USER GUIDE -1 T3 PowerBroadband Motorola, Inc.
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Regulatory Statements 45225 45101 Model Number: Radio Frequency Interference Requirements- FCC Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in commercial environment.
To comply with EU RF exposure requirements, antennas that are mounted externally at remote locations or operating near users at stand-alone desktop of similar configurations must operate with a minimum separation distance of 20 cm from all persons.
IMPORTANT SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS T2-2500 and T3 Switch CAUTION: For installation only in a Restricted Access Location by trained service personnel. CAUTION: Equipment must be connected to an earthed mains socket-outlet. CAUTION: To reduce the risk of fire, use only No. 26 AWG or larger telecommunication line cord. CAUTION: The power supply cord plug serves as the main disconnect for the product. The socket-outlet shall be installed near the product and be readily accessible.
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) English: For EU Customers: All products at the end of their life must be returned to Motorola for recycling. For information on how to return product, please go to: www.motorola.com/recycling/weee. Bulgarish: За клиенти от ЕС: След края на полезния им живот всички продукти трябва да се връщат на Motorola за рециклиране. За информация относно връщането на продукти, моля отидете на адрес: www.motorola.com/recycling/weee.
Commands and Syntax 9 Command Hierarchy .................................................................................. 9 Administrative Commands.......................................................................... 9 System Description 12 T3 PowerBroadband Switch .......................................................................12 M2 Ethernet WallPlate...............................................................................12 MC-802 Wireless WallPlate ................................
VLAN Specification ...................................................................................37 VLAN terminology ....................................................................................37 VLAN commands......................................................................................38 Web UI configuration ................................................................................39 Quality of Service (QoS) 42 QoS commands and concepts ........................................
Commands and Syntax Commands and Syntax The Motorola T3 PowerBroadband system can be managed via a Command Line Interface, webUI, and SNMP. Commands that apply to remote WallPlates, such as Ethernet port configurations and wireless interface, are all entered on the T3 Switch. C o m m a n d H i er a rc h y The Command Line Interface (CLI) implements a hierarchical command structure.
Commands and Syntax Global Commands Commands that are available from any command context are called global commands. For example, the help command can be used whether you are at the root command context or down a few levels in the command hierarchy. Global commands can also be used from either the user or admin account. Note: The default prompt is “system>”. If you set the system name using the “system name” command, the prompt changes to the new system name.
Commands and Syntax where; “wlan” is a keyword and must be typed <1-25> is the port range for the radio connected to the DSL line <1-16> is the port range of the WLAN on the radio (interface-id) is a description and is not typed Proper command form: wifi wlan enable wlan25-1 Note that range commands can also be used. In the following example, WLANs 1, 2, 3 are enabled on all radios. wifi wlan enable wlan(1-25)-(1-3) This document refers to actual command syntax as little as possible.
System Description System Description The T3 PowerBroadband system is designed primarily for hospitality, but useful in any high density MDU (multiple dwelling unit) such as long term healthcare or centrally wired apartments. The system is comprised of two primary components; a 25-port Switch and a CPE device (the WallPlate). Advanced networking features such as 802.1Q VLANs and QoS can be managed throughout the system, from the 25-port switch to each port on the WallPlate.
System Description M2 Ethernet WallPlate: Physical • 5"(mm) x 3.5" (mm) x 1.25" (32mm) • Operating Temperature: 0 - 40 degrees Celsius, 5% to 90% NC • Operating Power: approximately 2W, line powered by the T3 Switch Interfaces • Uplink ports o One VDSL single wire pair port via RJ11 jack • Downlink ports o Two 10/100Mb autosensing, full duplex Ethernet port via RJ45 jack o One pass-through filtered phone port via RJ11 jack Layer-2 Networking Features • 802.1Q VLAN trunk ports • 802.
System Description Radio • 802.11b/g o Beacon frame control o Probe request response o Broadcast on/off per SDID o Listen mode client support o DSS/OFDM modulation via 2.4Ghz transmitter o Regulatory Domain: FCC Part 15c 15.247 and ETS 300 328 • Transmit power: 20dBm transmitter o Customer configurable: 1 – 14, max. In 1dBm increments o Max transmit power of 20dBm depends on regulatory country • Two integrated omni-directional antennas o 3.
Hardware H a rd w a re M o d el N u m b e rs a n d D es c ri p t i o n The T3 PowerBroadband Switch is compatible with both the Wireless and Ethernet WallPlates. Both can be mixed together on the same T3 PowerBroadband Switch. Model Number Part Number Description 45225 558975-001-00 T3 PowerBroadband Switch. 2 x 10/100/1000Mb uplink Ethernet ports and 25 x high speed DSL ports for connection to UTP wiring. Provides broadband data and Adaptive Line Power for remote wireless WallPlates.
