Cisco RV130W, RV130 User Manual

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Cisco RV130W, RV130 User Manual

ADMINISTRATION

GUIDE

Cisco RV130 Multifunction VPN Router

Cisco RV130W Wireless Multifunction VPN Router

Revised August 2014

Cisco and the Cisco logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cisco and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. To view a list of Cisco trademarks, go to this URL: www.cisco.com/go/trademarks. Third-party trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership

relationship between Cisco and any other company. (1110R)

 

Contents

 

 

 

 

Chapter 1: Introduction

6

Verifying the Hardware Installation

6

Using the Setup Wizard

7

Configuration Next Steps

8

Using the Getting Started Page

8

Connecting to Your Wireless Network

10

Chapter 2: Viewing Device Status

12

Viewing the Dashboard

12

Viewing the System Summary

13

Viewing Active TCP/IP Services

15

Viewing Wireless Statistics

15

Viewing Captive Portal Status

15

Viewing Site-to-Site IPsec VPN Connection Status

15

Viewing the IPsec VPN Server Status

16

Viewing PPTP Server

16

Viewing Logs

16

Viewing Connected Devices

17

Viewing Port Statistics

18

Viewing the Mobile Network Status

18

Chapter 3: Configuring Networking

20

Configuring WAN Settings

21

Configuring Wired WAN Connections

21

Configuring DHCP

21

Configuring Static IP

22

Configuring PPPoE

22

Configuring PPTP

24

Configuring L2TP

26

Configuring Optional Settings

28

Configuring a Mobile Network

30

Configuring Global Mobile Network Settings

30

 

 

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Contents

 

 

 

 

Configuring Mobile Network Settings Manually

31

Bandwidth Cap Setting

32

E-mail Setting

32

Setting Failover and Recovery

33

Configuring LAN Settings

34

Changing the Device Management IP Address

34

Configuring DHCP Server

35

Configuring VLANs

37

Configuring Static DHCP

38

Viewing DHCP Leased Clients

39

Configuring a DMZ Host

39

Configuring RSTP

40

Port Management

41

Configuring Link Aggregation

42

Cloning the MAC Address

43

Configuring Routing

44

Configuring the Operating Mode

44

Configuring Dynamic Routing

44

Configuring Inter-VLAN Routing

45

Configuring Static Routing

45

Viewing the Routing Table

46

Configuring Dynamic DNS

47

Configuring the IP Mode

48

Configuring IPv6

49

Configuring the IPV6 WAN Connection

49

Configuring IPv6 LAN Connections

53

Configuring IPv6 Static Routing

55

Configuring Routing (RIPng)

56

Configuring Tunneling

57

Viewing IPv6 Tunnel Status

58

Configuring Router Advertisement

58

Configuring Advertisement Prefixes

60

 

 

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Contents

 

 

 

 

Chapter 4: Configuring Wireless Networks

63

Wireless Security

63

Wireless Security Tips

63

General Network Security Guidelines

65

Wireless Networks on Your Device

65

Configuring Basic Wireless Settings

66

Editing Wireless Network Settings

68

Configuring the Security Mode

69

Configuring MAC Filtering

72

Configuring Time of Day Access

73

Configuring Advanced Wireless Settings

74

Detecting Rogue Access Points

77

Importing Authorized AP Lists

78

Configuring WDS

80

Configuring WPS

81

Configuring Captive Portal

82

Configuring Device Mode

85

Chapter 5: Configuring the Firewall

86

Firewall Features

86

Configuring Basic Firewall Settings

87

Configuring Remote Management

90

Configuring Universal Plug and Play

91

Managing Firewall Schedules

92

Adding or Editing a Firewall Schedule

92

Configuring Services Management

92

Configuring Access Rules

93

Adding Access Rules

94

Creating an Internet Access Policy

97

Adding or Editing an Internet Access Policy

97

Configuring One-to-One Network Address Translation (NAT)

99

 

 

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Contents

 

 

 

 

Configuring Port Forwarding

99

Configuring Single Port Forwarding

100

Configuring Port Range Forwarding

101

Configuring Port Range Triggering

101

Chapter 6: Configuring VPN

103

VPN Tunnel Types

103

Configuring Basic Site-to-Site IPsec VPN

103

Viewing Default Values

105

Configuring Site-to-Site IPsec VPN Advanced Parameters

105

Managing IKE Policies

105

Managing VPN Policies

107

Configuring IPsec VPN Server

109

Configuring the IPsec VPN Server

109

Configuring IPsec VPN User Accounts

111

Configuring PPTP

111

Configuring the PPTP Server

112

Creating and Managing PPTP Users

112

Configuring VPN Passthrough

113

Chapter 7: Configuring Quality of Service (QoS)

