Minitar MWGAR, MWGARB User Manual

MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual
Version: 2.0
MWGAR/MWGARB
Wireless 802.11g/b AP Router
User Manual
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MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual Copyright © 2006 Minitar Corporation
MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual
Version: 2.0
Trademarks
Copyright @2006 Contents are subject to change without notice. All trademarks belong to their respective proprietors.
Copyright Statement
THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS OF PROPRIETARY TECHNICAL INFORMATION THAT IS THE PROPERTY OF THIS COMPANY. AND NO PART OF THIS DOCUMENTATION MAY BE REPRODUCED, STORED IN A RETRIEVAL SYSTEM OR TRANSMITTED IN ANY FORM OR BY ANY MEANS, ELECTRICAL OR MECHANICAL, BY PHOTOCOPYING, RECORDING, OR OTHERWISE, WITHOUT THE PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT OF THIS COMPANY.
Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequ ency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the e quipment off and on, the user is encourag ed to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) T his device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interferenc e that may cause undesired operation.
FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsi ble for compliance could voi d the user's authority to operate this equipment.
IMPORTANT NOTE: FCC Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body. This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter.
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MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual Copyright © 2006 Minitar Corporation
MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual
Version: 2.0
Table of Contents
REVISION HISTORY.......................................................................................................... I
TERMINOLOGY................................................................................................................ II
1 INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................ 1
1.1 PACKAGE CONTENTS............................................................................................... 1
1.2 PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS...................................................................................... 1
1.3 PRODUCT FEATURES............................................................................................... 2
1.4 UPPER PANEL DESCRIPTION.................................................................................... 3
1.5 REAR PANEL DESCRIPTION...................................................................................... 4
2 INSTALLATION.......................................................................................................... 7
2.1 HARDWARE INSTALLATION ....................................................................................... 7
2.2 SOFTWARE INSTALLATION........................................................................................ 7
3 SOFTWARE CONFIGURATION................................................................................ 8
3.1 PREP ARE YOUR PC TO CONFIGUR E THE WLAN BROADBAND ROUTER........................ 8
3.2 CONNECT TO THE WLAN BROADBAND ROUTER...................................................... 10
3.3 MANAGEMENT AND CONFIGURATION ON THE WLAN BROADBAND ROUTER ................ 10
3.3.1 Status......................................................................................................... 10
3.3.2 Setup Wizard.............................................................................................. 12
I Operation Mode............................................................................................. 12
II Time Zone Setting.......................................................................................... 14
III LAN Interface Setup................................................................................... 14
IV WAN Interface Setup.................................................................................. 15
V Wireless Basic Settings................................................................................. 15
VI Wireless Security Setup............................................................................. 16
3.3.3 Operation Mode ......................................................................................... 16
3.3.4 Wireless - Basic Settings............................................................................ 17
3.3.5 Wireless - Advanced Settings..................................................................... 18
3.3.6 Wireless - Security Setup........................................................................... 20
I WEP Key Setup............................................................................................. 22
3.3.7 Wireless - Access Control .......................................................................... 23
3.3.8 WDS Settings............................................................................................. 25
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I WDS Security Setup...................................................................................... 26
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II WDS AP T able............................................................................................... 26
3.3.9 Site Survey................................................................................................. 27
3.3.10 LAN Interface Setup................................................................................... 28
3.3.11 WAN Interface Setup.................................................................................. 30
I Static IP.......................................................................................................... 30
II DHCP Client .................................................................................................. 32
III PPPoE ....................................................................................................... 33
IV PPTP.......................................................................................................... 35
3.3.12 Firewall - Port Filtering ............................................................................... 37
3.3.13 Firewall - IP Filtering................................................................................... 38
3.3.14 Firewall - MAC Filtering.............................................................................. 39
3.3.15 Firewall - Port Forwarding.......................................................................... 40
3.3.16 Firewall – URL Filtering.............................................................................. 41
3.3.17 Firewall - DMZ............................................................................................ 42
3.3.18 VPN Setting................................................................................................ 43
I VPN Setup - Edit Tunnel................................................................................ 45
II Advanced IKE Setup...................................................................................... 47
3.3.19 Management - Statistics............................................................................. 48
3.3.20 Management - DDNS................................................................................. 49
3.3.21 Management - Time Zone Setting.............................................................. 50
3.3.22 Management – Denial-of-Service............................................................... 51
3.3.23 Management - Log..................................................................................... 52
3.3.24 Management - Upgrade Firmware ............................................................. 53
3.3.25 Management Save/ Reload Settings.......................................................... 53
3.3.26 Management - Password Setup................................................................. 54
3.3.27 Logout........................................................................................................ 55
4 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ) ........................................................... 56
4.1 WHAT AND HOW TO FIND MY PC’S IP AND MAC ADDRESS?....................................... 56
4.2 WHAT IS WIRELESS LAN?..................................................................................... 56
4.3 WHA T ARE ISM BANDS?........................................................................................ 56
4.4 HOW DOES WIRELESS NETWORKING WORK?............................................................ 56
4.5 WHAT IS BSSID? ................................................................................................. 57
4.6 WHAT IS ESSID? ................................................................................................. 57
4.7 WHAT ARE POTENTIAL FACTORS THAT MAY CAUSES INTERFERENCE?.......................... 58
4.8 WHA T ARE THE OPEN SYSTEM AND SHARED KEY AUTHENTICATIONS?........................58
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4.9 WHAT IS WEP?.................................................................................................... 58
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4.10 WHAT IS FRAGMENT THRESHOLD?......................................................................... 59
4.11 WHAT IS RTS (REQUEST TO SEND) THRESHOLD? .................................................. 59
4.12 WHAT IS BEACON INTERVAL?................................................................................. 60
4.13 WHAT IS PREAMBLE TYPE?.................................................................................... 60
4.14 WHAT IS SSID BROADCAST?................................................................................. 60
4.15 WHAT IS WI-FI PROTECTED ACCESS (WPA)? ......................................................... 60
4.16 WHAT IS WPA2?.................................................................................................. 61
4.17 WHAT IS 802.1X AUTHENTICATION? ....................................................................... 61
4.18 WHAT IS TEMPORAL KEY INTEGRITY PROTOCOL (TKIP)?......................................... 61
4.19 WHAT IS ADVANCED ENCRYPTION STANDARD (AES)? ............................................. 61
4.20 WHAT IS INTER-ACCESS POINT PROTOCOL (IAPP)?................................................ 62
4.21 WHAT IS WIRELESS DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM (WDS)?............................................... 62
4.22 WHAT IS UNIVERSAL PLUG AND PLAY (UPNP)? ....................................................... 62
4.23 WHAT IS MAXIMUM TRANSMISSION UNIT (MTU) SIZE?............................................. 62
4.24 WHAT IS CLONE MAC ADDRESS?.......................................................................... 62
4.25 WHAT IS DDNS?.................................................................................................. 63
4.26 WHAT IS NTP CLIENT? ......................................................................................... 63
4.27 WHAT IS VPN?..................................................................................................... 63
4.28 WHAT IS IPSEC? ................................................................................................. 63
5.1 EXAMPLE ONE – PPPOE ON THE WAN ..................................................................... 64
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5.2 EXAMPLE TWO – FIXED IP ON THE WAN .................................................................... 66
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Revision History
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MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual Copyright © 2006 Minitar Corporation
D
ATE R
EVISION OF USER’S MANUAL FIRMWARE
2006/7/27 Version 2.0 (g/v)1.4.1
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Terminology
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3DES Triple Data Encryption Standard AES Advanced Encryption Standard ANSI American National Standards Institute AP Access Point CCK Complementary Code Keying CSMA/CA Carrier Sense Multiple Access/ Collision Avoidance CSMA/CD Carrier Sense Multiple Access/ Collision Detection DDNS Dynamic Domain Name Server DH Diffie-Hellman Algorithm DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol DSSS Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum EAP Extensible Authentication Protocol ESP Encapsulating Security Payload FCC Federal Communications Commission FTP File Transfer Protocol IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers IKE Internet Key Exchange IP Internet Protocol ISM Industrial, Scientific and Medical LAN Local Area Network MAC Media Access Control MD5 Message Digest 5 NAT Network Address Translation NT Network Termination NTP Network Time Protocol PPTP Point to Point Tunneling Protocol PSD Power Spectral Density RF Radio Frequency SHA1 Secure Hash Algorithm SNR Signal to Noise Ratio SSID Service Set Identification TCP Transmission Control Protocol TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol
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TKIP Temporal Key Integrity Protocol UPNP Universal Plug and Play VPN Virtual Private Network WDS Wireless Distribution System WEP Wired Equivalent Privacy WLAN Wireless Local Area Network WPA Wi-Fi Protected Access
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MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual Copyright © 2006 Minitar Corporation
MWGAR/MWGARB User Manual
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1 Introduction
The Wireless LAN Broadband Router is an affordable IEEE 802.11b/g wireless LAN broadband router solution; setting SOHO and enterprise standard for high performance, secure, manageable and reliable WLAN.
