Intellinet 561433, 561440, 561457 User guide

Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web­Managed AV Switch
User Manual
Mod e l s 5 614 33, 5 614 4 0, 5 614 57
Model shown: 561433
intellinetsolutions.com
INT_561433_40_57_UM_0319_REV_ 5.03
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................................... 4
PRODUCT OVERVIEW ..............................................................................................................................4
FEATURES .................................................................................................................................................4
SPECIFICATIONS .....................................................................................................................................5
STANDARDS.............................................................................................................................................5
EXTERNAL COMPONENT DESCRIPTION ................................................................................................... 6
FRONT PANEL ......................................................................................................................................6
REAR PANEL .........................................................................................................................................6
PACKAGE CONTENTS ..............................................................................................................................7
INSTALLING AND CONNECTING THE SWITCH ............................................................................................7
DESKTOP INSTALLATION ..........................................................................................................................7
RACKMOUNT INSTALLATION IN 19” CABINET .........................................................................................7
POWER ON THE SWITCH ......................................................................................................................... 8
CONNECTION TO THE SWITCH ................................................................................................................... 8
CONNECTING TO A COMPUTER ..............................................................................................................8
HOW TO LOG IN TO THE SWITCH .............................................................................................................8
WEB PAGE ELEMENTS ..............................................................................................................................9
INTERFACE STRUCTURE ......................................................................................................................... 9
COMMON FUNCTIONS ........................................................................................................................9
ENTRY FIELDS ........................................................................................................................................9
STATUS FIELD ...................................................................................................................................... 10
SYSTEM CONFIGURATION ..................................................................................................................... 10
BASIC INFORMATION ......................................................................................................................... 10
SERIAL (CONSOLE PORT) INFORMATION ...........................................................................................10
USER MANAGEMENT .........................................................................................................................11
SAFE MANAGEMENT ..........................................................................................................................11
CURRENT CONFIGURATION ...............................................................................................................11
CONFIGURATION FILE .......................................................................................................................12
PORT STATISTICS ................................................................................................................................ 12
BROADCAST STORM CONTROL .......................................................................................................... 13
PORT SPEED LIMITS ............................................................................................................................. 14
PORT ISOLATION ...............................................................................................................................14
PORT LEARNING LIMIT ........................................................................................................................ 14
FILE UPLOAD ...................................................................................................................................... 15
SYSTEM REBOOT .................................................................................................................................15
PORT TRUNKING CONFIGURATION (A.K.A. PORT AGGREGATION) ....................................................15
PORT MIRROR CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................16
MAC BINDING .......................................................................................................................................16
MAC BIND CONFIGURATION .............................................................................................................16
MAC BINDING AUTOMATIC CONVERSION ........................................................................................17
MAC FILTER CONFIGURATION ............................................................................................................17
MAC FILTERING AUTOMATIC CONVERSION .......................................................................................18
VLAN CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................................................18
VLAN INFORMATION ..........................................................................................................................19
STATIC VLAN CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................... 19
VLAN PORT CONFIGURATION ............................................................................................................19
