Repotec RP-IPG210-2GF Owner's manual

Category
Network switches
Type
Owner's manual
i
M
ANAGEMENT
G
UIDE
RP-IPG210-2GF
GUI User Guide
10-Port Industrial L2+ managed GbE PoE+ switch
Release A3
ii
About This Manual
Copyright
Copyright Manufacture Technology Corp. All rights reserved.
The products and programs described in this User Guide are licensed products of Manufacture
Technology, This User Guide contains proprietary information protected by copyright, and this
User Guide and all accompanying hardware, software and documentation are copyrighted. No
parts of this User Guide may be copied, photocopied, reproduced, translated or reduced to any
electronic medium or machine-readable from by any means by electronic or mechanical.
Including photocopying, recording, or information storage and retrieval systems, for any purpose
other than the purchasers personal use, and without the prior express written permission of
Manufacture Technology.
.
Purpose
This GUI user guide gives specific information on how to operate and use the management
functions of the RP-IPG210-2GF via HTTP/HTTPs web browser
Audience
The Manual is intended for use by network administrators who are responsible for operating and
maintaining network equipment; consequently, it assumes a basic working knowledge of general
switch functions, the Internet Protocol (IP), and Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP).
CONVENTIONS
The following conventions are used throughout this manual to show information.
WARRANTY
See the Customer Support/ Warranty booklet included with the product. A copy of the specific
warranty terms applicable to your Manufacture products and replacement parts can be obtained
from your Manufacture Sales and Service Office authorized dealer.
Disclaimer
Manufacture Technology does not warrant that the hardware will work properly in all
environments and applications, and marks no warranty and representation, either implied or
expressed, with respect to the quality, performance, merchantability, or fitness for a particular
purpose. Manufacture disclaims liability for any inaccuracies or omissions that may have
occurred. Information in this User Guide is subject to change without notice and does not
represent a commitment on the part of Manufacture. Manufacture assumes no responsibility for
any inaccuracies that may be contained in this User Guide. Manufacture makes no commitment
to update or keep current the information in this User Guide, and reserves the righter to make
improvements to this User Guide and /or to the products described in this User Guide, at any
time without notice.
iv
Table of Contents
ABOUT THIS MANUAL .......................................................................................................................... II
Revision History ........................................................................................................................................ viii
INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................... 1
CHAPTER 1 OPERATION OF WEB-BASED MANAGEMENT .......................................................... 3
CHAPTER 2 SYSTEM CONFIGURATION ............................................................................. 6
2-1 SYSTEM ........................................................................................................................................................... 6
2-1.1 Information ........................................................................................................................................ 6
2-1.2 IP ......................................................................................................................................................... 8
2-1.3 NTP ................................................................................................................................................... 11
2-1.4 Time .................................................................................................................................................. 11
2-1.5 Log .................................................................................................................................................... 14
2-1.6 Digital I/O ........................................................................................................................................ 15
2-1.7 Alarm Notification ........................................................................................................................... 15
2-2 GREEN ETHERNET ........................................................................................................................................... 19
2-2.1 Port Power Savings .......................................................................................................................... 19
2-3 PORTS CONFIGURATION ................................................................................................................................... 18
2-3.1 Ports .................................................................................................................................................. 18
2-3.2 Ports Description ............................................................................................................................. 20
2-4 DHCP .......................................................................................................................................................... 21
2-4.1 Server ................................................................................................................................................ 21
2-4.2 Snooping .......................................................................................................................................... 25
2-4.3 Relay ................................................................................................................................................. 26
2-5 SECURITY ....................................................................................................................................................... 28
2-5.1 Switch ............................................................................................................................................... 28
2-5.2 Network ............................................................................................................................................ 53
2-5.3 AAA ................................................................................................................................................... 84
2-6 AGGREGATION ................................................................................................................................................ 88
2-6.1 Static ................................................................................................................................................. 89
2-6.2 LACP ................................................................................................................................................. 90
2-6.3 LACP on Air ...................................................................................................................................... 92
2-7 LOOP PROTECTION ...................................................................................................................................... 94
2-8 SPANNING TREE ........................................................................................................................................... 95
2-8.1 Bridge Setting ................................................................................................................................... 96
2-8.2 MSTI Mapping .................................................................................................................................. 98
2-8.3 MSTI Priorities ................................................................................................................................ 100
2-8.4 CIST Ports ....................................................................................................................................... 101
2-8.5 MSTI Ports ...................................................................................................................................... 103
2-9 IPMC PROFILE .......................................................................................................................................... 104
2-9.1 Profile Table ................................................................................................................................... 104
2-9.2 Address Entry ................................................................................................................................. 106
2-10 MVR ...................................................................................................................................................... 107
2-11 IPMC ..................................................................................................................................................... 110
2-11.1 IGMP Snooping ............................................................................................................................ 110
2-11.2 MLD Snooping ............................................................................................................................. 116
2-12 LLDP ...................................................................................................................................................... 120
2-12.1 LLDP.............................................................................................................................................. 121
