SR616ac User Manual
SR616ac User Manual
Model:SR616ac
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Table of Contents
SIP Star Code Setting 136
SIP Extra Setting 136
SIP Debug Setting 138
SIP Black Filter 140
Diagnostics 141
Diagnostics 141
Ethernet OAM 142
Diagnostic Tools 145
Ping 145
Traceroute 147
Start / Stop DSL 148
Management 149
Settings 149
Backup 149
Update 150
Restore Default 151
System Log 151
Security Log 154
SNMP Agent 155
Management Server 156
TR-069 156
STUN Config 158
XMPP Connection 160
Internet Time 161
Access Control 162
Passwords 162
Access List 163
Services Control 164
User Profile 165
Logout Timer 165
Update Software 166
Reboot 167
Logout 168
Appendix: FCC Statements 169
FCC Interference Statement 169
FCC Radiation Exposure Statement 169
FCC - PART 68 169
Ringer Equivalency Number Statement 170
IC CS-03 statement 170
Canada Statement 170
5GHz 171
Revision History 172
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Welcome!
Thank you for purchasing this SmartRG product.
SmartRG offers solutions that simplify the complex Internet ecosystem. Our solutions include hardware, software, applications,
enhanced network insights, and security delivered via a future-proof operating system. Based in the USA, SmartRG provides local,
proactive software development and customer support. We proudly offer the best, most innovative broadband gateways available.
Learn more at www.SmartRG.com.
Intended Audience
The information in this document is intended for Network Architects, NOC Administrators, Field Service Technicians and other
networking professionals responsible for deploying and managing broadband access networks. Readers of this manual are assumed to
have a basic understanding of computer operating systems, networking concepts and telecommunications.
Getting Assistance
Frequently asked questions are provided at the bottom of the Subscribers page of the SmartRG Web site.
Subscribers: If you require further help with this product, please contact your service provider.
Service providers: if you require further help with this product, please open a support request.
Disclaimer
SmartRG 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 patent rights of others. SmartRG further reserves the right to make changes to
any products described herein without notice. This publication is subject to change without notice.
Any trademarks mentioned in this publication are used for identification purposes only and may be properties of their respective
owners.
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Getting Familiar with your Gateway
This section contains a quick description of the gateway's lights, ports, and buttons to help you get familiar with the model.
POWER Unit is booting up & preparing for use. When the unit is ready, the light changes to green.
Device powered on and ready for use
Connections
The ports located on the back of the gateway and the buttons and ports located on the left side of the gateway, are described
below.
Feature Description
Rear panel
DSL This grey RJ11 port is used to connect your gateway to an Internet provider via a DSL service.
Phone 1 - 2 These grey RJ11 ports can be used to connect your gateway to an Internet provider via a telephone line.
LAN 1 - 4 The yellow RJ45 ports can be used to connect client devices such as computers and printers to your gateway.
WAN The blue RJ45 port is used to hard-wire your gateway to another network device.
For models with both WAN and DSL ports, when your Internet connection is via DSL, you can configure the WAN port to
function as an additional LAN port. For detailed instructions, see the Ethernet Mode section of this manual.
USB 1 Can transfer data, act as a printer interface, and handle a 3G accessory.
Power Use only the power supply included with your gateway. Intended for indoor use only.
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Feature Description
Left side
On/Off Power switch.
5GHz Enables or disables the 5GHZ wireless function.
2.4GHz Enables or disables the 5GHZ wireless function.
External Buttons
Smart RG gateways provide push-button controls on the exterior for critical features. These buttons provide a convenient way to
toggle the Wi-Fi radio on and off or reset the gateway. These controls are described below.
Reset Button
The Reset button is a small hole in the back of the gateway with the actual button mounted beneath the surface. This style of push-
button prevents the gateway from being inadvertently reset during handling.
Warning: Do not press the Reset button unless you are sure that you want to clear the current settings.
Your gateway is now automatically being set up to connect to the Internet. This process may take a few minutes to complete before
you can begin using your Internet applications (browser, email, etc.).
If you are unable to connect to the Internet, confirm that all cable connections are in place and the router’s power is turned on.
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Logging in to your Gateway's UI
To configure the SmartRG gateway's settings, access the gateway's embedded UI.
3. Enter the user name and password. The default user name and password of the super user are admin and admin. The
username and password of the common user are user and user. It is recommended that you change these default
values after logging in to the DSL gateway for the first time.
4. Click OK. The Network Status page appears.
5. To view the log for this gateway, click View log at the bottom of the page. The log appears in a separate window.
6. To log into the GUI, click Manage gateway (advanced). The gateway interface appears, showing the Device Info
summary page.
Device Info
In this section, you can view data about your gateway and network, and configure DHCP, ARP, and WAN interfaces.
Summary
On this page, you can view device information such as the board ID, software and voice service version, and information about your
WAN connection such as the upstream rate and the LAN address.
When you log into the gateway GUI, the Device Info summary page appears.
You can also reach this page by clicking Device Info > Summary in the left menu.
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WAN
The WAN status screen provides a high level overview of the connection between your Internet Service Provider and your gateway
device. The WAN interface can physically be DSL or Ethernet and supports a number of Layer 2 and later configuration options
covered later in this document.
In the left navigation bar, click Device Info > WAN. The following page appears.
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The fields on this page are defined below.
Statistics
In this section, you can view network interface information for LAN, WAN Service, xTM and DSL. Data is updated at 15-minute
intervals.
LAN
On this page, you can view the received and transmitted bytes, packets, errors and drops for each LAN interface configured on your
gateway. All local LAN Ethernet ports, Ethernet WAN ports and wireless interfaces are included.
In the left navigation bar, click Device Info > Statistics. The Statistics - LAN page appears.
To reset these counters, click Reset Statistics near the bottom of the page.
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The fields on this page are defined below.
WAN Service
On this page, you can view the received and transmitted bytes, packets, errors and drops for each WAN interface for your gateway.
All WAN interfaces configured for your gateway are included.
In the left menu, click Device Info > Statistics > WAN Service. The Statistics - WAN page appears where you can view detailed
information about the status of your WAN.
To reset the counters, click Reset Statistics near the bottom of the page.
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The fields on this page are defined below.
xTM
On this page, you can view the ATM/PTM statistics for your gateway. All WAN interfaces configured for your gateway are included.
In the left navigation bar, click Device Info > Statistics > xTM. The Interface Statistics page appears.
To reset these counters, click Reset near the bottom of the page.
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xDSL
On this page, you can view the DSL statistics for your gateway. All xDSL (VDSL or ADSL) interfaces configured for your gateway are
included. The terms and their explanations are derived from the relevant ITU-T standards and referenced accordingly.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Device Info > Statistics > xDSL. The following page appears.
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2. To run an xDSL (BER) test, follow the instructions in "Running xDSL (BER) tests".
3. To reset the counters, click Reset Statistics near the bottom of the page.
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Field Name Description
L (# of bits in each data Number of bits included within each data symbol.
symbol)
D (interleaver depth) Interleaving depth in the current latency path.
I (interleaver block size Interleaving block size in the current latency path.
in bytes)
N (RS codeword size) The number of bits per codeword.
Delay (msec) PMS-TC delay in milliseconds of the current latency path (or the lowest latency path when running dual-
latency paths).
INP (DMT symbol) Input level for DMT-managed DSL environments.
OH Frames Number of xDSL OH Frames transmitted/received.
OH Frame Errors Number of xDSL OH Frames transmitted/received with errors.
(End of DSL-specific field group)
Super Frames The number of xDSL Super Frames transmitted/received.
Super Frame Errors The number of xDSL Super Frames transmitted/received with errors.
RS Words Number of Reed-Solomon-based Forward Error Correction (FEC) codewords transmitted/received.
RS Correctable Errors Number of Reed-Solomon-based FEC codewords received with errors that have been corrected.
RS Uncorrectable Errors Number of Reed-Solomon-based FEC codewords received with errors that were not correctable.
HEC Errors Count of ATM HEC errors detected. As per ITU-T G.992.1 and G.992.3, a1-byte HEC is generated for each
ATM cell header. Error detection is implemented as defined in ITU-T I.432.1 with the exception that any
HEC error shall be considered as a multiple bit error, and therefore, HEC Error Correction is not
performed. [1],[2]
OCD Errors Total number of Out-of-Cell Delineation errors. ATM Cell delineation is the process which allows
identification of the cell boundaries. The HEC field is used to achieve cell delineation. [4] An OCD Error is
counted when the cell delineation process transitions from the SYNC state to the HUNT state. [2]
LCD Errors Total number of Loss of Cell Delineation errors. An LCD Error is counted when at least one OCD error is
present in each of four consecutive overhead channel periods and SEF (Severely Errored Frame) defect is
present. [2]
Total Cells Total number of cells (OAM and Data cells) transmitted/received.
Data Cells Total number of data cells transmitted/received.
Bit Errors Total number of Idle Cell Bit Errors in the ATM Data Path. [3]
Total ES Total number of Errored Seconds. This parameter is a count of 1-second intervals with one or more CRC-8
anomalies. [4]
Total SES Total number of Severely Errored Seconds. An SES is declared if, during a 1-second interval, there are 18
or more CRC-8 anomalies in one or more of the received bearer channels, LOS (Loss of Signal) defects, SEF
(Severely Errored Frame) defects, or LPR (Loss of Power) defects. [4]
Total UAS Total number of Un-Aavailable Seconds.
This is a count of 1-second intervals for which the xDSL line is unavailable. The xDSL line becomes
unavailable at the onset of 10 contiguous SESs (included in the unavailable time).
Once unavailable, the xDSL line becomes available at the onset of 10 contiguous seconds with no SESs
(excluded from unavailable time). [4]
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References
[1] ITU-T Recommendation G.992.1 (1999), Asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL) transceivers
[2] ITU-T Recommendation G.992.3 (2005), Asymmetric digital subscriber line transceivers 2 (ADSL2)
[3] ITU-T Recommendation G.997.1 (2006), Physical layer management for digital subscriber line (DSL) transceivers
[4] ITU-T Recommendation I.432.1 (1999), B-ISDN user-network interface – Physical layer specification: General characteristics
1. Scroll to the bottom of the page and click xDSL BER Test. The ADSL BER Test dialog box appears.
2. In the Tested Time field, select the duration in seconds and click Start. Options range from 1 second to 360 seconds.
The default is 20 seconds.
The test transfers idle cells containing a known pattern and compares the received data with this known pattern.
Comparison errors are tabulated and displayed. To stop the test, click Stop.
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3. When the test completes, a success dialog box appears.
Note: If the Error Ratio reaches e-5, you cannot access the Internet.
Route
On this page, you can view the LAN and WAN route table information configured in your gateway for both IPv4 and IPv6
implementation.
In the left navigation bar, click Device Info > Route. The following page appears.
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The fields on this page are defined below.
ARP
On this page, you can view the MAC address and IP address information for the devices connected to the gateway.
In the left navigation bar, click Device Info > ARP. The following page appears.
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The fields on this page are defined below.
DHCP
On this page, you can view the host name, the IP address assigned by the DHCP server, the MAC address corresponding to the IP
address, and the DHCP lease time.
In the left navigation bar, select Device Info > DHCP. The following screen appears.
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CPU & Memory
On this page, you can view the CPU and memory data for the gateway.
In the left navigation bar, click Device Info > CPU & Memory. The following page appears, showing the current usage and history.
The information refreshes automatically.
Advanced Setup
In this section, you can configure network interfaces, UPnP, quality of service, and other features.
Layer2 Interface
In this section, you can configure the network interfaces for your gateway.
ATM Interface
On this page, you can configure Asynchronous Transfer Mode / Permanent Virtual Circuit (ATM/PVC) settings for your gateway. You
can customize latency options, link type, encapsulation mode and more.
Note: Devices (gateways) on both ends of the connection must support ATM / PVC.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Layer2 Interface > ATM Interface and then click Add. The following
page appears.
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2. Modify the settings as needed, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes. The new interface appears on the DSL ATM Interface Configuration page.
4. To remove an interface, click the Remove checkbox next to it and then click the Remove button.
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Field Name Description
Select DSL Latency Select the level of DSL latency. Options are:
l Path0 (Fast): No error correction and can provide lower latency on error-free lines. This is the default.
l Path1 (Interleaved): Error checking that provides error-free data which increases latency.
