from the dropdown list.
Your ISP should provide the above information. Note that you must enter the user
name exactly as your ISP assigned it. If the assigned name is in the form of user@domain where
domain identifies a service name, enter it exactly as given. Click on BACK to return to the
previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without saving.
5.3.5 Configuring Bridge Mode
RFC 1483 explains two methods for Multi-protocol Encapsulation over AAL5. The first
method allows multiplexing of multiple protocols over just one ATM virtual circuit (LLC-based
multiplexing). The second method assumes that each individual protocol is carried over a
separate ATM virtual circuit (VC-based multiplexing). Please refer to RFC 1483 for more
information.
34
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
VPI
Enter the VPI here. VPI can range from 0 to 255.
VCI
Enter the VCI here. VCI can range from 32 to 65535.
Connection Type
Select your connection type from the dropdown list.
Your ISP should provide the above information. Click on BACK to return to the
previous screen, on NEXT to continue, or on EXIT to exit the wizard without saving.
5.3.6 Multiplexing
Two conventions identify what protocols a virtual circuit (VC) is carrying. Be sure to use the
multiplexing method your ISP requires.
(1) VC-Based Multiplexing
In VC-based multiplexing, by prior mutual agreement, each protocol is assigned to a
specific virtual circuit. For example, VC1 carries IP, etc. VC-based multiplexing may be dominant
in environments where dynamic creation of large numbers of ATM VCs is fast and economical.
(2) LLC-Based Multiplexing
In LLC-based multiplexing, one VC carries multiple protocols with protocol-identifying
information contained in each packet header. While this method requires extra bandwidth and
processing overhead, this method may be advantageous if it is not practical to have a separate
VC for each carried protocol; for example, if charging heavily depends on the number of
simultaneous VCs.
5.3.7 VPI and VCI
Be sure to use the Virtual Path Identifier (VPI) and Virtual Channel Identifier (VCI) numbers
assigned to you. The valid range for the VPI is 0 to 255. The valid range for the VCI is 32 to
65535. 0 to 31 is reserved for local management of ATM traffic.
35
5.4 Finishing the Wizard
The Quick Start wizard now has all the information it needs. Click on BACK to make
changes or correct mistakes. Click on NEXT to save the current settings. Click on EXIT to exit
the wizard without saving.
Your changes have been saved. Click on CLOSE. The Quick Start wizard window will
close.
36
6. Interface Setup
The physical connections determine whether the router ports are local area network (LAN)
ports or wide area network (WAN) ports. There are two kinds of IP networks. The local, private
kind is the LAN network; the global, public kind is the WAN network. The following illustration
shows the relationship between the router and the two different networks.
A LAN is a shared communication system to which many computers are attached. A LAN is
generally limited to the immediate area, usually the same building or floor of a building.
A WAN is an outside connection to another network or to the Internet.
Click an Interface Setup link to set ATM VC values, ISP Encapsulation, configure multiconnection settings, and LAN configuration.
6.1 Internet
The Internet screen allows you to set up how your router connects to the Internet. If you
already ran the Quick Start wizard, the information you provided to the wizard should be entered
into the fields already. After you finish the changes, click on the SAVE button to save your
changes.
37
6.1.1 ATM VC & QoS
ATM settings are used to connect to your ISP. Your ISP provides VPI, VCI, settings to you.
In this Device, you can totally setup 8 PVCs on different encapsulations if you apply 8 different
virtual circuits from your ISP. You need to activate the VC to take effect. For PVCs management,
you can use ATM QOS to setup each PVC traffic line’s priority.
Virtual Circuit: Select the VC number you want to setup.
VPI: Virtual Path Identifier. The valid range for the VPI is 0 to 255.
VCI: Virtual Channel Identifier. The valid range for the VCI is 1 to 65635 (0 to 31 is reserved for
local management of ATM traffic).
ATM QoS: Select the Quality of Service types for this Virtual Circuit. The ATM QoS types include
CBR(Constant Bit Rate), VBR(Variable Bit Rate) and UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate). These QoS
types are all controlled by the parameters specified below, including PCR, SCR, and MBS.
PCR: Peak Cell Rate (PCR) is the maximum rate at which the sender can send cells. This
parameter may be lower (but not higher) than the maximum line speed. 1 ATM cell is 53 bytes
(424 bits), so a maximum speed of 832 Kbps gives a maximum PCR of 1962 cells/sec. This rate
is not guaranteed because it is dependent on the line speed.
SCR: Sustained Cell Rate (SCR) is the mean cell rate of a bursty, on-off traffic source that can
be sent at the peak rate, and a parameter for burst-type traffic. SCR may not be greater than the
PCR; the system default is 0 cells/sec.
MBS: Maximum Burst Size (MBS) is the maximum number of cells that can be sent at the PCR.