114

Configuring Bandwidth Management

114

Configuring Bandwidth

115

Configuring Bandwidth Priority

115

Configuring QoS Port-Based Settings

117

Configuring CoS Settings

118

Configuring DSCP Settings

118

Chapter 8: Managing Your Device

120

Setting Device Properties

120

Setting Password Complexity

121

 

 

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Contents

 

 

 

 

Configuring User Accounts

122

Importing User Accounts

123

Setting the Session Timeout Value

124

Configuring Simple Network Management (SNMP)

125

Configuring SNMP System Information

125

Editing SNMPv3 Users

126

Configuring the SNMP Traps

127

Using Diagnostic Tools

127

Network Tools

128

Configuring Port Mirroring

129

Configuring Log and E-mail Settings

130

Configuring Log Settings

130

Configuring Log E-Mailing

132

Configuring Bonjour

134

Configuring Date and Time Settings

134

Backing Up and Restoring the System

135

Backing Up the Configuration Settings

136

Restoring the Configuration Settings

137

Copying the Configuration Settings

137

Generating an Encryption Key

138

Upgrading Firmware or Changing the Language

138

Upgrading Firmware Automatically

139

Upgrading Firmware Manually

139

Changing the Language

140

Restarting the Device

140

Restoring the Factory Defaults

141

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1

Getting Started

The Getting Started page displays the most common configuration tasks on your device. Click the links on the Web page to go to the relevant configuration page.

This page appears every time you start Device Manager. To change this behavior, check Don’t show on start up.

Initial Settings

Change Default

Displays the Users page where you can change

Administrator Password

the administrator password and set up a guest

 

account. See Configuring User Accounts.

 

 

Launch Setup Wizard

Launches the Setup Wizard. Follow the on-screen

 

instructions.

 

 

Configure WAN Settings

Opens the Internet Setup page to change

 

parameters. For example, the device host name.

 

See Configuring Wired WAN Connections.

 

 

Configure LAN Settings

Opens the LAN Configuration page to modify LAN

 

parameters. For example, the management IP

 

address. See Configuring LAN Settings.

 

 

Configure Wireless

Open the Basic Settings page to manage the

Settings

radio. See Configuring Wireless Networks.

 

 

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Getting Started

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Quick Access

 

 

 

 

 

 

Upgrade Router

Opens the Firmware/Language Upgrade page to

 

Firmware

update the device firmware or language pack. See

 

 

Upgrading Firmware or Changing the Language.

 

 

 

 

Add VPN Clients

Opens the PPTP Server page to set up and

 

 

manage VPN tunnels. See Configuring PPTP.

 

 

 

 

Configure Remote

Opens the Basic Settings page to enable the basic

 

Management Access

features of the device. See Configuring Basic

 

 

Firewall Settings.

 

 

 

 

 

Device Status

 

 

 

 

 

 

System Summary

Displays the System Summary page that shows

 

 

the state of the firmware, IPv4 and IPv6

 

 

configuration status, and the status of the wireless

 

 

and the firewall on the device. See Viewing the

 

 

System Summary.

 

 

 

 

Wireless Status

Displays the Wireless Statistics page that shows

 

 

the state of the radio. See Viewing Wireless

 

 

Statistics.

 

 

 

 

VPN Status

Displays the IPsec VPN Server page that lists the

 

 

VPN managed by this device. See Viewing Site-

 

 

to-Site IPsec VPN Connection Status.

 

 

 

 

 

Other Resources

 

 

 

 

 

 

Support

Click to open the Cisco support page.

 

 

 

 

Forums

Click to visit Cisco online support forums.

 

 

 

 

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Getting Started

1

 

Connecting to Your Wireless Network

 

 

 

 

 

Connecting to Your Wireless Network

To connect a client device (such as a computer) to your wireless network, configure the wireless connection on the client device with the wireless security information that you configured for the router by using the Setup Wizard.

The following steps are provided as an example; you may need to configure your device differently. For specific instructions, consult the documentation for your client device.

STEP 1 Open the wireless connection settings window or program for your device.

Your computer might have special software installed to manage wireless connections, or you might find the wireless connections under the Control Panel in the Network Connections or Network and Internet window. (The location depends on your operating system.)