2-12.2 LLDP-MED .................................................................................................................................... 124
2-13 POE ........................................................................................................................................................ 130
2- 13.1 Configuration .............................................................................................................................. 131
2- 13.2 Power Delay ................................................................................................................................ 134
v
2- 13.3 Schedule Profile .......................................................................................................................... 135
2- 13.4 Auto Checking ............................................................................................................................ 136
2- 13.5 Chip Reset Schedule ................................................................................................................... 137
2-14 MAC TABLE ............................................................................................................................................ 138
2-15 VLANS ................................................................................................................................................... 141
2-16 PRIVATE VLANS ...................................................................................................................................... 145
2-16.1 Membership ................................................................................................................................. 145
2-16.2 Port Isolation ................................................................................................................................ 147
2-17 VCL ........................................................................................................................................................ 148
2-17.1 MAC-based VLAN ........................................................................................................................ 148
2-17.2 Protocol -based VLAN ................................................................................................................. 150
2-17.3 IP Subnet-based VLAN ................................................................................................................ 154
2-18 VOICE VLAN......................................................................................................................................... 156
2-18.1 Configuration ............................................................................................................................... 156
2-18.2 OUI................................................................................................................................................ 158
2-19 QOS ....................................................................................................................................................... 159
2-19.1 Port Classification ....................................................................................................................... 159
2-19.2 Port Policing ................................................................................................................................. 161
2-19.3 Port Scheduler.............................................................................................................................. 162
2-19.4 Port Shaping ................................................................................................................................ 165
2-19.5 Port Tag Remarking..................................................................................................................... 167
2-19.6 Port DSCP..................................................................................................................................... 170
2-19.7 DSCP-Based QoS ......................................................................................................................... 172
2-19.8 DSCP Translation ......................................................................................................................... 174
2-19.9 DSCP Classification ..................................................................................................................... 176
2-19.10 QoS Control List......................................................................................................................... 178
2-19.11 Storm Control ............................................................................................................................ 182
2-20 MIRRORING ............................................................................................................................................ 184
2-21 UPNP ..................................................................................................................................................... 186
2-22 GVRP ..................................................................................................................................................... 188
2-22.1 Global Config ............................................................................................................................... 188
2-22.2 Port Config ................................................................................................................................... 190
2-23 SFLOW .................................................................................................................................................... 191
2-24 UDLD .................................................................................................................................................... 193
2-25 RAPID RING ............................................................................................................................................ 194
2-26 SWITCH2GO ............................................................................................................................................ 195
2-26.1 Switch2go setting ........................................................................................................................ 195
2.26.2 iPush Options ............................................................................................................................... 197
2-27 SMTP .................................................................................................................................................... 198
CHAPTER 3. MONITOR ...................................................................................................... 200
3-1 SYSTEM ..................................................................................................................................................... 200
3-1.1 Information .................................................................................................................................... 200
3-1.2 IP Status .......................................................................................................................................... 203
3-1.3 Log .................................................................................................................................................. 205
3-1.4 Detailed Log ................................................................................................................................... 207
3-2 GREEN ETHERNET ...................................................................................................................................... 208
3-2.1 Port Power Savings ........................................................................................................................ 208
3-3 PORTS ....................................................................................................................................................... 209
3-3.1 Traffic Overview ............................................................................................................................. 209
3-3.2 Qos Statistics .................................................................................................................................. 211
3-3.3 QCL Status ...................................................................................................................................... 212
3-3.4 Detailed Statistics .......................................................................................................................... 214
3-3.5 SFP Information ............................................................................................................................. 217
vi
3-3.6 SFP Detail Info ............................................................................................................................... 219
3-4 DHCP ...................................................................................................................................................... 220
3-4.1 Server .............................................................................................................................................. 220
3-4.2 Snooping Table .............................................................................................................................. 224
3-4.3 Relay Statistics ............................................................................................................................... 225
3-4.4 Detailed Statistics .......................................................................................................................... 227
