ZyXEL Communications NBG4604 Wireless N Gigabit Managed Router User Manual User s manual
ZyXEL Communications Corporation Wireless N Gigabit Managed Router User s manual
Contents
- 1. Manual Part 1
- 2. Manual Part 2
Manual Part 1
NBG4604 ny on fid en tia Wireless N Gigabit Managed Router Default Login Details http://192.168.1.1 pa IP Address 1234 om Password Firmware Version 1.0 Edition 3, 04/2010 www.zyxel.com www.zyxel.com Copyright © 2010 ZyXEL Communications Corporation C om pa ny on fid en tia About This User's Guide About This User's Guide tia Intended Audience Tips for Reading User’s Guides On-Screen en This manual is intended for people who want to configure the NBG4604 using the Web Configurator. You should have at least a basic knowledge of TCP/IP networking concepts and topology. fid When reading a ZyXEL User’s Guide On-Screen, keep the following in mind: • If you don’t already have the latest version of Adobe Reader, you can download it from http://www.adobe.com. on • Use the PDF’s bookmarks to quickly navigate to the areas that interest you. Adobe Reader’s bookmarks pane opens by default in all ZyXEL User’s Guide PDFs. • If you know the page number or know vaguely which page-range you want to view, you can enter a number in the toolbar in Reader, then press [ENTER] to jump directly to that page. • Type [CTRL]+[F] to open the Adobe Reader search utility and enter a word or phrase. This can help you quickly pinpoint the information you require. You can also enter text directly into the toolbar in Reader. ny • To quickly move around within a page, press the [SPACE] bar. This turns your cursor into a “hand” with which you can grab the page and move it around freely on your screen. pa • Embedded hyperlinks are actually cross-references to related text. Click them to jump to the corresponding section of the User’s Guide PDF. Related Documentation • Quick Start Guide om The Quick Start Guide is designed to help you get your NBG4604 up and running right away. It contains information on setting up your network and configuring for Internet access. • Supporting Disc The embedded Web Help contains descriptions of individual screens and supplementary information. • Support Disc Refer to the included CD for support documents. NBG4604 User’s Guide About This User's Guide Documentation Feedback Send your comments, questions or suggestions to: techwriters@zyxel.com.tw tia The Technical Writing Team, ZyXEL Communications Corp., 6 Innovation Road II, Science-Based Industrial Park, Hsinchu, 30099, Taiwan. Thank you! en Need More Help? • Download Library on fid More help is available at www.zyxel.com. ny Search for the latest product updates and documentation from this link. Read the Tech Doc Overview to find out how to efficiently use the User Guide, Quick Start Guide and Command Line Interface Reference Guide in order to better understand how to use your product. • Knowledge Base pa If you have a specific question about your product, the answer may be here. This is a collection of answers to previously asked questions about ZyXEL products. • Forum om This contains discussions on ZyXEL products. Learn from others who use ZyXEL products and share your experiences as well. NBG4604 User’s Guide About This User's Guide Customer Support tia See http://www.zyxel.com/web/contact_us.php for contact information. Please have the following information ready when you contact an office. Should problems arise that cannot be solved by the methods listed above, you should contact your vendor. If you cannot contact your vendor, then contact a ZyXEL office for the region in which you bought the device. • Product model and serial number. en • Warranty Information. om pa ny on fid • Date that you received your device. NBG4604 User’s Guide Document Conventions Warnings and Notes These are how warnings and notes are shown in this User’s Guide. tia Document Conventions en Warnings tell you about things that could harm you or your device. Note: Notes tell you other important information (for example, other things you may need to configure or helpful tips) or recommendations. fid Syntax Conventions • The NBG4604 may be referred to as the “NBG4604”, the “device”, the “product” or the “system” in this User’s Guide. • Product labels, screen names, field labels and field choices are all in bold font. on • A key stroke is denoted by square brackets and uppercase text, for example, [ENTER] means the “enter” or “return” key on your keyboard. • “Enter” means for you to type one or more characters and then press the [ENTER] key. “Select” or “choose” means for you to use one of the predefined choices. ny • A right angle bracket ( > ) within a screen name denotes a mouse click. For example, Maintenance > Log > Log Setting means you first click Maintenance in the navigation panel, then the Log sub menu and finally the Log Setting tab to get to that screen. • Units of measurement may denote the “metric” value or the “scientific” value. For example, “k” for kilo may denote “1000” or “1024”, “M” for mega may denote “1000000” or “1048576” and so on. om pa • “e.g.,” is a shorthand for “for instance”, and “i.e.,” means “that is” or “in other words”. NBG4604 User’s Guide Document Conventions Icons Used in Figures Computer Notebook computer Server Modem Firewall Telephone Switch fid en tia NBG4604 Figures in this User’s Guide may use the following generic icons. The NBG4604 icon is not an exact representation of your device. om pa ny on Router NBG4604 User’s Guide Safety Warnings Safety Warnings pa ny on fid en tia • Do NOT use this product near water, for example, in a wet basement or near a swimming pool. • Do NOT expose your device to dampness, dust or corrosive liquids. • Do NOT store things on the device. • Do NOT install, use, or service this device during a thunderstorm. There is a remote risk of electric shock from lightning. • Connect ONLY suitable accessories to the device. • Do NOT open the device or unit. Opening or removing covers can expose you to dangerous high voltage points or other risks. ONLY qualified service personnel should service or disassemble this device. Please contact your vendor for further information. • Make sure to connect the cables to the correct ports. • Place connecting cables carefully so that no one will step on them or stumble over them. • Always disconnect all cables from this device before servicing or disassembling. • Use ONLY an appropriate power adaptor or cord for your device. • Connect the power adaptor or cord to the right supply voltage (for example, 110V AC in North America or 230V AC in Europe). • Do NOT allow anything to rest on the power adaptor or cord and do NOT place the product where anyone can walk on the power adaptor or cord. • Do NOT use the device if the power adaptor or cord is damaged as it might cause electrocution. • If the power adaptor or cord is damaged, remove it from the power outlet. • Do NOT attempt to repair the power adaptor or cord. Contact your local vendor to order a new one. • Do not use the device outside, and make sure all the connections are indoors. There is a remote risk of electric shock from lightning. • Do NOT obstruct the device ventilation slots, as insufficient airflow may harm your device. • Antenna Warning! This device meets ETSI and FCC certification requirements when using the included antenna(s). Only use the included antenna(s). • If you wall mount your device, make sure that no electrical lines, gas or water pipes will be damaged. Your product is marked with this symbol, which is known as the WEEE mark. WEEE stands for Waste Electronics and Electrical Equipment. It means that used electrical om and electronic products should not be mixed with general waste. Used electrical and electronic equipment should be treated separately. NBG4604 User’s Guide Contents Overview Contents Overview tia User’s Guide ........................................................................................................................... 19 Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 21 The WPS Button ........................................................................................................................ 25 en The Web Configurator ............................................................................................................... 27 Connection Wizard .................................................................................................................... 39 AP Mode .................................................................................................................................... 55 Tutorials ..................................................................................................................................... 63 fid Technical Reference .............................................................................................................. 75 on Wireless LAN ............................................................................................................................. 77 WAN ........................................................................................................................................ 101 LAN ...........................................................................................................................................113 DHCP Server ............................................................................................................................117 Network Address Translation (NAT) ........................................................................................ 123 Dynamic DNS .......................................................................................................................... 131 Firewall .................................................................................................................................... 135 Content Filtering ...................................................................................................................... 139 pa ny Static Route ............................................................................................................................. 143 Bandwidth Management .......................................................................................................... 147 Remote Management .............................................................................................................. 155 Universal Plug-and-Play (UPnP) ............................................................................................. 159 SNMP ...................................................................................................................................... 167 ACS ......................................................................................................................................... 171 System ..................................................................................................................................... 177 Logs ......................................................................................................................................... 183 Tools ........................................................................................................................................ 187 Sys OP Mode .......................................................................................................................... 193 om Language ................................................................................................................................. 197 Troubleshooting ....................................................................................................................... 199 Product Specifications ............................................................................................................. 207 NBG4604 User’s Guide C om pa ny on fid en tia Contents Overview 10 NBG4604 User’s Guide Table of Contents Table of Contents tia About This User's Guide .......................................................................................................... 3 Document Conventions............................................................................................................ 6 en Safety Warnings........................................................................................................................ 8 Contents Overview ................................................................................................................... 9 fid Table of Contents.................................................................................................................... 11 Part I: User’s Guide................................................................................ 19 on Chapter 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 21 1.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 21 1.2 Applications ......................................................................................................................... 21 1.3 Ways to Manage the NBG4604 ........................................................................................... 22 1.4 Good Habits for Managing the NBG4604 ............................................................................ 22 1.5 LEDs .................................................................................................................................... 22 ny Chapter 2 The WPS Button...................................................................................................................... 25 2.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 25 pa Chapter 3 The Web Configurator ............................................................................................................ 27 3.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 27 om 3.2 Accessing the Web Configurator ......................................................................................... 27 3.3 Resetting the NBG4604 ....................................................................................................... 29 3.3.1 Procedure to Use the Reset Button ........................................................................... 29 3.4 Navigating the Web Configurator ...................................................................................... 29 3.5 Status Screen (Router Mode) .............................................................................................. 30 3.5.1 Navigation Panel ........................................................................................................ 32 3.5.2 Summary: DHCP Table ........................................................................................... 34 3.5.3 Summary: Packet Statistics ..................................................................................... 35 3.5.4 Summary: WLAN Station Status ............................................................................ 36 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard ................................................................................................................. 39 NBG4604 User’s Guide 11 Table of Contents tia 4.1 Wizard Setup ....................................................................................................................... 39 4.2 Connection Wizard: STEP 1: System Information ............................................................... 40 4.2.1 System Name ............................................................................................................. 40 4.2.2 Domain Name ............................................................................................................ 41 4.3 Connection Wizard: STEP 2: Wireless LAN ........................................................................ 42 4.3.1 Extend (WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK) Security ............................................................... 44 4.4 Connection Wizard: STEP 3: Internet Configuration ........................................................... 44 fid en 4.4.1 Ethernet Connection .................................................................................................. 45 4.4.2 PPPoE Connection .................................................................................................... 46 4.4.3 PPTP Connection ....................................................................................................... 47 4.4.4 Your IP Address ......................................................................................................... 48 4.4.5 WAN IP Address Assignment ..................................................................................... 49 4.4.6 IP Address and Subnet Mask ..................................................................................... 49 4.4.7 DNS Server Address Assignment .............................................................................. 50 4.4.8 WAN IP and DNS Server Address Assignment ......................................................... 51 4.4.9 WAN MAC Address .................................................................................................... 52 on 4.5 Connection Wizard Complete .............................................................................................. 53 Chapter 5 AP Mode................................................................................................................................... 55 5.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 55 5.2 Setting your NBG4604 to AP Mode ..................................................................................... 55 5.3 Status Screen (AP Mode) .................................................................................................... 56 5.3.1 Navigation Panel ........................................................................................................ 58 5.4 Configuring Your Settings .................................................................................................... 60 ny 5.4.1 LAN Settings .............................................................................................................. 60 5.4.2 WLAN and Maintenance Settings .............................................................................. 60 5.5 Logging in to the Web Configurator in AP Mode ................................................................. 61 pa Chapter 6 Tutorials ................................................................................................................................... 63 6.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 63 6.2 How to Connect to the Internet from an AP ......................................................................... 63 om 6.2.1 Configure Wireless Security Using WPS on both your NBG4604 and Wireless Client 63 6.2.2 Enable and Configure Wireless Security without WPS on your NBG4604 ................ 67 6.3 Bandwidth Management for your Network ........................................................................... 70 6.3.1 Configuring Bandwidth Management by Application .................................................. 70 6.3.2 Configuring Bandwidth Management by Custom Application .................................... 71 6.3.3 Configuring Bandwidth Allocation by IP or IP Range ................................................. 72 Part II: Technical Reference .................................................................. 75 12 NBG4604 User’s Guide Table of Contents Chapter 7 Wireless LAN........................................................................................................................... 77 en tia 7.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 77 7.2 What You Can Do ................................................................................................................ 78 7.3 What You Should Know ....................................................................................................... 78 7.3.1 Wireless Security Overview ....................................................................................... 78 7.4 General Wireless LAN Screen ............................................................................................ 81 7.4.1 No Security ................................................................................................................. 83 7.4.2 WEP Encryption ......................................................................................................... 84 on fid 7.4.3 WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK ................................................................................................ 86 7.5 MAC Filter ............................................................................................................................ 87 7.6 Wireless LAN Advanced Screen ......................................................................................... 89 7.7 Quality of Service (QoS) Screen ......................................................................................... 90 7.7.1 Application Priority Configuration ............................................................................... 92 7.8 WPS Screen ........................................................................................................................ 93 7.9 WPS Station Screen ............................................................................................................ 94 7.10 Scheduling Screen ............................................................................................................ 95 7.11 WDS Screen ...................................................................................................................... 96 7.11.1 Security Mode: Static WEP ...................................................................................... 98 7.11.2 Security Mode: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK ..................................................................... 99 Chapter 8 WAN........................................................................................................................................ 101 ny 8.1 Overview ............................................................................................................................ 101 8.2 What You Can Do .............................................................................................................. 101 8.3 What You Need To Know ................................................................................................... 102 8.3.1 Configuring Your Internet Connection ...................................................................... 102 8.3.2 Multicast ................................................................................................................... 103 pa 8.3.3 NetBIOS over TCP/IP .............................................................................................. 104 8.3.4 Auto-Bridge .............................................................................................................. 104 8.4 Internet Connection ........................................................................................................... 105 om 8.4.1 Ethernet Encapsulation ............................................................................................ 105 8.4.2 PPPoE Encapsulation .............................................................................................. 106 8.4.3 PPTP Encapsulation ................................................................................................ 108 8.5 Advanced WAN Screen ......................................................................................................111 Chapter 9 LAN......................................................................................................................................... 113 9.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................113 9.2 What You Can Do ...............................................................................................................113 9.3 What You Need To Know ....................................................................................................114 9.3.1 IP Pool Setup ............................................................................................................114 9.3.2 LAN TCP/IP ...............................................................................................................114 NBG4604 User’s Guide 13 Table of Contents 9.4 LAN IP Screen ....................................................................................................................115 Chapter 10 DHCP Server.......................................................................................................................... 