This document describes the steps required for the initial IP address assign and other WLAN router configuration. The description includes the implementation of the above steps.
1.1 Package contents
The package of the WLAN Broadband Router includes the following items,
The WLAN Broadband Router The AC to DC power adapter The Documentation CD 1.8M RJ-45 Cable Line (Option)
1.2 Product Specifications
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Product Name WLAN Broadband Router Standard 802.11b/g(Wireless), 802.3(10BaseT),
802.3u(100BaseT) Data Transfer Rate 54Mbps(Wireless), 100Mbps(Ethernet) Modulation Method CCK(802.11b), OFDM(802.11g) Frequency Band 2.4GHz – 2.497GJz ISM Band, DSSS RF Output Power CCK< 17 dBm, OFDM< 13.5 dBm Receiver Sensitivity 802.11b -80 dBm@8%, 802.11g -68 dBm@5% Operation Range 30 to 280 meters (depend on surrounding) Antenna External Antenna LED Power, Active (WLAN/Ethernet) Security 64 bit/ 128 bit WEP, WPA, WPA2, port filtering, IP
filtering, MAC filtering, port forwarding and DMZ hosting
LAN interface One 10/100BaseT with RJ45 connector (WAN)
Four 10/100BaseT with RJ45 connectors (LAN) Power Consumption 7.5V DC Power Adapter Operating Temperature 0 ~ 50oC ambient temperature Storage Temperature -20 ~ 70oC ambient temperature
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Humidity 5 to 90 % maximum (non-condensing) Dimension 118 x 95 x 25 mm
1.3 Product Features
Generic Router
Complies with IEEE 802.11b/g standard for 2.4GHz Wireless LAN. Supports multi-operation (bridge/gateway/WISP) modes between wireless
and wired Ethernet interfaces.
Supports 64-bit and 128-bit WEP, WPA, WPA2 encryption/decryption
function to protect the wireless data transmission.
Supports IEEE 802.1x Authentication. Support Wi-Fi Protected Access Authentication with Radius and Pre-Shared
Key mode.
Supports Inter-Access Point Protocol (IAPP). Supports Wireless Distribution System (WDS). Supports IEEE 802.3x full duplex flow control on 10/100M Ethernet interface. Supports DHCP server to provide clients auto IP addresses assignment. Supports DHCP client for WAN interface auto IP address assignment from
ISP.
Supports PPPoE on WAN interface. Supports PPTP Client on Ethernet WAN interface. Supports clone MAC address function. Supports firewall security with port filtering, IP filtering, MAC filtering, port
forwarding, trigger port, DMZ hosting and URL filtering functions.
Supports WEB based management and configuration. Supports UPnP for automatic Internet access. Supports Dynamic DNS service. Supports NTP client service. Supports Log table and remote Log service. Support Setup Wizard mode. Support DoS (Denial of Service) function.
VPN Router
Supports Virtual Private Network (VPN) connection.
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Supports IPSEC tunnel encryption(3DES/AES128) and
authentication(MD5/SHA1)
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1.4 Panel Description (MWGARB)
LED Indicator State Description
1. Power LED
On
The WLAN Broadband Router is powered on.
Off
The WLAN Broadband Router is powered off.
2. WLAN LED
Flashing
Data is transmitting or receiving on the antenna.
Off
No data is transmitting or receiving on the antenna.
3. LAN LED
ACT
Flashing
Data is transmitting or receiving on the LAN interface.
On
Port linked.
Off
No link.
4. WAN LED
ACT
Flashing
Data is transmitting or receiving on the WAN interface.
On
Port linked.
Off
No link.
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Power LED
WLAN LED
LAN LED
WAN LED
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Interfaces Description
1. Antenna
(Fixed / SMA)
The Wireless LAN Antenna.
2. Power The power jack allows an external DC +7.5 V power
supply connection. The external AC to DC adaptor provide adaptive power requirement to the WLAN Broadband Router.
3. LAN The RJ-45 sockets allow LAN connection through
Category 5 cables. Support auto-sensing on 10/100M speed and half/ full duplex; comply with IEEE 802.3/
802.3u respectively.
4. WAN The RJ-45 socket allows WAN connection through a
Category 5 cable. Support auto-sensing on 10/100M speed and half/ full duplex; comply with IEEE 802.3/
802.3u respectively.
5. Reset Push continually the reset button 5 ~ 10 seconds to reset
the configuration parameters to factory defaults.
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WAN
LAN
Powe
r
Antenna
Reset
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1.5 Panel Description (MWGAR)
LED Indicator State Description
1. Power LED
On
The WLAN Broadband Router is powered on.
Off
The WLAN Broadband Router is powered off.
2. WLAN LED
Flashing
Data is transmitting or receiving on the antenna.
Off
No data is transmitting or receiving on the antenna.
3. WAN LED
ACT
Flashing
Data is transmitting or receiving on the WAN interface.
Off
No data is transmitting or receiving on the WAN interface.
10/100M
On
Connection speed is 100Mbps on WAN interface.
Off
Connection speed is 10Mbps on WAN interface.
4. LAN LED
ACT
Flashing
Data is transmitting or receiving on the LAN interface.
Off
No data is transmitting or receiving on the LAN interface.
10/100M
On
Connection speed is 100Mbps on LAN interface.
Off
Connection speed is 10Mbps on LAN
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WAN LED
LAN LED
Power LED WLAN LED
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interface.
Interfaces Description
1. Antenna The Wireless LAN Antenna.
2. Reset Push continually the reset button 5 ~ 10 seconds to reset
the configuration parameters to factory defaults.
3. WAN
The RJ-45 socket allows WAN connection through a Category 5 cable. Support auto-sensing on 10/100M speed and half/ full duplex; comply with IEEE 802.3/
802.3u respectively.
4. LAN
The RJ-45 sockets allow LAN connection through Category 5 cables. Support auto-sensing on 10/100M speed and half/ full duplex; comply with IEEE 802.3/
802.3u respectively.
5. Power
The power jack allows an external DC +7.5 V power supply connection. The external AC to DC adaptor provide adaptive power requirement to the WLAN Broadband Router.
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WAN
LAN Powe
r
Antenna
Reset
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2 Installation
2.1 Hardware Installation
Step 1: Place the Wireless LAN Broadband Router to the best optimum
transmission location. The best transmission location for your WLAN Broadband Router is usually at the geographic center of your wireless network, with line of sign to all of your mobile stations.
Step 2: Connect the WLAN Broadband Router to your wired network. Connect
the Ethernet WAN interface of WLAN Broadband Router by category 5 Ethernet cable to your switch/ hub/ xDSL modem or cable modem. A straight-through Ethernet cable with appropriate cable length is needed.
Step 3: Supply DC power to the WLAN Broadband Router. Use only the AC/DC
power adapter supplied with the WLAN Broadband Router; it may occur damage by using a different type of power adapter.
The hardware installation finished.
2.2 Software Installation
There are no software drivers, patches or utilities installation needed, but
only the configuration setting. Please refer to chapter 3 for software configuration.
Notice: It will take about 55 seconds to complete the boot up sequence
after powered on the WLAN Broadband Router; Power LED will be active, and after that the WLAN Activity LED will be flashing to show the WLAN interface is enabled and working now.
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3 Software configuration
There are web based management and configuration functions allowing you to have the jobs done easily.
The WLAN Broadband Router is delivered with the following factory default parameters on the Ethernet LAN interfaces.
