NetGear M4250-10G2F-PoE+, M4250-10G2XF-PoE+, M4250-26G4F-PoE+, M4250-26G4XF-PoE+, M4250-40G8F-PoE+ Users Guide

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Main User Manual
AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series
Firmware version 13.0.0 and later versions
NETGEAR, Inc.
350 E. Plumeria DriveFebruary 2023 San Jose, CA 95134, USA202-12091-05
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AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series Main User Manual
Support and Community
You can also check out our NETGEAR Community for helpful advice at community.netgear.com.
Regulatory and Legal
Si ce produit est vendu au Canada, vous pouvez accéder à ce document en français canadien à https://www.netgear.com/support/download/.
(If this product is sold in Canada, you can access this document in Canadian French at https://www.netgear.com/support/download/.)
For regulatory compliance information including the EU Declaration of Conformity, visit https://www.netgear.com/about/regulatory/.
See the regulatory compliance document before connecting the power supply.
For NETGEAR’s Privacy Policy, visit https://www.netgear.com/about/privacy-policy.
By using this device, you are agreeing to NETGEAR’s Terms and Conditions at https://www.netgear.com/about/terms-and-conditions. If you do not agree, return the device to your place of purchase within your return period.
Do not use this device outdoors. The PoE source is intended for intra building connection only.
Applicable to 6 GHz devices only: Only use the device indoors. The operation of 6 GHz devices is prohibited on oil platforms, cars, trains, boats, and aircraft, except that operation of this device is permitted in large aircraft while flying above 10,000 feet. Operation of transmitters in the 5.925-7.125 GHz band is prohibited for control of or communications with unmanned aircraft systems.
Trademarks
© NETGEAR, Inc., NETGEAR, and the NETGEAR Logo are trademarks of NETGEAR, Inc. Any non-NETGEAR trademarks are used for reference purposes only.
Revision History
CommentsPublish DatePublication Part
Number
February 2023202-12091-05
We corrected the device class 6 value in Table 38 in section PoE concepts on page 136.
We changed Supported switches on page 23.May 2022202-12091-04
2
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(Continued)
Number
AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series Main User Manual
CommentsPublish DatePublication Part
November 2021202-12091-03
We changed the following sections: Log in to the main UI with a web browser on page 24 Log in to the main UI using the switch default IP address on page 25 Configure the IPv4 service port on page 48 Add an SNMPv3 user account on page 158 Configure user password requirements on page 497 Configure the HTTPS access settings on page 526 Manage certificates for HTTPS access on page 528 Generate an SSL certificate on page 529 Delete an SSL certificate on page 531 Transfer an existing HTTPS certificate from a server to the switch on page 531
We added the following sections: Display the status of the SSL certificates on page 528 Activate a certificate on page 530
We made other minor changes. We published the manual in a new format.
This second publication is a major revision.March 2021202-12091-02
We added the following: Information about the 24-port PoE+ and PoE++ models and the 40-port PoE+ and PoE++ models (see Supported switches on page 23). Information about the Auto-Trunk feature (see Auto-Trunk overview on page 194 and Enable or disable Auto-Trunks on page 195). Information about the Auto-LAG feature (see Auto-LAG overview on page 302, Enable or disable Auto-LAGs on page 303, and Configure the hash mode for Auto-LAGs on page 304).
We revised a very large part of the manual and added multiple new sections to provide more complete and correct information.
We replaced the old appendix with defaults setting with a new one that also includes hardware specifications (see Software Default Settings and Hardware Specifications on page 784).
We made multiple corrections throughout the entire manual.
First publication.October 2020202-12091-01
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Contents

