ZyXEL Communications NWD2205 Wireless N USB Adapter User Manual NWD2205 UG v1 1 ed1 2010 8 23 Windows DRAFT

ZyXEL Communications Corporation Wireless N USB Adapter NWD2205 UG v1 1 ed1 2010 8 23 Windows DRAFT

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NWD2205
Wireless N USB Adapter
Version 1.1
Edition 1, 08/2010
www.zyxel.com
www.zyxel.com
Copyright © 2010
ZyXEL Communications Corporation
About This User's Guide
About This User's Guide
Intended Audience
This manual is intended for people who want to configure the NWD2205 using the
ZyXEL utility.
Tips for Reading User’s Guides On-Screen
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.
• 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.
• 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.
• 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
The Quick Start Guide is designed to help you get up and running right away. It
contains information on setting up your network and configuring for Internet
access.
• Online Help
Embedded web help for descriptions of individual screens and supplementary
information.
• Support Disc
Refer to the included CD for support documents.
Documentation Feedback
Send your comments, questions or suggestions to: techwriters@zyxel.com.tw
NWD2205 User’s Guide
About This User's Guide
Thank you!
The Technical Writing Team, ZyXEL Communications Corp.,
6 Innovation Road II, Science-Based Industrial Park, Hsinchu, 30099, Taiwan.
Need More Help?
More help is available at www.zyxel.com.
• Download Library
Search for the latest product updates and documentation from this link. Read
the Tech Doc Overview to find out how to efficiently use the documentation in
order to better understand how to use your product.
• Knowledge Base
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
This contains discussions on ZyXEL products. Learn from others who use ZyXEL
products and share your experiences as well.
Customer Support
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.
See http://www.zyxel.com/web/contact_us.php for contact information. Please
have the following information ready when you contact an office.
• Product model and serial number.
• Warranty Information.
• Date that you received your device.
• Brief description of the problem and the steps you took to solve it.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Document Conventions
Document Conventions
Warnings and Notes
These are how warnings and notes are shown in this User’s Guide.
Warnings tell you about things that could harm you or your
NWD2205.
Note: Notes tell you other important information (for example, other things you may
need to configure or helpful tips) or recommendations.
Syntax Conventions
• The NWD2205 may be referred to as the “NWD2205”, the “device”, the “system”
or the “product” in this User’s Guide.
• Product labels, screen names, field labels and field choices are all in bold font.
• 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.
• 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.
• “e.g.,” is a shorthand for “for instance”, and “i.e.,” means “that is” or “in other
words”.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Document Conventions
Icons Used in Figures
Figures in this User’s Guide may use the following generic icons.
Wireless Access Point
Computer
Notebook computer
Server
Modem
Telephone
Internet
Wireless Signal
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Safety Warnings
Safety Warnings
• 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.
• Ground yourself (by properly using an anti-static wrist strap, for example) whenever
working with the device’s hardware or connections.
• ONLY qualified service personnel should service or disassemble this device.
• Antenna Warning! This device meets ETSI and FCC certification requirements when using
the included antenna(s). Only use the included antenna(s).
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 and electronic products should not be mixed with general waste.
Used electrical and electronic equipment should be treated separately.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Contents Overview
Contents Overview
Introduction and Configuration ............................................................................................ 15
Getting Started ........................................................................................................................... 17
Tutorial ....................................................................................................................................... 23
Wireless LANs ........................................................................................................................... 37
Station Mode .............................................................................................................................. 49
AP Mode .................................................................................................................................... 75
Maintenance .............................................................................................................................. 85
Troubleshooting and Specifications .................................................................................... 89
Troubleshooting ......................................................................................................................... 91
Product Specifications ............................................................................................................... 95
Appendices and Index ........................................................................................................... 99
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
About This User's Guide .......................................................................................................... 3
Document Conventions............................................................................................................ 5
Safety Warnings........................................................................................................................ 7
Contents Overview ................................................................................................................... 9
Table of Contents.................................................................................................................... 11
Part I: Introduction and Configuration ................................................. 15
Chapter 1
Getting Started ........................................................................................................................ 17
1.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 17
1.1.1 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 17
1.1.2 Before You Begin ....................................................................................................... 18
1.2 About Your NWD2205 ....................................................................................................... 18
1.2.1 Hardware .................................................................................................................... 18
1.3 Application Overview ........................................................................................................... 19
1.3.1 Infrastructure .............................................................................................................. 19
1.3.2 Ad-Hoc ....................................................................................................................... 20
1.4 Hardware and Utility Installation .......................................................................................... 20
1.4.1 ZyXEL Utility Icon ....................................................................................................... 20
1.5 Configuration Methods ....................................................................................................... 21
1.5.1 Enabling Windows Wireless Configuration ................................................................ 21
1.5.2 Accessing the ZyXEL Utility ...................................................................................... 21
Chapter 2
Tutorial ..................................................................................................................................... 23
2.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 23
2.1.1 What You Can Do in This Tutorial .............................................................................. 23
2.1.2 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 23
2.1.3 Before You Begin ....................................................................................................... 24
2.2 Connecting to an AP using Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) .................................................. 24
2.2.1 Push Button Configuration (PBC) .............................................................................. 24
2.2.2 PIN Configuration ....................................................................................................... 25
2.3 Connecting to an AP Without Using WPS ........................................................................... 28
NWD2205 User’s Guide
11
Table of Contents
2.3.1 Manually Connecting to a Wireless LAN ................................................................... 28
2.3.2 Creating and Using a Profile ...................................................................................... 30
2.4 Configuring the NWD2205 as an AP ................................................................................... 33
Chapter 3
Wireless LANs......................................................................................................................... 37
3.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 37
3.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section .............................................................................. 37
3.1.2 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 37
3.1.3 Before You Begin ....................................................................................................... 38
3.2 Wireless LAN Overview ...................................................................................................... 38
3.3 Wireless LAN Security ........................................................................................................ 39
3.3.1 User Authentication and Encryption ........................................................................... 39
3.4 WiFi Protected Setup ........................................................................................................... 41
3.4.1 Push Button Configuration ......................................................................................... 42
3.4.2 PIN Configuration ....................................................................................................... 42
3.4.3 How WPS Works ........................................................................................................ 44
3.4.4 Limitations of WPS ..................................................................................................... 47
Chapter 4
Station Mode............................................................................................................................ 49
4.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 49
4.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section .............................................................................. 49
4.1.2 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 49
4.1.3 Before You Begin ....................................................................................................... 50
4.2 ZyXEL Utility Screen Summary ........................................................................................... 50
4.3 The Link Info Screen .......................................................................................................... 51
4.3.1 Trend Chart ................................................................................................................ 53
4.4 The Site Survey Screen ..................................................................................................... 54
4.4.1 Security Settings ....................................................................................................... 55
4.4.2 Summary Screen ....................................................................................................... 61
4.5 The Profile Screen .............................................................................................................. 62
4.5.1 Adding a New Profile .................................................................................................. 63
4.6 The Adapter Screen ........................................................................................................... 68
4.6.1 WPS: PBC (Push Button Configuration) .................................................................... 69
4.6.2 WPS: PIN - Use this Device’s PIN ............................................................................. 69
4.7 Security Settings in Windows Vista .................................................................................... 70
4.7.1 Using PEAP in Vista ................................................................................................... 71
4.7.2 Using TLS in Vista ..................................................................................................... 72
Chapter 5
AP Mode................................................................................................................................... 75
5.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 75
12
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Table of Contents
5.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section .............................................................................. 76
5.1.2 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 76
5.1.3 Before You Begin ....................................................................................................... 77
5.2 AP Mode Screen Summary ................................................................................................. 77
5.3 The Link Info Screen .......................................................................................................... 78
5.4 The Configuration Screen ................................................................................................... 79
5.4.1 Security Settings ....................................................................................................... 80
5.5 The MAC Filter Screen ........................................................................................................ 83
Chapter 6
Maintenance ............................................................................................................................ 85
6.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 85
6.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section .............................................................................. 85
6.1.2 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 85
6.1.3 Before You Begin ....................................................................................................... 85
6.2 The About Screen ............................................................................................................... 86
6.3 Uninstalling the ZyXEL Utility .............................................................................................. 86
6.4 Upgrading the ZyXEL Utility ................................................................................................ 87
Part II: Troubleshooting and Specifications ........................................ 89
Chapter 7
Troubleshooting...................................................................................................................... 91
7.1 Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs .......................................................................... 91
7.2 Accessing the ZyXEL Utility ................................................................................................. 92
7.3 Link Quality .......................................................................................................................... 92
7.4 Problems Communicating with Other Computers ............................................................... 93
Chapter 8
Product Specifications ........................................................................................................... 95
Part III: Appendices and Index.............................................................. 99
Appendix A Setting Up Your Computer’s IP Address ........................................................... 101
Appendix B Wireless LANs .................................................................................................. 131
Appendix C Windows Wireless Management ...................................................................... 147
Appendix D Wireless for Windows 7 .................................................................................... 173
Appendix E Legal Information .............................................................................................. 179
NWD2205 User’s Guide
13
Table of Contents
Index....................................................................................................................................... 185
14
NWD2205 User’s Guide
P ART I
Introduction and
Configuration
Getting Started (17)
Tutorial (23)
Wireless LANs (37)
Station Mode (49)
AP Mode (75)
Maintenance (85)
15
CHAPTER
Getting Started
1.1 Overview
The ZyXEL NWD2205 wireless N USB adapter brings you a better Internet
experience over existing 802.11 networks. With data rates of up to 300 Mbps, you
can enjoy a breathtaking high-speed connection at home or in the office. It is an
excellent solution for daily activities such as file transfers, music downloading,
video streaming and online gaming.
This section includes:
• About Your NWD2205 on page 18
• Application Overview on page 19
• Hardware and Utility Installation on page 20
• Configuration Methods on page 21
1.1.1 What You Need to Know
The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this section, and
subsequently as you read through the rest of the User’s Guide.
Access Point
An Access Point (AP) is a network device that acts as a bridge between a wired
and a wireless network. Outside of the home or office, APs can most often be
found in coffee shops, bookstores and other businesses that offer wireless
Internet connectivity to their customers.
Infrastructure
An infrastructure network is one that seamlessly combines both wireless and
wired components. One or more APs often serve as the bridge between wireless
and wired LANs.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
17
Chapter 1 Getting Started
Ad-Hoc
An Ad-Hoc wireless LAN is a self-contained group of computers connected
wirelessly and which is independent of any other networks and Access Points.
1.1.2 Before You Begin
Read the Quick Start Guide for information on making hardware connections and
using the ZyXEL utility to connect your NWD2205 to a network.
1.2 About Your NWD2205
Your NWD2205 is an IEEE 802.11n compliant wireless LAN adapter. It can also
connect to IEEE 802.11b/g wireless networks. The NWD2205 is WPS (Wi-Fi
Protected Setup) compliant. WPS allows you to easily connect to another WPSenabled device.
The NWD2205 is a USB adapter which connects to an empty USB port on your
computer.
See your NWD2205’s Quick Start Guide for installation instructions, and see the
section on product specifications in this User’s Guide for detailed information.
1.2.1 Hardware
This section describes the NWD2205’s physical appearance.
Figure 1 The NWD2205
The following table describes the NWD2205.
Table 1 NWD2205 External View
18
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
LED and also a WPS button
USB connector
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Chapter 1 Getting Started
The following table describes the operation of the NWD2205’s LEDs.
Table 2 NWD2205 LEDs
LED
COLOR
STATUS
DESCRIPTION
Amber
Slow
Blinking
The NWD2205 is turned on, connected to an AP, and is
not transmitting or receiving data.
Rapid
Blinking
The NWD2205 is turned on, connected to an AP, and is
transmitting or receiving data. It also blinks when the
WPS feature is being used or a WPS connection is being
initiated.
Off
The NWD2205 is turned off.
1.3 Application Overview
This section describes some network applications for the NWD2205. You can either
set the network type to Infrastructure and connect to an AP or use Ad-Hoc
mode and connect to a peer computer (another wireless device in Ad-Hoc mode).
1.3.1 Infrastructure
To connect to a network via an access point (AP), set the NWD2205 network type
to Infrastructure (see Chapter 4 on page 62). Through the AP, you can access
the Internet or the wired network behind the AP.
Figure 2 Application: Infrastructure
NWD2205 User’s Guide
19
Chapter 1 Getting Started
1.3.2 Ad-Hoc
To set up a small independent wireless workgroup without an AP, use Ad-Hoc (see
Chapter 4 on page 62).
Ad-Hoc does not require an AP or a wired network. Two or more wireless clients
communicate directly with each other.
Note: Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) is not available in ad-hoc mode.
Figure 3 Application: Ad-Hoc
1.4 Hardware and Utility Installation
Follow the instructions in the Quick Start Guide to install the ZyXEL utility and
make hardware connections.
1.4.1 ZyXEL Utility Icon
After you install and start the ZyXEL utility, an icon for the ZyXEL utility appears in
the system tray.
Note: The ZyXEL utility system tray icon displays only when the NWD2205 is installed
properly.
Note: When you use the ZyXEL utility, it automatically disables Wireless Zero
Configuration (WZC) in Windows XP.
Figure 4 ZyXEL Utility: System Tray Icon
20
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Chapter 1 Getting Started
The color of the ZyXEL utility system tray icon indicates the status of the
NWD2205. Refer to the following table for details.
Table 3 ZyXEL Utility: System Tray Icon
COLOR
DESCRIPTION
Red
The NWD2205 is not connected to a wireless network.
Green
The NWD2205 is connected to a wireless network.
1.5 Configuration Methods
To configure your NWD2205, use one of the following applications:
• Wireless Zero Configuration (WZC, the Windows XP wireless configuration tool)
or WLAN AutoConfig (the Windows Vista wireless configuration tool).
• The ZyXEL utility.
Note: Do NOT use Windows XP’s Wireless Zero Configuration tool at the same time
you use the ZyXEL utility.
1.5.1 Enabling Windows Wireless Configuration
Note: When you use the ZyXEL utility, it automatically disables Windows XP’s
wireless configuration tool.
If you want to use the Windows XP wireless configuration tool to configure the
NWD2205, you need to disable the ZyXEL utility. Right-click the utility icon (
in the system tray and select Exit.
Figure 5 Enable WZC
Refer to the appendices for information on how to use the Windows wireless
configuration tool to manage the NWD2205.
To reactivate the ZyXEL utility, double-click the (
) icon on your desktop or click
Start > (All) Programs > Wireless N USB Utility > Wireless N USB Utility.
1.5.2 Accessing the ZyXEL Utility
Double-click on the ZyXEL wireless LAN utility icon in the system tray to open the
ZyXEL utility.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
21
Chapter 1 Getting Started
The ZyXEL utility screens are similar in all Microsoft Windows versions. Screens for
Windows XP are shown in this User’s Guide.
Note: Click the
window.
22
icon (located in the top right corner) to display the online help
NWD2205 User’s Guide
CHAPTER
Tutorial
2.1 Overview
This tutorial shows you how to join a wireless infrastructure network using the
ZyXEL utility. The wireless client is labeled C and the Access Point is labeled AP.
Figure 6 Infrastructure Network
2.1.1 What You Can Do in This Tutorial
• Connect securely either to an infrastructure AP using the WPS protocol. See
Section 2.2 on page 24 for details.
• Connect securely to an infrastructure AP using many of the strongest and most
common encryption protocols. See Section 2.3 on page 28 for details.
• Save a your settings so that you can later connect again to an infrastructure AP
with a single click. See Section 2.3.2 on page 30 for details.
• Configure your NWD2205 as an Access Point (AP), allowing other devices to
connect to it and share its network connections. See Section 2.4 on page 33 for
details.
2.1.2 What You Need to Know
The following term may help as you read through this section.
WPS
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) is a security protocol that lets two or more devices
connect securely to one another with a minimum amount of hassle on your part. It
most cases, establishing a secure connection with another WPS device is as easy
as pushing a button.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
23
Chapter 2 Tutorial
2.1.3 Before You Begin
• Make sure that you have already familiarized yourself with the NWD2205’s
features and hardware, as described in Chapter 1 on page 17.
• You should have valid login information for an existing network Access Point,
otherwise you may not be able to make a network connection right away.
2.2 Connecting to an AP using Wi-Fi Protected
Setup (WPS)
This section gives you an example of how to set up your wireless network using
WPS. This example uses the NWD2205 as the wireless client, and ZyXEL’s
NBG334W as the Access Point (AP).
Note: The Access Point must be a WPS-aware device.
There are two WPS methods for creating a secure connection. This tutorial shows
you both.
• Push Button Configuration (PBC) - create a secure wireless network simply
by pressing a button. See Section 2.2.1 on page 24.This is the easier method.
• PIN Configuration - create a secure wireless network simply by entering a
wireless client's PIN (Personal Identification Number) in the NWD2205’s
interface. See Section 2.2.2 on page 25. This is the more secure method, since
one device can authenticate the other.
2.2.1 Push Button Configuration (PBC)
Make sure that your access point is turned on and that it is within range of the
computer with the NWD2205 installed.
Make sure that you have installed the NWD2205’s driver and utility on your
computer.
In the NWD2205’s utility, click the Adapter tab, enable WPS and select PBC
(Push Button Configuration). In the screen that appears, click Start.
Log into the AP’s web configurator and locate its WPS settings section. On the
NBG334W, press the Push Button button in the Network > Wireless Client >
WPS Station screen.
Note: It doesn’t matter which button is pressed first. You must press the second
button within two minutes of pressing the first one.
24
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Chapter 2 Tutorial
The AP sends the proper configuration settings to the NWD2205. This may take up
to two minutes. Then the NWD2205 is able to communicate with the AP securely.
The following figure shows you an example to set up wireless network and security
by pressing a button on both the AP (the NBG334W in this example) and the
NWD2205.