3-5 SECURITY .................................................................................................................................................. 229
3-5.1 Access Management Statistics ...................................................................................................... 229
3-5.2 Network .......................................................................................................................................... 230
3-5.3 AAA ................................................................................................................................................. 244
3-5.4 Switch ............................................................................................................................................. 251
3-6 AGGREGATION ........................................................................................................................................... 260
3-6.1 Status .............................................................................................................................................. 260
3-6.2 LACP ............................................................................................................................................... 261
3-7 LOOP PROTECTION .................................................................................................................................... 264
3-8 SPANNING TREE ......................................................................................................................................... 265
3-8.1 Bridge Status .................................................................................................................................. 265
3-8.2 Port Status ...................................................................................................................................... 267
3-8.3 Port Statistics ................................................................................................................................. 268
3-9 MVR ........................................................................................................................................................ 270
3-9.1 Statistics .......................................................................................................................................... 270
3-9.2 MVR Channels Groups .................................................................................................................. 272
3-9.3 MVR SFM Information ................................................................................................................... 274
3-10 IPMC ..................................................................................................................................................... 276
3-10.1 IGMP Snooping ............................................................................................................................ 276
3-10.2 MLD Snooping ............................................................................................................................. 282
3-11 LLDP ...................................................................................................................................................... 288
3-11.1 Neighbour .................................................................................................................................... 288
3-11.2 LLDP-MED Neighbour ................................................................................................................. 290
3-11.3 PoE ................................................................................................................................................ 293
3-11.4 EEE ................................................................................................................................................ 295
3-11.5 Port Statistics ............................................................................................................................... 297
3-12 POE ........................................................................................................................................................ 298
3-13 MAC TABLE ............................................................................................................................................ 301
3-14 VLANS ................................................................................................................................................... 303
3-14.1 Membership ................................................................................................................................. 303
3-14.2 Port ............................................................................................................................................... 305
3-15 VCL ........................................................................................................................................................ 307
3-15.1 MAC-based VLAN ........................................................................................................................ 307
3-15.2 Protocol-based VLAN .................................................................................................................. 308
3-15.3 IP Subnet-based VLAN ................................................................................................................ 311
3-16 SFLOW .................................................................................................................................................... 312
3-17 UDLD .................................................................................................................................................... 314
CHAPTER 4. DIAGNOSTICS ............................................................................................... 316
4-1 PING ......................................................................................................................................................... 316
4-2 PING6 ....................................................................................................................................................... 318
4-3 CABLE DIAGNOSTICS .................................................................................................................................. 320
4-4 TRACEROUTE ............................................................................................................................................. 322
CHAPTER 5. MAINTENANCE ............................................................................. 323
5-1 RESTART DEVICE ........................................................................................................................................ 323
5-2 REBOOT SCHEDULE .................................................................................................................................... 323
5-3 FACTORY DEFAULTS .................................................................................................................................... 325
5-4 FIRMWARE................................................................................................................................................. 326
vii
5-4.1 Firmware upgrade ......................................................................................................................... 326
5-4.2 Firmware Selection ........................................................................................................................ 328
5-5 CONFIGURATION........................................................................................................................................ 330
5-5.1 Save startup-config ....................................................................................................................... 330
5-5.2 Download ....................................................................................................................................... 331
5-5.3 Upload ............................................................................................................................................ 332
5-5.4 Activate ........................................................................................................................................... 334
5-5.5 Delete.............................................................................................................................................. 335
5-6 SERVER REPORT ......................................................................................................................................... 335
viii
Revision History
Release
Date
Revision
Initial Release
12/09/2018
A1
08/18/2018
A2
09/08/2018
A3
01/04/2019
A4
INTRODUCTION
Overview
In this User Guide, it will not only tell you how to install and connect your network system but
configure and monitor the RP-IPG210-2GF through the web by (RJ-45) serial interface and Ethernet
ports step-by-step. Many explanations in detail of hardware and software functions are shown as well
as the examples of the operation for web-based interface.
The RP-IPG210-2GF series, the next generation Web managed switches from Manufacture, is a
portfolio of affordable managed switches that provides a reliable infrastructure for your business
network. These switches deliver more intelligent features you need to improve the availability of your
critical business applications, protect your sensitive information, and optimize your network
bandwidth to deliver information and applications more effectively. It provides the ideal combination
of affordability and capabilities for entry level networking includes small business or enterprise
application and helps you create a more efficient, better-connected workforce.