STEP 2 Enter the network name (SSID) that you chose for your network in the Setup Wizard.

STEP 3 Choose the type of encryption and enter the security key that you specified in the Setup Wizard.

If you did not enable security (not recommended), leave the wireless encryption fields that were configured with the security type and passphrase blank.

STEP 4 Verify your wireless connection and save your settings.

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2

Viewing Device Status

To ensure that data and statistics are frequently updated on Status pages, choose a refresh rate from the Refresh Rate drop-down list.

Viewing the Dashboard

Choose Status > Dashboard to view a snapshot of the configuration of your device. The Dashboard page displays information about your device’s firmware version, CPU and memory utilization, error-logging settings, LAN, WAN, wireless, site-to-site IPsec VPN, and PPTP VPN server settings.

To modify the information displayed, click the details link to go to the configuration page for the section. For more information about managing the settings displayed on the Dashboard page, see:

Configuring Log Settings

Configuring Basic Site-to-Site IPsec VPN

Configuring LAN Settings

Configuring Wired WAN Connections

Configuring Basic Wireless Settings

From the Refresh Rate drop-down list, choose the rate at which the latest statistics and parameter values are refreshed on the dashboard.

The Dashboard page also displays an interactive view of your device’s back panel when you click Show Panel View. Mouse-over each port to view port connection information.

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing the System Summary

 

 

 

 

 

Viewing the System Summary

Choose Status > System Summary to view details of your device properties, network settings across IP address modes, firewall, wireless and VPN settings. Click Refresh to see the latest information.

Click the underlined link to go to the related configuration window. For example, to modify the LAN IP address, click LAN IP. The LAN Configuration window is displayed.

The System Summary page displays information in the following sections:

System Information

Firmware Version—Current software version that the device is running.

Firmware MD5 Checksum—The message-digest algorithm used to verify the integrity of files.

Locale—The language installed on the router.

Language Version—The version of the installed language pack. The language pack version should be compatible with the currently installed firmware. In some cases, an older language pack may be used with a newer firmware image. The router checks the language pack version to see if it is compatible with the current firmware version.

Language MD5 Checksum—The MD5 checksum of the language pack.

CPU Model—Chipset of CPU currently used.

Serial Number—Serial number of the device.

System Up Time—Length of time that the system has been running.

Current Time—Time of day.

PID VID—Product ID and version ID of the device.

IPv4 Configuration

LAN IP—LAN IP address of the device.

WAN IP—WAN IP address of the device. To release the current IP address and obtain a new one, click Release or Renew.

Gateway—IP address of the gateway to which the device is connected (for example, the cable modem).

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing the System Summary

 

 

 

 

 

Mode—Displays Gateway if NAT is enabled, or Router.

DNS 1—Primary DNS server IP address of the WAN port.

DNS 2—Secondary DNS server IP address of the WAN port.

DDNS—Indicates whether the Dynamic DNS is enabled or disabled.

IPv6 Configuration

LAN IP—LAN IP address of the device.

WAN IP—WAN IP address of the device.

Gateway—IP address of the gateway to which the device is connected (for example, the cable modem).

Prefix Delegation—Prefix returned from the device at the ISP, which is provided to IPv6 addresses on the device.

DNS 1—IP address of the primary DNS server.

DNS 2—IP address of the secondary DNS server.

Wireless Summary

Displays the public name and security settings for your wireless networks configured on the Wireless > Basic Settings page. For more information, see

Configuring Basic Wireless Settings.

Firewall Setting Status

Displays DoS, WAN request and remote management settings configured on the Firewall > Basic Settings page. For more information, see Configuring Basic Firewall Settings.

VPN Setting Status

Displays available IPsec and PPTP VPN connections, and the connected users for each VPN type.

IPsec Connections Available—Number of available IPsec VPN connections.

PPTP VPN Connections Available—Number of available PPTP VPN connections.

Connected IPsec Users—Number of connected IPsec VPN users.

Connected PPTP VPN Users—Number of connected PPTP VPN users.

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing Active TCP/IP Services

 

 

 

 

 

For more information on configuring VPN server connections and user accounts, see Configuring Basic Site-to-Site IPsec VPN and Configuring PPTP.

Viewing Active TCP/IP Services

Choose Status > Active TCP/IP Services to view IPv4 and IPv6 TCP/IP connections that are active on your device. The Active Service List section for IPv4 and IPv6 displays the protocols and the services that are active on the device.

