MAX208M2W Series WiMAX Indoor VoIP Wi-Fi IAD Default Login Details IP Address: http://192.168.1.1 Admins User Name and Password: admin / 1234 Guests User Name and Password: guest / guest Software Version 2.00 Edition 1, 1/2011 www.zyxel.com www.zyxel.
About This User's Guide About This User's Guide Intended Audience This manual is intended for people who want to configure the ZyXEL MAX208M2W Series using the ZyXEL Web Configurator. You should have at least a basic knowledge of TCP/IP networking concepts and topology. Related Documentation Quick Start Guide The Quick Start Guide is designed to help you get up and running right away. It contains information on setting up your network and configuring for Internet access.
About This User's Guide Download Library Search for the latest product updates and documentation from this link. Read the Tech Doc Overview to find out how to efficiently use the documentation in order to better understand how to use your product. Knowledge Base If you have a specific question about your product, the answer may be here. This is a collection of answers to previously asked questions about ZyXEL products. Forum This contains discussions on ZyXEL products.
Document Conventions Document Conventions Warnings and Notes These are how warnings and notes are shown in this Users Guide. Warnings tell you about things that could harm you or your MAX208M2W Series. Note: Notes tell you other important information (for example, other things you may need to configure or helpful tips) or recommendations.
Document Conventions Icons Used in Figures Figures in this Users Guide may use the following generic icons. The MAX208M2W Series icon is not an exact representation of your product.
Safety Warnings Safety Warnings For your safety, be sure to read and follow all warning notices and instructions. Do NOT use this product near water, for example, in a wet basement or near a swimming pool. Do NOT expose your device to dampness, dust or corrosive liquids. Do NOT store things on the device. Do NOT install, use, or service this device during a thunderstorm. There is a remote risk of electric shock from lightning. Connect ONLY suitable accessories to the device.
Safety Warnings Make sure that the cable system is grounded so as to provide some protection against voltage surges. Your product is marked with this symbol, which is known as the WEEE mark. WEEE stands for Waste Electronics and Electrical Equipment. It means that used electrical and electronic products should not be mixed with general waste. Used electrical and electronic equipment should be treated separately.
Contents Overview Contents Overview Users Guide ........................................................................................................................... 17 Getting Started ........................................................................................................................... 19 Introducing the Web Configurator .............................................................................................. 25 Setup Wizard ................................................
Contents Overview 10 MAX208M2W Series Users Guide
Table of Contents Table of Contents About This User's Guide .......................................................................................................... 3 Document Conventions............................................................................................................ 5 Safety Warnings........................................................................................................................ 7 Contents Overview .......................................................
Table of Contents 3.1.6 WLAN Settings ........................................................................................................... 39 3.1.7 Setup Complete ......................................................................................................... 41 Chapter 4 Tutorials ................................................................................................................................... 43 4.1 Overview ................................................................
Table of Contents Chapter 7 Network Setting....................................................................................................................... 89 7.1 Overview .............................................................................................................................. 89 7.1.1 What You Need to Know ............................................................................................ 89 7.2 WAN ......................................................................
Table of Contents 9.1.3 Before you Begin ...................................................................................................... 135 9.2 Media ................................................................................................................................. 135 9.2.1 QoS .......................................................................................................................... 136 9.2.2 QoS Settings ................................................................
Table of Contents 12.8 OMA-DM .......................................................................................................................... 174 12.9 Date ................................................................................................................................. 176 12.10 Time Zone ...................................................................................................................... 177 12.11 Upgrade File .....................................................
Table of Contents Index.......................................................................................................................................
P ART I Users Guide 17
CHAPTER 1 Getting Started 1.1 About Your MAX208M2W Series The MAX208M2W Series includes MAX208M2W and MAX218M2W. The MAX208M2W Series has a built-in switch and two phone ports. It allows you to access the Internet by connecting to a WiMAX wireless network. You can use a traditional analog telephone to make Internet calls using the MAX208M2W Seriess Voice over IP (VoIP) communication capabilities.
Chapter 1 Getting Started Use content filtering to block access to web sites with URLs containing keywords that you specify. You can define time periods and days during which content filtering is enabled and include or exclude particular computers on your network from content filtering. For example, you could block access to certain web sites for the kids. 1.1.
Chapter 1 Getting Started 1.2 MAX208M2W Series Hardware Follow the instructions in the Quick Start Guide to make hardware connections. 1.2.1 LEDs The following figure shows the LEDs (lights) on the MAX208M2W Series. Figure 4 The MAX208M2W Seriess LEDs POWER LED WIMAX LINK SIGNAL STRENGTH INDICATORS VOICE LEDS 1&2 WLAN LED The following table describes your MAX208M2W Seriess LEDs (from top to bottom).
Chapter 1 Getting Started Table 2 The MAX208M2W Series LEDs behavior LED STATE DESCRIPTION WiMAX Link Off The MAX208M2W Series is not connected to a wireless (WiMAX) network. Green The MAX208M2W Series is successfully connected to a wireless (WiMAX) network. Green (Blinking Slowly) The MAX208M2W Series is searching for a wireless (WiMAX) network. Green (Blinking Quickly) The MAX208M2W Series has found a wireless (WiMAX) network and is connecting.
Chapter 1 Getting Started Back up the configuration (and make sure you know how to restore it). Restoring an earlier working configuration may be useful if the MAX208M2W Series becomes unstable or even crashes. If you forget your password, you will have to reset the MAX208M2W Series to its factory default settings. If you backed up an earlier configuration file, you would not have to totally reconfigure the MAX208M2W Series. You could simply restore your last configuration.
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CHAPTER 2 Introducing the Web Configurator 2.1 Overview The Web Configurator is an HTML-based management interface that allows easy device set up and management via any web browser that supports: HTML 4.0, CSS 2.0, and JavaScript 1.5, and higher. The recommended screen resolution for using the web configurator is 1024 by 768 pixels and 16-bit color, or higher. In order to use the Web Configurator you need to allow: Web browser pop-up windows from your device.
Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator 4 A login screen displays. Enter the default Username (admin) and Password (1234), then click Login. Figure 5 Login screen Note: For security reasons, the MAX208M2W Series automatically logs you out if you do not use the Web Configurator for five minutes. If this happens, log in again. 2.1.2 The Reset Button If you forget your password or cannot access the Web Configurator, you will need to use the Reset button to reload the factory-default configuration file.
Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator 2.1.3 Saving and Canceling Changes All screens to which you can make configuration changes must be saved before those changes can go into effect. If you make a mistake while configuring the MAX208M2W Series, you can cancel those changes and start over. Figure 6 Saving and Canceling Changes This screen contains the following fields: Table 3 Saving and Canceling Changes LABEL DESCRIPTION Save Click this to save your changes.
Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator Table 4 Saving and Canceling Changes (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Previous Page Click this to go to the previous page in the table. Page Indicator / Jump to Page This indicates which page is currently displayed in the table. Use the menu to jump to another page. You can only jump to other pages if those pages exist. Next Page Click this to go to the previous page in the table. Last Page Click this to go to the last page in the table.
Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator Figure 8 Main Screen The following table describes the icons in this screen. Table 5 Main > Icons ICON DESCRIPTION System Status Click this to open the Main screen, which shows your MAX208M2W Series status and other information. WiMAX Click this to open the WiMAX menu, which gives you options for configuring your WiMAX settings. Network Setting Click this to open the Network menu, which gives you options for configuring your network settings.
Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator Table 5 Main > Icons (continued) ICON DESCRIPTION Maintenance Click this to open the Maintenance menu, which gives you options for maintaining your MAX208M2W Series and performing basic network connectivity tests. Language Use this menu to select the Web Configurators language. Setup Wizard Click this to open the Setup Wizard, where you can configure the most essential settings for your MAX208M2W Series to work.