Select DSL Link Select the linking protocol. Options are:
Type l EoA: Ethernet over ATM, used for PPPoE, IPoE, and Bridge. This is the default.
l PPPoA: Point-to-Point Protocol over ATM.
l IPoA: Internet Protocol over ATM.
Encapsulation Mode Select whether multiple protocols or only one protocol is carried per PVC (Permanent Virtual Circuit). Options
are:
l LLC/ENCAPSULATION: (Available for PPPoA only) Logical Link Control (LLC) encapsulation protocols
used with multiple PVCs
l LLC/SNAP-BRIDGING: (Available for EoA only) LLC used to carry multiple protocols in a single PVC.
l LLC/SNAP-ROUTING: (Available for IPoA only) LLC used to carry one protocol per PVC.
l VC/MUX: Virtual Circuit/Multiplexer creates a virtual connection used to carry one protocol per PVC.
Service Category Select the bit rate protocol. Options are:
l UBR without PCR: Unspecified Bit Rate with no Peak Cell Rate, flow control or time synchronization
between the traffic source and destination. Commonly used with applications that can tolerate data /
packet loss. This is the default.
l UBR with PCR: Same as above but with a Peak Cell Rate.
l CBR: Constant Bit Rate relies on timing synchronization to make the network traffic predictable. Used
commonly in Video and Audio traffic network applications.
l Non Realtime VBR: Non Realtime Variable Bit Rate used for connections that transport traffic at a
variable rate. This category requires a guaranteed bandwidth and latency. It does not rely on timing
synchronization between the destination and source.
l Realtime VBR: Realtime Variable Bit Rate. Same as the above option but relies on timing and
synchronization between the destination and source. This category is commonly used in networks with
compressed video traffic.
Select Scheduler Select the algorithm used to schedule queue behavior. VC scheduling is different than scheduling done for
for Queues of Equal default queues. Options are:
Precedence l Round Robin (weight=1): Packets are accessed in a round robin style. Classes can be assigned. Time
slices are assigned to each process in equal portions and in circular order, handling all processes
without priority (also known as cyclic executive). This is the default.
l Weighted Fair Queuing: Packets are assigned in a specific queue. This data packet scheduling
technique allows different scheduling priorities to be assigned to statistically multiplexed data flows.
Since each data flow has its own queue, an ill-behaved flow (that sent larger packets or more packets
per second than the others since it became active) will only affect itself and not other sessions.
Default Queue Enter the default weight of the specified queue. Options are 1-63. The default is 1.
Weight
Default Queue Enter the precedence of the specified group. The lower the value, the higher the priority. Options are 1-8.
Precedence The default is 8.
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PTM Interface
SmartRG gateway follow VDSL2 standards to support Packet Transfer Mode (PTM). An alternative to ATM mode, PTM transports
packets (IP, PPP, Ethernet, MPLS, and others) over DSL links. For more information, refer to the IEEE802.3ah standard for Ethernet in
the First Mile (EFM).
On this page, you can configure PTM WAN interfaces.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Layer2 Interface > PTM Interface, and then click Add. The
following page appears.
2. Modify the settings as desired, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes. The new interface appears on the PTM Configuration page.
4. To remove an interface, click the Remove checkbox next to it and then click the Remove button.
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Field Name Description
Select Scheduler for Queues Select the algorithm used to schedule queue behavior. VC scheduling is different than scheduling
of Equal Precedence done for default queues. Options are:
l Round Robin (weight=1): Packets are accessed in a round robin style and classes can be
assigned. Time slices are assigned to each process in equal portions and in circular order,
handling all processes without priority (also known as cyclic executive). This is the default.
l Weighted Fair Queuing: Packets are assigned in a specific queue. This data packet
scheduling technique allows different scheduling priorities to be assigned to statistically
multiplexed data flows. Since each data flow has its own queue, an ill-behaved flow (that
sent larger packets or more packets per second than the others since it became active) will
only affect itself and not other sessions.
Default Queue Weight Enter the default weight of the specified queue. Options are 1-63. The default is 1.
Default Queue Precedence Enter the precedence of the specified group. The lower the value, the higher the priority. Options
are 1-8. The default is 8.
ETH Interface
On this page, you can configure ETH WAN interfaces. One of the four LAN ports on your gateway can be re-purposed to become an
RJ45 WAN port when needed.
Notes:
l Only one Ethernet WAN interface is allowed. If a WAN port it is already configured, you must remove it before you can define
a new one. Click the Remove checkbox and then click the Remove button. The Add button appears when the existing port is
removed.
l If a WAN port is already configured and associated with a WAN service, you must remove the WAN service configuration before
you can remove the port on this page.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Layer2 Interface > ETH Interface. The following page appears.
2. To remove an entry, click the Remove checkbox next to the entry and then click the Remove button.
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3. To add an entry, click Add. The following page appears.
WAN Service
On this page, you can add, remove, or edit a WAN service. You must configure the related interface (ATM, ETH or PTM) first. You can
configure services for PPPoE, IPoE, and Bridging. A sample configuration scenario is provided for each variation.
1. In the left navigation, click Advanced Setup > WAN Service. The following page appears, showing any services
already configured.
2. To edit an interface:
a. Click the Edit button at the far right.
b. Modify the settings as needed and then click through to click Apply/Save.
3. To remove an interface, click the Remove checkbox next to it and then click the Remove button.
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4. To add a service, click Add. The following page appears.
5. Configure the settings as desired, using the information in the topics listed below:
l "PPP over Ethernet WAN Service"
l "IP over Ethernet WAN Service"
l "Bridging"
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > WAN Service and then click Add. The following page appears.
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3. Click Next. The following page appears.
4. In the WAN Service Type field, accept the default of PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE).
5. (Optional) Modify the other fields, using the information in the following table.
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Field Name Description
Network Protocol Different scheduling priorities can be applied to statistically multiplexed data flows.
Selection Since each data flow has its own queue, an ill-behaved flow (which has sent larger
packets or more packets per second than the others) will only punish itself and not other
sessions. Options are IPv4 Only, IPv4&IPv6 (Dual Stack), and IPv6 Only.
Note: When you select IPV4&IPV6 or IPV6, the options presented on later pages change
accordingly.
6. Click Next. The following page appears where you will configure the PPP Username, Password and related
information.
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7. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table provided below.
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Field Name Description
Enable MAC Clone Click to enable MAC cloning. Additional fields appear. Options are:
l To use a specific MAC address, enter the MAC address that you want to clone.
l To use the MAC address of the connected PC, click Clone this PC's MAC Address.
Enable Firewall This option is enabled by default. To disable the firewall, clear the checkbox.
Dial on Demand (with Click to enable dialing on-demand. The Inactivity Timeout (minutes) field appears. Enter
idle timeout timer) the number of minutes before a session is timed out. Options are 1 - 4320. The default is
zero (0).
When this option is enabled, connection automatically starts when there is outbound
traffic to the Internet. It automatically terminates if the connection is idle, based on the
value in the Idle Timeout setting.
PPP IP extension Click to forward all traffic to the specified DMZ IP.
Use Static IPv4 Address Click to use the IPv4 Address associated with this WAN service. The IPv4 Address field
appears. Enter the static IPv4 address for this WAN service.
Retry PPP password on This option is enabled by default. In the Max PPP authentication retries (1-65536) field,
authentication error enter the number of tries allowed. The default is 65536 (unlimited tries).
To prevent retrying the PPP password after authentication errors, clear the checkbox.
Enable IPv6 (Available only for IPv6 environments) Click to enable IP processing on a serial interface
Unnumbered Model without assigning it an explicit IP address. The IP address of another interface can
"borrow" the IP address of another interface already configured on the router, which
conserves network and address space.
Launch Dhcp6c for (Available only for IPv6 environments) Click to enable the gateway to receive the WAN IP
Address Assignment from the ISP.
(IANA)
Launch Dhcp6c for Prefix (Available only for IPv6 environments) This option is enabled by default and enables the
Delegation (IAPD) gateway to generate the WAN IP's prefix from the server's REST by MAC address. To disable
this options, clear the checkbox.
Enable PPP Debug Mode Click to have the system put more PPP connection information into the system log of the
device. This is for debugging errors and not for normal usage.
Bridge PPPoE Frames Select to enable PPPoE passthrough to relay PPPoE connections from behind the modem.
Between WAN and Local Also known as Half-Bridged mode.
Ports
IGMP Multicast section
Enable IGMP Multicast Click to enable Internet Group Membership Protocol (IGMP) multicast. Used by IPv4 hosts
Proxy to report multicast group memberships to any neighboring multicast routers.
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Field Name Description
Enable IGMP Multicast Click to enable this service to act as an IGMP multicast source.
Source
MLD Multicast section
Enable MLD Multicast (Available only for IPv6 environments) Click to enable MLD multicast. Used by IPv4 hosts
Proxy to report multicast group memberships to any neighboring multicast routers.
Enable MLD Multicast (Available only for IPv6 environments) Click to enable this service to act as an MLD
Source multicast source.
8. Click Next. The following page appears where you will select the interface used as a default gateway used for the
PPP service being created.
9. Click the arrows to move your selections from left to right or from right to left.
10. (Optional) For IPv6 environments, in the Selected WAN Interface field, select the preferred WAN interface for the
default IPv6 gateway.
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11. Click Next. The following page appears where you will select DNS Server settings.
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l Define a static IPv6 DNS IP address: Click Use the following Static IPv6 DNS address and enter the DNS
server IP addresses.
13. Click Next. The summary page appears indicating that your PPPoE WAN setup is complete.
14. Review the summary and either click Apply/Save to commit your changes or click Back to step through the pages in
reverse order to make any necessary alterations.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > WAN Service and then click Add. The following page appears.
2. Select an ATM interface to use for the WAN service and click Next. The following page appears.
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4. Modify the other fields as needed, using the information in the following table.
For untagged service, accept the defaults of -1 (disabled) in this field and the 802.1P Priority
field.
Network Protocol Different scheduling priorities can be applied to statistically multiplexed data flows. Since
Selection each data flow has its own queue, an ill-behaved flow (which has sent larger packets or more
packets per second than the others) will only punish itself and not other sessions. Options are
IPv4 Only, IPv4&IPv6 (Dual Stack), and IPv6 Only. The default is IPv4 Only.
Note: When you select IPV4&IPV6 or IPV6, the options presented on later pages change
accordingly.
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5. Click Next. The following page appears.
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6. Enter the relevant WAN IP Settings, using the information provided in the table below.
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Field Name Description
Dhcpv6 Address Assignment Select this option for the CPE to receive the WAN IP from the ISP.
(IANA)
Dhcpv6 Prefix Delegation (IAPD) This option is selected by default. The CPE generates the WAN IP's prefix from the
server's REST by MAC address. To disable this option, clear the checkbox.
Use the following Static IPv6 Select this option to enter the v6 Static IP information provided by your ISP.
address
WAN IPv6 Address/Prefix (Available only when Static IPv6 address is selected) If entering a static IP
Length address, enter the IP address / prefix length. If you do not specify a prefix length,
the default of /64 is used.
Prefix Delegation/Prefix Length (Available only when Static IPv6 address is selected) (Optional) Enter the prefix
delegation ID and prefix length for WAN.
WAN Next-Hop IPv6 address (Available only when Static IPv6 address is selected) Enter the IP address of the
next WAN in the group. This address can be either a local link or a global unicast
IPv6 address.
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gateway to access the Internet normally, you need to add a route on the uplink equipment. Failure to do so will cause
access to the Internet to fail.
The fields on this page are defined below.
Warning: Enabling this option will disable network acceleration and some security settings.
Enable Firewall This option is selected by default. Click to disable functions in the Security sub-menu.
Enable IGMP Select to enable Internet Group Membership Protocol (IGMP) multicast. Used by IPv4 hosts to
Multicast Proxy report multicast group memberships to any neighboring multicast routers.
Enable IGMP Select to enable this service to act as an IGMP multicast source.
Multicast Source
Enable MLD (Available only for IPv6 environments) Click to enable multicast filtering. Used by IPv4 hosts
Multicast Proxy to report multicast group memberships to any neighboring multicast routers.
Enable MLD (Available only for IPv6 environments) Select to enable this service to act as a multicast
Multicast Source source.
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9. Click Next. The following page appears.
10. Select a WAN interface to act as the system default gateway or accept the default interface.
11. (Optional) For IPv6 environments, in the Selected WAN Interface field, select the preferred WAN interface for the
default IPv6 gateway.
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12. Click Next. The following page appears.