SNMP COMMUNITY CONFIGURATION ...............................................................................................20
TRAP TARGET CONFIGURATION .........................................................................................................20
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Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch User Manual
ACL CONFIGURATION ..........................................................................................................................20
IP STANDARD ACL CONFIGURATION..................................................................................................20
IP EXTENDED ACL CONFIGURATION ..................................................................................................21
MAC IP ACL CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................................... 22
MAC IP ACL CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................................... 22
MAC ARP ACL CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................22
ACL INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................23
QOS CONFIGURATION.......................................................................................................................... 23
QOS APPLY CONFIGURATION ............................................................................................................ 23
QOS SCHEDULE CONFIGURATION .....................................................................................................24
IP BASIC CONFIGURATION ...................................................................................................................24
IP ADDRESS CONFIGURATION FOR VLAN INTERFACES .......................................................................24
ARP CONFIGURATION AND DISPLAY .................................................................................................. 24
HOST STATIC ROUTING CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................... 25
CERTIFICATION. AUTHORIZATION. ACCOUNTING (AAA) CONFIGURATION ..........................................25
RADIUS CONFIGURATION ..................................................................................................................25
802.1X CONFIGURATION ...................................................................................................................26
802.1X PORT CONFIGURATION .........................................................................................................27
802.1X USER AUTHENTICATION INFORMATION ..................................................................................27
SPANNING TREE PROTOCOL CONFIGURATION .....................................................................................28
MSTP GLOBAL CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................................ 28
MSTP PORT CONFIGURATION ............................................................................................................30
MSTP CONFIGURATION INFORMATION .............................................................................................. 31
IGMP SNOOPING CONFIGURATION .....................................................................................................31
IGMP SNOOPING CONFIGURATION ..................................................................................................31
IGMP SNOOPING INFORMATION .......................................................................................................32
GMRP CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................................32
GMRP GLOBAL CONFIGURATION ......................................................................................................32
GMRP PORTS CONFIGURATION .........................................................................................................33
GMRP STATE MACHINE .......................................................................................................................34
EAPS CONFIGURATION .........................................................................................................................34
EAPS CONFIGURATION ......................................................................................................................34
EAPS INFORMATION ...........................................................................................................................35
RMON CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................................35
RMON STATISTICS GROUP CONFIGURATION ..................................................................................... 36
RMON HISTORY GROUP CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................36
RMON ALARM GROUP CONFIGURATION...........................................................................................36
RMON EVENT GROUP CONFIGURATION ............................................................................................37
CLUSTER CONFIGURATION ...................................................................................................................38
NDP CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................................38
NTDP CONFIGURATION ......................................................................................................................39
CLUSTER CONFIGURATION ................................................................................................................39
LOG MANAGEMENT .............................................................................................................................. 40
LOG INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................ 40
POE POWER CONTROL .........................................................................................................................41
POE PORT CONFIGURATION ..............................................................................................................41
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION .....................................................................................................................42
3
INTRODUCTION
Thank you for purchasing the Intellinet Network Solutions Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch. Before you install and use this product, read this manual carefully for a full understanding of its functions. Because this manual applies to multiple models, the screenshots and tables may vary slightly from the actual images that your particular model offers.