Figure 7 Example WPS Process: PBC Method
You
AP
WITHIN 2 MINUTES
SECURITY INFO
COMMUNICATION
2.2.2 PIN Configuration
When you use the PIN configuration method, you need to use both the NWD2205’s
utility and the AP’s configuration interface.
In the NWD2205’s Adaptor tab, select WPS and PIN - Use this Device’s PIN.
Note down the PIN in the screen that appears.
Enter the PIN number in the AP’s configuration interface. In the NBG334W, use the
PIN field in the Network > Wireless LAN > WPS Station screen.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
25
Chapter 2 Tutorial
Click the Start buttons on both the NWD2205 utility screen and the AP’s
configuration utility (the WPS Station screen on the NBG334W) within two
minutes.
The NBG334W 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 NBG334W securely.
The following figure shows you the example of configuring the wireless network
and security on the NWD2205 and the AP (ZyXEL’s NBG334W in this example) by
using the PIN method.
26
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Chapter 2 Tutorial
Figure 8 Example WPS Process: PIN Method
You
AP
WITHIN 2 MINUTES
Authentication by PIN
SECURITY INFO
COMMUNICATION
NWD2205 User’s Guide
27
Chapter 2 Tutorial
2.3 Connecting to an AP Without Using WPS
There are three ways to connect the wireless client (the NWD2205) to a network
without using WPS.
• Configure nothing and leave the wireless client to automatically scan for and
connect to any available network that has no wireless security configured.
• Manually connect to a network (see Section 2.3.1 on page 28).
• Configure a profile to have the wireless client automatically connect to a specific
network or peer computer (see Section 2.3.2 on page 30).
2.3.1 Manually Connecting to a Wireless LAN
This example illustrates how to manually connect your wireless client to an access
point (AP) configured for WPA-PSK security and connected to the Internet. Before
you connect to the access point, you must know its Service Set IDentity (SSID)
and WPA-PSK pre-shared key. In this example, the AP’s SSID is “SSID_Example3”
and its pre-shared key is “ThisismyWPA-PSKpre-sharedkey”.
After you install the ZyXEL utility and then insert the wireless client, follow the
steps below to connect to a network using the Site Survey screen.
Open the ZyXEL utility and click the Site Survey tab to open the screen shown
next.
Figure 9 ZyXEL Utility: Site Survey
28
The wireless client automatically searches for available wireless networks. Click
Scan if you want to search again. If no entry displays in the Available Network
List, that means there is no wireless network available within range. Make sure
the AP or peer computer is turned on, or move the wireless client closer to the AP
or peer computer. See Table 4.4 on page 54 for detailed field descriptions.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Chapter 2 Tutorial
To connect to an AP or peer computer, either click an entry in the list and then
click Connect or double-click an entry (SSID_Example3 in this example).
When you try to connect to an AP with security configured, a window will pop up
prompting you to specify the security settings. Enter the pre-shared key and leave
the encryption type at the default setting.
Use the Next button to move on to the next screen. You can use the Back button
at any time to return to the previous screen, or the Exit button to return to the
Site Survey screen.
Figure 10 ZyXEL Utility: Security Settings
The Summary window appears. Check your settings and click Save to continue.
Figure 11 ZyXEL Utility: Summary
NWD2205 User’s Guide
29
Chapter 2 Tutorial
The ZyXEL utility returns to the Link Info screen while it connects to the wireless
network using your settings. When the wireless link is established, the ZyXEL
utility icon in the system tray turns green and the Link Info screen displays
details of the active connection. Check the network information in the Link Info
screen to verify that you have successfully connected to the selected network. If
the wireless client is not connected to a network, the fields in this screen remain
blank. See Table 4.3 on page 51 for detailed field descriptions.
Figure 12 ZyXEL Utility: Link Info
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. If you cannot access the web site,
check the Troubleshooting section of this User's Guide or contact your network
administrator if necessary.
2.3.2 Creating and Using a Profile
A profile lets you automatically connect to the same wireless network every time
you use the ZyXEL utility. You can also configure different profiles for different
networks, for example if you connect a notebook computer to wireless networks at
home and at work.
This example illustrates how to set up a profile and connect the wireless client to
an access point configured for WPA-PSK security. In this example, the AP’s SSID is
“SSID_Example3” and its pre-shared key is “ThisismyWPA-PSKpre-sharedkey”.
You have chosen the profile name “PN_Example3”.
30
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Chapter 2 Tutorial
Open the ZyXEL utility and click the Profile tab to open the screen as shown. Click
Add to configure a new profile.
Figure 13 ZyXEL Utility: Profile
The Add New Profile screen appears. The wireless client automatically searches
for available wireless networks, which are displayed in the Scan Info box. You can
also configure your profile for a wireless network that is not in the list.
Figure 14 ZyXEL Utility: Add New Profile
Give the profile a descriptive name (of up to 32 printable ASCII characters). Select
Infrastructure and either manually enter or select the AP's SSID in the Scan
Info table and click Select.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
31
Chapter 2 Tutorial
Choose the same encryption method as the AP to which you want to connect (In
this example, WPA-PSK).
Figure 15 ZyXEL Utility: Profile Security
This screen varies depending on the encryption method you selected in the
previous screen. In this example, enter the pre-shared key and leave the
encryption type at the default setting.
Figure 16 ZyXEL Utility: Profile Encryption
Verify the profile settings in the ready-only screen. Click Save to save and go to
the next screen.
Figure 17 ZyXEL Utility: Profile Summary
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Click Activate Now to use the new profile immediately. Otherwise, click the
Activate Later button to go back to the Profile List screen.
If you clicked Activate Later you can select the profile from the list in the Profile
screen and click Connect to activate it.
Note: Only one profile can be activated and used at any given time.
Figure 18 ZyXEL Utility: Profile Activate
When you activate the new profile, the ZyXEL utility goes to the Link Info screen
while it connects to the AP using your settings. When the wireless link is
established, the ZyXEL utility icon in the system tray turns green and the Link
Info screen displays details of the active connection.
Make sure the selected AP in the active profile is on and connected to the Internet.
Open your Internet browser, enter http://www.zyxel.com or the URL of any other
web site in the address bar and press ENTER. If you are able to access the web
site, your new profile is successfully configured.
10 If you cannot access the Internet, go back to the Profile screen. Select the profile
you are using and click Edit. Check the details you entered previously. Also, refer
to the Troubleshooting section of this User's Guide or contact your network
administrator if necessary.
2.4 Configuring the NWD2205 as an AP
In access point mode, your NWD2205 allows you to set up your wireless network
without using a dedicated AP. See Chapter 5 on page 75 for more information.
After you install the ZyXEL Utility and then connect the NWD2205 to your
computer, follow the steps below to set up your NWD2205 as an AP.
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Chapter 2 Tutorial
Select AP Mode in the main ZyXEL Utility screen. The AP Mode version of the
default Link Info screen displays.
Figure 19 ZyXEL Utility - AP Mode
Under Status, you can view the current settings on the NWD2205. In the
Association List, you can see if any wireless clients have connected to your
NWD2205.
Figure 20 ZyXEL Utility - AP Mode: Link Info
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If you want to change the access point’s SSID and enable wireless security for
your NWD2205, click the Configuration tab. See Section 5.4.1 on page 80 for
detailed field descriptions found on this screen.
Figure 21 ZyXEL Utility - AP Mode: Configuration
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CHAPTER
Wireless LANs
3.1 Overview
This section provides background information on wireless Local Area Networks.
3.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section
• Connect securely to an AP using many of the strongest and most common
encryption protocols. See Section 3.3 on page 39 for details.
• Connect securely either to an AP or computer-to-computer using WPS. See
Section 3.4 on page 41 for details.
3.1.2 What You Need to Know
The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this section.
Server
When two or more devices are connected digitally to form a network, the one that
distributes data to the other devices is known as the “server”. A RADIUS (Remote
Authentication Dial-In User Service) is a kind of server that manages logins and
logout, among other things, for the network to which it is connected.
Client
When two or more devices are connected digitally to form a network, the one that
contacts and obtains data from a server is known as the “client”. Each client is
designed to work with one or more specific kinds of servers, and each server
requires a specific kind of client. Wireless adapters are clients that connect to a
network server through an AP.
Authentication
Authentication is the process of confirming a client’s or user’s digital identity when
they connect to a network. Turning off authentication means disabling all security
protocols and opening your network to anyone with the means to connect to it.
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Encryption
The process of taking data and encoding it, usually using a mathematical formula,
so that it becomes unreadable unless decrypted with the proper code or pass
phrase.
3.1.3 Before You Begin
• You should have valid login information for an existing network Access Point,
otherwise you may not be able to make a network connection right away.
3.2 Wireless LAN Overview
The following figure provides an example of a wireless network with an AP. See
Figure 3 on page 20 for an Ad Hoc network example.
Figure 22 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
Every wireless network must follow these basic guidelines.
• Every device 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.
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• If two wireless networks overlap, they should use a different channel.
Like radio stations or television channels, each wireless network uses a specific
channel, or frequency, to send and receive information.
• Every device in the same wireless network must use security compatible with
the AP or peer computer.
Security stops unauthorized devices from using the wireless network. It can also
protect the information that is sent in the wireless network.
3.3 Wireless LAN Security
Wireless LAN security is vital to your network to protect wireless communications.
If you do not enable any wireless security on your NWD2205, the NWD2205’s
wireless communications are accessible to any wireless networking device that is
in the coverage area.
Note: You can use only WEP encryption if you set the NWD2205 to Ad-hoc mode.
See the appendices for more detailed information about wireless security.
3.3.1 User Authentication and Encryption
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.
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.
3.3.1.1 WEP
3.3.1.1.1 Data Encryption
WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) encryption scrambles all data packets transmitted
between the NWD2205 and the AP or other wireless stations to keep network
communications private. Both the wireless stations and the access points must
use the same WEP key for data encryption and decryption.
There are two ways to create WEP keys in your NWD2205.
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• Automatic WEP key generation based on a “password phrase” called a
passphrase. The passphrase is case sensitive. You must use the same
passphrase for all WLAN adapters with this feature in the same WLAN.
For WLAN adapters without the passphrase feature, you can still take advantage
of this feature by writing down the four automatically generated WEP keys from
the Security Settings screen of the ZyXEL utility and entering them manually
as the WEP keys in the other WLAN adapter(s).
• Enter the WEP keys manually.
Your NWD2205 allows you to configure up to four 64-bit or 128-bit WEP keys.
Only one key is used as the default key at any one time.
3.3.1.1.2 Authentication Type
The IEEE 802.11b/g standard describes a simple authentication method between
the wireless stations and AP. Three authentication types are defined: Auto, Open
and Shared.
• Open mode 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.
• Shared 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.
• Auto authentication mode allows the NWD2205 to switch between the open
system and shared key modes automatically. Use the auto mode if you do not
know the authentication mode of the other wireless stations.
3.3.1.2 IEEE 802.1x
The IEEE 802.1x standard outlines enhanced security methods for both the
authentication of wireless stations and encryption key management.
Authentication can be done using an external RADIUS server.
3.3.1.2.1 EAP Authentication
EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol) is an authentication protocol that runs on
top of the IEEE 802.1x transport mechanism in order to support multiple types of
user authentication. By using EAP to interact with an EAP-compatible RADIUS
server, an access point helps a wireless station and a RADIUS server perform
authentication.
The type of authentication you use depends on the RADIUS server and an
intermediary AP(s) that supports IEEE 802.1x. The NWD2205 supports EAP-TLS,
EAP-TTLS (at the time of writing, TTLS is not available in Windows Vista) and EAPPEAP. Refer to Appendix B on page 131 for descriptions.
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For EAP-TLS authentication type, you must first have a wired connection to the
network and obtain the certificate(s) from a certificate authority (CA). Certificates
(also called digital IDs) can be used to authenticate users and a CA issues
certificates and guarantees the identity of each certificate owner.
3.3.1.3 WPA and WPA2
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) is a subset of the IEEE 802.11i standard. WPA2
(IEEE 802.11i) is a wireless security standard that defines stronger encryption,
authentication and key management than WPA.
Key differences between WPA(2) and WEP are improved data encryption and user
authentication.
Both WPA and WPA2 improve data encryption by using Temporal Key Integrity
Protocol (TKIP), Message Integrity Check (MIC) and IEEE 802.1x. WPA and WPA2
use Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) in the Counter mode with Cipher block
chaining Message authentication code Protocol (CCMP) to offer stronger
encryption than TKIP.
If both an AP and the wireless clients support WPA2 and you have an external
RADIUS server, use WPA2 for stronger data encryption. If you don't have an
external RADIUS server, you should use WPA2-PSK (WPA2-Pre-Shared Key) that
only requires a single (identical) password entered into each access point, wireless
gateway and wireless client. As long as the passwords match, a wireless client will
be granted access to a WLAN.
If the AP or the wireless clients do not support WPA2, just use WPA or WPA-PSK
depending on whether you have an external RADIUS server or not.
Select WEP only when the AP and/or wireless clients do not support WPA or WPA2.
WEP is less secure than WPA or WPA2.
3.4 WiFi Protected Setup
Your NWD2205 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.
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).
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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.
3.4.1 Push Button Configuration
WPS Push Button Configuration (PBC) is initiated by pressing a button on each
WPS-enabled device, and allowing them to connect automatically. You do not need
to enter any information.
Not every WPS-enabled device has a physical WPS button. Some may have a WPS
PBC button in their configuration utilities instead of or in addition to the physical
button.
Take the following steps to set up WPS using the button.
Ensure that the two devices you want to set up are within wireless range of one
another.
Look for a WPS button on each device. If the device does not have one, log into its
configuration utility and locate the button (see the device’s User’s Guide for how to
do this - for the NWD2205, see Section 4.6.1 on page 69).
Press the button on one of the devices (it doesn’t matter which).
Within two minutes, press the button on the other device. The registrar sends the
network name (SSID) and security key through an secure connection to the
enrollee.
If you need to make sure that WPS worked, check the list of associated wireless
clients in the AP’s configuration utility. If you see the wireless client in the list,
WPS was successful.
3.4.2 PIN Configuration
Each WPS-enabled device has its own PIN (Personal Identification Number). This
may either be static (it cannot be changed) or dynamic (in some devices you can
generate a new PIN by clicking on a button in the configuration interface).
Use the PIN method instead of the push-button configuration (PBC) method if you
want to ensure that the connection is established between the devices you specify,
not just the first two devices to activate WPS in range of each other. However, you
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need to log into the configuration interfaces of both devices to use the PIN
method.
When you use the PIN method, you must enter the PIN from one device (usually
the wireless client) into the second device (usually the Access Point or wireless
router). Then, when WPS is activated on the first device, it presents its PIN to the
second device. If the PIN matches, one device sends the network and security
information to the other, allowing it to join the network.
Take the following steps to set up a WPS connection between an access point or
wireless router (referred to here as the AP) and a client device using the PIN
method.
Ensure WPS is enabled on both devices.
Access the WPS section of the AP’s configuration interface. See the device’s User’s
Guide for how to do this.
Look for the client’s WPS PIN; it will be displayed either on the device, or in the
WPS section of the client’s configuration interface (see the device’s User’s Guide
for how to find the WPS PIN - for the NWD2205, see Section 4.6 on page 68).
Enter the client’s PIN in the AP’s configuration interface.
Note: If the client device’s configuration interface has an area for entering another
device’s PIN, you can either enter the client’s PIN in the AP, or enter the AP’s
PIN in the client - it does not matter which.
Start WPS on both devices within two minutes.
Note: Use the configuration utility to activate WPS, not the push-button on the device
itself.
On a computer connected to the wireless client, try to connect to the Internet. If
you can connect, WPS was successful.
If you cannot connect, check the list of associated wireless clients in the AP’s
configuration utility. If you see the wireless client in the list, WPS was successful.
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Chapter 3 Wireless LANs
The following figure shows a WPS-enabled wireless client (installed in a notebook
computer) connecting to the WPS-enabled AP via the PIN method.
Figure 23 Example WPS Process: PIN Method
ENROLLEE
REGISTRAR
WPS
This device’s
WPS PIN: 123456
WPS
Enter WPS PIN
from other device:
WPS
START
WPS
START
WITHIN 2 MINUTES
SECURE EAP TUNNEL
SSID
WPA(2)-PSK
COMMUNICATION
3.4.3 How WPS Works
When two WPS-enabled devices connect, each device must assume a specific role.
One device acts as the registrar (the device that supplies network and security
settings) and the other device acts as the enrollee (the device that receives
network and security settings. The registrar creates a secure EAP (Extensible
Authentication Protocol) tunnel and sends the network name (SSID) and the WPAPSK or WPA2-PSK pre-shared key to the enrollee. Whether WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK
is used depends on the standards supported by the devices. If the registrar is
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already part of a network, it sends the existing information. If not, it generates
the SSID and WPA(2)-PSK randomly.
The following figure shows a WPS-enabled client (installed in a notebook
computer) connecting to a WPS-enabled access point.
Figure 24 How WPS works
ACTIVATE
WPS
ACTIVATE
WPS
WITHIN 2 MINUTES
WPS HANDSHAKE
ENROLLEE
REGISTRAR
SECURE TUNNEL
SECURITY INFO
COMMUNICATION
The roles of registrar and enrollee last only as long as the WPS setup process is
active (two minutes). The next time you use WPS, a different device can be the
registrar if necessary.
The WPS connection process is like a handshake; only two devices participate in
each WPS transaction. If you want to add more devices you should repeat the
process with one of the existing networked devices and the new device.
Note that the access point (AP) is not always the registrar, and the wireless client
is not always the enrollee. All WPS-certified APs can be a registrar, and so can
some WPS-enabled wireless clients.