RP-IPG210-2GF Industrial L2+ managed GbE PoE+ switch provide 10 ports in a single device;
the specification is highlighted as follows.
L2+ features provide better manageability, security, QoS, and performance.
Support IPv4/IPv6 dual stack management
Support SSH/SSL secured management
Support SNMP v1/v2c/v3
Support RMON groups 1,2,3,9
Support sFlow
Support IGMP v1/v2/v3 Snooping
Support MLD v1/v2 Snooping
Support RADIUS and TACACS+ authentication
Support IP Source Guard
Support DHCP Relay (Option 82)
Support DHCP Snooping
Support ACL and QCL for traffic filtering
Support 802.1d(STP), 802.1w(RSTP) and 802.1s(MSTP)
Support LACP and static link aggregation
Support Q-in-Q double tag VLAN
Support GVRP dynamic VLAN
Overview of this User Guide
Chapter 1 “Operation of Web-based Management”
Chapter 2 “System Configuration”
Chapter 3 “Configuration
Chapter 4 “Security”
Chapter 5 “Maintenance”
2
Chapter 1 Operation of Web-based Management
Initial
Configuration
This chapter instructs you how to configure and manage the RP-IPG210-2GF
through the web user interface. With this facility, you can easily access and monitor
through any one port of the switch all the status of the switch, including MIBs status,
each port activity, Spanning tree status, port aggregation status, multicast traffic,
VLAN and priority status, even illegal access record and so on.
T
he default values of the RP-IPG210-2GF are listed in the table below:
IP Address
192.168.1.1
Subnet Mask
255.255.255.0
Default Gateway
192.168.1.254
Username
admin
Password
After the RP-IPG210-2GF has been finished configuration it interface, you can browse
it. For instance, type
http://192.168.1.1 in the address row in a browser, it will show
the following screen and ask you inputting username and password in order to login
and access authentication.
The default username is admin” and password is empty. For the first time to use,
please enter the default username and password, and then click the <Login> button.
The login process now is completed. In this login menu, you have to input the
complete username and password respectively, the RP-IPG210-2GF will not give you a
shortcut to username automatically. This looks inconvenient,
but safer.
In the RP-IPG210-2GF, allowed two or more users using administrator’s identity to
manage this switch, which administrator to do the last setting, it will be an available
configuration to effect the system.
NOTE:
When you login the Switch WEB page to manage. You must first type the
Username of the admin. Password was blank, so when you type after the
end Username, please press enter. Management page to enter WEB.
When you login RP-IPG210-2GF series switch Web UI management, you can
use both ipv4 ipv6 login to manage
To optimize the display effect, we recommend you use Microsoft IE 6.0
above, Netscape V7.1 above or Firefox V1.00 above and have the resolution
1024x768. The switch supported neutral web browser interface
NOTE:
AS RP-IPG210-2GF the function enable dhcp, so If you do not have DHCP
server to provide ip addresses to the switch, the Switch
default ip
192.168.1.1
Figure 1 The login page
6
Chapter 2 System Configuration
This chapter describes the entire basic configuration tasks which includes the System Information and
any manage of the Switch (e.g. Time, Account, IP, Syslog and NTP.)
2-1 System
You can identify the system by configuring the contact information, name, and location of the
switch.
2-1.1 Information
The switch system’s contact information is provided here.
Web interface
To configure System Information in the web interface:
1. Click Configuration, System, and Information.
2. Write System Contact, System Name, System Location information in this page.
3. Click Apply
Figure 2-1.1: System Information
Parameter description:
System Contact:
The textual identification of the contact person for this managed node, together with
information on how to contact this person. The allowed string length is 0 to 128, and the
allowed content is the ASCII characters from 32 to 126.
System name:
An administratively assigned name for this managed node. By convention, this is the node's
fully-qualified domain name. A domain name is a text string drawn from the alphabet
(A-Za-z), digits (0-9), minus sign (-). No space characters are permitted as part of a name.
The first character must be an alpha character. And the first or last character must not be a
minus sign. The allowed string length is 0 to 255.
System Location:
The physical location of this node(e.g., telephone closet, 3rd floor). The allowed string
length is 0 to 128, and the allowed content is the ASCII characters from 32 to 126.
Buttons:
7
ApplyClick to save changes.
Reset- Click to undo any changes made locally and revert to previously saved values.
8
2-1.2 IP
The IPv4 address for the switch could be obtained via DHCP Server for VLAN 1. To manually
configure an address, you need to change the switch's default settings to values that are
compatible with your network. You may also need to establish a default gateway between the
switch and management stations that exist on another network segment.