PRODUCT OVERVIEW

This switch provides seamless network connections. It integrates 1000 Mbps Gigabit Ethernet, 100 Mbps Fast Ethernet and 10 Mbps Ethernet network capabilities into a highly flexible package. The switch’s rear­facing ports make for a cleaner installation in the rack, so it’s perfect for use in A/V environments. Each of the 10/100/1000 Mbps Auto-Negotiation RJ45 ports support Auto MDI/MDIX function.
The switch offers a high-performance upgrade from your old network to a 1000 Mbps Gigabit network. It is essential in solving network bottlenecks that frequently develop as more advanced computer users and newer applications demand greater network resources. For efficient management, the switch offers a remote Web interface. You can program the switch for advanced management functions such as Port Management, Link Aggregation, VLAN, Spanning Tree, Multicast, QoS, Security, Access Control, MAC Address Table, Diagnostics, RMON and Maintenance. Its PoE ports can automatically detect and supply power to IEEE802.3at­compliant Powered Devices (PD) such as Wireless Access Points, network cameras or Voice over IP phones.

FEATURES

• Rear-facing IEEE 802.3at/af-compliant RJ45 PoE/PoE+ Gigabit Ethernet ports
• Provides power and data connection for 8, 16 or 24 PoE network devices, depending on model
• 10/100/1000 auto-sensing ports automatically detect optimal network speeds
• Two small form-factor pluggable 1 GbE SFP module slots
• Two RJ45 combo uplink ports (model 561457)
• Console port for configuring
• Power output up to 30 watts per port*
• PoE power budget of 255 watts for models 561433 & 561440 and 425 watts for model 561457
• Supports IEEE 802.3at and IEEE 802.3af-compliant PoE devices (e.g., wireless access points, VoIP phones, IP cameras, etc.)
• Supports IEEE 802.3at/af detection and short circuit, overload and high-voltage protection
• Management by Web/SNMP/Telnet/Console
• All RJ45 ports with Auto-MDIX and NWay auto-negotiation support
• Complies with the IEEE 802.3az (Energy Efficient Ethernet [EEE]) specification
• Offers 20 Gbps switch fabric in model 561433 and 36 Gbps switch fabric in models 561440 & 561457
• SNMP Management and Remote Monitoring (RMON)
• Remote reboot/restart
• IPv4/v6 dual protocol
• Supports VLAN (tag-based and port-based)
• Provides IEEE 802.1x port-based security
• Supports link aggregation (trunking)
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Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch User Manual
• Supports bandwidth control per port
• Supports port mirroring
• Supports two types of QoS: port-based and DSCP
• Broadcast storm control with multicast packet rate settings
• Support Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802.1d
• Store and forward switching architecture
• IEEE802.3x Flow Control
• Supports jumbo frames up to 10 kBytes
• Supports 8k MAC address entries
• LEDs for power, link/activity and PoE
• Included 19” rackmount brackets
• Included console cable

SPECIFICATIONS

STANDARDS

• IEEE 802.1d (Spanning Tree Protocol [STP])
• IEEE 802.1p (Trac Prioritization)
• IEEE 802.1q (VLAN Tagging)
• IEEE 802.1s (Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol [MSTP])
• IEEE 802.1w (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol [RSTP])
• IEEE 802.3ad (Link Aggregation)
• IEEE 802.3 (10Base-T Ethernet)
• IEEE 802.3ab (Twisted Pair Gigabit Ethernet)
• IEEE 802.3ad (Link Aggregation Control Protocol [LACP])
• IEEE 802.3az (Energy Ecient Ethernet [EEE])
• IEEE 802.3af (Power over Ethernet 802.3at Type 1)
• IEEE 802.3at (Power over Ethernet 802.3at Type 2)
• IEEE 802.3u (100Base-TX Fast Ethernet)
• IEEE 802.3x (Flow Control for full duplex mode)
POWER
• Input: 100 – 240 VAC, 50 – 60 Hz
• Power consumption: 270 W (models 561433 & 56140), 450 watts (model 561457)
ENVIRONMENTAL
• Metal housing
• Operating temperature: 0 – 40°C (32 – 104°F)
• Operating humidity: 20 – 85% RH, non-condensing
• Storage temperature: -10 – 70°C (14 – 158°F)
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EXTERNAL COMPONENT DESCRIPTION

FRONT PANEL

The front panel consists of LEDs that indicate status and connection:
PWR LED: Switch is connected to a power source. Link/Act LED: Flashes indicate a network link through the corresponding port at the rear of the switch.
Blinking indicates that the port is either sending or receiving data. PoE LEDs:
• Green: a PoE powered device (PD) is connected and the port is successfully supplying power
• O: no powered device (PD) is connected
Note: The SFP ports are shared with gigabit RJ45 ports. When an SFP port is used, the RJ45 port cannot be used. Warning: The SFP ports should use a UL-listed Optical Transceiver product, Rated Laser Class I. 3.3 VDC (see Intellinet Solutions parts 545006, 545013, 506724, 545044, 523882).

REAR PANEL

The rear panel of the switch consists of 10/100/1000 Mbps RJ45 ports, SFP ports, one Console port, one Reset button and a series of LED indicators as shown below.
10/100/1000 Mbps RJ45 ports
Designed to connect to the device with a bandwidth of 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps or 1000 Mbps; each has a corresponding 10/100/1000 Mbps LED found at the front of the switch.
Combo ports
For installating SFP modules; offers SFP receiver slots, which are shared with the related RJ45 ports.
Console port (Console)
Connects to the serial port of a computer or terminal to monitor and configure the switch.
Power
Used to connect the included AC power cord; it supports AC 100 – 240 V, 50/60 Hz.
Switch
Turns power to the switch on or off
Fuse
Prevents power overloads and short circuits to the equipment (tank containing a spare fuse)
Grounding Terminal
Grounds the switch through the PE cable on the AC cord or with a separate ground wire.
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Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch User Manual