Default IP Address: 192.168.1.254 Default IP subnet mask: 255.255.255.0 WEB login User Name: <empty> WEB login Password: <empty>
3.1 Prepare your PC to configure the WLAN Broadband Router
For OS of Microsoft Windows 95/ 98/ Me:
1. Click the Start button and select Settings, then click Control Panel. The Control Panel window will appear.
Note: Windows Me users may not see the Network control panel. If so, select View all Control Panel options on the left side of the window
2. Move mouse and double-click the right button on Network icon. The Network window will appear.
3. Check the installed list of Network Components. If TCP/IP is not installed, click the Add button to install it; otherwise go to step 6.
4. Select Protocol in the Network Component Type dialog box and click Add button.
5. Select TCP/IP in Microsoft of Select Network Protocol dialog box then click OK button to install the TCP/IP protocol, it may need the Microsoft Windows CD to complete the installation. Close and go back to Network dialog box after the TCP/IP installation.
6. Select TCP/IP and click the properties button on the Network dialog box.
7. Select Specify an IP address and type in values as following example.
IP Address: 192.168.1.1, any IP address within 192.168.1.1 to
192.168.1.253 is good to connect the Wireless LAN Access Point.
IP Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
8. Click OK and reboot your PC after completes the IP parameters setting.
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For OS of Microsoft Windows 2000, XP:
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1. Click the Start button and select Settings, then click Control Panel. The Control Panel window will appear.
2. Move mouse and double-click the right button on Network and Dial-up Connections icon. Move mouse and double-click the Local Area Connection icon. The Local Area Connection window will appear. Click Properties button in the Local Area Connection window.
3. Check the installed list of Network Components. If TCP/IP is not installed, click the Add button to install it; otherwise go to step 6.
4. Select Protocol in the Network Component Type dialog box and click Add button.
5. Select TCP/IP in Microsoft of Select Network Protocol dialog box then click OK button to install the TCP/IP protocol, it may need the Microsoft Windows CD to complete the installation. Close and go back to Network dialog box after the TCP/IP installation.
6. Select TCP/IP and click the properties button on the Network dialog box.
7. Select Specify an IP address and type in values as following example.
IP Address: 192.168.1.1, any IP address within 192.168.1.1 to
192.168.1.253 is good to connect the Wireless LAN Access Point.
IP Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
8. Click OK to completes the IP parameters setting.
For OS of Microsoft Windows NT:
1. Click the Start button and select Settings, then click Control Panel. The Control Panel window will appear.
2. Move mouse and double-click the right button on Network icon. The Network window will appear. Click Protocol tab from the Network window.
3. Check the installed list of Network Protocol window. If TCP/IP is not installed, click the Add button to install it; otherwise go to step 6.
4. Select Protocol in the Network Component Type dialog box and click Add button.
5. Select TCP/IP in Microsoft of Select Network Protocol dialog box then click OK button to install the TCP/IP protocol, it may need the Microsoft Windows CD to complete the installation. Close and go back to Network dialog box after the TCP/IP installation.
6. Select TCP/IP and click the properties button on the Network dialog box.
7. Select Specify an IP address and type in values as following example.
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IP Address: 192.168.1.1, any IP address within 192.168.1.1 to
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192.168.1.253 is good to connect the Wireless LAN Access Point.
IP Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
8. Click OK to complete the IP parameters setting.
3.2 Connect to the WLAN Broadband Router
Open a WEB browser, i.e. Microsoft Internet Explore, then enter 192.168.1.254 on the URL to connect the WLAN Broadband Router.
3.3 Management and configuration on the WLAN Broadband Router
3.3.1 St atus
This page shows the current status and some basic settings of the device, includes system, wireless, Ethernet LAN and WAN configuration information.
Screen snapshot – Status
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Item Description
System Uptime It shows the duration since WLAN Broadband
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Router is powered on.
Firmware version It shows the firmware version of WLAN Broadband
Router.
Wireless configuration Mode It shows wireless operation mode Band It shows the current wireless operating frequency. SSID It shows the SSID of this WLAN Broadband Router.
The SSID is the unique name of WLAN Broadband Router and shared among its service area, so all devices attempts to join the same wireless network
can identify it. Channel Number It shows the wireless channel connected currently. Encryption It shows the status of encryption function. BSSID It shows the BSSID address of the WLAN
Broadband Router. BSSID is a six-byte address. Associated Clients It shows the number of connected clients (or
stations, PCs). TCP/IP configuration Attain IP Protocol It shows type of connection. IP Address It shows the IP address of LAN interfaces of WLAN
Broadband Router. Subnet Mask It shows the IP subnet mask of LAN interfaces of
WLAN Broadband Router. Default Gateway It shows the default gateway setting for LAN
interfaces outgoing data packets. DHCP Server It shows the DHCP server is enabled or not. MAC Address It shows the MAC address of LAN interfaces of
WLAN Broadband Router. WAN configuration Attain IP Protocol It shows how the WLAN Broadband Router gets the
IP address. The IP address can be set manually to a
fixed one or set dynamically by DHCP server or
attain IP by PPPoE / PPTP connection. IP Address It shows the IP address of WAN interface of WLAN
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Broadband Router. Subnet Mask It shows the IP subnet mask of WAN interface of
WLAN Broadband Router. Default Gateway It shows the default gateway setting for WAN
interface outgoing data packets. MAC Address It shows the MAC address of WAN interface of
WLAN Broadband Router.
3.3.2 Setup Wizard
This page guides you to configure wireless broadband router for first time
Screen snapshot – Setup Wizard
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I Operation Mode
This page followed by Setup Wizard page to define the operation mode.
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Screen snapshot – Operation Mode
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II Time Zone Setting
This page is used to enable and configure NTP client
Screen snapshot – Time Zone Settings
III LAN Interface Setup
This page is used to configure local area network IP address and subnet mask
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Screen snapshot – LAN Interface Setup
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IV WAN Interface Setup
This page is used to configure WAN access type
Screen snapshot – WAN Interface Setup
V Wireless Basic Settings
This page is used to configure basic wireless parameters like Band, Mode, Network Type SSID, Channel Number, Enable Mac Clone(Single Ethernet Client)
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Screen snapshot – Wireless Basic Settings
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VI Wireless Security Setup
This page is used to configure wireless security
Screen snapshot – Wireless Security Setup
3.3.3 Operation Mode
This page is used to configure which mode wireless broadband router acts
Screen snapshot – Operation Mode
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Item Description
Gateway Traditional gateway configuration. It always
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connects internet via ADSL/Cable Modem. LAN
interface, WAN interface, Wireless interface, NAT
and Firewall modules are applied to this mode Bridge Each interface (LAN, WAN and Wireless) regards as
bridge. NAT, Firewall and all router’s functions are
not supported Wireless ISP Switch Wireless interface to WAN port and all
Ethernet ports in bridge mode. Wireless interface
can do all router’s functions Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.4 Wireless - Basic Settings
This page is used to configure the parameters for wireless LAN clients that may connect to your Broadband Router. Here you may change wireless encryption settings as well as wireless network parameters.
Screen snapshot – Wireless Basic Settings
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Item Description
Disable Wireless LAN Interface
Click on to disable the wireless LAN data
transmission. Band Click to select 2.4GHz(B) / 2.4GHz(G) /
2.4GHz(B+G)
Mode Click to select the WLAN AP / Client / WDS /
AP+WDS wireless mode. Site Survey
The Site Survey button provides tool to scan the
wireless network. If any Access Point or IBSS is
found, you could choose to connect it manually
when client mode is enabled. Refer to 3.3.9 Site
Survey. SSID It is the wireless network name. The SSID can be 32
bytes long. Channel Number Select the wireless communication channel from
pull-down menu. Associated Clients
Click the Show Active Clients button to open Active
Wireless Client Table that shows the MAC address,
transmit-packet, receive-packet and
transmission-rate for each associated wireless
client. Enable Mac Clone (Single Ethernet Client)
Take Laptop NIC MAC address as wireless client
MAC address. [Client Mode only]
Enable Universal Repeater Mode
Click to enable Universal Repeater Mode
SSID of Extended Interface
Assign SSID when enables Universal Repeater
Mode. Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.5 Wireless - Advanced Settings
These settings are only for more technically advanced users who have a
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sufficient knowledge about wireless LAN. These settings should not be changed unless you know what effect the changes will have on your WLAN Broadband Router.