By default, a WPS devices is “unconfigured”. This means that it is not part of an
existing network and can act as either enrollee or registrar (if it supports both
functions). If the registrar is unconfigured, the security settings it transmits to the
enrollee are randomly-generated. Once a WPS-enabled device has connected to
another device using WPS, it becomes “configured”. A configured wireless client
can still act as enrollee or registrar in subsequent WPS connections, but a
configured access point can no longer act as enrollee. It will be the registrar in all
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Chapter 3 Wireless LANs
subsequent WPS connections in which it is involved. If you want a configured AP to
act as an enrollee, you must reset it to its factory defaults.
3.4.3.1 Example WPS Network Setup
This section shows how security settings are distributed in an example WPS setup.
The following figure shows an example network. In step 1, both AP1 and Client 1
are unconfigured. When WPS is activated on both, they perform the handshake. In
this example, AP1 is the registrar, and Client 1 is the enrollee. The registrar
randomly generates the security information to set up the network, since it is
unconfigured and has no existing information.
Figure 25 WPS: Example Network Step 1
ENROLLEE
REGISTRAR
SECURITY INFO
AP1
CLIENT 1
In step 2, you add another wireless client to the network. You know that Client 1
supports registrar mode, but it is better to use AP1 for the WPS handshake with
the new client since you must connect to the access point anyway in order to use
the network. In this case, AP1 must be the registrar, since it is configured (it
already has security information for the network). AP1 supplies the existing
security information to Client 2.
Figure 26 WPS: Example Network Step 2
REGISTRAR
EXISTING CONNECTION
CLIENT 1
AP1
ENROLLEE
CLIENT 2
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In step 3, you add another access point (AP2) to your network. AP2 is out of
range of AP1, so you cannot use AP1 for the WPS handshake with the new access
point. However, you know that Client 2 supports the registrar function, so you use
it to perform the WPS handshake instead.
Figure 27 WPS: Example Network Step 3
EXISTING CONNECTION
AP1
CLIENT 1
REGISTRAR
CLIENT 2
ENROLLEE
AP1
3.4.4 Limitations of WPS
WPS has some limitations of which you should be aware.
• WPS works in Infrastructure networks only (where an AP and a wireless client
communicate). It does not work in Ad-Hoc networks (where there is no AP).
• When you use WPS, it works between two devices only. You cannot enroll
multiple devices simultaneously, you must enroll one after the other.
For instance, if you have two enrollees and one registrar you must set up the
first enrollee (by pressing the WPS button on the registrar and the first enrollee,
for example), then check that it successfully enrolled, then set up the second
device in the same way.
• WPS works only with other WPS-enabled devices. However, you can still add
non-WPS devices to a network you already set up using WPS.
WPS works by automatically issuing a randomly-generated WPA-PSK or WPA2PSK pre-shared key from the registrar device to the enrollee devices (see
Section 4.4.1.3 on page 57 for information on pre-shared keys). Whether the
network uses WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK depends on the device. You can check the
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Chapter 3 Wireless LANs
configuration interface of the registrar device to discover the key the network is
using (if the device supports this feature). Then, you can enter the key into the
non-WPS device and join the network as normal (the non-WPS device must also
support WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK).
• When you use the PBC method, there is a short period (from the moment you
press the button on one device to the moment you press the button on the
other device) when any WPS-enabled device could join the network. This is
because the registrar has no way of identifying the “correct” enrollee, and
cannot differentiate between your enrollee and a rogue device. This is a possible
way for a hacker to gain access to a network.
You can easily check to see if this has happened. WPS works between only two
devices simultaneously, so if another device has enrolled your device will be
unable to enroll, and will not have access to the network. If this happens, open
the access point’s configuration interface and look at the list of associated
clients (usually displayed by MAC address). It does not matter if the access
point is the WPS registrar, the enrollee, or was not involved in the WPS
handshake; a rogue device must still associate with the access point to gain
access to the network. Check the MAC addresses of your wireless clients
(usually printed on a label on the bottom of the device). If there is an unknown
MAC address you can remove it or reset the AP.
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CHAPTER
Station Mode
4.1 Overview
This section shows you how to configure your NWD2205 using the ZyXEL utility in
Windows.
Note: Some features available in Windows XP are not available in Windows Vista.
4.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section
• On the Link Info screen, you can see your current connection details, monitor
signal strength and quality, and more. See Section 4.3 on page 51 for details.
• On the Site Survey screen, you can connect to any available unsecured
wireless network in range of the NWD2205, or open the security settings screen
for any secured wireless network in range. See Section 4.4 on page 54 for
details.
• On the Profile screen, you can create, delete and manage your wireless
network profiles. See Section 4.5 on page 62 for details.
• On the Adapter screen, you can configure the NWD2205 hardware, such as
activating WPS mode or its power saving feature. See Section 4.6 on page 68
for details.
4.1.2 What You Need to Know
The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this section.
Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)
WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) encrypts data transmitted between wired and
wireless networks to keep the transmission private. Although one of the original
wireless encryption protocols, WEP is also the weakest. Many people use it strictly
to deter unintentional usage of their wireless network by outsiders.
Wi-fi Protected Access (WPA)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) is a subset of the IEEE 802.11i standard. It
improves data encryption by using Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP),
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Chapter 4 Station Mode
Message Integrity Check (MIC) and IEEE 802.1x. WPA uses Advanced Encryption
Standard (AES) in the Counter mode with Cipher block chaining Message
authentication code Protocol (CCMP) to offer stronger encryption than TKIP. WPA
applies IEEE 802.1x and Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) to authenticate
wireless clients using an external RADIUS database. The WPA protocol affords
users with vastly stronger security than the WEP protocol. It comes in two
different varieties: WPA and WPA2. Always try to use WPA2 as it implements the
full version of the security standard while WPA does not.
Pre-Shared Key (PSK)
A pre-shared key is a password shared between the server and the client that
unlocks the algorithm used to encrypt the data traffic between them. Without the
proper password, the client and the server cannot communicate.
Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
An enhanced security framework designed to improve an existing security
protocol, such as WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK.
4.1.3 Before You Begin
• Make sure the ZyXEL utility is already installed. See the Quick Start Guide for
more.
4.2 ZyXEL Utility Screen Summary
This section describes the ZyXEL utility screens.
Figure 28 ZyXEL Utility Menu Summary
The following table describes the menus.
Table 4 ZyXEL Utility Menu Summary
TAB
DESCRIPTION
Link Info
Use this screen to see your current connection status, configuration and
data rate statistics.
Site Survey
Use this screen to:
•
•
•
50
scan for a wireless network.
configure wireless security (if activated on the selected network).
connect to a wireless network.
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Table 4 ZyXEL Utility Menu Summary
TAB
DESCRIPTION
Profile
Use this screen to add, delete, edit or activate a profile with a set of
wireless and security settings.
Adapter
Use this screen to configure preamble type, enable power saving and
use WiFi Protected Setup (WPS).
4.3 The Link Info Screen
When the ZyXEL utility starts, the Link Info screen displays, showing the current
configuration and connection status of your NWD2205.
Figure 29 Link Info
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 5 Link Info
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Wireless
Network Status
Profile Name
This is the name of the profile you are currently using.
Network
Name
(SSID)
The SSID identifies the wireless network to which a wireless station is
associated. This field displays the name of the wireless device to which
the NWD2205 is associated.
AP MAC
Address
This field displays the MAC address of the AP or peer computer to which
the NWD2205 is associated.
Network
Type
This field displays the network type (Infrastructure or Ad-Hoc) of the
wireless network.
Speed
This field displays the current link speed of the NWD2205 in megabits
per second (Mbps).
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Table 5 Link Info (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Security
This field displays whether data encryption is activated (WEP / 802.1x
/ WPA /WPA-PSK / WPA2 / WPA2-PSK) or inactive (DISABLE).
Channel
This field displays the radio channel the NWD2205 is currently using.
Statistics
52
Transmit
Rate
This field displays the current data transmission rate in kilobits per
second (Kbps).
Receive Rate
This field displays the current data receiving rate in kilobits per second
(Kbps).
Authenticati
on
This field displays the authentication method of the NWD2205.
Network
Mode
This field displays the wireless standard used by the selected wireless
device. It shows B for 802.11b, G for 802.11g or N for 802.11n.
Total
Transmit
This field displays the total number of data frames transmitted.
Total
Receive
This field displays the total number of data frames received.
Link Quality
This field displays the signal strength of the NWD2205.
Trend Chart
Click this button to display the real-time statistics of the data rate in
kilobits per second (Kbps).
Signal Strength
The status bar shows the strength of the signal. The signal strength
mainly depends on the antenna output power and the distance between
your NWD2205 and the AP or peer computer.
Link Quality
The status bar shows the quality of wireless connection. This refers to
the percentage of packets transmitted successfully. If there are too
many wireless stations in a wireless network, collisions may occur which
could result in a loss of messages even though you have high signal
strength.
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4.3.1 Trend Chart
Click Trend Chart in the Link Info screen to display a screen as shown below.
Use this screen to view real-time data traffic statistics.
Figure 30 Link Info: Trend Chart
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 6 Link Info: Trend Chart
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Transmit Rate
This field displays the current data transmission rate in kilobits per
second (Kbps).
Receive Rate
This field displays the current data reception rate in kilobits per second
(Kbps).
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4.4 The Site Survey Screen
Use the Site Survey screen to scan for and connect to a wireless network
automatically.
Figure 31 Site Survey
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 7 Site Survey
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Available
Network List
Click a column heading to sort the entries.
denotes that the wireless device is in infrastructure mode and
the wireless security is activated.
denotes that the wireless device is in infrastructure mode but the
wireless security is deactivated.
or
denotes that the wireless device is in Ad-Hoc mode and the
wireless security is activated.
denotes that the wireless device is in Ad-Hoc mode but the
wireless security is deactivated.
54
SSID
This field displays the SSID (Service Set IDentifier) of each wireless
device.
Channel
This field displays the channel number used by each wireless device.
Signal
This field displays the signal strength of each wireless device.
Scan
Click Scan to search for available wireless devices within transmission
range.
Connect
Click Connect to associate to the selected wireless device.
Site
Information
Click an entry in the Available Network List table to display the
information of the selected wireless device.
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Table 7 Site Survey (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Network Type
This field displays the network type (Infrastructure or Ad Hoc) of the
wireless device.
Channel
This field displays the channel number used by each wireless device.
Security
This field shows whether data encryption is activated (WEP, WPA,
WPA-PSK, WPA2, WPA2-PSK or 802.1x) or inactive (DISABLE).
MAC address
This field displays the MAC address of the wireless device.
Surveyed at
This field displays the time when the wireless device was scanned.
4.4.1 Security Settings
When you configure the NWD2205 to connect to a network with wireless security
activated and the security settings are disabled on the NWD2205, the screen
varies according to the encryption method used by the selected network.
4.4.1.1 Security Type Selection
When you choose to connect to a network that has security, you are presented
with is a security selection screen. Choose the security of the network you are
attempting to join.
Figure 32 Security Setting Selection
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 8 Security Setting: WEP
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Security Type
Select the security type that matches the security setting of the
network you’re trying to join.
The options are: DISABLE, WEP, WPA, WPA2, WPA-PSK, WPA2PSK, and 802.1x.
Back
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Click Back to go to the Site Survey screen to select and connect to
another network.
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Table 8 Security Setting: WEP (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Next
Click Next to confirm your selections and advance to the Security
Settings screen that corresponds to the one you select here.
Exit
Click Exit to return to the Site Survey screen without saving.
4.4.1.2 WEP Encryption
Configure WEP security in this screen.
Figure 33 Security Setting: WEP
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 9 Security Setting: WEP
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Security
Settings
56
WEP
Select 64 bits or 128 bits to activate WEP encryption and then fill in
the related fields.
Authentication
Type
Select an authentication method. Choices are OPEN and SHARED.
Pass Phrase
Enter a passphrase of up to 32 case-sensitive printable characters. As
you enter the passphrase, the NWD2205 automatically generates four
different WEP keys and displays the first in the key field below. Refer to
Section 3.3.1.1.1 on page 39 for more information.
Transmit Key
Select a default WEP key to use for data encryption. The key displays in
the adjacent field.
Refer to Section 3.3.1.1.2 on page 40 for more information.
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Table 9 Security Setting: WEP (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Key x (where x
is a number
between 1 and
4)
Select this option if you want to manually enter the WEP keys. Enter the
WEP key in the field provided.
If you select 64 bits in the WEP field.
Enter either 10 hexadecimal digits in the range of “A-F”, “a-f” and
“0-9” (for example, 11AA22BB33) for HEX key type.
or
Enter 5 ASCII characters (case sensitive) ranging from “a-z”, “A-Z”
and “0-9” (for example, MyKey) for ASCII key type.
If you select 128 bits in the WEP field,
Enter either 26 hexadecimal digits in the range of “A-F”, “a-f” and
“0-9” (for example, 00112233445566778899AABBCC) for HEX key
type
or
Enter 13 ASCII characters (case sensitive) ranging from “a-z”, “A-Z”
and “0-9” (for example, MyKey12345678) for ASCII key type.
Note: The values for the WEP keys must be set up exactly the
same on all wireless devices in the same wireless LAN.
ASCII WEP keys are case sensitive.
Back
Click Back to go to the Site Survey screen to select and connect to
another network.
Next
Click Next to confirm your selections and advance to the Summary
screen. Refer to Section 4.4.2 on page 61.
Exit
Click Exit to return to the Site Survey screen without saving.
4.4.1.3 WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK
Configure WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK security in this screen.
Note: The procedure to configure WPA or WPA2 is different in Windows Vista. See
Section 4.7 on page 70 for information on setting up your NWD2205 to use
WPA or WPA2 in Vista.
Figure 34 Security Setting: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK
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The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 10 Security Setting: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Encryption Type
The encryption mechanisms used for WPA/WPA2 and WPA-PSK/WPA2PSK are the same. The only difference between the two is that WPAPSK/WPA2-PSK uses a simple common password, instead of userspecific credentials.
Select the encryption type (TKIP or AES) for data encryption.
Refer to Section 3.3.1.3 on page 41 for more information.
Pre-Shared Key
Type a pre-shared key (same as the AP or peer device) of between 8
and 63 case-sensitive ASCII characters (including spaces and symbols)
or 64 hexadecimal characters.
Back
Click Back to go to the Site Survey screen to select and connect to
another network.
Next
Click Next to confirm your selections and advance to the Summary
screen. Refer to Section 4.4.2 on page 61.
Exit
Click Exit to return to the Site Survey screen without saving.
4.4.1.4 WPA/WPA2
The screen that displays when you select WPA or WPA2 differs, depending on the
EAP Type you select (TLS, PEAP or TTLS).
Figure 35 Security Settings: WPA/WPA2
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The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 11 Security Setting: WPA/WPA2
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Encryption Type
The encryption mechanisms used for WPA/WPA2 and WPA-PSK/WPA2PSK are the same. The only difference between the two is that WPAPSK/WPA2-PSK uses a simple common password, instead of userspecific credentials.
Select the encryption type (TKIP or AES) for data encryption.
Refer to Section 3.3.1.3 on page 41 for more information.
EAP Type
The type of authentication you use depends on the RADIUS server or
AP.
Select an authentication method from the drop down list. Options are
TLS, PEAP and TTLS (at the time of writing, TTLS is not available in
Windows Vista).
Login Name
Enter a user name.
This is the user name that you or an administrator set up on a RADIUS
server.
Password
This field is not available when you select TLS in the EAP Type field.
Enter the password associated with the user name above.
Certificate
This field is only available when you select TLS in the EAP Type field.
Click Browse to select a certificate.
Note: You must first have a wired connection to a network and
obtain the certificate(s) from a certificate authority (CA).
Consult your network administrator for more information.
PEAP Inner EAP
This field is only available when you select PEAP in the EAP Type field.
The PEAP method used by the RADIUS server or AP for client
authentication is MS CHAP v2.
TTLS Protocol
This field is available only when you select TTLS in the EAP Type field.
Select a TTLS protocol that the RADIUS server uses. Options are CHAP,
MS-CHAP, MS-CHAP-V2 and PAP.
Note: This feature is not available on Windows Vista.
Back
Click Back to go to the Site Survey screen to select and connect to
another network.
Next
Click Next to confirm your selections and advance to the Summary
screen. Refer to Section 4.4.2 on page 61.
Exit
Click Exit to return to the Site Survey screen without saving.
4.4.1.5 IEEE 802.1x
Configure IEEE 802.1x security with various authentication methods in this
screen.
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Note: The procedure to configure 802.1x is different in Windows Vista. See Section
4.7 on page 70 for information on setting up your NWD2205 to use 802.1x in
Vista.
Figure 36 Security Setting: 802.1x
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 12 Security Settings: IEEE 802.1x
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Encryption Type
Select WEP if the access point is configured to use 802.1x with WEP
encryption. A dynamic WEP key is generated automatically.
EAP Type
The type of authentication you use depends on the RADIUS server or
AP.
Select an authentication method from the drop down list. Options are
TLS, PEAP and TTLS (at the time of writing, TTLS is not available in
Windows Vista).
Login Name
Enter a user name.
This is the user name that you or an administrator set up on a RADIUS
server.
Password
This field is not available when you select TLS in the EAP Type field or
the PEAP Inner EAP field.
Enter the password associated with the user name above.
Certificate
This field is available only when you select TLS in the EAP Type field.
Click Browse to select a certificate.
Note: You must first have a wired connection to a network and
obtain the certificate(s) from a certificate authority (CA).
Consult your network administrator for more information.
TTLS Protocol
This field is available only when you select TTLS in the EAP Type field.
Select a TTLS protocol that the RADIUS server uses. Options are CHAP,
MS-CHAP, MS-CHAP-V2 and PAP.
Note: This feature is not available on Windows Vista.
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Table 12 Security Settings: IEEE 802.1x
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
PEAP Inner EAP
This field is only available when you select PEAP in the EAP Type field.
