User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Package Contents
- Hardware Description
- Installing the Switch
- Installation Steps
- DIN-Rail Mounting
- Wall Mount Plate Mounting
- Wiring the Power Inputs
- Wiring the Fault Alarm Contact
- Wiring the Digital Inputs / Outputs (GE-DSH-73)
- Installing the SFP transceiver
- Factory Redundant Ring Application
- Transportation Networking and Public Wireless Service
- X-Ring Application
- Coupling Ring Application
- Dual Homing Application
- Connecting to the Console Port
- Login in the Console Interface
- CLI Management
- About Web-based Management
- Requirements
- Logging on the Switch
- System
- Port Management
- Protocol
- Security
- Digital Input/Output (GE-DSH-73)
- Power Over Ethernet (GE-DSH-82-PoE)
- Factory Default
- Save Configuration
- System Reboot
- System Commands Set
- Port Commands Set
- Trunk Commands Set
- VLAN Commands Set
- Spanning Tree Commands Set
- QOS Commands Set
- IGMP Commands Set
- MAC / Filter Table Commands Set
- SNMP Commands Set
- Port Mirroring Commands Set
- 802.1x Commands Set
- TFTP Commands Set
- SystemLog, SMTP and Event Commands Set
- SNTP Commands Set
- X-ring Commands Set
- PoE Command Set
- Address Table
- What is PoE?
- Switch's RJ-45 Pin Assignments
- 10/100Mbps, 10/100Base-TX
Chapter 5: Web-Based Management
80 GE-DSH-73/DSH-82 and DSH-82-PoE User Manual
VLAN Configuration
A Virtual LAN (VLAN) is a logical network grouping that limits the broadcast domain. It
allows you to isolate network traffic so only members of the VLAN receive traffic from
the same VLAN members. Basically, creating a VLAN from a switch is logically
equivalent of reconnecting a group of network devices to another Layer 2 switch.
However, all the network devices are still plug into the same switch physically.
The Industrial Switch supports Port-based, 802.1Q (Tagged-based) and GVRP VLAN in
web management page. In the default configuration, VLAN support is "Disable".
Figure 5-30: VLAN Configuration interface
Port-based VLAN
A port-based VLAN basically consists of its members-ports, which means that the
VLAN is created by grouping the selected ports. This method provides the
convenience for users to configure a simple VLAN easily without complicated steps.
Packets can go among only members of the same VLAN group. Note all unselected
ports are treated as belonging to another single VLAN. If the port-based VLAN
enabled, the VLAN-tagging is ignored. The port-based VLAN function allows the user
to create separate VLANs to limit the unnecessary packet flooding; however, for the
purpose of sharing resource, a single port called a common port can belongs to
different VLANs, which all the member devices (ports) in different VLANs have the
permission to access the common port while they still cannot communicate with
each other in different VLANs.