Screen snapshot – Wireless Advanced Settings
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Item Description
Authentication Type
Click to select the authentication type in Open
System, Shared Key or Auto selection. Fragment Threshold Set the data packet fragmentation threshold, value
can be written between 256 and 2346 bytes.
Refer to 4.10 What is Fragment Threshold? RTS Threshold Set the RTS Threshold, value can be written
between 0 and 2347 bytes.
Refer to 4.11 What is RTS(Request To Send)
Threshold? Beacon Interval Set the Beacon Interval, value can be written
between 20 and 1024 ms.
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Refer to 4.12 What is Beacon Interval? Data Rate Select the transmission data rate from pull-down
menu. Data rate can be auto-select, 11M, 5.5M, 2M
or 1Mbps. Preamble Type
Click to select the Long Preamble or Short
Preamble support on the wireless data packet
transmission.
Refer to 4.13 What is Preamble Type? Broadcast SSID Click to enable or disable the SSID broadcast
function.
Refer to 4.14 What is SSID Broadcast? IAPP Click to enable or disable the IAPP function.
Refer to 4.20 What is Inter-Access Point
Protocol(IAPP)?
802.11g Protection Protect 802.11b user. RF Output Power To adjust transmission power level. Turbo Mode
Click to enable/disable turbo mode.(Only apply to
WLAN IC of Realtek). Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.6 Wireless - Security Setup
This page allows you setup the wireless security. Turn on WEP, WPA, WP A2 by using encryption keys could prevent any unauthorized access to your wireless network.
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Screen snapshot – Wireless Security Setup
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Item Description
Encryption Select the encryption supported over wireless
access. The encryption method can be None, WEP,
WPA(TKIP), WPA2 or WPA2 Mixed
Refer to 4.9 What is WEP?
4.15 What is Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)?
4.16 What is WPA2(AES)?
4.17 What is 802.1X Authentication?
4.18 What is Temporal Key Integrity Protocol
(TKIP)? 4.19 What is Advanced Encryption S tandard
(AES)? Use 802.1x Authentication
While Encryption is selected to be WEP.
Click the check box to enable IEEE 802.1x
authentication function.
Refer to 4.16 What is 802.1x Authentication? WP A Authentication Mode
While Encryption is selected to be WPA.
Click to select the WPA Authentication Mode with
Enterprise (RADIUS) or Personal (Pre-Shared Key).
Refer to 4.15 What is Wi-Fi Protected Access
(WPA)? Pre-Shared Key While Encryption is selected to be WPA.
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Format Select the Pre-shared key format from the pull-down
menu. The format can be Passphrase or Hex (64
characters). [WPA, Personal(Pre-Shared Key)
only] Pre-Shared Key Fill in the key value. [WPA, Personal(Pre-Shared
Key) only] Enable Pre-Authentication
Click to enable Pre-Authentication. [WPA2/WPA2
Mixed only, Enterprise only] Authentication RADIUS Server
Set the IP address, port and login password
information of authentication RADIUS sever. Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
I WEP Key Setup
Screen snapshot – WEP Key Setup
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Item Description
Key Length Select the WEP shared secret key length from
pull-down menu. The length can be chose between
64-bit and 128-bit (known as “WEP2”) keys.
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The WEP key is composed of initialization vector (24
bits) and secret key (40-bit or 104-bit). Key Format Select the WEP shared secret key format from
pull-down menu. The format can be chose between
plant text (ASCII) and hexadecimal (HEX) code. Default Tx Key Set the default secret key for WEP security function.
Value can be chose between 1 and 4. Encryption Key 1 Secret key 1 of WEP security encryption function. Encryption Key 2 Secret key 2 of WEP security encryption function. Encryption Key 3 Secret key 3 of WEP security encryption function. Encryption Key 4 Secret key 4 of WEP security encryption function. Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Close Click to close this WEP Key setup window. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
WEP encryption key (secret key) length:
Length
Format
64-bit 128-bit
A
SCII 5 characters 13 characters
HEX 10 hexadecimal codes 26 hexadecimal codes
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3.3.7 Wireless - Access Control
If you enable wireless access control, only those clients whose wireless MAC addresses are in the access control list will be able to connect to your Access Point. When this option is enabled, no wireless clients will be able to connect if the list contains no entries.
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Screen snapshot – Wireless Access Control
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Item Description
Wireless Access Control Mode
Click the Disabled, Allow Listed or Deny Listed of
drop down menu choose wireless access control
mode.
This is a security control function; only those clients
registered in the access control list can link to this
WLAN Broadband Router. MAC Address Fill in the MAC address of client to register this
WLAN Broadband Router access capability. Comment Fill in the comment tag for the registered client. Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the
client to new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting. Current Access Control List
It shows the registered clients that are allowed to
link to this WLAN Broadband Router. Delete Selected Click to delete the selected clients that will be
access right removed from this WLAN Broadband
Router. Delete All Click to delete all the registered clients from the
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access allowed list. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
3.3.8 WDS Settings
Wireless Distribution System uses wireless media to communicate with other APs, like the Ethernet does. To do this, you must set these APs in the same channel and set MAC address of other AP that you want to communicate with in the table and then enable the WDS.
Screen snapshot – WDS Setup
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Item Description
Enable WDS Click the check box to enable wireless distribution
system. Refer to 4.21 What is Wireless Distribution
System (WDS)? MAC Address Fill in the MAC address of AP to register the wireless
distribution system access capability. Comment Fill in the comment tag for the registered AP. Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the AP
to new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
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the previous configuration setting. Set Security Click button to configure wireless security like
WEP(64bits), WEP(128bits), WPA(TKIP),
WPA2(AES) or None
Show Statistics It shows the TX, RX packets, rate statistics Delete Selected Click to delete the selected clients that will be
removed from the wireless distribution system. Delete All Click to delete all the registered APs from the
wireless distribution system allowed list. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
I WDS Security Setup
Requirement: Set [Wireless]->[Basic
Settings]->[Mode]->AP+WDS This page is used to configure the wireless security between APs. Refer to 3.3.6 Wireless Security Setup.
Screen snapshot – WDS Security Setup
II WDS AP Table
ow WDS statistics
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This page is used to sh
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Screen snapshot – WDS AP Table
Item Description
MAC Address It shows the MAC Address within WDS. Tx Packets It shows the statistic count of sent packets on the
wireless LAN interface.
Tx Errors It shows the statistic count of error sent packets on
the Wireless LAN interface.
Rx Packets It shows the statistic count of received packets on
the wireless LAN interface. Tx Rare (Mbps) It shows the wireless link rate within WDS. Refresh Click to refresh the statistic counters on the screen. Close Click to close the current window.
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3.3.9 Site Survey
This page is used to view or configure other APs near yours.
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Screen snapshot – Wireless Site Survey
Item Description
SSID It shows the SSID of AP. BSSID It shows BSSID of AP. Channel It show the current channel of AP occupied. Type It show which type AP acts. Encrypt It shows the encryption status. Signal It shows the power level of current AP. Select Click to select AP or client you’d like to connect. Refresh
Click the Refresh button to re-scan site survey on
the screen. Connect
Click the Connect button to establish connection.
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3.3.10 LAN Interface Setup
This page is used to configure the parameters for local area network that connects to the LAN ports of your WLAN Broadband Router. Here you may change the setting for IP address, subnet mask, DHCP, etc.
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Screen snapshot – LAN Interface Setup
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Item Description
IP Address Fill in the IP address of LAN interfaces of this WLAN
Access Point. Subnet Mask Fill in the subnet mask of LAN interfaces of this
WLAN Access Point. Default Gateway Fill in the default gateway for LAN interfaces out
going data packets. DHCP
Click to select Disabled, Client or Server in
different operation mode of wireless Access Point. DHCP Client Range Fill in the start IP address and end IP address to
allocate a range of IP addresses; client with DHCP
function set will be assigned an IP address from the
range. Show Client
Click to open the Active DHCP Client T able window
that shows the active clients with their assigned IP
address, MAC address and time expired
information. [Server mode only]
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DNS Server Manual setup DNS server IP address. Domain Name
A
ssign Domain Name and dispatch to DHCP clients.
It is optional field.