The PEAP method used by the RADIUS server or AP for client
authentication is MS CHAPII.
Back
Click Back to go to the Site Survey screen to select and connect to
another network.
Next
Click Next to confirm your selections and advance to the Summary
screen. Refer to Section 4.4.2 on page 61.
Exit
Click Exit to return to the Site Survey screen without saving.
4.4.2 Summary Screen
Use this screen to confirm and save the security settings.
Figure 37 Summary Screen
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 13 Summary Screen
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Network Name
(SSID)
This field displays the SSID previously entered.
Network Type
This field displays the network type (Infrastructure or Ad-Hoc) of the
wireless device.
Channel
This field displays the channel number used by the profile.
Security
This field shows whether data encryption is activated (WEP, WPA,
WPA-PSK, WPA2, WPA2-PSK, 802.1x) or inactive (DISABLE).
Back
Click Back to return to the previous screen.
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Table 13 Summary Screen
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Save
Click Save to save the changes back to the NWD2205 and display the
Link Info screen.
Exit
Click Exit to discard changes and return to the Site Survey screen.
4.5 The Profile Screen
A profile is a set of wireless parameters that you need to connect to a wireless
network. With a profile activated, each time you start the NWD2205, it
automatically scans for the specific SSID and joins that network with the predefined wireless security settings. If the specified network is not available, the
NWD2205 cannot connect to a network.
If you do not configure and activate a profile, each time you start the NWD2205,
the NWD2205 uses the default profile to connect to any available network that has
no security enabled.
The default profile is a profile that allows you to connect to any SSID that has no
security enabled.
Click the Profile tab in the ZyXEL utility program to display the Profile screen as
shown next.
The profile function allows you to save the wireless network settings in this
screen, or use one of the pre-configured network profiles.
Figure 38 Profile
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The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 14 Profile
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Profile List
Click a column heading to sort the entries.
denotes that the wireless device is in infrastructure mode and
the wireless security is activated.
denotes that the wireless device is in infrastructure mode but the
wireless security is deactivated.
or
denotes that the wireless device is in Ad-Hoc mode and the
wireless security is activated.
denotes that the wireless device is in Ad-Hoc mode but the
wireless security is deactivated.
Profile Name
This is the name of the pre-configured profile.
SSID
This is the SSID of the wireless network to which the selected profile
associate.
Connect
To use and activate a previously saved network profile, select a preconfigured profile name in the table and click Connect.
Add
To add a new profile into the table, click Add.
Delete
To delete an existing wireless network configuration, select a profile in
the table and click Delete.
Edit
To edit an existing wireless network configuration, select a profile in the
table and click Edit.
Profile Info
The following fields display detailed information of the selected profile in
the Profile List table.
Network Type
This field displays the network type (Infrastructure or Ad-Hoc) of the
profile.
SSID
This field displays the network’s Service Set IDentity (the name of the
network).
Channel
This field displays the channel number used by the profile.
Security
This field shows whether data encryption is activated (WEP, WPA,
WPA-PSK, WPA2, WPA2-PSK or 802.1x) or inactive (DISABLE).
Transmit Rate
This field displays the transmission speed of the selected profile in
megabits per second (Mbps).
4.5.1 Adding a New Profile
Follow the steps below to add a new profile.
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Click Add in the Profile screen. An Add New Profile screen displays as shown
next.
Figure 39 Profile: Add a New Profile
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 15 Profile: Add a New Profile
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Add New Profile
Profile Name
Enter a descriptive name in this field.
SSID
Select an available wireless device in the Scan Info table and click
Select, or enter the SSID of the wireless device to which you want to
associate in this field manually. Otherwise, enter Any to have the
NWD2205 associate to any AP or roam between any infrastructure
wireless networks.
Network Type
Select Infrastructure to associate to an AP. Select Ad-Hoc to
associate to a peer computer.
Next
Click Next to go to the next screen.
Exit
Click Exit to go back to the previous screen without saving.
Scan Info
This table displays the information of the available wireless networks
within the transmission range.
denotes that the wireless device is in infrastructure mode and
the wireless security is activated.
denotes that the wireless device is in infrastructure mode but the
wireless security is deactivated.
or
denotes that the wireless device is in Ad-Hoc mode and the
wireless security is activated.
denotes that the wireless device is in Ad-Hoc mode but the
wireless security is deactivated.
SSID
64
This field displays the SSID (Service Set IDentifier) of each AP or peer
device.
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Table 15 Profile: Add a New Profile (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Scan
Click Scan to search for available wireless devices within transmission
range.
Select
Select an available wireless device in the table and click Select to add it
to this profile.
Whenever you activate this profile, the NWD2205 associates to the
selected wireless network only.
If you select the Infrastructure network type in the previous screen, skip to step
3. If you select the Ad-Hoc network type in the previous screen, a screen displays
as follows. Select a Channel number and Wireless Mode and click Next to
continue.
Note: To associate to an ad-hoc network, you must use the same channel as the peer
computer.
Figure 40 Profile: Wireless Settings
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 16 Profile: Wireless Settings
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Wireless
Settings
Channel
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Select a channel number from the drop-down list box. To associate to
an ad-hoc network, you must use the same channel as the peer
computer.
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If you selected Infrastructure network type in the first screen, select WEP,
WPA, WPA2, WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK or 802.1x from the drop-down list box to
enable data encryption. If you selected Ad-Hoc network type in the first screen,
you can use only WEP encryption method. Otherwise, select DISABLE to allow
the NWD2205 to communicate with the access points or other peer wireless
computers without any data encryption, and skip to step 5.
Figure 41 Profile: Wireless Settings
The screen varies depending on the encryption method you select in the previous
screen. The settings must be exactly the same on the AP or other peer wireless
computers as they are on the NWD2205. Refer to Section 5.4.1 on page 80 for
detailed information on wireless security configuration.
Figure 42 Profile: Security Settings
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This read-only screen shows a summary of the new profile settings. Verify that the
settings are correct. Click Save to save and go to the next screen. Click Back to
return to the previous screen. Otherwise, click Exit to go back to the Profile
screen without saving.
Figure 43 Profile: Confirm New Settings
To use this network profile, click the Activate Now button. Otherwise, click the
Activate Later button. You can activate only one profile at a time.
Note: Once you activate a profile, the ZyXEL utility will use that profile the next time it
is started.
Figure 44 Profile: Activate the Profile
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4.6 The Adapter Screen
To set the other advanced features on the NWD2205, click the Adapter tab.
Figure 45 Adapter
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 17 Adapter
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Adapter Setting
Power Saving
Mode
Select Maximum or Normal to save power. This forces the NWD2205
to go to sleep mode when it is not transmitting data.
When you select Off, the NWD2205 will never go to sleep mode.
At the time of writing, this field is not available in Windows Vista.
WMM QoS
Select this to enable Wi-fi MultiMedia Quality of Service on the
NWD2205.
At the time of writing, this field is not available in Windows Vista.
WPS (WiFi
Protected
Setup)
PBC (Push
Button
Configuratio
n)
68
Select this to enable Wi-fi Protected Setup on the NWD2205.
Select this to use the PBC (Push-Button Configuration) WPS mode.
When you use the PBC mode you do not use a PIN.
When you select this, the PBC (Push Button Configuration) screen
appears (see Section 4.6.1 on page 69).
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Table 17 Adapter (continued)
LABEL
PIN - Use
This Device’s
PIN
DESCRIPTION
Select this to use the PIN (Personal Identification Number) WPS mode.
Use this option when you want to enter the NWD2205’s PIN in another
WPS-enabled device.
When you select this, the PIN - Use this Device’s PIN screen appears
(see Section 4.6.2 on page 69).
Save
Click Save to save the changes to the NWD2205 and return to the Link
Info screen.
4.6.1 WPS: PBC (Push Button Configuration)
This screen allows you to use the WPS Push Button Configuration mode. See
Section 3.4.1 on page 42 for more information. Select WPS and PBC (Push
Button Configuration) in the Adapter screen. The following screen displays.
Figure 46 WPS: PBC (Push Button Configuration)
Press Start when you want to begin the WPS process. You must also press the
button on the other device within two minutes.
4.6.2 WPS: PIN - Use this Device’s PIN
This screen allows you to use the WPS Personal Identification Number mode, by
entering the NWD2205’s unique PIN in the configuration utility of the other WPSenabled device. See Section 3.4.2 on page 42 for more information. Select WPS
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and PIN - Use this Device’s PIN in the Adapter screen. The following screen
displays.
Figure 47 WPS: PIN - Use this Device’s PIN
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 18 WPS: PIN - Use this Device’s PIN
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
This device’s PIN
This is the NWD2205’s Personal Identification Number
(PIN). This field is read-only. Enter the number that
displays in this field into the configuration interface of the
other WPS-enabled device.
Note: Each time this screen displays, the PIN is
different. The PIN is valid for only one WPS
transaction.
Start
Click this to start WPS. You must start WPS on the other
WPS-enabled device within two minutes.
4.7 Security Settings in Windows Vista
When you use the NWD2205 in Windows Vista, the procedure for setting up WPA,
WPA2 and 802.1x security settings is different from that of other operating
systems (other security types are not affected).
The procedures for setting up WPA, WPA2 or 802.1x in Vista are the same.
However, the procedure differs depending on whether you use PEAP (Protected
Extensible Authentication Protocol) or TLS (Transport Layer Security) encryption.
Consult your network administrator if you are unsure which type of encryption to
use.
See Section 4.7.1 on page 71 to use PEAP, or see Section 4.7.2 on page 72 to use
TLS.
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Note: TTLS (Tunneled TLS) is not available when using Windows Vista or Windows 7,
at the time of writing.
4.7.1 Using PEAP in Vista
Take the following steps to set up WPA, WPA2 or 802.1x security using PEAP in
Windows Vista.
Either select the AP to which you want to connect in the Site Survey screen (see
Section 4.4 on page 54), or configure a profile in the normal way (see Section 4.5
on page 62).
In the WPA, WPA2 or 802.1x security screen (see Section 4.4.1.4 on page 58
and Section 4.4.1.5 on page 59), select PEAP as the EAP Type. Note that the
Login Name and Password fields are greyed-out (not available).
Click Next.
In the Summary screen that appears, click Save.
A message similar to the following appears in the bottom-right of your screen.
Click the message.
Figure 48 Vista Security: Additional Information Required
The Enter Credentials screen displays. Enter your User name and Password
for the network to which you want to connect.
Figure 49 Vista Security: Enter Credentials
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Note: If you are not sure what to enter, contact your network administrator.
Click OK. The Enter Credentials screen disappears and the NWD2205 tries to
connect to the network. The ZyXEL utility’s Link Info screen displays, showing
the connection status (see Section 4.3 on page 51). If the Link Info screen
displays an active connection, you have successfully completed the procedure.
4.7.2 Using TLS in Vista
Take the following steps to set up WPA, WPA2 or 802.1x security using TLS in
Windows Vista.
Either select the AP to which you want to connect in the Site Survey screen (see
Section 4.4 on page 54), or configure a profile (see Section 4.5 on page 62) in the
normal way.
In the WPA, WPA2 or 802.1x security screen, select TLS as the EAP Type. Note
that the Login Name, Certificate and Validate Server Certificate fields are
greyed-out (not available).
Click Next.
In the Summary screen, click Save.
A message similar to the following appears in the bottom-right of your screen.
Click the message.
Figure 50 Vista Security: Additional Information Required
The Select Certificate screen displays. Select the certificate you want to use in
order to authenticate with the server, and enter your username.
Figure 51 Vista Security: Select Certificate
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Note: If you do not have the right certificate, or are not sure which certificate you
should use, contact your network administrator.
Click OK. The Select Certificate screen disappears and the NWD2205 tries to
connect to the network. The ZyXEL utility’s Link Info screen displays, showing
the connection status (see Section 4.3 on page 51). If the Link Info screen
displays an active connection, you have successfully completed the procedure.
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AP Mode
5.1 Overview
This section shows you how to configure your NWD2205 in AP Mode using the
Windows version of the ZyXEL Utility.
Note: Some features available in Windows XP or Windows 2000 are not available in
Windows Vista.
AP Mode allows you to set up a wireless network without using a pre-existing AP.
The following figure shows a sample AP network set up.
Figure 52 AP Network Example .
Here, the NWD2205 is installed on computer A and set to operate in access point
mode. Computer A provides an Internet connection to the wireless LAN, so
wireless stations B and C can access the Internet.
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Select the AP Mode option the ZyXEL Utility to have the device function as an
access point.
Figure 53 ZyXEL Utility: Setting AP Mode .
5.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section
• On the Link Info screen, you can see your AP’s current transmission and
security status See Section 5.3 on page 78 for details.
• On the Configuration screen, you can set up the broadcast parameters for
your access point as well as its security options. See Section 5.4 on page 79 for
details.
• On the MAC Filter screen, you can configure the NWD2205 to give exclusive
access to devices or exclude specific devices from connecting to the AP. See
Section 5.5 on page 83 for details.
5.1.2 What You Need to Know
The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this section.
MAC Address
On a local area network (LAN) or other network, the MAC address is a computer's
unique hardware number. On an Ethernet LAN, it's the same as your Ethernet
address. The MAC layer frames data for transmission over the network, then
passes the frame to the physical layer interface where it is transmitted as a
stream of bits.
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See Also...
The terms and concepts introduced in Chapter 4 on page 49 apply to this chapter
as well.
5.1.3 Before You Begin
Make sure the ZyXEL Utility is already installed. See the Quick Start Guide for
more.
To bridge your wired and wireless network using the NWD2205, the following
requirements must be met:
• The NWD2205 must be installed on a computer connected to the wired network.
• Either bridge the two interfaces (wireless and wired) on the computer (using the
Configuration screen) or configure network sharing.
• Set the wireless station’s IP address to be dynamic if you want the wireless
stations to access the wired network or the Internet through the NWD2205.
Refer to Appendix A on page 101 for how to configure your computer’s IP
address.
5.2 AP Mode Screen Summary
This section describes the ZyXEL Utility screens while in AP Mode.
Figure 54 ZyXEL Utility Menu Summary
The following table describes the menus.
Table 19 ZyXEL Utility Menu Summary
TAB
DESCRIPTION
Link Info
Use this screen to see your current connection status, configuration and
data rate statistics.
Configuration
Use this screen to configure wireless LAN settings.
Filter
Use this screen to configure which computer(s) you want access to the
wireless LAN through the NWD2205.
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5.3 The Link Info Screen
When you enter AP Mode, the Link Info screen displays, showing the current
configuration and connection status of your NWD2205 access point.
Figure 55 Link Info
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 20 Link Info
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Status
SSID
This field displays the name that identifies your NWD2205 in the wireless LAN network.
Current
Channel
This field displays the radio channel the NWD2205 is currently using.
Transmission Rate
This field displays the current transmission rate of the NWD2205 in
megabits per second (Mbps).
Security
This field shows whether data encryption is activated (WEP, WPA,
WPA2, WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK) or inactive (DISABLE).
MAC
This field displays the MAC address of the NWD2205.
Output
Power
This field shows the strength of the NWD2205’s antenna gain or transmission power.
Association List
This table lists the wireless clients that are currently connected to the
NWD2205.
denotes a wireless client without wireless security.
denotes a wireless client with wireless security enabled.
MAC Addr
Refresh
78
This field displays the MAC addresses of a wireless client that is currently connected to the NWD2205.
Click Refresh to update this screen.
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5.4 The Configuration Screen
The Configuration screen allows you to set up the broadcast parameters for your
access point as well as its security options.
Figure 56 The Configuration Screen
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 21 Configuration
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Wireless Settings
SSID
Enter a name for your AP This name is broadcast to all wireless-capable
devices in range and can be used to connect to your AP.
You can enter up to 32 printable ASCII characters in this field.
Hide SSID
Select this option to keep your AP’s SSID private. Only users who
explicitly enter the SSID name in their connection window while connecting will be able to “see” it.
While effective at deterring the casual user from inadvertantly connecting to your AP, it is the weakest of all wireless security. Anyone with a
basic sniffer program will be able to detect the channel.
Wireless
Mode
This displays a list of available wireless modes. As of this writing, the
NWD2205 only supports 2.4 GHz.
Channel
Select a channel on which on broadcast your AP’s wireless signal.
If there are a high number of APs broadcast within range of one
another, try to use a channel that is either not in use or that has the
fewest number of broadcasters. Too many APs using the same channel
can interfere with one another.
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5.4.1.2 WEP Encryption
Configure WEP security with these options.
Figure 57 Security Setting: WEP
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 22 Security Setting: WEP
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Security type
Select WEP to enable this encryption type.
Authentication
Type
Select an authentication method. Choices are OPEN and SHARED.
WEP
Select 64 bits or 128 bits for your WEP encryption type.
Transmit Key
Select a default WEP key to use for data encryption.
Note: This feature is not available in Windows Vista.
Pass Phrase
If you select this transmit key option, enter a passphrase of up to 32
case-sensitive printable characters.
As you enter the passphrase, the NWD2205 automatically generates
four different transmit keys and displays the first in the key field below.
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Table 22 Security Setting: WEP (continued)
LABEL
Key 1-4
DESCRIPTION
Select this option if you want to manually enter a transmit key. Enter
the key in the field provided.
If you select 64 bits in the WEP field.
Enter either 10 hexadecimal digits in the range of “A-F”, “a-f” and “09” (for example, 11AA22BB33) for HEX key type.
or
Enter 5 ASCII characters (case sensitive) ranging from “a-z”, “A-Z”
and “0-9” (for example, MyKey) for ASCII key type.
If you select 128 bits in the WEP field,
Enter either 26 hexadecimal digits in the range of “A-F”, “a-f” and “09” (for example, 00112233445566778899AABBCC) for HEX key type
or
Enter 13 ASCII characters (case sensitive) ranging from “a-z”, “A-Z”
and “0-9” (for example, MyKey12345678) for ASCII key type.