Configure the switch-managed IP information on this page
Configure IP basic settings, control IP interfaces and IP routes.
The maximum number of interfaces supported is 8 and the maximum number of routes is 32.
Web Interface
To configure an IP address in the web interface:
1. Click Configuration, System, IP.
2. Click Add Interface then you can create new Interface on the switch.
3. Click Add Route then you can create new Route on the switch
4. Click Apply
Figure2-1.2: The IP configuration
9
Parameter description:
IP Configuration
Mode:
Configure whether the IP stack should act as a Host or a Router. In Host mode, IP traffic
between interfaces will not be routed. In Router mode traffic is routed between all
interfaces.
DNS Server
This setting controls the DNS name resolution done by the switch.
There are four servers available for configuration, and the index of the server presents the
preference (less index has higher priority) in doing DNS name resolution.
System selects the active DNS server from configuration in turn, if the preferred server does
not respond in five attempts.
The following modes are supported:
From any DHCP interfaces
The first DNS server offered from a DHCPv4 lease to a DHCPv4-enabled interface will
be used..
No DNS server
No DNS server will be used.
Configured IPv4
Explicitly provide the valid IPv4 unicast address of the DNS Server in
dotted decimal
notation.
Make sure the configured DNS server could be reachable (e.g. via PING) for activating
DNS service.
From this DHCPv4 interface
Specify from which DHCPv4-enabled interface a provided DNS server should be
preferred.
Configured IPv6
Explicitly provide the valid IPv6 unicast (except linklocal) address of the DNS Server.
Make sure the configured DNS server could be reachable (e.g. via PING6) for activating
DNS service.
From this DHCPv6 interface
Specify from which DHCPv6-enabled interface a provided DNS server should be
preferred.
From any DHCPv6 interfaces
The first DNS server offered from a DHCPv6 lease to a DHCPv6-enabled interface will
be used.
DNS Proxy
When DNS proxy is enabled, system will relay DNS requests to the currently configured DNS
server, and reply as a DNS resolver to the client devices on the network.
Only IPv4 DNS proxy is now supported.
IP Interfaces
Delete
Select this option to delete an existing IP interface.
VLAN
The VLAN associated with the IP interface. Only ports in this VLAN will be able to access the IP
10
interface. This field is only available for input when creating a new interface.
IPv4 DHCP Enabled
Enable the DHCPv4 client by checking this box. If this option is enabled, the system will configure
the IPv4 address and mask of the interface using the DHCPv4 protocol. The DHCPv4 client will
announce the configured System Name as hostname to provide DNS lookup.
IPv4 DHCP Fallback Timeout
The number of seconds for trying to obtain a DHCP lease. After this period expires, a configured
IPv4 address will be used as IPv4 interface address. A value of zero disables the fallback
mechanism, such that DHCP will keep retrying until a valid lease is obtained. Legal values are 0 to
4294967295 seconds.
IPv4 DHCP Current Lease
For DHCP interfaces with an active lease, this column show the current interface address, as
provided by the DHCP server.
IPv4 Address
The IPv4 address of the interface in dotted decimal notation.
If DHCP is enabled, this field configures the fallback address. The field may be left blank if IPv4
operation on the interface is not desired - or no DHCP fallback address is desired.
IPv4 Mask
The IPv4 network mask, in number of bits (prefix length). Valid values are between 0 and 30 bits
for a IPv4 address.
If DHCP is enabled, this field configures the fallback address network mask. The field may be left
blank if IPv4 operation on the interface is not desired - or no DHCP fallback address is desired.
DHCPv6 Enable
Enable the DHCPv6 client by checking this box. If this option is enabled, the system will configure
the IPv6 address of the interface using the DHCPv6 protocol.
DHCPv6 Rapid Commit
Enable the DHCPv6 Rapid-Commit option by checking this box. If this option is enabled, the
DHCPv6 client terminates the waiting process as soon as a Reply message with a Rapid Commit
option is received.
This option is only manageable when DHCPv6 client is enabled.
DHCPv6 Current Lease
For DHCPv6 interface with an active lease, this column shows the interface address provided by
the DHCPv6 server.
IPv6 Address
The IPv6 address of the interface. A IPv6 address is in 128-bit records represented as eight fields
of up to four hexadecimal digits with a colon separating each field (:). For
example,fe80::215:c5ff:fe03:4dc7. The symbol :: is a special syntax that can be used as a shorthand
way of representing multiple 16-bit groups of contiguous zeros; but it can appear only once.