PACKAGE CONTENTS

Before installing the switch, make sure that the following items are enclosed. If any part is missing or damaged, contact your place of purchase immediately.
• Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch
• AC power cord
• Rubber feet (4)
• Console cable
• Mounting brackets
• User Manual

INSTALLING AND CONNECTING THE SWITCH

The following steps will help prevent damage to the device and maintain proper security:
• Place the switch on a stable surface or desktop to minimize the chances of it falling.
• Make sure the switch works in the proper AC input range and matches the voltage labeled on the switch.
• To prevent electrocution, do not open the switch’s chassis, even if it fails to receive power.
• Make sure that there is proper heat dissipation from and adequate ventilation around the switch.
• Make sure the surface on which the switch is placed can support the weight of the switch and its accessories.

DESKTOP INSTALLATION

Attach the enclosed rubber feet to the bottom corners of the switch to minimize vibration. Allow adequate space for ventilation between the device and the objects around it.
Desktop Installation

RACKMOUNT INSTALLATION IN 19” CABINET

You can mount the switch in an EIA standard-sized, 19-inch rack. To do so, attach the mounting brackets on the switch’s side panels (one on each side) and secure them with the screws provided.
Then, use the screws provided with the equipment rack to mount the switch on the rack and tighten it.
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POWER ON THE SWITCH

Connecting the switch to an outlet using the AC 100-240 V, 50/60 Hz internal high-performance power supply.
AC Electrical Outlet
Use a single-phase, three-wire receptacle with a neutral outlet or multifunctional professional receptacle. Be sure to connect the metal ground connector to the grounding source on the outlet.
AC Power Cord Connection
Connect the AC power connector on the back panel of the switch to an external receptacle with the included power cord, and then check that the power indicator is ON. When it is ON, the corresponding LED lights.

CONNECTION TO THE SWITCH

CONNECTING TO A COMPUTER

Use standard network cable to connect the switch to end nodes as described below. Switch ports will automatically adjust to the characteristics (MDI/MDI-X, speed, duplex) of the device they are connected to. The LNK/ACT/Speed LEDs for each port are illuminated when the link is available.

HOW TO LOG IN TO THE SWITCH

This switch provides Web-based management, This section describes how to congure the switch. The default settings of the switch are shown below.
Parameter Default Value
Default IP address 192.168.0.1 Default Username admin Default Password Switch serial number — nd in label on switch underside
Log on to the conguration window of the switch through following steps:
1. Connect the switch with the computer NIC interface.
2. Power on the switch.
3. Check whether the IP address of the computer is within this network segment: 192.168.0.xxx (“xxx” range is 2-254); for example, 192.168.0.100.
Open the browser, and go to the URL http://192.168.0.1 to access the switch login window, as shown below.
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Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch User Manual

WEB PAGE ELEMENTS

INTERFACE STRUCTURE

The switch’s GUI, as shown on the following pages, is composed of three parts: a header featuring the Port Status panel, a left-side Navigation Tree panel with folders and pages, and a larger-area Focus Page that shows the contents of the page you’ve selected from the panel. Find the page you want to manage using the Navigation Tree.
Switch

COMMON FUNCTIONS

Each page features some commonly used buttons. The function of each is described below:
Button Eect
Refresh Updates all fields on the page Apply Updates into the memory what is entereded into the editable fields. Because the Web server checks
for errors, no error-checking occurs before the user selects this button. Delete Deletes the current record Help Opens online help pages

ENTRY FIELDS

To add a new line, select “New” from the drop-down menu, enter new information, and then click Apply. To edit an existing line, select the appropriate line number of the drop-down menu first, make your edits, and then click Apply. The change is then recorded and displayed in the table. To delete a row, select the line number from the entry field’s drop-down menu, then press the delete key. The line will disappear from the table.
Switch
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STATUS FIELD

A State field will display on the far-right of some Focus Pages, which gives the status of the line displayed. All displayed status fields are Read-Only. Once information has been entered, click Apply, and the line will reflect the status.
Switch
SWITCH CONFIGURATION
This section describes how to use the web‐based management interface (Web UI) for this switch.