Note: The values for the WEP keys must be set up exactly the
same on all wireless devices in the same wireless LAN.
ASCII WEP keys are case sensitive.
Save
Click to save the changes.
Cancel
Click to discard the changes.
5.4.1.3 WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK
Configure WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK security with these options.
Figure 58 Security Setting: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK
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The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 23 Security Setting: WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Security Type
Select either WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK to enable these encryption
types.
Encryption Type
Select the encryption type (TKIP or AES) for data encryption.
Pre-Shared Key
Type a pre-shared key (same as the AP or peer device) of between 8
and 63 case-sensitive ASCII characters (including spaces and symbols)
or 64 hexadecimal characters.
Save
Click to save the changes.
Cancel
Click to discard the changes.
5.5 The MAC Filter Screen
The MAC Filter screen allows you to configure the NWD2205 to give exclusive
access to devices (Allow all) or exclude devices from connecting to the NWD2205
(Reject all). 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 device(s) to configure this screen.
Figure 59 The MAC Filter Screen
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The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 24 MAC Filter
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Filter Type
Define the filter action for the list of MAC addresses in the MAC address
filter table.
Select Disable to deactivate the MAC filter feature.
Select Reject all to block access to the NWD2205, MAC addresses not
listed will be allowed to access the NWD2205.
Select Allow all to permit access to the NWD2205, MAC addresses not
listed will be denied access to the NWD2205.
Filter MAC
Address 1-16
Specify the MAC address(es) of the wireless station(s) that is allowed or
denied association to the NWD2205.
Enter six pairs of hexadecimal digits (separated by colons) in the range
of “A-F”, “a-f” and “0-9” (for example, 00:A0:C5:00:00:02).
If you enter an invalid MAC address, once you click Save to save the
values, a warning screen will be displayed.
84
Save
Click to save the changes.
Cancel
Click to discard the changes.
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Maintenance
6.1 Overview
This section describes how to uninstall or upgrade the ZyXEL utility.
6.1.1 What You Can Do in This Section
• Learn which version of the ZyXEL utility and device driver you’re currently using.
See Section 6.2 on page 86 for details.
• Remove the ZyXEL utility from your computer. See Section 6.3 on page 86 for
details.
• Upgrade the ZyXEL utility. See Section 6.4 on page 87 for details.
6.1.2 What You Need to Know
The following term may help as you read through this section.
Device driver
A system file that lets other programs interact with a piece of hardware, or
“device.” You should never try to locate and install or uninstall device drivers
yourself since they are modifications to an operating system at the core (or
“kernel”) level. Doing so could irreparably damage your installation.
6.1.3 Before You Begin
• Disconnect the NWD2205 if you are going to uninstall or upgrade the ZyXEL
utility, save your work in any other open programs, and then close them.
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6.2 The About Screen
The About screen displays driver and utility version numbers of the NWD2205. To
display the screen as shown below, click the About (
) button.
Figure 60 About
The following table describes the read-only fields in this screen.
Table 25 About
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Driver Version
This field displays the version number of the NWD2205 driver.
Utility Version
This field displays the version number of the ZyXEL utility.
6.3 Uninstalling the ZyXEL Utility
Follow the steps below to remove (or uninstall) the ZyXEL utility from your
computer.
Note: Before you uninstall the ZyXEL utility, take note of your current wireless
configurations.
Click Start > (All) Programs > Wireless N USB Utility > Uninstall Wireless
N USB Utility.
When prompted, click OK or Yes to remove the driver and the utility software.
Figure 61 Uninstall: Confirm
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Click Finish to complete uninstalling the software and restart the computer when
prompted.
Figure 62 Uninstall: Finish
6.4 Upgrading the ZyXEL Utility
Note: Before you uninstall the ZyXEL utility, take note of your current wireless
configurations.
To perform the upgrade, follow the steps below.
Download the latest version of the utility from the ZyXEL web site and save the file
on your computer.
Follow the steps in Section 6.3 on page 86 to remove the current ZyXEL utility
from your computer.
Restart your computer when prompted.
Disconnect the NWD2205 from your computer.
Double-click on the setup program for the new utility to start the ZyXEL utility
installation.
Insert the NWD2205 and check the version numbers in the About screen to make
sure the new utility is installed properly.
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P ART II
Troubleshooting
and Specifications
Troubleshooting (91)
Product Specifications (95)
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CHAPTER
Troubleshooting
This chapter offers some suggestions to solve problems you might encounter. The
potential problems are divided into the following categories.
• Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs
• Accessing the ZyXEL Utility
• Link Quality
• Problems Communicating with Other Computers
7.1 Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs
The NWD2205 does not turn on. None of the LEDs turn on.
Make sure the NWD2205 is correctly installed (refer to your Quick Start Guide).
Restart the computer to which the NWD2205 is attached.
If the problem continues, contact the vendor.
One of the LEDs does not behave as expected.
Make sure you understand the normal behavior of the LED. See Section 1.2 on
page 18.
Check the hardware connection. See the Quick Start Guide and Section 1.2 on
page 18.
Restart the computer to which the NWD2205 is attached.
If the problem continues, contact the vendor.
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7.2 Accessing the ZyXEL Utility
I cannot access the ZyXEL Utility
Make sure the NWD2205 is properly inserted and the LEDs are on. Refer to the
Quick Start Guide for information on how to properly connect the NWD2205.
Use the Device Manager to check for possible hardware conflicts. Click Start >
Settings > Control Panel > System > Hardware > Device Manager. Verify
the status of the NWD2205 under Network Adapter (steps may vary depending
on the version of Windows).
Install the NWD2205 on another computer.
If the error persists, you may have a hardware problem. In this case, you should
contact your vendor.
7.3 Link Quality
The link quality and/or signal strength is poor.
92
Scan for and connect to another AP with a better link quality using the Site
Survey screen.
Move your computer closer to the AP or the peer computer(s) within the
transmission range.
There may be too much radio interference (for example from a microwave oven,
or another AP using the same channel) around your wireless network. Lower the
output power of each AP.
Make sure there are not too many wireless stations connected to a wireless
network.
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7.4 Problems Communicating with Other
Computers
The computer with the NWD2205 installed cannot communicate with the other
computer(s).
In Infrastructure Mode
• Make sure that the AP and the associated computers are turned on and working
properly.
• Make sure the NWD2205 computer and the associated AP use the same SSID.
• Change the AP and the associated wireless clients to use another radio channel
if interference is high.
• Make sure that the computer and the AP share the same security option and
key. Verify the settings in the Profile Security Setting screen.
• If you are using WPA(2) or WPA(2)-PSK security, try changing your encryption
type from TKIP to AES or vice versa.
In Ad-Hoc Mode
• Verify that the peer computer(s) is turned on.
• Make sure the NWD2205 computer and the peer computer(s) are using the
same SSID and channel.
• Make sure that the computer and the peer computer(s) share the same security
settings.
• Change the wireless clients to use another radio channel if interference is high.
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CHAPTER
Product Specifications
Table 26 Product Specifications
PHYSICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL
Product Name
NWD2205 Wireless N USB Adapter
Interface
USB 2.0
Standards
IEEE 802.11b
IEEE 802.11g
IEEE 802.11n
Operating Frequency
2.4GHZ
Antenna Type
PIFA (Planar Inverted F Antenna)
Antenna Peak Gain
Left: 2.8 dBi
Right: 2.9 dBi
Operating Temperature
0 - 50 degrees Celsius
Storage Temperature
-30 - 70 degrees Celsius
Operating Humidity
20 - 90% (non-condensing)
Storage Humidity
10 - 90% (non-condensing)
Voltage
5V
Power Saving Mode
Yes
Current Consumption
Transmit: <315 mA
Receive: <250 mA
Device Weight
3g
Device Dimensions
18 mm (L) x 6 mm (W) x 36 mm (H)
RADIO SPECIFICATIONS
Transmit Power
802.11b: 18.5 dBm
(+/- 1.5 dB)
802.11g: 16.5 dBm
802.11n:
@ HT20: 16.5 dBm
@ HT40: 16.5 dBm
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Table 26 Product Specifications (continued)
FCC and NCC RF Output
Power
802.11b: 18.1 dBm
802.11g: 24.5 dBm
802.11n:
@ HT20: 28.3 dBm
@ HT40: 27.7 dBm
Receiver Sensitivity
802.11b: 11Mbps at -88 dBm
802.11g: 54Mbps at -74 dBm
802.11n: HT20 at -65 dBm
HT40 at -63 dBm
WIRELESS STANDARDS
IEEE 802.11b
Dynamically shifts between 11, 5.5, 2, and 1 Mbps network
speed.
Operation Frequency
2.412GHz~2.472GHz
Operation Channels
N. America & Taiwan
2.412GHz~ 2.462GHz 1-11
Euro ETSI
2.412GHz~ 2.472GHz 1-13
IEEE 802.11g
Dynamically shifts between 54, 48, 36, 24, 18, 12, 9 and 6
Mbps network speed.
Operation Frequency
2.412GHz~2.472GHz
Operation Channels
N. America & Taiwan
2.412GHz~ 2.462GHz 1-11
Euro ETSI
2.412GHz~ 2.472GHz 1-13
IEEE 802.11n
Downstream data rate
300 Mbps
Upstream data rate
300 Mbps
Operation Frequency
2.412GHz~ 2.472GHz 1-13
Operation Channels
N. America & Taiwan HT20
2.412GHz~ 2.462GHz 1-11
N. America & Taiwan HT40
2.422GHz~ 2.452GHz 3-9
Euro ETSI HT20
2.412GHz~ 2.472GHz 1-13
Euro ETSI HT40
2.422GHz~ 2.462GHz 3-11
Networking Mode
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Infrastructure, Ad-Hoc, SoftAP Support
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Table 26 Product Specifications (continued)
Approvals
Safety
European Union: EN60950 (CE-LVD)
EMI
United States: FCC Part 15B Class B
Canada: ICES-003
European Union: CE EN 55022 Class B, CE EN 301489-1
Australia: C-Tick
EMS
European Union: CE EN55024, CE EN 301489-17
RF
United States: FCC Part 15C, FCC SAR
Canada: RSS-210
European Union: CE EN 300 328
Taiwan: NCC LP0002
Wi-Fi Certification
11 b/g/n WPA/WPA2/WPS
Microsoft Certification
WHQL: Windows 7 (32- and 64-bit), Windows Vista (32and 64-bit), Windows XP (32- and 64-bit)
SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS
Device Drivers
Windows 7 (32- and 64-bit)
Windows Vista (32- and 64-bit)
Windows XP (32- and 64-bit)
WIRELESS FEATURES
Wireless Security
WEP 64bit, 128bit, WPA, WPA-PSK, WPA2, WPA2-PSK
802.1x (EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-PEAP), WPS.
Note: EAP-TTLS is not supported in Windows Vista and
Windows 7.
Wireless QoS
Wi-Fi Multi Media (WMM)
Wi-Fi Protected Setup
(WPS)
Push button configuration
Other
WMM power-saving support
Use device's PIN
Compatible with Windows Zero Configuration
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P ART III
Appendices and
Index
Note: The appendices provide general
information. Some details may not
apply to your NWD2205.
Setting Up Your Computer’s IP Address
(101)
Wireless LANs (131)
Windows Wireless Management (147)
Wireless for Windows 7 (173)
Legal Information (179)
Index (185)
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APPENDIX
Setting Up Your Computer’s IP
Address
Note: Your specific NWD2205 may not support all of the operating systems described
in this appendix. See the product specifications for more information about
which operating systems are supported.
This appendix shows you how to configure the IP settings on your computer in
order for it to be able to communicate with the other devices on your network.
Windows Vista/XP/2000, Mac OS 9/OS X, and all versions of UNIX/LINUX include
the software components you need to use TCP/IP on your computer.
If you manually assign IP information instead of using a dynamic IP, make sure
that your network’s computers have IP addresses that place them in the same
subnet.
In this appendix, you can set up an IP address for:
• Windows XP/NT/2000 on page 101
• Windows Vista on page 105
• Windows 7 on page 109
• Mac OS X: 10.3 and 10.4 on page 113
• Mac OS X: 10.5 and 10.6 on page 117
• Linux: Ubuntu 8 (GNOME) on page 120
• Linux: openSUSE 10.3 (KDE) on page 125
Windows XP/NT/2000
The following example uses the default Windows XP display theme but can also
apply to Windows 2000 and Windows NT.
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Click Start > Control Panel.
Figure 63 Windows XP: Start Menu
In the Control Panel, click the Network Connections icon.
Figure 64 Windows XP: Control Panel
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Right-click Local Area Connection and then select Properties.
Figure 65 Windows XP: Control Panel > Network Connections > Properties
On the General tab, select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and then click
Properties.
Figure 66 Windows XP: Local Area Connection Properties
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The Internet Protocol TCP/IP Properties window opens.
Figure 67 Windows XP: Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties
Select Obtain an IP address automatically if your network administrator or ISP
assigns your IP address dynamically.
Select Use the following IP Address and fill in the IP address, Subnet mask,
and Default gateway fields if you have a static IP address that was assigned to
you by your network administrator or ISP. You may also have to enter a Preferred
DNS server and an Alternate DNS server, if that information was provided.
Click OK to close the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties window.
Click OK to close the Local Area Connection Properties window.
Verifying Settings
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Click Start > All Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt.
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In the Command Prompt window, type "ipconfig" and then press [ENTER].
You can also go to Start > Control Panel > Network Connections, right-click a
network connection, click Status and then click the Support tab to view your IP
address and connection information.
Windows Vista
This section shows screens from Windows Vista Professional.
Click Start > Control Panel.
Figure 68 Windows Vista: Start Menu
In the Control Panel, click the Network and Internet icon.
Figure 69 Windows Vista: Control Panel
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Click the Network and Sharing Center icon.
Figure 70 Windows Vista: Network And Internet
Click Manage network connections.
Figure 71 Windows Vista: Network and Sharing Center
Right-click Local Area Connection and then select Properties.
Figure 72 Windows Vista: Network and Sharing Center
Note: During this procedure, click Continue whenever Windows displays a screen
saying that it needs your permission to continue.
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Select Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) and then select Properties.
Figure 73 Windows Vista: Local Area Connection Properties
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The Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) Properties window opens.
Figure 74 Windows Vista: Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) Properties
Select Obtain an IP address automatically if your network administrator or ISP
assigns your IP address dynamically.
Select Use the following IP Address and fill in the IP address, Subnet mask,
and Default gateway fields if you have a static IP address that was assigned to
you by your network administrator or ISP. You may also have to enter a Preferred
DNS server and an Alternate DNS server, if that information was
provided.Click Advanced.
Click OK to close the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties window.
10 Click OK to close the Local Area Connection Properties window.
Verifying Settings
108
Click Start > All Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt.
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In the Command Prompt window, type "ipconfig" and then press [ENTER].
You can also go to Start > Control Panel > Network Connections, right-click a
network connection, click Status and then click the Support tab to view your IP
address and connection information.
Windows 7
This section shows screens from Windows 7 Enterprise.
Click Start > Control Panel.
Figure 75 Windows 7: Start Menu
In the Control Panel, click View network status and tasks under the
Network and Internet category.
Figure 76 Windows 7: Control Panel
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Click Change adapter settings.
Figure 77 Windows 7: Network And Sharing Center
Double click Local Area Connection and then select Properties.
Figure 78 Windows 7: Local Area Connection Status
Note: During this procedure, click Continue whenever Windows displays a screen
saying that it needs your permission to continue.
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Select Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) and then select Properties.
Figure 79 Windows 7: Local Area Connection Properties
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The Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) Properties window opens.
Figure 80 Windows 7: Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) Properties
Select Obtain an IP address automatically if your network administrator or ISP
assigns your IP address dynamically.
Select Use the following IP Address and fill in the IP address, Subnet mask,
and Default gateway fields if you have a static IP address that was assigned to
you by your network administrator or ISP. You may also have to enter a Preferred
DNS server and an Alternate DNS server, if that information was provided.
Click Advanced if you want to configure advanced settings for IP, DNS and WINS.
Click OK to close the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties window.
Click OK to close the Local Area Connection Properties window.
Verifying Settings
112
Click Start > All Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt.
In the Command Prompt window, type "ipconfig" and then press [ENTER].
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The IP settings are displayed as follows.
Figure 81 Windows 7: Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4) Properties
Mac OS X: 10.3 and 10.4
The screens in this section are from Mac OS X 10.4 but can also apply to 10.3.
Click Apple > System Preferences.
Figure 82 Mac OS X 10.4: Apple Menu
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In the System Preferences window, click the Network icon.
Figure 83 Mac OS X 10.4: System Preferences
When the Network preferences pane opens, select Built-in Ethernet from the
network connection type list, and then click Configure.
Figure 84 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Preferences
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For dynamically assigned settings, select Using DHCP from the Configure IPv4
list in the TCP/IP tab.
Figure 85 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Preferences > TCP/IP Tab.
For statically assigned settings, do the following:
• From the Configure IPv4 list, select Manually.
• In the IP Address field, type your IP address.
• In the Subnet Mask field, type your subnet mask.
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• In the Router field, type the IP address of your device.
Figure 86 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Preferences > Ethernet
Click Apply Now and close the window.
Verifying Settings
Check your TCP/IP properties by clicking Applications > Utilities > Network
Utilities, and then selecting the appropriate Network Interface from the Info
tab.
Figure 87 Mac OS X 10.4: Network Utility
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Mac OS X: 10.5 and 10.6
The screens in this section are from Mac OS X 10.5 but can also apply to 10.6.
Click Apple > System Preferences.
Figure 88 Mac OS X 10.5: Apple Menu
In System Preferences, click the Network icon.