CHAPTER 3 Setup Wizard 3.1 Overview This chapter provides information on the ZyXEL Setup Wizard. The wizard guides you through several steps for onfiguring your network settings. 3.1.1 Welcome to the Setup Wizard This screen provides a quick summary of the configuration tasks the wizard helps you to perform. They are: 1 Set up your Local Area Network (LAN) options, which determine how the devices in your home or office connect to the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard 5 Set up your MAX208M2W Seriess WLAN so that other devices, such as a laptop or a smartphone, can connect wirelessly to the nternet using the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard 3.1.2 LAN Settings The LAN Settings screen allows you to configure your local network options. Figure 10 Setup Wizard > LAN Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 6 Setup Wizard > LAN Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION LAN TCP/IP IP Address Enter the IP address of the MAX208M2W Series on the LAN. Note: This field is the IP address you use to access the MAX208M2W Series on the LAN.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard Table 6 Setup Wizard > LAN Settings (continued) LABEL Lease Time DESCRIPTION Enter the duration in minutes before the device requests a new IP address from the DHCP server. DNS Server assigned by DHCP Server First DNS Server Specify the first IP address of three DNS servers that the network can use. The MAX208M2W Series provides these IP addresses to DHCP clients. Second DNS Server Specify the second IP address of three DNS servers that the network can use.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 7 Setup Wizard > WiMAX Frequency Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Setting Type Select the WiMAX frequency setting type from the list. Step By Range - Select this to set up the frequency based on a range of MHz. By List - Select this to set up the frequency on an individual MHz basis. You can add multiple MHz values to the list. Enter the increments in MHz by which to increase the frequency range.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard 3.1.4 WiMAX Authentication Settings The WiMAX Authentication Settings screen allows you to configure how your MAX208M2W Series logs into the service providers network. Note: These settings should be provided by your ISP. Note: The EAP supplicant settings on this screen vary depending on the authentication mode your select.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 8 Setup Wizard > WiMAX Authentication Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Authentication Authenticati on Mode Select a WiMAX authentication mode for authentication network sessions with the ISP. Options are: No authentication User authentication Device authentication User and Device authentication EAP Supplication EAP Mode Select an EAP autentication mode. See Table 15 on page 79 if you need more inforamtion.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard 3.1.5 VoIP Settings The VoIP Settings screen allows you to configure how your MAX208M2W Series connects to up to two VoIP service providers network and makes calls over the Internet. Note: This settings should be provided by your VoIP service provider. Figure 13 Setup Wizard > VoIP Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 9 Setup Wizard > VoIP Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Line 1 SIP Account - Configure this section to use the PHONE 1 port.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard Table 9 Setup Wizard > VoIP Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Subscriber Number Enter your SIP number. In the full SIP URI, this is the part before the @ symbol. Display Name Enter the name that appears on the other partys device if they have Caller ID enabled. Authentication Name Type the SIP user name associated with this account for authentication to the SIP server. Password Type the SIP password associated with this account.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard Figure 15 Steup Wizard > WLAN Settings > Encryption Type: WPA Personall The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 10 Setup Wizard > WLAN Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Wifi Settings Enable WLAN Select this box to enable the wireless service and allow other wireless clients to connect to the Internet using the MAX208M2W Series. WLAN Mode Select the mode that the MAX208M2W Series will be using to communicate: 802.11 B/G/N mixed, 802.11 B/G mixed, 802.
Chapter 3 Setup Wizard Table 10 Setup Wizard > WLAN Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION WPA Mode Select either WPA, WPA2 or Auto (WPA or WPA2). Cipher Type Select the type of authentication that you wish to use for your network: TKIP, AES or both. AES is more secure. Pre Shared Key Type the pre-shared key or PSK previously shared between the two parties. 3.1.7 Setup Complete Click Save to save the Setup Wizard settings and close it.
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CHAPTER 4 Tutorials 4.1 Overview This chapter shows you how to configure some of the MAX208M2W Seriess features. Note: Be sure to read Introducing the Web Configurator on page 25 before working through the tutorials presented here. For field descriptions for individual screens, see the related technical reference in this User's Guide.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 3 Configure the MAX208M2W Series to connect securely to the ISPs authentication servers. See Section 6.4 on page 78. 4 Check the MAX208M2W Seriess connection status to ensure everything is working properly. See Section 6.7 on page 85. 4.3 Configuring LAN DHCP This tutorial shows you how to set up a small network in your office or home. Goal: Connect three computers to your MAX208M2W Series to form a small network.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 2 Manually change the IP address of your computer that your are using to 192.168.100.x (for example, 192.168.100.5) and keep the subnet set to 255.255.255.0. 3 Type http://192.168.100.1 in your browser after the MAX208M2W Series finishes starting up completely. 4 Log into the Web Configurator and open the Networking Setting > LAN > DHCP screen. 5 Select Server for the DHCP mode, then enter 192.168.100.10 and 192.168.100.30 as your DHCP starting and ending IP addresses.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 8 Connect your computers to the MAX208M2W Seriess Ethernet ports and youre all set! Note: You may need to configure the computers on your LAN to automatically obtain IP addresses. For information on how to do this, see Appendix B on page 209. Once your network is configured and hooked up, you will want to connect it to the Internet next. To do this, just run the Internet Connection Wizard (Chapter 3 on page 31), which walks you through the process. 4.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 3 You may need to configure the Options section according to the information provided by the ISP. 4 Click Save. You should now be able to connect to the Internet through your new service provider! 4.5 Blocking Web Access If your MAX208M2W Series is in a home or office environment you may decide that you want to block an Internet website access. You may need to block both the websites IP address and domain name.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 6 Click Save. Open a browser from your computer in the MAX208M2W Seriess LAN network, you should get an Access Violation message when you try to access to http:// www.example.com. You may also need to block the IP address of the website if you do not want users to access to the website through its IP address. 4.6 Configuring the MAC Address Filter This tutorial shows you how to use the MAC filter to block a DHCP clients access to hosts and to the WiMAX network.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 1 First of all, you have to know the MAC address of the computer. If not, you can look for the MAC address in the Network Setting > LAN > DHCP screen. (192.168.100.3 mapping to 00:02:E3:53:16:95 in this example). 2 Click Security > Firewall > MAC Filter. Select Blacklist and click the Add button in the MAC Filter Rules table.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 3 An empty entry appears. Enter the computers MAC address in the Source MAC field and leave the other fields set to their defaults. Click Save. The computer will no longer be able to access any host on the WiMAX network through the MAX208M2W Series. 4.7 Setting Up NAT Port Forwarding Thomas recently received an Xbox 360 as his birthday gift. His friends invited him to play online games with them on Xbox LIVE.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 2 NAT mode is required to use port forwarding. Click Network Setting > WAN and make sure NAT is selected in the Operation Mode field. Click Save. 3 Click Network Setting > NAT > Port Forwarding and then click the first entry to edit the rule. 4 Configure the screen as follows to open TCP/UDP port 53 for the Xbox 360. Click OK.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 5 Repeat steps 2 and 3 to open the rest of the ports for the Xbox 360. The port forwarding settings you configured are listed in the Port Forwarding screen. 6 Click Save. Thomas can then connect his Xbox 360 to the Internet and play online games with his friends. In this tutorial, all port 80 traffic is forwarded to the Xbox 360, but port 80 is also the default listening port for remote management via WWW.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 4.8 Access the MAX208M2W Series Using DDNS If you connect your MAX208M2W Series to the Internet and it uses a dynamic WAN IP address, it is inconvenient for you to manage the device from the Internet. The MAX208M2W Seriess WAN IP address changes dynamically. Dynamic DNS (DDNS) allows you to access the MAX208M2W Series using a domain name. http://mywimax.dyndns.org A w.x.y.z a.b.c.d To use this feature, you have to apply for DDNS service at www.dyndns.org.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 4.8.2 Configuring DDNS on Your MAX208M2W Series Configure the following settings in the Network Setting > DDNS screen. 1 Select Enable Dynamic DNS. 2 Select dyndns.org for the service provider. 3 Select Dynamic for the service type. 4 Type mywimax.dyndns.org in the Domain Name field. 5 Enter the user name (UserName1) and password (12345). 6 Select WAN IP for the IP update policy. 7 Click Save. 4.8.
Chapter 4 Tutorials In the following figure, router R is connected to the MAX208M2W Seriess LAN. R connects to two networks, N1 (192.168.1.x/24) and N2 (192.168.10.x/24). If you want to send traffic from computer A (in N1 network) to computer B (in N2 network), the traffic is sent to the MAX208M2W Seriess WAN default gateway by default. In this case, computer B will never receive the traffic.