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14. Click Next. The following page appears.
15. Review the IPoE settings. You can modify the settings by clicking the Back button.
16. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
Bridging
Before you can configure a bridge WAN service, you must create the related Layer2 ATM interface.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > WAN Service and then click Add. The following page appears.
2. Select the interface for the WAN service and then click Next. The following page appears.
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3. Select Bridging. Multicast source fields appear.
4. Modify the other fields as needed, using the information in the following table.
For untagged service, accept the default of -1 (disabled) in this field and in the
802.1Q VLAN ID field.
Enter 802.1Q VLAN ID Options are 0 - 4094. The default is -1 (disabled).
For tagged service, enter values in this field and the 802.1P Priority field.
For untagged service, accept the default of -1 (disabled) in this field and in the
802.1P Priority field.
5. Click Next. The summary page appears indicating that your Bridging WAN setup is complete.
6. Review the summary and either click Apply/Save to commit your changes or click Back to step through the pages in
reverse order to make any necessary alterations.
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VPN
In this section, you can configure tunneling protocols (L2TP or PPTP clients) for your network.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > VPN and then click Add. The following page appears.
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Field Name Description
Enable Firewall (SPI) (Optional) Click to enable the firewall.
Enable Click to enable this L2TP client configuration.
4. Select the default gateway by selecting interface entries and clicking the arrows to move the entries right or left.
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5. Click Next. The following page appears.
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7. Click Next. The summary page appears.
PPTP Client
On this page, you can configure the PPTP (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol) client.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > VPN > PPTP Client and then click Add. The following page
appears.
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2. Fill in the fields, using the information in the table below. The Description, WAN Interface, and PPTP Server
IP/Domain fields are required.
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3. Click Next. The following page appears.
4. Select the default gateway by selecting interface entries and clicking the arrows to move the entries right or left.
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5. Click Next. The following page appears.
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7. Click Next. The summary page appears.
Ethernet Config
On this page, you can configure the Ethernet speed for your gateway.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > Ethernet Mode. The following page appears.
LAN
In this section, you can configure an IP address for the DSL gateway, enable IGMP snooping, enable or disable the DHCP server, edit
the DHCP options, configure the DHCP advanced setup, and set the binding between a MAC address and an IP address.
IGMP snooping enables the gateway to forward multicast traffic intelligently, instead of flooding all ports in the VLAN. With IGMP
snooping, the gateway listens to IGMP membership reports, queries and leave messages to identify the switch ports that are
members of multicast groups. Multicast traffic will only be forwarded to ports identified as members of the specific multicast group
or groups.
If you enable the DHCP server, the clients will automatically acquire the IP address from the DHCP server. If the DHCP server is
disabled, you need to manually set the start IP address, end IP address and the lease time for the clients in the LAN.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > LAN. The following page appears.
2. (Optional) In the GroupName field, select the interface group for this configuration. If no groups are defined, the only
option is Default.
3. Modify the other fields using the information in the following table. The default configuration settings work for most
scenarios.
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Field Description
IP Address / (Optional) Modify the IP address and subnet mask of the device. The default IP address is
Subnet Mask that of the gateway and the subnet mask is 255.255.255.0.
Enable IGMP Snooping This option is enabled by default. To disable this option, click the checkbox to clear it.
Options are Standard Mode and Blocking Mode. The default is Blocking Mode.
To disable this option, clear the check box.
Enable IGMP LAN to LAN This option is disabled by default. To enable this option, select Enable.
Multicast
Enable LAN side firewall Click to enable the LAN-side firewall.
Disable DHCP Server / This option is enabled by default. You can modify the address, server and leased time
Enable DHCP Server fields as needed.
To disable the DHCP server, click Disable DHCP Server. Then, if needed, enter different
server information for the LAN.
Edit DHCP Option 60 To modify the vendor class information, click Edit DHCP Option 60, modify the entries,
and click the appropriate action button. Then click Return.
Edit DHCP Option To add information about other DHCP options, click Edit DHCP Option, enter the
information for the desired options, and click the appropriate action button. Then click
Return.
b. Click the State checkboxes as needed to manage DHCP for each LAN interface in the table, and then
click Advanced Setup > LAN > IPv4 Autoconfig in the left menu.
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5. To add addresses to the Static IP Lease List:
a. Click Add Entries below the MAC Address table. The DHCP Static IP Lease page appears.
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11. Click Apply/Save to apply your settings.
IPv4 Autoconfig
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > LAN. The following page appears. You can also reach this page by
clicking Advanced Setup > LAN > IPv4 Autoconfig in the left menu.
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2. (Optional) In the GroupName field, select the interface group for this configuration. If there are no groupings
defined, the only option is Default.
3. Modify the other fields using the information in the following table. The default configuration settings work for most
scenarios.
Field Description
IP Address / (Optional) Modify the IP address and subnet mask of the device. The default IP address is
Subnet Mask that of the gateway and the subnet mask is 255.255.255.0.
Enable IGMP Snooping This option is enabled by default. Options are Standard Mode and Blocking Mode. The
default is Blocking Mode.
To disable this option, clear the check box.
Enable IGMP LAN to LAN This option is disabled by default. To enable this option, select Enable.
Multicast
Enable LAN side firewall Click to enable the LAN-side firewall.
Disable DHCP Server / This option is enabled by default. You can modify the address, server and leased time
Enable DHCP Server fields as needed.
To disable the DHCP server, click Disable DHCP Server. Then, if needed, enter different
server information for the LAN.
Edit DHCP Option 60 To modify the vendor class information, click Edit DHCP Option 60, modify the entries,
and click the appropriate action button. Then click Return.
Edit DHCP Option To add information about other DHCP options, click Edit DHCP Option, enter the
information for the desired options, and click the appropriate action button. Then click
Return.
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b. Click the State checkboxes as needed to manage DHCP for each LAN interface in the table, and then
click Advanced Setup > LAN > IPv4 Autoconfig in the left menu.
5. To add addresses to the Static IP Lease List:
a. Click Add Entries below the MAC Address field. The DHCP Static IP Lease page appears.
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10. Click Apply/Save to apply your settings.
IPv6 Autoconfig
On this page, you can configure your gateway's IPv6 environment.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > LAN > IPv6 Autoconfig. The following page appears.
2. To enable advertisement of the ULA prefix, click Enable ULA Prefix Advertisement. Additional fields appear.
3. Modify these and the other fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
4. Click Save/Apply to commit your changes.
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Field Name Description
Static LAN IPv6 Address Enter the interface address in IPv6 format (including the prefix length). This address must begin
Configuration with "fd". The prefix length must be "64". The address and prefix must reside on the same
network.
Enable ULA Prefix Check this option to enable unique local address (ULA) advertisement on the LAN. Options are
Advertisement Randomly Generate and Statically Configure. The default is Randomly Generate which enables
the gateway to generate a random IPv6 prefix.
If you select Statically Configure, additional fields become available. Modify these fields as
needed:
l Prefix: Enter the prefix, e.g., fd80::/64.
l Preferred Life Time: The default is -1 (no limit). The value in this field must be less than
or equal to the value in the Valid Life Time field.
l Valid Life Time: The value in this field must be greater than or equal to the value in the
Preferred Life Time field. The default is -1 (no limit).
IPv6 LAN Applications section
Enable DHCPv6 Server This option is selected by default. To disable the DHCP v6 feature on the LAN, click this checkbox
to clear it. Options are:
l Stateless: (Available only when Enable DHCPv6 Server is selected) This option is
selected by default. Click to stop inheriting IPV6 address assignments from the WAN IPV6
interface.
l Stateful: (Available only when Enable DHCPv6 Server is selected) Identifies the DHCPv6
server given by the LAN IPV6 network as configured with additional options.
Note: Zero compression is not supported. Make sure to enter zeros between the colons;
that is, do not use shorthand notation (enter "0:0:0:2", not ":::2").
Enter values in the following fields:
l Start interface ID: Enter the beginning IPv6 available addresses for DHCP to assign
to LAN devices.
l End interface ID: Enter the ending IPv6 available addresses for DHCP to assign to
LAN devices.
l Leased Time (hour): Enter the length of time before a new IPv6 lease is requested
by the LAN client.
Enable RADVD This option is enabled by default. It enables Router Advertisement Daemon (RADVD) service that
sends router advertisements to LAN clients. To disable RADVD, clear the check box .
Enable MLD Snooping This option is enabled by default. It enables Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping to
manage IPV6 multicast traffic. If you clear the check box to disable this feature, the MLD-related
fields are hidden. Options are:
l Standard Mode: Multicast traffic will flood to all bridge ports when no client subscribes to
a multicast group even if IGMP snooping is enabled.
l Blocking Mode: The multicast data traffic will be blocked and not flood to all bridge ports
when there are no client subscriptions to any multicast group. This is the default.
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Field Name Description
Enable MLD LAN to LAN (Optional) This option enables LAN-to-LAN Multicast until the first WAN service is connected.
Multicast Options are Disable and Enable. The default is Disable.
Enable Relay Click to enable the relay function. Additional fields appear. Do the following:
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > LAN > Local VLAN Setting. The following page appears.
2. Select the LAN port on which you want to enable VLAN mode.
3. Click Enable VLAN Mode.
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4. To add a VLAN:
a. Click Add. A table appears where you can enter the details.
NAT
In this section, you can configure the NAT (Network Address Translation) settings.
Virtual Servers
Firewall can prevent unexpected traffic on the Internet from your host on the LAN. The virtual server can create a channel that can
pass through the firewall. In that case, the host on the Internet can communicate with a host on your LAN within certain port range.
On this page, you can add or remove virtual server entries.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > NAT. The following page appears.
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2. To add a virtual server:
a. Click Add. The following page appears.
b. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
Field Description
Use Interface Select the interface that you want to configure.
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Field Description
Service Name Select or enter the service for which you want to forward IP packets. Options
are:
l Select a Service: Select from services defined for your network. The
port table at the bottom of the page is updated with the default port ID
defined for the service.
l Custom Service: Enter a new service name to establish a user service
type. You must enter the ports and select a protocol in the table at the
bottom of the page.
Server IP Address Enter the final octet of the IP address for this virtual server.
External Port Start When you select a service, the external port start and end numbers display
External Port End automatically. Modify them if necessary.
Protocol (Optional) Select the protocol for this service. Options are TCP/UDP, TCP, and
UDP. The default is TCP.
Internal Port Start When you select a service, the internal port start and end numbers display
Internal Port End automatically. Modify them if necessary.
3. Click Apply/Save to save the settings. The server or servers for the selected service appear on the NAT -- Virtual
Servers Setup page.
4. To remove an application from the list, click the checkbox in the Remove column and then click the Remove button.
The list is refreshed.
Port Triggering
Some applications need some ports to be opened in the firewall for the remote access. When an application initializes a TCP/UDP to
connect to a remote user, port triggering dynamically opens the open ports of the firewall.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > NAT > Port Triggering. The following page appears.
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2. To add a port trigger, click Add. The following page appears.
3. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the following table.
4. To remove a trigger, click the Remove check box next to it and then click the Remove button. The list is refreshed.
5. Click Apply /Save to implement the settings.
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Field Name Description
Trigger Port Start Enter the starting and ending numbers of the range of available outgoing trigger ports. Options are 1 -
Trigger Port End 65535.
Note: You can use a single port number, several port numbers separated by commas, port blocks consisting
of two port numbers separated by a dash, or any combination of these, for example 80, 90-140, 180.
Trigger Protocol Select the protocol required by the application that will be using the ports in the specified range. Options
are TCP, UDP, and TCP/UDP. The default is TCP.
Open Port Start Enter the starting and ending numbers of the range of available incoming ports. Options are 1 - 65535.
Open Port End
Open Protocol Select the protocol for the open port. Options are TCP, UDP, and TCP/UDP.
DMZ Host
DMZ allows all the ports of a PC on your LAN to be exposed to the Internet. On this page, you can set the IP address of a PC to be the
DMZ host, so that the DMZ host will not be blocked by your firewall.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > NAT > DMZ Host. The following page appears.
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ALG
On this page, you can enable Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for your NAT. SIP is a communications protocol for signaling and
controlling multimedia communication sessions.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > NAT > ALG. The following page appears.
2. To disable SIP for your NAT, clear the SIP Enabled checkbox.
3. Click Save/Apply to commit the new or changed address.
Multi NAT
On this page, you can define rules for managing access to your NAT. You can create multiple rules and apply them to as many as
eight address ranges.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > NAT > Multi NAT and then click Add. The following page appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
Field Description
Rule Type Select the type of rule. Options are One to One, One to Many, Many to One, and Many to
Many.