System accepts the valid IPv6 unicast address only, except IPv4-Compatible address and
IPv4-Mapped address.
The field may be left blank if IPv6 operation on the interface is not desired.
IPv6 Mask
The IPv6 network mask, in number of bits (prefix length). Valid values are between 1 and 128 bits
for a IPv6 address.
The field may be left blank if IPv6 operation on the interface is not desired.
Resolving IPv6 DAD
The link-local address is formed from an interface identifier based on the hardware address which
11
is supposed to be uniquely assigned. Once the DAD (Duplicate Address Detection) detects the
address duplication, the operation on the interface SHOULD be disabled.
At this moment, manual intervention is required to resolve the address duplication. For example,
check whether the loop occurs in the VLAN or there is indeed other device occupying the same
hardware address as the device in the VLAN.
After making sure the specific link-local address is unique on the IPv6 link in use, delete and then
add the specific IPv6 interface to restart the IPv6 operations on this interface.
IP Routes
Delete
Select this option to delete an existing IP route.
Network
The destination IP network or host address of this route. Valid format is dotted decimal
notationor a valid IPv6 notation. A default route can use the value 0.0.0.0or IPv6 :: notation.
Mask Length
The destination IP network or host mask, in number of bits (prefix length). It defines how
much of a network address that must match, in order to qualify for this route. Valid values
are between 0 and 32 bits respectively 128 for IPv6 routes. Only a default route will have a
mask length of 0 (as it will match anything).
Gateway
The IP address of the IP gateway. Valid format is dotted decimal notationor a valid IPv6
notation. Gateway and Network must be of the same type.
Next Hop VLAN (Only for IPv6)
The VLAN ID (VID) of the specific IPv6 interface associated with the gateway.
The given VID ranges from 1 to 4095 and will be effective only when the corresponding IPv6
interface is valid.
If the IPv6 gateway address is link-local, it must specify the next hop VLAN for the gateway.
If the IPv6 gateway address is not link-local, system ignores the next hop VLAN for the
gateway.
Buttons
Add Interface:
Click to add a new IP interface. A maximum of 8 interfaces is supported.
Add Route:
Click to add a new IP route. A maximum of 32 routes is supported.
Apply:
Click to save changes.
Reset:
Click to undo any changes made locally and revert to previously saved values.
2-1.3 NTP
NTP is Network Time Protocol and is used to sync the network time based Greenwich Mean
Time (GMT). If use the NTP mode and select a built-in NTP time server or manually specify an
user-defined NTP server as well as Time Zone, the switch will sync the time in a short after
pressing <Apply> button. Though it synchronizes the time automatically, NTP does not update
the time periodically without users processing.
12
Time Zone is an offset time off GMT. You have to select the time zone first and then perform
time sync via NTP because the switch will combine this time zone offset and updated NTP time
to come out the local time, otherwise, you will not able to get the correct time. The switch
supports configurable time zone from 12 to +13 step 1 hour.
Default Time zone: +8 Hrs.
Web Interface
To configure NTP in the web interface:
1. Click Configuration, System, NTP.
2. Specify the Time parameter in manual parameters.
3. Click Apply.
Figure 2-1.3: The NTP configuration
Parameter description:
Mode :
Indicates the NTP mode operation. Possible modes are:
Enabled: Enable NTP client mode operation.
Disabled: Disable NTP client mode operation.
Server 1 to 5 :
Provide the IPv4 or IPv6 address of a NTP server. IPv6 address is in 128-bit records
represented as eight fields of up to four hexadecimal digits with a colon separating each
field (:). For example, 'fe80::215:c5ff:fe03:4dc7'. The symbol '::' is a special syntax that can be
used as a shorthand way of representing multiple 16-bit groups of contiguous zeros; but it
can appear only once. It can also represent a legally valid IPv4 address. For example,
'::192.1.2.34'. In addition, it can also accept a domain name address.
Buttons
ApplyClick to save changes.
Reset - Click to undo any changes made locally and revert to previously saved values.
2-1.4 Time
The switch provides manual and automatic ways to set the system time via NTP. Manual setting
is simple and you just input “Year, “Month”, “Day”, “Hour” and “Minute” within the valid value
range indicated in each item.
Web Interface
To configure Time in the web interface:
1. Click Configuration, System and Time
2. Specify the Time parameter.
3. Click Apply.
Figure 2-1.4: The time configuration
12
Parameter description:
Time Configuration
Clock Source:
There are two modes for configuring how the Clock Source from. Select "Use Local
Settings" : Clock Source from Local Time. Select "Use NTP Server" : Clock Source from NTP
Server.