Hardware T 3 P o w e r B r o ad b an d S w i t c h Front View ETHERNET PORTS: CONSOLE PORT: 2 x 10/100/1000 auto-sensing DB9 serial Rear View LINE RJ21: PHONE RJ21: AC POWER: Connect to PBX side of termination block Connect to HOUSE side of termination block 100-240VAC IEC320 socket Cross-Connect Connections T3 PowerBroadband Switch Mounting Options T3 ships with mounting ears designed for a standard EIA-19 equipment rack. The ears can be rotated 180 degrees. Motorola, Inc.
Hardware M C - 8 0 2 W i r e l e s s W al l P l at e Designed to be installed over existing RJ11 wall jack. Ships with Adapter plate for standard 70mm x 114mm RJ11 wall jack.
Hardware DC power connector (used during installation, not under normal operation) RJ11 filtered phone port Eth1 – 10/100 auto-sensing Ethernet Eth2 – 10/100 auto-sensing Ethernet RJ11 line-in port (not shown, accessible when bracket is removed) Motorola, Inc.
System Administration S y s t e m A d m i n i s t ra t i o n This User Guide covers the commands relevant to the T3 PowerBroadband Switch. For a complete set of commands and information, consult the T3 PowerBroadband Command Reference. M a n a g e m e n t A c ce s s T3 can be managed via serial console, telnet, HTTP webUI, or SNMP. Eth1 is enabled by default. Telnet and HTTP are accessible at the default IP address. Access Methods Default IP address 192.168.1.
System Administration file delete d. Delete a file from the file system file dir e. List the files in the system and display the remaining storage file exec f. Executes a file as a set of configuration commands. Note that “file” is a local file in the file system. The file must have previously been copied to the filesystem from the external server using the file copy command.
System Administration H T T P M en u s Monitor Menu Quick access to all Ethernet, DSL and Wireless interface status and statistics Color coded Port Monitor: Green - Ethernet Port or DSL Port is operating normally and within tolerance Gray - Ethernet Port is enabled, but disconnected. Yellow - Indicates an alert condition. Red – Indicates a warning or alert condition. When applied to the Line Status, Red indicates the line is enabled, but the WallPlate is disconnected.
System Administration U p g r a d i n g t h e F i r m w a re T3 Firmware T3 Switch stores one active and one alternate boot image. To view the current image, or to monitor the progress of an upgrade, use: show system image The system image can be upgraded using FTP or TFTP. Commands used are: Using FTP: Using TFTP: system image load ftp://username:password@ipaddress/path/t3-app.img system image load tftp://ipaddress/path/t3-app.
System Administration L i n e Q u al i t y T3 includes Forward Error Correction in the VDSL frames. Bit errors that are not corrected are counted and reported as a Line Quality measurement. Bit errors are averaged over 1 second of time. An SNMP trap will be sent to the SNMP trap recipient when the threshold is crossed. The line quality status will change in the webUI and the Command Line Interface.
System Administration Vi e w S y s t e m C o n f i g u r at i o n a n d S t at u s Configuration and Status can be viewed using the Show commands. To view the available show items, use the following command from the CLI: show ? Ex: View Current and alternate software versions on the system and the WallPlates: show system image show system inventory show remote image show remote inventory T3 OS displays the configuration from the CLI in three useful modes.
System Administration C o m m i t m od e T3 OS supports automatic and manual commit modes. When in automatic mode, every command will be executed immediately and saved to memory. The commands will be active if the system is rebooted or power cycled. In manual mode, commands are executed immediately, but are not saved to memory. The commands will be lost when rebooted if they are not committed.
Managing the Wireless WallPlates Managing the Wireless WallPlates The Wireless WallPlate is managed through two interfaces; one interface is via an embedded management channel within the VDSL frames. The other interface is through a layer 3 IP address. W al l P l a t e I n v e n t o r y a n d F i r m w a r e I m a g e Show remote inventory “show remote inventory” command uses the embedded channel to read hardware rev and basic information, including serial number and BSS MAC range.
Managing the Wireless WallPlates I P A d d r e ss e s Private IP address The T3 system requires an IP address for network management. This T3 management address is assigned using the following command: ip config ip-address mask gateway The Wireless WallPlates also require an IP address for management by the T3 system.