Viewing Wireless Statistics

Choose Status > Wireless Statistics to view wireless statistical data for the device radio. In the Refresh Rate field, choose the rate at which you want the latest statistics to be displayed.

To show the bytes in kilobytes (KB) and the numerical data in rounded-up values, check the Show Simplified Statistic Data check box and click Save. By default, byte data is displayed in bytes and other numerical data is displayed in long form.

To reset the wireless statistics counters, click Clear Count. The counters are reset when the device is rebooted.

Viewing Captive Portal Status

Choose Status > Captive Portal to view information about the connected Captive Portal users. For more information about configuring Captive Portals on your device, see Configuring Captive Portal.

Viewing Site-to-Site IPsec VPN Connection Status

Choose Status > Site-to-Site IPsec VPN to view the connection status of active site-to-site IPsec VPN policies on the device. For information on configuring VPN policies, see Configuring Basic Site-to-Site IPsec VPN.

To change the rate at which latest and real-time connection status is displayed, choose a refresh rate from the Refresh Rate drop-down list.

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing the IPsec VPN Server Status

 

 

 

 

 

By default, byte data is displayed in bytes and other numerical data is displayed in long form. To show the bytes in kilobytes (KB) and the numerical data in roundedup form, check the Show Simplified Statistic Data box and click Save.

To terminate an active VPN connection, click Disconnect.

Viewing the IPsec VPN Server Status

Choose Status > IPsec VPN Server to view a list of your IPsec VPN connections and the duration of the connection. For more information about configuring IPsec VPN connections, see Configuring IPsec VPN Server.

Viewing PPTP Server

Choose Status > PPTP Server to view a list of your PPTP VPN connections, the duration of the connection, and the actions you can perfom on this connection. For more information about configuring PPTP VPN connections, see Configuring PPTP.

Viewing Logs

Choose Status > View Logs. Click Refresh Logs, to display latest log entries.

To filter logs or specify the severity of logs to display, check the boxes next to the log type and click Go. Note that all log types above a selected log type are automatically included and you cannot deselect them. For example, checking the Error check box automatically includes emergency, alert, and critical logs in addition to error logs.

The event severity levels are listed from the highest severity to the lowest severity, as follows:

Emergency—Messages about events such as a system crash.

Alert—Messages about conditions that require immediate corrective action.

Critical—Messages for when the system is in a critical condition.

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing Connected Devices

 

 

 

 

 

Error—Messages about conditions that are not critical but require corrective action.

Warning—System warnings.

Notification—Messages about normal but significant conditions that may require attention.

Informational—Messages about device information.

Debugging—Detailed information about an event. To delete all entries in the log window, click Clear Logs.

To save all log messages from the device to the local hard drive, click Save Logs.

To specify the number of entries to show per page, choose a number from the drop-down menu.

To move between log pages, use the page navigation buttons .

Viewing Connected Devices

The Connected Devices page displays information about the active client devices connected to your router. To view connected devices, choose Status >

Connected Devices.

To specify the types of interfaces to display, select a value from the Filter dropdown menu:

All—All devices connected to the router.

Wireless—All devices connected through the wireless interface.

Wired—All devices connected through the Ethernet ports on the router.

WDS—All Wireless Distribution System (WDS) devices connected to the router.

IPv4 ARP Table displays information from other routers that have responded to the device’s Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) request. If a device does not respond to the request, it is removed from the list.

IPv6 NDP Table displays all IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP) devices connected to the device’s local link.

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing Port Statistics

 

 

 

 

 

Viewing Port Statistics

The Port Statistics page displays detailed port activity.

To view port statistics, choose Status > Port Statistics.

To refresh the page at regular intervals, choose a refresh rate from the Refresh

Rate drop-down list.

To show the bytes in kilobytes (KB) and the numerical data in rounded-up form, check the Show Simplified Statistic Data box and click Save. By default, byte data is displayed in bytes and other numerical data is displayed in long form.

To reset the port statistics counters, click Clear Count.

The Port Statistics page displays this information:

Interface

Name of the network interface.

 

 

Packet

Number of received/sent packets.

 

 

Byte

Number of received/sent bytes of information per second.

 

 

Error

Number of received/sent packet errors.

 

 

Dropped

Number of received/sent packets that were dropped.

 

 

Multicast

Number of multicast packets sent over this radio.