802.1d Spanning Tree
Select to enable or disable the IEEE 802.1d
Spanning Tree function from pull-down menu. Clone MAC Address Fill in the MAC address that is the MAC address to
be cloned. Refer to 4.24 What is Clone MAC
Address? Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
3.3.11 WAN Interface Setup
This page is used to configure the parameters for wide area network that connects to the WAN port of your WLAN Broadband Router. Here you may change the access method to Static IP, DHCP, PPPoE or PPTP by click the item value of WAN Access Type.
I Static IP
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Screen snapshot – WAN Interface Setup – Static IP
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Item Description
Static IP Click to select Static IP support on WAN interface.
There are IP address, subnet mask and default
gateway settings need to be done. IP Address If you select the Static IP support on WAN interface,
fill in the IP address for it. Subnet Mask If you select the Static IP support on WAN interface,
fill in the subnet mask for it. Default Gateway If you select the Static IP support on WAN interface,
fill in the default gateway for WAN interface out
going data packets. MTU Size Fill in the mtu size of MTU Size. The default value is
1400 DNS 1 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 1. DNS 2 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 2. DNS 3 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 3. Clone MAC Address Fill in the MAC address that is the MAC address to
be cloned. Refer to 4.24 What is Clone MAC
Address? Enable uPNP Click the checkbox to enable uPNP function.
Refer to 4.22 What is Universal Plug and Play
(uPNP)? Enable Web Server Access on WAN
Click the checkbox to enable web configuration from
WAN side. Enable WAN Echo Reply
Click the checkbox to enable WAN ICMP response.
Enable IPsec pass through on VPN connection
Click the checkbox to enable IPSec packet pass
through
Enable PPTP pass through on VPN connection
Click the checkbox to enable PPTP packet pass
through
Enable L2TP pass through on VPN connection
Click the checkbox to enable L2TP packet pass
through
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
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new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
II DHCP Client
Screen snapshot – WAN Interface Setup – DHCP Client
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Item Description
DHCP Client Click to select DHCP support on WAN interface for
IP address assigned automatically from a DHCP
server. Host Name Fill in the host name of Host Name. The default
value is empty MTU Size Fill in the mtu size of MTU Size. The default value is
1400 Attain DNS Automatically
Click to select getting DNS address for DHCP
support. Please select Set DNS Manually if the
DHCP support is selected. Set DNS Manually
Click to select getting DNS address for DHCP
support. DNS 1 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 1.
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DNS 2 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 2. DNS 3 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 3. Clone MAC Address Fill in the MAC address that is the MAC address to
be cloned. Refer to 4.24 What is Clone MAC
Address? Enable uPNP Click the checkbox to enable uPNP function.
Refer to 4.22 What is Universal Plug and Play
(uPNP)? Enable Web Server Access on WAN
Click the checkbox to enable web configuration from
WAN side. Enable WAN Echo Reply
Click the checkbox to enable WAN ICMP response.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
III PPPoE
Screen snapshot – WAN Interface Setup – PPPoE
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Item Description
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PPPoE Click to select PPPoE support on WAN interface.
There are user name, password, connection type
and idle time settings need to be done. User Name If you select the PPPoE support on WAN interface,
fill in the user name and password to login the
PPPoE server. Password If you select the PPPoE support on WAN interface,
fill in the user name and password to login the
PPPoE server. Service Name Fill in the service name of Service Name. The
default value is empty. Connection Type Select the connection type from pull-down menu.
There are Continuous, Connect on Demand and
Manual three types to select.
Continuous connection type means to setup the
connection through PPPoE protocol whenever this
WLAN Broadband Router is powered on.
Connect on Demand connection type means to
setup the connection through PPPoE protocol
whenever you send the data packets out through the
WAN interface; there are a watchdog implemented
to close the PPPoE connection while there are no
data sent out longer than the idle time set.
Manual connection type means to setup the
connection through the PPPoE protocol by clicking
the Connect button manually, and clicking the
Disconnect button manually. Idle Time
If you select the PPPoE and Connect on Demand
connection type, fill in the idle time for
auto-disconnect function. Value can be between 1
and 1000 minutes. MTU Size Fill in the mtu size of MTU Size. The default value is
1400. Refer to 4.23 What is Maximum Transmission
Unit (MTU) Size? Attain DNS Automatically
Click to select getting DNS address for PPPoE
support. Please select Set DNS Manually if the
PPPoE support is selected.
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Set DNS Manually
Click to select getting DNS address for Static IP
support. DNS 1 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 1. DNS 2 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 2. DNS 3 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 3. Clone MAC Address Fill in the MAC address that is the MAC address to
be cloned. Refer to 4.24 What is Clone MAC
Address? Enable uPNP Click the checkbox to enable uPNP function.
Refer to 4.22 What is Universal Plug and Play
(uPNP)? Enable Web Server Access on WAN
Click the checkbox to enable web configuration from
WAN side. Enable WAN Echo Reply
Click the checkbox to enable WAN ICMP response.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
new configuration setting. Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover
the previous configuration setting.
IV PPTP
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Screen snapshot – WAN Interface Setup – PPTP
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Item Description
PPTP
A
llow user to make a tunnel with remote site directly to secure the data transmission among the connection. User can use embedded PPTP client supported by this router to make a VPN connection.
IP Address If you select the PPTP support on WAN interface, fill
in the IP address for it.
Subnet Mask If you select the PPTP support on WAN interface, fill
in the subnet mask for it.
Server IP Address Enter the IP address of the PPTP Server. User Name If you select the PPTP support on WAN interface, fill
in the user name and password to login the PPTP server.
Password f you select the PPTP support on WAN interface, fill
in the user name and password to login the PPTP server.
MTU Size Fill in the mtu size of MTU Size. The default value is
1400. Refer to 4.23 What is Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) Size?
Request MPPE Encryption
Click the checkbox to enable request MPPE encryption.
Attain DNS Automatically
Click to select getting DNS address for PPTP support. Please select Set DNS Manually if the PPTP support is selected.
Set DNS Manually
Click to select getting DNS address for PPTP support.
DNS 1 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 1. DNS 2 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 2. DNS 3 Fill in the IP address of Domain Name Server 3. Clone MAC Address Fill in the MAC address that is the MAC address to
be cloned. Refer to 4.24 What is Clone MAC Address?
Enable uPNP Click the checkbox to enable uPNP function.
Refer to 4.22 What is Universal Plug and Play (uPNP)?
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Enable Web Server Access on WAN
Click the checkbox to enable web configuration from WAN side.
Enable WAN Echo Reply
Click the checkbox to enable WAN ICMP response.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to complete the new configuration setting.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
3.3.12 Firewall - Port Filtering
Entries in this table are used to restrict certain types of data packets from your local network to Internet through the Gateway. Use of such filters can be helpful in securing or restricting your local network.
Screen snapshot – Firewall - Port Filtering
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Item Description
Enable Port Filtering Click to enable the port filtering security function. Port Range Protocol Comments
To restrict data transmission from the local network on certain ports, fill in the range of start-port and end-port, and the protocol, also put your comments on it. The Protocol can be TCP, UDP or Both. Comments let you know about whys to restrict data
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from the ports.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the ports to port filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Delete Selected Click to delete the selected port range that will be
removed from the port-filtering list.
Delete All Click to delete all the registered entries from the
port-filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
3.3.13 Firewall - IP Filtering
Entries in this table are used to restrict certain types of data packets from your local network to Internet through the Gateway. Use of such filters can be helpful in securing or restricting your local network.
Screen snapshot – Firewall - IP Filtering
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Item Description
Enable IP Filtering Click to enable the IP filtering security function. Local IP Address Protocol Comments
To restrict data transmission from local network on certain IP addresses, fill in the IP address and the protocol, also put your comments on it.
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The Protocol can be TCP, UDP or Both. Comments let you know about whys to restrict data
from the IP address.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the IP address to IP filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Delete Selected Click to delete the selected IP address that will be
removed from the IP-filtering list.
Delete All Click to delete all the registered entries from the
IP-filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
3.3.14 Firewall - MAC Filtering
Entries in this table are used to restrict certain types of data packets from your local network to Internet through the Gateway. Use of such filters can be helpful in securing or restricting your local network.
Screen snapshot – Firewall - MAC Filtering
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Item Description
Enable MAC Filtering Click to enable the MAC filtering security function. MAC Address To restrict data transmission from local network on
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Comments certain MAC addresses, fill in the MAC address and
your comments on it. Comments let you know about whys to restrict data from the MAC address.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the MAC address to MAC filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Delete Selected Click to delete the selected MAC address that will be
removed from the MAC-filtering list.
