Contents Contents i 3800HGV-B Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Installation Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Connect the Computer to the Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Choose a Computer and Connection Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Accessing the Management and Diagnostic Console . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 System Summary Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Broadband Link - Summary Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Broadband Link - Statistics Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
800HGV-B Overview The 3800HGV-B is a residential gateway used to connect to the Lightspeed network. It has many of the features of an advanced broadband router as well as some additional features. Following are some of the major features of the 2Wire gateway. Advanced modem technology. 2Wire’s modem technology features enhanced bridge tap, long loop, and disturber performance. Super-fast router.
Networking Technology Overview Wireless. The 2Wire gateway includes an integrated wireless access point, which allows users to roam wirelessly throughout the home or office. 2Wire's high-powered wireless technology virtually eliminates wireless “coldspots” in the home. The 2Wire gateway’s high power 400mW transmitter ensures that users benefit from increased wireless bandwidth throughout the coverage area. In addition, the 2Wire gateway employs a special triple antenna design.
Networking Technology Overview VDSL. VDSL (very high bit-rate DSL) operates over the copper wires in a phone line in a manner similar to ADSL, but at much faster speeds. VDSL can achieve speeds as high as 52 Mbps downstream and 16 Mbps upstream, as opposed to ADSL (up to 8 Mbps downstream and 800 Kbps upstream).
Installation Requirements Before you begin installation, review the 3800HGV-B package contents and ensure that you have available the items shown in Figure 21. Figure 2. 2Wire and Service Provider Installation Components Note: Vertical orientation is the preferred method for mounting the 3700HGV-B gateway. Please use the mounting stand included with the 3700HGV-B gateway. 1. Additional components may be provided by your service provider.
Connect the Computer to the Gateway Note: Any equipment or devices that must be installed at the NID are outside the scope of this document. Choose a Computer and Connection Type If the customer has ordered IPTV and High Speed Internet, the preferred location for installing the 3700HGV-B is by the first video set top box. In this case, the first PC may or may not be located in the same room. If the customer ordered High Speed Internet access only, then the 3700HGV-B should be installed near the first PC.
Connect the Computer to the Gateway Ethernet Connection 1. Connect the provided power adapter from the 3700HGV-B's POWER port to an electrical outlet. After the 3700HGV-B has completed its start up process, the POWER light on the front of the 3700HGV-B should be green. 2. Connect the yellow Ethernet cable provided with the 3700HGV-B from any available ETHENET port on the 3700HGV-B to the computer’s Ethernet port. 3.
Connect the Computer to the Gateway Wireless Connection Requires wireless-enabled notebook or a computer with an 802.11b/g wireless network adapter installed. Wireless adapters can be purchased from the service provider. 1. Connect the provided AC power adapter from the 3700HGV-B’s POWER port to an electrical outlet. After the 3700HGV-B has completed its start up process, the POWER light on the front of the 3700HGV-B should be green. 2.
Connect the Computer to the Gateway Non-2Wire Wireless Adapter Configuration Locating the Serial Number and Wireless Encryption Key A portion of the serial number of your 3700HGV-B is used as the network name (SSID). Beneath the serial number is a tendigit number which is used as the encryption key. These are located on the bottom of your 3700HGV-B (shown in vertical orientation). You will need this information to configure your wireless adapter. Configuring the Adapter 1.
Connect the Computer to the Gateway USB to PC Connection 1. Connect the provided AC power adapter from the 3700HGV-B’s POWER port to an electrical outlet. After the 3700HGV-B has completed its start up process, the POWER light on the front of the 3700HGV-B should be green. 2. Connect the provided blue USB cable from the 3700HGV-B’s USB-PC port to the USB port on the computer. 3.
Connect the Computer to the Gateway Install the 2Wire Gateway USB Driver - Macintosh Note: The 2Wire gateway supports USB for Macintosh OS 8.6, 9.2, 10.1.4, 10.1.5, 10.2.0, 10.2.1 to 10.2.6, 10.3.3 to 10.3.9, 10.4.0, and 10.4.1. Before making the USB connection to the gateway, you must install the 2Wire gateway USB driver on the computer. The following instructions are for USB installation on Macintosh computers running OS 10.2. 1.