 

 

Collisions

Number of signal collisions that occurred on this port. A

 

collision occurs when the port tries to send data at the

 

same time as a port on another router or computer that is

 

connected to this port.

 

 

Viewing the Mobile Network Status

The mobile network statistics about the mobile 3G/4G network and communication device (dongle) configured on the device.

To view the mobile network status, choose Status > Mobile Network. The following information is displayed:

Connection—Device connected to the guest network.

Internet IP Address—IP address assigned to the USB device.

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Viewing Device Status

2

 

Viewing the Mobile Network Status

 

 

 

 

 

Subnet Mask—Subnet mask of the USB device.

Default Gateway—IP address of the default gateway.

Connection Up Time—The length of time that link has been up.

Current Session Usage—Volume of data being received (Rx) and transmitted (Tx) on the mobile link.

Monthly Usage—Monthly data download and bandwidth usage.

Manufacturer—Card manufacturer name.

Card Model—Card model number.

Card Firmware—Card firmware version.

SIM Status—Subscriber identification module (SIM) status.

IMS—The unique identification associated with the GSM, UMTS, or LTE network mobile phone users.

Carrier—Mobile network carrier.

Service Type—Type of service accessed.

Signal Strength—Strength of the wireless mobile network signal.

Card Status—Status of the data card.

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3

Configuring Networking

Configuring Wired WAN Connections

Configuring WAN properties for an IPv4 network differs depending on which type of Internet connection you have.

Configuring DHCP (Automatic Configuration)

If your Internet Service Provider (ISP) uses Dynamic Host Control Protocol (DHCP) to assign you an IP address, you receive an IP address that is dynamically generated each time you log in.

To configure DHCP WAN settings:

STEP 1 Choose Networking > WAN.

STEP 2 From the Internet Connection Type drop-down list, choose Automatic Configuration - DHCP.

STEP 3 From the DNS Server Source drop-down list, choose one of the following ways to set the DNS server address:

If you already have DNS server addresses from your ISP, choose Use these DNS Servers, and enter the primary and secondary addresses.

If you do not have DNS server addresses from your ISP, choose Get Dynamically from ISP.

To use the DNS servers provided by OpenDNS (208.67.222.222, 208.67.220.220) to resolve your web addresses, choose Use OpenDNS.

STEP 4 Click Save.

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Configuring Networking

3

 

 

 

 

 

Configuring Static IP

If your ISP assigned you a permanent IP address, perform the following steps to configure your WAN settings:

STEP 1

Choose Networking > WAN.

 

STEP 2

From the Internet Connection Type drop-down menu, choose Static IP.

STEP 3

Enter this information:

 

 

 

 

 

Internet IP Address

 

IP address of the WAN port.

 

 

 

 

 

Subnet mask

 

Subnet mask of the WAN port.

 

 

 

 

 

DNS Server Source

 

The DNS server address. If you already have DNS

 

 

 

server addresses from your ISP, choose Use these

 

 

 

DNS Servers, and enter the primary and secondary

 

 

 

addresses in the Static DNS 1 and Static DNS 2

 

 

 

fields.

 

 

 

To use the DNS servers provided by OpenDNS

 

 

 

(208.67.222.222, 208.67.220.220) to resolve your

 

 

 

web addresses, choose Use OpenDNS.

 

 

 

 

 

Default Gateway

 

IP address of the default gateway.

 

 

 

 

STEP 4

Click Save.

 

Configuring PPPoE

To configure the Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet (PPPoE) settings:

STEP 1 Choose Networking > WAN.

STEP 2 From the Internet Connection Type drop-down menu, choose PPPoE.

STEP 3 Select a PPPoE profile or click Configure Profile to create a new profile.

STEP 4 On the PPPoE Profiles page, enter the following information (you might need to contact your ISP to obtain your PPPoE login information):

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Configuring Networking

3

 

 

 

 

 

Profile Name

A unique name for the PPPoE profile.

 

 

Username

The username assigned by the ISP.

 

 

Password

The password assigned by the ISP.

 

 

DNS Server Source

The DNS server address. If you already have DNS

 

server addresses from your ISP, choose Use these

 

DNS Servers, and enter the primary and secondary

 

addresses in the Static DNS 1 and Static DNS 2

 

fields.

 

To get DNS server addresses from your ISP,

 

choose Get Dynamically from ISP.

 

To use the DNS servers provided by OpenDNS

 

(208.67.222.222, 208.67.220.220) to resolve your

 

web addresses, choose Use OpenDNS.

