Billion BiPAC 7404VNOX, BiPAC 7404VNPX User Manual

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BiPAC 7404VNOX /VNPX

3G/VoIP/802.11n ADSL2+ (VPN)

Firewall Router

User Manual

Version release: 1.24 (6.24b.dm2)

Last Revised: July 04, 2012

Table of Contents

 

Chapter 1: Introduction ........................................................................................................................

1

Introduction to your Router ............................................................................................................

1

Features ........................................................................................................................................

1

Chapter 2: Installing the Router ...........................................................................................................

5

Important note for using this router................................................................................................

5

Package Contents .........................................................................................................................

5

Device Description.........................................................................................................................

6

The Front LEDs.......................................................................................................................

6

The Rear Ports........................................................................................................................

7

Cabling ..........................................................................................................................................

8

Chapter 3: Basic Installation ................................................................................................................

9

Connecting Your Router ..............................................................................................................

10

Network Configuration .................................................................................................................

11

Configuring PC in windows 7 ................................................................................................

11

Configuring PC in Windows Vista..........................................................................................

13

Configuring PC in Windows XP.............................................................................................

15

Configuring PC in Windows 2000..........................................................................................

16

Configuring PC in Windows NT4.0........................................................................................

18

Factory Default Settings ..............................................................................................................

19

Information from your ISP............................................................................................................

20

Configuring with your Web Browser ............................................................................................

21

Chapter 4: Configuration....................................................................................................................

22

Status ..........................................................................................................................................

23

ADSL Status..........................................................................................................................

23

3G Status ..............................................................................................................................

24

EWAN Status ........................................................................................................................

25

iBurst Status..........................................................................................................................

26

ARP Table.............................................................................................................................

27

DHCP Table ..........................................................................................................................

27

Routing Table........................................................................................................................

29

NAT Sessions .......................................................................................................................

30

UPnP Portmap ......................................................................................................................

30

PPTP Status..........................................................................................................................

31

IPSec Status .........................................................................................................................

32

L2TP Status ..........................................................................................................................

32

VoIP Status ...........................................................................................................................

33

VoIP Call Log ........................................................................................................................

33

Event Log ..............................................................................................................................

34

Error Log ...............................................................................................................................

35

IDS Log .................................................................................................................................

35

Diagnostic .............................................................................................................................

35

Quick Start...................................................................................................................................

36

Configuration ...............................................................................................................................

41

LAN - Local Area Network.....................................................................................................

41

Bridge Interface...............................................................................................................

41

Ethernet ..........................................................................................................................

42

IP Alias............................................................................................................................

43

IPv6 Autoconfig...............................................................................................................

44

Ethernet Client Filter .......................................................................................................

45

Wireless ..........................................................................................................................

46

Wireless Security ............................................................................................................

49

Wireless Client / MAC Address Filter ..............................................................................

51

WPS................................................................................................................................

52

Wi-Fi Network Setup .......................................................................................................

52

Port Setting .....................................................................................................................

65

DHCP Server ..................................................................................................................

66

WAN - Wide Area Network....................................................................................................

67

WAN Interface.................................................................................................................

67

WAN Profile ....................................................................................................................

70

ADSL Mode.....................................................................................................................

90

System ..................................................................................................................................

91

Time Zone.......................................................................................................................

91

Remote Access...............................................................................................................

92

Firmware Upgrade ..........................................................................................................

92

Backup / Restore ............................................................................................................

93

Restart Router.................................................................................................................

94

User Management ..........................................................................................................

95

Mail Alert .........................................................................................................................

97

Firewall and Access Control..................................................................................................

98

General Settings .............................................................................................................

99

Packet Filter ..................................................................................................................

100

Intrusion Detection ........................................................................................................

102

URL Filter......................................................................................................................

106

IM / P2P Blocking..........................................................................................................

109

Firewall Log...................................................................................................................

110

VPN - Virtual Private Networks ...........................................................................................

111

PPTP (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol).....................................................................