Use Interface Select the interface to which this rule will apply.
internalAddrStart Enter the starting address for the internal server.
internalAddrEnd Enter the ending address for the internal server.
externalAddrStart Enter the starting address for the external server.
externalAddrEnd Enter the ending address for the external server.
3. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings. The server or servers for the selected service appear on the
MultiNat table page.
Security
In this section, you can configure the incoming and outgoing IP filtering and MAC filtering.
IP Filtering - Outgoing
On this page, you can add an outgoing filter and prevent certain data being transferred from the LAN to the WAN.
You can define up to 32 outgoing IP filters.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Security and then click Add. The following page appears. You can
also reach the Outgoing IP Filtering Setup page by clicking Advanced Setup > Security > IP Filtering > Outgoing.
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Field Name Description
Destination IP Enter the destination IP address of a LAN side host for which you wish to filter (block) outgoing traffic using the
address [/prefix specified protocol(s).
length]
Note: The address specified here can be a particular address or a block of IP address on a given network
subnet. This is done through appending the address with the associated routing "/prefix" length decimal value
(preceded with the slash).
Destination Port Set the destination host port (or range of ports) for the above host (or range of hosts) to define the destination
(port or port:port) port profile for which egress traffic will be blocked, e.g., for a computer external to the local network.
IP Filtering - Incoming
On this page, you can add an incoming filter and prevent certain data being transferred from the WAN to the LAN.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Security > IP Filtering > Incoming and then click Add. The following
page appears.
2. Fill in the fields, using the information in the table below. The Filter Name and Protocol fields are required.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
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Field Name Description
IP Version For the filter to be configured and effective for IPV6, the gateway must be installed on a network that is
either a pure IPV6 network (with that protocol enabled) or is both IPV4 and IPV6 dual protocol
enabled/configured. Options are IPv4 and IPv6. The default is IPv4.
If you select IPV6, Source IP address and Destination IP address must be specified in IPV6 format, i.e.,
an IPV6-compliant, hexadecimal address such as: 2001:0DB8:AC10:FE01:0000:0000:0000:0001.
Protocol Select the protocol to be associated with this incoming filter. Options are TCP/UDP, TCP, UDP, or ICMP.
Source IP address Enter the source IP address for this filter. For IPv6, enter the prefix as well.
[/prefix length]
Source Port (port or Enter a source port number or range (xxxxx:yyyyy).
port:port)
Destination IP address Enter the destination IP address for this filter. For IPv6, enter the prefix as well.
[/prefix length]
Destination Port (port or Enter destination port number or range (xxxxx:yyyyy).
port:port)
DROP Click to create a filter that will drop packets that meet the conditions of this filter.
WAN Interfaces Click to apply this rule to all WAN interfaces or only certain types. Options are Select All or select any of
the types defined for your network. The default is Select All .
MAC Filtering
On this page, you can manage MAC filtering for your gateway.
Your gateway can block or forward packets based on the originating device. This MAC filtering feature is available only in Bridge
mode. For other modes, similar functionality is available via IP Filtering.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Security > MAC Filtering. The following page appears.
2. To modify settings for an existing policy, click the Change checkbox next to it, and then click Change Policy. Options
are BLOCKED and FORWARD. The page refreshes, showing that the action has changed. The Change Policy button
acts like a toggle switch, clicking it switches the policy from BLOCKED to FORWARD and back again.
3. To add a MAC filtering rule, click Add and follow the instructions in Adding a MAC Filter.
4. To remove a rule, click the Remove checkbox next to the rule and click the Remove button.
5. When your changes are completed, click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
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1. On the MAC Filtering Setup page, click Add. The following page appears.
2. Fill in the fields, using the information provided in the following table. The Protocol Type field is required.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
Parental Control
In this section, you can manage time restrictions and block or allow specific URLs.
Time Restriction
On this page, you can control time restriction settings for a LAN device that connects to the gateway.
Note: Before you can create a time restriction rule, the gateway's time must be set. You can do this on the Management > Internet
Time page.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > Parental Control and then click Add. The following page
appears.
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Url Filter
On this page, you can prevent the LAN users from accessing some Web sites.
1. Click Advanced Setup > Parental Control > Url Filter. The following page appears.
2. Select whether to exclude or include the URLs in the list you are going to create. If you select Exclude, users cannot
access the URLs in the list. If you select Include, users can access the URLs in the list.
3. To create the list of URLs, click Add. The following page appears.
4. Enter the URL address and its corresponding port number. For example, enter http://www.google.com as the URL
address and 80 as the port number. If you leave the Port Number field blank, the default port number of 80 is used.
5. Select the days of the week when this rule will apply.
6. Enter the starting and ending time periods when this rule should be active. Use 24-hour format.
7. Click Apply/Save to save your changes. You are returned to the Parental Control > URL Filter page.
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Quality of Service
Quality of Service (QoS) enables prioritization of Internet content to help ensure the best possible performance. This is particularly
useful for streaming video and audio content with minimized potential for drop-outs. QoS becomes significant when the sum of all
traffic (audio, video, data) exceeds the capacity of the line.
In this section, you can disable/enable QoS and configure queues and classification rules.
Quality of Service
On this page, you can enable or disable QoS and set the DSCP Mark classification.
The maximum number of queues that can be configured vary by mode, as shown below.
Note: Queues for wireless connections (e.g., WMM Voice Priority) are shown only when wireless is enabled. If the WMM Advertise
option on the Wireless > Basic Setup page is disabled, assigning classifications to wireless traffic has no effect.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Quality Of Service. The following page appears. The Quality of
Service feature is enabled by default.
2. To disable QoS for ALL interfaces, click the Enable QoS check box to clear it.
3. (Optional) Select the default DSCP Mark (Differentiated Services Code Point) classification value to be used. The
default is No Change(-1).
4. Click Apply/Save to save your settings.
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QoS Queue
On this page, you can configure a queue and add it to a selected Layer2 interface. You can also edit and delete queues. A number of
standard queues are already defined. You may have to remove queues that you don't need in order to create the desired queues.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Quality Of Service > QoS Queue. The following page appears.
2. To add a queue:
a. Click Add at the bottom of the table. The following page appears.
b. Fill in the fields, using the information in the following table. The visible fields vary by interface and
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queue precedence selections. In most cases, you can use the default values.
c. Click Apply/Save. You are returned to the Qos Queue Setup page.
3. To remove a queue, click the Remove checkbox to the right of the entry and then click the Remove button at the
bottom of the page.
4. Click Apply/Save to save your settings.
WLAN Queue
On this page, you can view the WLAN queues defined for your network.
Note: Make sure that wireless connection is active by going to Wireless and clicking Apply/Save.
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In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Quality Of Service > QoS Queue > Wlan Queue. The following page appears.
QoS Classification
On this page, you can create classifications (traffic class rules) for assigning ingress traffic to a priority queue.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Quality Of Service > QoS Classification and then click Add. The
following page appears. A maximum of 32 entries can be configured.
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2. Fill in the fields, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
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Field Name Description
Ingress Interface Select an interface for incoming traffic. Options are LAN, WAN, Local , 2.4GHz, 5GHz, and any
interface defined for your network. The default is LAN.
Ether Type Select the Ethernet interface type for this classification. Options include IP, ARP, IPV6, PPPoE, and
any other Ethernet interface defined for your network.
Source MAC Address / Mask (Available for LAN, ATM, ETH, PPP-Routed and wireless interfaces only) Enter the source MAC
address and source MAC mask for this classification.
Destination MAC Address / (Available for LAN, ETH and wireless interfaces only) Enter the destination MAC address and
Mask destination MAC mask for this classification.
Source IP Address [/ Mask] or (Available for WAN, ATM and PPP-Routed interfaces only) Select the source for this classification.
Vendor Class ID or User Class Options are:
ID l Source IP Address[/Mask]: Enter the source IP address and source IP mask.
l Vendor Class ID (DHCP Option 60): Enter the vendor class ID.
l User Class ID (DHCP Option 77): Enter the user class ID.
Destination IP Address (Available for WAN and ATM interfaces only) Enter the destination IP address and source IP mask for
[/ Mask] this classification.
IP Length Check (Min/Max) (Available for Local, ATM interfaces only) Enter the minimum and maximum number of digits
required for IP addresses.
Protocol (Available for WAN, Local, and ATM interfaces only)Select the protocol specified for this
classification. Options are TCP, UDP, ICMP, and IGMP.
UDP/TCP Source Port (Appears when TCP or UDP is selected in the Protocol field) Enter the source port to be used for
this classification. You can enter a range (port:port) or a single port.
UDP/TCP Destination Port (Appears when TCP or UDP is selected in the Protocol field) Enter the destination port to be used
for this classification. You can enter a range (port:port) or a single port.
Specify Classification Results section
Specify Egress Interface Select an interface for outgoing traffic. Options include any interface defined for your network.
Specify Egress Queue Select from the available queues.
Note: Make sure to select a queue that is defined for the interface that you selected. If you select a
queue that is not defined for the selected interface, any packets classified into that queue are
processed by the default queue for the interface.
Mark Applied Differentiated Select the desired DSCP code.
Service Code Point
Mark 802.1p priority (Available for LAN, bridged and wireless interfaces only) This value is inserted into the Ethernet
frame and used to differentiate traffic. Lower values assign higher priorities. Options are 0 - 7.
Set Rate Limit (Kbps) Enter the data traffic rate limit for this classification in kilobits per second.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Quality Of Service > QoS Port Shaping. The following page
appears.
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2. (Optional) For each interface in the table, enter a Shaping Rate (in Kbps) and a Burst Size (in bytes). The default
settings work for most scenarios.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
Routing
In this section, you can configure default gateway, static routing, policy routing and RIP settings.
Default Gateway
On this page, you can select the WAN interface for the default gateway.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Routing. The following page appears.
2. (Optional) Select entries in the lists and click the arrows to move your selections from left to right or right to left.
3. (Optional) In the Selected WAN Interface field, select the appropriate interface.
4. Click Apply/Save to implement the settings.
Static Route
On this page, you can configure static routes for your network. Static route is a form of manually configured, fixed route for IP data.
You can enter a maximum of 32 entries.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Routing > Static Route and then click Add. The following page
appears.
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2. Fill in the fields, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
Policy Routing
Policy routing makes somewhat automated routing choices based on policies defined by a network administrator. For example, a
network administrator might want to deviate from standard routing based on destination markers in the packet and, instead,
forward a packet based on the source address. Use this feature to establish similar policies.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Routing > Policy Routing and then click Add. The following page
appears.
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2. Fill in the fields, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes. You are returned to the Policy Routing Setting page.
4. To remove a route, click the Remove check box next to it and then click the Remove button. The list is refreshed.
RIP
RIP (Routing Information Protocol) is a type of distance-vector routing protocol, which leverages hop count as a metric for routing. RIP
puts a limit on the number of hops (maximum of 15) allowed in order to prevent routing loops. This can sometimes limit the size of
networks where RIP can be successfully employed.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Routing > RIP. The following page appears.
2. For the interface that you want to modify, select values using the information in the table below.
3. To enable a configuration, click the Enabled checkbox next to the interface.
4. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
DNS
In this section, you can configure a DNS server, dynamic DNS and static DNS.
DNS Server
On this page, you can select a DNS server interface from the available interfaces, manually enter the DNS server addresses, or
obtain the DNS address from a WAN interface.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > DNS. The following page appears.
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l Define a static IPv6 DNS IP address: Click Use the following Static IPv6 DNS address and enter the DNS
server IP addresses.
3. Click Apply/Save to apply your settings.
Dynamic DNS
Dynamic DNS (DDNS) automatically updates a name server in the DNS with the active DNS configuration of its configured hostnames,
addresses or other data. Often this update occurs in real time. You can configure the settings for this feature on this page.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > DNS > Dynamic DNS and then click Add. The following page
appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
DNS Config
On this page, you can configure static host names for your DNS domains.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > DNS > DNS Config. The following page appears.
3. Enter a domain name and IP address for the domain. Only letters, numbers, dashes, and periods are allowed.
4. Click Apply/Save to apply your settings.
DSL
On this page, you can set the DSL settings. The modem negotiates the modulation mode with the DSLAM; you usually do not need to
modify the factory default settings.