Figure 89 Mac OS X 10.5: Systems Preferences
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When the Network preferences pane opens, select Ethernet from the list of
available connection types.
Figure 90 Mac OS X 10.5: Network Preferences > Ethernet
From the Configure list, select Using DHCP for dynamically assigned settings.
For statically assigned settings, do the following:
• From the Configure list, select Manually.
• In the IP Address field, enter your IP address.
• In the Subnet Mask field, enter your subnet mask.
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• In the Router field, enter the IP address of your NWD2205.
Figure 91 Mac OS X 10.5: Network Preferences > Ethernet
Click Apply and close the window.
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Verifying Settings
Check your TCP/IP properties by clicking Applications > Utilities > Network
Utilities, and then selecting the appropriate Network interface from the Info
tab.
Figure 92 Mac OS X 10.5: Network Utility
Linux: Ubuntu 8 (GNOME)
This section shows you how to configure your computer’s TCP/IP settings in the
GNU Object Model Environment (GNOME) using the Ubuntu 8 Linux distribution.
The procedure, screens and file locations may vary depending on your specific
distribution, release version, and individual configuration. The following screens
use the default Ubuntu 8 installation.
Note: Make sure you are logged in as the root administrator.
Follow the steps below to configure your computer IP address in GNOME:
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Click System > Administration > Network.
Figure 93 Ubuntu 8: System > Administration Menu
When the Network Settings window opens, click Unlock to open the
Authenticate window. (By default, the Unlock button is greyed out until clicked.)
You cannot make changes to your configuration unless you first enter your admin
password.
Figure 94 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > Connections
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In the Authenticate window, enter your admin account name and password then
click the Authenticate button.
Figure 95 Ubuntu 8: Administrator Account Authentication
In the Network Settings window, select the connection that you want to
configure, then click Properties.
Figure 96 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > Connections
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The Properties dialog box opens.
Figure 97 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > Properties
• In the Configuration list, select Automatic Configuration (DHCP) if you
have a dynamic IP address.
• In the Configuration list, select Static IP address if you have a static IP
address. Fill in the IP address, Subnet mask, and Gateway address fields.
Click OK to save the changes and close the Properties dialog box and return to
the Network Settings screen.
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If you know your DNS server IP address(es), click the DNS tab in the Network
Settings window and then enter the DNS server information in the fields
provided.
Figure 98 Ubuntu 8: Network Settings > DNS
Click the Close button to apply the changes.
Verifying Settings
Check your TCP/IP properties by clicking System > Administration > Network
Tools, and then selecting the appropriate Network device from the Devices
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tab. The Interface Statistics column shows data if your connection is working
properly.
Figure 99 Ubuntu 8: Network Tools
Linux: openSUSE 10.3 (KDE)
This section shows you how to configure your computer’s TCP/IP settings in the K
Desktop Environment (KDE) using the openSUSE 10.3 Linux distribution. The
procedure, screens and file locations may vary depending on your specific
distribution, release version, and individual configuration. The following screens
use the default openSUSE 10.3 installation.
Note: Make sure you are logged in as the root administrator.
Follow the steps below to configure your computer IP address in the KDE:
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Click K Menu > Computer > Administrator Settings (YaST).
Figure 100 openSUSE 10.3: K Menu > Computer Menu
When the Run as Root - KDE su dialog opens, enter the admin password and
click OK.
Figure 101 openSUSE 10.3: K Menu > Computer Menu
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When the YaST Control Center window opens, select Network Devices and
then click the Network Card icon.
Figure 102 openSUSE 10.3: YaST Control Center
When the Network Settings window opens, click the Overview tab, select the
appropriate connection Name from the list, and then click the Configure button.
Figure 103 openSUSE 10.3: Network Settings
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When the Network Card Setup window opens, click the Address tab
Figure 104 openSUSE 10.3: Network Card Setup
Select Dynamic Address (DHCP) if you have a dynamic IP address.
Select Statically assigned IP Address if you have a static IP address. Fill in the
IP address, Subnet mask, and Hostname fields.
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Click Next to save the changes and close the Network Card Setup window.
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Appendix A Setting Up Your Computer’s IP Address
If you know your DNS server IP address(es), click the Hostname/DNS tab in
Network Settings and then enter the DNS server information in the fields
provided.
Figure 105 openSUSE 10.3: Network Settings
Click Finish to save your settings and close the window.
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Verifying Settings
Click the KNetwork Manager icon on the Task bar to check your TCP/IP
properties. From the Options sub-menu, select Show Connection Information.
Figure 106 openSUSE 10.3: KNetwork Manager
When the Connection Status - KNetwork Manager window opens, click the
Statistics tab to see if your connection is working properly.
Figure 107 openSUSE: Connection Status - KNetwork Manager
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APPENDIX
Wireless LANs
Wireless LAN Topologies
This section discusses ad-hoc and infrastructure wireless LAN topologies.
Ad-hoc Wireless LAN Configuration
The simplest WLAN configuration is an independent (Ad-hoc) WLAN that connects
a set of computers with wireless adapters (A, B, C). Any time two or more wireless
adapters are within range of each other, they can set up an independent network,
which is commonly referred to as an ad-hoc network or Independent Basic Service
Set (IBSS). The following diagram shows an example of notebook computers
using wireless adapters to form an ad-hoc wireless LAN.
Figure 108 Peer-to-Peer Communication in an Ad-hoc Network
BSS
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 Intra-BSS is
enabled, wireless client A and B can access the wired network and communicate
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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.
Figure 109 Basic Service Set
ESS
An Extended Service Set (ESS) consists of a series of overlapping BSSs, each
containing an access point, with each access point connected together by a wired
network. This wired connection between APs is called a Distribution System (DS).
This type of wireless LAN topology is called an Infrastructure WLAN. The Access
Points not only provide communication with the wired network but also mediate
wireless network traffic in the immediate neighborhood.
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An ESSID (ESS IDentification) uniquely identifies each ESS. All access points and
their associated wireless clients within the same ESS must have the same ESSID
in order to communicate.
Figure 110 Infrastructure WLAN
Channel
A channel is the radio frequency(ies) used by wireless devices to transmit and
receive data. Channels available depend on your geographical area. You may have
a choice of channels (for your region) so you should use a channel different from
an adjacent AP (access point) to reduce interference. Interference occurs when
radio signals from different access points overlap causing interference and
degrading performance.
Adjacent channels partially overlap however. To avoid interference due to overlap,
your AP should be on a channel at least five channels away from a channel that an
adjacent AP is using. For example, if your region has 11 channels and an adjacent
AP is using channel 1, then you need to select a channel between 6 or 11.
RTS/CTS
A hidden node occurs when two stations are within range of the same access
point, but are not within range of each other. The following figure illustrates a
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hidden node. Both stations (STA) are within range of the access point (AP) or
wireless gateway, but out-of-range of each other, so they cannot "hear" each
other, that is they do not know if the channel is currently being used. Therefore,
they are considered hidden from each other.
Figure 111
RTS/CTS
When station A sends data to the AP, it might not know that the station B is
already using the channel. If these two stations send data at the same time,
collisions may occur when both sets of data arrive at the AP at the same time,
resulting in a loss of messages for both stations.
RTS/CTS is designed to prevent collisions due to hidden nodes. An RTS/CTS
defines the biggest size data frame you can send before an RTS (Request To
Send)/CTS (Clear to Send) handshake is invoked.
When a data frame exceeds the RTS/CTS value you set (between 0 to 2432
bytes), the station that wants to transmit this frame must first send an RTS
(Request To Send) message to the AP for permission to send it. The AP then
responds with a CTS (Clear to Send) message to all other stations within its range
to notify them to defer their transmission. It also reserves and confirms with the
requesting station the time frame for the requested transmission.
Stations can send frames smaller than the specified RTS/CTS directly to the AP
without the RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send) handshake.
You should only configure RTS/CTS if the possibility of hidden nodes exists on
your network and the "cost" of resending large frames is more than the extra
network overhead involved in the RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send)
handshake.
If the RTS/CTS value is greater than the Fragmentation Threshold value (see
next), then the RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send) handshake will never
occur as data frames will be fragmented before they reach RTS/CTS size.
Note: Enabling the RTS Threshold causes redundant network overhead that could
negatively affect the throughput performance instead of providing a remedy.
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Fragmentation Threshold
A Fragmentation Threshold is the maximum data fragment size (between 256
and 2432 bytes) that can be sent in the wireless network before the AP will
fragment the packet into smaller data frames.
A large Fragmentation Threshold is recommended for networks not prone to
interference while you should set a smaller threshold for busy networks or
networks that are prone to interference.
If the Fragmentation Threshold value is smaller than the RTS/CTS value (see
previously) you set then the RTS (Request To Send)/CTS (Clear to Send)
handshake will never occur as data frames will be fragmented before they reach
RTS/CTS size.
Preamble Type
Preamble is used to signal that data is coming to the receiver. Short and long refer
to the length of the synchronization field in a packet.
Short preamble increases performance as less time sending preamble means
more time for sending data. All IEEE 802.11 compliant wireless adapters support
long preamble, but not all support short preamble.
Use long preamble if you are unsure what preamble mode other wireless devices
on the network support, and to provide more reliable communications in busy
wireless networks.
Use short preamble if you are sure all wireless devices on the network support it,
and to provide more efficient communications.
Use the dynamic setting to automatically use short preamble when all wireless
devices on the network support it, otherwise the NWD2205 uses long preamble.
Note: The wireless devices MUST use the same preamble mode in order to
communicate.
IEEE 802.11g Wireless LAN
IEEE 802.11g is fully compatible with the IEEE 802.11b standard. This means an
IEEE 802.11b adapter can interface directly with an IEEE 802.11g access point
(and vice versa) at 11 Mbps or lower depending on range. IEEE 802.11g has
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several intermediate rate steps between the maximum and minimum data rates.
The IEEE 802.11g data rate and modulation are as follows:
Table 27 IEEE 802.11g
DATA RATE
(MBPS)
MODULATION
DBPSK (Differential Binary Phase Shift Keyed)
DQPSK (Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying)
5.5 / 11
CCK (Complementary Code Keying)
6/9/12/18/24/36/
48/54
OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing)
Wireless Security Overview
Wireless security is vital to your network to protect wireless communication
between wireless clients, access points and the wired network.
Wireless security methods available on the NWD2205 are data encryption,
wireless client authentication, restricting access by device MAC address and hiding
the NWD2205 identity.
The following figure shows the relative effectiveness of these wireless security
methods available on your NWD2205.
Table 28 Wireless Security Levels
SECURITY
LEVEL
Least
Secure
SECURITY TYPE
Unique SSID (Default)
Unique SSID with Hide SSID Enabled
MAC Address Filtering
WEP Encryption
IEEE802.1x EAP with RADIUS Server
Authentication
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)
WPA2
Most Secure
Note: You must enable the same wireless security settings on the NWD2205 and on
all wireless clients that you want to associate with it.
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Appendix B Wireless LANs
IEEE 802.1x
In June 2001, the IEEE 802.1x standard was designed to extend the features of
IEEE 802.11 to support extended authentication as well as providing additional
accounting and control features. It is supported by Windows XP and a number of
network devices. Some advantages of IEEE 802.1x are:
• User based identification that allows for roaming.
• Support for RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service, RFC 2138,
2139) for centralized user profile and accounting management on a network
RADIUS server.
• Support for EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol, RFC 2486) that allows
additional authentication methods to be deployed with no changes to the access
point or the wireless clients.
RADIUS
RADIUS is based on a client-server model that supports authentication,
authorization and accounting. The access point is the client and the server is the
RADIUS server. The RADIUS server handles the following tasks:
• Authentication
Determines the identity of the users.
• Authorization
Determines the network services available to authenticated users once they are
connected to the network.
• Accounting
Keeps track of the client’s network activity.
RADIUS is a simple package exchange in which your AP acts as a message relay
between the wireless client and the network RADIUS server.
Types of RADIUS Messages
The following types of RADIUS messages are exchanged between the access point
and the RADIUS server for user authentication:
• Access-Request
Sent by an access point requesting authentication.
• Access-Reject
Sent by a RADIUS server rejecting access.
• Access-Accept
Sent by a RADIUS server allowing access.
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• Access-Challenge
Sent by a RADIUS server requesting more information in order to allow access.
The access point sends a proper response from the user and then sends another
Access-Request message.
The following types of RADIUS messages are exchanged between the access point
and the RADIUS server for user accounting:
• Accounting-Request
Sent by the access point requesting accounting.
• Accounting-Response
Sent by the RADIUS server to indicate that it has started or stopped accounting.
In order to ensure network security, the access point and the RADIUS server use a
shared secret key, which is a password, they both know. The key is not sent over
the network. In addition to the shared key, password information exchanged is
also encrypted to protect the network from unauthorized access.
Types of EAP Authentication
This section discusses some popular authentication types: EAP-MD5, EAP-TLS,
EAP-TTLS, PEAP and LEAP. Your wireless LAN device may not support all
authentication types.
EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol) is an authentication protocol that runs on
top of the IEEE 802.1x transport mechanism in order to support multiple types of
user authentication. By using EAP to interact with an EAP-compatible RADIUS
server, an access point helps a wireless station and a RADIUS server perform
authentication.
The type of authentication you use depends on the RADIUS server and an
intermediary AP(s) that supports IEEE 802.1x. .
For EAP-TLS authentication type, you must first have a wired connection to the
network and obtain the certificate(s) from a certificate authority (CA). A certificate
(also called digital IDs) can be used to authenticate users and a CA issues
certificates and guarantees the identity of each certificate owner.
EAP-MD5 (Message-Digest Algorithm 5)
MD5 authentication is the simplest one-way authentication method. The
authentication server sends a challenge to the wireless client. The wireless client
‘proves’ that it knows the password by encrypting the password with the challenge
and sends back the information. Password is not sent in plain text.
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However, MD5 authentication has some weaknesses. Since the authentication
server needs to get the plaintext passwords, the passwords must be stored. Thus
someone other than the authentication server may access the password file. In
addition, it is possible to impersonate an authentication server as MD5
authentication method does not perform mutual authentication. Finally, MD5
authentication method does not support data encryption with dynamic session
key. You must configure WEP encryption keys for data encryption.
EAP-TLS (Transport Layer Security)
With EAP-TLS, digital certifications are needed by both the server and the wireless
clients for mutual authentication. The server presents a certificate to the client.
After validating the identity of the server, the client sends a different certificate to
the server. The exchange of certificates is done in the open before a secured
tunnel is created. This makes user identity vulnerable to passive attacks. A digital
certificate is an electronic ID card that authenticates the sender’s identity.
However, to implement EAP-TLS, you need a Certificate Authority (CA) to handle
certificates, which imposes a management overhead.
EAP-TTLS (Tunneled Transport Layer Service)
EAP-TTLS is an extension of the EAP-TLS authentication that uses certificates for
only the server-side authentications to establish a secure connection. Client
authentication is then done by sending username and password through the
secure connection, thus client identity is protected. For client authentication, EAPTTLS supports EAP methods and legacy authentication methods such as PAP,
CHAP, MS-CHAP and MS-CHAP v2.
PEAP (Protected EAP)
Like EAP-TTLS, server-side certificate authentication is used to establish a secure
connection, then use simple username and password methods through the
secured connection to authenticate the clients, thus hiding client identity.
However, PEAP only supports EAP methods, such as EAP-MD5, EAP-MSCHAPv2
and EAP-GTC (EAP-Generic Token Card), for client authentication. EAP-GTC is
implemented only by Cisco.
LEAP
LEAP (Lightweight Extensible Authentication Protocol) is a Cisco implementation of
IEEE 802.1x.
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Dynamic WEP Key Exchange
The AP maps a unique key that is generated with the RADIUS server. This key
expires when the wireless connection times out, disconnects or reauthentication
times out. A new WEP key is generated each time reauthentication is performed.
If this feature is enabled, it is not necessary to configure a default encryption key
in the wireless security configuration screen. You may still configure and store
keys, but they will not be used while dynamic WEP is enabled.
Note: EAP-MD5 cannot be used with Dynamic WEP Key Exchange
For added security, certificate-based authentications (EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS and
PEAP) use dynamic keys for data encryption. They are often deployed in corporate
environments, but for public deployment, a simple user name and password pair
is more practical. The following table is a comparison of the features of
authentication types.
Table 29 Comparison of EAP Authentication Types
EAP-MD5
EAP-TLS
EAP-TTLS
PEAP
LEAP
Mutual Authentication
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Certificate – Client
No
Yes
Optional
Optional
No
Certificate – Server
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Dynamic Key Exchange
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Credential Integrity
None
Strong
Strong
Strong
Moderate
Deployment Difficulty
Easy
Hard
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Client Identity
Protection
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
WPA and WPA2
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) is a subset of the IEEE 802.11i standard. WPA2
(IEEE 802.11i) is a wireless security standard that defines stronger encryption,
authentication and key management than WPA.
Key differences between WPA or WPA2 and WEP are improved data encryption and
user authentication.
If both an AP and the wireless clients support WPA2 and you have an external
RADIUS server, use WPA2 for stronger data encryption. If you don't have an
external RADIUS server, you should use WPA2-PSK (WPA2-Pre-Shared Key) that
only requires a single (identical) password entered into each access point, wireless
gateway and wireless client. As long as the passwords match, a wireless client will
be granted access to a WLAN.
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If the AP or the wireless clients do not support WPA2, just use WPA or WPA-PSK
depending on whether you have an external RADIUS server or not.
Select WEP only when the AP and/or wireless clients do not support WPA or WPA2.
WEP is less secure than WPA or WPA2.
Encryption
WPA improves data encryption by using Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP),
Message Integrity Check (MIC) and IEEE 802.1x. WPA2 also uses TKIP when
required for compatibility reasons, but offers stronger encryption than TKIP with
Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) in the Counter mode with Cipher block
chaining Message authentication code Protocol (CCMP).