Chapter 4 Tutorials This tutorial uses the following example IP settings: Table 11 IP Settings in this Tutorial DEVICE / COMPUTER IP ADDRESS The MAX208M2W Seriess WAN 172.16.1.1 The MAX208M2W Seriess LAN 192.168.1.1 A 192.168.1.34 Rs IP address on N1 192.168.1.253 Rs IP address on N2 192.168.10.2 B 192.168.10.33 To configure a static route to route traffic from N1 to N2: 1 Click Network Setting > Route > Static Route. 2 Click Add to create a new route.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 4.10 Remotely Managing Your MAX208M2W Series The remote management feature allows you to log into the device through the Internet. Goal: Set up the MAX208M2W Series to allow management requests from the WAN (Internet). See Also: Section 12.3 on page 169. 1 Open the Maintenance > Remote MGMT > HTTP screen. 2 Select Enable in both HTTP Server and HTTPS Server sections and leave the Port Number settings as 80 and 443. 3 Select Allow Connection from WAN.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 4.11 VLAN Configuration Example This example assumes that you want port 1 to recognize VLAN 100 and VLAN 200 traffic sent from/to computers A and B. Port 2 is dedicated for transmitting and receiving VLAN-untagged and management traffic. Figure 17 VLAN Configuration Example A port 1 VLAN 100 B 58 VLAN 200 C port 2 1 Connect your computer (C in the example) to the MAX208M2W Seriess LAN port 2 and access the Web Configurator. 2 Log into the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 3 Click Network Setting > VLAN and then click the PVID Group for port 2. 4 Select MGMT from the drop-down list, click OK in the section, and then click Save at the bottom of the screen.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 5 Click Network Setting > WAN. Change the MAX208M2W Series to bridge mode and then click Save. 6 The MAX208M2W Series will restart. Wait until it completely restarts. 7 Configure the IP address of your computer to be in the same network as the MAX208M2W Seriess LAN. The default is 192.168.1.x where x can be 2 to 254. 8 Open a browser and type the MAX208M2W Seriess LAN IP address (for example, 192.168.1.1). 9 Log into the MAX208M2W Series and then click Network Setting > VLAN.
Chapter 4 Tutorials 12 Since by default port 1 is associated with VLAN rule 1. Click the VID field to configure the settings as shown next. Click OK and then Save. Finally, you complete the settings. See Section 7.19 on page 122 if you need more information about VLAN.
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CHAPTER 5 System Status 5.1 Overview Use this screen to view a summary of your MAX208M2W Series connection status. 5.2 System Status This screen allows you to view the current status of the device, system resources, and interfaces (LAN and WAN). Click System Status to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 5 System Status The following tables describe the labels in this screen. Table 12 Status LABEL DESCRIPTION System Information System Model Name This field displays the MAX208M2W Series system model name. It is used for identification. Software Version This field displays the Web Configurator version number. Firmware Version This field displays the current version of the firmware inside the device. Firmware Build Time This field shows the date the firmware version was created.
Chapter 5 System Status Table 12 Status (continued) LABEL Connection Status DESCRIPTION This field displays the status of the WiMAXconnection between the MAX208M2W Series and the base station. Network Search - The MAX208M2W Series is scanning for any available WiMAX connections. Disconnected - No WiMAX connection is available. Network Entry - A WiMAX connection is initializing. Normal - The WiMAX connection has successfully established.
Chapter 5 System Status Table 12 Status (continued) LABEL 68 DESCRIPTION Registered Status This field displays whether SIP account 2 is already registered with a SIP server (Registered or Unregistered). Line1 Status This field displays whether phone line 1 (mapping to the VoIP1 port) is in use or not (idle). Line 2 Status This field displays whether phone line 2 (mapping to the VoIP2 port) is in use or not (idle).
CHAPTER 6 WiMAX 6.1 Overview This chapter shows you how to set up and manage the connection between the MAX208M2W Series and your ISPs base stations. 6.1.1 What You Need to Know The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this chapter. WiMAX WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) is the IEEE 802.16 wireless networking standard, which provides high-bandwidth, wide-range wireless service across wireless Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs).
Chapter 6 WiMAX WiMAX technology uses radio signals (around 2 to 10 GHz) to connect subscriber stations and mobile stations to local base stations. Numerous subscriber stations and mobile stations connect to the network through a single base station (BS), as in the following figure. Figure 20 WiMAX: Multiple Mobile Stations A base stations coverage area can extend over many hundreds of meters, even under poor conditions.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Frequency Ranges The following figure shows the MAX208M2W Series searching a range of frequencies to find a connection to a base station. Figure 22 Frequency Ranges In this figure, A is the WiMAX frequency range. WiMAX frequency range refers to the entire range of frequencies the MAX208M2W Series is capable of using to transmit and receive (see the Product Specifications appendix for details). In the figure, B shows the operator frequency range.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Certificate File Formats The certification authority certificate that you want to import has to be in one of these file formats: Binary X.509: This is an ITU-T recommendation that defines the formats for X.509 certificates. PEM (Base-64) encoded X.509: This Privacy Enhanced Mail format uses lowercase letters, uppercase letters and numerals to convert a binary X.509 certificate into a printable form.
Chapter 6 WiMAX 6.2 Connection Settings This screen allows you to configure how the MAX208M2W Series connects to the base stations on the WiMAX network. Click WiMAX > Profile > Connection Settings to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 13 Connection Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Idle Mode Interval Set the idle duration in minutes. This is how long the MAX208M2W Series waits during periods of no activity before going into idle mode. CINR & RSSI Refresh Interval Set the refresh interval in milliseconds for calculating the signal-tonoise measurement (CINR) and signal strength measurement (RSSI) of the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 6 WiMAX 6.3 Frequency Settings Use this screen to have the WiMAX Device to scan one or more specific radio frequencies (given by your WiMAX service provider) to find available connections to base stations. Click WiMAX > Profile > Frequency Settings to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 6 WiMAX This screen contains the following fields: Table 14 Frequency Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Setting Type Select whether to scan base stations by entering specific frequency(ies) (By List) or a range of frequencies (By Range). Note: When you select By Range, you can only configure one range of frequencies in this screen. To configure multiple frequency ranges, use the WiMAX > Wide Scan screen. Note: Some settings in this screen are only available depending on the Setting Type selected.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 14 Frequency Settings (continued) LABEL OK DESCRIPTION Click this button to save any changes made to the list. Valid Band Info (B) This table displays the entire frequency band the MAX208M2W Series supports. The frequenc(ies) to scan that you configured in table A must be within this range. Band Start (KHz) This indicates the beginning of the frequency band in kilohertz (KHz). Band End (KHz) This indicates the end of the frequency band in kilohertz (KHz).
Chapter 6 WiMAX 6.4 Authentication Settings These settings allow the WiMAX Device to establish a secure (authenticated) connection with the service provider. Click WiMAX > Profile > Authentication Settings to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 6 WiMAX This screen contains the following fields: Table 15 Authentication Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Authentication Mode Select the authentication mode from the list. The MAX208M2W Series supports the following authentication modes: No authentication User authentication Device authentication User and device authentication Data Encryption AES-CCM Select this to enable AES-CCM encryption. CCM combines counter-mode encryption with CBC-MAC authentication.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 15 Authentication Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Device Private Key Browse for and choose a device private key, if required. Device Private Key Info This field displays information about the assigned device private key. Device Private Key Password Enter the device private key, if required. Inner Mode Sets the EAP-TTLS inner mode.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 15 Authentication Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Delete existed Root Certificate file Select this to delete an existing root certificate file from the MAX208M2W Series. Delete existed Device Certificate file Select this to delete an existing device certificate file from the MAX208M2W Series. Delete existed Private Key Select this to delete an existing private key from the MAX208M2W Series. 6.