Connect the Broadband Interface Now that you have completed the Power and LAN connections, it is time to connect to the broadband interface. There are two connection methods available: • VDSL over RJ-11 • VDSL over Coax If the 3700HGV-B is receiving the VSDL signal via RJ-11, that step was completed in the previous chapter. If the 3700HGV-B is receiving the VSDL signal via CoAX, refer to the following section.
Connect to IPTV Setting Up IPTV While the 3700HGV-B supports MoCA directly connected to it, it will not be used by SBC during the Controlled Launch. Instead MoCA or HomePNA will be terminated on an Ethernet over CoAX bridge (for example, a Scientific Atlanta device or a Motorola NIM 100), which connects to an Ethernet port on the 3700HGV-B. Note: The NIM100 is independently powered, and should be installed close to a power outlet. Refer to the manufacturer’s instructions that came with the NIM100. 1.
Gateway User Interface This chapter describes the 2Wire gateway user interface. Note: 2Wire recommends that you use Internet Explorer 5.5 (or higher) or Netscape 6 (or higher). Gateway (System) Pages Viewing Your System Summary The System Summary page provides general information and links to the gateway’s most commonly used features. The Network at a Glance panel provides a summary of the System, Broadband Link, and Home Network states of your gateway.
Gateway User Interface Setting a System Password Setting a system password protects your gateway settings from being modified or changed by someone who has not been given permission to do so. After setting a system password, you will be required to enter it whenever you attempt to access a gateway configuration page — for example, if you try to change the gateway’s broadband connection settings or upgrade the gateway software.
Gateway User Interface Viewing System Details The System Details page provides information about your gateway, any enhanced services you may have, and provides a link that you can use to restart your system. Broadband Link Pages Viewing Your Broadband Link Summary The Broadband Link Summary page provides general information about the current status of your broadband link connection and your system configuration.
Gateway User Interface • Connection Status. There are two ways you can check the current status of your gateway’s broadband connection: you can use the BROADBAND LINK indicator light on the front of your gateway, or, if your computer is connected to the network, you can view the user interface. Connection Speed • Connection Speed shows the incoming and outgoing data rates of your DSL connection, measured in kilobits per second (Kbps).
Gateway User Interface From Jeff M.: Need to show Ethernet broadband example page. The information displayed depends on the type of broadband service you have and your gateway model. Using Broadband Diagnostics Diagnostics displays an itemized list of your broadband connection’s current status. Technical support representatives use this information to help troubleshoot problems with your broadband connection. To update the broadband link status, click REFESH.
Gateway User Interface Viewing Statistics The View Broadband Link Statistics page shows statistics associated with the 2Wire gateway broadband link, including cumulative DSL statistics. Note: This page is not available for Ethernet broadband connections. When it is temporarily displayed in menu bars (immediately after changing from a DSL configuration), it will not contain any information.
Gateway User Interface Using Broadband Link Advanced Settings The Advanced Settings page allows you to manually configure your DSL and Internet connection settings. Typically, these settings are automatically provided by your service provider. You should adjust these settings ONLY if you are very familiar with DSL and networking technology. • Selecting Broadband Connection. The Broadband Type dropdown menu allows you to select whether to connect via DSL or Ethernet. • Modifying DSL Settings.
Gateway User Interface Home Network Pages Viewing Your Home Network Summary The Home Network Summary page displays information about the devices installed on your network. Local Devices The Local Devices panel shows you the name of the device, how it is connected, any special configuration information, and provides links to other system features that you can set up for the device.
Gateway User Interface • Access shared files. Accesses the shared files available from this computer. This feature only works with Microsoft Windows computers that have shared files and file sharing installed. If your computer is configured with a static IP address, this link will not appear. • Edit firewall settings. Accesses the system user interface page, which allows you to edit the firewall pass-through settings for the computer.