117 tia 10.1 Overview ...........................................................................................................................117 10.2 What You Can Do .............................................................................................................117 10.3 What You Need To Know ..................................................................................................117 en 10.4 General Screen ................................................................................................................118 10.5 Advanced Screen ..........................................................................................................118 10.6 Client List Screen ............................................................................................................ 120 Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT).................................................................................... 123 fid 11.1 Overview ....................................................................................................................... 123 11.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 124 11.3 General NAT Screen ........................................................................................................ 124 on 11.4 NAT Application Screen ................................................................................................. 125 11.5 NAT Advanced Screen ..................................................................................................... 128 11.5.1 Trigger Port Forwarding Example ........................................................................... 129 11.5.2 Two Points To Remember About Trigger Ports ...................................................... 130 Chapter 12 Dynamic DNS ........................................................................................................................ 131 12.1 Overview ......................................................................................................................... 131 12.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 131 ny 12.3 What You Need To Know ................................................................................................. 131 12.3.1 DynDNS Wildcard .................................................................................................. 131 12.4 Dynamic DNS Screen .................................................................................................... 132 pa Chapter 13 Firewall................................................................................................................................... 135 13.1 Overview ........................................................................................................................ 135 13.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 136 om 13.3 What You Need To Know ................................................................................................. 136 13.3.1 About the NBG4604 Firewall .................................................................................. 136 13.4 General Firewall Screen 13.5 Services Screen ............................................................................................... 137 ........................................................................................................... 137 Chapter 14 Content Filtering ................................................................................................................... 139 14 14.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 139 14.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 139 14.3 What You Need To Know ................................................................................................. 139 NBG4604 User’s Guide Table of Contents 14.3.1 Content Filtering Profiles ........................................................................................ 139 14.4 Filter Screen .................................................................................................................... 140 14.5 Technical Reference ........................................................................................................ 141 14.5.1 Customizing Keyword Blocking URL Checking ...................................................... 141 tia Chapter 15 Static Route ........................................................................................................................... 143 en 15.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 143 15.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 143 15.3 IP Static Route Screen .................................................................................................... 144 15.3.1 Static Route Setup Screen ................................................................................... 145 fid Chapter 16 Bandwidth Management....................................................................................................... 147 16.1 Overview ......................................................................................................................... 147 16.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 147 on 16.3 What You Need To Know ................................................................................................. 148 16.4 General Configuration ................................................................................................... 148 16.5 Advanced Configuration ................................................................................................. 149 16.5.1 Priority Levels ......................................................................................................... 152 16.5.2 User Defined Service Rule Configuration ........................................................... 152 16.5.3 Predefined Bandwidth Management Services ....................................................... 153 16.5.4 Services and Port Numbers ................................................................................... 154 ny Chapter 17 Remote Management............................................................................................................ 155 17.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 155 17.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 155 17.3 What You Need To Know ................................................................................................. 155 pa 17.3.1 Remote Management Limitations .......................................................................... 156 17.3.2 Remote Management and NAT .............................................................................. 156 17.3.3 System Timeout .................................................................................................... 156 ............................................................................................................... 157 om 17.4 WWW Screen Chapter 18 Universal Plug-and-Play (UPnP).......................................................................................... 159 18.1 Overview ......................................................................................................................... 159 18.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 159 18.3 What You Need to Know .................................................................................................. 159 18.4 UPnP Screen ................................................................................................................... 160 18.5 Technical Reference ........................................................................................................ 161 18.5.1 Using UPnP in Windows XP Example ................................................................... 161 18.5.2 Web Configurator Easy Access ............................................................................. 164 NBG4604 User’s Guide 15 Table of Contents Chapter 19 SNMP...................................................................................................................................... 167 tia 19.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 167 19.2 What You Need to Know .................................................................................................. 167 19.3 SNMP Screen .................................................................................................................. 168 Chapter 20 ACS ........................................................................................................................................ 171 en 20.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 171 fid 20.2 What You Can Do in this Chapter .................................................................................... 171 20.3 What You Need to Know .................................................................................................. 171 20.4 General Screen ............................................................................................................... 172 20.4.1 STUN ..................................................................................................................... 172 20.5 Certificate Screen ............................................................................................................ 175 20.6 Technical Reference ........................................................................................................ 176 on Chapter 21 System ................................................................................................................................... 177 21.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 177 21.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 177 21.3 System General Screen ................................................................................................. 177 21.4 Time Setting Screen ........................................................................................................ 179 ny Chapter 22 Logs ....................................................................................................................................... 183 22.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 183 22.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 183 22.3 What You Need to Know .................................................................................................. 183 pa 22.4 View Log Screen .............................................................................................................. 184 22.5 Log Settings Screen ........................................................................................................ 185 om Chapter 23 Tools....................................................................................................................................... 187 23.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 187 23.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 187 23.3 Firmware Upload Screen ................................................................................................. 187 23.4 Configuration Screen ....................................................................................................... 190 23.4.1 Backup Configuration ............................................................................................. 190 16 23.4.2 Restore Configuration ............................................................................................ 191 23.4.3 Back to Factory Defaults ........................................................................................ 192 23.5 Restart Screen ................................................................................................................. 192 NBG4604 User’s Guide Table of Contents Chapter 24 Sys OP Mode ......................................................................................................................... 193 tia 24.1 Overview .......................................................................................................................... 193 24.2 What You Can Do ............................................................................................................ 193 24.3 What You Need to Know .................................................................................................. 193 24.4 General Screen ............................................................................................................... 194 en Chapter 25 Language ............................................................................................................................... 197 25.1 Language Screen ............................................................................................................ 197 Chapter 26 Troubleshooting.................................................................................................................... 199 on fid 26.1 Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs ...................................................................... 199 26.2 NBG4604 Access and Login ........................................................................................... 200 26.3 Internet Access ................................................................................................................ 202 26.4 Resetting the NBG4604 to Its Factory Defaults ............................................................... 203 26.5 Wireless Router/AP Troubleshooting ............................................................................... 204 Chapter 27 Product Specifications ......................................................................................................... 207 27.1 Wall-mounting Instructions .............................................................................................. 209 Appendix A IP Addresses and Subnetting ........................................................................... 211 ny Appendix B Pop-up Windows, JavaScript and Java Permissions........................................ 221 Appendix C Setting up Your Computer’s IP Address ........................................................... 229 27.1.1 Verifying Settings ................................................................................................... 246 pa Appendix D Wireless LANs .................................................................................................. 247 27.1.2 WPA(2)-PSK Application Example ......................................................................... 257 27.1.3 WPA(2) with RADIUS Application Example ........................................................... 257 om Appendix E Services ............................................................................................................ 259 Appendix F .......................................................................................................................... 263 Appendix F Open Software Announcements ....................................................................... 263 Appendix G Legal Information.............................................................................................. 281 Index....................................................................................................................................... 289 NBG4604 User’s Guide 17 C om pa ny on fid en tia Table of Contents 18 NBG4604 User’s Guide en User’s Guide fid Introduction (21) The WPS Button (25) on The Web Configurator (27) Connection Wizard (39) AP Mode (55) om pa ny Tutorials (63) tia P ART I 19 20 om pa ny on fid en tia CHAPTER tia Introduction en 1.1 Overview This chapter introduces the main features and applications of the NBG4604. fid The NBG4604 extends the range of your existing wired network without additional wiring, providing easy network access to mobile users. You can set up a wireless network with other IEEE 802.11b/g/n compatible devices. 1.2 Applications on A range of services such as a firewall and content filtering are also available for secure Internet computing. Your can create the following networks using the NBG4604: ny • Wired. You can connect network devices via the Ethernet ports of the NBG4604 so that they can communicate with each other and access the Internet. • Wireless. Wireless clients can connect to the NBG4604 to access network resources. pa • WAN. Connect to a broadband modem/router for Internet access. om Figure 1 NBG4604 Network NBG4604 User’s Guide 21 Chapter 1 Introduction 1.3 Ways to Manage the NBG4604 Use any of the following methods to manage the NBG4604. tia • WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup). You can use the WPS button or the WPS section of the Web Configurator to set up a wireless network with your ZyXEL Device. en • Web Configurator. This is recommended for everyday management of the NBG4604 using a (supported) web browser. 1.4 Good Habits for Managing the NBG4604 fid Do the following things regularly to make the NBG4604 more secure and to manage the NBG4604 more effectively. • Change the password. Use a password that’s not easy to guess and that consists of different types of characters, such as numbers and letters. on • Write down the password and put it in a safe place. 1.5 LEDs ny • Back up the configuration (and make sure you know how to restore it). Restoring an earlier working configuration may be useful if the device becomes unstable or even crashes. If you forget your password, you will have to reset the NBG4604 to its factory default settings. If you backed up an earlier configuration file, you would not have to totally re-configure the NBG4604. You could simply restore your last configuration. om pa Figure 2 Front Panel The following table describes the LEDs and the WPS button. Table 1 Front Panel LEDs and WPS Button 22 LED COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION POWER Green On The NBG4604 is receiving power and functioning properly. Off The NBG4604 is not receiving power. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 1 Introduction Table 1 Front Panel LEDs and WPS Button COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION WLAN Green On The NBG4604 is ready, but is not sending/ receiving data through the wireless LAN. Blinking The NBG4604 is sending/receiving data through the wireless LAN. tia LED The NBG4604 is negotiating a WPS connection with a wireless client. Green LAN 1-4 Green The NBG4604 is ready, but is not sending/ receiving data through the WPS connection. Blinking The NBG4604 is sending/receiving data through the WPS connection. Off The WPS connection is not ready or has failed. On The NBG4604 has a successful 10/100/1000 MB WAN connection. Blinking The NBG4604 is sending/receiving data through the WAN. Off The WAN connection is not ready, or has failed. On The NBG4604 has a successful 10/100/1000 MB Ethernet connection. The NBG4604 is sending/receiving data through the LAN. Blinking Off The LAN is not connected. Press this button for 1 second to set up a wireless connection via WiFi Protected Setup with another WPS-enabled client. You must press the WPS button on the client side within 120 seconds for a successful connection. om pa ny WPS Button en WAN On fid Green The wireless LAN is not ready or has failed. on WPS Off NBG4604 User’s Guide 23 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 1 Introduction 24 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER tia The WPS Button en 2.1 Overview fid Your NBG4604 supports WiFi Protected Setup (WPS), which is an easy way to set up a secure wireless network. WPS is an industry standard specification, defined by the WiFi Alliance. on WPS allows you to quickly set up a wireless network with strong security, without having to configure security settings manually. Each WPS connection works between two devices. Both devices must support WPS (check each device’s documentation to make sure). Depending on the devices you have, you can either press a button (on the device itself, or in its configuration utility) or enter a PIN (a unique Personal Identification Number that allows one device to authenticate the other) in each of the two devices. When WPS is activated on a device, it has two minutes to find another device that also has WPS activated. Then, the two devices connect and set up a secure network by themselves. om pa ny For more information on using WPS, see Section 6.2.1 on page 63. NBG4604 User’s Guide 25 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 2 The WPS Button 26 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER tia The Web Configurator en 3.1 Overview fid This chapter describes how to access the NBG4604 Web Configurator and provides an overview of its screens. on The Web Configurator is an HTML-based management interface that allows easy setup and management of the NBG4604 via Internet browser. Use Internet Explorer 7.0 and later or Firefox 1.5 and later. The recommended screen resolution is 1024 by 768 pixels. In order to use the Web Configurator you need to allow: • Web browser pop-up windows from your device. Web pop-up blocking is enabled by default in Windows XP SP (Service Pack) 2. • JavaScript (enabled by default). • Java permissions (enabled by default). ny Refer to the Troubleshooting chapter to see how to make sure these functions are allowed in Internet Explorer. pa 3.2 Accessing the Web Configurator Make sure your NBG4604 hardware is properly connected and prepare your computer or computer network to connect to the NBG4604 (refer to the Quick Start Guide). om Launch your web browser. Type "http://192.168.1.1" as the website address. Your computer must be in the same subnet in order to access this website address. NBG4604 User’s Guide 27 Chapter 3 The Web Configurator Type "1234" (default) as the password and click Login. In some versions, the default password appears automatically - if this is the case, click Login. You should see a screen asking you to change your password (highly recommended) as shown next. Type a new password (and retype it to confirm) and click Apply or click Ignore. pa ny on fid en tia om Note: The management session automatically times out when the time period set in the Administrator Inactivity Timer field expires (default five minutes). Simply log back into the NBG4604 if this happens. Select the setup mode you want to use. • Click Go to Wizard Setup to use the Configuration Wizard for basic Internet and Wireless setup. 28 • Click Go to Advanced Setup to view and configure all the NBG4604’s settings. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 3 The Web Configurator on fid en tia • Select a language to go to the basic Web Configurator in that language. To change to the advanced configurator see Chapter 25 on page 197. 3.3 Resetting the NBG4604 ny If you forget your password or IP address, or you cannot access the Web Configurator, you will need to use the RESET button at the back of the NBG4604 to reload the factory-default configuration file. This means that you will lose all configurations that you had previously saved, the password will be reset to “1234” and the IP address will be reset to “192.168.1.1”. pa 3.3.1 Procedure to Use the Reset Button Make sure the power LED is on. Press the RESET button for longer than 1 second to restart/reboot the NBG4604. Press the RESET button for longer than five seconds to set the NBG4604 back to its factory-default configurations. om 3.4 Navigating the Web Configurator The following summarizes how to navigate the Web Configurator from the Status screen in Router Mode and AP Mode. NBG4604 User’s Guide 29 Chapter 3 The Web Configurator 3.5 Status Screen (Router Mode) tia (For information on the status screen in AP Mode see Chapter 5 on page 56.) Click on Status. The screen below shows the status screen in Router Mode. ny on fid en Figure 3 Status Screen (Router Mode) pa The following table describes the icons shown in the Status screen. Table 2 Status Screen Icon Key ICON DESCRIPTION om Click this icon to open the setup wizard. 