Chapter 1 Get Started with the Main UI
Supported switches............................................................................23
Available publications and online help...........................................23
Register your product........................................................................23
Main local browser UI overview........................................................24
Log in to the main UI with a web browser.......................................24
Log in to the main UI using the switch default IP address........25
Log in to the main UI with a known IP address..........................26
Main UI buttons and user-defined fields.....................................26
Interface naming conventions......................................................27
Save your settings to the running configuration........................28
Main UI online help........................................................................28
Use the Device View in the Main UI..................................................29
Set up SNMP access...........................................................................31
Chapter 2 Configure Switch System Information
Switch system information.................................................................35
View and configure switch system information..........................35
View the fan status.........................................................................38
View the temperature sensor information..................................39
View the device status and firmware version.............................40
View the system CPU status..........................................................41
Configure the CPU thresholds.....................................................42
View or clear switch statistics........................................................43
View USB device information.......................................................45
Loopback interface.............................................................................46
IPv4 management interfaces and VLANs........................................47
Configure the IPv4 service port....................................................48
Configure an IPv4 management VLAN.......................................49
Configure an IPv4 management interface..................................52
IPv6 management interfaces and VLANs........................................53
Configure an IPv6 service porttime.............................................54
Manage IPv6 addresses for the IPv6 service port......................55
Configure an IPv6 management VLAN.......................................56
Manage IPv6 addresses for the IPv6 management VLAN........59
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Manage the IPv6 default route addresses for the IPv6
management VLAN.......................................................................60
Configure an IPv6 management interface..................................61
Manage IPv6 addresses for the IPv6 management interface....63
Manage the IPv6 default route addresses for the IPv6
management interface..................................................................64
Time and SNTP settings.....................................................................65
Configure the time setting manually...........................................65
Configure the time settings with SNTP and configure the global
SNTP settings..................................................................................66
View the SNTP global status.........................................................69
Configure SNTP servers................................................................71
Add an SNTP server..................................................................72
Change the settings for an existing SNTP server..................74
Remove an SNTP server...........................................................74
Configure daylight saving time settings.....................................75
View the daylight saving time status............................................77
Precision Time Protocol.....................................................................79
Manage the global PTP settings..................................................79
Manage the PTP interface settings..............................................80
Domain Name System.......................................................................81
Configure the global DNS settings and add a DNS server......81
Remove a DNS server....................................................................83
Configure and view host name-to-IP address information.......84
Add a static entry to the dynamic host mapping table........84
Remove an entry from the dynamic host mapping table.....85
Change the host name or IP address in an entry of the dynamic
host mapping table, view all entries, or clear all entries......85
Switch database management template.........................................86
Green Ethernet settings.....................................................................88
Configure the global green Ethernet settings...........................88
Configure green Ethernet interface settings..............................89
Configure and display detailed green Ethernet settings for an
interface..........................................................................................90
Display green Ethernet information for the link partner of an
interface..........................................................................................93
Display the green Ethernet statistics summary..........................94
Configure and display the green Ethernet EEE LPI history for an
interface..........................................................................................96
Bonjour settings..................................................................................97
Enable or disable Bonjour............................................................98
Display Bonjour information.........................................................98
IPv4 DHCP server................................................................................99
Configure a DHCP server..............................................................99
Manage DHCP pools...................................................................101
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Create a DHCP pool...............................................................101
Change a DHCP pool.............................................................104
Remove a DHCP pool.............................................................105
Configure DHCP pool options...................................................105
Display DHCP server statistics....................................................106
Display the DHCP bindings........................................................108
Delete one or all dynamic DHCP bindings...............................109
View bindings with DHCP conflicts...........................................109
Delete one or all DHCP bindings with conflicts.......................111
DHCP relay and relay statistics.......................................................112
DHCP Layer 2 relay..........................................................................113
Configure the global DHCP L2 relay settings..........................114
Configure a DHCP L2 relay interface........................................114
Display DHCP L2 relay interface statistics.................................116
UDP relay...........................................................................................117
Configure the global UDP relay settings and add a UDP switch
configuration................................................................................117
Change a UDP switch configuration.........................................119
Remove a UDP switch configuration.........................................119
Add a UDP interface configuration...........................................120
Change a UDP interface configuration.....................................121
Remove a UDP switch configuration.........................................122
DHCPv6 server..................................................................................123
Enable the DHCPv6 server.........................................................123
Manage DHCPv6 pools...............................................................124
Create a DHCPv6 pool...........................................................124
Change a DHCPv6 pool.........................................................124
Delete a DHCPv6 pool...........................................................125
Manage DHCPv6 prefix delegation for pools..........................126
Create a DHCPv6 prefix delegation configuration for a
pool...........................................................................................126
Change a DHCPv6 prefix delegation configuration for a
pool...........................................................................................127
Delete a DHCPv6 prefix delegation configuration for a
pool...........................................................................................128
Configure the DHCPv6 settings for an interface......................129
Display the DHCPv6 bindings....................................................130
Display DHCPv6 server statistics................................................131
Delete DHCPv6 statistics for one or all interfaces...................134
DHCPv6 relay interface....................................................................135
Power over Ethernet........................................................................136
PoE concepts................................................................................136
Configure the global PoE settings.............................................138
Configure the PoE ports settings...............................................139
Power-cycle one or more PoE ports..........................................143
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Timer schedules...............................................................................144
Create a timer schedule..............................................................144
Specify the settings for an absolute timer schedule...............145
Specify the settings for a recurring timer schedule.................146
Change the settings for a recurring timer schedule entry......148
Delete a timer schedule entry....................................................149
Delete a timer schedule..............................................................150
Simple Network Management Protocol........................................151
Manage SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 communities..........................151
Add an SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 community..........................151
Change an existing SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 community.....152
Delete an SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 community......................153
Manage the SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 trap settings.....................153
Add an SNMPv1 or SNMPv2 trap configuration for a host.153
Change an SNMPv1 or SNMPv2 trap configuration for a
host...........................................................................................155
Delete an SNMPv1 or SNMPv2 trap configuration for a
host...........................................................................................155
Configure SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 trap flags.............................156
Display the supported MIBs.......................................................158
Manage SNMPv3 users...............................................................158
Add an SNMPv3 user account...............................................158
Change an SNMPv3 user account.........................................159
Delete an SNMPv3 user account...........................................160
Link Layer Discovery Protocol.........................................................161
Configure the global LLDP settings..........................................161
Configure LLDP interface settings.............................................162
Display or clear LLDP statistics...................................................163
Display LLDP local device information......................................165
Display LLDP remote device information.................................166
Display the LLDP remote device inventory..............................168
Link Layer Discovery Protocol for Media Endpoint Devices.......169
Configure the global LLDP-MED settings.................................169
Configure LLDP-MED interface settings...................................170
Display LLDP-MED local device information............................172
Display the LLDP-MED remote device information.................174
Display the LLDP-MED remote device inventory.....................178
Link dependency..............................................................................179
Configure a link dependency group.........................................179
Configure or display upstream and downstream interfaces for a
link dependency group..............................................................180
Clear all interfaces in a link dependency group......................182
Industry Standard Discovery Protocol...........................................183
Configure the global ISDP settings...........................................183
Configure ISDP settings for an interface...................................185
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Display or clear ISDP neighbor information.............................186
Display or clear ISDP statistics....................................................187
Chapter 3 Configure Switching Information
VLANs................................................................................................190
Manage the VLAN configuration on the switch.......................190
Add a VLAN.............................................................................190
Change a VLAN.......................................................................191
Delete one or more VLANs....................................................192
Reset the entire VLAN configuration to default setting.....193
Change the internal VLAN allocation settings.....................193
Auto-Trunk overview...................................................................194
Enable or disable Auto-Trunks...................................................195
Configure the switch port mode settings for interfaces.........196
Configure membership interfaces for a VLAN.........................199
View the VLAN status on the switch..........................................201
Change the port VLAN ID settings............................................202
Configure a MAC-based VLAN..................................................205
Add a MAC-based VLAN configuration...............................205
Delete a MAC-based VLAN configuration...........................206
Configure a protocol-based VLAN group................................206
Add a protocol-based VLAN group......................................207
Change a protocol-based VLAN group...............................208