Delete All Click to delete all the registered entries from the
MAC-filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.15 Firewall - Port Forwarding
Entries in this table allow you to automatically redirect common network services to a specific machine behind the NAT firewall. These settings are only necessary if you wish to host some sort of server like a web server or mail server on the private local network behind your Gateway's NAT firewall.
Screen snapshot – Firewall - Port Forwarding
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Item Description
Enable Port Forwarding
Click to enable the Port Forwarding security function.
IP Address Protocol Port Range Comment
To forward data packets coming from WAN to a specific IP address that hosted in local network behind the NAT firewall, fill in the IP address, protocol, port range and your comments. The Protocol can be TCP, UDP or Both. The Port Range for data transmission. Comments let you know about whys to allow data packets forward to the IP address and port number.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the IP address and port number to Port forwarding list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Delete Selected Click to delete the selected IP address and port
number that will be removed from the port-forwarding list.
Delete All Click to delete all the registered entries from the
port-forwarding list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.16 Firewall – URL Filtering
URL Filtering is used to restrict users to access specific websites in internet.
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Screen snapshot – Firewall – URL Filtering
Item Description
Enable URL Filtering Click to enable the URL Filtering function. URL Address Add one URL address.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to save settings.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Delete Selected Click to delete the selected URL address that will be
removed from the URL Filtering list.
Delete All Click to delete all the registered entries from the
URL Filtering list.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.17 Firewall - DMZ
A Demilitarized Zone is used to provide Internet services without sacrificing unauthorized access to its local private network. Typically, the DMZ host contains devices accessible to Internet traffic, such as Web (HTTP) servers, FTP servers, SMTP (e-mail) servers and DNS servers.
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Screen snapshot – Firewall - DMZ
Item Description
Enable DMZ Click to enable the DMZ function. DMZ Host IP Address To support DMZ in your firewall design, fill in the IP
address of DMZ host that can be access from the WAN interface.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to register the IP address of DMZ host.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.18 VPN Setting
This page is used to show VPN connection table, configure IPSEC VPN, NAT Traversal, Generate RSA Key, Show RSA Public Key.
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Screen snapshot – VPN Setup
Item Description
Enable IPSEC VPN Click to enable IPSEC VPN function. Refer to 4.27
What is VPN? and 4.28 What is IPSEC?
Enable NAT Traversal
Click to enable NAT Traversal function.
Generate RSA Key Click to generate RSA key. Show RSA Public Key
Click to show RSA public key that we generate.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to enable IPSEC VPN, NAT Traversal settings.
Current VPN Connection Table
It shows current WAN interface information and VPN connection table.
Edit Click to enter the current VPN tunnel configuration
page.
Delete Click to delete the current VPN tunnel that radio
button stay.
Refresh Click to refresh the current VPN connection table.
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I VPN Setup - Edit Tunnel
Screen snapshot – VPN Setup-Edit-1
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Item Description
Enable Tunnel # Click to enable the IPSEC VPN current tunnel. Connection Name Assign the connection name tag. Auth Type
Click to select PSK or RSA.
Local Site
Local IP Address/Network Local Subnet Mask
Click to select Single Address or Subnet Address VPN connection. Fill in IP address or subnet address depends on which Local Site option you choose. Fill in the local subnet mask.
Remote Site
Remote Secure Gateway Remote IP Address/Network Remote Subnet Mask
Click to select Single Address, Subnet Address, Any Address or NA T-T Any Address VPN remote
connection. Fill in remote gateway IP address
Fill in IP address or subnet address depends on which Remote Site option you choose. Fill in remote subnet mask
Local/Peer ID
Local ID Type Local ID
Define IKE exchange information type Click to select IP, DNS or E-mail as local exchange type
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Remote ID Type
Remote ID
Fill in local ID except IP selected Click to select IP, DNS or E-mail as remote exchange type Fill in remote ID except IP selected
Screen snapshot – VPN Setup-Edit-2
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Item Description
Key Management
Click to select IKE or Manual mode.
Advanced
Click Advanced button to configure more IKE settings.
Connection Type
Click to select Initiator or Responder mode.
Connect
Click to connect manually. [Responder mode only]
Disconnect
Click to disconnect manually. [Responder mode only].
ESP
Click to configure 3DES, AES128 or NULL encryption. Click to configure MD5 or SHA1 authentication.
PreShared Key
Fill in the key value. [IKE mode only]
Remote RSA Key
Fill in the remote gateway RSA key. [IKE mode only]
Status
It shows connection status. [IKE mode only]
SPI
Fill in Security Parameter Index value. [Manual mode only]
Encryption Key
Fill in encryption key. [Manual mode only]
Authentication Key
Fill in authentication key. [Manual mode only]
Apply Change
Click the Apply Changes button to save current tunnel settings.
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Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Refresh
It shows the current connection status. [Manual mode only]
Back It returns back to VPN Setup page.
II Advanced IKE Setup
Screen snapshot – Advanced VPN Settings for IKE
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Item Description
Phase 1 Negotiation Mode Main mode. Encryption Algorithm
Click to select 3DES or AES128 encryption.
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Authentication Algorithm
Click to select MD5 or SHA1 authentication.
Key Group
Click to select DH1(modp768), DH2(modp1024) or DH5(modp1536) key group. Default value is DH2
Key Life Time Fill in the key life time value by seconds. Phase 2 Active Protocol ESP. Encryption Algorithm
Click to select 3DES, AES128 or NULL encryption.
Authentication Algorithm
Click to select MD5 or SHA1 authentication.
Key Life Time Fill in the key life time value by seconds. Encapsulation Tunnel mode. Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS)
Click to select ON or NONE.
Ok
Click the Ok button to save current tunnel settings.
Cancel
Click the Cancel button to close current window without any changes.
3.3.19 Management - Statistics
This page shows the packet counters for transmission and reception regarding to wireless, Ethernet LAN and Ethernet WAN networks.
Screen snapshot – Management - Statistics
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Item Description
Wireless LAN It shows the statistic count of sent packets on the
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Sent Packets
wireless LAN interface.
Wireless LAN Received Packets
It shows the statistic count of received packets on the wireless LAN interface.
Ethernet LAN Sent Packets
It shows the statistic count of sent packets on the Ethernet LAN interface.
Ethernet LAN Received Packets
It shows the statistic count of received packets on the Ethernet LAN interface.
Ethernet WAN Sent Packets
It shows the statistic count of sent packets on the Ethernet WAN interface.
Ethernet WAN Received Packets
It shows the statistic count of received packets on the Ethernet WAN interface.
Refresh Click the refresh the statistic counters on the screen.
3.3.20 Management - DDNS
This page is used to configure Dynamic DNS service to have DNS with dynamic IP address.
Screen snapshot – Management – DDNS
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Item Description
Enable DDNS
Click the checkbox to enable DDNS service. Refer to 4.25 What is DDNS?
Service Provider Click the drop down menu to pickup the right
provider.
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Domain Name To configure the Domain Name. User Name/Email Configure User Name, Email. Password/Key Configure Password, Key. Apply Change
Click the Apply Changes button to save the enable DDNS service.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
3.3.21 Management - Time Zone Setting
This page is used to configure NTP client to get current time.
Screen snapshot – Management – Time Zone Settings
Item Description
Current Time It shows the current time. Time Zone Select Click the time zone in your country. Enable NTP client update
Click the checkbox to enable NTP client update. Refer to 4.26 What is NTP Client?
NTP Server Click select default or input NTP server IP address. Apply Change
Click the Apply Changes button to save and enable NTP client service.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
Refresh Click the refresh the current time shown on the
screen.
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3.3.22 Management – Denial-of-Service
This page is used to enable and setup protection to prevent attack by hacker’s program. It provides more security for users.
Screen snapshot – Management – Denial-of-Service
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Item Description
Enable DoS Prevention
Click the checkbox to enable DoS prevention.
Whole System Flood / Per-Source IP Flood…
Enable and setup prevention in details.
Select ALL Click the checkbox to enable all prevention items. Clear ALL Click the checkbox to disable all prevention items. Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to save above
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settings.
3.3.23 Management - Log
This page is used to configure the remote log server and shown the current log.