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1. In the left navigation menu, select Advanced Setup > DSL. The following page appears.
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2. Modify the settings as needed.
3. (Optional) To modify additional parameters, click Advanced Settings. The following page appears.
UPnP
On this page, you can enable or disable the UPnP function.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > UPnP. The following page appears.
2. To disable UPnP, click the Enable UPnP check box to clear it.
3. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
DNS Proxy
On this page, you can enable or disable the DNS proxy function. This function is enabled by default.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > DNS Proxy. The following page appears.
2. To disable the DNS Proxy, click the Enable DNS Proxy checkbox to clear it.
3. To modify the host and domain, enter the host name of the new broadband gateway and the domain name of the LAN
network.
4. Click Apply/Save to implement the settings.
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Interface Grouping
On this page, you can configure interface groupings. Interface grouping supports multiple ports to PVC and bridging groups. Each
group performs as an independent network. Only the default group has an IP interface. To support this feature, you must create
mapping groups with the appropriate LAN and WAN interfaces.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > Interface Grouping. The following page appears.
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2. To add a new grouping, click Add. The following page appears.
IP Tunnel
IP Tunneling is typically used as a means to establish a path between two independent networks.
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In this section, you can configure connections of IPv6 networks across the IPv4 internet or IPv4 in IPv6.
IPv6inIPv4
On this page, you can configure a tunnel for IPv6inIPv4.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > IP Tunnel and then click Add. The following page appears.
2. Enter a Tunnel Name. In the Mechanism field, the only option is 6RD.
3. Select the WAN and LAN interfaces associated with the tunnel you wish to establish.
4. Do one of the following:
l To configure the LAN interface settings manually, enter values in the fields located below the Manual button:
l IPv4 Mask Length: Options are 0 - 32.
l 6rd Prefix with Prefix Length: Prefix/length, such as: 2002::/64.
l Border Relay IPv4 Address: IP address for the IPv4 relay server.
l To configure these settings automatically, click Automatic.
5. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
IPv4inIPv6
On this page, you can configure a tunnel for IPv4inIPv6.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > IP Tunnel > IPv4inIPv6 and then click Add. The following page
appears.
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2. Enter a Tunnel Name. In the Mechanism field, the only option is DS-Lite.
3. Select the LAN and WAN interfaces associated with the tunnel you wish to establish.
4. In the AFTR (Address Family Transition Router) field, do either of the following:
l To configure manually, enter the remote address in the AFTR field.
l To configure automatically, select Automatic above the AFTR field.
5. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
Certificate
In this section, you can configure certificates (local and Trusted CA) for the gateway. For more information about certificates, refer
to the ITU X.509 standard.
Local
On this page, you can manage local certificates used to identify the gateway to other users. You can create a new certificate
request locally and have it signed by a certificate authority, or you can import an existing certificate. For additional info regarding
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI), refer to ITU-T X.509.
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Creating certificate requests
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Certificate. The following page appears.
3. Enter your connection details, using the information provided in the table below.
4. Click Apply to complete the request.
5. Submit your certificate request to a certificate authority for signature.
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Field Name Description
Common Name Enter the IP address (in dotted decimal notation), domain name, or email address. Browsers use this
information to verify your certificate is valid.
Organization Name Enter the name or the company or organization creating the request.
State/Province Enter the full name of the state or province where your organization's head office is located.
Name
Country/Region Select the country or region in which this certificate will be employed.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Certificate > Local. Then click Import Certificate. The following
page appears.
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4. Paste the Private Key information between the BEGIN and END markers.
5. Click Apply to commit this certificate.
Trusted CA
On this page, you can import Trusted Certificates to identity other gateways to your gateway as a trusted source.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Advanced Setup > Certificate > Trusted CA. The following page appears.
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3. In the Certificate Name field, type a descriptive name for this certificate. If you are using this certificate with TR-069,
the name must be "acscert".
4. Paste the certificate details between the BEGIN and END markers.
5. Click Apply to commit this certificate.
After you add one certificate, a Remove button appears on the Trusted CA landing page. Click this button to remove the current
certificate and replace it with a new one.
Power Management
Note: This feature is not currently supported.
Multicast
On this page, you can configure the multicast parameters.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Advanced Setup > Multicast. The following page appears.
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2. Fill in the fields, using the information in the table below. The fields provided for the IGMP and MLD configurations
are largely the same.
3. To create or remove exceptions in the Group Exception List table, follow the instructions in "Managing group
exception lists".
4. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
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Managing group exception lists
You can manage exceptions for multicast groups using the IGMP Group Exception List or MLD Group Exception List tables. The
first two entries are created by default; you cannot change these entries.
To add an exception, type the IP address in the Group Address field, enter the mask information in the Mask / Mask bits field, and
then click Add.
To remove an exception, click the Remove check box next to it and then click the Remove Checked Entries button. The list
refreshes.
Click Apply / Save to implement your changes.
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Wireless
In this section, you can configure the wireless interface settings for your gateway, including basic and advanced settings, MAC
filtering, and wireless bridging.
Basic
On this page, you can configure basic features of the WiFi LAN interface. You can enable or disable the WiFi LAN interface, hide the
network from active scans, set the WiFi network name (also known as SSID) and restrict the channel set based on country
requirements.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Wireless. The following page appears, showing the information for the 5 GHz band.
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2. If you want to view or configure the 2.4GHz band settings, click 2.4 GHZ Band in the left menu.
3. Modify the settings as desired, using the information provided in the table below.
4. (Optional) Define up to three virtual access points for guest access using the information from the Wireless -
Guest/Virtual Access Points section of the table below.
5. Click Apply/Save to commit your settings.
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Security
On this page, you can configure network security settings of a wireless LAN interface, either by using the WiFi Protected Setup (WPS)
method or by setting the network authentication mode. For WiFi Protected Setup, the following methods are supported:
l PIN entry: Mandatory method of setup for all WPS-certified devices. Options are:
l Enter STA PIN: You must enter the (input) station PIN from the client.
l Use AP PIN: The access point (AP) generates the device PIN.
l PBC (Push Button Configuration): Uses a simulated push button in the software. (This is an optional method on
wireless clients.)
Note: To use the PIN method, you need a Registrar (access point/wireless gateway) to initiate the registration between a new
device and an active access point/wireless gateway. The PBC method may also need a Registrar when used in a special case where
the PIN is all zeros.
Seven types of network authentication modes are supported: Open, Shared, 802.1X, WPA2, WPA2-PSK, Mixed WPA2/WPA, and Mixed
WPA2/WPA-PSK.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Wireless > 5 GHz Band or 2.4 GHz Band > Security. The following page appears.
2. Modify the settings as needed, using the information provided in the field description table below and in the sections
that explain each authentication method.
The fields in the WPS Setup section are described in the following table.
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Field Name Description
Add Client (Available for WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK and Open Network Authentication methods) Select the
method for generating the WPS PIN. Options are:
l Enter STA PIN: Type the input station PIN for the client in the field below the radio
button. Click Add Enrollee. The PIN is verified.
l Use AP PIN: The entry field and the Set Authorized Station MAC field disappear.
Note: If the PIN and Set Authorized Station MAC fields are left blank, the PBC (push-button)
mode is automatically made active.
Set Authorized (Available only when Enter STA PIN is selected) Enter the MAC address of the authorized (input)
Station MAC station in format: xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx.
Set WPS AP Select how security is assigned to clients.
Mode l Configured: The gateway assigns security settings to clients. This is the default.
l Unconfigured: An external client assigns security settings to the gateway.
Device PIN This value is generated by the access point.
3. In the Manual Setup AP section, select the SSID for the device that you want to configure. The default is the 5 GHz
wireless band defined for your gateway.
4. Select the Network Authentication method and then fill in the fields that appear. The default method is Mixed
WPA2 / WPA-PSK. Detailed instructions are provided for each method in the following sections:
l "Open and Shared Authentication"
l "802.1X Authentication"
l "WPA2 and Mixed WPA2/WPA Authentication"
l "WPA2-PSK and Mixed WPA2/WPA-PSK Authentication"
5. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
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Modify the fields as needed and then click Apply/Save.
802.1X Authentication
The following fields appear when you select 802.1X in the Network Authentication field. WPS is disabled for this method.
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Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below, and then click Apply/Save.
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Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below, and then click Apply/Save.
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Field Name Description
WPA/WAPI Encryption Select the encryption standard. This field is displays the option most compatible with the selected
network authentication method. Options are:
l AES: Advanced Encryption Standard. This is the default.
l TKIP+AES: AES combined with TKIP (Temporary Key Integrity Protocol) allows access by
either standard.
WEP Encryption This option is set to Disabled and cannot be changed.
Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below, and then click Apply/Save.
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MAC Filter
On this page, you can configure whether wireless clients are allowed to access the wireless network of the wireless gateway.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Wireless > MAC Filter. The following page appears.
2. In the Select SSID field, select the access point that you want to configure.
3. Select the MAC Restrict Mode. Options are:
l Disabled: Disable wireless MAC address filtering. This is the default.
l Allow: Allow the wireless clients in the MAC Address list to access the wireless network.
Note: For this option to work, you must add at least one MAC address to this page.
l Deny: Reject requests from the wireless clients in the MAC Address list to access the wireless network.
4. To add a MAC Address to the filter list:
a. Click Add. The following page appears.
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c. Click Apply/Save to save the address to the list. You are returned to the Wireless - MAC Filter landing
page.
5. To remove a MAC address from the list, click the Remove check box next to it and then click the Remove button. The
list refreshes.
Wireless Bridge
On this page, you can configure the wireless bridge features of the wireless LAN interface.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Wireless > Wireless Bridge. The following page appears.
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2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below.
l Enabled (Scan): Allow only those bridges selected in the Remote Bridges MAC Address
table to access the wireless LAN but the scanning feature is active.
l Disabled: Disable the wireless MAC address filtering function. Any wireless bridge can
access the wireless LAN.
Remote Bridges Enter up to four MAC addresses for the remote bridges that are allowed to access the wireless
MAC Address LAN.
Advanced
On this page, you can configure the advanced features of the wireless LAN interface. You can select a particular channel on which to
operate, force the transmission rate to a desired speed, set the fragmentation threshold, the RTS threshold, the wakeup interval
for clients in power-save mode, and more.
Note: The default settings work for most environments. It is recommended that only experienced users change settings on this
page.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Wireless > Advanced. The following page appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the following table.
3. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
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Field Name Description
Channel Select the Wi-Fi channel you want to use. The current channel number displays to the right of the field.
For the 5GHz band, options are Auto and 36 through 157. For the 2.4GHz band, options are Auto and 1 -
7. The default is Auto.
All devices in your wireless network must use the same channel in order to work correctly.
Auto Channel Timer (min) Enter the frequency (in minutes) at which the gateway scans channels for interference. If a threshold of
inference is detected, a new channel will be selected automatically. Options are 0 - 65535 minutes.
The default is 15 minutes.
MIMO-OFDM This option is set to On and cannot be changed.
Bandwidth Select the operating bandwidth. Options are 20 MHz, 40 MHz, and, for the 5 GHz band, 80 MHz. The
default is 20MHz. The current bandwidth setting displays to the right of the field.
Control Sideband This option is not available. The value is set by the system and cannot be changed.
802.11n Rate Select the desired physical transmission rate. This option is set to Auto (the Auto-Fallback feature is
enabled) and cannot be changed. This enables the Auto-Fallback feature which allows the gateway to
automatically use the fastest possible data rate. Auto-Fallback will negotiate the best possible
connection speed between the gateway and a wireless client.
802.11n Protection Select whether to enable 802.11n and legacy clients to both work effectively on the network. Options
are:
l Auto: Provides maximum security but produces a noticeable impact on throughput. With
this option, RTS/CTS behavior permits legacy clients to become aware of 802.11n transmit
times, but decreases overall throughput. This is the default.
l Off: Provides better throughput.
Support MIMO client only Select whether to restrict MIMO clients from accessing the gateway. Options are On and Off. The
default is Off.
RIFS Advertisement RIFS (Reduced InterFrame Speed) is the time in micro seconds by which the multiple transmissions from
a single station is separated. This option Improves performance by reducing dead time required
between OFDM transmission. Options are Auto and Off. The default is Auto.