Delete a protocol-based VLAN group.................................209
Configure membership interfaces for a protocol-based VLAN
group.............................................................................................209
Configure an IP subnet-based VLAN........................................211
Add an IP subnet-based VLAN..............................................211
Delete an IP subnet-based VLAN..........................................212
Configure a double VLAN..........................................................212
Configure a voice VLAN..............................................................214
Configure Generic Attribute Registration Protocol.................215
Configure GARP switch settings............................................216
Configure GARP settings for one or more interfaces.........217
Auto-VoIP..........................................................................................218
Configure Auto-VoIP protocol-based settings.........................219
Configure the Auto-VoIP OUI-based properties.....................220
Configure the OUI-based interface settings............................221
Manage the OUI table.................................................................222
Add an OUI prefix...................................................................223
Delete one or more OUI prefixes..........................................223
Display the Auto-VoIP status......................................................224
Spanning Tree Protocol...................................................................225
Configure the STP settings and display the STP status...........226
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Configure the CST settings and display the CST status..........229
Configure the CST interface settings........................................231
Display the CST interface status.................................................234
Manage MST instances...............................................................236
Add an MST instance and display the MST status..............236
Change an MST instance........................................................238
Delete an MST instance..........................................................238
Configure and display the interface settings for an MST
instance.........................................................................................239
Display the STP interface statistics.............................................242
Configure the PVST/RPVST VLAN settings...............................243
Change a PVST/RPVST VLAN configuration.............................245
Remove a PVST/RPVST VLAN configuration............................246
Configure the PVST and RPVST interface settings..................246
Display the PVST and RPVST statistics......................................248
Multicast forwarding database.......................................................249
Display the entries in the multicast forwarding database......249
Remove the IGMP snooping entries from the multicast forwarding
database.......................................................................................250
Remove all known multicast MAC entries from the multicast
forwarding database...................................................................251
Display the multicast forwarding database statistics..............252
Internet Group Management Protocol snooping........................253
Configure IGMP snooping automatically with IGMP Plus
mode.............................................................................................254
Configure IGMP snooping manually.........................................255
Configure the IGMP snooping settings for interfaces.............257
Configure IGMP snooping for VLANs automatically with IGMP
Plus mode.....................................................................................259
Configure IGMP snooping for VLANs manually......................260
Configure an IGMP multicast router interface.........................262
Configure an IGMP multicast router VLAN...............................263
IGMP snooping querier overview..............................................264
Configure the IGMP snooping querier global settings..........264
Configure an IGMP snooping querier for a VLAN...................265
Remove the IGMP snooping querier settings for a VLAN......267
Display the status of the IGMP snooping querier....................268
Multicast Listener Discovery snooping..........................................269
Configure MLD snooping automatically with MLD Plus mode.269
Configure MLD snooping manually..........................................271
Configure the MLD snooping settings for interfaces..............272
Configure MLD snooping for VLANs automatically with MLD Plus
mode.............................................................................................274
Configure MLD snooping for VLANs manually........................275
Remove the MLD snooping querier settings for a VLAN........277
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Configure an MLD multicast router interface...........................278
Configure an MLD multicast router VLAN................................279
Configure the MLD snooping querier global settings............280
Configure an MLD snooping querier for a VLAN....................281
Remove the MLD snooping querier settings for a VLAN........283
Multicast VLAN registration............................................................283
Configure the global MVR settings...........................................284
Configure an MVR group............................................................285
Remove an MVR group...............................................................286
Configure an MVR interface.......................................................287
Configure the interface members of an MVR group...............288
Display the MVR statistics...........................................................289
MAC address table...........................................................................290
View, search, or clear the MAC address table.........................290
Set the dynamic address aging interval....................................292
Add a static MAC address to the MAC address table............293
Remove a static MAC address from the MAC address table..293
Port settings......................................................................................294
Configure and display the port settings...................................294
Add port, LAG, and VLAN descriptions....................................297
Display transceiver module information...................................299
Configure the port link flap settings..........................................300
Link aggregation groups.................................................................301
Auto-LAG overview......................................................................302
Enable or disable Auto-LAGs.....................................................303
Configure the hash mode for Auto-LAGs.................................304
Configure the LAG settings........................................................305
Configure a single LAG and its membership...........................307
802.1AS timing and synchronization.............................................309
Configure and view the global 802.1AS settings....................309
Configure the 802.1AS interface settings.................................311
View the 802.1AS statistics.........................................................313
Multiple Registration Protocol and 802.1Qav settings................315
Configure the global MRP settings............................................316
Configure 802.1Qav mapping...................................................318
Configure the MRP interface settings.......................................319
View or clear MMRP statistics.....................................................321
View or clear MVRP statistics......................................................322
View or clear MSRP statistics......................................................324
View the MSRP reservation settings..........................................326
Configure and view the Qav settings for interfaces................328
View MSRP streams information................................................330
Loop protection................................................................................332
About loop protection................................................................332
Configure the global loop protection settings........................334
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Configure the loop protection settings for interfaces and display
the loop protection state............................................................335
Chapter 4 Manage Routing
Routing concepts.............................................................................338
Routing table, routes and route preferences................................338
Configure a route and display learned routes.........................338
Delete a route...............................................................................340
Specify route preferences...........................................................341
IPv4 routing.......................................................................................342
Manage the global IPv4 routing settings..................................342
Display the IPv4 statistics............................................................344
Configure IPv4 routing interfaces..............................................347
Delete the routing IP address from an IPv4 routing interface.350 Configure a secondary IP address for an IPv4 routing
interface........................................................................................351
Delete the secondary IP address from an IPv4 routing
interface........................................................................................352
IPv6 routing.......................................................................................353
Manage the global IPv6 routing settings..................................353
Display the IPv6 route table........................................................354
Configure IPv6 routing interfaces..............................................355
Configure prefix settings for an IPv6 routing interface...........358
Delete a prefix setting from an IPv6 routing interface............360
Display the IPv6 and ICMPv6 statistics for an IPv6 routing
interface........................................................................................361
Display the IPv6 neighbor table or clear IPv6 neighbor entries.366
Configure IPv6 static routes.......................................................368
Delete an IPv6 static route..........................................................370
Configure the IPv6 route preference for the switch................370
Configure IPv6 tunnels................................................................371
Delete an IPv6 tunnel..................................................................373
Routing VLANs..................................................................................373
Create a routing VLAN with the VLAN static routing wizard...374
Configure routing for an existing VLAN....................................375
Remove the routing function from a VLAN..............................376
Address Resolution Protocol..........................................................377
Display the ARP entries in the ARP cache.................................378
Add or change a static entry in the ARP table.........................379
Delete a static ARP entry.............................................................380
Configure the ARP table settings or remove entries from the
table...............................................................................................381
Routing Information Protocol.........................................................383
Enable or disable RIP on the switch..........................................384
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Configure the global RIP settings for the switch......................384
Configure RIP interface settings................................................386
Configure the RIP route redistribution settings and display the
route redistribution summary....................................................388
Router discovery and router advertisements................................390
Chapter 5 Configure Multicast Routing
IPv4 multicast routing and the IPv4 multicast route table...........394
Display the IPv4 multicast route table.......................................394
Add static multicast entries to the IPv4 Mroute table.............395
Delete a static multicast entry from the IPv4 Mroute table.....396
Configure global multicast settings for the switch..................397
Configure a multicast interface..................................................398
IGMP for IPv4 multicast routing......................................................399
Configure the global IGMP settings for the switch.................399
Configure an IGMP routing interface........................................400
Display the statistics for the IGMP routing interfaces..............402
Display the IGMP groups and search the IGMP group
database.......................................................................................403
Display the IGMP membership information and search the IGMP
membership database................................................................405
Configure an IGMP proxy interface...........................................407
Display the statistics for the IGMP proxy interface..................408
Display the IGMP proxy membership and search the IGMP proxy
membership database................................................................410
PIM for IPv4 multicast routing.........................................................411
Configure the global PIM IPv4 settings on the switch............412
Add IPv4 PIM-SSM groups..........................................................412
Delete an IPv4 PIM-SSM group..................................................413
Configure an IPv4 PIM interface................................................414
Display IPv4 PIM neighbors and search the PIM neighbor
database.......................................................................................416
Add an IPv4 PIM candidate rendezvous point configuration.417 Delete an IPv4 PIM candidate rendezvous point configuration.418 Configure an interface as an IPv4 PIM bootstrap router
candidate......................................................................................419
Delete an IPv4 PIM bootstrap router candidate configuration.420
Configure a static IPv4 PIM rendezvous point for a group.....421
Delete a static IPv4 PIM rendezvous point configuration.......422
Static multicast routes for IPv4 addresses.....................................422
Configure static multicast routes for IPv4 addresses..............422
Delete a static multicast route for an IPv4 address..................423
Multicast admin boundaries for IPv4 addresses..........................424
Configure an interface as a multicast admin boundary..........424