Gateway User Interface By default, the 2Wire gateway ships with WPA enabled and a preconfigured network name. The default WPA key is located on the bottom of the gateway, next to the serial number. The Current Settings panel shows the 2Wire gateway’s wireless access point settings: • Access Point. The designated name of the wireless access point. • Network Name. The name assigned to your wireless network.
Gateway User Interface Customizing Security Settings You should always enable encryption for wireless communication. When encryption is enabled, you must define an encryption key for the 2Wire gateway’s wireless access point and configure that same key on each wireless client that will use your 2Wire gateway wireless network. Note: If encryption is enabled, each wireless client must be configured with the encryption key defined on the system before it can operate on your wireless network.
Gateway User Interface Configuring Advanced Settings The Edit Advanced Home Network Settings page displays the current IP settings in use by your system for your home network, and allows you to configure your home network settings. You should adjust these settings ONLY if you are very familiar with computer networking technologies. The Current Settings panel shows the following information: • Router Address. The IP address used by your gateway on the private home network (the default is 192.168.1.254).
Gateway User Interface Editing Address Allocation Settings The Current Settings panel displays the computers currently on the local network, and their IP address. It also indicates whether a given computer is receiving its IP address via DHCP or has been manually entered into the computer (static). If users enable the Public Network feature, they can choose to have their broadband accessible (non-NAT) IP addresses assigned automatically via DHCP to computers on the local network. To do so: 1.
Gateway User Interface Firewall Pages The 2Wire gateway has a professional-grade firewall to help prevent unauthorized users from accessing your local network. The 2Wire gateway firewall includes the following features: • Stateful packet inspection. Blocks common Denial of Service attacks (such as SYN/FIN flooding or Smurf), and detects and logs TCP and UDP port scans. • Stateless packet inspection.
Gateway User Interface The Firewall Settings panel displays the Current Settings for your firewall. • Default. Unsolicited inbound traffic is not allowed to pass through the firewall. • Custom. Applications are associated with computers on your network. An access list shows the computers (Devices) on your network and the names of the Allowed Applications for each computer. When you allow application traffic, external users on the Internet can have limited access to your home network.
Gateway User Interface Configuring Firewall Settings The Edit Firewall Settings page allows you to open select ports, or “pinholes” in the firewall. You can allow individual applications, or use DMZplus mode. When in DMZplus mode, the designated computer: • Shares your gateway’s IP address (Router Address). • Appears as if it is directly connected to the Internet. • Has all of the unassigned TCP and UDP ports opened and pointed to it. • Can receive unsolicited network traffic from the Internet.
Gateway User Interface Configuring Advanced Firewall Settings The Edit Advanced Firewall Settings page allows you to configure advanced features on your firewall. Enabling Advanced Security The 2Wire gateway firewall already provides a high level of security. You can configure the firewall to provide advanced security features, including stealth mode, strict UDP, or block pings. • Stealth Mode.
Gateway User Interface • Strict UDP Session Control. Enabling this feature provides increased security by preventing the 2Wire gateway from accepting packets sent from an unknown source over an existing connection. The ability to send traffic based on destination only is required by some applications. Enabling this feature may not allow some on-line applications to work properly. Allowing Inbound and Outbound Traffic The Inbound and Outbound Control pane displays some common protocol types.