After MBS is reached, cell rates fall below SCR until cell rate averages to the SCR again. At this
38
time, more cells (up to the MBS) can be sent at the PCR again.
CBR is for connections that support constant rates of data transfer. The only parameter you
need to worry about in CBR is PCR.
UBR is for connections that have variable traffic. The only parameter you need to worry about in
UBR is PCR.
rtVBR is for connections that, while having variable traffic, require precise timing between traffic
source and destination. PCR, SCR and MBS must all be set for rtVBR.
nrtVBR is for connections that have variable traffic, do not require precise timing, but still require
a set bandwidth availability. PCR, SCR and MBS must all be set for nrtVBR.
6.1.2 Encapsulation
Select the encapsulation protocol your ISP uses. The following section will vary depending
on which encapsulation protocol you select.
(1) Dynamic IP Address
Select this option if your ISP provides you an IP address automatically. Please enter the
Dynamic IP information accordingly.
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Encapsulation
Select your encapsulation type from the dropdown list.
NAT
Select whether NAT is Enabled or Disabled.
Default Route
Select whether this PVC will be the default route for Internet data.
TCP MTU Option
Enter TCP MTU Value here
Dynamic Route
Select the RIP type and direction from the dropdown lists.
Multicast
Select the multicast protocol you wish to use from the dropdown list.
39
(2) Static IP Address
Select this option to set static IP information. You will need to enter in the encapsulation
type (1483 Bridged IP LLC, 1483 Bridged IP VC-Mux, 1483 Routed IP LLC (IPoA), 1483 Routed
IP VC-Mux), IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address provided to you by your ISP. Each
IP address entered in the fields must be in the appropriate IP form, which is 4 IP octets separated
by a dot (x.x.x.x). The Router will not accept the IP address if it is not in this format.
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Encapsulation
Select your encapsulation type from the dropdown list.
Static IP Address
Enter the static IP Address here.
IP Subnet Mask
Enter the IP Subnet Mask here.
Gateway
Enter the Gateway address here.
NAT
Select whether NAT is Enabled or Disabled.
Default Route
Select whether this PVC will be the default route for Internet data.
Dynamic Route
Select the RIP type and direction from the dropdown lists.
Multicast
Select the multicast protocol you wish to use from the dropdown list.
(3) PPPoA / PPPoE
Select this option if your ISP requires you to use a PPPoE connection. This option is
typically used for DSL service. Select Dynamic PPPoE to obtain an IP address automatically for
your PPPoE connection. Selection Static PPPoE to use static IP address for your PPPoE
connection. Please enter the information accordingly.
40
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Username
Enter your username for your PPPoE/PPPoA connection.
Password
Enter your password for your PPPoE/PPPoA connection.
Encapsulation
Select your encapsulation type from the dropdown list.
Bridge Interface
Select whether the Interface will be Activated or Deactivated.
Connection
Select whether your connection is always on or if it connects on demand. If on
demand, specify how many minutes the connection may be idle before it
disconnects.
TCP MSS Option
Enter the TCP MSS you wish to use here.
Get IP Address
Choose whether the ROUTER obtains the IP address statically or dynamically.
Static IP Address
Enter the static IP address here. Only if you chose Static above.
IP Subnet Mask
Enter the IP subnet mask here. Only if you chose Static above.
Gateway
Enter the gateway here. Only if you chose Static above.
NAT
Select whether NAT is Enabled or Disabled.
Default Route
Select whether this PVC will be the default route for Internet data.
TCP MTU Option
Enter TCP MTU Value here.
Dynamic Route
Select the RIP type and direction from the dropdown lists.
Multicast
Select the multicast protocol you wish to use from the dropdown list.
41
Connection Setting: For PPPoE/PPPoA connection, you can select Always on or Connect
on-demand. Connect on demand is dependent on the traffic. If there is no traffic (or Idle) for a
pre-specified period of time, the connection will tear down automatically. And once there is traffic
send or receive, the connection will be automatically on.
IP Address: For PPPoE/PPPoA connection, you need to specify the public IP address for this
ADSL Router. The IP address can be either dynamically (via DHCP) or given IP address provide
by your ISP. For Static IP, you need to specify the IP address, Subnet Mask and Gateway IP
address.
NAT: Select this option to Activate/Deactivated the NAT (Network Address Translation) function
for this VC. The NAT function can be activated or deactivated per PVC basis.
[Dynamic Route]
RIP (Routing Information Protocol): Select this option to specify the RIP version, including
RIP1, RIP2-B and RIP2-M. RIP2-B & RIP2-M are both sent in RIP-2 format, the difference is that
RIP2-M using Multicast and RIP2-B using Broadcast format.
RIP Direction: Select this option to specify the RIP direction. None is for disabling the RIP
function. Both means the ADSL Router will periodically send routing information and accept
routing information then incorporate into routing table. IN only means the ADSL router will only
accept but will not send RIP packet. OUT only means the ADSL router will only sent but will not
accept RIP packet.