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Delete a multicast admin boundary configuration for an
interface........................................................................................425
IPv6 multicast routing and the IPv6 multicast route table...........426
Display the IPv6 multicast route table.......................................426
PIM for IPv6 multicast routing.........................................................428
Configure the global PIM IPv6 settings on the switch............428
Add IPv6 PIM-SSM groups..........................................................429
Delete an IPv6 PIM-SSM group..................................................430
Configure an IPv6 PIM interface................................................430
Display IPv6 PIM neighbors and search the PIM neighbor
database.......................................................................................432
Add an IPv6 PIM candidate rendezvous point configuration.433 Delete an IPv6 PIM candidate rendezvous point configuration.434 Configure an interface as an IPv6 PIM bootstrap router
candidate......................................................................................435
Delete an IPv6 PIM bootstrap router candidate configuration.436
Configure a static IPv6 PIM rendezvous point for a group.....437
Delete a static IPv6 PIM rendezvous point configuration.......438
MLD for IPv6 multicast routing.......................................................439
Configure the global MLP settings for the switch....................439
Configure an MLD routing interface.........................................440
Display the statistics for the MLD routing interfaces...............442
Display the MLD groups and search the MLD group database.443
Display or clear MLD traffic statistics.........................................445
Configure an MLD proxy interface............................................446
Display the statistics for the MLD proxy interface....................447
Display the MLD proxy membership and search the MLD proxy
membership database................................................................449
Static multicast routes for IPv6 addresses.....................................450
Configure static multicast routes for IPv6 addresses..............451
Delete a static multicast route for an IPv6 address..................452
Chapter 6 Configure Quality of Service
Quality of Service concepts.............................................................454
Class of Service.................................................................................454
CoS configuration concepts.......................................................454
Configure the CoS trust mode settings globally or for a specific
interface........................................................................................455
Map 802.1p priorities to queues...............................................456
Map DSCP values to queues......................................................458
Configure the CoS interface settings for an interface.............458
Configure CoS queue settings for an interface.......................460
Configure the CoS WRED precedence settings for dropping
packets..........................................................................................462
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Differentiated Services.....................................................................464
Defining DiffServ..........................................................................464
DiffServ wizard overview.............................................................465
Use the DiffServ wizard to create a traffic class and policy for one
or more interfaces........................................................................466
Configure the DiffServ mode and display the entries in the
DiffServ private MIB tables.........................................................467
Configure a DiffServ class...........................................................468
Add and configure a DiffServ class.......................................469
Rename an existing DiffServ class.........................................473
Change the criteria for an existing DiffServ class................473
Delete a DiffServ class............................................................474
Configure an IPv6 DiffServ class................................................475
Add and configure an IPv6 DiffServ class............................475
Rename an existing IPv6 DiffServ class................................478
Change the criteria for an existing IPv6 DiffServ class.......478
Delete an IPv6 DiffServ class..................................................479
Configure a DiffServ policy.........................................................480
<<TBD>>Create and configure a DiffServ policy...............480
Rename an existing DiffServ policy.......................................486
Change the policy attributes for an existing DiffServ policy.487 Change or remove a class from an existing DiffServ policy.488
Delete a DiffServ policy..........................................................488
Configure the DiffServ service interface...................................489
Attach DiffServ policies to an interface................................489
Change one or both DiffServ policies for an interface.......490
Remove one or both DiffServ policies from an interface....491
Display DiffServ service statistics...............................................492
Chapter 7 Manage Switch Security
User accounts and passwords........................................................495
Add or change a user account...................................................495
Delete a user account.................................................................496
Configure user password requirements...................................497
Change the privileged EXEC CLI password.............................498
Change the console, Telnet, or SSH password........................499
RADIUS servers.................................................................................500
Configure the global RADIUS server settings..........................500
Configure a RADIUS authentication server on the switch......503
Add a RADIUS authentication server to the switch.............503
Modify the settings for a RADIUS authentication server on the
switch........................................................................................505
Remove a RADIUS authentication server from the switch..506
Configure a RADIUS accounting server....................................507
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Add a RADIUS accounting server to the switch..................507
Modify the settings for a RADIUS accounting server on the
switch........................................................................................509
Remove a RADIUS accounting server from the switch.......510
TACACS+ servers.............................................................................510
Configure the global TACACS+ settings..................................511
Add a TACACS+ server to the switch.......................................512
Modify the settings for a TACACS+ server on the switch.......513
Remove a TACACS+ server from the switch............................514
Authentication lists...........................................................................514
Configure a login authentication list.........................................514
Delete a login authentication list...............................................516
Configure an enable authentication list....................................517
Delete an enable authentication list..........................................519
Configure the Dot1x authentication list....................................520
Configure the HTTP authentication list.....................................521
Configure the HTTPS authentication List..................................522
Current login sessions.....................................................................523
HHTP and HTTPS management access.........................................524
Configure HTTP access settings................................................524
Configure the HTTPS access settings........................................526
Browser security message with HTTPS access.........................527
Manage certificates for HTTPS access.......................................528
Display the status of the SSL certificates..............................528
Generate an SSL certificate....................................................529
Activate a certificate................................................................530
Delete an SSL certificate.........................................................531
Transfer an existing HTTPS certificate from a server to the
switch........................................................................................531
SSH management access................................................................533
Configure the global SSH access settings................................534
Manage RSA and DSA keys for SSH access..............................535
Generate an RSA or DSA key.................................................535
Delete an RSA or DSA key.....................................................536
Transfer existing SSH keys from a TFTP server to the switch.537
Telnet management access............................................................539
Select Telnet authentication lists...............................................539
Configure inbound Telnet settings...........................................540
Configure outbound Telnet settings.........................................541
Console port management access................................................542
Denial of service...............................................................................544
Management access profiles and rules.........................................546
Add an access profile..................................................................546
Add a rule to the access profile.................................................547
Activate the access profile..........................................................548
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Display the access profile summary and the number of filtered
packets..........................................................................................549
Deactivate an access profile.......................................................550
Remove an access profile...........................................................551
Port authentication...........................................................................552
Configure the global 802.1X settings.......................................552
Manage port authentication on individual ports.....................554
Configure 802.1X settings for a port....................................554
Initialize 802.1X on a port......................................................558
Display the port summary...........................................................559
Display the client summary.........................................................561
MAC filters for traffic control...........................................................563
Create a MAC filter......................................................................563
Delete a MAC filter......................................................................565
Display the MAC filter summary................................................566
Port security.......................................................................................567
Configure the global port security mode.................................567
Configure a port security interface............................................568
Display learned MAC addresses and convert them to static
addresses......................................................................................569
Add a static MAC address to the MAC address table for port
security..........................................................................................571
Remove a static MAC address from the MAC address table for
port security..................................................................................571
Private port groups..........................................................................572
Add a private port group............................................................572
Remove a private port group.....................................................573
Configure the membership of a private port group...............574
Protect ports......................................................................................575
Private VLANs....................................................................................576
Overview of the tasks for private VLAN configuration............577
Assign a private VLAN type to a VLAN......................................578
Configure a private VLAN association with a primary and
secondary VLAN..........................................................................579
Remove an existing private VLAN association.........................581
Configure the private VLAN port mode...................................581
Private VLAN host interface: Assign the interface to primary and
secondary VLANs.........................................................................583
Private VLAN host interface: Remove the interface from primary
and secondary VLANs.................................................................585
Private VLAN promiscuous interface: Assign the interface to
primary and secondary VLANs...................................................586
Private VLAN promiscuous interface: Remove the interface from
primary and secondary VLANs...................................................587
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Private VLAN promiscuous trunk interface: Add primary and
secondary VLANs to the trunk....................................................589
Private VLAN promiscuous trunk interface: Remove primary and
secondary VLANs from the trunk...............................................590
Private VLAN isolated trunk interface: Add primary and secondary
VLANs to the trunk.......................................................................591
Private VLAN isolated trunk interface: Remove primary and
secondary VLANs from the trunk...............................................592
Configure native and allowed VLANs on a private VLAN trunk
interface........................................................................................593
Storm control....................................................................................595
Configure global storm control settings...................................595
Configure storm control settings for one or more ports........597
DHCP snooping................................................................................599
Enable DHCP snooping for the switch......................................600
Enable DHCP snooping for a VLAN..........................................600
Configure DHCP snooping interface settings..........................601
Add a static DHCP binding and display dynamic DHCP
bindings........................................................................................603