111

IPSec (IP Security Protocol)..........................................................................................

120

L2TP (Layer Two Tunneling Protocol) ..........................................................................

130

VoIP - Voice over Internet Protocol .....................................................................................

142

SIP Device Parameters.................................................................................................

143

SIP Accounts ................................................................................................................

146

Phone Port ....................................................................................................................

147

PSTN Dial Plan (Router with LINE port only) ................................................................

148

VoIP Dial Plan...............................................................................................................

152

Call Features.................................................................................................................

155

Speed Dial ....................................................................................................................

155

Ring & Tone ..................................................................................................................

156

QoS - Quality of Service......................................................................................................

158

Prioritization ..................................................................................................................

158

Outbound IP Throttling (LAN to WAN) ..........................................................................

159

Inbound IP Throttling (WAN to LAN) .............................................................................

161

Virtual Server ......................................................................................................................

167

Porting Forwarding........................................................................................................

168

Edit DMZ Host...............................................................................................................

170

Edit One-to-One NAT (Network Address Translation) ..................................................

171

Wake on LAN ......................................................................................................................

174

Time Schedule ....................................................................................................................

175

Advanced ............................................................................................................................

178

Static Route ..................................................................................................................

178

Static ARP.....................................................................................................................

178

Dynamic DNS ...............................................................................................................

179

Device Management .....................................................................................................

180

IGMP.............................................................................................................................

183

MLD ..............................................................................................................................

183

VLAN Bridge .................................................................................................................

185

Chapter 5: Troubleshooting .............................................................................................................

186

Logout..............................................................................................................................................

188

Appendix: Product Support & Contact .............................................................................................

189

Chapter 1: Introduction

Introduction to your Router

Welcome to the 3G/VoIP/ 802.11n ADSL2+ (VPN) Firewall Router. The router is an “all-in-one”

ADSL router, combining an ADSL modem, ADSL router and Ethernet network switch functionalities, providing everything you need to get the machines on your network connected to the Internet over your ADSL broadband connection. With features such as an ADSL Quick-Start wizard and DHCP

Server, you can be online in no time at all and with a minimum of fuss and configuration, catering for first-time users to the guru requiring advanced features and control over their Internet connection and network.

Features

Express Internet Access

The router complies with ADSL worldwide standards. It supports downstream rate up to 12/24 Mbps with ADSL2/2+, 8Mbps with ADSL. Users enjoy not only high-speed ADSL services but also broadband multimedia applications such as interactive gaming, video streaming and real-time audio much easier and faster than ever. It is compliant with Multi-Mode standard (ANSI T1.413, Issue 2;

G.dmt (ITU G.992.1); G.lite (ITU G.992.2); G.hs (ITU G994.1); G.dmt.bis (ITU G.992.3); G.dmt.bis.plus (ITU G.992.5)).

3G

With 3G-based Internet connection (requires an additional 3G USB modem), user can access internet through 3G - whether you're seated at your desk or taking a cross-country train trip.

EWAN

Besides using 3G/ADSL to get connected to the Internet, the router offers its Ethernet port 1 as a WAN port to be used to connect to Cable Modems and fiber optic lines. This alternative, yet faster method to connect to the internet will provide users more flexibility to get online.

Dual WAN

Dual WAN is a new way of getting connected to the internet which is to use each two of the 3G/ADSL/EWAN to deal with the unexpected case and balance traffic load. That is a way of improving greatly the robustness.

802.11n Wireless AP with WPA Support

With an integrated 802.11n Wireless Access Point in the router, the device delivers up to 6 times faster speeds and 3 times farther range than an 802.11b/g wireless network. It offers a quick yet easily accessible and mobile to the users among wired network, wireless network, broadband connection (ADSL). In addition to having a 300Mbps. data rate, it is also backward compatible with existing 802.11b/11g equipments. The supported features of Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPAPSK/ WPA2-PSK) and Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) enhance the security level of data protection and access control via Wireless

Fast Ethernet Switch

A 4-port 10/100/1000Mbps fast Ethernet switch is built in with automatic switching between MDI and MDI-X for 10Base-T, 100Base-TX and 1000Base-TX ports. An Ethernet straight or crossover cable can be used directly for auto detection.