Screen snapshot – Management – Log
Item Description
Enable Log
System all Wirelessy DoS
Click the checkbox to enable log. Show all log of wireless broadband router Only show wireless log Only show Denial-of-Service log
Enable Remote Log Log Server IP Address
Click the checkbox to enable remote log service. Input the remote log IP address
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to save above settings.
Refresh Click the refresh the log shown on the screen. Clear Clear log display screen
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3.3.24 Management - Upgrade Firmware
This page allows you upgrade the Access Point firmware to new version. Please note, do not power off the device during the upload because it may crash the system.
Screen snapshot – Management - Upgrade Firmware
Item Description
Select File
Click the Browse button to select the new version of web firmware image file.
Upload
Click the Upload button to update the selected web firmware image to the WLAN Broadband Router.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
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3.3.25 Management Save/ Reload Settings
This page allows you save current settings to a file or reload the settings from the file that was saved previously. Besides, you could reset the current configuration to factory default.
Screen snapshot – Management - Save/Reload Settings
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Item Description
Save Settings to File
Click the Save button to download the configuration parameters to your personal computer.
Load Settings from File
Click the Browse button to select the configuration files then click the Upload button to update the selected configuration to the WLAN Broadband Router.
Reset Settings to Default
Click the Reset button to reset the configuration parameter to factory defaults.
3.3.26 Management - Password Setup
This page is used to set the account to access the web server of Access Point. Empty user name and password will disable the protection.
+
Screen snapshot – Management - Password Setup
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Item Description
User Name Fill in the user name for web management login
control.
New Password Fill in the password for web management login
control.
Confirmed Password Because the password input is invisible, so please
fill in the password again for confirmation purpose.
Apply Changes
Clear the User Name and Password fields to empty, means to apply no web management login control. Click the Apply Changes button to complete the
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new configuration setting.
Reset
Click the Reset button to abort change and recover the previous configuration setting.
3.3.27 Logout
This page is used to logout web management page. This item will be activated next time you login after you define user account and password.
Screen snapshot – Logout
Screen snapshot – Logout - OK
Item Description
Apply Change
Click the Apply Change button, Then click OK button to logout.
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4 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
4.1 What and how to find my PC’s IP and MAC address?
IP address is the identifier for a computer or device on a TCP/IP network. Networks using the TCP/IP protocol route messages based on the IP address of the destination. The format of an IP address is a 32-bit numeric address written as four numbers separated by periods. Each number can be zero to 255. For example, 191.168.1.254 could be an IP address.
The MAC (Media Access Control) address is your computer's unique hardware number. (On an Ethernet LAN, it's the same as your Ethernet address.) When you're connected to the Internet from your computer (or host as the Internet protocol thinks of it), a correspondence table relates your IP address to your computer's physical (MAC) address on the LAN.
To find your PC’s IP and MAC address,
Open the Command program in the Microsoft Windows. Type in ipconfig /all then press the Enter button.
Your PC’s IP address is the one entitled IP Address and your PC’s MAC
address is the one entitled Physical Address.
4.2 What is Wireless LAN?
A wireless LAN (WLAN) is a network that allows access to Internet without the need for any wired connections to the user’s machine.
4.3 What are ISM bands?
ISM stands for Industrial, Scientific and Medical; radio frequency bands that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) authorized for wireless LANs. The ISM bands are located at 915 +/- 13 MHz, 2450 +/- 50 MHz and 5800 +/- 75 MHz.
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4.4 How does wireless networking work?
The 802.1 1 st andard define two modes: infrastructure mode and ad hoc mode. In infrastructure mode, the wireless network consists of at least one access point connected to the wired network infrastructure and a set of wireless end stations. This configuration is called a Basic Service Set (BSS). An Extended Service Set
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(ESS) is a set of two or more BSSs forming a single subnetwork. Since most corporate WLANs require access to the wired LAN for services (file servers, printers, Internet links) they will operate in infrastructure mode.
Example 1: wireless Infrastructure Mode
Ad hoc mode (also called peer-to-peer mode or an Independent Basic Service Set, or IBSS) is simply a set of 802.11 wireless stations that communicate directly with one another without using an access point or any connection to a wired network. This mode is useful for quickly and easily setting up a wireless network anywhere that a wireless infrastructure does not exist or is not required for services, such as a hotel room, convention center, or air port, or where access to the wired network is barred (such as for consultants at a client site).
Example 2: wireless Ad Hoc Mode
4.5 What is BSSID?
A six-byte address that distinguishes a particular a particular access point from others. Also know as just SSID. Serves as a network ID or name.
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4.6 What is ESSID?
The Extended Service Set ID (ESSID) is the name of the network you want to
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access. It is used to identify different wireless networks.
4.7 What are potential factors that may causes interference?
Factors of interference:
Obstacles: walls, ceilings, furniture… etc. Building Materials: metal door, aluminum studs. Electrical devices: microwaves, monitors and electrical motors.
Solutions to overcome the interferences:
Minimizing the number of walls and ceilings. Position the WLAN antenna for best reception. Keep WLAN devices away from other electrical devices, eg: microwaves,
monitors, electric motors, … etc.
Add additional WLAN Access Points if necessary.
4.8 What are the Open System and Shared Key authentications?
IEEE 802.11 supports two subtypes of network authentication services: open system and shared key. Under open system authentication, any wireless station can request authentication. The station that needs to authenticate with another wireless station sends an authentication management frame that contains the identity of the sending station. The receiving station then returns a frame that indicates whether it recognizes the sending station. Under shared key authentication, each wireless station is assumed to have received a secret shared key over a secure channel that is independent from the 802.11 wireless network communications channel.
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4.9 What is WEP?
An optional IEEE 802.1 1 function that of fers frame transmission privacy similar to a wired network. The Wired Equivalent Privacy generates secret shared encryption keys that both source and destination stations can use to alert frame bits to avoid disclosure to eavesdroppers.
WEP relies on a secret key that is shared between a mobile station (e.g. a laptop with a wireless Ethernet card) and an access point (i.e. a base station). The secret key is used to encrypt packets before they are transmitted, and an integrity check is used to ensure that packets are not modified in transit.
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4.10 What is Fragment Threshold?
The proposed protocol uses the frame fragmentation mechanism defined in IEEE 802.11 to achieve parallel transmissions. A large data frame is fragmented into several fragments each of size equal to fragment threshold. By tuning the fragment threshold value, we can get varying fragment sizes. The determination of an efficient fragment threshold is an important issue in this scheme. If the fragment threshold is small, the overlap part of the master and parallel transmissions is large. This means the spatial reuse ratio of parallel transmissions is high. In contrast, with a large fragment threshold, the overlap is small and the spatial reuse ratio is low. However high fragment threshold leads to low fragment overhead. Hence there is a trade-off between spatial re-use and fragment overhead.
Fragment threshold is the maximum packet size used for fragmentation. Packets larger than the size programmed in this field will be fragmented.
If you find that your corrupted packets or asymmetric packet reception (all send packets, for example). You may want to try lowering your fragmentation threshold. This will cause packets to be broken into smaller fragments. These small fragments, if corrupted, can be resent faster than a larger fragment. Fragmentation increases overhead, so you'll want to keep this value as close to the maximum value as possible.
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4.11 What is RTS (Request To Send) Threshold?
The RTS threshold is the packet size at which packet transmission is governed by the RTS/CTS transaction. The IEEE 802.11-1997 standard allows for short packets to be transmitted without RTS/CTS transactions. Each station can have a different RTS threshold. RTS/CTS is used when the data packet size exceeds the defined RTS threshold. With the CSMA/CA transmission mechanism, the transmitting station sends out an RTS packet to the receiving station, and waits for the receiving station to send back a CTS (Clear to Send) packet before sending the actual packet data.
This setting is useful for networks with many clients. With many clients, and a high network load, there will be many more collisions. By lowering the RTS threshold, there may be fewer collisions, and performance should improve. Basically, with a faster RTS threshold, the system can recover from problems
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faster. RTS packets consume valuable bandwidth, however, so setting this value too low will limit performance.
4.12 What is Beacon Interval?
In addition to data frames that carry information from higher layers, 802.11 includes management and control frames that support data transfer. The beacon frame, which is a type of management frame, provides the "heartbeat" of a wireless LAN, enabling stations to establish and maintain communications in an orderly fashion.