System Date:
Show the current time of the system. The year of system date limits between 2011 and 2037.
Time Zone Configuration
Time Zone:
Lists various Time Zones worldwide. Select appropriate Time Zone from the drop down and
click Apply to set.
Acronym:
User can set the acronym of the time zone. This is a User configurable acronym to identify
the time zone. (Range: Up to 16 characters)
Daylight Saving Time Configuration
Daylight Saving Time:
This is used to set the clock forward or backward according to the configurations set below
for a defined Daylight Saving Time duration. Select 'Disable' to disable the Daylight Saving
Time configuration. Select 'Recurring' and configure the Daylight Saving Time duration to
repeat the configuration every year. Select 'Non-Recurring' and configure the Daylight
  • Page 1 1
  • Page 2 2
  • Page 3 3
  • Page 4 4
  • Page 5 5
  • Page 6 6
  • Page 7 7
  • Page 8 8
  • Page 9 9
  • Page 10 10
  • Page 11 11
  • Page 12 12
  • Page 13 13
  • Page 14 14
  • Page 15 15
  • Page 16 16
  • Page 17 17
  • Page 18 18
  • Page 19 19
  • Page 20 20
  • Page 21 21
  • Page 22 22
  • Page 23 23
  • Page 24 24
  • Page 25 25
  • Page 26 26
  • Page 27 27
  • Page 28 28
  • Page 29 29
  • Page 30 30
  • Page 31 31
  • Page 32 32
  • Page 33 33
  • Page 34 34
  • Page 35 35
  • Page 36 36
  • Page 37 37
  • Page 38 38
  • Page 39 39
  • Page 40 40
  • Page 41 41
  • Page 42 42
  • Page 43 43
  • Page 44 44
  • Page 45 45
  • Page 46 46
  • Page 47 47
  • Page 48 48
  • Page 49 49
  • Page 50 50
  • Page 51 51
  • Page 52 52
  • Page 53 53
  • Page 54 54
  • Page 55 55
  • Page 56 56
  • Page 57 57
  • Page 58 58
  • Page 59 59
  • Page 60 60
  • Page 61 61
  • Page 62 62
  • Page 63 63
  • Page 64 64
  • Page 65 65
  • Page 66 66
  • Page 67 67
  • Page 68 68
  • Page 69 69
  • Page 70 70
  • Page 71 71
  • Page 72 72
  • Page 73 73
  • Page 74 74
  • Page 75 75
  • Page 76 76
  • Page 77 77
  • Page 78 78
  • Page 79 79
  • Page 80 80
  • Page 81 81
  • Page 82 82
  • Page 83 83
  • Page 84 84
  • Page 85 85
  • Page 86 86
  • Page 87 87
  • Page 88 88
  • Page 89 89
  • Page 90 90
  • Page 91 91
  • Page 92 92
  • Page 93 93
  • Page 94 94
  • Page 95 95
  • Page 96 96
  • Page 97 97
  • Page 98 98
  • Page 99 99
  • Page 100 100
  • Page 101 101
  • Page 102 102
  • Page 103 103
  • Page 104 104
  • Page 105 105
  • Page 106 106
  • Page 107 107
  • Page 108 108
  • Page 109 109
  • Page 110 110
  • Page 111 111
  • Page 112 112
  • Page 113 113
  • Page 114 114
  • Page 115 115
  • Page 116 116
  • Page 117 117
  • Page 118 118
  • Page 119 119
  • Page 120 120
  • Page 121 121
  • Page 122 122
  • Page 123 123
  • Page 124 124
  • Page 125 125
  • Page 126 126
  • Page 127 127
  • Page 128 128
  • Page 129 129
  • Page 130 130
  • Page 131 131
  • Page 132 132
  • Page 133 133
  • Page 134 134
  • Page 135 135
  • Page 136 136
  • Page 137 137
  • Page 138 138
  • Page 139 139
  • Page 140 140
  • Page 141 141
  • Page 142 142
  • Page 143 143
  • Page 144 144
  • Page 145 145
  • Page 146 146
  • Page 147 147
  • Page 148 148
  • Page 149 149
  • Page 150 150
  • Page 151 151
  • Page 152 152
  • Page 153 153
  • Page 154 154
  • Page 155 155
  • Page 156 156
  • Page 157 157
  • Page 158 158
  • Page 159 159
  • Page 160 160
  • Page 161 161
  • Page 162 162