TKIP uses 128-bit keys that are dynamically generated and distributed by the
authentication server. AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) is a block cipher that
uses a 256-bit mathematical algorithm called Rijndael. They both include a perpacket key mixing function, a Message Integrity Check (MIC) named Michael, an
extended initialization vector (IV) with sequencing rules, and a re-keying
mechanism.
WPA and WPA2 regularly change and rotate the encryption keys so that the same
encryption key is never used twice.
The RADIUS server distributes a Pairwise Master Key (PMK) key to the AP that
then sets up a key hierarchy and management system, using the PMK to
dynamically generate unique data encryption keys to encrypt every data packet
that is wirelessly communicated between the AP and the wireless clients. This all
happens in the background automatically.
The Message Integrity Check (MIC) is designed to prevent an attacker from
capturing data packets, altering them and resending them. The MIC provides a
strong mathematical function in which the receiver and the transmitter each
compute and then compare the MIC. If they do not match, it is assumed that the
data has been tampered with and the packet is dropped.
By generating unique data encryption keys for every data packet and by creating
an integrity checking mechanism (MIC), with TKIP and AES it is more difficult to
decrypt data on a Wi-Fi network than WEP and difficult for an intruder to break
into the network.
The encryption mechanisms used for WPA(2) and WPA(2)-PSK are the same. The
only difference between the two is that WPA(2)-PSK uses a simple common
password, instead of user-specific credentials. The common-password approach
makes WPA(2)-PSK susceptible to brute-force password-guessing attacks but it’s
still an improvement over WEP as it employs a consistent, single, alphanumeric
password to derive a PMK which is used to generate unique temporal encryption
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keys. This prevent all wireless devices sharing the same encryption keys. (a
weakness of WEP)
User Authentication
WPA and WPA2 apply IEEE 802.1x and Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) to
authenticate wireless clients using an external RADIUS database. WPA2 reduces
the number of key exchange messages from six to four (CCMP 4-way handshake)
and shortens the time required to connect to a network. Other WPA2
authentication features that are different from WPA include key caching and preauthentication. These two features are optional and may not be supported in all
wireless devices.
Key caching allows a wireless client to store the PMK it derived through a
successful authentication with an AP. The wireless client uses the PMK when it tries
to connect to the same AP and does not need to go with the authentication
process again.
Pre-authentication enables fast roaming by allowing the wireless client (already
connecting to an AP) to perform IEEE 802.1x authentication with another AP
before connecting to it.
Wireless Client WPA Supplicants
A wireless client supplicant is the software that runs on an operating system
instructing the wireless client how to use WPA. At the time of writing, the most
widely available supplicant is the WPA patch for Windows XP, Funk Software's
Odyssey client.
The Windows XP patch is a free download that adds WPA capability to Windows
XP's built-in "Zero Configuration" wireless client. However, you must run Windows
XP to use it.
WPA(2) with RADIUS Application Example
To set up WPA(2), you need the IP address of the RADIUS server, its port number
(default is 1812), and the RADIUS shared secret. A WPA(2) application example
with an external RADIUS server looks as follows. "A" is the RADIUS server. "DS" is
the distribution system.
142
The AP passes the wireless client's authentication request to the RADIUS server.
The RADIUS server then checks the user's identification against its database and
grants or denies network access accordingly.
A 256-bit Pairwise Master Key (PMK) is derived from the authentication process by
the RADIUS server and the client.
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Appendix B Wireless LANs
The RADIUS server distributes the PMK to the AP. The AP then sets up a key
hierarchy and management system, using the PMK to dynamically generate
unique data encryption keys. The keys are used to encrypt every data packet that
is wirelessly communicated between the AP and the wireless clients.
Figure 112 WPA(2) with RADIUS Application Example
WPA(2)-PSK Application Example
A WPA(2)-PSK application looks as follows.
First enter identical passwords into the AP and all wireless clients. The Pre-Shared
Key (PSK) must consist of between 8 and 63 ASCII characters or 64 hexadecimal
characters (including spaces and symbols).
The AP checks each wireless client's password and allows it to join the network
only if the password matches.
The AP and wireless clients generate a common PMK (Pairwise Master Key). The
key itself is not sent over the network, but is derived from the PSK and the SSID.
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The AP and wireless clients use the TKIP or AES encryption process, the PMK and
information exchanged in a handshake to create temporal encryption keys. They
use these keys to encrypt data exchanged between them.
Figure 113 WPA(2)-PSK Authentication
Security Parameters Summary
Refer to this table to see what other security parameters you should configure for
each authentication method or key management protocol type. MAC address
filters are not dependent on how you configure these security features.
Table 30 Wireless Security Relational Matrix
AUTHENTICATION
METHOD/ KEY
MANAGEMENT
PROTOCOL
ENCRYPTIO ENTER
N METHOD MANUAL KEY IEEE 802.1X
Open
None
No
Disable
Enable without Dynamic WEP
Key
Open
Shared
144
WEP
WEP
No
Enable with Dynamic WEP Key
Yes
Enable without Dynamic WEP
Key
Yes
Disable
No
Enable with Dynamic WEP Key
Yes
Enable without Dynamic WEP
Key
Yes
Disable
WPA
TKIP/AES
No
Enable
WPA-PSK
TKIP/AES
Yes
Disable
WPA2
TKIP/AES
No
Enable
WPA2-PSK
TKIP/AES
Yes
Disable
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Appendix B Wireless LANs
Antenna Overview
An antenna couples RF signals onto air. A transmitter within a wireless device
sends an RF signal to the antenna, which propagates the signal through the air.
The antenna also operates in reverse by capturing RF signals from the air.
Positioning the antennas properly increases the range and coverage area of a
wireless LAN.
Antenna Characteristics
Frequency
An antenna in the frequency of 2.4GHz (IEEE 802.11b and IEEE 802.11g) or 5GHz
(IEEE 802.11a) is needed to communicate efficiently in a wireless LAN
Radiation Pattern
A radiation pattern is a diagram that allows you to visualize the shape of the
antenna’s coverage area.
Antenna Gain
Antenna gain, measured in dB (decibel), is the increase in coverage within the RF
beam width. Higher antenna gain improves the range of the signal for better
communications.
For an indoor site, each 1 dB increase in antenna gain results in a range increase
of approximately 2.5%. For an unobstructed outdoor site, each 1dB increase in
gain results in a range increase of approximately 5%. Actual results may vary
depending on the network environment.
Antenna gain is sometimes specified in dBi, which is how much the antenna
increases the signal power compared to using an isotropic antenna. An isotropic
antenna is a theoretical perfect antenna that sends out radio signals equally well
in all directions. dBi represents the true gain that the antenna provides.
Types of Antennas for WLAN
There are two types of antennas used for wireless LAN applications.
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• Omni-directional antennas send the RF signal out in all directions on a horizontal
plane. The coverage area is torus-shaped (like a donut) which makes these
antennas ideal for a room environment. With a wide coverage area, it is possible
to make circular overlapping coverage areas with multiple access points.
• Directional antennas concentrate the RF signal in a beam, like a flashlight does
with the light from its bulb. The angle of the beam determines the width of the
coverage pattern. Angles typically range from 20 degrees (very directional) to
120 degrees (less directional). Directional antennas are ideal for hallways and
outdoor point-to-point applications.
Positioning Antennas
In general, antennas should be mounted as high as practically possible and free of
obstructions. In point-to–point application, position both antennas at the same
height and in a direct line of sight to each other to attain the best performance.
For omni-directional antennas mounted on a table, desk, and so on, point the
antenna up. For omni-directional antennas mounted on a wall or ceiling, point the
antenna down. For a single AP application, place omni-directional antennas as
close to the center of the coverage area as possible.
For directional antennas, point the antenna in the direction of the desired
coverage area.
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APPENDIX
Windows Wireless Management
This appendix shows you how to manage your NWD2205 using the Windows Vista
and Windows XP wireless configuration tools.
Windows Vista
Take the following steps to connect to a wireless network using the Windows Vista
wireless configuration tool (WLAN AutoConfig).
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Connecting to a Wireless Network
In the Windows Vista taskbar, click Start (
) > Connect To.
Figure 114 Vista: Start Menu
The Connect To window displays, showing all available networks.
Figure 115 Vista: The Connect To Window
The security status of each wireless network displays, as well as an indication of
its signal strength. If you use the mouse pointer to hover over a network’s entry,
additional information about the network displays.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Figure 116 Vista: Additional Information
Double-click the network’s name to join the network, or select a network and click
Connect.
Note: If the network to which you want to connect does not display, see the section on
setting up a connection manually on page 151.
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If security is enabled, you may be prompted to enter your security key.
Figure 117 Vista: Enter Security Key
Your computer tries to connect to the wireless network.
Figure 118 Vista: Connecting
If your computer has connected to the wireless network successfully, the following
screen displays.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Figure 119 Vista: Successful Connection
If you will use this network again, ensure that Save this network is selected. If
you save the network, you do not have to configure its settings again.
Select Start this connection automatically if you want Windows to always try
to use this network when you start up your computer. If you do not select this (but
select Save this network) you can connect manually each time by clicking Start
> Connect to and selecting the network’s name from the list.
Connecting to a Network Manually
If the wireless network to which you want to connect does not appear in the
Connect to window (if your network’s SSID is hidden, for example), take the
following steps to configure your network connection manually
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Click Set up a connection or network at the bottom of the Connect to screen.
The following screen displays.
Figure 120 Vista: Choose a Connection Option
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Click Manually connect to a wireless network. The following screen displays.
Figure 121 Vista: Connect Manually
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 31 Vista: Connect Manually
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Network name
Enter your network’s SSID (Service Set IDentifier).
Security type
Select the type of security used by the network to which you
want to connect. The types of available security shown depend on
your computer’s wireless client.
In this field, WPA(2)-Personal is the same as WPA(2)-PSK,
and WPA(2)-Enterprise is the same as WPA(2)
Encryption type
Select the type of encryption used by the network.
When you use WEP or 802.1x, WEP displays.
When you use a WPA mode (WPA(2)-Personal or WPA(2)Enterprise) you can choose AES or TKIP (if supported by your
computer’s wireless client).
Security Key /
Passphrase
If your network uses WEP or WPA(2)-Personal security, enter
the key here.
Display Characters
Select this if you do not want the security key characters to be
hidden.
Start this connection
automatically
Select this box if you always want to try to connect to this
network at startup. If you leave this box unchecked, you will need
to connect manually each time.
Connect even if the
network is not
broadcasting
Select this box if you always want to try to connect to this
network at startup, even if the network is not broadcasting its
SSID. The warning in this field refers to the fact that if you do
this, your computer sends out probe request packets, which
contain the network’s SSID and could be used by an attacker to
access the network.
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Table 31 Vista: Connect Manually
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Next
Click this to save your settings and move on to the next page.
Cancel
Click this to stop setting up your network.
When you have finished filling in the fields, click Next. the following screen
displays.
Figure 122 Vista: Successfully Added Network
If you want to make any changes to the settings you just configured, click
Change connection settings. Otherwise, click Connect to.... In the window
that displays, double-click the new network’s name to connect to the network.
Setting Up An Ad-Hoc Network
Take the following steps to set up a wireless connection between two computers in
Windows Vista.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Click Start (
) > Connect To. In the Connect to screen, click Set up a
connection or network. The following screen displays.
Figure 123 Vista: Set Up An Ad-hoc Network
Select Set up a wireless ad hoc (computer-to-computer) network and click
Next. The following screen displays.
Figure 124 Vista: Ad-hoc Options
Enter the Network name (SSID) you want to use for your network. Select a
Security type. If you are not sure what kind of security you want to use, click the
Help me choose link.
Note: Make sure all the wireless clients on your ad-hoc network can support the type
of security you select.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Enter the Security key/Passphrase. Everybody on the network must enter this
key in their computer’s wireless client in order to access the network. If you want
to see the characters you entered, select the Display characters box. Otherwise,
leave it empty (dots display instead of the characters).
If you will use this ad-hoc network again, select the Save this network box. If
you do this, the next time you click Start > Connect to, you can select the
network from the list.
Click Next. The following screen displays.
Figure 125 Vista: Ad-hoc Network Ready
If you want to share files with other computers on the ad-hoc network, or let other
computers use your Internet connection, click the Network and Sharing Center
link. Otherwise, click Close.
Windows XP
Be sure you have the Windows XP service pack 2 installed on your computer.
Otherwise, you should at least have the Windows XP service pack 1 already on
your computer and download the support patch for WPA from the Microsoft web
site.
Windows XP SP2 screen shots are shown unless otherwise specified. Click the help
icon (
) in most screens, move the cursor to the item that you want the
information about and click to view the help.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Activating Wireless Zero Configuration
Click Start, Control Panel and double-click Network Connections.
Double-click on the icon for wireless network connection.
The status window displays as shown below. Click Properties.
Figure 126 Windows XP SP1: Wireless Network Connection Status
Figure 127 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection Status
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
The Wireless Network Connection Properties screen displays. Click the
Wireless Networks tab.
Make sure the Use Windows to configure my wireless network settings
check box is selected.
Figure 128 Windows XP SP1: Wireless Network Connection Properties
Figure 129 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection Properties
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
If you see the following screen, refer to article 871122 on the Microsoft web site
for information on starting WZC.
Figure 130 Windows XP SP2: WZC Not Available
Connecting to a Wireless Network
Double-click the network icon for wireless connections in the system tray to open
the Wireless Network Connection Status screen.
Figure 131 Windows XP SP2: System Tray Icon
The type of the wireless network icon in Windows XP SP2 indicates the status of
the NWD2205. Refer to the following table for details.
Table 32 Windows XP SP2: System Tray Icon
ICON
DESCRIPTION
The NWD2205 is connected to a wireless network.
The NWD2205 is in the process of connecting to a wireless network.
The connection to a wireless network is limited because the network did not
assign a network address to the computer.
The NWD2205 is not connected to a wireless network.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Windows XP SP2: In the Wireless Network Connection Status screen, click
View Wireless Networks to open the Wireless Network Connection screen.
Figure 132 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection Status
Windows XP SP1: In the Wireless Network Connection Status screen, click
Properties and the Wireless Networks tab to open the Wireless Network
Connection Properties screen.
Figure 133 Windows XP SP1: Wireless Network Connection Status
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Windows XP SP2: Click Refresh network list to reload and search for available
wireless devices within transmission range. Select a wireless network in the list
and click Connect to join the selected wireless network.
Figure 134 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection
The following table describes the icons in the wireless network list.
Table 33 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection
ICON
DESCRIPTION
This denotes that wireless security is activated for the wireless network.
This denotes that this wireless network is your preferred network. Ordering
your preferred networks is important because the NWD2205 tries to associate
to the preferred network first in the order that you specify. Refer to the
section on ordering the preferred networks for detailed information.
This denotes the signal strength of the wireless network.
Move your cursor to the icon to see details on the signal strength.
Windows XP SP1: Click Refresh to reload and search for available wireless
devices within transmission range. Select a wireless network in the Available
networks list, click Configure and set the related fields to the same security
settings as the associated AP to add the selected network into the Preferred
networks table. Click OK to join the selected wireless network. Refer to the section
on security settings (discussed later) for more information.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Figure 135 Windows XP SP1: Wireless Network Connection Properties
162
4.Windows XP SP2: If the wireless security is activated for the selected wireless
network, the Wireless Network Connection screen displays. You must set the
related fields in the Wireless Network Connection screen to the same security
settings as the associated AP and click Connect. Refer to the section about
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
security settings for more information. Otherwise click Cancel and connect to
another wireless network without data encryption. If there is no security activated
for the selected wireless network, a warning screen appears. Click Connect
Anyway if wireless security is not your concern.
Figure 136 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection: WEP or WPA-PSK
Figure 137
Windows XP SP2: Wireless Network Connection: No Security
Verify that you have successfully connected to the selected network and check the
connection status in the wireless network list or the connection icon in the
Preferred networks or Available networks list.
The following table describes the connection icons.
Table 34 Windows XP: Wireless Networks
ICON
DESCRIPTION
This denotes the wireless network is an available wireless network.
This denotes the NWD2205 is associated to the wireless network.
This denotes the wireless network is not available.
Security Settings
When you configure the NWD2205 to connect to a secure network but the security
settings are not yet enabled on the NWD2205, you will see different screens
according to the authentication and encryption methods used by the selected
network.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Association
Select a network in the Preferred networks list and click Properties to view or
configure security.
Figure 138 Windows XP: Wireless (network) properties: Association
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 35 Windows XP: Wireless (network) properties: Association
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Network name
(SSID)
This field displays the SSID (Service Set IDentifier) of each wireless
network.
Network
Authentication
This field automatically shows the authentication method (Share,
Open, WPA or WPA-PSK) used by the selected network.
Data Encryption This field automatically shows the encryption type (TKIP, WEP or
Disable) used by the selected network.
Network Key
Enter the pre-shared key or WEP key.
The values for the keys must be set up exactly the same on all wireless
devices in the same wireless LAN.
Confirm
network key
Enter the key again for confirmation.
Key index
(advanced)
Select a default WEP key to use for data encryption.
The key is
provided for me
automatically
164
This field is available only when the network use WEP encryption
method and the The key is provided for me automatically check
box is not selected.
If this check box is selected, the wireless AP assigns the NWD2205 a
key.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Table 35 Windows XP: Wireless (network) properties: Association (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
This is a
computer-tocomputer (ad
hoc) network;
wireless access
points are not
used
If this check box is selected, you are connecting to another computer
directly.
OK
Click OK to save your changes.
Cancel
Click Cancel to leave this screen without saving any changes you may
have made.
Authentication
Click the Authentication tab in the Wireless (network) properties screen to
display the screen shown next. The fields on this screen are grayed out when the
network is in Ad-Hoc mode or data encryption is disabled.