OBSS Co-Existence Coexistence of Overlapping Basic Service Sets (OBSS) prevents overlapping in the 20 MHz and 40 MHz
frequencies. Options are:
l Enable: The gateway automatically reverts to 20 MHz channel bandwidth when another
WiFi network within 2 channels of its own channel is detected or when a client device
with its 40 MHz Intolerant bit set is detected.
l Disable: The gateway advertises and operates in 40 MHz mode regardless of how other
nearby networks are configured. This is the default.
RX Chain Power Save Select whether power-save mode is enabled. Options are Disable and Enable. The default is Enable.
Note: Before setting this parameter, make sure that 802.11n/EWC is set to Auto.
RX Chain Power Save Enter the number of minutes that will elapse before quiet time begins. The default is 10 minutes.
Quiet Time
RX Chain Power Save PPS Enter the throughput threshold (in seconds) for when the router engages power save mode after the
quiet time period has elapsed. The default is 10 seconds.
54g Rate This option is set to 6 Mbps and cannot be changed.
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Field Name Description
Multicast rate Select the multicast transmission rate for the network according to the speed of your wireless network.
Select from a range of transmission speeds or select Auto to have the gateway automatically use the
fastest possible data rate and enable the Auto-Fallback feature. Auto-Fallback will negotiate the best
possible connection speed between the gateway and a wireless client.
Options are Auto and 6 - 54 Mbps. The default value is Auto.
Basic Rate Select the basic transmission rate ability for the AP. Options are Default, All ,1 & 2 Mbps, and 1 & 2 &
5.5 & 6 & 11 & 12 &24 Mbps. The default is Default.
Fragmentation Threshold Enter the size at which packets will be fragmented into smaller units. The primary consideration for this
setting is the size/capability of the circuit. Options are 256 - 2346 bytes. The default is 2346 bytes.
Note: A high packet error rate is an indication that a slightly increased fragmentation threshold is
needed. When possible, the default value of 2346 bytes should be maintained. Poor throughput is a
likely result of setting this threshold too low.
RTS Threshold The gateway sends Request to Send (RTS) frames to a particular receiving station and negotiates the
sending of a data frame. After receiving an RTS, the wireless station responds with a Clear to Send (CTS)
frame to acknowledge the right to begin transmission.
If a packet is smaller than this setting, the WLAN client hardware does not invoke its RTS/CTS
mechanism. Options are 256 - 2347 bytes.
The default value of 2347 (disabled) should be left in place unless you encounter inconsistent data
flow. In that case, make small reductions to this value until the issue is resolved.
DTIM Interval Enter the Delivery Traffic Indication Message (DTIM or Beacon rate) countdown variable used to indicate
when the next window is available to client devices for listening to buffered broadcast and multicast
messages. Options are 1 - 255. The default is 1.
Beacon Interval Beacon information packets are sent from a connected device to all other devices where it announces
its availability and readiness. A beacon interval is the period of time (sent with the beacon) that the
device waits before sending the beacon again.
Enter the time interval (in milliseconds) between beacon transmissions. Options are 1 - 65535 ms. The
default is 100 ms, which is recommended.
Global Max Clients Enter the maximum number of clients that can assess this wireless network at one time. The maximum
for 5 GHz is 80; the maximum for 2.4 GHz is 128. The default is the maximum for each band.
Note: You must change this field before you can change the Max Clients on the Wireless > Basic. page.
Xpress™ Technology Select whether to enable Xpress Technology, a special accelerating technology for IEEE802.11g. Options
are Enable and Disable. The default is Enable.
Transmit Power Level Select the level of power used for transmittals. Options range from 4 dBm (2mw) to 26 dBm (400 mw).
The default is 26 dBm (400 mw).
WMM (WiFi Multimedia) This technology allows multimedia services (audio, video and voice packets) to get higher priority for
transmission. Options are Auto, Enabled, and Disabled. The default is Enabled.
Warning: If you disable this option, all QoS queues and classifications defined for the wireless network
are also disabled.
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Field Name Description
WMM No The acknowledge policy used at the MAC level. Enabling this option allows better throughput but, in a
Acknowledgment noisy RF environment, higher -963 error rates may result. The default is Disabled, meaning that an
acknowledgment packet is returned for every packet received. This provides a more reliable
transmission but increases traffic load, which decreases performance. Disabling the acknowledgment
can be useful for Voice, for example, where speed of transmission is important and packet loss is
tolerable to a certain degree. Options are Enabled and Disabled. The default is Disabled.
WMM APSD APSD (Automatic Power Save Delivery) is an automatic power saving feature. Enabling ensures very low
power consumption. WMM Power Save is an improvement to the 802.11e amendment, adding advanced
power management functionality to WMM. Options are Enabled and Disabled. The default is Enabled.
Beamforming Select to concentrate the transmission signal at the gateway location. This results in a better signal and
Transmission (BFR) potentially better throughput. Options are Disabled, SU BFR, and MU BFR. The default is Disabled.
Beamforming Reception Select to concentrate the transmission signal at the gateway location. Options are Disabled, SU BFE,
(BFE) and MU BFE. The default is Disabled.
Band Steering Select whether to detect if the client has the ability to use two bands. When enabled, the less-
congested 5GHz network is selected (by blocking the client's 2.4GHz network). Options are Disabled and
Enabled. The default is Disabled.
Enable Traffic Scheduler Select whether to enable scheduling of traffic to improve efficiency and increase usable bandwidth for
some types of packets by delaying other types. Options are Disable and Enable. The default is Disable.
Airtime Fairness Select how the gateway will manage the receiving signal with other devices. Options are Disable and
Enable. The default is Enable.
Station Info
On this page, you can view the authenticated wireless stations and their status.
In the left navigation menu, click Wireless > Station Info. The following page appears.
Wifi Insight
On this page, you can configure the WiFi Insight system.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Wireless > Wifi Insight. The following page appears. You can also reach this page by
clicking Wireless > Wifi Insight > Configure.
2. In the Sample Interval section, select the number of seconds for sampling to occur. Options are 5, 10, 15, and 20
seconds. The default is 5 seconds.
3. In the Start/Stop Data Collection section, configure the data sample:
a. Click Start collecting data every.
b. Select the days of the week when the data should be collected.
c. In the From and To fields, enter the start and end times for collection.
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4. In the Database Size section, configure the database size limits:
a. In the Database Size field, enter the maximum size for the database file where the collected data will
be stored. The default is 2 MB.
b. (Optional) Select whether to stop data collection when the maximum size is reached. Options are
Overwrite Older Data and Stop Datacollection. The default is Overwrite Older Data.
5. (Optional) In the Counters section, clear any counter options that you do not need. The default is to collect all
counters.
6. Click Submit to save the configuration.
7. To export a database, in the Export Database section:
1. Click Save Database to File. The open/save dialog box appears.
2. Click OK to save or click Open and OK to view.
Site Survey
On this page, you can view signal strength and other details for your wireless networks.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Wireless > Wifi Insight > Site Survey. The following page appears.
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2. In the first field above the chart, select the wireless network that you want to review.
3. In the Select Channel field, select the channel that you want to review.
4. In the Select Bandwidth field, select the bandwidth.
5. Click Scan. The page refreshes to show the requested information.
Channel Statistics
On this page, you can view signal strength, channel capacity, interference, and other details for specific channels.
In the left navigation menu, click Wireless > Wifi Insight > Channel Statistics. The following page appears.
Metrics
On this page, you can view glitch counter, chanim, associated stations, and packet queue statistics for your wireless networks.
In the left navigation menu, click Wireless > Wifi Insight > Metrics. The following page appears.
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Voice
In this section, you can view status, enable features, and configure settings for VoIP.
VoIP Status
On this page, you can view status data for your SIP accounts.
In the left navigation menu, click Voice. The following page appears.
In the Registration Status field, Up means registered successfully, Down means unregistered, Disabled means the account is not
enabled.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Voice > SIP Basic Setting. The following page appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the following table.
3. Click Apply to implement your changes.
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The fields on this page are defined below.
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FIELD NAME DESCRIPTION
Polarity Reverse Enable Enable or disable this function by selecting and clearing the check boxes.
Authentication name Enter the user name.
Password Enter the password.
Cid Name Enter the user name that should display as the caller ID name.
Cid Number Enter the number that should display as the caller ID number.
Note: In some cases, this number must be the SIP authentication user ID.
Codec line settings table
Codec -line 1 / 2 The 1st and 5th columns identify the codec. The most common codec IDs display by default.
ptime [ms] The 2nd and 6th columns identify the packetization time (ptime) which is the length of the digital voice
segment that each packet holds. Enter the ptime in milliseconds. The default is 20 millisecond packets.
Note: Selecting 10 millisecond packets improves voice quality; less information is lost, but there is more
load on the network traffic.
Priority The 3rd and 7th columns identify the priority of each codec. The priority of the codec is defined from up
to down. Codecs define the method of relaying voice data. Different codecs have different
characteristics, such as data compression and voice quality. For example, G723 is a codec that uses
compression, therefore, it is good for use where the bandwidth is limited. However, its voice quality is not
as good as other codecs, such as the G711. If you do not select a codec (accepting the default value), the
gateway chooses the codec automatically.
Enable The 4th and 8th columns contain the Enable check boxes. Click to enable a particular codec.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Voice > SIP Advanced Setting. The following page appears. Detailed information
about each VoIP line is shown in the top table.
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In the bottom section are settings for Fax, QoS, caller ID, service offer models and so on.
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2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below.
3. Click Apply to implement the settings.
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FIELD NAME DESCRIPTION
Unconditionally Call Enter the number to which you want all incoming calls to be forwarded.
forwarding number
Busy Call forwarding Enter the number to which you want all incoming calls to be forwarded when the line is busy.
number
No Answer Call Enter the number to which you want all incoming calls to be forwarded when the calls are not answered.
forwarding number
Options Time Enter the time interval for sending the Options message.
Forward unconditionally Select to enable unconditional forwarding.
Forward on "busy" Select to enable forwarding when the line is engaged.
Forward on "no answer" Select to enable forwarding when a call is not answered.
Anonymous call blocking Select to block anonymous calls. Users can dial *77 to enable this feature and dial *87 to disable it.
Anonymous calling Select to enable using an anonymous name as a call number when calling out. Users can dial *68 to
enable this feature and dial *82 to disable it.
Anonymous calling mode Select the anonymous calling mode. Options are Display anonymous or All anonymous.
DND Select to reject all incoming calls. Users can dial *78 to enable this feature.
Enable Call Return Select to enable this function.
Call Transfer Select to enable transferring calls either manually or automatically.
Call conference Select to enable multiple extensions to join a single call.
Warm Line Select to enable the warm line feature which configures a line to dial a specific number after a short
delay (entered in seconds).
Warm Line URI If using the warm line feature, enter the URI to which the line should connect.
Warm Line Delay Timer Enter the number of seconds before an incoming call to the warm line is transferred.
Fax Setting section
Fax Negotiate Mode Select the negotiation mode. Options are Auto_switch, Negotiate, and V.152. The default is Auto_
switch.
Bypass Codec Select the bypass codec. Options are G711_A , G711_MU, and T.38. The default is Auto_switch.
Enable T38 redundancy Select to enable this function.
support
Enable vbd redundancy Select to enable this function.
support
Settings section
Enable VAD support This option is enabled by default. To disable VAD support, clear the checkbox. Select the VAD mode in
signal value. Options are None, Silencsupp, and annexa/annexb/vad. The default is None.
Enable RTCP Flow Ctrol Select to enable RTCP flow control for improved quality of service.
Enable Echo Cancellation This option is enabled by default. To disable echo cancellation for improved quality of service, clear the
checkbox..
Enable # to ASCII Select to enable conversion of numbers to their ASCII equivalents.
Enable call waiting calid. Select to display the caller ID for a waiting call.
SIP Timer Setting section
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FIELD NAME DESCRIPTION
Registration Expire Enter the registration expire timeout. The default is 172800 (48 hours).
Timeout
Session Expire Time Enter the time interval for closing a conversation. The default is 86400 (24 hours).
Min Session Expire Time Enter the minimum interval for closing a conversation. This value must be 90 seconds or greater.
Digitmap Setting section
VoIP DialPlan Setting Enter the VoIP dial plan parameters. If a user-dialed number matches it, the number is processed by the
gateway immediately.
QoS Setting section
DSCP for SIP Select the DSCP mark for SIP. The default is DEFAULT (000000).
DSCP for RTP Select the DSCP mark for RTP. The default is DEFAULT (000000).
Payload Setting section
RFC2198 Payload Value Enter the RFC2198 payload value. Options are 97 - 127.