Managing the Wireless WallPlates Public IP address If you wish to use 802.1x authentication, or if you wish to use ping to monitor the Wireless WallPlates, you must set the DHCP pool as a public pool. Note the following steps are required: Disable the private IP gateway address: ip private disable Configure the public IP network: dhcp server disable dhcp server config network public start end dhcp server enable For example: ip private disable ip config ip-address 10.1.1.2 mask 255.255.255.
Managing the Wireless WallPlates Configuring a WLAN Four steps are required to enable a WLAN and start broadcasting: Step1: Create a profile to contain the SSID and per-SSID parameters wifi wlan profile add ex: wifi wlan profile add My_WLAN Step2: Bind the profile to a WLAN wifi wlan config -<1-16>> profile ex: wifi wlan config wlan(1-25)-1 profile My_WLAN Step3: Enable the WLAN wifi wlan enable -<1-16>> ex: wifi wlan enable wlan(1-25)-1 Step4: Enable the Radio interface
Managing the Wireless WallPlates P er - W L A N C o m m a n d s Use the following commands to configure per-WLAN parameters: Command wifi wlan profile add wifi wlan profile config Wifi wlan profile security What it does Create a new WLAN by assigning an SSID as a profile name Broadcast SSID: enable/disable Client Isolation: enable/disable Client inactivity timeout: 300-86400 (sec) DTIM Period: 1-255 None: Dynamic-WEP: (uses 802.
Managing the Wireless WallPlates A c c e ss C on tr ol L ists ( A C L s) Configure layer 3 ACLs based on an administrator defined IP addresses and pre-defined services. The predefined services are HTTP, FTP, Telnet, SNMP. Number of ACLs: Each ACL index: 20 IP address pre-defined service combination of IP address and service ACLs are processed from index 1 through index 20. If no matches are found, the access is granted. Place the most restrictive access rules on the lower index number.
RADIUS network authenticated login R A D I U S ne t w o r k a u t he n t i c a t e d l o g i n RADIUS server configurations apply to administrative access accounts and client 802.1X authentication. RADIUS access-requests are supported, but RADIUS accounting messages are not. Up to five RADIUS servers can be added. The default RADIUS port 1812 is used and is not configurable.
RADIUS network authenticated login WallPlate Installation Basic Configuration The following commands will enable a basic network configuration. The T3 system will ignore the text following the “#” comment character. NOTE: Telnet is recommended due to the TCP flow control. Ranged commands can take several seconds to execute. If the console is used to paste a long string of commands, set a Line Delay of 500ms on your serial program so that the serial buffer does not overflow.
RADIUS network authenticated login Components required to purchase: Regulated 12V power supply. Use of the wrong power supply could result in damage to your WallPlate unit. Please order a small quantity of regulated 12V power supplies from Motorola to use during installation. If you do not have the correct regulated 12V power supply – STOP. Order a regulated 12V power supply from your Motorola PBN sales representative. Step 1 1. Loosen screws on wall plate approximately 6mm (1/4”) 2.
RADIUS network authenticated login Step 2 Connect 50mm (2”) cable (supplied) between bottom mounted RJ11 port on the MC-802 and the existing RJ11 jack. Step 3 Attach the MC-802 to the Mounting Adapter using the supplied 6/32 thread forming screws 6/32 thread forming screws 6/32 thread forming screws Step 4 1. Connect the local AC power adapter to the WallPlate 2.
RADIUS network authenticated login show bridge address The MAC address of the PC will appear along with the connected line. Enable line power From the CLI, enter this command: interface dsl power enable portx (enable only the port being installing) F i n i s h t h e i n s t al l at i o n Remove the 12V regulated power supply. If the correct port is enabled for line power, the WallPlate will reset and operate from in-line power. Motorola, Inc.
RADIUS network authenticated login 802.1Q VLANs Note: The system requires a reboot after the “vlan enable” command. If the system is not rebooted, the webUI will not display the VLAN configuration and the CLI will not execute VLAN commands. V L A N S p eci fi c a t i o n VLAN modes: IEEE 802.1Q standard compliant VLANs or Port-based VLANs on T3 Switch IEEE 802.1Q standard compliant VLANs on WallPlates Max number of VLANs: 128 VLANs can be created on the T3 Switch and assigned to any port.
RADIUS network authenticated login Tag-based VLAN Mode Tag based mode is fully 802.1Q VLAN compliant. You must explicitly configure the Egress and Ingress rules for each port and each VLAN. On the webUI, use the 802.1Q TAG-BASED VLAN menu to configure VLANs. The T3 Switch and WallPlate can operate independently. Be sure to configure all ports on the Switch and the WallPlates for proper operation. Port-based VLAN Mode Port based VLAN is also called Port Isolation or Port Privacy in other switches.