 

 

Connect on Demand

Select this option if your ISP charges based on the

 

amount of time that you are connected. When you

 

select this option, the Internet connection is on only

 

when traffic is present. If the connection is idle—

 

that is, no traffic is flowing—the connection is

 

closed. If you click Connect on Demand, enter the

 

number of minutes after which the connection

 

shuts off in the Max Idle Time field.

 

 

Keep Alive

When you select this option, the Internet

 

connection is always on. In the Redial Period field,

 

enter the number of seconds after which the

 

device attempts to reconnect if it is disconnected.

 

 

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Configuring Networking

3

 

 

 

 

 

 

Authentication Type

Auto-negotiation—The server sends a

 

 

configuration request specifying the security

 

 

algorithm set on it. The device then sends back

 

 

authentication credentials with the security type

 

 

sent by the server.

 

 

PAP—Password Authentication Protocol (PAP)

 

 

used by Point-to-Point Protocol to connect to the

 

 

ISP.

 

 

CHAP—Challenge Handshake Authentication

 

 

Protocol (CHAP) requires that both the client and

 

 

server know the plaintext of the secret to use ISP

 

 

services.

 

 

MS-CHAP or MS-CHAPv2—The Microsoft

 

 

version of CHAP used to access ISP services.

 

 

 

STEP 5 Click Save.

 

Configuring PPTP

To configure the PPTP settings:

STEP 1

Choose Networking > WAN.

 

STEP 2

From the Internet Connection Type drop-down menu, choose PPTP.

STEP 3

Enter this information:

 

 

 

 

 

Internet IP Address

 

IP address of the WAN port.

 

 

 

 

 

Subnet mask

 

Subnet mask of the WAN port.

 

 

 

 

 

Default Gateway

 

IP address of the default gateway.

 

 

 

 

 

PPTP Server

 

IP address of the Point-To-Point Tunneling Protocol

 

 

 

server.

 

 

 

 

 

Username

 

The username assigned to you by the ISP.

 

 

 

 

 

Password

 

The password assigned to you by the ISP.

 

 

 

 

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Configuring Networking

3

 

 

 

 

 

Connect on Demand

Select this option if your ISP charges based on the

 

amount of time that you are connected. When you

 

select this option, the Internet connection is on only

 

when traffic is present. If the connection is idle—

 

that is, no traffic is flowing—the connection is

 

closed. If you click Connect on Demand, enter the

 

number of minutes after which the connection

 

shuts off in the Max Idle Time field.

 

 

Keep Alive

When you select this option, the Internet

 

connection is always on. In the Redial period field,

 

enter the number of seconds after which the

 

device attempts to reconnect, if it is disconnected.

 

 

Authentication Type

Choose the authentication type:

 

Auto-negotiation—The server sends a

 

configuration request specifying the security

 

algorithm set on it. The device then sends back

 

authentication credentials with the security type

 

sent earlier by the server.

 

PAP—The device uses the Password

 

Authentication Protocol (PAP) to connect to the ISP.

 

CHAP—The device uses the Challenge Handshake

 

Authentication Protocol (CHAP) when connecting

 

with the ISP.

 

MS-CHAP or MS-CHAPv2—The device uses

 

Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication

 

Protocol when connecting with the ISP.

 

 

Service Name

Enter a name for the new PPTP service.

 

 

MPPE Encryption

Check the Enable check box to enable Microsoft

 

Point-to-Point Encryption for the PPTP connection.

 

 

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Configuring Networking

3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DNS Server Source

 

The DNS server address. If you already have DNS

 

 

 

server addresses from your ISP, choose Use these

 

 

 

DNS Servers, and enter the primary and secondary

 

 

 

addresses in the Static DNS 1 and Static DNS 2

 

 

 

fields.

 

 

 

To get DNS server addresses from your ISP,

 

 

 

choose Get Dynamically from ISP.

 

 

 

To use the DNS servers provided by OpenDNS

 

 

 

(208.67.222.222, 208.67.220.220) to resolve your

 

 

 

web addresses, choose Use OpenDNS.

 

 

 

 

 

STEP 4

Click Save.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Configuring L2TP

 

 

 

To configure L2TP settings:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

STEP 1

Choose Networking > WAN.

 

 

STEP 2

From the Internet Connection Type drop-down menu, choose L2TP.

STEP 3

Enter this information:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Internet IP Address

 

The IP address of the WAN port.