Chapter 6 WiMAX This screen contains the following fields: Table 16 Connect LABEL DESCRIPTION Applied Frequency Information This table shows the scanning result you made in the WiMAX > Profile > Frequency Settings and WiMAX > Wide Scan screens. Note: You cannot see the wide scanning result that you made in WiMAX > Wide Scan screen if the Join Wide Scan Result is set to No in the WiMAX > Profile > Frequency Settings screen.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 16 Connect (continued) LABEL Device Status DESCRIPTION This field displays the MAX208M2W Series current status for connecting to the selected base station. Scanning - The MAX208M2W Series is scanning for available base stations. Ready - The MAX208M2W Series has finished scanning and you can connect to a base station. Connecting - The MAX208M2W Series attempts to connect to the selected base station.
Chapter 6 WiMAX 6.6 Wide Scan This screen allows you to discover base stations by entering one or more frequency ranges and bandwidth on which to scan. Click WiMAX > Wide Scan to open this screen as shown next. Figure 28 Wide Scan Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 17 Wide Scan LABEL DESCRIPTION Wide Scan Settings Auto Wide Scan Use this to enable (Yes) or disable (No) automatically scanning for base stations.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 17 Wide Scan (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Frequency (KHz) This field displays the frequency in kilohertz (KHz). Bandwidth (MHz) This field displays the bandwidth in megahertz (MHz). Search Click this to initiate a wide scan. Clear Click this to clear the wide scan results. 6.7 Link Status This screen provides a general overview of the current WiMAX connection with the service provider. Click WiMAX > Link Status to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 6 WiMAX Table 18 Link Status (continued) 86 LABEL DESCRIPTION CINR R1 This field displays the average Carrier to Interference plus Noise Ratio (R1) for the current connection. This value is an indication of overal radio signal quality, where a higher value means a better quality signal. CINR Std Dev This field displays the average Carrier to Interference plus Noise Ratio (Std Dev) for the current connection.
Chapter 6 WiMAX 6.8 Link Statistics This screen provides a detailed overview of the current WiMAX connection with the service provider.. Click WiMAX > Link Statistics to open this screen as shown next. Figure 30 Link Statistics Screen This screen contains the following sections: Table 19 Link Statistics LABEL DESCRIPTION Link This section provides a detailed overview of link statistics. HARQ This section provides a detailed overview of Hybrid Automatic Repeat Request link statistics.
Chapter 6 WiMAX 6.9 Connection Info This screen displays all of the connections made through the WiMAX device since its last reboot. Click WiMAX > Connection Info to open this screen as shown next. Figure 31 Connection Info Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 20 Connection Info LABEL DESCRIPTION Active Connection CID This displays the unique, unidirectional 16-bit Connection Identifier (CID) for an active connection. Connection Type This displays the type of connection. 6.
CHAPTER 7 Network Setting 7.1 Overview This chapter shows you how to configure the MAX208M2W Seriess network setting. 7.1.1 What You Need to Know The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this chapter. IP Address IP addresses identify individual devices on a network. Every networking device (including computers, servers, routers, printers, etc.) needs an IP address to communicate across the network. These networking devices are also known as hosts.
Chapter 7 Network Setting DNS Server Address DNS (Domain Name System) is for mapping a domain name to its corresponding IP address and vice versa. The DNS server is extremely important because without it, you must know the IP address of a machine before you can access it. The DNS server addresses that you enter in the DHCP setup are passed to the client machines along with the assigned IP address and subnet mask. There are two ways that an ISP disseminates the DNS server addresses.
Chapter 7 Network Setting The Version field controls the format and the broadcasting method of the RIP packets that the MAX208M2W Series sends (it recognizes both formats when receiving). RIP-1 is universally supported; but RIP-2 carries more information. RIP-1 is probably adequate for most networks, unless you have an unusual network topology. Both RIP-2B and RIP-2M sends the routing data in RIP-2 format; the difference being that RIP-2B uses subnet broadcasting while RIP-2M uses multicasting.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Trigger Ports Some services use a dedicated range of ports on the client side and a dedicated range of ports on the server side. With regular port forwarding you set a forwarding port in NAT to forward a service (coming in from the server on the WAN) to the IP address of a computer on the client side (LAN). The problem is that port forwarding only forwards a service to a single LAN IP address.
Chapter 7 Network Setting NAT Traversal UPnP NAT traversal automates the process of allowing an application to operate through NAT. UPnP network devices can automatically configure network addressing, announce their presence in the network to other UPnP devices and enable exchange of simple product and service descriptions.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.2 WAN Use these settings to configure the WAN connection between the WiMAX Device and the service provider. Click Network Setting > WAN to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 7 Network Setting This screen contains the following fields: Table 22 WAN LABEL DESCRIPTION Operation Mode Select the MAX208M2W Seriess operational mode. WAN Protocol Bridge - This puts the MAX208M2W Series in bridge mode, acting as a transparent middle man between devices on the LAN and the devices on the WAN. NAT - This allows the MAX208M2W Series to tag frames for NAT, allowing devices on the LAN to use their own internal IP addresses while communicating with devices on the WAN.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Table 22 WAN (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Clone MAC Address Enter a MAC address here for registering bridged devices on the network if their current MAC addresses are causing problems. For example, this can happen when a desktop computer swaps network interface cards; the original NIC may have used its MAC address to register itself on the network and now the new NIC is unrecognized. Using a MAC address that you know is valid, i.e.
Chapter 7 Network Setting This screen contains the following fields: Table 23 PPPoE LABEL DESCRIPTION User Name Enter the username for PPPoE login into the WAN network. Password Enter the password for PPPoE login into the WAN network. Retype Password Retype the password to confirm it. Auth Protocol Select a PPPoE authentication protocol.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.4 GRE Use these settings to configure the peer setting of the Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunnel between the WiMAX Device and another GRE peer. Click Network Setting > WAN > GRE to open this screen as shown next. Figure 36 GRE Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 24 GRE LABEL DESCRIPTION Peer IP Address Enter the IP address of the GRE peer. 7.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.6 IP Use these settings to configure the LAN connection between the WiMAX Device and your local network. Click Network Setting > LAN > IP to open this screen as shown next. Figure 38 IP Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 26 IP LABEL DESCRIPTION IP address Enter the IP address of the LAN interface for the MAX208M2W Series. IP Subnet Mask Enter the IP subnet maks of the LAN interface for the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.7 DHCP Use these settings to configure whether the WiMAX Device functions as a DHCP server for your local network, or a DHCP relay between the local network and the service provider. You can also disable the DHCP functions. Click Network Setting > LAN > DHCP to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Table 27 DHCP (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Start IP Enter the start IP address from which the MAX208M2W Series begins allocating IP addresses. End IP Enter the end IP address at which the MAX208M2W Series ceases allocating IP addresses. Lease Time Enter the duration in minutes that devices on the LAN retain their DHCP-issued IP addresses. At the end of the lease time, they poll the MAX208M2W Series for a renewed or replacement IP.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.8 WLAN Use this screen to configure the connections between the MAX208M2W Series and the wireless clients that want to access the Internet. Click Network Setting > WLAN to open this screen as shown next. Figure 40 WLAN Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 28 Network Setting LABEL WLAN DESCRIPTION WiFi Settings Enable WLAN Select this to activate the wireless LAN. WLAN Mode Select 802.11B/G mixed to allow both IEEE802.11b and IEEE802.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Table 28 Network Setting WLAN LABEL DESCRIPTION WLAN Maximum STA number Enter the maximum number of wireless stations that is allowed to associate with the MAX208M2W Series. WLAN TxPower Select a number between 1 and 24 dB in the drop down box to control the strength of the connection signal, or leave it as default to let the MAX208M2W Series control this feature.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.9 WPS Use this screen to configure WiFi Protected Setup (WPS) on your MAX208M2W Series. WPS allows you to quickly set up a wireless network with strong security without having to configure security settings manually. Set up each WPS connection between two devices. Both devices have to support WPS. Click Network Setting > WLAN > WPS to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Click on Network Setting > WLAN > MAC Address Filter. The screen appears as shown. Figure 42 MAC Address Filter Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 30 MAC Address Filter LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable MAC Address Filter Select the check box to enable MAC address filtering. Then, the following fields display. Mode Define the filter action for the list of MAC addresses in the MAC address table.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.11 Static Route Use these settings to create fixed paths through the network. Click Network Setting > Route > Static Route to open this screen as shown next. Figure 43 Static Route Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 31 Static Route LABEL DESCRIPTION Destination This field displays the destination IP address of the static route. Subnet Mask This field displays the subnet mask of the static route.