1

Multi-Protocol to Establish a Connection

It supports PPPoA (RFC 2364 - PPP over ATM Adaptation Layer 5), RFC 1483 encapsulation overATM (bridged or routed), PPP over Ethernet (RFC 2516), and IPoA (RFC1577) to establish a connection with the ISP. The product also supports VC-based and LLC-based multiplexing.

Quick Installation Wizard

It supports a WEB GUI page to install this device quickly. With this wizard, end users can enter the information easily which they get from their ISP, then surf the Internet immediately.

Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) and UPnP NAT Traversal

This protocol is used to enable simple and robust connectivity among stand-alone devices and PCs from many different vendors. It makes network simple and affordable for users. UPnP architecture leverages TCP/IP and the Web to enable seamless proximity networking in addition to control and data transfer among networked devices. With this feature enabled, users can now connect to Net meeting or MSN Messenger seamlessly.

Network Address Translation (NAT)

Allows multi-users to access outside resources such as the Internet simultaneously with one IP address/one Internet access account. Many application layer gateway (ALG) are supported such as web browser, ICQ, FTP, Telnet, E-mail, News, Net2phone, Ping, NetMeeting, IP phone and others.

SOHO Firewall Security with DoS and SPI

Along with the built-in NAT natural firewall feature, the router also provides advanced hacker pattern-filtering protection. It can automatically detect and block Denial of Service (DoS) attacks. The router is built with Stateful Packet Inspection (SPI) to determine if a data packet is allowed through the firewall to the private LAN.

Domain Name System (DNS) Relay

It provides an easy way to map the domain name (a friendly name for users such as www.yahoo. com) and IP address. When a local machine sets its DNS server with this router’s IP address, every DNS conversion request packet from the PC to this router will be forwarded to the real DNS in the outside network.

Dynamic Domain Name System (DDNS)

The Dynamic DNS service allows you to alias a dynamic IP address to a static hostname. This dynamic IP address is the WAN IP address. For example, to use the service, you must first apply for an account from a DDNS service like http://www.dyndns.org/. More than 5 DDNS servers are supported.

Quality of Service (QoS)

QoS gives you full control over which types of outgoing data traffic should be given priority by the router, ensuring important data like gaming packets, customer information, or management information move through the router ay lightning speed, even under heavy load. The QoS features are configurable by source IP address, destination IP address, protocol, and port. You can throttle the

speed at which different types of outgoing data pass through the router, to ensure P2P users don’t saturate upload bandwidth, or office browsing doesn’t bring client web serving to a halt. In addition, or alternatively, you can simply change the priority of different types of upload data and let the router sort out the actual speeds.

2

IPv6 supported

Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) is a version of the Internet Protocol that is designed to succeed IPv4.

IPv6 has a vastly larger address space than IPv4. This results from the use of a 128-bit address, whereas IPv4 uses only 32 bits. The new address space thus supports 2128 (about 3.4×1038) addresses. This expansion provides flexibility in allocating addresses and routing traffic and eliminates the primary need for network address translation (NAT), which gained widespread deployment as an effort to alleviate IPv4 address exhaustion.

IPv6 also implements new features that simplify aspects of address assignment (stateless address autoconfiguration) and network renumbering (prefix and router announcements) when changing

Internet connectivity providers. The IPv6 subnet size has been standardized by fixing the size of the host identifier portion of an address to 64 bits to facilitate an automatic mechanism for forming the host identifier from Link Layer media addressing information (MAC address).