 

 

 

 

 

Subnet mask

 

The subnet mask of the WAN port.

 

 

 

 

 

Default Gateway

 

The IP address of the default gateway.

 

 

 

 

 

L2TP Server

 

The IP address of the L2TP server.

 

 

 

 

 

Version

 

The L2TP version that you want to use. If you select

 

 

 

version 3, enter the vendor ID, and the virtual circuit

 

 

 

ID.

 

 

 

 

 

Cookie Length

 

The size of the cookie in the L2TP v3 data packet,

 

 

 

which identifies the L2TP session.

 

 

 

 

 

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Configuring Networking

3

 

 

 

 

 

Vendor ID

The vendor ID contained in the AVP encoding

 

format for L2TP.

 

To use the IETF-adopted attribute values in the AVP,

 

select Standard.

 

To implement Cisco’s L2TP extensions and private

 

attribute values, select Cisco.

 

 

Virtual Circuit ID

The identifier for the Layer 2 circuit over which

 

L2TP data packets are carried. This information is

 

required if you selected Cisco as the Vendor ID for

 

L2TP v3.

 

 

Username

Enter your username assigned to you by the ISP.

 

 

Password

Enter your password assigned to you by the ISP.

 

 

Connect on Demand

Select this option if your ISP charges based on the

 

amount of time that you are connected. When you

 

select this option, the Internet connection is on only

 

when traffic is present. If the connection is idle—

 

that is, no traffic is flowing—the connection is

 

closed. If you click Connect on Demand, enter the

 

number of minutes after which the connection

 

shuts off in the Max Idle Time field.

 

 

Keep Alive

When you select this option, the Internet

 

connection is always on. In the redial period field,

 

enter the number of seconds after which the

 

device attempts to reconnect if it is disconnected.

 

 

Authentication Type

Auto-negotiation—The server sends a

 

configuration request specifying the security

 

algorithm set on it. The device then sends back

 

authentication credentials with the security type

 

sent by the server.

 

PAP—Password Authentication Protocol (PAP) is

 

used to connect to the ISP.

 

CHAP—Challenge Handshake Authentication

 

Protocol (CHAP) is used to connect to the ISP.

 

MS-CHAP or MS-CHAPv2—Microsoft Challenge

 

Handshake Authentication Protocol is used to

 

connect to the ISP.

 

 

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Service Name

Enter a name for the new L2TP service.

 

 

 

 

MPPE Encryption

Check Enable to enable Microsoft Point-to-Point

 

 

Encryption for the L2TP connection.

 

 

 

 

DNS Server Source

The DNS server address. If you already have DNS

 

 

server addresses from your ISP, choose Use these

 

 

DNS Servers, and enter the primary and secondary

 

 

addresses in the Static DNS 1 and Static DNS 2

 

 

fields.

 

 

To get DNS server addresses from your ISP,

 

 

choose Get Dynamically from ISP.

 

 

To use the DNS servers provided by OpenDNS

 

 

(208.67.222.222, 208.67.220.220) to resolve your

 

 

web addresses, choose Use OpenDNS.

 

 

 

STEP 4 Click Save.

 

Configuring Optional Network Settings

To configure optional settings:

STEP 1 In the Optional Settings section, configure the following settings:

MTU

Maximum transmission unit (MTU) is the size of the

 

largest packet that can be sent over the network.

 

Unless a change is required by your ISP, we

 

recommend that you choose Auto. The default

 

MTU size is 1500 bytes.

 

If your ISP requires a custom MTU setting, choose

 

Manual and enter the MTU size.

 

 

Size

The custom MTU size. The standard MTU value for

 

Ethernet networks is usually 1500 bytes. For

 

PPPoE connections, the value is 1492 bytes.

 

 

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Configuring Networking

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Untagged VLAN

Check the box to enable VLAN tagging. When

 

 

enabled (the default), all traffic is tagged with a

 

 

VLAN ID.

 

 

By default, all traffic on the device uses VLAN 1, the

 

 

default untagged VLAN. All traffic is untagged until

 

 

you disable the untagged VLAN, change the

 

 

untagged traffic VLAN ID, or change the VLAN ID.

 

 

 

 

Untagged VLAN ID

A number between 1 and 4094 for the untagged

 

 

VLAN ID. The default is 1. Traffic on the VLAN that

 

 

you specify in this field is not tagged with a VLAN

 

 

ID when forwarded to the network.

 

 

VLAN 1 is the default untagged VLAN.