Remove a static DHCP binding..................................................604
Configure DHCP snooping persistent settings........................605
Display or clear DHCP snooping statistics................................606
DHCPv6 snooping............................................................................607
Enable DHCPv6 snooping for the switch..................................607
Enable DHCPv6 snooping for a VLAN......................................608
Configure DHCPv6 snooping interface settings......................609
Add a static DHCPv6 binding and display dynamic DHCPv6
bindings........................................................................................611
Remove a static DHCPv6 binding..............................................612
Configure DHCPv6 snooping persistent settings....................613
Display or clear DHCPv6 snooping statistics...........................614
IP source guard interfaces...............................................................615
Configure IP source guard on an interface..............................615
Add a static IP source guard binding and display dynamic IP
source guard bindings................................................................617
Remove a static IP source guard binding.................................618
IPv6 source guard interfaces...........................................................619
Configure IPv6 source guard on an interface..........................619
Add a static IPv6 source guard binding and display dynamic IPv6
source guard bindings................................................................621
Remove a static IPv6 source guard binding.............................622
Dynamic ARP inspection.................................................................623
Configure the global DAI settings.............................................623
Configure DAI VLANs..................................................................624
Configure DAI interfaces............................................................625
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Create a DAI access control list.................................................627
Configure a rule for an existing DAI ACL..................................627
Delete a rule from an existing DAI ACL....................................628
Delete a DAI access control list..................................................629
Display the DAI statistics.............................................................630
Captive portals..................................................................................631
Configure the global captive portal settings...........................632
Configure a captive portal..........................................................633
Delete a captive portal................................................................637
Configure a captive portal binding...........................................637
Display or delete captive portal bindings in the captive portal
binding table................................................................................638
Configure captive portal groups...............................................639
Add a captive portal group....................................................639
Remove a captive portal group.............................................640
Configure captive portal users...................................................641
Add or modify a captive portal user account......................641
Delete a captive portal user account....................................643
Configure the captive portal trap flag settings........................644
Display or clear captive portal client statistics.........................645
Access control lists...........................................................................646
Use the ACL Wizard to create a simple ACL............................647
Use the ACL Wizard to create an ACL..................................647
Modify an ACL rule that you created with the ACL Wizard.652
Delete an ACL rule that you created with the ACL Wizard.652
ACL Wizard example..............................................................653
Configure a MAC ACL.................................................................653
Add a MAC ACL......................................................................654
Change the name of a MAC ACL..........................................655
Delete a MAC ACL..................................................................655
Configure MAC ACL rules..........................................................656
Add a rule to a MAC ACL.......................................................656
Change the match criteria for a MAC rule...........................659
Delete a rule for a MAC ACL.................................................659
Configure MAC bindings............................................................660
Display or delete MAC ACL bindings in the MAC binding
table...............................................................................................662
Configure a basic or extended IPv4 ACL..................................663
Add an IPv4 ACL..........................................................................664
Change the number or name of an IPv4 ACL..........................665
Delete an IPv4 ACL......................................................................666
Configure rules for a basic IP ACL.............................................666
Add a rule for a basic IPv4 ACL.............................................667
Modify the match criteria for a basic IPv4 ACL rule............669
Delete a basic IPv4 ACL rule..................................................670
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Configure rules for an extended IPv4 ACL...............................671
Add a rule for an extended IPv4 ACL...................................671
Modify the match criteria for an extended IPv4 ACL rule...678
Delete an extended IPv4 ACL rule........................................679
Configure an IPv6 ACL................................................................679
Add an IPv6 ACL.....................................................................680
Change the name of an IPv6 ACL.........................................681
Delete an IPv6 ACL.................................................................681
Configure rules for an IPv6 ACL.................................................682
Add a rule for an IPv6 ACL.....................................................682
Modify the match criteria for an IPv6 ACL rule....................687
Delete an IPv6 ACL rule..........................................................688
Configure IP ACL interface bindings.........................................688
Display or delete IP ACL bindings in the IP ACL binding table.690
Configure VLAN ACL bindings..................................................692
Add a VLAN ACL binding......................................................692
Remove a VLAN ACL binding................................................693
Chapter 8 Monitor the Switch and Network
Port and EAP packet statistics.........................................................695
Display or clear port statistics....................................................695
Display or clear detailed statistics for a port............................696
Display or clear EAP and EAPoL statistics................................703
Perform a cable test.........................................................................705
Logs....................................................................................................706
Manage and display the memory log.......................................707
Message log format.....................................................................709
Enable or disable the command configuration log................709
Enable or disable console logging...........................................710
Syslog and log server host settings...............................................712
Configure the syslog settings.....................................................712
Add a syslog server.....................................................................713
Modify the settings for a syslog server......................................715
Delete the settings for a syslog server......................................715
Trap log.............................................................................................716
Event log............................................................................................717
Port mirroring....................................................................................718
RSPAN VLANs and source and destination switches...................721
Configure an existing VLAN as an RSPAN VLAN.....................721
Configure the switch as an RSPAN source switch...................722
Configure the switch as an RSPAN destination switch............724
sFlow monitoring..............................................................................725
sFlow agent overview..................................................................726
Configure the source interface for the sFlow agent................726
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Configure an sFlow receiver.......................................................727
Configure sFlow polling and sampling on an interface..........729
Display license information.............................................................730
Display license key information.................................................730
Display features to which the license applies..........................731
Chapter 9 Maintenance and Troubleshooting
Save the configuration.....................................................................734
Automatic installation of the configuration file.............................734
Configure the auto install process.............................................734
Option 125 DHCP server requirements for obtaining an
configuration file through auto install.......................................736
Reboot the switch from the main local browser UI......................737
Reset the switch to the factory default settings............................738
Export a file from the switch............................................................739
Export a file from the switch to a server....................................739
Use HTTP to export a file from the switch to a computer.......741
Export a file from the switch to a USB storage device............742
Upgrade software or download a file............................................744
Upgrade the software image or download a file from a server to
the switch......................................................................................744
Use HTTP to download a file to the switch or update the software
image.............................................................................................747
Download a file from a USB storage device to the switch......749
Use an HTTP session to download and install an SSL security
certificate file on the switch........................................................750
Manage software images................................................................752
Copy a software image...............................................................752
Configure dual image settings...................................................753
Change the software image that loads when the switch starts
or reboots.................................................................................753
Delete a software image........................................................754
Diagnostics and troubleshooting...................................................755
Ping an IPv4 address...................................................................755
Ping an IPv6 address...................................................................757
Send an IPv4 traceroute..............................................................758
Send an IPv6 traceroute..............................................................760
Capture Packets...........................................................................762
Perform a full memory dump.....................................................763
Appendix A Configuration Examples
Virtual Local Area Networks (VLANs).............................................766
VLAN configuration examples...................................................767
Access control lists (ACLs)...............................................................768
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MAC ACL sample configuration................................................769
Basic IP ACL sample configuration............................................770
Differentiated Services (DiffServ)....................................................771
Class..............................................................................................772
DiffServ traffic classes..................................................................772
Create policies.............................................................................773
Traffic conditioning policy.....................................................773
DiffServ example configuration.................................................774
802.1X access control......................................................................775
802.1X example configuration...................................................777
Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol...................................................779
MSTP example configuration.....................................................780
VLAN routing interfaces..................................................................782
Appendix B Software Default Settings and Hardware Specifications
Access default settings for the switch device UI...........................785
System features default settings.....................................................785
Switching features default settings................................................790
Routing and multicast features default settings...........................800
QoS features default settings.........................................................805
Security features default settings...................................................807
Monitoring features default settings..............................................816
Model-specific hardware technical specifications.......................818
Model M4250-10G2F-PoE+ (SKU GSM4212P)........................818
Model M4250-10G2XF-PoE+ (SKU GSM4212PX)...................819
M4250-10G2XF-PoE++ (SKU GSM4212UX)............................819
M4250-26G4F-PoE+ (SKU GSM4230P)....................................820
M4250-26G4XF-PoE+ (SKU GSM4230PX)...............................821
M4250-26G4F-PoE++ (SKU GSM4230UP)...............................821
M4250-40G8F-PoE+ (SKU GSM4248P)....................................822
M4250-40G8XF-PoE+ (SKU GSM4248PX)...............................823
M4250-40G8XF-PoE++ (SKU GSM4248UX)............................823
M4250-12M2XF (SKU MSM4214X)...........................................824
M4250-16XF (SKU XSM4216F)..................................................824
General hardware technical specifications...................................825
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1