30 Click this icon to view copyright and a link for related product information. Click this icon at any time to exit the Web Configurator. Select a number of seconds or None from the drop-down list box to refresh all screen statistics automatically at the end of every time interval or to not refresh the screen statistics. Click this button to refresh the status screen statistics. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 3 The Web Configurator The following table describes the labels shown in the Status screen. Table 3 Web Configurator Status Screen (Router Mode) LABEL DESCRIPTION This is the System Name you enter in the Maintenance > System > General screen. It is for identification purposes. Firmware Version This is the firmware version and the date created. WAN Information tia System Name This shows the WAN Ethernet adapter MAC Address of your device. - IP Address This shows the WAN port’s IP address. - IP Subnet Mask This shows the WAN port’s subnet mask. - DHCP This shows the WAN port’s DHCP role - Client or None. fid en - MAC Address LAN Information This shows the LAN Ethernet adapter MAC Address of your device. - IP Address This shows the LAN port’s IP address. - IP Subnet Mask This shows the LAN port’s subnet mask. - DHCP This shows the LAN port’s DHCP role - Server or None. on - MAC Address WLAN Information This shows the wireless adapter MAC Address of your device. - Status This shows the current status of the Wireless LAN - On or Off. - Channel This shows the channel number which you select manually. - Operating Channel This shows the channel number which the NBG4604 is currently using over the wireless LAN. - 802.11 Mode This shows the wireless standard. ny - WPS - MAC Address - SSID Device Information This shows a descriptive name used to identify the NBG4604 in the wireless LAN. This displays Configured when the WPS has been set up. pa This displays Unconfigured if the WPS has not been set up. Click the status to display Network > Wireless LAN > WPS screen. System Status This is the total time the NBG4604 has been on. Current Date/Time This field displays your NBG4604’s present date and time. om System Up Time System Resource - CPU Usage This displays what percentage of the NBG4604’s processing ability is currently used. When this percentage is close to 100%, the NBG4604 is running at full load, and the throughput is not going to improve anymore. If you want some applications to have more throughput, you should turn off other applications. - Memory Usage This shows what percentage of the heap memory the NBG4604 is using. System Setting - Firewall NBG4604 User’s Guide This shows whether the firewall is active or not. 31 Chapter 3 The Web Configurator Table 3 Web Configurator Status Screen (Router Mode) (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION This shows whether bandwidth management is active or not. - UPnP This shows whether UPnP is active or not. - Bandwidth Management tia Interface Status This displays the NBG4604 port types. The port types are: WAN, LAN and WLAN. Status For the LAN and WAN ports, this field displays Down (line is down) or Up (line is up or connected). en Interface For the WLAN, it displays Up when the WLAN is enabled or Down when the WLAN is disabled. Rate For the LAN ports, this displays the port speed and duplex setting or N/A when the line is disconnected. fid For the WLAN, it displays the maximum transmission rate when the WLAN is enabled and N/A when the WLAN is disabled. Summary Use this screen to view current DHCP client information. Packet Statistics Use this screen to view port status and packet specific statistics. WLAN Station Status Use this screen to view the wireless stations that are currently associated to the NBG4604. 3.5.1 Navigation Panel on DHCP Table Use the sub-menus on the navigation panel to configure NBG4604 features. ny The following table describes the sub-menus. Table 4 Screens Summary LINK TAB pa Status FUNCTION This screen shows the NBG4604’s general device, system and interface status information. Use this screen to access the wizard, and summary statistics tables. om Network 32 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 3 The Web Configurator Table 4 Screens Summary FUNCTION General Use this screen to configure wireless LAN. MAC Filter Use the MAC filter screen to configure the NBG4604 to block access to devices or block the devices from accessing the NBG4604. Advanced This screen allows you to configure advanced wireless settings. QoS Use this screen to configure Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service (WMM QoS). WMM QoS allows you to prioritize wireless traffic according to the delivery requirements of individual services. WPS Use this screen to configure WPS. WPS Station Use this screen to add a wireless station using WPS. Scheduling Use this screen to schedule the times the Wireless LAN is enabled. WDS Use this screen to set up Wireless Distribution System (WDS) on your NBG4604. Internet Connection This screen allows you to configure ISP parameters, WAN IP address assignment, DNS servers and the WAN MAC address. Advanced Use this screen to configure other advanced properties. LAN IP Use this screen to configure LAN IP address and subnet mask. DHCP Server General om tia en Use this screen to enable the NBG4604’s DHCP server. Use this screen to assign IP addresses to specific individual computers based on their MAC addresses and to have DNS servers assigned by the DHCP server. ny Advanced Client List Use this screen to view current DHCP client information and to always assign an IP address to a MAC address (and host name). General Use this screen to enable NAT. Application Use this screen to configure servers behind the NBG4604. Advanced Use this screen to change your NBG4604’s port triggering settings. General Use this screen to set up dynamic DNS. General Use this screen to activate/deactivate the firewall. Services This screen shows a summary of the firewall rules, and allows you to edit/add a firewall rule. Filter Use this screen to block certain web features and sites containing certain keywords in the URL. IP Static Route Use this screen to configure IP static routes. pa NAT fid WAN on Wireless LAN TAB LINK DDNS Security Firewall Content Filter Management Static Route NBG4604 User’s Guide 33 Chapter 3 The Web Configurator Table 4 Screens Summary LINK TAB FUNCTION General Use this screen to configure a bandwidth management service type. Advanced Use this screen to configure bandwidth management for specific types of applications. Remote MGMT WWW Use this screen to configure through which interface(s) and from which IP address(es) users can use HTTP to manage the NBG4604. UPnP General Use this screen to enable UPnP on the NBG4604. SNMP General Use this screen to configure SNMP. ACS General Use this screen configure ACS. Certificate Use this screen to upload security certificates to the device. General Use this screen to view and change administrative settings such as system and domain names, password and inactivity timer. Time Setting Use this screen to change your NBG4604’s time and date. View Log Use this screen to view the logs for the categories that you selected. Log Settings Use this screen to activate syslog logging as well as the syslog server IP address. Firmware en on Use this screen to upload firmware to your NBG4604. Configuration Use this screen to backup and restore the configuration or reset the factory defaults to your NBG4604. Restart This screen allows you to reboot the NBG4604 without turning the power off. General This screen allows you to select whether your device acts as a Router or a Access Point. ny Tools Logs fid Maintenance System tia Bandwidth MGMT Sys OP Mode pa Language This screen allows you to select the language you prefer. 3.5.2 Summary: DHCP Table om DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, RFC 2131 and RFC 2132) allows individual clients to obtain TCP/IP configuration at start-up from a server. You can configure the NBG4604’s LAN as a DHCP server or disable it. When configured as a server, the NBG4604 provides the TCP/IP configuration for the clients. If DHCP service is disabled, you must have another DHCP server on that network, or else the computer must be manually configured. 34 Click the DHCP Table (Details...) hyperlink in the Status screen. Read-only information here relates to your DHCP status. The DHCP table shows current NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 3 The Web Configurator DHCP client information (including IP Address, Host Name and MAC Address) of all network clients using the NBG4604’s DHCP server. The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 5 Summary: DHCP Table en tia Figure 4 Summary: DHCP Table DESCRIPTION This is the index number of the host computer. IP Address This field displays the IP address relative to the # field listed above. fid LABEL This field displays the computer host name. MAC Address This field shows the MAC address of the computer with the name in the Host Name field. on Host Name Every Ethernet device has a unique MAC (Media Access Control) address which uniquely identifies a device. The MAC address is assigned at the factory and consists of six pairs of hexadecimal characters, for example, 00:A0:C5:00:00:02. Refresh Click Refresh to renew the screen. ny 3.5.3 Summary: Packet Statistics pa Click the Packet Statistics (Details...) hyperlink in the Status screen. Readonly information here includes port status, packet specific statistics and the "system up time". The Poll Interval(s) field is configurable and is used for refreshing the screen. om Figure 5 Summary: Packet Statistics NBG4604 User’s Guide 35 Chapter 3 The Web Configurator The following table describes the labels in this screen. DESCRIPTION Port This is the NBG4604’s port type. Status For the LAN ports, this displays the port speed and duplex setting or Down when the line is disconnected. tia LABEL Table 6 Summary: Packet Statistics en For the WAN port, it displays the port speed and duplex setting if you’re using Ethernet encapsulation and Idle (line (ppp) idle), Dial (starting to trigger a call) and Drop (dropping a call) if you're using PPPoE or PPTP encapsulation. This field displays Down when the line is disconnected. For the WLAN, it displays the maximum transmission rate when the WLAN is enabled and Down when the WLAN is disabled. This is the number of transmitted packets on this port. RxPkts This is the number of received packets on this port. Collisions This is the number of collisions on this port. Tx B/s This displays the transmission speed in bytes per second on this port. Rx B/s This displays the reception speed in bytes per second on this port. System Up Time This is the total time the NBG4604 has been on. Poll Interval(s) Enter the time interval for refreshing statistics in this field. Set Interval Click this button to apply the new poll interval you entered in the Poll Interval(s) field. Stop Click Stop to stop refreshing statistics. on fid TxPkts ny 3.5.4 Summary: WLAN Station Status pa Click the WLAN Station Status (Details...) hyperlink in the Status screen. View the wireless stations that are currently associated to the NBG4604 in the Association List. Association means that a wireless client (for example, your network or computer with a wireless network card) has connected successfully to the AP (or wireless router) using the same SSID, channel and security settings. om Figure 6 Summary: Wireless Association List 36 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 3 The Web Configurator The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 7 Summary: Wireless Association List DESCRIPTION This is the index number of an associated wireless station. MAC Address This field displays the MAC address of an associated wireless station. Association Time This field displays the time a wireless station first associated with the NBG4604’s WLAN network. Refresh Click Refresh to reload the list. om pa ny on fid en tia LABEL NBG4604 User’s Guide 37 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 3 The Web Configurator 38 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER tia Connection Wizard en 4.1 Wizard Setup fid This chapter provides information on the wizard setup screens in the Web Configurator. on The Web Configurator’s wizard setup helps you configure your device to access the Internet. Refer to your ISP (Internet Service Provider) checklist in the Quick Start Guide to know what to enter in each field. Leave a field blank if you don’t have that information. After you access the NBG4604 Web Configurator, click the Go to Wizard setup hyperlink. You can click Go to Advanced setup hyperlink to skip this wizard setup and configure basic or advanced features accordingly. om pa ny Figure 7 Select Wizard or Advanced Mode NBG4604 User’s Guide 39 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard Choose a language by clicking on the language’s button. The screen will update. Click the Next button to proceed to the next screen. Read the on-screen information and click Next. on fid Figure 9 Welcome to the Connection Wizard en tia Figure 8 Select a Language ny 4.2 Connection Wizard: STEP 1: System Information pa System Information contains administrative and system-related information. 4.2.1 System Name om System Name is for identification purposes. However, because some ISPs check this name you should enter your computer's "Computer Name". 40 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard To view (or set) your computer name in Windows, right click over My Computer on your desktop, then select Properties. When the System Properties window opens, select the Computer Name tab. 4.2.2 Domain Name on fid en tia Figure 10 Computer Name ny The Domain Name entry is what is propagated to the DHCP clients on the LAN. If you leave this blank, the domain name obtained by DHCP from the ISP is used. While you must enter the host name (System Name) on each individual computer, the domain name can be assigned from the NBG4604 via DHCP. pa Click Next to configure the NBG4604 for Internet access. om Figure 11 Wizard Step 1: System Information NBG4604 User’s Guide 41 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 8 Wizard Step 1: System Information DESCRIPTION System Name System Name is a unique name to identify the NBG4604 in an Ethernet network. Enter a descriptive name. This name can be up to 30 alphanumeric characters long. Spaces are not allowed, but dashes "-" and underscores "_" are accepted. Domain Name Type the domain name (if you know it) here. If you leave this field blank, the ISP may assign a domain name via DHCP. The domain name entered by you is given priority over the ISP assigned domain name. Back Click Back to display the previous screen. Next Click Next to proceed to the next screen. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. fid en tia LABEL 4.3 Connection Wizard: STEP 2: Wireless LAN on Set up your wireless LAN using the following screen. om pa ny Figure 12 Wizard Step 2: Wireless LAN 42 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 9 Wizard Step 2: Wireless LAN DESCRIPTION Name (SSID) Enter a descriptive name (up to 32 printable 7-bit ASCII characters) for the wireless LAN. tia LABEL If you change this field on the NBG4604, make sure all wireless stations use the same SSID in order to access the network. Security Select a Security level from the drop-down list box. en Choose Auto (WPA2-PSK) to have the NBG4604 generate a pre-shared key automatically. After you click Next a screen pops up displaying the generated pre-shared key. Write down the key for use later when connecting other wireless devices to your network. Click OK to continue. fid Choose None to have no wireless LAN security configured. If you do not enable any wireless security on your NBG4604, your network is accessible to any wireless networking device that is within range. If you choose this option, skip directly to Section 4.4 on page 44. on Choose Extend (WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK) security to configure a PreShared Key. Choose this option only if your wireless clients support WPAPSK or WPA2-PSK respectively. If you choose this option, skip directly to Section 4.3.1 on page 44. The range of radio frequencies used by IEEE 802.11b/g/n wireless devices is called a channel. The device will automatically select the channel with the least interference. Back Click Back to display the previous screen. Next Click Next to proceed to the next screen. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. ny Channel Selection om pa Note: The wireless stations and NBG4604 must use the same SSID, channel ID, WPA-PSK (if WPA-PSK is enabled) or WPA2-PSK (if WPA2-PSK is enabled) for wireless communication. NBG4604 User’s Guide 43 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard 4.3.1 Extend (WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK) Security Choose Extend (WPA-PSK) or Extend (WPA2-PSK) security in the Wireless LAN setup screen to set up a Pre-Shared Key. fid en tia Figure 13 Wizard Step 2: Extend (WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK) Security on The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 10 Wizard Step 2: Extend (WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK) Security DESCRIPTION Pre-Shared Key Type from 8 to 63 case-sensitive ASCII or 64 HEX characters. You can set up the most secure wireless connection by configuring WPA in the wireless LAN screens. You need to configure an authentication server to do this. Back Click Back to display the previous screen. Next Click Next to proceed to the next screen. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. ny LABEL pa 4.4 Connection Wizard: STEP 3: Internet Configuration om The NBG4604 offers three Internet connection types. They are Ethernet, PPP over Ethernet or PPTP. The wizard attempts to detect which WAN connection type you are using. If the wizard does not detect a connection type, you must select one from the drop-down list box. Check with your ISP to make sure you use the correct type. 44 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard This wizard screen varies according to the connection type that you select. Table 11 Wizard Step 3: ISP Parameters DESCRIPTION on CONNECTION TYPE fid The following table describes the labels in this screen, en tia Figure 14 Wizard Step 3: ISP Parameters. Select the Ethernet option when the WAN port is used as a regular Ethernet. PPPoE Select the PPP over Ethernet option for a dial-up connection. If your ISP gave you an IP address and/or subnet mask, then select PPTP. PPTP Select the PPTP option for a dial-up connection. Ethernet ny 4.4.1 Ethernet Connection Choose Ethernet when the WAN port is used as a regular Ethernet. Continue to Section 4.4.4 on page 48. om pa Figure 15 Wizard Step 3: Ethernet Connection NBG4604 User’s Guide 45 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard 4.4.2 PPPoE Connection tia Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet (PPPoE) functions as a dial-up connection. PPPoE is an IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) standard specifying how a host personal computer interacts with a broadband modem (for example DSL, cable, wireless, etc.) to achieve access to high-speed data networks. For the service provider, PPPoE offers an access and authentication method that works with existing access control systems (for instance, RADIUS). en One of the benefits of PPPoE is the ability to let end users access one of multiple network services, a function known as dynamic service selection. This enables the service provider to easily create and offer new IP services for specific users. fid Operationally, PPPoE saves significant effort for both the subscriber and the ISP/ carrier, as it requires no specific configuration of the broadband modem at the subscriber’s site. on By implementing PPPoE directly on the NBG4604 (rather than individual computers), the computers on the LAN do not need PPPoE software installed, since the NBG4604 does that part of the task. Furthermore, with NAT, all of the LAN's computers will have Internet access. Refer to the appendix for more information on PPPoE. om pa ny Figure 16 Wizard Step 3: PPPoE Connection The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 12 Wizard Step 3: PPPoE Connection LABEL DESCRIPTION ISP Parameter for Internet Access 46 Connection Type Select the PPP over Ethernet option for a dial-up connection. Service Name Type the name of your service provider. User Name Type the user name given to you by your ISP. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard DESCRIPTION Password Type the password associated with the user name above. Back Click Back to return to the previous screen. Next Click Next to continue. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. en 4.4.3 PPTP Connection tia LABEL Table 12 Wizard Step 3: PPPoE Connection Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) is a network protocol that enables transfers of data from a remote client to a private server, creating a Virtual Private Network (VPN) using TCP/IP-based networks. fid PPTP supports on-demand, multi-protocol, and virtual private networking over public networks, such as the Internet. on Refer to the appendix for more information on PPTP. Note: The NBG4604 supports one PPTP server connection at any given time. om pa ny Figure 17 Wizard Step 3: PPTP Connection NBG4604 User’s Guide 47 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard The following table describes the fields in this screen Table 13 Wizard Step 3: PPTP Connection LABEL DESCRIPTION Select PPTP from the drop-down list box. To configure a PPTP client, you must configure the User Name and Password fields for a PPP connection and the PPTP parameters for a PPTP connection. User Name Type the user name given to you by your ISP. Password Type the password associated with the User Name above. en PPTP Configuration tia Connection Type ISP Parameters for Internet Access Type the IP address of the PPTP server. Connection ID/ Name Enter the connection ID or connection name in this field. It must follow the "c:id" and "n:name" format. For example, C:12 or N:My ISP. fid Server IP Address This field is optional and depends on the requirements of your ISP. Select this radio button if your ISP did not assign you a fixed IP address. Use fixed IP address Select this radio button, provided by your ISP to give the NBG4604 a fixed, unique IP address. on Get automatically from ISP Type the (static) IP address assigned to you by your ISP. My IP Subnet Mask Type the subnet mask assigned to you by your ISP (if given). My IP Address Click Back to return to the previous screen. Next Click Next to continue. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. ny Back pa 4.4.4 Your IP Address The following wizard screen allows you to assign a fixed IP address or give the NBG4604 an automatically assigned IP address depending on your ISP. om Figure 18 Wizard Step 3: Your IP Address 48 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard The following table describes the labels in this screen Table 14 Wizard Step 3: Your IP Address DESCRIPTION Get automatically from your ISP Select this option If your ISP did not assign you a fixed IP address. This is the default selection. If you choose this option, skip directly to Section 4.4.9 on page 52. Use fixed IP address provided by your ISP Select this option if you were given IP address and/or DNS server settings by the ISP. The fixed IP address should be in the same subnet as your broadband modem or router. Back Click Back to return to the previous screen. Next Click Next to continue. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. tia en fid 4.4.5 WAN IP Address Assignment LABEL on Every computer on the Internet must have a unique IP address. If your networks are isolated from the Internet, for instance, only between your two branch offices, you can assign any IP addresses to the hosts without problems. However, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) has reserved the following three blocks of IP addresses specifically for private networks. Table 15 Private IP Address Ranges 10.255.255.255 172.16.0.0 172.31.255.255 192.168.0.0 192.168.255.255 10.0.0.0 pa ny You can obtain your IP address from the IANA, from an ISP or have it assigned by a private network. If you belong to a small organization and your Internet access is through an ISP, the ISP can provide you with the Internet addresses for your local networks. On the other hand, if you are part of a much larger organization, you should consult your network administrator for the appropriate IP addresses. om Note: Regardless of your particular situation, do not create an arbitrary IP address; always follow the guidelines above. For more information on address assignment, please refer to RFC 1597, Address Allocation for Private Internets and RFC 1466, Guidelines for Management of IP Address Space. 