Gateway User Interface • Packet Flood (SYN/UDP/ICMP/Other). When enabled, the firewall will check for SYN, UDP, ICMP, and other types of packet floods on the local and Internet facing interfaces and stop the flood. • Invalid TCP Flag Attacks (NULL/XMAS/Other). When enabled, the firewall will scan inbound and outbound packets for invalid TCP Flag settings, and drop the packet to prevent SYN/FIN, NULL, and XMAS attacks. • Invalid ICMP Detection.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Accessing the Management and Diagnostic Console The Management and Diagnostic Console (MDC) provides information about the status of the 2Wire gateway, its broadband network connections, attached home networking devices, system and security information, and a running log of any error conditions. To access the MDC locally, in the browser address bar enter http://gateway.2wire.net/management.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Depending on the service provider and the components installed, the System Summary page may include the following information: Item Description System Model 2Wire gateway model number (for example, 3700HGV-B). Serial number 2Wire gateway serial number. MAC Address 2Wire gateway MAC address. Hardware Version 2Wire gateway hardware version. Hardware Options The type of peripheral device installed. DSL Modem Type VDSL.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Item Description Features Broadband Link - Summary Page The Broadband Link - Summary page allows you to view 2Wire gateway broadband connectivity-related settings, and reset the Broadband Link and IP Connection. Note: The information displayed varies depending on whether the broadband connection is via DSL or Ethernet.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Broadband Link - Statistics Page The Broadband Link - Statistics page shows statistics associated with the 2Wire gateway broadband link.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Broadband Link - Detailed Statistics Page The Broadband Link – Detailed DSL Statistics page shows a set of cumulative DSL statistics associated with the 2Wire gateway.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Broadband Link - Configuration Page The Broadband Link – Configuration page allows you to modify specific broadband connection settings. For details on broadband link configuration settings, refer to “Using Broadband Link Advanced Settings” on page 19.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Status Page The Local Network – Status page shows the status of the local network. The Local Network – Status page includes the following information: Item Description IP Gateway The IP address allocated to the 2Wire gateway. IP Network The IP address used by the network. Subnet Mask The subnet mask allocated to the 2Wire gateway.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Item Description Network Name The default setting is the word “2WIRE,” followed by the last three digits of the 2Wire gateway serial number. Authentication The authentication method used: Open, Shared, or WPAPSK (Wi-Fi Protected Access pre-shared key). Encryption The encryption method used: WEP or TKIP. Channel The frequency channel in use. The default channel is 6.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Statistics Page Note: The information displayed is dependent on gateway model features. The Local Network – Statistics page shows information about the interfaces on the local network.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Device List Page The Local Network - Device List page displays information about each device in the local network.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Wireless Settings Page The Wireless Settings page allows you to view or modify the gateway’s wireless settings. For details on configuring wireless settings, refer to page 23.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Configuration Page The Local Network - Configuration page allows you to change the gateway’s default local network settings. You must click the Submit button for changes to take effect. For details on configuring advanced network settings, refer to page 24.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Address Allocation Page The Local Network - Address Allocation page shows the name and IP address of each device on the gateway’s local network, and allows you to create DHCP mappings for each device. For details on network address allocation, refer to “Editing Address Allocation Settings” on page 25.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - Configure the MoCA Network Page The Configure the MoCA Network page allows you to change the channel upon which the MoCA signal is sent or received, enable or disable network privacy, and set the password for network privacy. These settings are only used when the gateway is connected via MoCA. When MoCA is used through external devices, these settings are not applicable.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Local Network - MoCA Statistics Page The MoCA Statistics page shows connection rates to other MoCA devices. • If the 3700HGV-B is the coordinator, the link rate to the slaves. • If the 3700HGV-B is not the coordinator, the link rate to the coordinator.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Firewall - Settings Page The Firewall - Settings page allows you to configure the firewall to pass through specific application data to a selected computer. For details on configuring the firewall, refer to page 28.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Firewall - Detailed Information Page The Firewall - Detailed Information page shows detailed information about the gateway’s firewall.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Firewall - Advanced Settings Page The Firewall - Advanced Settings page allows you to configure the gateway’s firewall. For details on configuring advanced firewall settings, refer to page 29.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Troubleshooting - DSL Diagnostics Page The Troubleshooting - DSL Diagnostics page displays data associated with the 3700HGV-B gateway’s VDSL link. Note: Most of the values displayed on this page are calculated once at the start of the connection. Values that are dynamically updated during the connection are marked with an asterisk (*).