Get Started with the Main UI

This user manual is for the AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series and covers all M4250 switch models.
This chapter provides an overview of how you can using your switch and access the main local browser user interface (UI).
The chapter contains the following sections:
Supported switches
Available publications and online help
Register your product
Main local browser UI overview
Log in to the main UI with a web browser
Use the Device View in the Main UI
Set up SNMP access
Note: For more information about the topics covered in this manual, visit the support website at netgear.com/support.
Note: Firmware updates with new features and bug fixes are made available from time to time at netgear.com/support/download/. Some products can regularly check the site and download new firmware, or you can check for and download new firmware manually. If the features or behavior of your product does not match what is described in this guide, you might need to update your firmware.
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Supported switches

This main user manual is for the NETGEAR AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series models. For a list of M4250 switch models, visit kb.netgear.com/000064904.

Available publications and online help

You can download the following publications and more for the AV Line of Fully Managed Switches M4250 Series by visiting netgear.com/support/download/.
Installation Guide
Hardware Installation Guide
Main User Manual (this manual)
Audio Video User Manual
Software Administration Manual
CLI Command Reference Manual
When you are logged in to the main local browser UI, you can access documentation online by selecting Help > Online Help > User Guide. See Main UI online help on page 28
In addition, context-sensitive online help is available in the main local browser UI.

Register your product

To qualify for product updates and product warranty, we encourage you to register your product. The first time that you log in to the switch, you can register with NETGEAR by clicking the Register now button.
Registration confirms that your email alerts work, lowers technical support resolution time, and ensures that your shipping address accuracy. We would also like to incorporate your feedback into future product development. We never sell or rent your email address and you can opt out of communications.
To register your switch with NETGEAR:
1.
Visit the NETGEAR website for registration at https://my.netgear.com/registration/login.aspx.
2.
Click the Login button, and follow the directions onscreen to register the switch with your NETGEAR email address and password.
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If you did not yet create a NETGEAR account, click the Create account link, follow the directions onscreen to create an account, and then register the switch with your NETGEAR email address and password.

Main local browser UI overview

Your switch contains an embedded web server and management software for managing and monitoring switch functions. The switch functions as a simple switch without the management software. However, you can use the management software to configure more advanced features that can improve switch efficiency and overall network performance.
The switch software includes a set of comprehensive management functions for configuring and monitoring the system by using one of the following methods:
Main local browser user interface (main UI), either over an Ethernet network port or
• over the out-of-band (OOB) port (also referred to as the service port)
Audio-video local browser user interface (AV UI), either over an Ethernet network
• port or over the OOB port
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
Command-line interface (CLI)
Each of the standards-based management methods allows you to configure and monitor the components of the switch. The method you use to manage the system depends on your network size and requirements, and on your preference.
This manual describes how to use the main local browser user interface (UI) to manage and monitor the switch. We abbreviate the main local browser UI as the main UI.
The main UI is a web-based management tool that lets you monitor, configure, and control your switch remotely using a standard web browser. From your web browser, you can monitor the performance of your switch and optimize its configuration for your network. You can configure all available switch features, such as VLANs, QoS, and ACLs, by using the main UI.

Log in to the main UI with a web browser

If this is the first time that you log in to the switch and you must use the default IP address of the switch, see the information in the installation guide.
You can use a web browser to access the switch and log in. You must be able to ping the IP address of the management interface or out-of-band (OOB) port from your computer for web access to be available.
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By default, no IP address is set for the OOB port, but its DHCP client is enabled so that the port can receive an IP address from a DHCP server in your network. If the OOB port does not receive an IP address from a DHCP server in your network, the IP address for the port is set to 192.168.0.239 with 255.255.255.0 as the subnet mask. The same occurs if you connect the OOB port directly to a computer and reboot the switch.
Note: The first time that you log in as an admin user to the main UI, no password is required (that is, the password is blank). After you log in for the first time, you are required to specify a local device password that you must use each subsequent time that you log in. (You can change the password again.)

Log in to the main UI using the switch default IP address

To use the switch default IP address to access the switch over the main UI:
1. Prepare your computer with a static IP address:
For access over an Ethernet network port, use a static IP address in the 169.254.0.0
subnet with subnet mask 255.255.0.0. For example, use 169.254.100.201 for your computer.
For access over the OOB port, use a static IP address in the 192.168.0.0 subnet
with subnet mask 255.255.0.0. For example, use 192.168.0.201 for your computer.
2.
Connect an Ethernet cable from an Ethernet port on your computer to either an Ethernet network port on the switch or to the OOB port on the switch.
3.
If you are using the OOB port, reboot the switch so that the IP address for the OOB port is set to 192.168.0.239 with 255.255.255.0 as the subnet mask.
4.
Launch a web browser such as Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, or Microsoft Edge.
5.
Enter the default IP address of the switch in the web browser address field:
For access over an Ethernet network port, enter 169.254.100.100.
For access over the OOB port, enter 192.168.0.239.
The login page displays.
6. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
7. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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Log in to the main UI with a known IP address

If you did not assign a static IP address to the switch but let a DHCP server in your network assign an IP address to switch, determine the IP address by accessing the DHCP server or by using an IP scanner utility.
The procedures in this manual assume that you know the IP address of your switch.
To use a known IP address to access the switch over the main UI:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.