4.4.6 IP Address and Subnet Mask Similar to the way houses on a street share a common street name, so too do computers on a LAN share one common network number. Where you obtain your network number depends on your particular situation. If the ISP or your network administrator assigns you a block of registered IP NBG4604 User’s Guide 49 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard addresses, follow their instructions in selecting the IP addresses and the subnet mask. en tia If the ISP did not explicitly give you an IP network number, then most likely you have a single user account and the ISP will assign you a dynamic IP address when the connection is established. The Internet Assigned Number Authority (IANA) reserved this block of addresses specifically for private use; please do not use any other number unless you are told otherwise. Let's say you select 192.168.1.0 as the network number; which covers 254 individual addresses, from 192.168.1.1 to 192.168.1.254 (zero and 255 are reserved). In other words, the first three numbers specify the network number while the last number identifies an individual computer on that network. fid Once you have decided on the network number, pick an IP address that is easy to remember, for instance, 192.168.1.1, for your NBG4604, but make sure that no other device on your network is using that IP address. on The subnet mask specifies the network number portion of an IP address. Your NBG4604 will compute the subnet mask automatically based on the IP address that you entered. You don't need to change the subnet mask computed by the NBG4604 unless you are instructed to do otherwise. 4.4.7 DNS Server Address Assignment ny Use DNS (Domain Name System) to map a domain name to its corresponding IP address and vice versa, for instance, the IP address of www.zyxel.com is 204.217.0.2. The DNS server is extremely important because without it, you must know the IP address of a computer before you can access it. The NBG4604 can get the DNS server addresses in the following ways. The ISP tells you the DNS server addresses, usually in the form of an information sheet, when you sign up. If your ISP gives you DNS server addresses, enter them in the DNS Server fields in the Wizard and/or WAN > Internet Connection screen. om pa If the ISP did not give you DNS server information, leave the DNS Server fields set to 0.0.0.0 in the Wizard screen and/or set to From ISP in the WAN > Internet Connection screen for the ISP to dynamically assign the DNS server IP addresses. 50 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard 4.4.8 WAN IP and DNS Server Address Assignment The following wizard screen allows you to assign a fixed WAN IP address and DNS server addresses. on fid en tia Figure 19 Wizard Step 3: WAN IP and DNS Server Addresses The following table describes the labels in this screen Table 16 Wizard Step 3: WAN IP and DNS Server Addresses DESCRIPTION LABEL WAN IP Address Assignment Enter your WAN IP address in this field. The WAN IP address should be in the same subnet as your DSL/Cable modem or router. ny My WAN IP Address My WAN IP Subnet Mask Enter the IP subnet mask in this field. Gateway IP Address Enter the gateway IP address in this field. pa System DNS Server Address Assignment (if applicable) om DNS (Domain Name System) is for mapping a domain name to its corresponding IP address and vice versa. The DNS server is extremely important because without it, you must know the IP address of a computer before you can access it. The NBG4604 uses a system DNS server (in the order you specify here) to resolve domain names for DDNS and the time server. First DNS Server Enter the DNS server's IP address in the fields provided. Second DNS Server If you do not configure a system DNS server, you must use IP addresses when configuring DDNS and the time server. Back Click Back to return to the previous screen. Next Click Next to continue. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. NBG4604 User’s Guide 51 Chapter 4 Connection Wizard 4.4.9 WAN MAC Address Every Ethernet device has a unique MAC (Media Access Control) address. The MAC address is assigned at the factory and consists of six pairs of hexadecimal characters, for example, 00:A0:C5:00:00:02. tia Table 17 Example of Network Properties for LAN Servers with Fixed IP Addresses 192.168.1.2-192.168.1.32; 192.168.1.65-192.168.1.254. Subnet mask 255.255.255.0 Gateway (or default route) 192.168.1.1(NBG4604 LAN IP) en Choose an IP address fid This screen allows users to configure the WAN port's MAC address by either using the NBG4604’s MAC address, copying the MAC address from a computer on your LAN or manually entering a MAC address. Once it is successfully configured, the address will be copied to configuration file. It is advisable to clone the MAC address from a computer on your LAN even if your ISP does not presently require MAC address authentication. pa ny on Figure 20 Wizard Step 3: WAN MAC Address The following table describes the fields in this screen. Table 18 Wizard Step 3: WAN MAC Address DESCRIPTION Factory Default Select Factory Default to use the factory assigned default MAC address. Clone the computer’s MAC address Select this option and enter the IP address of the computer on the LAN whose MAC you are cloning. It is advisable to clone the MAC address from a computer on your LAN even if your ISP does not presently require MAC address authentication. Set WAN MAC Address Select this option and enter the MAC address you want to use. Back Click Back to return to the previous screen. Next Click Next to continue. Exit Click Exit to close the wizard screen without saving. om LABEL 52 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 4 Connection Wizard 4.5 Connection Wizard Complete Click Finish to complete the wizard setup. fid en tia Figure 21 Connection Wizard Complete om pa ny on Well done! You have successfully set up your NBG4604 to operate on your network and access the Internet. NBG4604 User’s Guide 53 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 4 Connection Wizard 54 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER tia AP Mode en 5.1 Overview fid This chapter discusses how to configure settings while your NBG4604 is set to AP Mode. Many screens that are available in Router Mode are not available in AP Mode. Note: See Chapter 6 on page 63 for an example of setting up a wireless network in AP mode. on Use your NBG4604 as an AP if you already have a router or gateway on your network. In this mode your device bridges a wired network (LAN) and wireless LAN (WLAN) in the same subnet. See the figure below for an example. om pa ny Figure 22 Wireless Internet Access in AP Mode 5.2 Setting your NBG4604 to AP Mode Log into the Web Configurator if you haven’t already. See the Quick start Guide for instructions on how to do this. NBG4604 User’s Guide 55 Chapter 5 AP Mode To set your NBG4604 to AP Mode, go to Maintenance > Sys OP Mode > General and select Access Point. en tia Figure 23 Maintenance > Sys OP Mode > General A pop-up appears providing information on this mode. Click OK in the pop-up message window. (See Section 24.4 on page 194 for more information on the pop-up.) Click Apply. Your NBG4604 is now in AP Mode. fid on Note: You have to log in to the Web Configurator again when you change modes. 5.3 Status Screen (AP Mode) Click on Status. The screen below shows the status screen in AP Mode. om pa ny Figure 24 Status Screen (AP Mode) 56 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 5 AP Mode The following table describes the labels shown in the Status screen. Table 19 Status Screen (AP Mode) LABEL DESCRIPTION This is the System Name you enter in the Maintenance > System > General screen. It is for identification purposes. Firmware Version This is the firmware version and the date created. LAN Information tia System Name This shows the LAN Ethernet adapter MAC Address of your device. - IP Address This shows the LAN port’s IP address. - IP Subnet Mask This shows the LAN port’s subnet mask. - DHCP This shows the LAN port’s DHCP role - Client. fid en - MAC Address WLAN Information This shows the wireless adapter MAC Address of your device. - Status This shows the current status of the Wireless LAN - On or Off. - Channel This shows the channel number which you select manually. - Operating Channel This shows the channel number which the NBG4604 is currently using over the wireless LAN. - 802.11 Mode This shows the IEEE 802.11 standard that the NBG4604 supports. Wireless clients must support the same standard in order to be able to connect to the NBG4604 - SSID This shows a descriptive name used to identify the NBG4604 in the wireless LAN. - WPS This shows the WPS (WiFi Protected Setup) Status. Click the status to display Network > Wireless LAN > WPS screen. ny System Up Time Current Date/Time This is the total time the NBG4604 has been on. This field displays your NBG4604’s present date and time. pa System Resource on - MAC Address System Status Device Information om - CPU Usage - Memory Usage This displays what percentage of the NBG4604’s processing ability is currently used. When this percentage is close to 100%, the NBG4604 is running at full load, and the throughput is not going to improve anymore. If you want some applications to have more throughput, you should turn off other applications. This shows what percentage of the heap memory the NBG4604 is using. Interface Status This displays the NBG4604 port types. The port types are: LAN and WLAN. Status For the LAN port, this field displays Down (line is down) or Up (line is up or connected). Interface For the WLAN, it displays Up when the WLAN is enabled or Down when the WLAN is disabled. NBG4604 User’s Guide 57 Chapter 5 AP Mode Table 19 Status Screen (AP Mode) (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Rate For the LAN ports, this displays the port speed and duplex setting or N/A when the line is disconnected. tia For the WLAN, it displays the maximum transmission rate when the WLAN is enabled and N/A when the WLAN is disabled. Summary Use this screen to view port status and packet specific statistics. WLAN Station Status Use this screen to view the wireless stations that are currently associated to the NBG4604. en Packet Statistics 5.3.1 Navigation Panel fid Use the menu in the navigation panel to configure NBG4604 features in AP Mode. The following screen and table show the features you can configure in AP Mode. pa ny on Figure 25 Menu: AP Mode The following table describes the sub-menus. om Table 20 Menu: AP Mode LINK Status TAB FUNCTION This screen shows the NBG4604’s general device, system and interface status information. Use this screen to access the wizard, and summary statistics tables. Network 58 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 5 AP Mode Table 20 Menu: AP Mode LAN General Use this screen to configure wireless LAN. MAC Filter Use the MAC filter screen to configure the NBG4604 to block access to devices or block the devices from accessing the NBG4604. Advanced This screen allows you to configure advanced wireless settings. QoS Use this screen to configure Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service (WMM QoS). WMM QoS allows you to prioritize wireless traffic according to the delivery requirements of individual services. WPS Use this screen to configure WPS. WPS Station Use this screen to add a wireless station using WPS. Scheduling Use this screen to schedule the times the Wireless LAN is enabled. WDS Use this screen to set up Wireless Distribution System (WDS) on your NBG4604. IP Use this screen to configure LAN IP address and subnet mask or to get the LAN IP address from a DHCP server. General Use this screen configure ACS. Certificate Use this screen to upload security certificates to the device. ACS Maintenance Sys OP Mode Language tia en Use this screen to change your NBG4604’s time and date. View Log Use this screen to view the logs for the categories that you selected. Log Settings Use this screen to activate syslog logging as well as the syslog server IP address. Firmware Use this screen to upload firmware to your NBG4604. Configuration Use this screen to backup and restore the configuration or reset the factory defaults to your NBG4604. Restart This screen allows you to reboot the NBG4604 without turning the power off. General This screen allows you to select whether your device acts as a Router or a Access Point. This screen allows you to select the language you prefer. om Tools Use this screen to view and change administrative settings such as system and domain names, password and inactivity timer. Time Setting pa Logs General ny System Management FUNCTION fid Wireless LAN TAB on LINK NBG4604 User’s Guide 59 Chapter 5 AP Mode 5.4 Configuring Your Settings Use this section to configure your NBG4604 settings while in AP Mode. tia 5.4.1 LAN Settings Click Network > LAN to see the screen below. en Note: If you change the IP address of the NBG4604 in the screen below, you will need to log into the NBG4604 again using the new IP address. on fid Figure 26 Network > LAN > IP The table below describes the labels in the screen. Table 21 Network > LAN > IP DESCRIPTION Get from DHCP Server Select this to let the DHCP server in the gateway assign the NBG4604 IP address. User Defined LAN IP Select this to give the NBG4604 a static IP address. IP Address Type the IP address in dotted decimal notatiion. The default setting is 192.168.1.2. If you change the IP address you will have to log in again with the new IP address. pa ny LABEL om IP Subnet Mask The subnet mask specifies the network number portion of an IP address. Your NBG4604 will automatically calculate the subnet mask based on the IP address that you assign. Unless you are implementing subnetting, use the subnet mask computed by the NBG4604. Apply Click Apply to save your changes to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. 5.4.2 WLAN and Maintenance Settings The configuration of wireless and maintenance settings in AP Mode is the same as for Router Mode. • See Chapter 5 on page 69 for information on the configuring your wireless network. 60 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 5 AP Mode tia 5.5 Logging in to the Web Configurator in AP Mode • See Maintenance and Troubleshooting (169) for information on configuring your maintenance settings. Connect your computer to the LAN port of the NBG4604. The default IP address of the NBG4604 is “192.168.1.2”. In this case, your computer must have an IP address in the range between “192.168.1.3” and “192.168.1.254”. Click Start > Run on your computer in Windows. Type “cmd” in the dialog box. Type “ipconfig” to show your computer’s IP address. If your computer’s IP address is not in the correct range then see Appendix C on page 229 for information on changing your computer’s IP address. After you’ve set your computer’s IP address, open a web browser such as Internet Explorer and type “192.168.1.2” as the web address in your web browser. on fid en om pa ny See Chapter 6 on page 63 for a tutorial on setting up a network with an AP. NBG4604 User’s Guide 61 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 5 AP Mode 62 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 6.1 Overview en tia Tutorials This chapter provides tutorials for your NBG4604 as follows: fid • How to Connect to the Internet from an AP • Configure Wireless Security Using WPS on both your NBG4604 and Wireless Client • Enable and Configure Wireless Security without WPS on your NBG4604 on • Bandwidth Management for your Network 6.2 How to Connect to the Internet from an AP ny This section gives you an example of how to set up an access point (AP) and wireless client (a notebook, B in this example) for wireless communication. B can access the Internet through the AP wirelessly. om pa Figure 27 Wireless AP Connection to the Internet 6.2.1 Configure Wireless Security Using WPS on both your NBG4604 and Wireless Client This section gives you an example of how to set up wireless network using WPS. This example uses the NBG4604 as the AP and NWD210N as the wireless client which connects to a notebook. Note: The wireless client must be a WPS-aware device (for example, a WPS USB adapter or PCI card). NBG4604 User’s Guide 63 Chapter 6 Tutorials There are two WPS methods for creating a secure connection. This tutorial shows you how to do both. tia • PIN Configuration - create a secure wireless network simply by entering a wireless client's PIN (Personal Identification Number) in the NBG4604’s interface. See Section 6.2.1.2 on page 65. This is the more secure method, since one device can authenticate the other. • Push Button Configuration (PBC) - create a secure wireless network simply by pressing a button. See Section 6.2.1.1 on page 64.This is the easier method. en 6.2.1.1 Push Button Configuration (PBC) Make sure that your NBG4604 is turned on and that it is within range of your computer. Make sure that you have installed the wireless client (this example uses the NWD210N) driver and utility in your notebook. In the wireless client utility, find the WPS settings. Enable WPS and press the WPS button (Start or WPS button) Log into NBG4604’s Web Configurator and press the Push Button button in the Network > Wireless Client > WPS Station screen. on fid ny Note: Your NBG4604 has a WPS button located on its panel, as well as a WPS button in its configuration utility. Both buttons have exactly the same function; you can use one or the other. Note: It doesn’t matter which button is pressed first. You must press the second button within two minutes of pressing the first one. om pa The NBG4604 sends the proper configuration settings to the wireless client. This may take up to two minutes. Then the wireless client is able to communicate with the NBG4604 securely. 64 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 6 Tutorials The following figure shows you an example to set up wireless network and security by pressing a button on both NBG4604 and wireless client (the NWD210N in this example). NBG4604 on fid WITHIN 2 MINUTES en tia Wireless Client Figure 28 Example WPS Process: PBC Method SECURITY INFO ny COMMUNICATION 6.2.1.2 PIN Configuration pa When you use the PIN configuration method, you need to use both NBG4604’s configuration interface and the client’s utilities. Launch your wireless client’s configuration utility. Go to the WPS settings and select the PIN method to get a PIN number. om Enter the PIN number to the PIN field in the Network > Wireless LAN > WPS Station screen on the NBG4604. Click the Start buttons (or button next to the PIN field) on both the wireless client utility screen and the NBG4604’s WPS Station screen within two minutes. The NBG4604 authenticates the wireless client and sends the proper configuration settings to the wireless client. This may take up to two minutes. Then the wireless client is able to communicate with the NBG4604 securely. NBG4604 User’s Guide 65 Chapter 6 Tutorials The following figure shows you the example to set up wireless network and security on NBG4604 and wireless client (ex. NWD210N in this example) by using PIN method. Wireless Client on fid en tia NBG4604 Figure 29 Example WPS Process: PIN Method ny WITHIN 2 MINUTES SECURITY INFO COMMUNICATION om pa Authentication by PIN 66 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 6 Tutorials SSID SSID_Example3 Channel Security WPA-PSK en (Pre-Shared Key: ThisismyWPA-PSKpre-sharedkey) tia This example shows you how to configure wireless security settings with the following parameters on your NBG4604. 6.2.2 Enable and Configure Wireless Security without WPS on your NBG4604 Follow the steps below to configure the wireless settings on your NBG4604. fid The instructions require that your hardware is connected (see the Quick Start Guide) and you are logged into the Web Configurator through your LAN connection (see Section 3.2 on page 27). Open the Wireless LAN > General screen in the NBG4604’s Web Configurator. Make sure the Enable Wireless LAN check box is selected. Enter SSID_Example3 as the SSID and select a channel. Set security mode to WPA-PSK and enter ThisismyWPA-PSKpre-sharedkey in the Pre-Shared Key field. Click Apply. on om pa ny Figure 30 Tutorial: Network > Wireless LAN > General NBG4604 User’s Guide 67 Chapter 6 Tutorials Open the Status screen. Verify your wireless and wireless security settings under Device Information and check if the WLAN connection is up under Interface Status. on fid en tia Figure 31 Tutorial: Status Screen ny 6.2.2.1 Configure Your Notebook Note: We use the ZyXEL M-302 wireless adapter utility screens as an example for the wireless client. The screens may vary for different models. The NBG4604 supports IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g and IEEE 802.11n wireless clients. Make sure that your notebook or computer’s wireless adapter supports one of these standards. pa Wireless adapters come with software sometimes called a “utility” that you install on your computer. See your wireless adapter’s User’s Guide for information on how to do that. om 68 After you’ve installed the utility, open it. If you cannot see your utility’s icon on your screen, go to Start > Programs and click on your utility in the list of programs that appears. The utility displays a list of APs within range, as shown in the example screen below. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 6 Tutorials Select SSID_Example3 and click Connect. fid en tia Figure 32 Connecting a Wireless Client to a Wireless Network t Select WPA-PSK and type the security key in the following screen. Click Next. ny on Figure 33 Security Settings The Confirm Save window appears. Check your settings and click Save to continue. om pa Figure 34 Confirm Save NBG4604 User’s Guide 69 Chapter 6 Tutorials Check the status of your wireless connection in the screen below. If your wireless connection is weak or you have no connection, see the Troubleshooting section of this User’s Guide. fid en tia Figure 35 Link Status on If your connection is successful, open your Internet browser and enter http:// www.zyxel.com or the URL of any other web site in the address bar. If you are able to access the web site, your wireless connection is successfully configured. 6.3 Bandwidth Management for your Network ny This section shows you how to configure the bandwidth management feature on the NBG4604 to limit the bandwidth for specific kinds of outgoing traffic. ZyXEL's bandwidth management feature allows you to specify bandwidth management rules based on an application or subnet. pa Use the Management > Bandwidth MGMT > Advanced screen to configure bandwidth management for your network. 6.3.1 Configuring Bandwidth Management by Application om For this example, your company’s customer support department wants to prioritize VoIP, e-mail and MSN Messenger services. In the Priority Queue table, VoIP and e-mail services are already pre-defined. However, you still need to add MSN Messenger in the list (refer to Section 6.3.2 on page 71). 