Network security is integrated into the design of the IPv6 architecture. Internet Protocol Security

(IPsec) was originally developed for IPv6, but found widespread optional deployment first in IPv4 (into which it was back-engineered). The IPv6 specifications mandate IPsec implementation as a fundamental interoperability requirement

Virtual Server (“port forwarding”)

Users can specify some services to be visible from outside users. The router can detect incoming service requests and forward either a single port or a range of ports to the specific local computer to handle it. For example, a user can assign a PC in the LAN acting as a WEB server inside and expose it to the outside network. Outside users can browse inside web servers directly while it is protected by NAT. A DMZ host setting is also provided to a local computer exposed to the outside network, Internet.

Rich Packet Filtering

Not only filters the packet based on IP address, but also based on Port numbers. It will filter packets from and to the Internet, and also provides a higher level of security control.

Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Client and Server

In the WAN site, the DHCP client can get an IP address from the Internet Service Provider (ISP) automatically. In the LAN site, the DHCP server can allocate a range of client IP addresses and distribute them including IP address, subnet mask as well as DNS IP address to local computers. It provides an easy way to manage the local IP network.

Static and RIP1/2 Routing

It has routing capability and supports easy static routing table or RIP1/2 routing protocol.

Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

It is an easy way to remotely manage the router via SNMP.

Web based GUI

It supports web based GUI for configuration and management. It is user-friendly and comes with on-line help. It also supports remote management capability for remote users to configure and manage this product.

Firmware Upgradeable

Device can be upgraded to the latest firmware through the WEB based GUI.

Rich Management Interfaces

3

It supports flexible management interfaces with local console port, LAN port, and WAN port. Users can use terminal applications through the console port to configure and manage the device, or Telnet,

WEB GUI, and SNMP through LAN or WAN ports to configure and manage the device.

Virtual Private Network (VPN)

It allows user to make a tunnel with a remote site directly to secure the data transmission among the connection. User can use embedded PPTP and L2TP client/server, IKE and IPSec which are supported by this router to make a VPN connection or users can run the PPTP client in PC and the router already provides IPSec and PPTP pass through function to establish a VPN connection if the user likes to run the PPTP client in his local computer.

4

Chapter 2: Installing the Router

Important note for using this router

Package Contents

3G/VoIP/802.11n ADSL2+ (VPN) Firewall Router CD-ROM containing the online manual

RJ-11 ADSL/telephone cable Ethernet (RJ-45) cable PS2-RS 232 console cable Power adapter

Three 2dBi detachable antennas Quick Start Guide

Splitter / Micro-filter (optional)

5

Device Description

The Front LEDs

LED

1Power

Ethernet

21x - 4x

(RJ-45 connector)

3USB

4Wireless

5Phone 1x-2x

(RJ-11 connector)

Line

6(Router with

LINE

7VoIP 1x-2x

(RJ-11 connector)

8DSL

9Internet

Meaning

Both red and green LEDs lit together when power is ON. Lit red means system failure.

Restart the device or contact support.

Lit green when the device is ready.

Lit when one of the LAN ports is connected to an Ethernet device.

Lit green when transmission rate hits 1000Mbps,

Lit orange when it hits 100Mbps but no light for 10Mbps.

Flash when data is being Transmitted / Received.

Lit green when the router is connected to a USB device.

Flash when data is received / transmitted.

Lit green when a wireless connection is established. Flash when the device is sending/receiving data.

Flash once per second while Wi-Fi protected setup is in progress.

Lit green when phone is off hook.

Lit green when the inbound and outbound calls are transmitted through PSTN.

Lit green when phone 1 has registered successfully.

Lit orange when phone 2 has registered successfully.

If both phone 1 & 2 have succeeded in registration, both green and orange LEDs will lit together.

Lit Green when the device is successfully connected to an ADSL

DSLAM. (“line sync”).

Lit red when WAN port fails to get IP address.

Lit green when WAN port gets IP address successfully.

Lit off when the device is in bridge mode or when WAN connection is absent.

6

The Rear Ports

Port

1Antenna

2DSL

3

Line

(Router with LINE port only)

4Phone

1x - 2x (RJ-11 connector)

5Console Port

6USB

7Giga Ethernet 1x - 4x

(RJ-45 connector)

8WPS

9RESET

10Power

11Power Switch

Meaning

Connect the detachable antenna to this port.