Main UI buttons and user-defined fields

The following table shows the command buttons that are used on the pages in the main UI:
Table 1. Main UI command buttons
FunctionButton
Clicking the Add button adds the new item configured in the heading row of a table.Add
Apply
Clicking the Apply button sends the updated configuration to the switch. Configuration changes take effect immediately.
Cancel
Clicking the Cancel button cancels the configuration on the page and resets the data on the page to the previous values of the switch.
Clicking the Delete button removes the selected item.Delete
Clicking the Refresh button refreshes the page with the latest information from the device.Refresh
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Table 1. Main UI command buttons (Continued)
FunctionButton
Clicking the Save button saves your settings.Save
Clicking the Logout button ends the session.Logout
User-defined fields can contain 1 to 159 characters, unless otherwise noted on the configuration web page. All characters can be used except for the following (unless specifically noted in for that feature):
Table 2. Invalid characters for user-defined fields
Invalid characters for user-defined fields
?*></|\

Interface naming conventions

The switch supports physical and logical interfaces. Interfaces are identified by their type and the interface number. The physical ports are Gigabit Ethernet or multispeed 10G Ethernet interfaces and are numbered on the front panel. You configure the logical interfaces.
The following table describes the naming convention for all interfaces available on the switch.
Table 3. Naming conventions for interfaces
ExampleDescriptionInterface
Physical interfaces
ports are 1G, 2.5G,or 10G Ethernet interfaces or 1G or 10G fiber interfaces. The interface number consists of the switch number (always 0) followed by a forward slash and the port number, which is a sequential number starting from 1.
Link aggregation group (LAG)
are used only for bridging functions.
0/1, 0/2, 0/3, and so onDepending on the model, the physical
LAG 1, LAG 2, LAG 3, and so onLAG interfaces are logical interfaces that
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Table 3. Naming conventions for interfaces (Continued)
ExampleDescriptionInterface
CPU management interface
Routing VLAN interfaces
responsible for the switch base MAC address. This interface is not configurable and is always listed in the MAC Address Table.
This is an interface used for routing functionality.
5/1This is the internal switch interface
VLAN 1, VLAN 2, VLAN 3, and so on

Save your settings to the running configuration

When you click the Apply button, your changes are saved for the web management session but are not retained when you restart the switch. To save your changes to the running configuration (that is, permanently), click the Save icon at the top right of a page.
You can also first make multiple changes without clicking the Save icon after each change (although you must click the Apply button after each change) and then save the configuration to the running configuration. For more information, see Save the configuration on page 734).

Main UI online help

When you log in to the switch, each page contains a link to the online help that contains information to assist in configuring and managing the switch. The online help pop-up windows are context sensitive. For example, if the IP Addressing page is open, the help topic for that page displays if you click the Help button.
You can connect to the online support site at netgear.com/support when you are logged in to the switch.
To access the online support link:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
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The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select Help > Online Help > Support.
6.
To connect to the NETGEAR support site for the M4250 Series switches, click the Apply button.

Use the Device View in the Main UI

The Device View is an HTML applet that displays the ports on the switch. This graphic provides an alternate way to navigate to configuration and monitoring options. The graphic also provides information about device ports, current configuration and status, tables, and feature components.
To use the Device View:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Device View. The Device View front view of the switch displays.
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As an example, the following figure shows the front view of model M4250-10G2F-PoE+.
6. To display the back view, click the B button. The B button changes into the F button. (Clicking the F button displays the front
view again.)
As an example, the following figure shows the back view of model M4250-10G2F-PoE+.
The port coloring indicates the port status:
• Black. The port is not connected to a device or disabled.
• Green. The port is connected to a device or enabled.
• Red. An error occurred on the port.
The system LEDs indicate the system status. For more information, see the hardware installation guide, which you can download by visiting netgear.com/support/download/.
7.
To display the menus that let you configure ports, right-click a port.
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As an example, the following figure shows the back view of model M4250-10G2F-PoE+ with a partial view of the menus that let you configure a port.
8.
To display the menus that let you configure global switch settings, right-click the back view anywhere other than on a port.
As an example, the following figure shows the back view of model M4250-10G2F-PoE+ with menus that let you configure global switch settings.

Set up SNMP access

The switch software supports the configuration of SNMP groups and users that can manage traps that the SNMP agent generates.
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The switch uses both standard public MIBs for standard functionality and private MIBs that support additional switch functionality. All private MIBs begin with a “-” prefix. The main object for interface configuration is in -SWITCHING-MIB, which is a private MIB. Some interface configurations also involve objects in the public MIB, IF-MIB.
SNMP is enabled by default. The System Information page, which is the page that displays when you log in, displays the information that you need to configure an SNMP manager to access the switch.
Any user can connect to the switch using the SNMP v3 protocol, but for authentication and encryption, the switch supports only one user, which is the admin user; therefore, only one profile can be created or modified.
You cannot access the switch using SNMPv3 until you log in to the switch as an admin and change the default password (see Log in to the main UI with a web browser on page 24). After you do, SNMPv3 is automatically configured with the MD5 authentication protocol and the new password for admin user.
For SNMPv3 switch access, the authentication protocol must be MD5 or SHA. You cannot use the “none” option for the authentication protocol.
For more information about SNMP, see Simple Network Management Protocol on page
151.
To configure authentication and encryption settings for the SNMPv3 admin profile:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > SNMP > SNMP v3 User Configuration. The User Configuration page displays.
6. To enable authentication, select an Authentication Protocol option, which is either MD5 or SHA.
7. To enable encryption, select the DES option in the Encryption Protocol list Then enter an encryption code of eight or more alphanumeric characters in the Encryption Key field.
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8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
9.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Note: To access configuration information for SNMP V1 or SNMP V2, select System > SNMP > SNMPv1/v2 and select the page that contains the information that you want
to configure.
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2

Configure Switch System Information

This chapter covers the following topics:
Switch system information
Loopback interface
IPv4 management interfaces and VLANs
IPv6 management interfaces and VLANs
Time and SNTP settings
Precision Time Protocol
Domain Name System
Switch database management template
Green Ethernet settings
Bonjour settings
IPv4 DHCP server
DHCP relay and relay statistics
DHCP Layer 2 relay
UDP relay
DHCPv6 server
DHCPv6 relay interface
Power over Ethernet
Timer schedules
Simple Network Management Protocol
Link Layer Discovery Protocol
Link Layer Discovery Protocol for Media Endpoint Devices
Link dependency
Industry Standard Discovery Protocol
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Switch system information

You can view and configure the switch system information.