70 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 6 Tutorials In the following screen, you set the priorities for VoIP and e-mail. fid en tia Figure 36 Tutorial: Priority Queue on Click Enable for the VoIP (SIP) service and set priority to High. Do the same for E-mail. For the rest of the applications, click Enable if you need these services and set the priority to Low. Note: You can also leave the Enable field blank for the rest of the applications. In doing so, the NBG4604 does not apply bandwidth management to these services. ny 6.3.2 Configuring Bandwidth Management by Custom Application pa Aside from the VOIP and e-mail services, you need to set the priority for MSN Messenger. To do this, add the service in the Priority Queue table of the Management > Bandwidth MGMT > Advanced screen. om Figure 37 Tutorial: Adding MSN Messenger to Priority Queue NBG4604 User’s Guide 71 Chapter 6 Tutorials To add the MSN Messenger service in the Priority Queue: Click Enable in one of the fields for additional services. Add MSN as the service name. Set the priority for this to High. For the port, choose TCP from the drop-down menu and enter 1863 in the Specific Port field. en tia Your priority table should now have the VoIP, E-mail and MSN Messenger services priorities set to High. fid 6.3.3 Configuring Bandwidth Allocation by IP or IP Range You know the following: on For this example, your company’s 20th anniversary is coming up. You want to use the multimedia room’s Internet connection to upload some videos to the website. You also use this room for video conferences, radio broadcasts, live video streaming, and so on throughout the day. While these media-heavy activities are going on, you still want to keep uploading the videos in the background. As such, you want to dedicate the minimum amount of bandwidth for this traffic. • Multimedia room’s LAN IP range: 192.168.1.1 to 192.168.1.34 ny • IP Address of the computer uploading through FTP: 192.168.1.34 • Services you want to configure: REAL AUDIO TCP 7070 RTSP TCP or UDP 554 pa VDO LIVE FTP TCP 7000 TCP 20 ~ 21 om Click the Edit icon in Management > Bandwidth MGMT > Advanced to open the following screen. Figure 38 Tutorial: Bandwidth Allocation Example 72 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 6 Tutorials Enter the following values for each service you want to add. For this tutorial, you need to add each of the following service (see table below) and click Apply. Table 22 Services and Values VDO LIVE FTP tia REAL AUDIO RTSP SERVICES FIELDS Check this to turn on this bandwidth management rule. Direction Select Both applies bandwidth management to traffic that the NBG4604 forwards to both the LAN and the WAN. Select To WAN LAN IP Range Enter 192.168.1.1 ~ 192.168.1.33. Enter 192.168.1.34 Protocol TCP TCP or UDP TCP Port Range 7070 554 7000 Policy Min Rate Select 30M as the minimum bandwidth allowed. Apply Click this to add the rule to the Bandwidth Allocation table. fid en Active TCP 20 ~ 21 Max Select 64K on After adding these services, go to Management > Bandwidth MGMT > Advanced and check if you have the correct values. pa ny Figure 39 Tutorial: Bandwidth Allocation Example om Note: The Policy column displays either Max (maximum) or Min (minimum). This is directly directed to the value in the Rate column. For example, you selected Min and entered 30M as the rate for the VoIP service. The NBG4604 allocates at least 30 megabytes for the VoIP service. Refer to Appedix F on page 259 for a list of common services that you can add in the Bandwidth Mgnt screen. NBG4604 User’s Guide 73 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 6 Tutorials 74 NBG4604 User’s Guide tia P ART II en Technical Reference fid Wireless LAN (77) WAN (101) on LAN (113) DHCP Server (117) om pa ny Dynamic DNS (131) Network Address Translation (NAT) (123) 75 76 om pa ny on fid en tia CHAPTER tia Wireless LAN en 7.1 Overview fid This chapter discusses how to configure the wireless network settings in your NBG4604. See the appendices for more detailed information about wireless networks. The following figure provides an example of a wireless network. om pa ny on Figure 40 Example of a Wireless Network The wireless network is the part in the blue circle. In this wireless network, devices A and B are called wireless clients. The wireless clients use the access point (AP) to interact with other devices (such as the printer) or with the Internet. Your NBG4604 is the AP. NBG4604 User’s Guide 77 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN 7.2 What You Can Do tia • Use the MAC Filter screen (Section 7.5 on page 87) to allow or deny wireless stations based on their MAC addresses from connecting to the NBG4604. • Use the General screen (Section 7.4 on page 81) to enable the Wireless LAN, enter the SSID and select the wireless security mode. • Use the Advanced screen (Section 7.6 on page 89) to allow intra-BSS networking and set the RTS/CTS Threshold. en • Use the QoS screen (Section 7.7 on page 90) to ensure Quality of Service (QoS) in your wireless network. • Use the WPS screen (Section 7.8 on page 93) to quickly set up a wireless network with strong security, without having to configure security settings manually. fid • Use the WPS Station screen (Section 7.9 on page 94) to add a wireless station using WPS. • Use the Scheduling screen (Section 7.10 on page 95) to set the times your wireless LAN is turned on and off. on • Use the WDS screen (Section 7.11 on page 96) to set the operating mode of your NBG4604 to AP + Bridge or Bridge Only and establish wireless links with other APs. 7.3 What You Should Know ny Every wireless network must follow these basic guidelines. • Every wireless client in the same wireless network must use the same SSID. The SSID is the name of the wireless network. It stands for Service Set IDentity. pa • If two wireless networks overlap, they should use different channels. Like radio stations or television channels, each wireless network uses a specific channel, or frequency, to send and receive information. om • Every wireless client in the same wireless network must use security compatible with the AP. Security stops unauthorized devices from using the wireless network. It can also protect the information that is sent in the wireless network. 7.3.1 Wireless Security Overview 78 The following sections introduce different types of wireless security you can set up in the wireless network. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN 7.3.1.1 SSID tia Normally, the AP acts like a beacon and regularly broadcasts the SSID in the area. You can hide the SSID instead, in which case the AP does not broadcast the SSID. In addition, you should change the default SSID to something that is difficult to guess. en This type of security is fairly weak, however, because there are ways for unauthorized devices to get the SSID. In addition, unauthorized devices can still see the information that is sent in the wireless network. 7.3.1.2 MAC Address Filter fid Every wireless client has a unique identification number, called a MAC address.1 A MAC address is usually written using twelve hexadecimal characters2; for example, 00A0C5000002 or 00:A0:C5:00:00:02. To get the MAC address for each wireless client, see the appropriate User’s Guide or other documentation. on You can use the MAC address filter to tell the AP which wireless clients are allowed or not allowed to use the wireless network. If a wireless client is allowed to use the wireless network, it still has to have the correct settings (SSID, channel, and security). If a wireless client is not allowed to use the wireless network, it does not matter if it has the correct settings. ny This type of security does not protect the information that is sent in the wireless network. Furthermore, there are ways for unauthorized devices to get the MAC address of an authorized wireless client. Then, they can use that MAC address to use the wireless network. 7.3.1.3 User Authentication pa You can make every user log in to the wireless network before they can use it. This is called user authentication. However, every wireless client in the wireless network has to support IEEE 802.1x to do this. om For wireless networks, there are two typical places to store the user names and passwords for each user. • In the AP: this feature is called a local user database or a local database. • In a RADIUS server: this is a server used in businesses more than in homes. If your AP does not provide a local user database and if you do not have a RADIUS server, you cannot set up user names and passwords for your users. 1. Some wireless devices, such as scanners, can detect wireless networks but cannot use wireless networks. These kinds of wireless devices might not have MAC addresses. 2. Hexadecimal characters are 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, A, B, C, D, E, and F. NBG4604 User’s Guide 79 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN tia Local user databases also have an additional limitation that is explained in the next section. Unauthorized devices can still see the information that is sent in the wireless network, even if they cannot use the wireless network. Furthermore, there are ways for unauthorized wireless users to get a valid user name and password. Then, they can use that user name and password to use the wireless network. 7.3.1.4 Encryption en Wireless networks can use encryption to protect the information that is sent in the wireless network. Encryption is like a secret code. If you do not know the secret code, you cannot understand the message. fid The types of encryption you can choose depend on the type of user authentication. (See Section 7.3.1.3 on page 79 for information about this.) Table 23 Types of Encryption for Each Type of Authentication NO AUTHENTICATION RADIUS SERVER No Security WPA on Weakest Static WEP WPA-PSK WPA2-PSK WPA2 Strongest ny For example if the wireless network has a RADIUS server, you can choose WPA or WPA2. If users do not log in to the wireless network, you can choose no encryption, Static WEP, WPA-PSK, or WPA2-PSK. pa Usually, you should set up the strongest encryption that every wireless client in the wireless network supports. For example, suppose the AP does not have a local user database, and you do not have a RADIUS server. Therefore, there is no user authentication. Suppose the wireless network has two wireless clients. Device A only supports WEP, and device B supports WEP and WPA. Therefore, you should set up Static WEP in the wireless network. om Note: It is recommended that wireless networks use WPA-PSK, WPA, or stronger encryption. IEEE 802.1x and WEP encryption are better than none at all, but it is still possible for unauthorized devices to figure out the original information pretty quickly. 80 Note: It is not possible to use WPA-PSK, WPA or stronger encryption with a local user database. In this case, it is better to set up stronger encryption with no authentication than to set up weaker encryption with the local user database. When you select WPA2 or WPA2-PSK in your NBG4604, you can also select an option (WPA Compatible) to support WPA as well. In this case, if some wireless clients support WPA and some support WPA2, you should set up WPA2-PSK or NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN WPA2 (depending on the type of wireless network login) and select the WPA Compatible option in the NBG4604. tia Many types of encryption use a key to protect the information in the wireless network. The longer the key, the stronger the encryption. Every wireless client in the wireless network must have the same key. 7.3.1.5 WPS fid en WiFi Protected Setup (WPS) is an industry standard specification, defined by the WiFi Alliance. WPS allows you to quickly set up a wireless network with strong security, without having to configure security settings manually. Depending on the devices in your network, you can either press a button (on the device itself, or in its configuration utility) or enter a PIN (Personal Identification Number) in the devices. Then, they connect and set up a secure network by themselves. See how to set up a secure wireless network using WPS in the Section 6.2.1 on page 63. on 7.4 General Wireless LAN Screen Use this screen to enable the Wireless LAN, enter the SSID and select the wireless security mode. ny Note: If you are configuring the NBG4604 from a computer connected to the wireless LAN and you change the NBG4604’s SSID, channel or security settings, you will lose your wireless connection when you press Apply to confirm. You must then change the wireless settings of your computer to match the NBG4604’s new settings. Click Network > Wireless LAN to open the General screen. om pa Figure 41 Network > Wireless LAN > General NBG4604 User’s Guide 81 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the general wireless LAN labels in this screen. Table 24 Network > Wireless LAN > General DESCRIPTION Enable Wireless LAN Click the check box to activate wireless LAN. Enable Wireless LAN #1 Set the number of wireless LANs to enable on this device, up to a maximum of 4. Name(SSID) (Service Set IDentity) The SSID identifies the Service Set with which a wireless station is associated. Wireless stations associating to the access point (AP) must have the same SSID. Enter a descriptive name (up to 32 printable 7-bit ASCII characters) for the wireless LAN. en tia LABEL There is one Name(SSID) field for each wireless LAN enabled on this device. Set the operating frequency/channel depending on your particular region. fid Channel Selection Select a channel from the drop-down list box. The options vary depending on the frequency band and the country you are in. on Refer to the Connection Wizard chapter for more information on channels. This option is only available if Auto Channel Selection is disabled. Select this check box for the NBG4604 to automatically choose the channel with the least interference. Deselect this check box if you wish to manually select the channel using the Channel Section field. Operating Channel This displays the channel the NBG4604 is currently using. Channel Width Select whether the NBG4604 uses a wireless channel width of 20 or 40 MHz. A standard 20 MHz channel offers transfer speeds of up to 150Mbps whereas a 40MHz channel uses two standard channels and offers speeds of up to 300 Mbps. Because not all devices support 40 MHz channels, select Auto 20/40MHz to allow the NBG4604 to adjust the channel bandwidth automatically. ny Select a wireless LAN for which to configure security settings. The security settings only apply to the selected wireless LAN. pa SSID Selection Auto Channel Selection Select this check box to hide the SSID in the outgoing beacon frame so a station cannot obtain the SSID through scanning using a site survey tool. Enable IntraBSS Traffic A Basic Service Set (BSS) exists when all communications between wireless clients or between a wireless client and a wired network client go through one access point (AP). Intra-BSS traffic is traffic between wireless clients in the BSS. When IntraBSS is enabled, wireless client A and B can access the wired network and communicate with each other. When Intra-BSS is disabled, wireless client A and B can still access the wired network but cannot communicate with each other. om Enable Hide SSID 82 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN DESCRIPTION Security Mode Select No Security, Static WEP, WPA-PSK, or WPA2-PSK to add security on this wireless network. The wireless clients which want to associate to this network must have same wireless security settings as this device. After you select to use a security, additional options appears in this screen. See 7.4.2 and 7.4.3 sections. Or you can select No Security to allow any client to associate this network without authentication. tia LABEL Table 24 Network > Wireless LAN > General en Note: If you enable the WPS function, only No Security, WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK are available in this field. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. fid See the rest of this chapter for information on the other labels in this screen. 7.4.1 No Security on Select No Security to allow wireless stations to communicate with the access points without any data encryption. Note: If you do not enable any wireless security on your NBG4604, your network is accessible to any wireless networking device that is within range. om pa ny Figure 42 Network > Wireless LAN > General: No Security NBG4604 User’s Guide 83 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 25 Network > Wireless LAN > General: No Security DESCRIPTION Security Mode Choose No Security from the drop-down list box. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. tia en 7.4.2 WEP Encryption LABEL fid WEP encryption scrambles the data transmitted between the wireless stations and the access points to keep network communications private. It encrypts unicast and multicast communications in a network. Both the wireless stations and the access points must use the same WEP key. om pa ny on Your NBG4604 allows you to configure up to four 64-bit or 128-bit WEP keys but only one key can be enabled at any one time. 84 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN In order to configure and enable WEP encryption; click Network > Wireless LAN to display the General screen. Select Static WEP from the Security Mode list. pa ny on fid en tia Figure 43 Network > Wireless LAN > General: Static WEP The following table describes the wireless LAN security labels in this screen. Table 26 Network > Wireless LAN > General: Static WEP DESCRIPTION WEP Encryption Select 64-bit WEP or 128-bit WEP to enable data encryption. Authentication Method This field is activated when you select 64-bit WEP or 128-bit WEP in the WEP Encryption field. om LABEL NBG4604 User’s Guide Select Auto, Open System or Shared Key from the drop-down list box. This field specifies whether the wireless clients have to provide the WEP key to login to the wireless client. Keep this setting at Auto or Open System unless you want to force a key verification before communication between the wireless client and the ZyXEL Device occurs. Select Shared Key to force the clients to provide the WEP key prior to communication. 85 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN LABEL DESCRIPTION ASCII Select this option in order to enter ASCII characters as WEP key. Hex Select this option in order to enter hexadecimal characters as a WEP key. Key 1 to Key 4 tia The preceding "0x", that identifies a hexadecimal key, is entered automatically. Table 26 Network > Wireless LAN > General: Static WEP The WEP keys are used to encrypt data. Both the NBG4604 and the wireless stations must use the same WEP key for data transmission. en If you chose 64-bit WEP, then enter any 5 ASCII characters or 10 hexadecimal characters ("0-9", "A-F"). If you chose 128-bit WEP, then enter 13 ASCII characters or 26 hexadecimal characters ("0-9", "A-F"). fid You must configure at least one key, only one key can be activated at any one time. The default key is key 1. Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. 7.4.3 WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK on Apply Click Network > Wireless LAN to display the General screen. Select WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK from the Security Mode list. om pa ny Figure 44 Network > Wireless LAN > General: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK 86 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. DESCRIPTION WPA Compatible This check box is available only when you select WPA2-PSK in the Security Mode field. tia LABEL Table 27 Network > Wireless LAN > General: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK Select the check box to have both WPA2 and WPA wireless clients be able to communicate with the NBG4604 even when the NBG4604 is using WPA2-PSK. WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK uses a simple common password for authentication. en Pre-Shared Key Type a pre-shared key from 8 to 63 case-sensitive ASCII characters (including spaces and symbols). fid Type a pre-shared key less than 64 case-sensitive HEX characters ("09", "A-F"). The Group Key Update Timer is the rate at which the AP (if using WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK key management) or RADIUS server (if using WPA/WPA2 key management) sends a new group key out to all clients. The re-keying process is the WPA/WPA2 equivalent of automatically changing the WEP key for an AP and all stations in a WLAN on a periodic basis. Setting of the Group Key Update Timer is also supported in WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK mode. The default is 600 seconds (10 minutes). Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. on Group Key Update Timer ny 7.5 MAC Filter om pa The MAC filter screen allows you to configure the NBG4604 to give exclusive access to up to 16 devices (Allow) or exclude up to 16 devices from accessing the NBG4604 (Deny). Every Ethernet device has a unique MAC (Media Access Control) address. The MAC address is assigned at the factory and consists of six pairs of hexadecimal characters, for example, 00:A0:C5:00:00:02. You need to know the MAC address of the devices to configure this screen. NBG4604 User’s Guide 87 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN To change your NBG4604’s MAC filter settings, click Network > Wireless LAN > MAC Filter. The screen appears as shown. on fid en tia Figure 45 Network > Wireless LAN > MAC Filter The following table describes the labels in this menu. LABEL Active ny Table 28 Network > Wireless LAN > MAC Filter Select Yes from the drop down list box to enable MAC address filtering. Define the filter action for the list of MAC addresses in the MAC Address table. pa Filter Action DESCRIPTION Select Deny to block access to the NBG4604, MAC addresses not listed will be allowed to access the NBG4604 om Select Allow to permit access to the NBG4604, MAC addresses not listed will be denied access to the NBG4604. 88 Set This is the index number of the MAC address. MAC Address Enter the MAC addresses of the wireless station that are allowed or denied access to the NBG4604 in these address fields. Enter the MAC addresses in a valid MAC address format, that is, six hexadecimal character pairs, for example, 12:34:56:78:9a:bc. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN 7.6 Wireless LAN Advanced Screen tia Click Network > Wireless LAN > Advanced. The screen appears as shown. Use this screen to allow intra-BSS networking and set the RTS/CTS Threshold. on fid en Figure 46 Network > Wireless LAN > Advanced The following table describes the labels in this screen. LABEL DESCRIPTION Wireless Advanced Setup Data with its frame size larger than this value will perform the RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear To Send) handshake. ny RTS/CTS Threshold Table 29 Network > Wireless LAN > Advanced Enter a value between 0 and 2432. The threshold (number of bytes) for the fragmentation boundary for directed messages. It is the maximum data fragment size that can be sent. Enter an even number between 256 and 2346. pa Fragmentatio n Threshold This field is not available when Super Mode is selected. om Beacon Interval When a wirelessly networked device sends a beacon, it includes with it a beacon interval. This specifies the time period before the device sends the beacon again. The interval tells receiving devices on the network how long they can wait in low-power mode before waking up to handle the beacon. This value can be set from 20ms to 1000ms. A high value helps save current consumption of the access point. DTIM Delivery Traffic Indication Message (DTIM) is the time period after which broadcast and multicast packets are transmitted to mobile clients in the Active Power Management mode. A high DTIM value can cause clients to lose connectivity with the network. This value can be set from 1 to 100. Preamble A preamble affects the timing in your wireless network. There are two preamble modes: long and short. If a device uses a different preamble mode than the NBG4604 does, it cannot communicate with the NBG4604. NBG4604 User’s Guide 89 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN Table 29 Network > Wireless LAN > Advanced DESCRIPTION CTS Protection When set to None, the NBG4604 protects wireless communication against interference. tia When set to Always, the NBG4604 improves performance within mixed wireless modes. LABEL Select Auto to let the NBG4604 determine whether to turn this feature on or off in the current environment. This field controls the transmission power of the NBG4604. When using the NBG4604 with a notebook computer, select a lower transmission power level when you are close to the AP in order to conserve battery power. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. fid en Tx Power on 7.7 Quality of Service (QoS) Screen The QoS screen allows you to automatically give a service (such as e-mail, VoIP or FTP) a priority level. Click Network > Wireless LAN > QoS. The following screen appears. om pa ny Figure 47 Network > Wireless LAN > QoS 90 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 30 Network > Wireless LAN > QoS DESCRIPTION WMM QoS Policy Select Default to have the NBG4604 automatically give a service a priority level according to the ToS value in the IP header of packets it sends. WMM QoS (Wifi MultiMedia Quality of Service) gives high priority to voice and video, which makes them run more smoothly. tia LABEL en Select Application Priority from the drop-down list box to display a table of application names, services, ports and priorities to which you want to apply WMM QoS. The table appears only if you select Application Priority in WMM QoS Policy. This is the number of an individual application entry. Name This field displays a description given to an application entry. Service This field displays either FTP, WWW, E-mail or a User Defined service to which you want to apply WMM QoS. Dest Port This field displays the destination port number to which the application sends traffic. Priority This field displays the priority of the application. on fid Highest - Typically used for voice or video that should be highquality. High - Typically used for voice or video that can be medium-quality. Mid - Typically used for applications that do not fit into another priority. For example, Internet surfing. pa Modify ny Low - Typically used for non-critical “background” applications, such as large file transfers and print jobs that should not affect other applications. Click the Remove icon to delete an application entry. Click Apply to save your changes to the NBG4604. om Apply Click the Edit icon to open the Application Priority Configuration screen. Modify an existing application entry or create a application entry in the Application Priority Configuration screen. NBG4604 User’s Guide 91 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN 7.7.1 Application Priority Configuration en tia Figure 48 Network > Wireless LAN > QoS: Application Priority Configuration Use this screen to edit a WMM QoS application entry. Click the edit icon under Modify. The following screen displays. fid See Appendix E on page 259 for a list of commonly-used services and destination ports. The following table describes the fields in this screen. Table 31 Network > Wireless LAN > QoS: Application Priority Configuration DESCRIPTION Name Type a description of the application priority. Service The following is a description of the applications you can prioritize with WMM QoS. Select a service from the drop-down list box. • E-Mail on LABEL Electronic mail consists of messages sent through a computer network to specific groups or individuals. Here are some default ports for e-mail: POP3 - port 110 ny IMAP - port 143 SMTP - port 25 om pa HTTP - port 80 92 • FTP File Transfer Protocol enables fast transfer of files, including large files that it may not be possible to send via e-mail. FTP uses port number 21. • WWW The World Wide Web is an Internet system to distribute graphical, hyper-linked information, based on Hyper Text Transfer Protocol (HTTP) - a client/server protocol for the World Wide Web. The Web is not synonymous with the Internet; rather, it is just one service on the Internet. Other services on the Internet include Internet Relay Chat and Newsgroups. The Web is accessed through use of a browser. • User-Defined User-defined services are user specific services configured using known ports and applications. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN Table 31 Network > Wireless LAN > QoS: Application Priority Configuration DESCRIPTION Dest Port This displays the port the selected service uses. Type a port number in the field provided if you want to use a different port to the default port. LABEL Select a priority from the drop-down list box. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Cancel Click Cancel to return to the previous screen. en tia Priority 7.8 WPS Screen pa ny on Figure 49 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS fid Use this screen to enable/disable WPS, view or generate a new PIN number and check current WPS status. To open this screen, click Network > Wireless LAN > WPS tab. om The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 32 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS LABEL DESCRIPTION WPS Setup Enable WPS Select this to enable the WPS feature. PIN Number This displays a PIN number last time system generated. Click Generate to generate a new PIN number. WPS Status NBG4604 User’s Guide 93 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN DESCRIPTION Status This displays Configured when the NBG4604 has connected to a wireless network using WPS or when Enable WPS is selected and wireless or wireless security settings have been changed. The current wireless and wireless security settings also appear in the screen. tia LABEL Table 32 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS This displays Unconfigured if WPS is disabled and there are no wireless or wireless security changes on the NBG4604 or you click Release_Configuration to remove the configured wireless and wireless security settings. This button is only available when the WPS status displays Configured. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Refresh Click Refresh to get this screen information afresh. en Release Configuration on 7.9 WPS Station Screen fid Click this button to remove all configured wireless and wireless security settings for WPS connections on the NBG4604. Use this screen when you want to add a wireless station using WPS. To open this screen, click Network > Wireless LAN > WPS Station tab. ny Note: Note: After you click Push Button on this screen, you have to press a similar button in the wireless station utility within 2 minutes. To add the second wireless station, you have to press these buttons on both device and the wireless station again after the first 2 minutes. om pa Figure 50 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS Station 94 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. DESCRIPTION Push Button Use this button when you use the PBC (Push Button Configuration) method to configure wireless stations’s wireless settings. tia LABEL Table 33 Network > Wireless LAN > WPS Station Click this to start WPS-aware wireless station scanning and the wireless security information synchronization. Use this button when you use the PIN Configuration method to configure wireless station’s wireless settings. en Type the same PIN number generated in the wireless station’s utility. Then click Start to associate to each other and perform the wireless security information synchronization. 7.10 Scheduling Screen fid Or input station’s PIN number on Use this screen to set the times your wireless LAN is turned on and off. Wireless LAN scheduling is disabled by default. The wireless LAN can be scheduled to turn on or off on certain days and at certain times. To open this screen, click Network > Wireless LAN > Scheduling tab. om pa ny Figure 51 Network > Wireless LAN > Scheduling NBG4604 User’s Guide 95 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 34 Network > Wireless LAN > Scheduling DESCRIPTION Enable Wireless LAN Scheduling Select this to enable Wireless LAN scheduling. Action Select On or Off to specify whether the Wireless LAN is turned on or off. This field works in conjunction with the Day and Except for the following times fields. Day Select Everyday or the specific days to turn the Wireless LAN on or off. If you select Everyday you can not select any specific days. This field works in conjunction with the Except for the following times field. Except for the following times (24-Hour Format) Select a begin time using the first set of hour and minute (min) drop down boxes and select an end time using the second set of hour and minute (min) drop down boxes. If you have chosen On earlier for the WLAN Status the Wireless LAN will turn off between the two times you enter in these fields. If you have chosen Off earlier for the WLAN Status the Wireless LAN will turn on between the two times you enter in these fields. fid en tia LABEL on Note: Entering the same begin time and end time will mean the whole day. Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to reload the previous configuration for this screen. ny 7.11 WDS Screen Apply pa A Wireless Distribution System is a wireless connection between two or more APs. Use this screen to set the operating mode of your NBG4604 to AP + Bridge or Bridge Only and establish wireless links with other APs. You need to know the MAC address of the peer device, which also must be in bridge mode. om Note: You must enable the same wireless security settings on the NBG4604 and on all wireless clients that you want to associate with it. 96 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN Click Network > Wireless LAN > WDS tab. The following screen opens with the Basic Setting set to Disabled, and Security Mode set to No Security. fid en tia Figure 52 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS The following table describes the labels in this screen. LABEL DESCRIPTION WDS Setup Select the operating mode for your NBG4604. • ny • AP + Bridge - The NBG4604 functions as a bridge and access point simultaneously. Bridge - The NBG4604 acts as a wireless network bridge and establishes wireless links with other APs. You need to know the MAC address of the peer device, which also must be in bridge mode. The NBG4604 can establish up to five wireless links with other APs. Basic Settings on Table 35 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS Select Disable if you do not want to use this feature. This is the MAC address of your NBG4604. Phy Mode Select a WDS physical layer transceiver mode. pa Local MAC Address Remote MAC Address This is the MAC address of the peer device that your NBG4604 wants to make a bridge connection with. You can connect to up to 4 peer devices. om Security Security Mode Note: WDS security is independent of the security settings between the NBG4604 and any wireless clients. The WDS is set to No Security by default. • • Refer to Section 7.11.1 on page 98 to view the screen for Static WEP security. Refer to Section 7.11.2 on page 99 to view the screen for WPA2PSK security. Apply Click Apply to save your changes to NBG4604. Refresh Click Refresh to reload the previous configuration for this screen. NBG4604 User’s Guide 97 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN 7.11.1 Security Mode: Static WEP Use this screen to configure the Static WEP security for your NBG4604 when it is in AP + Bridge or Bridge Only mode. on fid en tia Figure 53 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS (Static WEP) The following table describes the labels in this screen. Refer to Table 35 on page 97 for descriptions of other fields in this screen. Table 36 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS (Static WEP) DESCRIPTION ny LABEL Select 64-bit WEP or 128-bit WEP to enable data encryption. om pa WEP Encryption 98 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 7 Wireless LAN Table 36 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS (Static WEP) LABEL DESCRIPTION Authentication Method There are two types of WEP authentication namely, Open System and Shared Key. tia Open system is implemented for ease-of-use and when security is not an issue. The wireless station and the AP or peer computer do not share a secret key. Thus the wireless stations can associate with any AP or peer computer and listen to any transmitted data that is not encrypted. • Keys 1 to 4t The WEP keys are used to encrypt data. Both the NBG4604 and the wireless stations must use the same WEP key for data transmission. on ASCII/HEX Select Shared Key to have the NBG4604 authenticate only those wireless clients that use Shared Key mode and have the correct WEP key. Select Auto to have the NBG4604 allow association with wireless clients that use Open System mode. Data transfer is encrypted as long as the wireless client has the correct WEP key for encryption. The NBG4604 authenticates wireless clients using Shared Key mode that have the correct WEP key. fid • en Shared key mode involves a shared secret key to authenticate the wireless station to the AP or peer computer. This requires you to enable the wireless LAN security and use same settings on both the wireless station and the AP or peer computer. If you chose 64-bit WEP, then enter any 5 ASCII characters or 10 hexadecimal characters ("0-9", "A-F"). If you chose 128-bit WEP, then enter 13 ASCII characters or 26 hexadecimal characters ("0-9", "A-F"). ny You must configure all four keys, but only one key can be activated at any one time. The default key is key 1. 7.11.2 Security Mode: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK pa Use this screen to configure the WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK security for your NBG4604 when it is in AP + Bridge or Bridge Only mode. om Figure 54 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS (WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK) NBG4604 User’s Guide 99 Chapter 7 Wireless LAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. Refer to Table 35 on page 97 for descriptions of other fields in this screen. DESCRIPTION Pre-Shared Key Type a pre-shared key from 8 to 63 case-sensitive ASCII characters (including spaces and symbols). om pa ny on fid en tia LABEL Table 37 Network > Wireless LAN > WDS (WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK) 100 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER tia WAN en 8.1 Overview fid This chapter discusses the NBG4604’s WAN screens. Use these screens to configure your NBG4604 for Internet access. ny Figure 55 LAN and WAN on A WAN (Wide Area Network) connection is an outside connection to another network or the Internet. It connects your private networks (such as a LAN (Local Area Network) and other networks, so that a computer in one location can communicate with computers in other locations. pa See the chapter about the connection wizard for more information on the fields in the WAN screens. om 8.2 What You Can Do • Use the Internet Connection screen (Section 8.4 on page 105) to enter your ISP information and set how the computer acquires its IP, DNS and WAN MAC addresses. • Use the Advanced screen (Section 8.5 on page 111) to enable multicasting, configure Windows networking and bridge. NBG4604 User’s Guide 101 Chapter 8 WAN 8.3 What You Need To Know tia The information in this section can help you configure the screens for your WAN connection, as well as enable/disable some advanced features of your NBG4604. 8.3.1 Configuring Your Internet Connection en Encapsulation Method fid Encapsulation is used to include data from an upper layer protocol into a lower layer protocol. To set up a WAN connection to the Internet, you need to use the same encapsulation method used by your ISP (Internet Service Provider). If your ISP offers a dial-up Internet connection using PPPoE (PPP over Ethernet) or PPTP (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol), they should also provide a username and password (and service name) for user authentication. on WAN IP Address The WAN IP address is an IP address for the NBG4604, which makes it accessible from an outside network. It is used by the NBG4604 to communicate with other devices in other networks. It can be static (fixed) or dynamically assigned by the ISP each time the NBG4604 tries to access the Internet. ny If your ISP assigns you a static WAN IP address, they should also assign you the subnet mask and DNS server IP address(es) (and a gateway IP address if you use the Ethernet or ENET ENCAP encapsulation method). DNS Server Address Assignment pa Use Domain Name System (DNS) to map a domain name to its corresponding IP address and vice versa, for instance, the IP address of www.zyxel.com is 204.217.0.2. The DNS server is extremely important because without it, you must know the IP address of a computer before you can access it. om The NBG4604 can get the DNS server addresses in the following ways. 102 The ISP tells you the DNS server addresses, usually in the form of an information sheet, when you sign up. If your ISP gives you DNS server addresses, manually enter them in the DNS server fields. If your ISP dynamically assigns the DNS server IP addresses (along with the NBG4604’s WAN IP address), set the DNS server fields to get the DNS server address from the ISP. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 8 WAN WAN MAC Address tia The MAC address screen allows users to configure the WAN port's MAC address by either using the factory default or cloning the MAC address from a computer on your LAN. Choose Factory Default to select the factory assigned default MAC Address. en Otherwise, click Clone the computer's MAC address - IP Address and enter the IP address of the computer on the LAN whose MAC you are cloning. Once it is successfully configured, the address will be copied to configuration file. It is recommended that you clone the MAC address prior to hooking up the WAN Port. 8.3.2 Multicast pa ny Figure 56 Multicast Example on fid Traditionally, IP packets are transmitted in one of either two ways - Unicast (1 sender - 1 recipient) or Broadcast (1 sender - everybody on the network). Multicast delivers IP packets to a group of hosts on the network - not everybody and not just 1. om In the multicast example above, systems A and D comprise one multicast group. In multicasting, the server only needs to send one data stream and this is delivered to systems A and D. IGMP (Internet Group Multicast Protocol) is a network-layer protocol used to establish membership in a multicast group - it is not used to carry user data. The NBG4604 supports both IGMP version 1 (IGMP-v1) and IGMP version 2 (IGMPv2). At start up, the NBG4604 queries all directly connected networks to gather group membership. After that, the NBG4604 periodically updates this information. IP multicasting can be enabled/disabled on the NBG4604 LAN and/or WAN interfaces in the Web Configurator (LAN; WAN). Select None to disable IP multicasting on these interfaces. NBG4604 User’s Guide 103 Chapter 8 WAN 8.3.3 NetBIOS over TCP/IP tia NetBIOS (Network Basic Input/Output System) are TCP or UDP broadcast packets that enable a computer to connect to and communicate with a LAN. For some dialup services such as PPPoE or PPTP, NetBIOS packets cause unwanted calls. However it may sometimes be necessary to allow NetBIOS packets to pass through to the WAN in order to find a computer on the WAN. en 8.3.4 Auto-Bridge fid In the rear panel of your NBG4604, you can see four LAN ports (1 to 4) and one WAN port. The WAN port is for your Internet access connection, and the LAN ports are for your network devices. The WAN port has a different IP address from the LAN ports. When you enable auto-bridging in your NBG4604, all five ports (4 LAN ports and the WAN port) share the same IP address as shown in the figure below. on Figure 57 Autobridging Example IP Address: 192.168.1.20 pa ny This might happen if you put the NBG4604 behind a NAT router that assigns it this IP address. When the NBG4604 is in auto-bridge mode, the NBG4604 acts as an AP and all the interfaces (LAN, WAN and WLAN) are bridged. In this mode, your NAT, DHCP server and firewall on the NBG4604 are not available. You do not have to reconfigure them if you return to router mode. Auto-bridging only works under the following conditions: om • The WAN IP must be 192.168.x.y (where x and y must be from zero to nine). If the LAN IP address and the WAN IP address are in the same subnet but x or y is greater than nine, the device operates in router mode (with firewall available). • The device must be in Router Mode (see Chapter 24 on page 193 for more information) for auto-bridging to become active. 104 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 8 WAN 8.4 Internet Connection 8.4.1 Ethernet Encapsulation This screen displays when you select Ethernet encapsulation. tia Use this screen to change your NBG4604’s Internet access settings. Click Network > WAN. The screen differs according to the encapsulation you choose. pa ny on fid en Figure 58 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: Ethernet Encapsulation The following table describes the labels in this screen. om Table 38 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: Ethernet Encapsulation LABEL DESCRIPTION Connection Type You must choose the Ethernet option when the WAN port is used as a regular Ethernet. WAN IP Address Assignment Get automatically from ISP Select this option If your ISP did not assign you a fixed IP address. This is the default selection. Use Fixed IP Address Select this option If the ISP assigned a fixed IP address. NBG4604 User’s Guide 105 Chapter 8 WAN Table 38 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: Ethernet Encapsulation LABEL DESCRIPTION Enter your WAN IP address in this field if you selected Use Fixed IP Address. IP Subnet Mask Enter the IP Subnet Mask in this field. Gateway IP Address Enter a Gateway IP Address (if your ISP gave you one) in this field. tia IP Address DNS Servers fid en First DNS Server Select From ISP if your ISP dynamically assigns DNS server information (and the NBG4604's WAN IP address). The field to the right Second DNS displays the (read-only) DNS server IP address that the ISP assigns. Server Select User-Defined if you have the IP address of a DNS server. Enter the DNS server's IP address in the field to the right. If you chose UserDefined, but leave the IP address set to 0.0.0.0, User-Defined changes to None after you click Apply. If you set a second choice to User-Defined, and enter the same IP address, the second UserDefined changes to None after you click Apply. on Select None if you do not want to configure DNS servers. If you do not configure a DNS server, you must know the IP address of a computer in order to access it. The MAC address section allows users to configure the WAN port's MAC address by either using the NBG4604’s MAC address, copying the MAC address from a computer on your LAN or manually entering a MAC address. Factory default Select Factory default to use the factory assigned default MAC Address. Clone the computer’s MAC address - IP Address Select Clone the computer's MAC address - IP Address and enter the IP address of the computer on the LAN whose MAC you are cloning. Once it is successfully configured, the address will be copied to the rom file. It will not change unless you change the setting or upload a different ROM file. Set WAN MAC Address Select this option and enter the MAC address you want to use. pa ny WAN MAC Address Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. om 8.4.2 PPPoE Encapsulation The NBG4604 supports PPPoE (Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet). PPPoE is an IETF standard (RFC 2516) specifying how a personal computer (PC) interacts with a broadband modem (DSL, cable, wireless, etc.) connection. The PPP over Ethernet option is for a dial-up connection using PPPoE. 