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Item Description Value Comment Final Rx Gain Indicates the current receive gain setting (in dB). Dependent on DSL line length. Ok or Suspicious - possible saturation. Delay of latency path The delay, in milliseconds, imposed by the modem on the interleaved frames. Reviewing Training History This pane provides a record of the last 20 connection attempts. The current connection or connection attempt is displayed in the last row.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Item Description Max Maximum rate achievable at the time of the initial connection based on the quality of the line (specifically, the uncapped rate). Mgn Noise margin (in dB) at the start of the connection. Attn Measured attenuation (dB) of the line. Pwr Transmit power (dB). *CRCs Total uncorrected errors for this connection. *FECs Total corrected errors for this connection. Mode The DSL mode used.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Troubleshooting - Event Log Page The Troubleshooting – Event Log page displays events for the broadband and local network. Log information is stored in a fixed-size buffer. When the buffer is full, the oldest items are purged from the log. You can also clear the log contents by clicking the Clear Log button.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Users can view specific information by selecting which log to view from the pull-down menu and then clicking the Filter button. Following are descriptions of the logs. • Access. Shows the current access log, which registers all significant Content Screening and Internet Access Control events. • All. Shows all logs that register a significant event (access, firewall, fw alert, system, and wra). • Firewall.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Troubleshooting - Network Tests Page The Troubleshooting – Network Tests page provides the Traceroute and Ping tools, which help diagnose problems with the 2Wire gateway or 2Wire gateway connections. The Ping test allows you to ensure that the 2Wire gateway can send data packets to (ping) a remote host or a local LAN device (such as a PC).
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Troubleshooting - Upgrade History Page The Upgrade History page shows a log of all system software upgrades, and lists the upgrades in the order in which they occurred.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Troubleshooting Resets Page The Troubleshooting – Resets page allows you to reset various components associated with the 2Wire gateway network.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - Syslog Settings Page The Advanced - Syslog Settings page allows users to maintain a history of events greater than the capacity of the 2Wire gateway by enabling a syslog server. Use of this feature requires a computer running a syslog daemon.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - Provisioning Info Page The Advanced – Provisioning Info page displays the parameters with which the 2Wire gateway was provisioned.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - Configure Time Services Page The Advanced – Configure Time Services page allows you to view and change system time and date settings. As part of the 2Wire gateway setup process, users specify the time zone in which they are located so that the time and date are automatically displayed in the 2Wire gateway user interface.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - Configure Services Page The Advanced – Configure Services page allows users to change the timeout settings for NAT, enable broadband status notification, enable the SIP ALG, and change the upstream maximum transmission rate.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - DNS Resolve Page The Advanced - DNS Resolve page allows users to name network devices (such as printers or web servers) so that they can be easily accessed by other users on the network.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - Link Manager States Page The Advanced – Link Manager States page is a tree representation of the 2Wire gateway interface stack, and shows the internal state of the 2Wire gateway. The Link Manager States page is used to gather dynamic information on internal networking modules, and is based on the runtime configuration of the 2Wire gateway. The information cannot be used to configure the 2Wire gateway.
Access the Management and Diagnostic Console Advanced - Detailed Log Page The Advanced – Detailed Log page is a debug log facility modeled after syslog, and provides advanced diagnostic capabilities.
Upgrade the Software Gateway field upgrades are typically performed via CMS, which is the gateway remote management system. The following procedure describes how to perform a local upgrade; however, because the gateway’s configuration information is not retained when performing a local upgrade, upgrading via CMS is the preferred method. Perform the local upgrade only if you cannot access the broadband link to upgrade via CMS, or the target release is not published on CMS.
Upgrade the Software 4. After the gateway reboots, the Conexant firmware is upgraded.