Connect this port to the ADSL/telephone network with the RJ11 cable (telephone) provided.

Connect this port to the telephone jack on the wall with RJ-11 cable.

Connect this port to an analog phone set with RJ-11 cable.

Plug in the console cable provided. Connect the USB cable to this port.

Connect a UTP Ethernet cable (Cat-5 or Cat-5e) to one of the LAN ports when connecting to a PC or an office/home network of 10Mbps, 100Mbps or 1000Mbps.

Push WPS button for less than 5 sec to trigger Wi-Fi

Protected Setup function; push WPS button for more than 5 sec to enable/disable WLAN Service.

To be sure the device is being turned on press RESET button for:

1-3 seconds: quick reset the device.

6 seconds and above, power off, power on the device: restore to factory default settings. (Cannot login to the router or forgot your Username/Password. Press the button for more than 6 seconds).

Caution: After pressing the RESET button for more than 6 seconds, to be sure you power cycle the device again.

Connect it with the supplied power adapter.

Power ON/OFF switch.

7

Cabling

One of the most common causes of problem is bad cabling or ADSL line(s). Make sure that all connected devices are turned on. On the front panel of your router is a bank of LEDs. Verify that the

LAN Link and ADSL line LEDs are lit. If they are not, verify if you are using the proper cables.

Make sure that all devices (e.g. telephones, fax machines, analogue modems) connected to the same telephone line as your router have a line filter connected between them and the wall outlet (unless you are using a Central Splitter or Central Filter installed by a qualified and licensed electrician), and that all line filters are correctly installed in a right way. If line filter is not installed and connected properly, it may cause problem to your ADSL connection or may result in frequent disconnections.

8

Chapter 3: Basic Installation

The router can be configured through your web browser. A web browser is included as a standard application in the following operating systems: Linux, Mac OS, Windows 7/98/NT/2000/XP/Me/Vista, etc. The product provides an easy and user-friendly interface for configuration.

Please check your PC network components. The TCP/IP protocol stack and Ethernet network adapter must be installed. If not, please refer to your Windows-related or other operating system manuals.

There are ways to connect the router, either through an external repeater hub or connect directly to your PCs. However, make sure that your PCs have an Ethernet interface installed properly prior to connecting the router device. You ought to configure your PCs to obtain an IP address through a

DHCP server or a fixed IP address that must be in the same subnet as the router. The default IP address of the router is 192.168.1.254 and the subnet mask is 255.255.255.0 (i.e. any attached PC must be in the same subnet, and have an IP address in the range of 192.168.1.1 to 192.168.1.253). The best and easiest way is to configure the PC to get an IP address automatically from the router using DHCP. If you encounter any problem accessing the router web interface it is advisable to uninstall your firewall program on your PCs, as they can cause problems accessing the IP address of the router. Users should make their own decisions on what is best to protect their network.

Please follow the following steps to configure your PC network environment.

9

Connecting Your Router

1.Connect this router to a LAN (Local Area Network) and the ADSL/telephone

(ADSL) net work.

2.Power on the device.

3.Make sure the Power LED lit steadily and that the LAN LED is lit.

4.Connect your router to the telephone jack on the wall with RJ-11 cable.

5.Connect the USB 2.0 cable.

10

Network Configuration

Configuring PC in windows 7

1. Go to Start. Click on Control Panel. Then click on Network and Internet.

2. When the Network and Sharing Center window pops up, select and click on Change adapter settings on the left window panel.

3. Select the Local Area Connection, and right click the icon to select

Properties.

11

Billion BiPAC 7404VNOX, BiPAC 7404VNPX User Manual

4. Select Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4), then click Properties.

5. In the TCP/IPv4 properties window, select the Obtain an IP address automatically and Obtain DNS Server address automatically radio buttons. Then click OK to exit the setting.

6. Click OK again in the Local Area

Connection Properties window to apply the new configuration.