Chapter 7 Network Setting This screen contains the following fields: Table 32 Static Route LABEL DESCRIPTION Destination IP Enter the destination IP address of the static route. Subnet Mask Enter the subnet mask of the static route. Next Hop Select Interface and then select WAN or LAN for the next hop of the static route. If the next hop is an IP address rather than an interface on the MAX208M2W Series, select IP Address and enter the IP address. Metric Enter the static route metric. 7.
Chapter 7 Network Setting This screen contains the following fields: Table 33 RIP LABEL DESCRIPTION General Setup Enable Select this to enable RIP on the MAX208M2W Series. Redistribute Active This indicates whether a route is being redistributed. Type This indicates what type of route is being redistributed. Metric This indicates the metric that is being used for redistribution. Edit Click this to edit a selected route. OK Click this to save any changes to the redistribution table.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Click Network Setting > NAT > Port Forwarding to open this screen as shown next. Figure 46 Port Forwarding Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 34 Port Forwarding LABEL DESCRIPTION Active This indicates whether the port forwarding rule is active or not. Name The displays the name of the port forwarding rule. Protocol This displays the protocol to which the port forwarding rule applies.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.14.1 Port Forwarding Wizard Use this wizard to set up a port forwarding rule for incoming service requests to the ports on your local network. Click Network Setting > NAT > Port Forwarding > Wizard to open this screen as shown next. Figure 47 Port Forwarding Wizard Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 35 Port Forwarding Wizard 110 LABEL DESCRIPTION Active Select this to make this port forwarding rule active.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.15 Port Trigger Use these settings to automate port forwarding and allow computers on local network to provide services that would normally require a fixed address on the local network. Click Network Setting > NAT > Port Trigger to open this screen as shown next. Figure 48 Port Trigger Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 36 Port Trigger LABEL DESCRIPTION Active This indicates whether the port trigger rule is active or not.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Table 36 Port Trigger (continued) LABEL Start / End Port DESCRIPTION This displays the start / end open port for the port trigger rule. Click Add to create a new, empty rule, then enter the outgoing port number or range of port numbers that makes the MAX208M2W Series record the source IP address and assign it to the selected incoming port number(s). To select one port number, enter the port number in the Start Port and End Port fields.
Chapter 7 Network Setting This screen contains the following fields: Table 37 Port Trigger Wizard LABEL DESCRIPTION Active Select this to make this port trigger rule active. Port Trigger Rule Select the type of port trigger rule. Rule Name Enter a name for the port trigger rule. Trigger Protocol Select the type of port trigger protocol. Trigger Start Port Enter the port trigger start port. Trigger End Port Enter the port trigger end port.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 5 Only Jane can connect to the Real Audio server until the connection is closed or times out. The MAX208M2W Series times out in three minutes with UDP (User Datagram Protocol), or two hours with TCP/IP (Transfer Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). Two points to remember about trigger ports: 1 Trigger events only happen on data that is coming from inside the MAX208M2W Series and going to the outside.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.17 ALG Use these settings to bypass NAT on your WiMAX Device for those applications that are "NAT un-friendly". Click Network Setting > NAT > ALG to open this screen as shown next. Figure 52 ALG Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 39 Network Setting > NAT > ALG LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable FTP ALG Turns on the FTP ALG to detect FTP (File Transfer Program) traffic and helps build FTP sessions through the MAX208M2W Seriess NAT. Enable H.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.18 UPnP Use this page to enable the UPnP networking protocol on your WiMAX Device and allow easy network connectivity with other UPnP-compatible devices. Click Network Setting > UPnP to open this screen as shown next. Figure 53 UPnP Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 40 UPnP LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable UPnP Select this to enable UPnP on the MAX208M2W Series. Enable NAT-PMP Select this to enable NAT Port Mapping Protocol on the MAX208M2W Series. 7.18.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 4 The Windows Optional Networking Components Wizard window displays. Select Networking Service in the Components selection box and click Details. 5 In the Networking Services window, select the Universal Plug and Play check box. 6 Click OK to go back to the Windows Optional Networking Component Wizard window and click Next.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.18.1.1 Auto-discover Your UPnP-enabled Network Device in Windows XP This section shows you how to use the UPnP feature in Windows XP. You must already have UPnP installed in Windows XP and UPnP activated on the MAX208M2W Series. Make sure the computer is connected to a LAN port of the MAX208M2W Series. Turn on your computer and the MAX208M2W Series. 118 1 Click Start and Control Panel. Double-click Network Connections. An icon displays under Internet Gateway.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 3 In the Internet Connection Properties window, click Settings to see the port mappings there were automatically created. 4 You may edit or delete the port mappings or click Add to manually add port mappings. 5 When the UPnP-enabled device is disconnected from your computer, all port mappings will be deleted automatically.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 6 Select Show icon in notification area when connected option and click OK. An icon displays in the system tray. 7 Double-click on the icon to display your current Internet connection status. 7.18.2 Web Configurator Easy Access With UPnP, you can access the web-based configurator on the MAX208M2W Series without finding out the IP address of the MAX208M2W Series first. This becomes helpful if you do not know the IP address of the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 3 Select My Network Places under Other Places. 4 An icon with the description for each UPnP-enabled device displays under Local Network. 5 Right-click on the icon for your MAX208M2W Series and select Invoke. The web configurator login screen displays.
Chapter 7 Network Setting 6 Right-click on the icon for your MAX208M2W Series and select Properties. A properties window displays with basic information about the MAX208M2W Series. 7.19 VLAN Use this screen to configure port-based VLAN settings on the MAX208M2W Series. This screen allows you to assign port(s) to specific virtual LAN(s) in order to isolate traffic from different VLAN groups.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Click Network Setting > VLAN to open the screen as shown next. Figure 54 VLAN Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 41 VLAN LABEL DESCRIPTION Management VLAN VLAN ID Enter an ID number (1~4094) to create a new VLAN. Enter 0 to disable VLAN on the MAX208M2W Series. Note: To use VLAN on the MAX208M2W Series, you must switch the operation mode to bridge on the Network Setting > WAN screen. It will then require system restart to take effect.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Table 41 VLAN LABEL DESCRIPTION Tag This field displays whether to prioritize traffic transmitted by the port, tagged or untagged. Click this field to change the setting. Set this to untagged if you do not want to prioritize outgoing traffic through the port. OK Click this to save the changes in the Port Egress Tagging section. Port Settings # This is the index number of a port (1 or 2).
Chapter 7 Network Setting 7.20 DDNS Use this page to configure the WiMAX Device as a dynamic DNS client. Click Network Setting > DDNS Figure 55 DDNS Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 42 DDNS LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Dynamic DNS Select this to enable dynamic DNS on the MAX208M2W Series. Service Provider Select the dynamice DNS service provider for the MAX208M2W Series. Service Type Select the dynamic DNS service type. Domain Name Enter the domain name.
Chapter 7 Network Setting Table 42 DDNS (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Backup MX Select this to enable a secondary mail routing, if supported by the specified DYNDNS service provider. MX Host Enter the host to which mail is routed when the MX option is selected. 7.21 Content Filter Use these settings to allow ("whitelist") or block ("blacklist") connections to and from specific web sites through the WiMAX Device. Click Network Setting > Content Filter to open this screen as shown next.
CHAPTER 8 Security 8.1 Overview This chapter shows you how to configure the MAX208M2W Seriess network settings. 8.1.1 What You Need to Know The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this chapter. About the MAX208M2W Seriess Security Features The MAX208M2W Series security features are designed to protect against Denial of Service attacks when activated as well as block access to and from specific URLs and MAC addresses.
Chapter 8 Security 8.2 IP Filter Use this screen to block incoming connections from specific IP addresses. Click Security > Firewall > IP Filter to open this screen as shown next. Figure 57 IP Filter Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 44 IP Filter LABEL DESCRIPTION Active Indicates whether the current IP filter is active or not. Source IP This displays the source IP address for the IP filter rule.