RADIUS network authenticated login show vlan membership Displays the memberships in Rows and Columns show vlan interface Displays the PVID, Membership, and Mode in Rows and Columns Web UI configuration VLANs can be configured from the CLI, web UI or SNMP. The CLI advantage is support for scripting the entire configuration. The CLI disadvantage is the large number of commands required to execute the complete configuration.
RADIUS network authenticated login Tag-based VLAN webUI Create/Delete VLANs Use this menu to create new VLANs and assign a name to the VLAN. Note that you cannot delete VLAN 1, however VLAN 1 can be removed from all interfaces. Set VLAN Egress Rules Set the VLAN membership rules. Click 3 times in the box to select (U)ntagged, (T)agged or not a member. In this example, Eth1 is a (T)agged member of VLAN 50.
RADIUS network authenticated login Port-based VLAN webUI, continued In the example at right, Note: • • • • • Eth1 and Eth2 cannot communicate together Eth1 can communicate with DSL ports 1 – 12 Eth2 can communicate with DSL ports 12 – 25 Port 12 can communicate with both Eth1 and Eth2 Ports 6 and 12 can also communicate together Note that DSL ports can only talk to the upstream Eth1 or Eth2. The only exception is DSL ports 6 and 12.
Quality of Service Quality of Service (QoS) Standards IEEE 802.1P, WRED, WFQ, IP TOS based on RFC1275 Number of queues 4 queues per port Packet classifiers Static classifier: All packets received on a port are assigned to a single queue Dynamic classifier: Packets are assigned to a queue based on their IP TOS or 802.1P WFQ queue mode Administrator selectable queue weight. Queue weights are calculated as a percentage of the cumulative weights.
Quality of Service Once a port has been set to use dynamic or static mode; specify whether T3 will use IP TOS or 802.1P precedence bit for dynamic packet classification. network qos interface queue mode Deprecated commands to set the queuing mechanism on a port. This command is superseded by network qos interface egress which has more configuration options.
Quality of Service Enable or disable WRED support. WRED adds further protection for data integrity in a contention based Ethernet network by randomly discarding TCP packets according to administrator settable parameters for thresholds. network qos wred config min-discard max-discard Set the rate at which Ethernet frames will be discarded once the rate exceeds the thresholds. Note that two discard rates are supported.
QoS Example QoS Example An easy way to demonstrate QoS is to use the traffic shaping queue scheduler. To further simplify the example, dynamic packet classifier is not used. Packet Classification: Static. All packets on Eth1 will be classified high. All packets on Eth2 will be classified low. Packet transmission: Shaping. All four queues will be configured with unique bitrates.
Line Status Li n e S t a t u s Operators can view extensive details about DSL line characteristics from the CLI, Port Monitor web page, or SNMP. To view line characteristics using the webUI, click on DSL Monitor, then click the + sign to expand the port you wish to view. Using the Port Monitor web page, the operator can quickly scan the status of all ports in the system. A color coded grid indicates the important status of each port e.g.
Line Status Line Current This value indicated the total power consumed by the port; including power loss in the wire, in the WallPlate, and efficiency. Maximum power for any single line: 9 watts Maximum line power for a complete system: 200 watts To determine the power for a single line use the following chart: Line Current Value 255 197 195 190 185 180 175 170 165 162 160 155 150 145 140 135 130 125 120 115 113 112 110 105 100 95 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 Motorola, Inc. Watts 2.58 4.
Appendix A Appendix A: Pin-out Assignments Fast Ethernet WallPlate ports 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Motorola, Inc.
Appendix B Appendix B: Hardware Specifications T 3 P o w e r B r o ad b an d Line code modulation 3-band, QAM modulation Automatic power backoff, independent line-rate adaptation Interfaces 2 x RJ45, 10/100/1000Mbps auto-sensing – 328ft (100m) 2 x RJ21, female telco connector 1 x DB9, female console port Operating Voltage 100 – 240VAC, 50/60Hz Power Consumption 300 Watts Dimensions 17.25” x 14.25” x 1.75” (43.8cm x 36.1cm x 4.4cm) Weight 11.5lbs (5.
Appendix B Telephone splitter Integrated analog POTS splitter Management In Band Management Telnet, Web UI, SNMP v2 standard and enterprise MIB Front Panel LEDs 1 x unit power/link status 10/100 link status, activity Mounting Options Mounting bracket provided M C - 8 0 2 W i r e l e s s W al l P l at e Interfaces 2 x RJ45, 10/100/Mbps auto-sensing – 328ft (100m) 1 x RJ11, line-in port 1 x RJ11, filtered phone port Input Voltage Local power supply, 12VDC (not shipped) Power Consumption 6 watts