12

Configuring PC in Windows Vista

1.Go to Start. Click on Network.

2.Then click on Network and Sharing Center at the top bar.

3.When the Network and Sharing

Center window pops up, select and click on Manage network connections on the left window column.

4.Select the Local Area Connection, and right click the icon to select

Properties.

13

5. Select Internet Protocol Versio4

(TCP/IPv4) then click Properties.

6.In the TCP/IPv4 properties window, select the Obtain an IP address automatically and Obtain DNS

Server address automatically radio buttons. Then click OK to exit the setting.

7.Click OK again in the Local Area Connection Properties window to apply the new configuration.

14

Configuring PC in Windows XP

1.Go to Start > Control Panel (in

Classic View). In the Control Panel, double-click on Network Connections.

2.Double-click Local Area Connection.

3.In the Local Area Connection Status window, click Properties.

4. Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and

click Properties.

5.Select the Obtain an IP address automatically and the Obtain DNS server address automatically radio buttons.

6.Click OK to finish the configuration.

15

Configuring PC in Windows 2000

1.Go to Start > Settings > Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click on

Network and Dial-up Connections.

2.Double-click Local Area Connection.

3.In the Local Area Connection Status window click Properties.

4.Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties.

5.Select the Obtain an IP address automatically and the Obtain DNS server address automatically radio buttons.

6.Click OK to finish the configuration.

16

Configuring PC in Windows 95/98/Me

1.Go to Start > Settings > Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click on

Network and choose the

Configuration tab.

2.Select TCP/IP > NE2000 Compatible, or the name of your Network Interface Card (NIC) in your PC.

3.Select the Obtain an IP address automatically radio button.

4.Then select the DNS Configuration tab.

5.Select the Disable DNS radio button and click OK to finish the configuration.

17

Configuring PC in Windows NT4.0

1. Go to Start > Settings > Control Panel.

In the Control Panel, double-click on

Network and choose the Protocols tab.

2. Select TCP/IP Protocol and click

Properties.

3.Select the Obtain an IP address from a DHCP server radio button and click

OK.

18

Factory Default Settings

Before configuring your router, you need to know the following default settings.

Web Interface (Username and Password)

Username: admin

Password: admin

The default username and password are “admin” and “admin” respectively.

Device LAN IP settings

IP Address: 192.168.1.254

Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0

ISP setting in WAN site

PPPoE

DHCP server

DHCP server is enabled.

Start IP Address: 192.168.1.100

IP pool counts: 100

LAN and WAN Port Addresses

The parameters of LAN and WAN ports are pre-set in the factory. The default values are shown in the tale.

 

LAN Port

IP address

192.168.1.254

Subnet Mask

255.255.255.0

DHCP server function

Enabled

IP addresses for

100 IP addresses continuing

from 192.168.1.100 through

distribution to PCs

192.168.1.199

 

WAN Port

The PPPoE function is enabled to automatically get the WAN port configuration from the ISP.

19

Information from your ISP

Before configuring this device, you have to check with your ISP (Internet Service Provider) to find out what kind of service is provided such as DHCP (Obtain an IP Address Automatically, Static IP

(Fixed IP Address) or PPPoE.

Gather the information as illustrated in the following table and keep it for reference.

PPPoE(RFC2516)

VPI/VCI, VC / LLC-based multiplexing, Username, Password, Service

Name, and Domain Name System (DNS) IP address (it can be

 

automatically assigned by your ISP when you connect or be set manually).

 

 

PPPoA(RFC2364)

VPI/VCI, VC / LLC-based multiplexing, Username, Password and

Domain Name System (DNS) IP address (it can be automatically

 

assigned by your ISP when you connect or be set manually).

 

 

MPoA(RFC1483/

VPI/VCI, VC / LLC-based multiplexing, IP address, Subnet mask,

Gateway address, and Domain Name System (DNS) IP address (it is a

RFC2684)

fixed IP address).