Chapter 8 Security 8.3 MAC Filter Use this screen to allow ("whitelist") or block ("blacklist") connections to and from specific devices on the network based on their unique MAC addresses. Note: This feature only works when the MAX208M2W Series is in bridge mode. Click Security > Firewall > MAC Filter to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 8 Security 8.4 DDOS Use these settings to potentially block specific types of Denial of Service attacks directed at your WiMAX Device. Click Security > Firewall > DDOS to open this screen as shown next. Figure 59 DDOS Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 46 DDOS 130 LABEL DESCRIPTION Prevent from TCP SYN Flood Select this to monitor for and block TCP SYN flood attacks. Prevent from UDP Flood Select this to monitor for and block UDP flood attacks.
Chapter 8 Security Table 46 DDOS (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Prevent from IP Spoof Select this to monitor for and block IP address spoof attacks. Prevent from ICMP redirect Select this to monitor for and block ICMP redirect attacks. Prevent from PING of Death Select this to monitor for and block ping of death attacks.
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CHAPTER 9 The VoIP General Screens 9.1 VoIP Overview The VOICE > General screens allow you to set up global SIP and Quality of Service (QoS) settings. VoIP (Voice over IP) is the sending of voice signals over the Internet Protocol. This allows you to make phone calls and send faxes over the Internet at a fraction of the cost of using the traditional circuit-switched telephone network. You can also use servers to run telephone service applications like PBX services and voice mail.
Chapter 9 The VoIP General Screens G.711 is a Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) waveform codec. PCM measures analog signal amplitudes at regular time intervals (sampling) and converts them into digital bits (quantization). Quantization reads the analog signal and then writes it to the nearest digital value. For this reason, a digital sample is usually slightly different from its analog original (this difference is known as quantization noise). G.
Chapter 9 The VoIP General Screens multimedia sessions over the Internet. SIP signaling is separate from the media for which it handles sessions. The media that is exchanged during the session can use a different path from that of the signaling. SIP handles telephone calls and can interface with traditional circuit-switched telephone networks. RTP When you make a VoIP call using SIP, the RTP (Real time Transport Protocol) is used to handle voice data transfer. See RFC 1889 for details on RTP. 9.1.
Chapter 9 The VoIP General Screens The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 47 VoIP > General > Media LABEL DESCRIPTION Port Range Media Port Start Enter the listening port number(s) for RTP traffic on the MAX208M2W Series, if your VoIP service provider gave you this information. Media Port End Otherwise, keep the default values. To enter one port number, enter the port number in the both Media Port Start and Media Port End fields.
Chapter 9 The VoIP General Screens 9.2.2 QoS Settings Click VoIP > General > QoS to set up Type of Service (ToS) and Differentiated Services (Diffserv) settings for voice traffic transmission through the MAX208M2W Series. Figure 61 VoIP > General > QoS The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Chapter 9 The VoIP General Screens The DSCP value determines the forwarding behavior, the PHB (Per-Hop Behavior), that each packet gets across the DiffServ network. Based on the marking rule, different kinds of traffic can be marked for different priorities of forwarding. Resources can then be allocated according to the DSCP values and the configured policies.
CHAPTER 10 The VoIP Account Screens 10.1 Overview Use the VoIP > Account 1 and VoIP > Account 2 screens to configure SIP servers, authentication, additional VoIP features, dialing timeout values, speeddial rules and how to handle fax messages for two accounts on the MAX208M2W Series. Account 1 maps to phone port 1 and account 2 maps to phone port 2. Since both the Account 1 and Account 2 screens are quite similar, this section uses the VoIP > Account 1 screens to describe the fields. 10.1.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens SIP Identities A SIP account uses an identity (sometimes referred to as a SIP address). A complete SIP identity is called a SIP URI (Uniform Resource Identifier). A SIP account's URI identifies the SIP account in a way similar to the way an e-mail address identifies an e-mail account. The format of a SIP identity is SIPNumber@SIP-Service-Domain. SIP Number The SIP number is the part of the SIP URI that comes before the @ symbol.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens In the following example, you want to use client device A to call someone who is using client device C. 1 The client device (A in the figure) sends a call invitation to the SIP proxy server (B). 2 The SIP proxy server forwards the call invitation to C.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens 3 The MAX208M2W Series uses the public IP address and port number in the SIP packets that it sends to the SIP server (C). Figure 65 STUN NAT A 1 2 3 Outbound Proxy Your VoIP service provider may host a SIP outbound proxy server to handle all of the MAX208M2W Seriess VoIP traffic. This allows the MAX208M2W Series to work with any type of NAT router and eliminates the need for STUN or a SIP ALG.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens In peer-to-peer calls, you call another VoIP device directly without going through a SIP server. Enter the callees IP address or domain name. The MAX208M2W Series sends SIP INVITE requests to the peer VoIP device when you use the speed dial entry. You do not need to configure a SIP account in order to make a peer-to-peer VoIP call.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens 10.2 Status Click VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Status to view VoIP settings and current status. Figure 66 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Status The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 49 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Status LABEL DESCRIPTION Server Status SIP Register This field displays the IP address and service port number of the SIP register server, if you have configured one.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens Table 49 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Status LABEL DESCRIPTION STUN Server This field displays the IP address and service port number of the STUN (Simple Traversal of UDP through NATs (Network Address Translation)) server, if you have configured one. STUN Status This field displays whether you have enabled STUN server support on the MAX208M2W Series. Line Status Subscriber Number This field displays the SIP phone number for the phone line.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens 10.3 Server Click VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Server to configure the register server, proxy server, outbound proxy server and NAT settings for this SIP account. Figure 67 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Server The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 50 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Server LABEL DESCRIPTION Registrar Server Registrar Server Enter the IP address or domain name of a SIP server.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens Table 50 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Server LABEL DESCRIPTION Outbound Server Enter the IP address or domain name of the outbound proxy server provided by your VoIP service provider. You can use up to 127 printable ASCII characters. If you choose not to use an outbound proxy server, set this to 0.0.0.0. Port Number Enter the outbound proxys listening port number, if your VoIP service provider gave you one. Otherwise, leave it as the default 5060.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 51 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Feature LABEL DESCRIPTION Feature Settings Block Anonymous Call Select this to have the MAX208M2W Series block all incoming calls from phone that do not send caller ID. Do Not Disturb Select this to have the MAX208M2W Series not forward calls to the (DND) phone line. Hide User ID Select this to not have your calling number display on the callees caller ID.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens Table 51 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Feature LABEL DESCRIPTION Busy CF, Busy CF Target Select this if you want the MAX208M2W Series to forward incoming calls to the specified phone number if the phone port is busy. Specify the phone number in the Busy CF Target field. If you have call waiting, the incoming call is forwarded to the specified phone number if you reject or ignore the second incoming call.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens 10.5 User Click VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > User to configure advanced VoIP settings such as DTMF, call forwarding, call waiting and hotline settings. Figure 69 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > User The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 52 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > User LABEL DESCRIPTION SIP Account Enable Select this if you want the MAX208M2W Series to use this account.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens Table 52 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > User LABEL 1st Codec, 2nd Codec, 3rd Codec DESCRIPTION Select the MAX208M2W Seriess first, second, and third choices of the type of voice coder/decoder (codec) that you want the phone line to use when communicating with the SIP server. The following codecs (shown in highest quality to lowest quality order) are supported by the MAX208M2W Series: G.711 aLaw (typically used in Europe) G.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens 10.6 Dialing Click VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Dialing to configure dialing timeout values. Figure 70 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Dialing The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 53 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Dialing LABEL DESCRIPTION Inter-digit Timeout Enter the maximum number of seconds (1~5) the MAX208M2W Series waits for each digit input of a complete callee number after you press the flash key on the phone.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens Table 54 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > Speed Dial LABEL DESCRIPTION Active This field displays whether the rule is activated or not. Short Number This field displays the speed-dial number you want to use for this phone number. Select the the speed-dial number you want to use for this phone number if you are editing the entry. Real Number This field displays the phone number you want the MAX208M2W Series to call when you use the specified short number.