Figure 139 Windows XP: Wireless (network) properties: Authentication
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 36 Windows XP: Wireless (network) properties: Authentication
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Enable IEEE
802.1x
authentication
for this network
This field displays whether the IEEE 802.1x authentication is active.
EAP Type
Select the type of EAP authentication. Options are Protected EAP
(PEAP) and Smart Card or other Certificate.
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If the network authentication is set to Open in the previous screen, you
can choose to disable or enable this feature.
165
Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Table 36 Windows XP: Wireless (network) properties: Authentication (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Properties
Click this button to open the properties screen and configure
certificates. The screen varies depending on what you select in the EAP
type field.
Authenticate as
computer when
computer
information is
available
Select this check box to have the computer send its information to the
network for authentication when a user is not logged on.
Authenticate as
guest when
user or
computer
information is
unavailable
Select this check box to have the computer access to the network as a
guest when a user is not logged on or computer information is not
available.
OK
Click OK to save your changes.
Cancel
Click Cancel to leave this screen without saving any changes you may
have made.
Authentication Properties
Select an EAP authentication type in the Wireless (network) properties:
Authentication screen and click the Properties button to display the following
screen.
Protected EAP Properties
Figure 140 Windows XP: Protected EAP Properties
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 37 Windows XP: Protected EAP Properties
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Validate server
certificate
Select the check box to verify the certificate of the authentication
server.
Connect to
these servers
Select the check box and specify a domain in the field below to have
your computer connect to a server which resides only within this
domain.
Trusted Root
Certification
Authorities:
Select a trusted certification authority from the list below.
Do not prompt
user to
authorize new
server or
trusted
certification
authorities.
Select this check box to verify a new authentication server or trusted CA
without prompting.
Select
Authentication
Method:
Select an authentication method from the drop-down list box and click
Configure to do settings.
Enable Fast
Reconnect
Select the check box to automatically reconnect to the network (without
re-authentication) if the wireless connection goes down.
OK
Click OK to save your changes.
Cancel
Click Cancel to leave this screen without saving any changes you may
have made.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Note: You must first have a wired connection to a network and
obtain the certificate(s) from a certificate authority (CA).
Consult your network administrator for more information.
This field is available only if you installed the Windows XP server pack 2.
167
Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Smart Card or other Certificate Properties
Figure 141 Windows XP: Smart Card or other Certificate Properties
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 38 Windows XP: Smart Card or other Certificate Properties
168
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Use my smart
card
Select this check box to use the smart card for authentication.
Use a certificate
on this
computer
Select this check box to use a certificate on your computer for
authentication.
Validate server
certificate
Select the check box to check the certificate of the authentication
server.
Connect to
these servers
Select the check box and specify a domain in the field below to have
your computer connect to a server which resides only within this
domain.
Trusted Root
Certification
Authorities:
Select a trusted certification authority from the list below.
View Certificate
Click this button if you want to verify the selected certificate.
Use a different
user name for
the connection:
Select the check box to use a different user name when the user name
in the smart card or certificate is not the same as the user name in the
domain that you are logged on to.
OK
Click OK to save your changes.
Cancel
Click Cancel to leave this screen without saving any changes you may
have made.
Note: You must first have a wired connection to a network and
obtain the certificate(s) from a certificate authority (CA).
Consult your network administrator for more information.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Ordering the Preferred Networks
Follow the steps below to manage your preferred networks.
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Windows XP SP2: Click Change the order of preferred networks in the
Wireless Network Connection screen (see Figure 134 on page 161). The screen
displays as shown.
Figure 142 Windows XP SP2: Wireless Networks: Preferred Networks
Windows XP SP1: In the Wireless Network Connection Status screen, click
Properties and the Wireless Networks tab to open the screen as shown.
Figure 143 Windows XP SP1: Wireless Networks: Preferred Networks
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Appendix C Windows Wireless Management
Whenever the NWD2205 tries to connect to a new network, the new network is
added in the Preferred networks table automatically. Select a network and click
Move up or Move down to change it's order, click Remove to delete it or click
Properties to view the security, authentication or connection information of the
selected network. Click Add to add a preferred network into the list manually.
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171
APPENDIX
Wireless for Windows 7
Follow these steps to connect to a wireless network for a computer with the
Windows 7 Operating System (OS).
You should know the network name (SSID) of the wireless network to which you
want to connect. You should also know the password (pre-shared key (PSK)/
passphrase) if the wireless network is secured.
Enabling the Wireless Adapter
Do the following to enable the wireless adapter of your computer. If you know for
a fact that the wireless adapter is already working, you can skip this part and go
to Connecting to a Wireless Network.
Click Start > Control Panel.
Figure 144 Windows 7: Start Menu
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Appendix D Wireless for Windows 7
In the Control Panel, click View network status and tasks under the
Network and Internet category.
Figure 145 Windows 7: Control Panel
Click Change adapter settings.
Figure 146 Windows 7: Network And Sharing Center
Right click Wireless Network Connection and select Enable.
Figure 147 Windows 7: Wireless Network Connection
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Appendix D Wireless for Windows 7
A progress indicator appears.
Figure 148 Windows 7: Enabling the Wireless Network Connection
When it shows Enabled, you are ready to connect to your wireless network.
Connecting to a Wireless Network
Once the computer’s wireless adapter has been enabled, do the following to
connect to a wireless network.
Click the wireless adapter icon which appears in the bottom right of your computer
monitor. A list of available wireless networks displays.
Figure 149 Windows 7: List of Wireless Networks
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Appendix D Wireless for Windows 7
Select a wireless network and click Connect.
Figure 150 Windows 7: Connect to the Wireless Networks
• If the wireless network is not password-protected, you should see a progress
indicator as follows.
Figure 151 Windows 7: Wireless Connection Progress Indicator
• If the wireless network is secured, you should provide the correct credentials
before you can gain access as shown below.
Figure 152 Windows 7: Wireless Connection Security
You may have to wait several minutes while your computer connects to the
wireless network.
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Appendix D Wireless for Windows 7
Verifying the Settings
Open a web browser and try to access a website, such as www.zyxel.com.
Additionally, do the following to check your wireless network connection status.
Click Start > Control Panel.
Figure 153 Windows 7: Start Menu
In the Control Panel, click View network status and tasks under the
Network and Internet category.
Figure 154 Windows 7: Control Panel
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Appendix D Wireless for Windows 7
Check the Connections under View you active networks. If the wireless
network name displays and the icon is green, you have successfully connected to
the wireless network.
Figure 155 Windows 7: Network and Sharing Center
178
NWD2205 User’s Guide
APPENDIX
Legal Information
Copyright
Copyright © 2010 by ZyXEL Communications Corporation.
The contents of this publication may not be reproduced in any part or as a whole,
transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, translated into any language, or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, magnetic,
optical, chemical, photocopying, manual, or otherwise, without the prior written
permission of ZyXEL Communications Corporation.
Published by ZyXEL Communications Corporation. All rights reserved.
Disclaimers
ZyXEL does not assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any
products, or software described herein. Neither does it convey any license under
its patent rights nor the patent rights of others. ZyXEL further reserves the right
to make changes in any products described herein without notice. This publication
is subject to change without notice.
Trademarks
Trademarks mentioned in this publication are used for identification purposes only
and may be properties of their respective owners.
Certifications
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Interference Statement
The device complies with Part 15 of FCC rules. Operation is subject to the
following two conditions:
• This device may not cause harmful interference.
• This device must accept any interference received, including interference that
may cause undesired operations.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
179
Appendix E Legal Information
This device has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B
digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to
provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential
installation. This device generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy,
and if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause
harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee
that interference will not occur in a particular installation.
If this device does cause harmful interference to radio/television reception, which
can be determined by turning the device off and on, the user is encouraged to try
to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
Increase the separation between the equipment and the receiver.
Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the
receiver is connected.
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
FCC Radiation Exposure Statement
• This device has been tested to the FCC exposure requirements (Specific
Absorption Rate).
• This device complies with the requirements of Health Canada Safety Code 6 for
Canada.
• Testing was performed on laptop computers with antennas at 5mm spacing. The
maximum SAR value is: 1.05 W/kg. The device must not be collocated with any
other antennas or transmitters.
• This equipment has been SAR-evaluated for use in laptops (notebooks) with side
slot configuration.
• The device complies with FCC RF radiation exposure limits set forth for an
uncontrolled environment, under 47 CFR 2.1093 paragraph (d)(2). End users
must follow the specific operating instructions for satisfying RF exposure
compliance. To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure compliance
requirements, please follow operation instruction as documented in this manual.
• This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any
other antenna or transmitter.
• IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g operation of this product in the U.S.A. is firmwarelimited to channels 1 through 11.
180
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Appendix E Legal Information
FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party
responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate this
equipment.
Industry Canada Statement
This device complies with RSS-210 of the Industry Canada Rules. Operation is
subject to the following two conditions:
1) this device may not cause interference and
2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause
undesired operation of the device
This device has been designed to operate with antennas having a maximum gain
of 2.9 dBi.
Antenna having a higher gain is strictly prohibited per regulations of Industry
Canada. The required antenna impedance is 50 ohms.
To reduce potential radio interference to other users, the antenna type and its gain
should be so chosen that the EIRP is not more than required for successful
communication.
IC Radiation Exposure Statement
This equipment complies with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an
uncontrolled environment. End users must follow the specific operating
instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
181
Appendix E Legal Information
Notices
Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for
compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment.
This device has been designed for the WLAN 2.4 GHz network throughout the EC
region and Switzerland, with restrictions in France.
This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003. Operation is
subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause
interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including
interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.
Cet appareil numérique de la classe B est conforme à la norme NMB-003 du
Canada.
Viewing Certifications
Go to http://www.zyxel.com.
Select your product on the ZyXEL home page to go to that product's page.
Select the certification you wish to view from this page.
ZyXEL Limited Warranty
ZyXEL warrants to the original end user (purchaser) that this product is free from
any defects in material or workmanship for a specific period (the Warranty Period)
from the date of purchase. The Warranty Period varies by region. Check with your
vendor and/or the authorized ZyXEL local distributor for details about the
Warranty Period of this product. During the warranty period, and upon proof of
purchase, should the product have indications of failure due to faulty workmanship
and/or materials, ZyXEL will, at its discretion, repair or replace the defective
products or components without charge for either parts or labor, and to whatever
extent it shall deem necessary to restore the product or components to proper
operating condition. Any replacement will consist of a new or re-manufactured
functionally equivalent product of equal or higher value, and will be solely at the
discretion of ZyXEL. This warranty shall not apply if the product has been
modified, misused, tampered with, damaged by an act of God, or subjected to
abnormal working conditions.
Note
Repair or replacement, as provided under this warranty, is the exclusive remedy of
the purchaser. This warranty is in lieu of all other warranties, express or implied,
182
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Appendix E Legal Information
including any implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular use or
purpose. ZyXEL shall in no event be held liable for indirect or consequential
damages of any kind to the purchaser.
To obtain the services of this warranty, contact your vendor. You may also refer to
the warranty policy for the region in which you bought the device at http://
www.zyxel.com/web/support_warranty_info.php.
Registration
Register your product online to receive e-mail notices of firmware upgrades and
information at www.zyxel.com.
NWD2205 User’s Guide
183
Index
Index
About 86
Basic Service Set, See BSS 131
about your ZyXEL Device 18
BSS 131
Access Point (AP) 38
Access point (AP) 38
Access Point. See also AP.
ACT LED 19
activating a profile 67
CA 41, 139
adapter 68
CCMP 41
Ad-Hoc 20, 65
Certificate Authority
See CA.
Advanced Encryption Standard 41
See AES.
advanced settings 68
AES 141
antenna
directional 146
gain 145
omni-directional 146
Antenna gain 80
Antenna output power 78
AP
See also access point.
certifications 179
notices 182
viewing 182
channel 39, 52, 54, 55, 65, 79, 133
interference 133
configuration method 21
important note 21
Wireless Zero Configuration (WZC) 20, 21
ZyXEL utility 21
configuration status 51, 78
connection status 51, 78
AP (access point) 133
copyright 179
AP MAC address 51
creating a new profile 63
AP mode
configuration 33
credentials 71
Association list 34, 78
current configuration 51, 78
authentication 52
current connection status 51, 78
authentication type 40
auto 40
open system 40
shared key 40
auto authentication 40
automatic connection 54
automatic network scan 28, 62
CTS (Clear to Send) 134
data encryption 55
digital ID 41
dimensions 95
disclaimer 179
download 87
driver version 86
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185
Index
dynamic WEP key exchange 140
IEEE 802.1x 40, 59, 70
Independent Basic Service Set
See IBSS 131
infrastructure 19
EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol) 40
installation 20
EAP Authentication 138
interface 95
EAP authentication 41
Internet access 19
EAP type 70
IP address
dynamic 77
EAP-PEAP 40
initialization vector (IV) 141
EAP-TLS 40
EAP-TTLS 40
encryption 141
encryption type 40, 59
environmental specifications 95
LEDs 19
ESS 132
lights 19
Extended Service Set, See ESS 132
link information 51, 78
LINK LED 19
link quality 52
FCC interference statement 179
fragmentation threshold 135
frequency 39, 96
MAC 78
MAC filter 83
action 84
getting started 17
hardware connections 20
help 22
hidden node 133
humidity 95
manual network connection 28
Mbps 78
Message Integrity Check (MIC) 41, 141
Network interface card (NIC) 80
network mode 52
network name 51
network overlap 39
network scan 62
Network sharing 77
network type 51, 55
IBSS 131
IEEE 802.11g 135
186
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Index
shared secret key 138
real-time data traffic statistics 53
online help 22
receive rate 52
Output power 78
registration
product 183
related documentation 3
RTS (Request To Send) 134
threshold 133, 134
packet collisions 52
Pairwise Master Key (PMK) 141, 143
passphrase 40, 56, 81
password 40
PEAP 70, 71
peer computer 19, 65
physical specifications 95
power saving mode 68
preamble mode 135
product registration 183
product specifications 95
Profile 62
profile 51, 63
activation 67
add new 63
configure 28, 30
default 62
delete 63
edit 63
information 63
new 63
PSK 141
safety warnings 7
Save power 80
save power 68
scan 54
scan info 65
search 54
Security 78
security 39, 52, 97
data encryption 39
security settings and Vista 70
sensitivity 96
Service Set Identity (SSID) 28, 38
signal strength 52, 54
site information 54
site survey 54
scan 54
security settings 55, 80
sleep mode 68
SSID 28, 38, 51, 54, 78, 93
statistics 52
Quick Start Guide 20, 92
syntax conventions 5
system tray 20
temperature 95
radio interference 92
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) 41, 141
radio specifications 95, 96
The 70
RADIUS 40, 41, 137
message types 137
messages 137
TLS 70, 72
NWD2205 User’s Guide
total receive 52
total transmit 52
187
Index
trademarks 179
Transmission rate 78
introduction 37
security 39
transmission rate 51, 63
wireless LAN (WLAN) 37
transmit key 56, 81
wireless network 38
transmit rate 52
wireless security 136
trend chart 52, 53
wireless standard 95
TTLS 70
Wireless station mode
profile 62
wireless station mode
adapter 68
security settings 55, 80
site survey 54
trend chart 53
uninstalling the ZyXEL utility 86
upgrading the ZyXEL utility 87
important step 87
user authentication 39
utility installation 20
utility version 86
Vista 70, 72
warranty 182
note 182
weight 95
WEP 39, 56
automatic setup 40
manual setup 40, 57, 82
passphrase 40, 56, 81
WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) 39
wireless tutorial 24
WLAN
interference 133
security parameters 144
WPA 41, 58, 70, 140
key caching 142
pre-authentication 142
user authentication 142
vs WPA-PSK 141
wireless client supplicant 142
with RADIUS application example 142
WPA2 41, 58, 70, 140
user authentication 142
vs WPA2-PSK 141
wireless client supplicant 142
with RADIUS application example 142
WPA2-Pre-Shared Key 41, 140
WPA2-PSK 41, 57, 82, 140, 141
application example 143
WPA-PSK 41, 57, 82, 141
application example 143
WPS
see also Wi-Fi Protected Setup 51
Windows XP 21
WZC
activating 157
network connection 159
not available 159
preferred network 169
security setting 163
system tray icon 159
Wired network 80
WZC (Wireless Zero Configuration) 21
WEP Encryption 56
WEP key generation 40
Wi-Fi Protected Access 41, 140
Wi-Fi Protected Setup 51
Windows 70
wireless client 38
wireless client WPA supplicants 142
wireless LAN
188
NWD2205 User’s Guide
Index
ZyXEL Utility
accessing 21
ZyXEL utility 21
accessing 21
driver version number 86
exiting 21
help 22
reactivating 21
status 21
system tray icon 20
upgrading 87
version number 86
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189

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Encryption                      : Standard V2.3 (128-bit)
User Access                     : Print, Copy, Extract, Print high-res
XMP Toolkit                     : 3.1-701
Create Date                     : 2010:08:23 15:45:43+08:00
Creator Tool                    : pdfFactory Pro www.ahasoft.com.tw/FinePrint
Modify Date                     : 2010:08:23 16:24:54+08:00
Metadata Date                   : 2010:08:23 16:24:54+08:00
Format                          : application/pdf
Creator                         : lydia
Title                           : NWD2205_UG_v1-1_ed1_2010-8-23_Windows DRAFT.pdf
Producer                        : pdfFactory Pro 3.10 (Windows XP Professional Chinese)
Document ID                     : uuid:649ebd2e-5cca-4622-b05f-ce35d01c9af2
Instance ID                     : uuid:9bc5a49c-53be-4428-9071-1711a61c605c
Has XFA                         : No
Page Count                      : 175
Author                          : lydia
EXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools
FCC ID Filing: I88NWD2205

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