(range 96~127)
DTMF Relay Setting Select the DTMF transmit method. Options are:
l InBand: DTMF events are mixed with user voice in RTP packet.
l RFC2833: Use RTP packet to encapsulate DTMF events, as specified in RFC 2833.
l SIP Info: Use SIP INFO message to transmit DTMF digits.
Call ID Setting section
Caller ID send Delay time Enter the number of milliseconds that the system will delay before sending the caller ID. Options are
500 - 1500 ms. The default is 600 milliseconds.
Caller ID Message Type Select the message format for the caller ID. Options are FSK-MDMF, FSK-SDMF, and DTMF. The default is
FSK_MDMF.
FSK modulation Mode (Appears when an FSK value is selected in the Caller ID Message Type field) Select the modulation
mode for FSK message types. Options are BellcoreGen, V23Gen, and V23UK.
Transport Setting section
SIP Transport Protocol Select the transport protocol to use for SIP signaling. Note that the SIP proxy and registrar need to
support the protocol you select. Options are UDP and TCP. The default is UDP.
SIP Extends section
PRACK (100rel) Select to enable provisional responses. Options are DISABLE, SUPPORTED, and REQUIRED. The default is
SUPPORTED.
Agent Header Enter the agent name that you want displayed to users in the response header.
Service Offer Setting section
Complementary business Options are Local model , Server model , IMS model , and Undefined. The default is Local model .
models
If you select IMS model, the ETSI Malicious call tracing field appears. To enable malicious call tracing
option, click the checkbox.
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SIP Star Code Setting
On this page, you can set the numbers that are used with the * key to enable and disable various features.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Voice > SIP Star Code Setting. The following page appears.
2. Enter the numbers that you want assigned to various features. Users press the star (*) key and then enter these
numbers to enable or disable the various calling features.
3. Click Apply to implement your settings.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Voice > SIP Extra Setting. The following page appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply to implement the settings.
Field Description
Line The VoIP line that you want to configure.
Dial tone time Enter the number of seconds that the dial tone will persist. Options are 10 - 20 seconds. The default is 15
seconds.
Busy tone time Enter the number of seconds that the busy tone will persist. Options are 30 - 180 seconds. The default is 40
seconds.
Inter digit time Enter the number of seconds allowed between dialing individual digits. The valid range is 1 - 5 seconds. The
default is 5 seconds.
Offhook warning Enter the number of seconds that the off-the-hook warning tone will persist. Options are 30 - 180 seconds. The
tone time default is 60 seconds.
Ringback tone Enter the number of seconds that the ringback tone will persist. Options are 30 - 180 seconds. The default is 80
time seconds.
T digit timer Enter the maximum number of seconds that the system waits to dial after the last digit has been entered. The
default is 4 seconds.
Short digit timer Enter the maximum number of seconds allowed between dialed digits. The default is 4 seconds.
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SIP Debug Setting
On this page, you can configure the debugging settings.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Voice > SIP Debug Setting. The following page appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
3. Click Apply to implement the settings.
Field Description
Vodsl Console Log (Optional) Select the level of detail stored in the VODSL Console log. Options are Error, Notice, and Debug.
Level
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Field Description
System Log Level (Optional) Select the level of detail stored in the System log. Options are SPY_GEN_INFO, SPY_FNENTER,
SPY_EVENT, SPY_MINOR_ERR, SPY_MAJOR_ERR, SPY_FATAL_ERR, and SPY_LEVEL_OFF. The default is
SPY_EVENT.
Protocol Stack Log (Optional) Select the level of detail stored in these logs. Options are SPY_GEN_INFO, SPY_FNENTER, SPY_
Level EVENT, SPY_MINOR_ERR, SPY_MAJOR_ERR, SPY_FATAL_ERR, and SPY_LEVEL_OFF. The default is SPY_
Call Control Log Level MAJOR_ERR.
Register Log Level
DSP Log Level
Tele Log Level
Dialplan Log Level
Restart Log Level
Master Level Control settings section
Master Level (Optional) Select the lowest level of log entries for VoIP. When debugging, this level must be lower than
the levels selected in the other fields in this section. Options are Emerg, Alert, Crit, Error, Warn, Notice,
Info, and Debug. The default is Crit.
LOGIC (Optional) Select the level of logging for these modules. Options are Emerg, Alert, Crit, Error, Warn,
PROVISION Notice, Info, and Debug. The default is Error.
VOICE
AGENT
SIP log server IP Enter the IP address of the server where the SIP logs should be stored.
address
SIP log server port Enter the port number for the same server.
Gain Settings table (Optional) Select the gain levels for incoming and outgoing transmissions for each line. Options are -14 to 6.
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SIP Black Filter
On this page, you can configure the black filtering settings.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Voice > SIP Black Filter. The following page appears.
2. In the black list column, enter the phone number that you want to block.
3. To activate the new entry, click the enable checkbox next to it.
4. Click Apply to implement the settings.
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Diagnostics
Line performance diagnostic tools are supported by your SmartRG gateway. Three legs of the data path are included in the available
tests: LAN connectivity, DSL connectivity, and Internet connectivity tests.
Diagnostics
On this page, you can test the connection to your local network, the connection to your DSL service provider, and the connection to
your Internet service provider.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Diagnostics. The following page appears, showing information about the connection
encountered by the gateway.
2. To run a test (and refresh the data), click the appropriate Test button.
The table is updated with fresh diagnostic information regarding connection integrity.
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3. To test another connection, click Next Connection. The data refreshes and the Previous Connection button
appears.
4. If a test fails, click the Help link located in the last column to learn more about what is being tested and what actions
you can take.
Ethernet OAM
On this page, you can view diagnostics regarding your VDSL PTM or Ethernet WAN connection. Fault Management is compliant with
IEEE 802.1ag for Connectivity Fault Management.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Diagnostics > Ethernet OAM. The following page appears.
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2. To enable Ethernet Link OAM (802.3ah):
a. Click the Enabled checkbox. Additional fields appear.
b. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the Ethernet Link OAM (802.3ah) section of the
table below.
3. To enable Ethernet Service OAM (802.1ag/Y.1731):
a. Click the Enabled checkbox. Additional fields appear showing values for 802.1ag. To configure Y.1731,
click the Y.1731 radio button. The page refreshes.
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b. Modify the fields, using the information provided in the Ethernet Service OAM (802.1ag/Y.1731)
section of the table below.
4. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
5. To run a loopback test, enter a MAC address in the Target MAC field and click Send Loopback at the bottom of the
page. The results appear in the Loopback Result row of the table.
6. To run a linktrace test, enter a MAC address in the Target MAC field and click Send Linktrace at the bottom of the
page. The results appear in the Linktrace Result row of the table.
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Field Name Description
Link Events Click to enable reporting of critical conditions that may cause link failure.
Remote Loopback Click to enable on-demand link diagnostics, including bit-error-rate approximation.
Active Mode Click to enable this feature.
Ethernet Service OAM (802.1ag/Y.1731) section
WAN Interface Select the WAN interface that you want to test.
MD Level (Appears for the 802.1ag option only) Select the domain level for this maintenance domain. Options are 0 -
7. The larger the domain, the higher the value you should select.
MD Name (Appears for the 802.1ag option only) Enter the name of the maintenance domain, e.g., Broadcom.
MA ID (Appears for the 802.1ag option only) Enter the maintenance association ID, e.g., BRCM.
MEG Level (Appears for the Y.1731 option only) Enter the level of the maintenance entity group.
MEG ID (Appears for the Y.1731 option only) Enter the ID of the MEG.
Local MEP ID Enter the ID of the local maintenance entity group end point.. Options are 1 - 8191. The default is 1.
Local MEP VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID of the local MEP. Options are 1 - 4094. The default is -1 (no VLAN tag).
CCM Transmission Click to enable continuity check message transmission.
Remote MEP ID Enter the ID of the remote MEP. Options are 1 - 8191. The default is -1 (no remote MEP).
Loopback and Linktrace Test section
Target MAC Enter the MAC address for the test, e.g., 02:10:18:aa:bb:cc.
Linktrace TTL Enter the maximum number of hops allowed. Optinons are 1- 233. The default is -1 (no limit).
Loopback Result Displays the results of the loopback test.
Linktrace Result Displays the results of the linktrace test.
Diagnostic Tools
In this section, you can ping or trace the communication route, and start or stop your DSL connection.
Ping
On this page you can ping a server by host name or IP address.
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1. In the left navigation menu, click Diagnostics Tools > Ping. The following page appears.
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Traceroute
On this page, you can use the Traceroute utility to trace a connection.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Diagnostics Tools > Traceroute. The following page appears.
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3. Click Submit. The details of the trace appear on the page.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Diagnostics Tools > Start/Stop DSL. The following page appears.
2. To connect to your DSL, click Start. A message appears, with instructions for refreshing the page. When the
connection is ready, the "DSL connection is up" message appears.
3. To stop your connection, click Stop. A message appears, stating that your DSL connection is down.
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Management
In this section, you can configure server and system log settings, control access, and configure clients.
Settings
In this section, you can back up the current settings, restore saved settings, or reset the gateway to default settings.
Backup
On this page, you can back up the current settings for your gateway in a file stored on your computer.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Settings. The following page appears.
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Update
On this page, you can restore previously backed-up gateway settings.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Settings > Update. The following page appears.
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Restore Default
On this page, you can restore the gateway to the factory default settings. If you think you might need to reload the current settings,
create a backup (on the Management > Settings > Backup page) before proceeding.
1. In the left navigation menu, click Management > Settings > Restore Default. The following page appears.
2. Click Restore Default Settings. The system returns to the default settings and reboots.
System Log
The System Log page displays a history of error conditions and other events encountered by your gateway. You can configure the
system log and view the security log.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Settings > System Log. The following page appears.
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2. To view the system log details:
a. Click View System Log. The log appears in a separate window.
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3. To configure the log settings:
a. Click Configure System Log. The following page appears.
b. Modify the fields as needed, using the information in the table below.
c. Click Apply/Save to save and apply your changes. You are returned to the System Log page.
Action Description
Log Level Select the type of information that you want logged. Options are Emergency, Alert, Critical , Error, Warning,
Notice, Informational , and Debugging. The options are listed in order from least detailed to most detailed. The
default is Debugging.
Display Level Select the level of information that should be displayed. Options are Emergency, Alert, Critical , Error, Warning,
Notice, Informational , and Debugging. The options are listed in order from least detailed to most detailed. The
default is Error. This level is recommended (least verbose) unless you are actively troubleshooting a situation with
a subscriber for which increased detail is required.
Mode Select where log events will be sent. Options are Local, Remote, and Both. Select Remote or Both to send to the
specified IP address and UDP port of a remote syslog server. Select Local or Both to record events in the local
memory of your gateway. The default is Local.
When you select Remote or Both, additional fields appear. Enter the IP address and port number for the remote
syslog server.
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Security Log
The security log contains a history of events related to sensitive access to the gateway. Logged events include:
l Password change success / failure
l Authorized login success / failure
l Authorized user logged out
l Security lockout added / removed
l Authorized / unauthorized resource access
l Software update
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Security Log. The following page appears.
l To purge the log entries and start fresh, click Reset. A confirming message appears. Click Close.
l To export the log to a local drive, right-click the here link in the last line of the instructions on the page. The
log appears in the browser window. You can save the page or select all of the log text, paste into a text file
and save the file.
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SNMP Agent
On this page, you can configure the SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) settings to retrieve statistics from the SNMP agent
for the gateway. You can enable or disable the SNMP agent and set parameters such as the read community, system name and trap
manager IP.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > SNMP Agent. The following page appears.
2. Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below.
3. Click Save/Apply to commit your changes.
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Management Server
SmartRG gateways support TR-069 based standards for remote management, including STUN server configuration. In this section, you
can configure the gateway with details about the management ACS (Auto Configuration Server) to which this gateway will be linked.
TR-069
The TR-069 client screen contains default connection parameters and generally only needs to be enabled, pointed to the ACS URL,
and any required ACS Username and ACS Password entered. This manual does not cover the setup of your ACS. If you need to modify
the default settings, consult the materials provided by your ACS vendor to determine the appropriate parameters and server
settings.
SmartRG products can accommodate several ACS products, including:
l Calix Consumer ACS
l Cisco Prime Home
l ClearVision
l Device Manager by SmartRG
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Management Server. The following page appears.