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 55 VoIP > Account 1 (or Account 2) > FAX LABEL DESCRIPTION Options Select which standard the MAX208M2W Series uses to handle faxes. The peer devices must also use standard. NONE - Disable the fax function. G.711A Pass Through - Select this option to send and receive fax messages over the network or Internet using VoIP (G.711a).
Chapter 10 The VoIP Account Screens 1 A sends a SIP INVITE request to B. This message is an invitation for B to participate in a SIP telephone call. 2 B sends a response indicating that the telephone is ringing. 3 B sends an OK response after the call is answered. 4 A then sends an ACK message to acknowledge that B has answered the call. 5 Now A and B exchange voice media (talk). 6 After talking, A hangs up and sends a BYE request.
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CHAPTER 11 The VoIP Line Screens 11.1 Overview The VoIP > Line 1 and VoIP > Line 2 screens allow you to configure the volume, echo cancellation, VAD settings and custom tones for phone ports 1 and 2 which map to SIP accounts 1 and 2 (see Chapter 10 on page 139). Since both the Line 1 and Line 2 screens are quite similar, this section uses the VoIP > Line 1 screens to describe the fields. 11.1.1 What You Can Do in This Chapter The Phone screen (Section 11.
Chapter 11 The VoIP Line Screens 11.2 Phone Click VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Phone to configure phone and caller ID settings. Figure 73 VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Phone The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 57 VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Phone LABEL DESCRIPTION Phone Hook Flash Detect Upper Bound Enter the number of milliseconds for the upper bound of a quick onhook and off-hook cycle in order to recognize a hook flash event.
Chapter 11 The VoIP Line Screens 11.3 Voice Click VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Voice to configure voice settings. Figure 74 VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Voice The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 58 VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Voice LABEL DESCRIPTION VAD - Voice Activity Detection Voice Active Detector Select one of the following Silence Suppression option to have the MAX208M2W Series stop transmitting voice traffic when you are not speaking using the detection method.
Chapter 11 The VoIP Line Screens The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 59 VoIP > Line 1 (or Line 2) > Profile 160 LABEL DESCRIPTION Country Profile Select the place in which the MAX208M2W Series is located, USA or any other country (Default).
CHAPTER 12 Maintenance 12.1 Overview Use these screens to manage and maintain your MAX208M2W Series. 12.1.1 What You Need to Know The following terms and concepts may help as you read through this chapter. Remote Management Limitations Remote management over LAN or WAN will not work when: 1 You have disabled that service in one of the remote management screens. 2 The IP address in the Secured Client IP field does not match the client IP address.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Remote Management and NAT When NAT is enabled: Use the MAX208M2W Seriess WAN IP address when configuring from the WAN. Use the MAX208M2W Seriess LAN IP address when configuring from the LAN. System Timeout There is a default system management idle timeout of five minutes. The MAX208M2W Series automatically logs you out if the management session remains idle for longer than this timeout period. The management session does not time out when a statistics screen is polling.
Chapter 12 Maintenance TR-069 TR-069 is an abbreviation of Technical Reference 069, a protocol designed to facilitate the remote management of Customer Premise Equipement (CPE), such as the MAX208M2W Series. It can be managed over a WAN by means of an Auto Configuration Server (ACS). TR-069 is based on sending Remote Procedure Calls (RPCs) between the ACS and the client device. RPCs are sent in Extensible Markup Language (XML) format over HTTP or HTTPS.
Chapter 12 Maintenance SNMP An SNMP managed network consists of two main types of component: agents and a manager. Figure 77 SNMP Management Model An agent is a management software module that resides in a managed device (the MAX208M2W Series). An agent translates the local management information from the managed device into a form compatible with SNMP. The manager is the console through which network administrators perform network management functions.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Set - Allows the manager to set values for object variables within an agent. Trap - Used by the agent to inform the manager of some events. The MAX208M2W Series sends traps to the SNMP manager when any of the following events occurs: Table 60 SNMP Traps TRAP # TRAP NAME DESCRIPTION 0 coldStart (defined in RFC1215) A trap is sent after booting (power on). 1 warmStart (defined in RFC1215) A trap is sent after booting (software reboot).
Chapter 12 Maintenance 4 The server disconnects from the MAX208M2W Series once all of its management operations have been carried out. Figure 78 OMA-DM Data Management OMA-DM Authentication In order to ensure the integrity of the connection between an OMA-DM server and the MAX208M2W Series, communication between the two is encoded using one of three common algorithms.
Chapter 12 Maintenance OMA-DM Data Model Each device that conforms to the current OMA-DM standard has an identical data structure embedded in its controlling firmware. This allows a similarly conforming OMA-DM server to navigate the folder structure and to make file alterations where appropriate or required. Figure 79 OMA-DM Data Model Operator MP3s Root Folder ./ Vendor Games DMAcc In the example data model shown here, the parent folders must conform to the OMA-DM standard.
Chapter 12 Maintenance NTP NTP stands for Network Time Protocol. It is employed by devices connected to the Internet in order to obtain a precise time setting from an official time server. These time servers are accurate to within 200 microseconds. 12.2 Password Use this screen to set up admin and guest accounts for logging into and managing the WiMAX Device. The admin user can access and configure all screens.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.3 HTTP Use this screen to allow remote access to the WiMAX Device from a network connection over HTTP. Click Maintenance > Remote MGMT > HTTP to open this screen as shown next. Figure 81 HTTP Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 62 HTTP LABEL DESCRIPTION HTTP Server Enable Select this to enable remote management using this service. Port Number Enter the port number this service can use to access the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.4 Telnet Use this screen to allow remote access to the WiMAX Device from a network connection over Telnet. Click Maintenance > Remote MGMT > Telnet to open this screen as shown next. Figure 82 Telnet Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 63 Telnet LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Select this to enable remote management using this service. Port Number Enter the port number this service can use to access the MAX208M2W Series.
Chapter 12 Maintenance This screen contains the following fields: Table 64 SSH LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Select this to enable remote management using this service. Port Number Enter the port number this service can use to access the MAX208M2W Series. The computer must use the same port number. Allow Connection from WAN Select this to allow connections using this service that originate on the WAN.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Table 65 SNMP (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Trap Server Enter the IP address of the station to send your SNMP traps to. Trap Community Enter the trap community, which is the password sent with each trap to the SNMP manager. The default is public and allows all requests. 12.7 CWMP Use this screen to allow CWMP connections for remote management, firmware upgrades and troubleshooting. Click Maintenance > Remote MGMT > CWMP to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Table 66 CWMP (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION ACS Password Enter the password sent when the MAX208M2W Series connects to an ACS and which is used for authentication. You can enter up to 31 alphanumeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9) and underscores but spaces are not allowed. Perodical Inform Enable Select this to allow the MAX208M2W Series to periodically connect to the ACS and check for configuration updates.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.8 OMA-DM Use this screen to allow remote access to the WiMAX Device from a network connection over OMA-DM. Click Maintenance > Remote MGMT > OMA-DM to open this screen as shown next. Figure 86 OMA-DM Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 67 OMA-DM LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Select this to enable remote management using this service. Server URL Enter the IP address or URL of the OMA-DM server that you intend to use to manage this device.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Table 67 OMA-DM (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Server Password Enter the password for the servers identification code. This shared public key is used by the MAX208M2W Series during the communication handshake process to identify the server. Server Nonce The MAX208M2W Series and the OMA-DM server use nonces to authenticate each other if you select MD5 as the authentication algorithm in the Server Auth Type field. Nonce is an abbreviation of 'number used once'.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.9 Date Use these settings to set the system time or configure an NTP server for automatic time synchronization. Click Maintenance > Date/Time > Date to open this screen as shown next. Figure 87 Date Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 68 Date LABEL DESCRIPTION Manual New Time Enter the new time in this field. New Date Enter the new date in this field. Get from Time Server Time Protocol Select the time service protocol that your time server uses.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.10 Time Zone Use this screen to set the time zone in which the WiMAX device is physically located. Click Maintenance > Date/Time > Time Zone to open this screen as shown next. Figure 88 Time Zone Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 69 Time Zone LABEL DESCRIPTION Time Zone Select the time zone at your location. Enable Daylight Savings Time Select this if your location uses daylight savings time.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Click Maintenance > Firmware Upgrade > Upgrade File to open this screen as shown next. Figure 89 Upgrade File Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 70 Upgrade File LABEL DESCRIPTION Upgrade File Click Browse then browse to the location of a firmware upgrade file and select it. Upgrade Click this to begin uploading the selected file. This may take up to two minutes. Note: Do not turn off the device while firmware upload is in progress! 12.11.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.12 Upgrade Link Use this screen to set the URL of a firmware file on a remote computer and upload it to the WiMAX Device. Click Maintenance > Firmware Upgrade > Upgrade Link to open this screen as shown next. Figure 90 Upgrade Link Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 71 Upgrade Link LABEL DESCRIPTION Upgrade Link Enter the URL or IP address of the firmwares upgrade location on the network. Upgrade Click this to begin uploading the selected file.