Beacon Interval represents the amount of time between beacon transmissions. Before a station enters power save mode, the station needs the beacon interval to know when to wake up to receive the beacon (and learn whether there are buffered frames at the access point).
4.13 What is Preamble Ty pe?
There are two preamble types defined in IEEE 802.11 specification. A long preamble basically gives the decoder more time to process the preamble. All
802.11 devices support a long preamble. The short preamble is designed to improve efficiency (for example, for VoIP systems). The difference between the two is in the Synchronization field. The long preamble is 128 bits, and the short is 56 bits.
4.14 What is SSID Broadcast?
Broadcast of SSID is done in access points by the beacon. This announces your access point (including various bits of information about it) to the wireless world around it. By disabling that feature, the SSID configured in the client must match the SSID of the access point.
Some wireless devices don't work properly if SSID isn't broadcast (for example the D-link DWL-120 USB 802.11b adapter). Generally if your client hardware supports operation with SSID disabled, it's not a bad idea to run that way to enhance network security . However it's no r eplacement for WEP, MAC filtering or other protections.
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4.15 What is Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)?
Wi-Fi’s original security mechanism, Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP), has been
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viewed as insufficient for securing confidential business communications. A longer-term solution, the IEEE 802.11i standard, is under development. However, since the IEEE 802.11i standard is not expected to be published until the end of 2003, several members of the WI-Fi Alliance teamed up with members of the IEEE 802.11i task group to develop a significant near-term enhancement to Wi-Fi security. Together, this team developed Wi-Fi Protected Access.
To upgrade a WLAN network to support WPA, Access Points will require a WPA software upgrade. Clients will require a software upgrade for the network interface card, and possibly a software update for the operating system. For enterprise networks, an authentication server, typically one that supports RADIUS and the selected EAP authentication protocol, will be added to the network.
4.16 What is WPA2?
It is the second generation of WPA. WPA2 is based on the final IEEE 802.11i amendment to the 802.11 standard.
4.17 What is 802.1x Authentication?
802.1x is a framework for authenticated MAC-level access control, defines Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) over LANs (WAPOL). The standard encapsulates and leverages much of EAP, which was defined for dial-up authentication with Point-to-Point Protocol in RFC 2284.
Beyond encapsulating EAP packets, the 802.1x standard also defines EAPOL messages that convey the shared key information critical for wireless security.
4.18 What is Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP)?
The Temporal Key Integrity Protocol, pronounced tee-kip, is part of the IEEE
802.11i encryption standard for wireless LANs. TKIP is the next generation of WEP, the Wired Equivalency Protocol, which is used to secure 802.11 wireless LANs. TKIP provides per-packet key mixing, a message integrity check and a re-keying mechanism, thus fixing the flaws of WEP.
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4.19 What is Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)?
Security issues are a major concern for wireless LANs, AES is the U.S. government’s next-generation cryptography algorithm, which will replace DES
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and 3DES.
4.20 What is Inter-Access Point Protocol (IAPP)?
The IEEE 802.11f Inter-Access Point Protocol (IAPP) supports Access Point Vendor interoperability, enabling roaming of 802.11 Stations within IP subnet.
IAPP defines messages and data to be exchanged between Access Points and between the IAPP and high layer management entities to support roaming. The IAPP protocol uses TCP for inter-Access Point communication and UDP for RADIUS request/response exchanges. It also uses Layer 2 frames to update the forwarding tables of Layer 2 devices.
4.21 What is Wireless Distribution System (WDS)?
The Wireless Distribution System feature allows WLAN AP to talk directly to other APs via wireless channel, like the wireless bridge or repeater service.
4.22 What is Universal Plug and Play (uPNP)?
UPnP is an open networking architecture that consists of services, devices, and control points. The ultimate goal is to allow data communication among all UPnP
devices regardless of media, operating system, programming language, and wired/wireless connection.
4.23 What is Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) Size?
Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) indicates the network stack of any packet is larger than this value will be fragmented before the transmission. During the PPP negotiation, the peer of the PPP connection will indicate its MRU and will be accepted. The actual MTU of the PPP connection will be set to the smaller one of MTU and the peer’s MRU. The default is value 1400.
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4.24 What is Clone MAC Address?
Clone MAC address is designed for your special application that request the clients to register to a server machine with one identified MAC address. Since that all the clients will communicate outside world through the WLAN Broadband Router, so have the cloned MAC address set on the WLAN Broadband Router will solve the issue.
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4.25 What is DDNS?
DDNS is the abbreviation of Dynamic Domain Name Server. It is designed for user own the DNS server with dynamic WAN IP address.
4.26 What is NTP Client?
NTP client is designed for fetching the current timestamp from internet via Network Time protocol. User can specify time zone, NTP server IP address.
4.27 What is VPN?
VPN is the abbreviation of Virtual Private Network. It is designed for creating point-to point private link via shared or public network.
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4.28 What is IPSEC?
IPSEC is the abbreviation of IP Security. It is used to transferring data securely under VPN.
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5 Configuration Examples
5.1 Example One – PPPoE on the WAN
Sales division of Company ABC likes to establish a WLAN network to support mobile communication on sales’ Notebook PCs. MIS engineer collects information and plans the WLAN Broadband Router implementation by the following configuration.
WAN configuration:
PPPoE User Name H890123456
Password PW192867543210
LAN configuration
IP Address 192.168.1.254 Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0 Default Gateway 0.0.0.0 DHCP Client Range
192.168.1.100 – 192.168.1.200
WLAN configuration
SSID MyWLAN Channel Number 11
Internet
xDSL/ CM
Power adapter
Ethernet
Cable
Ethernet cable
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
DHCP client
Bridge mode
PPPoE connection parameters:
User Name: H890123456 Passwrod: pw192867543210
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP range: 192.168.1.100 to 192.168.1.200
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Figure 3 – Configuration Example One – PPPoE on the WAN
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Configure the WAN interface:
Open WAN Interface Setup page, select PPPoE then enter the User N “H8901234 Password “PW192867543210”, the password is encrypted to
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ame
56” and
isplay on the screen.
Press button to confirm the configuration setting.
onfigure the LAN interface:
”, Default
ateway “0.0.0.0”,
” to ”.
Press button to confirm the configuration setting.
d
C
Open LAN Interface Setup page, enter the IP Address “192.168.1.254”, Subnet Mask “255.255.255.0 G enable DHCP Server, DHCP client range “192.168.1.100
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Configure the WLAN interface:
Open WLAN Interface Setup page, enter the SSID “MyWLAN”, Channel Number “11”.
Press button to confirm the configuration setting.
5.2 Example Two – Fixed IP on the WAN
Company ABC likes to establish a WLAN network to support mobile communication on all employees’ Notebook PCs. MIS engineer collects information and plans the WLAN Broadband Router implementation by the following configuration.
WAN configuration:
Fixed IP
IP Address
192.168.2.254
Subnet Mask
255.255.255.0
Default Gateway
192.168.2.10
DNS Address
168.95.1.1
LAN configuration
IP Address 192.168.1.254 Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0 Default Gateway 192.168.2.254 DHCP Client Range
192.168.1.100 – 192.168.1.200
WLAN configuration
SSID
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MyWLAN
Channel Number 11
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Internet
xDSL/ CM
Power adapter
Ethernet
Cable
Ethernet cable
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP client
DHCP c lient
Router mode
SSID: MyWLAN Channel: 11 DHCP range: 192.168.1.100 to 192.168.1.200 WAN IP: 192.168.2.254/ 255.255.255.0
192.168.2.10/ 255.255.255.0
Figure 4 – Configuration Example Two – Fixed IP on the WAN
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Configure the WAN interface:
Open WAN Interface Setup page, select Fixed IP then enter IP Address “192.168.2.254”, subnet mask “255.255.255.0”, Default gateway “192.168.2.10”.
Press button to confirm the configuration setting.
Configure the LAN interface: Open LAN Interface Setup page, enter the IP Address “192.168.1.254”, Subnet Mask “255.255.255.0”, enable DHCP Server, DHCP client range “192.168.1.100” to “192.168.1.200”.
Press button to confirm the configuration setting.
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Configure the WLAN interface:
Open WLAN Interface Setup page, enter the SSID “MyWLAN”, Channel Number “11”.
Press button to confirm the configuration setting.
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