SYSTEM CONFIGURATION

BASIC INFORMATION

The following image shows basic system information, which lets you to configure the System Name, Location and Contact. Click apply to save any changes.
Switch

SERIAL (CONSOLE PORT) INFORMATION

The following image shows the settings of the console port, which include Baud Rate, Character Size, Parity Code, Stop Bits, and Flow Control. Make sure settings are the same in the software on your PC.
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Switch
Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch User Manual

USER MANAGEMENT

The following image shows the User Management page, where you can add multiple switch users, set user names and passwords, change the admin and other passwords, and manage users.
Switch

SAFE MANAGEMENT

The following image shows how to connect to the interface of the switch through the web GUI, TELNET and SNMP functions. An administrator can control network management services such as TELNET, WEB and SNMP as well as enable (default) or disable these services. ACL groups can also be assigned here. More information on this is available under ACL configuration later in the manual.
Switch

CURRENT CONFIGURATION

This page shows the current configuration. Also known as “Running Config,” this screen lets the user view the current configuration of the switch. Clicking Save files the current configuration in the Configuration File option in the left menu.
Switch
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CONFIGURATION FILE

This the current “Running Configuration” of the switch created from the previous menu option.
Switch
PORT CONFIGURATION/SHOW
The following image shows the Port Configuration/Show page. Through this page, users can enable or disable ports, set the port speed or view the basic information of all ports.
Switch

PORT STATISTICS

The following image shows the port statistics information page. To view a particular port, select the appropriate port name in the port drop-down menu. This page also allows you to view the statistics of all packets.
Switch
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Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Web-Managed AV Switch User Manual
FLOW CONTROL
IEEE 802.3x Flow Control is the process of managing the rate of data transmission between two nodes (i.e., the switch and a connected network client) to prevent a fast sender from overwhelming a slow receiver. It provides a mechanism for the receiver to control the transmission speed, so that the receiving node is not overwhelmed with data from the transmitting node. That sounds like it is a good thing, and it is. So why is the option by default set to “disabled”? The short answer is because you normally don’t need it and because it can, in very rare instances, have a negative impact on the overall performance in your network. The TCP protocol already provides its own Flow Control mechanism, allowing a sender to throttle back the speed if the receiver is having problems keeping up.
The following image shows the options for Flow Control. Users can enable and disable the Flow Control of each port here.
Switch

BROADCAST STORM CONTROL

Storm control prevents LAN interfaces from being disrupted by a broadcast storm. A broadcast storm occurs when broadcast packets flood the subnet, creating excessive traffic and degrading network performance. Errors in the protocol-stack implementation or in the network configuration can cause a broadcast storm. The switch allows configuring maximum allowed pps rates for three different types of packets (Broadcast, Multicast and Unicast). The following image shows the Broadcast Storm Control page. This page is used to turn on or off Broadcast, Multicast and DLF Suppressions and apply a rate limit.
The default rate limit is 64 kbps.
Switch
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PORT SPEED LIMITS

This feature allows you to limit the data rates for a particular port on the Switch. When the data rate exceeds user-configured values, the switch drops packets immediately. Rate limiting is configured for two types of transmissions, which are ingress and egress. Ingress traffic is received on any given port (incoming, inbound, download or input speed), whereas egress traffic is traffic sent out (outgoing, outbound, upload or output speed) to another network client. The following image shows the Port Speed-Limit page. This page is used to configure the send and receive rate of the port.
Switch

PORT ISOLATION

The following image shows the page for Port Protection. Port isolation prevents network clients, such as PCs on different ports, from communicating with each other without the necessity of configuring a VLAN.
Switch

PORT LEARNING LIMIT

The following image shows the Learn Limit of the each port. This page is used to restrict how many MAC addresses the port is allowed to learn. The default value is the maximum of 8191.
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Switch
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