Chapter 12 Maintenance This screen contains the following fields: Table 72 CWMP Upgrade LABEL DESCRIPTION Upgrade Click this to begin upgrading firmware using CWMP Request. This may take up to two minutes. Note: Do not turn off the device while firmware upload is in progress! 12.14 Backup Use this screen to backup your current WiMAX Device settings to a local computer. Click Maintenance > Backup/Restore > Backup to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.15 Restore Use this screen to restore your WiMAX Device settings from a backup file on a local computer. Click Maintenance > Backup/Restore > Restore to open this screen as shown next. Figure 93 Restore Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 74 Restore LABEL DESCRIPTION Configuration File Click Choose File then browse to the location of a firmware upgrade file and select it.
Chapter 12 Maintenance If the upload was not successful, you are notified with an error message. 12.16 Factory Defaults Use this screen to restore the WiMAX Device to its factory default settings. Click Maintenance > Backup/Restore > Factory Defaults to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 12 Maintenance Table 76 Log Setting (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Remote Log Select this to allow logs to be recorded and stored on a remote logs server. Remote Log Host Enter the remote log host IP address if Enable Remote Log is selected. Remote Log Port Enter the remote log host port if Enable Remote Log is selected. 12.18 Log Display Use this screen to view the log messages of the WiMAX Device. Click Maintenance > LOG > Log Display to open this screen as shown next.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.19 Ping Test Use this screen to test network connectivity using ping. Click Maintenance > Network Test > Ping to open this screen as shown next. Figure 97 Ping Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 78 Ping LABEL DESCRIPTION IP Address Enter the IP address or domain name of a target device to which this test will send. Ping Click this to start the test. The result will show at the bottom of the screen. 12.
Chapter 12 Maintenance 12.21 About This screen displays information about the MAX208M2W Series that can be useful when upgrading firmware, considering deployment options, and working with technical support if the device encounters difficulties. Click Maintenance > About to open this screen as shown next. Figure 99 About Screen This screen contains the following fields: Table 80 About LABEL DESCRIPTION System Model Name This field displays the MAX208M2W Series system name.
Chapter 12 Maintenance This screen contains the following fields: Table 81 Reboot LABEL DESCRIPTION Reboot Click this button to have the device perform a software restart. The Power LED blinks as it restarts and the shines steadily if the restart is successful. Note: Wait one minute before logging back into the MAX208M2W Series after a restart.
CHAPTER 13 Troubleshooting This chapter offers some suggestions to solve problems you might encounter. The potential problems are divided into the following categories: Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs MAX208M2W Series Access and Login Internet Access Reset the MAX208M2W Series to Its Factory Defaults 13.1 Power, Hardware Connections, and LEDs The MAX208M2W Series does not turn on. None of the LEDs turn on.
Chapter 13 Troubleshooting 3 Inspect your cables for damage. Contact the vendor to replace any damaged cables. 4 Disconnect and re-connect the power adapter to the MAX208M2W Series. 5 If the problem continues, contact the vendor. 13.2 MAX208M2W Series Access and Login I forgot the IP address for the MAX208M2W Series. 1 The default IP address is .
Chapter 13 Troubleshooting If you changed the IP address and have forgotten it, see the troubleshooting suggestions for I forgot the IP address for the MAX208M2W Series. 2 Check the hardware connections, and make sure the LEDs are behaving as expected. See the Quick Start Guide and Section 1.2.1 on page 21. 3 Make sure your Internet browser does not block pop-up windows and has JavaScript and Java enabled. See Appendix C on page 237.
Chapter 13 Troubleshooting I cannot Telnet to the MAX208M2W Series. See the troubleshooting suggestions for I cannot see or access the Login screen in the web configurator. Ignore the suggestions about your browser. 13.3 Internet Access I cannot access the Internet. 1 Check the hardware connections, and make sure the LEDs are behaving as expected. See the Quick Start Guide and Section 1.2.1 on page 21. 2 Make sure you entered your ISP account information correctly in the wizard.
Chapter 13 Troubleshooting 3 If the problem continues, contact your ISP. The Internet connection is slow or intermittent. 1 The quality of the MAX208M2W Seriess wireless connection to the base station may be poor. Poor signal reception may be improved by moving the MAX208M2W Series away from thick walls and other obstructions, or to a higher floor in your building. 2 There may be radio interference caused by nearby electrical devices such as microwave ovens and radio transmitters.
Chapter 13 Troubleshooting You will lose all of your changes when you push the Reset button. To reset the MAX208M2W Series, 1 Make sure the Power LED is on and not blinking. 2 Press and hold the Reset button for five to ten seconds. Release the Reset button when the Power LED begins to blink. The default settings have been restored. If the MAX208M2W Series restarts automatically, wait for the MAX208M2W Series to finish restarting, and log in to the web configurator. The password is 1234.
CHAPTER 14 Product Specifications This chapter gives details about your MAX208M2W Seriess hardware and firmware features.
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Table 83 Radio Specifications FEATURE DESCRIPTION Media Access Protocol IEEE 802.16e WiMAX Bandwidth 3.4 GHz ~ 3.6 GHz (MAX218M2W) 2.496 GHz~2.690 GHz (MAX208M2W) Data Rate Aggregate throughput: up to 20 mbps Upload: 7 mbps Modulation QPSK (uplink and downlink) 16-QAM (uplink and downlink) 64-QAM (downlink only) Output Power Typically 26.
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Table 84 Firmware Specifications (continued) FEATURE DESCRIPTION Network Address Translation (NAT) Network Address Translation (NAT) allows the translation of an Internet protocol address used within one network (for example a private IP address used in a local network) to a different IP address known within another network (for example a public IP address used on the Internet).
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Table 84 Firmware Specifications (continued) FEATURE DESCRIPTION Logging Use the MAX208M2W Seriess logging feature to view connection history, surveillance logs, and error messages. Codecs G.711 (PCM µ-law and a-law), G729, G.729a Fax Support T.38 FAX relay (FAX over UDP). G.711 fax relay for fax calls and be able to renegotiate codec to G.711 if a fax call is detected. Ring Tones Supports different distinctive ring tones on each line.
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Table 85 Standards Supported (continued) STANDARD DESCRIPTION RFC 3263 Session Initiation Protocol (SIP): Locating SIP Servers RFC 3264 An Offer/Answer Model with the Session Description Protocol (SDP) RFC 3265 Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification RFC 3323 A Privacy Mechanism for SIP RFC 3325 Private Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks RFC 3489 NAT Traversal - STUN RFC 3550
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Table 86 Voice Features 198 Auto Dial You can set the MAX208M2W Series to automatically dial a specified number immediately whenever you lift a phone off the hook. Use the Web Configurator to set the specified number. Use the command line interpreter to have the MAX208M2W Series wait a specified length of time before dialing the number.
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Table 86 Voice Features SIP ALG Your device is a SIP Application Layer Gateway (ALG). It allows VoIP calls to pass through NAT for devices behind it (such as a SIP-based VoIP software application on a computer). Other Voice Features SIP version 2 (Session Initiating Protocol RFC 3261) SDP (Session Description Protocol RFC 2327) RTP (RFC 1889) RTCP (RFC 1890) Voice codecs (coder/decoders) G.711, G.726, G.
Chapter 14 Product Specifications Note: To take full advantage of the supplementary phone services available through the MAX208M2W Series's phone port, you may need to subscribe to the services from your voice account service provider. Not all features are supported by all service providers. Consult your service provider for more information.