User Manual
Table Of Contents
- S350 Series 24-Port (PoE+) and 48-Port Gigabit Ethernet Smart Switches with 2 or 4 SFP Ports
- Contents
- 1 Get Started
- Available Publications
- Switch Management and Discovery Overview
- Options to Change the Default IP Address of the Switch
- Discover or Change the Switch IP Address
- About the User Interfaces
- Access the Local Browser Interface
- Change the Language of the Local Browser Interface
- Use the Device View of the Local Browser Interface
- Interface Naming Conventions
- Configure Interface Settings
- Context-Sensitive Help and Access to the Support WebSite
- Access the User Manual Online
- Register Your Product
- 2 Configure System Information
- 3 Configure Switching
- Configure the Port Settings and Maximum Frame Size
- Configure Link Aggregation Groups
- Configure LAG Settings
- Configure LAG Membership
- Set the LACP System Priority
- Set the LACP Port Priority Settings
- Configure VLANs
- Configure VLAN Settings
- Configure VLAN Membership
- View the VLAN Status
- Configure Port PVID Settings
- Configure a MAC-Based VLAN
- Configure Protocol-Based VLAN Groups
- Configure Protocol-Based VLAN Group Membership
- Configure a Voice VLAN
- Configure Auto-VoIP
- Configure Spanning Tree Protocol
- Configure Multicast
- View, Search, or Clear the MFDB Table
- View the MFDB Statistics
- Configure the Auto-Video Multicast Settings
- About IGMP Snooping
- Configure IGMP Snooping
- Configure IGMP Snooping for Interfaces
- View, Search, or Clear the IGMP Snooping Table
- Configure IGMP Snooping for VLANs
- Modify IGMP Snooping Settings for a VLAN
- Disable IGMP Snooping on a VLAN
- Configure a Multicast Router Interface
- Configure a Multicast Router VLAN
- IGMP Snooping Querier Overview
- Configure an IGMP Snooping Querier
- Configure an IGMP Snooping Querier for VLANs
- Display IGMP Snooping Querier for VLAN Status
- View, Search, and Manage the MAC Address Table
- Configure Layer 2 Loop Protection
- 4 Configure Quality of Service
- 5 Manage Device Security
- Configure the Management Security Settings
- Configure Management Access
- Configure Port Authentication
- Set Up Traffic Control
- Configure Access Control Lists
- Use the ACL Wizard to Create a Simple ACL
- Configure a Basic MAC ACL
- Configure MAC ACL Rules
- Configure MAC Bindings
- View or Delete MAC ACL Bindings in the MAC Binding Table
- Configure a Basic or Extended IP ACL
- Configure Rules for a Basic IP ACL
- Configure Rules for an Extended IP ACL
- Configure IP ACL Interface Bindings
- View or Delete IP ACL Bindings in the IP ACL Binding Table
- 6 Monitor the System
- 7 Maintenance
- A Configuration Examples
- B Specifications and Default Settings
S350 Series 24-Port (PoE+) and 48-Port Gigabit Ethernet Smart Switches
Configure Switching User Manual131
the tag. In an untagged frame, the VLAN is the port VLAN ID specified for the port that
received this frame.
• Disable.
All frames are forwarded in accordance with the 802.1Q VLAN bridge
specification. The default is Disable.
13. In the Port Priority field, specify the default 802.1p priority assigned to untagged packets
arriving at the port.
You can enter a number from 0 to 7.
14. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields.
Table 31. Nonconfigurable fields on the PVID Configuration page
Field Description
Current Ingress Filtering Indicates whether ingress filtering is enabled for the interface.
Untagged VLANs The number of untagged VLANs for the interface.
Tagged VLANs The number of tagged VLANs for the interface.
Forbidden VLANs The number of forbidden VLANs for the interface.
Dynamic VLANs The number of dynamically added VLANs for the interface.
Configure a MAC-Based VLAN
The MAC-Based VLAN feature allows incoming untagged packets to be assigned to a VLAN
and thus classify traffic based on the source MAC address of the packet.
You define a MAC-to-VLAN mapping by configuring an entry in the MAC-to-VLAN table. An
entry is specified through a source MAC address and a VLAN ID. The MAC-to-VLAN
configurations are shared across all ports of the switch (that is, a system-wide table exists
with MAC address–to–VLAN ID mappings).
When untagged or priority-tagged packets arrive at the switch and entries exist in the
MAC-to-VLAN table, the source MAC address of the packet is looked up. If an entry is found,
the corresponding VLAN ID is assigned to the packet. If the packet is already priority-tagged,
it maintains this value. Otherwise, the priority is set to zero.
The assigned VLAN ID is verified
against the VLAN table. If the VLAN is valid, ingress processing on the packet continues.
Otherwise, the packet is dropped. This implies that you can configure a MAC address
mapping to a VLAN that you did not yet create on the switch.