106 For the service provider, PPPoE offers an access and authentication method that works with existing access control systems (for example Radius). NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 8 WAN One of the benefits of PPPoE is the ability to let you access one of multiple network services, a function known as dynamic service selection. This enables the service provider to easily create and offer new IP services for individuals. tia Operationally, PPPoE saves significant effort for both you and the ISP or carrier, as it requires no specific configuration of the broadband modem at the customer site. en By implementing PPPoE directly on the NBG4604 (rather than individual computers), the computers on the LAN do not need PPPoE software installed, since the NBG4604 does that part of the task. Furthermore, with NAT, all of the LANs’ computers will have access. This screen displays when you select PPPoE encapsulation. om pa ny on fid Figure 59 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPPoE Encapsulation The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 39 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPPoE Encapsulation LABEL DESCRIPTION ISP Parameters for Internet Access Connection Type Select PPP over Ethernet if you connect to your Internet via dial-up. Service Name Type the PPPoE service name provided to you. PPPoE uses a service name to identify and reach the PPPoE server. User Name Type the user name given to you by your ISP. NBG4604 User’s Guide 107 Chapter 8 WAN Table 39 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPPoE Encapsulation DESCRIPTION Password Type the password associated with the user name above. Retype to Confirm Type your password again to make sure that you have entered is correctly. Nailed-Up Connection Select Nailed-Up Connection if you do not want the connection to time out. Idle Timeout This value specifies the time in minutes that elapses before the router automatically disconnects from the PPPoE server. tia LABEL First DNS Server Select From ISP if your ISP dynamically assigns DNS server information (and the NBG4604's WAN IP address). The field to the right displays the (read-only) DNS server IP address that the ISP assigns. Select User-Defined if you have the IP address of a DNS server. Enter the DNS server's IP address in the field to the right. If you chose UserDefined, but leave the IP address set to 0.0.0.0, User-Defined changes to None after you click Apply. If you set a second choice to User-Defined, and enter the same IP address, the second UserDefined changes to None after you click Apply. fid Second DNS Server en DNS Servers on Select None if you do not want to configure DNS servers. If you do not configure a DNS server, you must know the IP address of a computer in order to access it. The MAC address section allows users to configure the WAN port's MAC address by using the NBG4604’s MAC address, copying the MAC address from a computer on your LAN or manually entering a MAC address. Factory default Select Factory default to use the factory assigned default MAC Address. Clone the computer’s MAC address IP Address Select Clone the computer's MAC address - IP Address and enter the IP address of the computer on the LAN whose MAC you are cloning. Once it is successfully configured, the address will be copied to the rom file. It will not change unless you change the setting or upload a different ROM file. Set WAN MAC Address Select this option and enter the MAC address you want to use. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. om pa ny WAN MAC Address 8.4.3 PPTP Encapsulation Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) is a network protocol that enables secure transfer of data from a remote client to a private server, creating a Virtual Private Network (VPN) using TCP/IP-based networks. 108 PPTP supports on-demand, multi-protocol and virtual private networking over public networks, such as the Internet. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 8 WAN This screen displays when you select PPTP encapsulation. ny on fid en tia Figure 60 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPTP Encapsulation pa The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 40 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPTP Encapsulation LABEL DESCRIPTION om ISP Parameters for Internet Access Connection Type Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) is a network protocol that enables secure transfer of data from a remote client to a private server, creating a Virtual Private Network (VPN) using TCP/IP-based networks. PPTP supports on-demand, multi-protocol, and virtual private networking over public networks, such as the Internet. The NBG4604 supports only one PPTP server connection at any given time. To configure a PPTP client, you must configure the User Name and Password fields for a PPP connection and the PPTP parameters for a PPTP connection. User Name NBG4604 User’s Guide Type the user name given to you by your ISP. 109 Chapter 8 WAN Table 40 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPTP Encapsulation DESCRIPTION Password Type the password associated with the User Name above. Retype to Confirm Type your password again to make sure that you have entered is correctly. Nailed-up Connection Select Nailed-Up Connection if you do not want the connection to time out. Idle Timeout This value specifies the time in minutes that elapses before the NBG4604 automatically disconnects from the PPTP server. tia LABEL en PPTP Configuration Type the IP address of the PPTP server. Connection ID/ Name Type your identification name for the PPTP server. Get automatically from ISP Select this option If your ISP did not assign you a fixed IP address. This is the default selection. Use Fixed IP Address Select this option If the ISP assigned a fixed IP address. fid Server IP Address/ Domain Enter your WAN IP address in this field if you selected Use Fixed IP Address. My IP Subnet Mask Your NBG4604 will automatically calculate the subnet mask based on the IP address that you assign. Unless you are implementing subnetting, use the subnet mask computed by the NBG4604. Get automatically from ISP DNS Servers Select this to get your WAN IP address from your ISP. Select From ISP if your ISP dynamically assigns DNS server information (and the NBG4604's WAN IP address). The field to the right displays the (read-only) DNS server IP address that the ISP assigns. ny First DNS Server WAN IP Address Assignment on My WAN IP Address om pa Second DNS Server 110 Select User-Defined if you have the IP address of a DNS server. Enter the DNS server's IP address in the field to the right. If you chose User-Defined, but leave the IP address set to 0.0.0.0, UserDefined changes to None after you click Apply. If you set a second choice to User-Defined, and enter the same IP address, the second User-Defined changes to None after you click Apply. Select None if you do not want to configure DNS servers. If you do not configure a DNS server, you must know the IP address of a computer in order to access it. WAN MAC Address The MAC address section allows users to configure the WAN port's MAC address by either using the NBG4604’s MAC address, copying the MAC address from a computer on your LAN or manually entering a MAC address. Factory default Select Factory default to use the factory assigned default MAC Address. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 8 WAN DESCRIPTION Clone the computer’s MAC address - IP Address Select Clone the computer's MAC address - IP Address and enter the IP address of the computer on the LAN whose MAC you are cloning. Once it is successfully configured, the address will be copied to the rom file. It will not change unless you change the setting or upload a different ROM file. Set WAN MAC Address Select this option and enter the MAC address you want to use. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. en fid 8.5 Advanced WAN Screen tia LABEL Table 40 Network > WAN > Internet Connection: PPTP Encapsulation on Use this screen to enable Multicast, allow Windows Networking and enable Auto-bridge. Note: The three categories shown in this screen are independent of each other. To change your NBG4604’s advanced WAN settings, click Network > WAN > Advanced. The screen appears as shown. om pa ny Figure 61 Network > WAN > Advanced NBG4604 User’s Guide 111 Chapter 8 WAN The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 41 Network > WAN > Advanced LABEL DESCRIPTION Multicast Setup Check this to enable multicasting. This applies to traffic routed from the WAN to the LAN. tia Multicast Leaving this blank may cause incoming traffic to be dropped or sent to all connected network devices. Select this check box to forward NetBIOS packets from the LAN to the WAN and from the WAN to the LAN. If your firewall is enabled with the default policy set to block WAN to LAN traffic, you also need to enable the default WAN to LAN firewall rule that forwards NetBIOS traffic. fid Allow between LAN and WAN en Windows Networking (NetBIOS over TCP/IP) Clear this check box to block all NetBIOS packets going from the LAN to the WAN and from the WAN to the LAN. Allow Trigger Dial Select this option to allow NetBIOS packets to initiate calls. on Auto-bridge Select this option to have the NBG4604 switch to bridge mode automatically when the NBG4604 gets a WAN IP address in the range of 192.168.x.y (where x and y are from zero to nine) no matter what the LAN IP address is. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. om pa ny Enable Auto-bridge mode 112 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 9.1 Overview This chapter describes how to configure LAN settings. en tia LAN on fid A Local Area Network (LAN) is a shared communication system to which many computers are attached. A LAN is a computer network limited to the immediate area, usually the same building or floor of a building. The LAN screens can help you configure a LAN DHCP server, manage IP addresses, and partition your physical network into logical networks. pa ny Figure 62 LAN Setup om The LAN screens can help you configure a LAN DHCP server and manage IP addresses. 9.2 What You Can Do Use the IP screen (Section 9.4 on page 115) to change your basic LAN settings. NBG4604 User’s Guide 113 Chapter 9 LAN 9.3 What You Need To Know tia The actual physical connection determines whether the NBG4604 ports are LAN or WAN ports. There are two separate IP networks, one inside the LAN network and the other outside the WAN network as shown next. fid en Figure 63 LAN and WAN IP Addresses on The LAN parameters of the NBG4604 are preset in the factory with the following values: • IP address of 192.168.1.1 with subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 (24 bits) • DHCP server enabled with 32 client IP addresses starting from 192.168.1.33. ny These parameters should work for the majority of installations. If your ISP gives you explicit DNS server address(es), read the embedded Web Configurator help regarding what fields need to be configured. 9.3.1 IP Pool Setup om pa The NBG4604 is pre-configured with a pool of 32 IP addresses starting from 192.168.1.33 to 192.168.1.64. This configuration leaves 31 IP addresses (excluding the NBG4604 itself) in the lower range (192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.32) for other server computers, for instance, servers for mail, FTP, TFTP, web, etc., that you may have. Refer to Section 4.4.6 on page 49 for information on IP Address and Subnet Mask. 9.3.2 LAN TCP/IP 114 The NBG4604 has built-in DHCP server capability that assigns IP addresses and DNS servers to systems that support DHCP client capability. Refer to the Section 4.4.7 on page 50 section for information on System DNS Servers. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 9 LAN 9.4 LAN IP Screen Use this screen to change your basic LAN settings. Click Network > LAN. fid The following table describes the labels in this screen. en tia Figure 64 Network > LAN > IP Table 42 Network > LAN > IP DESCRIPTION Get from DHCP Server Select this to have your NBG4604 receive its IP address automatically from a DHCP server. User Defined LAN IP Select this to manually enter the IP address and Subnet Mask as they were provided to you by your network administrator. on LABEL Type the IP address of your NBG4604 in dotted decimal notation 192.168.1.1 (factory default). IP Subnet Mask The subnet mask specifies the network number portion of an IP address. Your NBG4604 will automatically calculate the subnet mask based on the IP address that you assign. Unless you are implementing subnetting, use the subnet mask computed by the NBG4604. Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. om pa Reset ny Apply IP Address NBG4604 User’s Guide 115 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 9 LAN 116 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 10 tia DHCP Server en 10.1 Overview 10.2 What You Can Do on fid DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, RFC 2131 and RFC 2132) allows individual clients to obtain TCP/IP configuration at start-up from a server. You can configure the NBG4604’s LAN as a DHCP server or disable it. When configured as a server, the NBG4604 provides the TCP/IP configuration for the clients. If DHCP service is disabled, you must have another DHCP server on your LAN, or else the computer must be manually configured. • Use the General screen (Section 10.4 on page 118) to enable the DHCP server. • Use the Advanced screen (Section 10.5 on page 118) to assign IP addresses on the LAN to specific individual computers based on their MAC Addresses. ny • Use the Client List screen (Section 10.6 on page 120) to view the current DHCP client information. pa 10.3 What You Need To Know om Every Ethernet device has a unique MAC (Media Access Control) address. The MAC address is assigned at the factory and consists of six pairs of hexadecimal characters, for example, 00:A0:C5:00:00:02. Find out the MAC addresses of your network devices if you intend to add them to the DHCP Client List screen. Refer to Section 4.4.6 on page 49 for information on IP Address and Subnet Mask. Refer to the Section 4.4.7 on page 50 section for information on System DNS Servers. NBG4604 User’s Guide 117 Chapter 10 DHCP Server 10.4 General Screen Use this screen to enable the DHCP server. Click Network > DHCP Server. The following screen displays. Table 43 Network > DHCP Server > General en fid The following table describes the labels in this screen. tia Figure 65 Network > DHCP Server > General DESCRIPTION Enable DHCP Server Enable or Disable DHCP for LAN. on LABEL ny DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, RFC 2131 and RFC 2132) allows individual clients (computers) to obtain TCP/IP configuration at startup from a server. Leave the Enable DHCP Server check box selected unless your ISP instructs you to do otherwise. Clear it to disable the NBG4604 acting as a DHCP server. When configured as a server, the NBG4604 provides TCP/IP configuration for the clients. If not, DHCP service is disabled and you must have another DHCP server on your LAN, or else the computers must be manually configured. When set as a server, fill in the following four fields. IP Pool Starting Address This field specifies the first of the contiguous addresses in the IP address pool for LAN. Pool Size This field specifies the size, or count of the IP address pool for LAN. pa Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. om Reset 10.5 Advanced Screen 118 This screen allows you to assign IP addresses on the LAN to specific individual computers based on their MAC addresses. You can also use this screen to configure the DNS server information that the NBG4604 sends to the DHCP clients. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 10 DHCP Server To change your NBG4604’s static DHCP settings, click Network > DHCP Server > Advanced. The following screen displays. on fid en tia Figure 66 Network > DHCP Server > Advanced The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 44 Network > DHCP Server > Advanced LABEL DESCRIPTION This is the index number of the static IP table entry (row). ny Static DHCP Table MAC Address Type the MAC address (with colons) of a computer on your LAN. IP Address Type the LAN IP address of a computer on your LAN. DNS Server The NBG4604 passes a DNS (Domain Name System) server IP address (in the order you specify here) to the DHCP clients. The NBG4604 only passes this information to the LAN DHCP clients when you select the Enable DHCP Server check box. When you clear the Enable DHCP Server check box, DHCP service is disabled and you must have another DHCP sever on your LAN, or else the computers must have their DNS server addresses manually configured. om pa DNS Servers Assigned by DHCP Server NBG4604 User’s Guide 119 Chapter 10 DHCP Server LABEL DESCRIPTION First DNS Server Select From ISP if your ISP dynamically assigns DNS server information (and the NBG4604's WAN IP address). The field to the right displays the (read-only) DNS server IP address that the ISP assigns. tia Second DNS Server Table 44 Network > DHCP Server > Advanced en Select User-Defined if you have the IP address of a DNS server. Enter the DNS server's IP address in the field to the right. If you chose User-Defined, but leave the IP address set to 0.0.0.0, User-Defined changes to None after you click Apply. If you set a second choice to User-Defined, and enter the same IP address, the second UserDefined changes to None after you click Apply. on fid Select DNS Relay to have the NBG4604 act as a DNS proxy. The NBG4604's LAN IP address displays in the field to the right (readonly). The NBG4604 tells the DHCP clients on the LAN that the NBG4604 itself is the DNS server. When a computer on the LAN sends a DNS query to the NBG4604, the NBG4604 forwards the query to the NBG4604's system DNS server (configured in the WAN > Internet Connection screen) and relays the response back to the computer. You can only select DNS Relay for one of the three servers; if you select DNS Relay for a second or third DNS server, that choice changes to None after you click Apply. Select None if you do not want to configure DNS servers. If you do not configure a DNS server, you must know the IP address of a computer in order to access it. Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. ny Apply 10.6 Client List Screen pa The DHCP table shows current DHCP client information (including IP Address, Host Name and MAC Address) of network clients using the NBG4604’s DHCP servers. om Configure this screen to always assign an IP address to a MAC address (and host name). Click Network > DHCP Server > Client List. Note: You can also view a read-only client list by clicking the DHCP Table (Details...) hyperlink in the Status screen. 120 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 10 DHCP Server The following screen displays. The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 45 Network > DHCP Server > Client List en tia Figure 67 Network > DHCP Server > Client List DESCRIPTION This is the index number of the host computer. IP Address This field displays the IP address relative to the # field listed above. Host Name This field displays the computer host name. MAC Address The MAC (Media Access Control) or Ethernet address on a LAN (Local Area Network) is unique to your computer (six pairs of hexadecimal notation). on fid LABEL A network interface card such as an Ethernet adapter has a hardwired address that is assigned at the factory. This address follows an industry standard that ensures no other adapter has a similar address. Apply Click Apply to save your settings. Click Refresh to reload the DHCP table. om pa Refresh Select this check box in the DHCP Setup section to have the NBG4604 always assign the IP address(es) to the MAC address(es) (and host name(s)). After you click Apply, the MAC address and IP address also display in the Advanced screen (where you can edit them). ny Reserve NBG4604 User’s Guide 121 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 10 DHCP Server 122 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 11 en tia Network Address Translation (NAT) 11.1 Overview fid This chapter discusses how to configure NAT on the NBG4604. on NAT (Network Address Translation - NAT, RFC 1631) is the translation of the IP address of a host in a packet. For example, the source address of an outgoing packet, used within one network is changed to a different IP address known within another network. ny Each packet has two addresses – a source address and a destination address. For outgoing packets, NAT maps private (local) IP addresses to globally unique ones required for communication with hosts on other networks. It replaces the original IP source address in each packet and then forwards it to the Internet. The NBG4604 keeps track of the original addresses and port numbers so incoming reply packets can have their original values restored. The following figure illustrates this. om pa Figure 68 NAT Example For more information on IP address translation, refer to RFC 1631, The IP Network Address Translator (NAT). NBG4604 User’s Guide 123 Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) Note: You must create a firewall rule in addition to setting up NAT, to allow traffic from the WAN to be forwarded through the NBG4604. tia 11.2 What You Can Do • Use the General screen (Section 11.3 on page 124) to enable NAT and set a default server. en • Use the Application screen (Section 11.4 on page 125) to change your NBG4604’s port forwarding settings. 11.3 General NAT Screen fid • Use the Advanced screen (Section 11.5 on page 128) to change your NBG4604’s trigger port settings. on Use this screen to enable NAT and set a default server. Click Network > NAT to open the General screen. pa ny Figure 69 Network > NAT > General om The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 46 Network > NAT > General LABEL DESCRIPTION NAT Setup Enable Network Address Translation 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). Select the check box to enable NAT. Default Server Setup 124 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) Table 46 Network > NAT > General DESCRIPTION Server IP Address In addition to the servers for specified services, NAT supports a default server. A default server receives packets from ports that are not specified in the Application screen. LABEL Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. en Apply tia If you do not assign a Default Server IP address, the NBG4604 discards all packets received for ports that are not specified in the Application screen or remote management. fid 11.4 NAT Application Screen on Use the Application screen to forward incoming service requests to the server(s) on your local network. You may enter a single port number or a range of port numbers to be forwarded, and the local IP address of the desired server. The port number identifies a service; for example, web service is on port 80 and FTP on port 21. In some cases, such as for unknown services or where one server can support more than one service (for example both FTP and web service), it might be better to specify a range of port numbers. ny In addition to the servers for specified services, NAT supports a default server. A service request that does not have a server explicitly designated for it is forwarded to the default server. If the default is not defined, the service request is simply discarded. pa Note: Many residential broadband ISP accounts do not allow you to run any server processes (such as a Web or FTP server) from your location. Your ISP may periodically check for servers and may suspend your account if it discovers any active services at your location. If you are unsure, refer to your ISP. om Port forwarding allows you to define the local servers to which the incoming services will be forwarded. To change your NBG4604’s port forwarding settings, click Network > NAT > Application. The screen appears as shown. Note: If you do not assign a Default Server IP address in the NAT > General screen, the NBG4604 discards all packets received for ports that are not specified in this screen or remote management. NBG4604 User’s Guide 125 Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) Refer to Appendix E on page 259 for port numbers commonly used for particular services. on fid en tia Figure 70 Network > NAT > Application The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 47 Network > NAT > Application LABEL DESCRIPTION Active ny Add Application Rule Select the check box to enable this rule and the requested service can be forwarded to the host with a specified internal IP address. pa Clear the checkbox to disallow forwarding of these ports to an inside server without having to delete the entry. om Service Name Local Port Range Type a name (of up to 31 printable characters) to identify this rule in the first field next to Service Name. Otherwise, select a predefined service in the second field next to Service Name. The predefined service name and port number(s) will display in the Service Name and Port fields. Enter the port number ranges to be forwarded. Public Port Range 126 Server IP Address Type the inside IP address of the server that receives packets from the port(s) specified in the Port field. Apply Click Apply to save your changes to the Application Rules Summary table. Reset Click Reset to not save and return your new changes in the Service Name and Port fields to the previous one. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) Table 47 Network > NAT > Application (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Application Rules Summary This is the number of an individual port forwarding server entry. Active This icon is turned on when the rule is enabled. Name This field displays a name to identify this rule. Local Start/End Port This field displays the port number(s). tia en Public Start/End Port This field displays the inside IP address of the server. Modify Click the Edit icon to display and modify an existing rule setting in the fields under Add Application Rule. fid Server IP Address om pa ny on Click the Remove icon to delete a rule. NBG4604 User’s Guide 127 Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) 11.5 NAT Advanced Screen en tia Some services use a dedicated range of ports on the client side and a dedicated range of ports on the server side. With regular port forwarding you set a forwarding port in NAT to forward a service (coming in from the server on the WAN) to the IP address of a computer on the client side (LAN). The problem is that port forwarding only forwards a service to a single LAN IP address. In order to use the same service on a different LAN computer, you have to manually replace the LAN computer's IP address in the forwarding port with another LAN computer's IP address. on fid Trigger port forwarding solves this problem by allowing computers on the LAN to dynamically take turns using the service. The NBG4604 records the IP address of a LAN computer that sends traffic to the WAN to request a service with a specific port number and protocol (a "trigger" port). When the NBG4604's WAN port receives a response with a specific port number and protocol ("incoming" port), the NBG4604 forwards the traffic to the LAN IP address of the computer that sent the request. After that computer’s connection for that service closes, another computer on the LAN can use the service in the same manner. This way you do not need to configure a new IP address each time you want a different LAN computer to use the application. To change your NBG4604’s trigger port settings, click Network > NAT > Advanced. The screen appears as shown. Note: Only one LAN computer can use a trigger port (range) at a time. om pa ny Figure 71 Network > NAT > Advanced 128 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 48 Network > NAT > Advanced DESCRIPTION This is the rule index number (read-only). Name Type a unique name (up to 15 characters) for identification purposes. All characters are permitted - including spaces. Incoming Incoming is a port (or a range of ports) that a server on the WAN uses when it sends out a particular service. The NBG4604 forwards the traffic with this port (or range of ports) to the client computer on the LAN that requested the service. en tia LABEL Start Port Type a port number or the starting port number in a range of port numbers. End Port Type a port number or the ending port number in a range of port numbers. The trigger port is a port (or a range of ports) that causes (or triggers) the NBG4604 to record the IP address of the LAN computer that sent the traffic to a server on the WAN. fid Trigger Type a port number or the starting port number in a range of port numbers. End Port Type a port number or the ending port number in a range of port numbers. on Start Port Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. Apply 11.5.1 Trigger Port Forwarding Example ny The following is an example of trigger port forwarding. om pa Figure 72 Trigger Port Forwarding Process: Example Jane requests a file from the Real Audio server (port 7070). NBG4604 User’s Guide 129 Chapter 11 Network Address Translation (NAT) Port 7070 is a “trigger” port and causes the NBG4604 to record Jane’s computer IP address. The NBG4604 associates Jane's computer IP address with the "incoming" port range of 6970-7170. The Real Audio server responds using a port number ranging between 6970-7170. The NBG4604 forwards the traffic to Jane’s computer IP address. Only Jane can connect to the Real Audio server until the connection is closed or times out. The NBG4604 times out in three minutes with UDP (User Datagram Protocol), or two hours with TCP/IP (Transfer Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). en tia 11.5.2 Two Points To Remember About Trigger Ports Trigger events only happen on data that is going coming from inside the NBG4604 and going to the outside. If an application needs a continuous data stream, that port (range) will be tied up so that another computer on the LAN can’t trigger it. om pa ny on fid 130 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 12 tia Dynamic DNS en 12.1 Overview fid Dynamic DNS (DDNS) services let you use a domain name with a dynamic IP address. on 12.2 What You Can Do Use the Dynamic DNS screen (Section 12.4 on page 132) to enable DDNS and configure the DDNS settings on the NBG4604. 12.3 What You Need To Know pa ny Dynamic DNS allows you to update your current dynamic IP address with one or many dynamic DNS services so that anyone can contact you (in NetMeeting, CUSeeMe, etc.). You can also access your FTP server or Web site on your own computer using a domain name (for instance myhost.dhs.org, where myhost is a name of your choice) that will never change instead of using an IP address that changes each time you reconnect. Your friends or relatives will always be able to call you even if they don't know your IP address. om 12.3.1 DynDNS Wildcard Enabling the wildcard feature for your host causes *.yourhost.dyndns.org to be aliased to the same IP address as yourhost.dyndns.org. This feature is useful if you want to be able to use, for example, www.yourhost.dyndns.org and still reach your hostname. Note: If you have a private WAN IP address, then you cannot use Dynamic DNS. You must have a public WAN IP address. NBG4604 User’s Guide 131 Chapter 12 Dynamic DNS 12.4 Dynamic DNS Screen To change your NBG4604’s DDNS, click Network > DDNS. The screen appears as shown. pa ny on fid en tia Figure 73 Network > Dynamic DNS The following table describes the labels in this screen. om Table 49 Network > Dynamic DNS LABEL DESCRIPTION Dynamic DNS Setup 132 Enable Dynamic DNS Select this check box to use dynamic DNS. Service Provider Select the name of your Dynamic DNS service provider. Dynamic DNS Type Select the type of service that you are registered for from your Dynamic DNS service provider. Host Name Enter a host names in the field provided. You can specify up to two host names in the field separated by a comma (","). NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 12 Dynamic DNS DESCRIPTION User Name Enter your user name. Password Enter the password assigned to you. Token Enter your client authorization key provided by the server to update DynDNS records. tia LABEL Table 49 Network > Dynamic DNS This field is configurable only when you select WWW.REGFISH.COM in the Service Provider field. Select the check box to enable DynDNS Wildcard. Enable off line option This option is available when CustomDNS is selected in the DDNS Type field. Check with your Dynamic DNS service provider to have traffic redirected to a URL (that you can specify) while you are off line. en Enable Wildcard Option fid IP Address Update Policy: Use WAN IP Address Select this option to update the IP address of the host name(s) to the WAN IP address. Select this option to update the IP address of the host name(s) automatically by the DDNS server. It is recommended that you select this option. Use specified IP Address Type the IP address of the host name(s). Use this if you have a static IP address. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh. om pa ny on Dynamic DNS server auto detect IP Address NBG4604 User’s Guide 133 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 12 Dynamic DNS 134 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 13 tia Firewall en 13.1 Overview fid Use these screens to enable and configure the firewall that protects your NBG4604 and your LAN from unwanted or malicious traffic. Enable the firewall to protect your LAN computers from attacks by hackers on the Internet and control access between the LAN and WAN. By default the firewall: on • allows traffic that originates from your LAN computers to go to all of the networks. • blocks traffic that originates on the other networks from going to the LAN. The following figure illustrates the default firewall action. User A can initiate an IM (Instant Messaging) session from the LAN to the WAN (1). Return traffic for this session is also allowed (2). However other traffic initiated from the WAN is blocked (3 and 4). om pa ny Figure 74 Default Firewall Action NBG4604 User’s Guide 135 Chapter 13 Firewall 13.2 What You Can Do • Use the General screen (Section 13.4 on page 137) to enable or disable the NBG4604’s firewall. en 13.3 What You Need To Know tia • Use the Services screen (Section 13.5 on page 137) screen enable service blocking, enter/delete/modify the services you want to block and the date/time you want to block them. 13.3.1 About the NBG4604 Firewall fid The NBG4604’s firewall feature physically separates the LAN and the WAN and acts as a secure gateway for all data passing between the networks. on The NBG4604 firewall is a stateful inspection firewall and is designed to protect against Denial of Service attacks when activated (click the General tab under Firewall and then click the Enable Firewall check box). The NBG4604's purpose is to allow a private Local Area Network (LAN) to be securely connected to the Internet. The NBG4604 can be used to prevent theft, destruction and modification of data, as well as log events, which may be important to the security of your network. ny The NBG4604 is installed between the LAN and a broadband modem connecting to the Internet. This allows it to act as a secure gateway for all data passing between the Internet and the LAN. pa The NBG4604 has one Ethernet WAN port and four Ethernet LAN ports, which are used to physically separate the network into two areas.The WAN (Wide Area Network) port attaches to the broadband (cable or DSL) modem to the Internet. om The LAN (Local Area Network) port attaches to a network of computers, which needs security from the outside world. These computers will have access to Internet services such as e-mail, FTP and the World Wide Web. However, "inbound access" is not allowed (by default) unless the remote host is authorized to use a specific service. 136 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 13 Firewall 13.4 General Firewall Screen Use this screen to enable or disable the NBG4604’s firewall, and set up firewall logs. Click Security > Firewall to open the General screen. fid en tia Figure 75 Security > Firewall > General The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 50 Security > Firewall > General DESCRIPTION Enable Firewall Select this check box to activate the firewall. The NBG4604 performs access control and protects against Denial of Service (DoS) attacks when the firewall is activated. Apply Click Apply to save the settings. Reset Click Reset to start configuring this screen again. on LABEL ny 13.5 Services Screen pa If an outside user attempts to probe an unsupported port on your NBG4604, an ICMP response packet is automatically returned. This allows the outside user to know the NBG4604 exists. Use this screen to prevent the ICMP response packet from being sent. This keeps outsiders from discovering your NBG4604 when unsupported ports are probed. om You can also use this screen to enable service blocking, enter/delete/modify the services you want to block and the date/time you want to block them. NBG4604 User’s Guide 137 Chapter 13 Firewall Click Security > Firewall > Services. The screen appears as shown next. Table 51 Security > Firewall > Services fid The following table describes the labels in this screen. en tia Figure 76 Security > Firewall > Services DESCRIPTION ICMP Internet Control Message Protocol is a message control and errorreporting protocol between a host server and a gateway to the Internet. ICMP uses Internet Protocol (IP) datagrams, but the messages are processed by the TCP/IP software and directly apparent to the application user. Respond to Ping on The NBG4604 will not respond to any incoming Ping requests when Disable is selected. Select LAN to reply to incoming LAN Ping requests. Select WAN to reply to incoming WAN Ping requests. Otherwise select LAN & WAN to reply to all incoming LAN and WAN Ping requests. Do not respond to requests for unauthorized services Select this option to prevent hackers from finding the NBG4604 by probing for unused ports. If you select this option, the NBG4604 will not respond to port request(s) for unused ports, thus leaving the unused ports and the NBG4604 unseen. By default this option is not selected and the NBG4604 will reply with an ICMP Port Unreachable packet for a port probe on its unused UDP ports, and a TCP Reset packet for a port probe on its unused TCP ports. ny on LABEL om pa Note that the probing packets must first traverse the NBG4604's firewall mechanism before reaching this anti-probing mechanism. Therefore if the firewall mechanism blocks a probing packet, the NBG4604 reacts based on the firewall policy, which by default, is to send a TCP reset packet for a blocked TCP packet. You can use the command "sys firewall tcprst rst [on|off]" to change this policy. When the firewall mechanism blocks a UDP packet, it drops the packet without sending a response packet. Click Apply to save the settings. Reset Click Reset to start configuring this screen again. Apply 138 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 14 tia Content Filtering en 14.1 Overview fid This chapter provides a brief overview of content filtering using the embedded web GUI. 14.2 What You Can Do on Internet content filtering allows you to create and enforce Internet access policies tailored to your needs. Content filtering is the ability to block certain web features or specific URL keywords. ny Use the Filter (Section 14.4 on page 140) screen to restrict web features, add keywords for blocking and designate a trusted computer. 14.3 What You Need To Know pa Content filtering allows you to block certain web features, such as cookies, and/or block access to specific web sites. For example, you can configure one policy that blocks John Doe’s access to arts and entertainment web pages. om 14.3.1 Content Filtering Profiles A content filtering profile conveniently stores your custom settings for the following features. Restrict Web Features The NBG4604 can disable web proxies and block web features such as ActiveX controls, Java applets and cookies. NBG4604 User’s Guide 139 Chapter 14 Content Filtering Keyword Blocking URL Checking The NBG4604 checks the URL’s domain name (or IP address) and file path separately when performing keyword blocking. tia The URL’s domain name or IP address is the characters that come before the first slash in the URL. For example, with the URL www.zyxel.com.tw/news/ pressroom.php, the domain name is www.zyxel.com.tw. en The file path is the characters that come after the first slash in the URL. For example, with the URL www.zyxel.com.tw/news/pressroom.php, the file path is news/pressroom.php. on fid Since the NBG4604 checks the URL’s domain name (or IP address) and file path separately, it will not find items that go across the two. For example, with the URL www.zyxel.com.tw/news/pressroom.php, the NBG4604 would find “tw” in the domain name (www.zyxel.com.tw). It would also find “news” in the file path (news/pressroom.php) but it would not find “tw/news”. 14.4 Filter Screen Use this screen to restrict web features, add keywords for blocking and designate a trusted computer. Click Security > Content Filter to open the Filter screen. om pa ny Figure 77 Security > Content Filter > Filter 140 NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 14 Content Filtering The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 52 Security > Content Filter > Filter DESCRIPTION Enable URL Keyword Blocking The NBG4604 can block Web sites with URLs that contain certain keywords in the domain name or IP address. For example, if the keyword "bad" was enabled, all sites containing this keyword in the domain name or IP address will be blocked, e.g., URL http:// www.website.com/bad.html would be blocked. Select this check box to enable this feature. Keyword Type a keyword in this field. You may use any character (up to 64 characters). Wildcards are not allowed. You can also enter a numerical IP address. Keyword List This list displays the keywords already added. Add Click Add after you have typed a keyword. en tia LABEL fid Repeat this procedure to add other keywords. Up to 64 keywords are allowed. When you try to access a web page containing a keyword, you will get a message telling you that the content filter is blocking this request. Highlight a keyword in the lower box and click Delete to remove it. The keyword disappears from the text box after you click Apply. Clear All Click this button to remove all of the listed keywords. Apply Click Apply to save your changes. Reset Click Reset to begin configuring this screen afresh on Delete ny 14.5 Technical Reference pa The following section contains additional technical information about the NBG4604 features described in this chapter. 14.5.1 Customizing Keyword Blocking URL Checking om You can use commands to set how much of a website’s URL the content filter is to check for keyword blocking. See the appendices for information on how to access and use the command interpreter. Domain Name or IP Address URL Checking By default, the NBG4604 checks the URL’s domain name or IP address when performing keyword blocking. This means that the NBG4604 checks the characters that come before the first slash in the URL. NBG4604 User’s Guide 141 Chapter 14 Content Filtering For example, with the URL www.zyxel.com.tw/news/pressroom.php, content filtering only searches for keywords within www.zyxel.com.tw. tia Full path URL checking has the NBG4604 check the characters that come before the last slash in the URL. Full Path URL Checking en For example, with the URL www.zyxel.com.tw/news/pressroom.php, full path URL checking searches for keywords within www.zyxel.com.tw/news/. fid Use the ip urlfilter customize actionFlags 6 [disable | enable] command to extend (or not extend) the keyword blocking search to include the URL's full path. File Name URL Checking Filename URL checking has the NBG4604 check all of the characters in the URL. on For example, filename URL checking searches for keywords within the URL www.zyxel.com.tw/news/pressroom.php. om pa ny Use the ip urlfilter customize actionFlags 8 [disable | enable] command to extend (or not extend) the keyword blocking search to include the URL's complete filename. 142 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 15 tia Static Route en 15.1 Overview This chapter shows you how to configure static routes for your NBG4604. on fid Each remote node specifies only the network to which the gateway is directly connected, and the NBG4604 has no knowledge of the networks beyond. For instance, the NBG4604 knows about network N2 in the following figure through remote node Router 1. However, the NBG4604 is unable to route a packet to network N3 because it doesn't know that there is a route through the same remote node Router 1 (via gateway Router 2). The static routes are for you to tell the NBG4604 about the networks beyond the remote nodes. om pa ny Figure 78 Example of Static Routing Topology 15.2 What You Can Do • Use the IP Static Route screen (Section 15.3 on page 144) to view existing static route rules. • Use the Static Route Setup screen (Section 15.3.1 on page 145) to add or edit a static route rule. NBG4604 User’s Guide 143 Chapter 15 Static Route 15.3 IP Static Route Screen Use this screen to view existing static route rules. Click Management > Static Route to open the IP Static Route screen. The following screen displays. on fid en tia Figure 79 Management > Static Route > IP Static Route The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 53 Management > Static Route > IP Static Route DESCRIPTION This is the index number of an individual static route. The first entry is for the default route and not editable. Name This is the name that describes or identifies this route. Active ny LABEL This icon is turned on when this static route is active. pa Click the Edit icon under Modify and select the Active checkbox in the Static Route Setup screen to enable the static route. Clear the checkbox to disable this static route without having to delete the entry. This parameter specifies the IP network address of the final destination. Routing is always based on network number. Gateway This is the IP address of the gateway. The gateway is an immediate neighbor of your NBG4604 that will forward the packet to the destination. On the LAN, the gateway must be a router on the same segment as your NBG4604; over the WAN, the gateway must be the IP address of one of the remote nodes. om Destination Modify 144 Click the Edit icon to open the static route setup screen. Modify a static route or create a new static route in the Static Route Setup screen. Click the Remove icon to delete a static route. NBG4604 User’s Guide Chapter 15 Static Route 15.3.1 Static Route Setup Screen fid en tia Figure 80 Management > Static Route > IP Static Route: Static Route Setup To edit a static route, click the edit icon under Modify. The following screen displays. Fill in the required information for each static route. The following table describes the labels in this screen. on Table 54 Management > Static Route > IP Static Route: Static Route Setup DESCRIPTION Route Name Enter the name of the IP static route. Leave this field blank to delete this static route. Active This field allows you to activate/deactivate this static route. Destination IP Address This parameter specifies the IP network address of the final destination. Routing is always based on network number. If you need to specify a route to a single host, use a subnet mask of 255.255.255.255 in the subnet mask field to force the network number to be identical to the host ID. ny LABEL Enter the IP subnet mask here. Gateway IP Address Enter the IP address of the gateway. The gateway is an immediate neighbor of your NBG4604 that will forward the packet to the destination. On the LAN, the gateway must be a router on the same segment as your NBG4604; over the WAN, the gateway must be the IP address of one of the Remote Nodes. pa IP Subnet Mask om Metric Metric represents the “cost” of transmission for routing purposes. IP routing uses hop count as the measurement of cost, with a minimum of 1 for directly connected networks. Enter a number that approximates the cost for this link. The number need not be precise, but it must be between 1 and 15. In practice, 2 or 3 is usually a good number. Click Apply to save your changes back to the NBG4604. Cancel Click Cancel to return to the previous screen and not save your changes. Apply NBG4604 User’s Guide 145 C om pa ny on fid en tia Chapter 15 Static Route 146 NBG4604 User’s Guide CHAPTER 16 tia Bandwidth Management en 16.1 Overview fid This chapter contains information about configuring bandwidth management and editing rules. ZyXEL’s Bandwidth Management allows you to specify bandwidth management rules based on an application. on In the figure below, uplink traffic goes from the LAN device (A) to the WAN device (B). Bandwidth management is applied before sending the packets out to the WAN. Downlink traffic comes back from the WAN device (B) to the LAN device (A). Bandwidth management is applied before sending the traffic out to LAN. Figure 81 Bandwidth Management pa ny -> VOIP -> FTP -> HTTP -> Chat, Email om You can allocate specific amounts of bandwidth capacity (bandwidth budgets) to individual applications (like VoIP, Web, FTP, and E-mail for example). 16.2 What You Can Do • Use the General screen (Section 16.4 on page 148) to enable bandwidth management and assign uplink/downlink limits. • Use the Advanced screen (Section 16.5 on page 149) to configure bandwidth management rules for the pre-defined services and applications. NBG4604 User’s Guide 147
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