  • Page 163 163
  • Page 164 164
  • Page 165 165
  • Page 166 166
  • Page 167 167
  • Page 168 168
  • Page 169 169
  • Page 170 170
  • Page 171 171
  • Page 172 172
  • Page 173 173
  • Page 174 174
  • Page 175 175
  • Page 176 176
  • Page 177 177
  • Page 178 178
  • Page 179 179
  • Page 180 180
  • Page 181 181
  • Page 182 182
  • Page 183 183
  • Page 184 184
  • Page 185 185
  • Page 186 186
  • Page 187 187
  • Page 188 188
  • Page 189 189
  • Page 190 190
  • Page 191 191
  • Page 192 192
  • Page 193 193
  • Page 194 194
  • Page 195 195
  • Page 196 196
  • Page 197 197
  • Page 198 198
  • Page 199 199
  • Page 200 200
  • Page 201 201
  • Page 202 202
  • Page 203 203
  • Page 204 204
  • Page 205 205
  • Page 206 206
  • Page 207 207
  • Page 208 208
  • Page 209 209
  • Page 210 210
  • Page 211 211
  • Page 212 212
  • Page 213 213
  • Page 214 214
  • Page 215 215
  • Page 216 216
  • Page 217 217
  • Page 218 218
  • Page 219 219
  • Page 220 220
  • Page 221 221
  • Page 222 222
  • Page 223 223
  • Page 224 224
  • Page 225 225
  • Page 226 226
  • Page 227 227
  • Page 228 228
  • Page 229 229
  • Page 230 230
  • Page 231 231
  • Page 232 232
  • Page 233 233
  • Page 234 234
  • Page 235 235
  • Page 236 236
  • Page 237 237
  • Page 238 238
  • Page 239 239
  • Page 240 240
  • Page 241 241
  • Page 242 242
  • Page 243 243
  • Page 244 244
  • Page 245 245
  • Page 246 246
  • Page 247 247
  • Page 248 248
  • Page 249 249
  • Page 250 250
  • Page 251 251
  • Page 252 252
  • Page 253 253
  • Page 254 254
  • Page 255 255
  • Page 256 256
  • Page 257 257
  • Page 258 258
  • Page 259 259
  • Page 260 260
  • Page 261 261
  • Page 262 262
  • Page 263 263
  • Page 264 264
  • Page 265 265
  • Page 266 266
  • Page 267 267
  • Page 268 268
  • Page 269 269
  • Page 270 270
  • Page 271 271
  • Page 272 272
  • Page 273 273
  • Page 274 274
  • Page 275 275
  • Page 276 276
  • Page 277 277
  • Page 278 278
  • Page 279 279
  • Page 280 280
  • Page 281 281
  • Page 282 282
  • Page 283 283
  • Page 284 284
  • Page 285 285
  • Page 286 286
  • Page 287 287
  • Page 288 288
  • Page 289 289
  • Page 290 290
  • Page 291 291
  • Page 292 292
  • Page 293 293
  • Page 294 294
  • Page 295 295
  • Page 296 296
  • Page 297 297
  • Page 298 298
  • Page 299 299
  • Page 300 300
  • Page 301 301
  • Page 302 302
  • Page 303 303
  • Page 304 304
  • Page 305 305
  • Page 306 306
  • Page 307 307
  • Page 308 308
  • Page 309 309
  • Page 310 310
  • Page 311 311
  • Page 312 312
  • Page 313 313
  • Page 314 314
  • Page 315 315
  • Page 316 316
  • Page 317 317
  • Page 318 318
  • Page 319 319
  • Page 320 320
  • Page 321 321
  • Page 322 322
  • Page 323 323
  • Page 324 324
  • Page 325 325
  • Page 326 326
  • Page 327 327
  • Page 328 328
  • Page 329 329
  • Page 330 330
  • Page 331 331
  • Page 332 332
  • Page 333 333
  • Page 334 334
  • Page 335 335
  • Page 336 336
  • Page 337 337
  • Page 338 338
  • Page 339 339
  • Page 340 340
  • Page 341 341
  • Page 342 342
  • Page 343 343
  • Page 344 344
  • Page 345 345
  • Page 346 346
  • Page 347 347
  • Page 348 348

Repotec RP-IPG210-2GF Owner's manual

Category
Network switches
Type
Owner's manual

Ask a question and I''ll find the answer in the document

Finding information in a document is now easier with AI