User guide
102 Settings
From this window, you can view or adjust these settings, or perform the following actions:
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Router IP Address — This is the routing hardware’s IP address on the LAN.
●
Subnet Mask — This is the routing hardware’s internal LAN subnet mask.
●
Hostname — This is, in essence, a name you’re giving the device. (See “Host Name (Device Name)”
on page 93.)
●
Link SSID and Hostname — With this feature you only need to remember one name when selecting
the Wi-Fi network, accessing the browser interface, or accessing the microSD card. (See “Linking
the SSID and the Host Name” on page 88.)
●
SSID — This is the name of the Wi-Fi network. (See “SSID (Wi-Fi Network Name)” on page 87.)
●
MTU Mode — This specifies whether optimization is used.
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Auto — Optimization is not used.
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Optimized — Optimization is used; this may improve data transmission.
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DHCP Server — This field enables DHCP.
Note: The following settings are displayed only when DHCP is enabled.
● DHCP IP Address Range — This specifies the starting and ending address of the range of IP
addresses available for the device to dynamically (that is, not permanently) assign to computers
connected to it.
●
DHCP Lease Time — This is the amount of time, in minutes, a computer can use its assigned IP
address before it is required to renew the lease. After this time is up, the computer is automatically
assigned a new dynamic IP address.
Enter a number between 2 and 10080.
●
Max DHCP Clients — This is the number of DHCP addresses that can be assigned and active at one
time. It’s recommended you set this to a number greater than the number of Wi-Fi users.
●
DNS Mode — This specifies how the DNS servers (that the DHCP clients are to communicate with)
are obtained.
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Auto — The DNS server specified by Sprint is used. DNS Relay is enabled by default.
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Manual — The routing hardware assigns DHCP clients the DNS servers specified in the Manual
DNS Server #1
and #2 fields.
Use this option to access a DNS server that provides customized addressing or if you have a
local DNS serv
er on your network.
If
DNS Relay is disabled, the routing hardware rejects DNS requests targeting the internal
DNS proxy.
●
Manual DNS Server #1 and #2 — These are the static IP addresses to use for the DNS servers (if
DNS Mode is Manual); available only if DNS Mode is Manual.
●
DNS Relay — If enabled, and if DNS Mode (see above) is Manual, the routing hardware assigns
DHCP clients the DNS servers specified in the
Manual DNS Server #1 and #2 fields.
If
DNS Relay is set to Disable, the routing hardware rejects DNS requests targeting the internal
DNS proxy.