User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. INSTALLATION
- 3. SWITCH MANAGEMENT
- 4. WEB CONFIGURATION
- 4.1 Main Web Page
- 4.2 System
- 4.2.1 System Information
- 4.2.2 IP Configuration
- 4.2.3 IP Status
- 4.2.4 Users Configuration
- 4.2.5 Privilege Levels
- 4.2.6 NTP Configuration
- 4.2.7 Time Configuration
- 4.2.8 UPnP
- 4.2.9 DHCP Relay
- 4.2.10 DHCP Relay Statistics
- 4.2.11 CPU Load
- 4.2.12 System Log
- 4.2.13 Detailed Log
- 4.2.14 Remote Syslog
- 4.2.15 SMTP Configuration
- 4.2.16 Digital Input/Output
- 4.2.17 Faulty Alarm
- 4.2.18 Web Firmware Upgrade
- 4.2.19 TFTP Firmware Upgrade
- 4.2.20 Save Startup Config
- 4.2.21 Configuration Download
- 4.2.22 Configuration Upload
- 4.2.23 Configuration Activate
- 4.2.24 Configuration Delete
- 4.2.25 Image Select
- 4.2.26 Factory Default
- 4.2.27 System Reboot
- 4.3 Simple Network Management Protocol
- 4.4 Port Management
- 4.5 Link Aggregation
- 4.6 VLAN
- 4.7 Spanning Tree Protocol
- 4.8 Multicast
- 4.8.1 IGMP Snooping
- 4.8.2 Profile Table
- 4.8.3 Address Entry
- 4.8.4 IGMP Snooping Configuration
- 4.8.5 IGMP Snooping VLAN Configuration
- 4.8.6 IGMP Group Port Group Filtering
- 4.8.7 IGMP Snooping Status
- 4.8.8 IGMP Group Information
- 4.8.9 IGMPv3 Information
- 4.8.10 MLD Snooping Configuration
- 4.8.11 MLD Snooping VLAN Configuration
- 4.8.12 MLD Snooping Port Group Filtering
- 4.8.13 MLD Snooping Status
- 4.8.14 MLD Group Information
- 4.8.15 MLDv2 Information
- 4.8.16 MVR (Multicaset VLAN Registration)
- 4.8.17 MVR Status
- 4.8.18 MVR Groups Information
- 4.8.19 MVR SFM Information
- 4.9 Quality of Service
- 4.9.1 Understand QOS
- 4.9.2 Port Policing
- 4.9.3 Port Shaping
- 4.9.4 Port Classification
- 4.9.5 Port Scheduler
- 4.9.6 Port Tag Remarking
- 4.9.7 Port DSCP
- 4.9.8 DSCP-Based QoS
- 4.9.9 DSCP Translation
- 4.9.10 DSCP Classification
- 4.9.11 QoS Control List
- 4.9.12 QoS Status
- 4.9.13 Storm Control Configuration
- 4.9.14 WRED
- 4.9.15 QoS Statistics
- 4.9.16 Voice VLAN Configuration
- 4.9.17 Voice VLAN OUI Table
- 4.10 Access Control Lists
- 4.11 Authentication
- 4.12 Security
- 4.12.1 Port Limit Control
- 4.12.2 Access Management
- 4.12.3 Access Management Statistics
- 4.12.4 HTTPs
- 4.12.5 SSH
- 4.12.6 Port Security Status
- 4.12.7 Port Security Detail
- 4.12.8 DHCP Snooping
- 4.12.9 DHCP Snooping Statistics
- 4.12.10 IP Source Guard Configuration
- 4.12.11 IP Source Guard Static Table
- 4.12.12 ARP Inspection
- 4.12.13 ARP Inspection Static Table
- 4.13 MAC Address Table
- 4.14 LLDP
- 4.15 Diagnostics
- 4.16 Loop Protection
- 4.17 RMON
- 4.18 PTP (MGSW-28240F Only)
- 4.19 Ring (For MGSD-10080F and MGSW-28240F)
- 5. SWITCH OPERATION
- 6. TROUBLESHOOTING
- APPENDIX A
- APPENDIX B: GLOSSARY
- EC Declaration of Conformity
User’s Manual of MGSW-MGSD Series
QoS class
Every incoming frame is classified to a QoS class, which is used throughout the device for providing queuing,
scheduling and congestion control guarantees to the frame according to what was configured for that specific QoS
class. There is a one to one mapping between QoS class, queue and priority. A QoS class of 0 (zero) has the lowest
priority.
R
RARP
RARP is an acronym for Reverse Address Resolution Protocol. It is a protocol that is used to obtain an IP address for a
given hardware address, such as an Ethernet address. RARP is the complement of ARP.
RADIUS
RADIUS is an acronym for Remote Authentication Dial In User Service. It is a networking protocol that provides
centralized access, authorization and accounting management for people or computers to connect and use a network
service.
Router Port
A router port is a port on the Ethernet switch that leads switch towards the Layer 3 multicast device.
RSTP
In 1998, the IEEE with document 802.1w introduced an evolution of STP: the Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol, which
provides for faster spanning tree convergence after a topology change. Standard IEEE 802.1D-2004 now incorporates
RSTP and obsoletes STP, while at the same time being backwards-compatible with STP.
S
SAMBA
Samba is a program running under UNIX-like operating systems that provides seamless integration between UNIX and
Microsoft Windows machines. Samba acts as file and print servers for Microsoft Windows, IBM OS/2, and other SMB
client machines. Samba uses the Server Message Block (SMB) protocol and Common Internet File System (CIFS),
which is the underlying protocol used in Microsoft Windows networking.
Samba can be installed on a variety of operating system platforms, including Linux, most common Unix platforms,
OpenVMS, and IBM OS/2.
Samba can also register itself with the master browser on the network so that it would appear in the listing of hosts in
Microsoft Windows "Neighborhood Network".
SHA
SHA is an acronym for Secure Hash Algorithm. It designed by the National Security Agency (NSA) and published by
the NIST as a U.S. Federal Information Processing Standard. Hash algorithms compute a fixed-length digital
384