 

 

 

 

AP Management VLAN

The VLAN associated with the IP address you use

 

 

to access the device when it is configured as an

 

 

access point.

 

 

If you create additional VLANs, for security

 

 

reasons, choose a value that corresponds with the

 

 

VLAN configured on other switches in the network.

 

 

You may need to change the management VLAN to

 

 

limit access to Device Manager.

 

 

 

STEP 2 Click Save.

 

 

 

 

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Configuring a Mobile Network

 

 

 

 

 

Configuring a Mobile Network

Choose Networking > WAN > Mobile Network to configure to configure the device to connect to a Mobile Broadband USB modem that is connected to its USB interface.

Configuring Global Mobile Network Settings

To configure global settings for supported USB devices:

STEP 1 Connect the USB modem. If the modem is supported, it is automatically detected and appears on the Mobile Network page.

STEP 2 Select Auto or Manual connection mode. Ethernet Connection Recovery works only if the Connect Mode is set to Auto.

To enable your modem to establish a connection automatically, select Auto mode. If you select Auto, set a Connect on Demand time or select Keep Alive. Connect on Demand terminates the Internet connection after it is inactive for the period of time specified in the Max Idle Time field.

If your Internet connection is terminated due to inactivity, the modem automatically reestablishes a connection when a user attempts to access the Internet. In the Max Idle Time field, enter the number of minutes of idle time that can elapse before the Internet connection terminates. Select Keep Alive to keep the connection active at all times.

To connect or disconnect your modem connection manually, select Manual mode.

The device displays the current modem connection status that includes initializing, connecting, disconnecting, or disconnected.

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Configuring Networking

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Configuring a Mobile Network

 

 

 

 

 

STEP 3 Verify that the Card Status field shows your mobile card is Connected.

Configuring Mobile Network Settings Manually

To change mobile network parameters in the Mobile Network Setup area, click the Manual radio button. The device automatically detects supported modems and lists the appropriate configuration parameters. To override global parameters, select Manual.

STEP 1 Enter information in the following fields:

Field

Description

 

 

Access point Name

Internet network that the mobile device is connecting to.

(APN)

Enter the access point name provided by your mobile

 

network service provider. If you do not know the name

 

of the access point, contact your service provider.

 

 

Dial Number

Dial number provided by your mobile network service

 

provider for the Internet connection.

 

 

Username

User name and password provided by your mobile

Password

network service provider.

 

 

SIM Check

SIM card check enable or disable.

 

 

SIM PIN

PIN code associated with your SIM card. This field is

 

only displayed for GSM SIM cards.

 

You can modify the SIM PIN in either Auto or Manual

 

mode.

 

 

Server Name

Name of the server for the Internet connection (if

 

provided by your service provider).

 

 

Authentication

Authentication used by your service provider. The value

 

can be changed by choosing the authentication type

 

from the drop-down list. The default is Auto. If you do

 

not know which type of authentication to use, select

 

Auto.

 

 

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Configuring Networking

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Configuring a Mobile Network

 

 

 

 

 

Field

Description

 

 

Server Type

The most commonly available type of mobile data

 

service connection based on your area service signal. If

 

your location supports only one mobile data service,

 

you can limit your preferred option, reducing connection

 

setup times. The first selection always searches for

 

HSPDA/3G/UMTS service and switches automatically

 

to GPRS when it is available.

 

 

LTE Service

Long-term Evolution (LTE) Service setting. Auto chooses

 

a signal based on the area service signal. 4G only

 

searches for only 4G signals. 3G only searches for only

 

3G signals.

 

 

STEP 2 Click Save to save your settings

Bandwidth Cap Setting

The device monitors the data activity across the mobile network link and when it reaches a given threshold, sends a notification.

To enable or disable Bandwidth Cap Tracking and set the limits:

STEP 1 Click Enabled or Disabled.

STEP 2 Select the Monthly Renewal Date from the drop-down list to indicate which day of the month the bandwidth cap is reset.

STEP 3 In the Monthly Bandwidth Cap field, enter the maximum amount of data in megabytes that is allowed to pass before the device takes an action, such as sending an email to an administrator.

E-mail Setting

When the bandwidth data limit is reached, an email message can be sent to the administrator. To set up the target email address, see Configuring Log E-Mailing.

When enabled by checking the box, email is sent when:

Mobile network usage has exceeded a given percentage.

The device fails over to the backup pathway and recovers.

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