 

 

 

IPoA(RFC1577)

VPI/VCI, VC / LLC-based multiplexing, IP address, Subnet mask,

Gateway address, and Domain Name System (DNS) IP address (it is a

 

fixed IP address).

 

 

Pure Bridge

VPI/VCI, VC / LLC-based multiplexing to use Bridged Mode.

 

 

20

Configuring with your Web Browser

Open your web browser, enter the IP address of your router, which by default is 192.168.1.254, and click “Go”, a user name and password window prompt will appear. The default username and password are “admin” and “admin” respectively. (See Figure 3.14)

Figure 3.14: User name & Password Prompt Window

Congratulations! You are now successfully logon to the 3G/VoIP/802.11n ADSL2+ (VPN) Firewall Router!

21

Chapter 4: Configuration

At the configuration homepage, the left navigation column provides you the link to each configuration page. The category of each configuration page is listed as below.

Status

ADSL Table

3G Status

EWAN Status

iBurst Status

ARP Table

DHCP Table

Routing Table

NAT Sessions

UPnP Portmap

PPTP Status

IPSec Status

L2TP Status

VoIP Status

VoIP Call Log

Event Log

Error Log

IDS Log

Diagnostic

Quick Start

Configuration

LAN

WAN

System

Firewall

VPN

VoIP

QoS

Virtual Server

Wake on LAN

Time Schedule

Advanced

Language (provides user interface in English and French languages)

22

Status

ADSL Status

This section displays the ADSL overall status, which shows a number of helpful information such as DSP firmware version.

23

3G Status

This section displays the 3G Card’s overall status, which shows you a number of helpful information such as the current signal strength and statistics on current and total bytes transferred and received.

Status: The current status of the 3G card.

Signal Strength: The signal strength bar indicates current 3G signal strength.

Network Name: The network name that the device is connected to.

Card Name: The name of the 3G card.

Card Firmware: The current firmware for the 3G card.

Current TX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of transmission, count for this call.

Current RX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of receive, count for this call.

Total TX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of transmission, count from system ready

Total RX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of receive, count from system ready

Current Connection Time: The duration for the current connection.

24

Total Connection Time: The cumulative connection time.

Amount used: Show the traffic or hours has been used.

Billing period: The day from which the fee is charged.

Note: Only after you have checked to enable Usage Allowance , the following information will be shown.

EWAN Status

Besides using 3G/ADSL to get connected to the Internet, the router offers its Ethernet port 1 as a

WAN port to be used to connect to Cable Modems and fiber optic lines. This alternative, yet faster method to connect to the internet will provide users more flexibility to get online.

Total TX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of total data transmission in bytes / packets since system ready.

Total RX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of total data received in bytes / packets since system ready.

25

iBurst Status

Displays additional information of the 3G status when iBurst function is enabled in the 3G configuration such as its signal strength, card name, connection status and port class Ethernet.

Card Name: The name of the card.

Signal Strength: The signal strength bar indicates the current signal strength.

Current TX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of data transmission in bytes / packets during a call.

Current RX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of data received in bytes / packets during a call.

Total TX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of total data transmission in bytes / packets since system ready.

Total RX Bytes / Packets: The statistics of total data received in bytes / packets since system ready.

26

ARP Table

This section displays the router’s ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) Table, which shows the mapping of Internet (IP) addresses to Ethernet (MAC) addresses. This is useful as a quick way of determining the MAC address of the network interface of your PCs to use with the router’s Firewall

– MAC Address Filter function. See the Firewall section of this manual for more information on this feature.

IP Address: A list of IP addresses of devices on your LAN (Local Area Network).

MAC Address: The MAC (Media Access Control) addresses for each device on your LAN.

Interface: The interface name (on the router) that this IP Address connects to.

Static: Static status of the ARP table entry:

no” for dynamically-generated ARP table entries.

yes” for static ARP table entries added by the user.

DHCP Table

Leased: The DHCP assigned IP addresses information.

Expired: The expired IP addresses information.

Permanent: The fixed host mapping information.

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