2. Complete the necessary fields per the instructions from your ACS platform vendor.
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Field Name Description
ACS URL from DHCP Click to enable the gateway to obtain the ACS URL from the DHCP server.
OUI-Serial Select whether to use the MAC address or the device serial number as the identifier. The
default is MAC.
Inform Select whether to disable or enable the inform feature. The default is Enable.
Inform Interval Enter the frequency (in seconds) at which the CPE (gateway) checks in with the ACS to sync
and exchange data. A typical production environment has CPEs informing to the ACS once a
day or every 86,400 seconds. The default is 3600 seconds (1 hour).
ACS URL Enter the URL for the CPE to connect to the ACS using the CPE WAN Management Protocol.
This parameter MUST be in the form of a valid HTTP or HTTPS URL. An HTTPS URL indicates
that the ACS supports SSL. The "host" portion of this URL is used by the CPE for validating the
certificate from the ACS when using certificate-based authentication.
You can include a port specification suffix if your ACS platform requires it, e.g.,
http://customer1.acs.smartrg.com:30005 where 30005 is the port number. The default port
is 30005.
ACS User Name Enter the user name by which this gateway logs in to the ACS.
ACS Password Enter the password to authenticate the above user name.
TR-069 Client Port Enter the port number to be used by the TR-069 client, e.g.,
"http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:30005/" where the xxx values are specific WAN IP octet numbers.
The default port value is 30005.
WAN Interface used by Select any_WAN, LAN, Loopback or any configured connection to identify how this gateway
TR-069 client will connect to the ACS.
Display SOAP messages Select whether to disable or enable the display of SOAP messages on the console. The
on serial console default is Disable.
3. (Optional) To configure the modem client Connection Request mechanism used by your ACS for communication with
subscriber gateways, click Connection Request Authentication. Additional fields appear.
Note: Consult with your ACS vendor for any specific connection request requirement impacted by the following
settings.
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4. To force the gateway to attempt to sync with the ACS, click the GetRPCMethods button. This will assist you in
verifying the TR-069 parameters entered above.
5. Click Apply/Save to commit your changes.
STUN Config
STUN stands for “Simple Traversal of UDP through NATs”. STUN enables a device to find out its public IP address and the type of NAT
service it is sitting behind.
STUN is most commonly used with older modems under ACS management connected via a NAT gateway. NAT accommodates a LAN-
side device that has been allocated a Private IP address such as a CPE device on a private network behind an ONT. In this instance,
the regular CWMP Connection Request mechanism to talk to the modem gateway cannot be used to initiate a session with that ACS.
A STUN server receives STUN requests and sends STUN responses. STUN servers are generally attached to the public Internet.
On this page, when a STUN server is present within the infrastructure of the Service Provider, you can configure this gateway with
the connectivity specifics for that server.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Management Server > STUN Config. The following page appears.
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2. To view the required STUN settings, click STUN Server Support. Additional fields appear.
3. Modify the fields using the information provided in the following table.
4. Click Save/Apply to commit your changes.
* This mechanism is used for refreshing NAT bindings with using Restricted Cone NAT or Port Restricted Cone NAT. A device’s
internal address / port mappings (which the STUN protocol can use) can have keep alive values attributed. These minimum and
maximum keep alive times define the minimum time to retain the mapping information that STUN has discovered, and the maximum
time to retain that information, before refreshing it through forced re-discovery.
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With these NAT schemes, the initial network address translation may not be used after a specified elapsed time. Internal mapping is
dropped. The gateway then assigns a different address mapping. This mechanism allows for coordinated refresh on the bindings for
mappings used by the STUN protocol. For further information, review STUN-related RFCs.
Selecting appropriate values for these two fields is influenced by a various environmental factors including device types deployed,
services employed and NAT configuration options enabled within the topology.
XMPP Connection
On this page, you can configure a connection between the gateway and an XMPP server.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > XMPP Connection. The following page appears.
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2. To add a connection, click Add. The following page appears.
3. In the XMPP Connection field, select whether to use TLS and then click Enable.
4. Modify the fields as needed, using the information provided in the table below.
Field Description
Username Enter the username for accessing the XMPP server.
Password Enter the password for accessing the XMPP server.
Domain (Optional) Enter the domain for this connection.
Resource (Optional) Enter a descriptive name for this connection.
XMPP Server Address Enter the IP address for the server.
XMPP Server Port Enter the port for the IP address entered above.
Internet Time
On this page, you can configure the gateway to synchronize its time with the Internet time servers. This feature is enabled by
default.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Internet Time. The following page appears.
2. Click Automatically synchronzie with Internet time servers. Additional fields appear.
3. Select the desired time servers.
4. Select the Time zone offset.
5. (Optional) Click Enable Daylight Savings Time.
6. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
7. To disable this feature, click the Automatically synchronize with Internet time servers check box to clear it and
then click Apply/Save to save your changes.
Access Control
In this section, you can manage user passwords and the services that are available for users.
The following user names are assigned specific rights:
l "admin" has unrestricted access
l "support" has general access rights plus additional rights to perform maintenance tasks and run diagnostics.
l "user" can view settings and statistics and update the firmware.
Passwords
On this page, you can modify the username and password of your users.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Access Control. The following page appears.
Access List
On this page, you can create list of IP addresses that are allowed to access local management services (defined in the Services
Control list). When Access Control mode is disabled, IP addresses for incoming packets are not validated.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Access Control > Access List. The following page appears.
2. To enable the listed IP addresses to access local management services, in the Access Control Mode field, click
Enable.
3. To add an access list:
a. Click Add. The following page appears.
b. Enter the IP address and mask of the station allowed to access local management services.
c. Click Apply/Save. You are returned to the Access List page.
4. To remove a connection, click the Remove checkbox to the right of the entry and then click the Remove button. If
you remove the only entry, Access Control Mode is set to Disable.
5. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
Services Control
On this page, you can enable or disable the different types of services that your gateway can access.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Access Control > Services Control. The following page appears.
2. Select or clear the enable checkbox next to each service and interface that you want to change.
3. (Optional) In the WAN Port Number field, modify the port numbers for the services.
4. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
User Profile
On this page, you can enable or disable access to different features for each user profile defined for your gateway.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Access Control > User Profile. The following page appears.
2. Select or clear the enable checkbox next to each feature to configure access for the selected user profile.
3. Click Apply/Save to save and apply the settings.
Logout Timer
On this page, you can define the maximum time that a session can remain open before the gateway logs out.
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1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Access Control > Logout Timer. The following page appears.
2. In the Logout Timer Period field, type the number of minutes after which a session will be ended. Options are 0 - 60
minutes. The default is 15 minutes. To disable this feature, enter a zero (0) in the field.
Update Software
On this page, you can update the firmware of your gateway. Software updates for SmartRG product are available for download by
direct customers of SmartRG via the SmartRG Customer Portal.
Note: Make sure that you have downloaded the correct software file as instructed by your ISP.
1. In the left navigation bar, click Management > Update Software. The following screen appears.
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3. Click Update Software.
Note: When software update is in progress, do not shut down the gateway. After the software update completes, the
gateway automatically reboots.
Reboot
On this page, you can reboot your gateway without needing physical access to the unit.
1. In the left navigation, click Management > Reboot. The following page appears.
2. Click Reboot. The gateway reboots and, after a few minutes, the Login dialog box appears.
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Logout
1. To log out of your gateway, click Logout in the left navigation menu. The Logout page appears.
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Appendix: FCC Statements
FCC Interference Statement
This device complies with Part 15 of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Rules. Operation is subject to the following two
conditions:
l This device may not cause harmful interference.
l This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC
Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This
equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the
instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not
occur in a particular installation.
If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the
equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
l Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
l Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
l Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
l Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.
Cet appareil numrique de la classe B est conforme à la norme NMB-003 du Canada.
l This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment.
l This equipment should be installed an operated with a minimum distance of 20cm between the radiator and your body.
l This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful
interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
Caution! Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the
equipment.
FCC - PART 68
This equipment complies with Part 68 of the FCC rules and the requirements adopted by the ACTA. On the bottom case of this equipment is a label
that contains, among other information, a product identifier in the format US: VW7DL01BSR616A.
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This equipment uses the following USOC jacks: RJ-11/RJ45/USB/Power Jacks.
A plug and jack used to connect this equipment to the premises wiring and telephone network must comply with the applicable FCC Part 68 rules and
requirements adopted by the ACTA. A compliant telephone cord and modular plug is provided with this product. It is designed to be connected to a
compatible modular jack that is also compliant. See installation instructions for details.
If this equipment causes harm to the telephone network, the telephone company will notify you in advance that temporary discontinuance of service
may be required. But if advance notice isn't practical, the telephone company will notify the customer as soon as possible. Also, you will be advised
of your right to file a complaint with the FCC if you believe it is necessary.
The telephone company may make changes in its facilities, equipment, operations or procedures that could affect the operation of the equipment. If
this happens the telephone company will provide advance notice in order for you to make necessary modifications to maintain uninterrupted service.
If trouble is experienced with this equipment, for repair or warranty information, please contact SmartRG,Inc. If the equipment is causing harm to
the telephone network, the telephone company may request that you disconnect the equipment until the problem is resolved.
Connection to party line service is subject to state tariffs. Contact the state public utility commission, public service commission or corporation
commission for information.
If your home has specially wired alarm equipment connected to the telephone line, ensure the installation of this device does not disable your alarm
equipment. If you have questions about what will disable alarm equipment, consult your telephone company or a qualified installer.
IC CS-03 statement
This product meets the applicable Industry Canada technical specifications. / Le présent matériel est conforme aux specifications techniques
applicables d’Industrie Canada
The Ringer Equivalence Number (REN) is an indication of the maximum number of devices allowed to be connected to a telephone interface. The
termination of an interface may consist of any combination of devices subject only to the requirement that the sum of the RENs of all the devices not
exceed five. / L’indice d’équivalence de la sonnerie (IES) sert à indiquer le nombre maximal de terminaux qui peuvent être raccordés à une
interface téléphonique. La terminaison d’une interface peut consister en une combinaison quelconque de dispositifs, à la seule condition que la
somme d’indices d’équivalence de la sonnerie de tous les dispositifs n’excède pas cinq.
Canada Statement
This device complies with Industry Canada licence-exempt RSS standard(s). 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.
Le présent appareil est conforme aux CNR d'Industrie Canada applicables aux appareils radio exempts de licence. L'exploitation est autorisée aux
deux conditions suivantes : (1) l'appareil ne doit pas produire de brouillage, et (2) l'utilisateur de l'appareil doit accepter tout brouillage
radioélectrique subi, même si le brouillage est susceptible d'en compromettre le fonctionnement.
The device meets the exemption from the routine evaluation limits in section 2.5 of RSS 102 and compliance with RSS-102 RF exposure, users can
obtain Canadian information on RF exposure and compliance.
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Le dispositif rencontre l'exemption des limites courantes d'évaluation dans la section 2.5 de RSS 102 et la conformité à l'exposition de RSS-102 rf,
utilisateurs peut obtenir l'information canadienne sur l'exposition et la conformité de rf.
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. This equipment should be installed and
operated with a minimum distance of 20 centimeters between the radiator and your body.
Cet émetteur ne doit pas être Co-placé ou ne fonctionnant en même temps qu'aucune autre antenne ou émetteur. Cet équipement devrait être
installé et actionné avec une distance minimum de 20 centimètres entre le radiateur et votre corps.
This radio transmitter (identify the device by certification number, or model number if Category II) has been approved by Industry Canada to operate
with the antenna types listed below with the maximum permissible gain and required antenna impedance for each antenna type indicated. Antenna
types not included in this list, having a gain greater than the maximum gain indicated for that type, are strictly prohibited for use with this device.
Le présent émetteur radio (identifier le dispositif par son numéro de certification ou son numéro de modèle s'il fait partie du matériel de catégorie I)
a été approuvé par Industrie Canada pour fonctionner avec les types d'antenne énumérés ci-dessous et ayant un gain admissible maximal et
l'impédance requise pour chaque type d'antenne. Les types d'antenne non inclus dans cette liste, ou dont le gain est supérieur au gain maximal
indiqué, sont strictement interdits pour l'exploitation de l'émetteur.
5GHz
5150-5250 MHz band is restricted to indoor operations only.
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Revision History
Revision Date LAN ports
1.1 Apr 2018 Updated to match release 2.6.1.5.
1.0 Mar 2018 Updated to match release 2.6.1
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