[Multicast]
IGMP (Internet Group Multicast Protocol): It is a session-layer protocol used to establish
membership in a multicast group. The ADSL supports both IGMP version IGMP-v1 & IGMP-v2.
Select None to disable it.
Your ISP should provide the above information. Note that you must enter the user name
exactly as your ISP assigned it. If the assigned name is in the form of user@domain where
domain identifies a service name, enter it exactly as given.
(4) Bridge Mode
The modem can be configured to act as a bridging device between your LAN and your ISP.
Bridges are devices that enable 2 or more networks to communicate as if they are 2 segments of
the same physical LAN. Please set the Connection type.
42
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
LABEL
Encapsulation
DESCRIPTION
Select your encapsulation type from the dropdown list.
6.2 LAN
There are the IP settings of the LAN Interface for the device. These settings may be
referred to as Private settings. You may change the LAN IP address if needed. The LAN IP
address is provided to your internal network and cannot be seen on the Internet.
6.2.1 Router Local IP
IP Address: Enter the IP address of your ADSL router in dotted decimal notation, for
example, 192.168.1.1 (default setting).
IP Subnet Mask: Your ADSL router will automatically calculate the subnet mask based on
the IP address that you assign. Unless you are implementing sub netting, use the subnet
mask computed by the ADSL router.
43
Dynamic Route: Select the Dynamic Route from RIP1, RIP2-B, and RIP2-M. Please refer to
InternetÆ Dynamic Route. The only difference is the interface.
IGMP Snoop: You can disabled and enabled IGMP Snoop function.
6.2.2 Explaining RIP Setup
Routing Information Protocol (RIP) allows a router to exchange routing information with
other routers. The RIP Direction field controls how RIP packets are allowed to enter and
leave the router. Selecting Both means the router will broadcast its routing table and
incorporate the RIP information that it receives. Selecting In Only means the router will
only accept RIP packets received, not send RIP packets. Selecting Out Only means the
router will only send RIP packets, not accept any RIP packets received. Selecting
None means the router will not send any RIP packets nor will it accept any RIP packets
received.
The Dynamic Route field controls the format and the broadcasting method of RIP
packets that the router sends. It recognizes both formats when receiving packets.
RIP-1 is universally supported, but RIP-2 carries more information. RIP-1 is adequate for
most networks. Only consider RIP-2 if your network has unusual topology.
Both RIP-2B and RIP-2M sends the routing data in RIP-2 format. RIP-2B uses subnet
broadcasting while RIP-2M uses multicasting.
Direction: Select the RIP direction from None, Both, In Only and Out Only.
Multicast: IGMP (Internet Group Multicast Protocol) is a session-layer protocol used to
establish membership in a multicast group. The ADSL router supports both IGMP-v1 and
IGMP-v2. Select None to disable it. Please refer to InternetÆ Multicast. The only difference
is the interface.
6.2.3 DHCP Server
The DHCP Server gives out IP addresses when a device is booting up and request an IP to
be logged on to the network. It must be set as a DHCP client to obtain the IP address
automatically. By default, the DHCP Server is enabled. The DHCP address pool contains the
range of the IP address that will automatically be assigned to the client on the network.
44
LABEL
Starting IP Address
DESCRIPTION
Enter the starting IP address you wish to use as the DHCP server's IP
assignment.
IP Pool Count
Enter the maximum user pool size you wish to allow.
Lease Time
Enter the amount of time you wish to lease out a given IP address.
DNS Relay
Select the DNS relay option you wish to use from the dropdown list.
Primary DNS Server
Enter the primary DNS server IP address you wish to use. For user
discovered DNS only.
Secondary DNS Server
Enter the secondary DNS server IP address you wish to use. For user
discovered DNS only.
6.2.4 DHCP Relay
A DHCP relay is a computer that forwards DHCP data between computers that request IP
addresses and the DHCP server that assigns the addresses. Each of the device’s interfaces
can be configured as a DHCP relay. If it is enable, the DHCP requests from local PCs will
forward to the DHCP server runs on WAN side. To have this function working properly,
please run on router mode only, disable the DHCP server on the LAN port, and make sure
the routing table has the correct routing entry.
DHCP Server IP for relay agent: The DHCP server IP Address runs on WAN side.
45
6.2.5 DNS Relay
The DNS Configuration allows the user to set the configuration of DNS.
DNS Rely Selection: If user wants to disable this feature, he just needs to set both Primary
& Secondary DNS to 0.0.0.0. Using DNS relay, users can setup DNS server IP to
192.168.1.1 on their computer. If not, device will perform as NO DNS relay.
If you don’t want to use the DNS Relay option, set the DNS relay to “Use User
Discovered DNS Server Only” and set both Primary and Secondary DNS Servers to
“0.0.0.0”.
46

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