Configuring Multiple Static IP Addresses This chapter describes how to configure the 3700HGV-B for use with multiple service provider-assigned (static) broadband IP addresses on the SBC Lightspeed network. To use multiple broadband addresses with the 3700HGV-B, you must have subscribed to the appropriate service from your Internet Service Provider. In addition, you need the IP address and networking information that has been identified for the subscribed service.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses Step 1: Enable Public Network Mode To enable Public Network mode: 1. Access the Management and Diagnostic Console (MDC) by entering http://gateway.2wire.net/management in your browser’s address bar. 2. In the left-hand navigation menu, click the Local Network - Configure link. The Local Network - Configuration page opens. 3. In the Public Network pane, click the Create a route from the Internet to the public network specified below checkbox.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses If you did not receive a subnet mask from your ISP, but were provided with a number of addresses has been, you can look up the associated subnet mask in the table below. Because this information may have been identified in a number of different ways, it has been presented here in a number of different ways.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses For devices using the Public Network addresses, simply configure the device to use the IP address (subnet mask and default gateway) as assigned by the ISP. The gateway will automatically detect the usage of a broadband IP address on the LAN network and correctly route the return traffic to the appropriate LAN device.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses Sample Configuration In the sample network below, the customer has subscribed to service with an 8 IP address subnet (i.e., 5 usable broadband IP addresses). The customer wants to host dedicated VPN and web servers in addition to having PCs with private IP addresses. The subnet assigned to the customer is 208.35.230.192/29. The sample network is shown in Figure *. Figure *.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses First, configure the gateway to support “Public Network” static IP addressing using the service provider assigned IP addresses of 208.35.206.198 for the gateway and a subnet mask of 255.255.255.248 as shown in Figure xxx. Click SAVE to ensure the changes are saved. Figure xx Second, assign static IP addresses to the Network Servers from the available. This can be done by hard coding these on the network interface for these servers or via the gateway using DHCP.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses Edit the addresses assigned to each device as shown below. Assign an available static IP address to each server, selecting the “DHCP Fixed” option from the list box next to each server name. For this example, select the following options: Device IP Address VPNSRV DHCP Fixed 208.35.230.193 WEBSRV DHCP Fixed 208.35.230.194 Click SAVE after making your selections in order to ensure the addresses are properly assigned.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses In the case of the Web Server, the “hosted application” feature of the 3700HGV-B will be used. This feature provides a quick and easy way to allow specific types of unsolicited traffic through the 3700HGV-B firewall. For the web server, this includes traffic on TCP port 80 (http). Select the computer to which you would like to have all data sent. In this example, the computer selected is VPNSRV. Select Allow all applications and click DONE.
Configuring Mulitple Static IP Addresses To allow all traffic for the web server, configure the gateway to allow the specific type of the associated inbound ports to flow to the server. In this example, the computer WEBSRV is selected as the destination for the web server traffic. Select the Allow individual application(s) option. Select the appropriate application from the application list, click the ADD buttton, and then click the DONE button. In this example, the application type is “Web Server.
LEDs LED overview The 2Wire Gateway has numerous indicator lights that can be used to diagnose installation and connection problems. The following table describes how to interpret the indicator lights. Power LED Solid green The gateway is powered on. Off The gateway is not receiving power. Flashing red Power-On Self-Test (POST) is in progress. Solid red POST failure (not bootable), or a gateway malfunction occurred.
LEDs Service LED Solid green IP connected (The residential gateway has a WAN IP address from IPCP or DHCP and the broadband connection is up, or a static IP address is configured, PPP negotiation has successfully completed - if used and the broadband connection is up). Off The gateway is not receiving power. The gateway is in bridged mode. Broadband connection is not established. Flashing green Attempting to connect via PPP. Attempting to establish IEEE 802.1X authentication.
Glossary ATA (Analog Telephone Adapter). IP device (often Ethernet) with one or more ports for connecting analog telephones. Balun. A circuit that allows signals to flow smoothly between Twisted Pair and Coax (term derived from BALanced / UNbalanced transmission medium). Coax Splitter. Used to divide RF signals over Coax allowing more devices to be connected. Diplexer.
Regulatory Information Declaration of Conformity Trade Name: 2Wire Responsible Party: 2Wire, Inc. Address: 1704 Automation Parkway San Jose, CA 95131 Phone: 408-856-1600 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.
Regulatory Information If the terminal 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 is not 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.