View and configure switch system information

When you log in, the System Information page displays. You can configure and view general device information.
To view and define system information:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > System Information.
6.
Define the following fields:
System Name: Enter the name to identify this switch. You can use up to 255
alphanumeric characters. The factory default is blank.
System Location: Enter the location of this switch. You can use up to 255
alphanumeric characters. The factory default is blank.
System Contact: Enter the contact person for this switch. You can use up to 255
alphanumeric characters. The factory default is blank.
Login Timeout: Specify how many minutes of inactivity can occur on a serial port
connection before the switch closes the connection. Enter a number between 0 and 160 minutes. The factory default is 5. Entering 0 disables the time-out.
Management Source Interface: Select the management interface that is used
as source interface for SNMP trap, syslog, DNS, TACACS+, RADIUS, sflow, and SNTP applications. Possible values are as follows:
None
Routing Interface
Routing VLAN
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Routing Loopback Interface
Service Port
Different. For some applications from the list, the source interface is configured
• separately. They display in the list only if this is the case.
By default VLAN 1 is used as the source interface.
7. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The following table describes the status information in the Application Information and System Information sections on the page.
Table 4. Application Information and System Information
Application Information
App Name
System Information
IPv4 Management Interface
IPv6 Management Interface
DescriptionField
The name of the application that functions as the Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) agent.
The status of the application.App Status
The version of the application.Version
The product name of this switch.Product Name
The IPv4 address and mask assigned to the management VLAN interface.IPv4 Management Address
The IPv6 address and mask assigned to the management VLAN interface.IPv6 Management Address
The IPv4 management VLAN ID of the switch. Click the displayed Management VLAN ID value to jump to the configuration page. See Configure an IPv4 management VLAN on page 49.
The IPv6 management VLAN ID of the switch. Click the displayed Management VLAN ID value to jump to the configuration page. See Configure an IPv6 management VLAN on page 56.
The IPv4 address and mask assigned to the loopback interface.IPv4 Loopback Interface
Information
The IPv6 prefix and prefix length assigned to the loopback interface.IPv6 Loopback Interface
The current date.System Date
The time in days, hours, and minutes since the switch was restarted.System Up Time
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Table 4. Application Information and System Information (Continued)
DescriptionField
The current SNTP sync status.Current SNTP Sync Status
The base object ID for the switch's enterprise MIB.System SNMP OID
Universally assigned network address.System Mac Address
The SNTP synchronized time.Current SNTP Synchronized Time

View the fan status

This page shows the status of the fans in all units. These fans remove the heat generated by the power, CPU, and other chipsets, and allow the chipsets work normally.
To view the fan status:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Scroll down to the Fan Status section.
6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table describes the nonconfigurable Fan Status information.
The number of fans depend on the switch model.
Table 5. Fan Status
Information
DescriptionField
The unit ID of the switch in which the fan is installed. This ID is always 1.Unit ID
The ID of the fan (1, 2, or 3)FAN
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Table 5. Fan Status (Continued)
DescriptionField
The description of the fan (FAN-1, FAN-2, or FAN-3).Description
The type of fan is always Fixed.Type
Speed
FAN Status
The speed of the fan.
For more information, see the hardware installation guide, which you can
download by visiting netgear.com/support/download/.
The duty level of the fan in percentage.Duty Level
The status of the fan:
Operational: The fan is running normally.
Failure: The fan failed.
Not Present: The fan is not present. (The number of fans depends on
• the switch model.)
Stop: The fan stopped because the switch temperature is low. The fan
• will start if the switch temperature rises.

View the temperature sensor information

You can view the current temperature of different system sensors using the Temperature Status table.
To view temperature information:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Scroll down to the Temperature Status section.
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6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table describes the nonconfigurable Temperature Status information.
Table 6. Temperature Status information
DescriptionField
Unit ID
The unit ID of the switch in which the sensor is installed. This ID is always
1.
The ID of the sensor.Sensor
The description of the sensor.Description
The temperature of the sensor in Celsius.Temperature (C)
The state of the sensor: Operational or Failure.State
The maximum supported operating temperature in Celsius.Max Temp (C)

View the device status and firmware version

You can view the device status and firmware version.
To view the device status and firmware version:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Scroll down to the Temperature Status section.
6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table describes the nonconfigurable Device Status information.
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Table 7. Device Status
DescriptionField
Firmware Version
Boot Version
CPLD Version
PS-1
MAX PoE
The release, version, and maintenance number of the firmware running
on the switch. For example, if the release is 1, the version is 2, and the
maintenance number is 4, the format is 1.2.4.
The version of the boot code that is in the flash memory to load the
firmware into the memory.
The version of the software for the complex programmable logic device
(CPLD ) on the switch.
The serial number of the switch.Serial Number
The status of the power supply in the switch:
Operational: The power supply is present and functioning properly.
Failed: The power supply is present, but the power cable is not plugged
• in or a defective cable is plugged in.
The PoE system status on the switch:
ON: Less than 10W of PoE power is available for another PD.
OFF: At least 10W of PoE power available for another PD.
N/A: PoE is not supported by the switch.
The time in days, hours, and minutes since the switch was restarted.System Up Time

View the system CPU status

To view the system CPU status:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button.
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The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > System CPU Status.
The System CPU Status page displays.
The CPU memory status includes the total memory of the switch in KBytes and the available memory space for the switch in KBytes.
The CPU utilization shows the CPU utilization by the various processes on the switch.

Configure the CPU thresholds

You to configure CPU thresholds that, when crossed, trigger a notification. The notification occurs through SNMP trap and syslog messages.
To configure the CPU thresholds:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > System CPU Status > CPU Threshold.
The CPU Threshold page displays.
6.
Configure the following CPU threshold settings:
Rising Threshold: Configure the rising threshold value. A notification is generated
when the total CPU utilization exceeds this threshold value over the configured time period. The range is a percentage from 1 to 100.
Rising Interval: Configure the rising interval value. Configure this utilization
monitoring time period from 5 to 86400 seconds in multiples of 5 seconds.
Falling Threshold: Configure the falling threshold. A notification is triggered
when the total CPU utilization falls below this level for a configured period of time.
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The falling utilization threshold must be equal to or less than the rising threshold value. The falling utilization threshold notification is generated only if a rising threshold notification was generated previously. Configuring the falling utilization threshold and time period is optional. If the falling CPU utilization values aare not configured, they take the same value as the rising CPU utilization values. The range is a percentage from 1 to 100.
Falling Interval: Configure the falling interval. YOu can configure the utilization
monitoring time period from 5 seconds to 86400 seconds in multiples of 5 seconds.
Free Memory Threshold: Configure the CPU free memory threshold value in KB.
7. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

View or clear switch statistics

To view or clear the switch statistics:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > Switch Statistics.
The Switch Statistics page displays.
6.
To clear all the counters, resetting all switch summary and detailed statistics to default values, click the Clear button.
The discarded packets count cannot be cleared.
7.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The following table describes switch statistics information.
Information
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Table 8. Switch statistics information
DescriptionField
ifIndex
Octets Received
Packets Received Without Errors
Unicast Packets Received
Multicast Packets Received
Broadcast Packets Received
Receive Packets Discarded
Octets Transmitted
The ifIndex of the interface table entry associated with the processor of this switch.
The total number of octets of data received by the processor (excluding framing bits but including FCS octets).
The total number of packets (including broadcast packets and multicast packets) received by the processor.
The number of subnetwork-unicast packets delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
The total number of packets received that were directed to a multicast address. This number does not include packets directed to the broadcast address.
The total number of packets received that were directed to the broadcast address. This does not include multicast packets.
The number of inbound packets that were discarded even though no errors were detected to prevent their being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol. A possible reason for discarding a packet could be to free up buffer space.
The total number of octets transmitted out of the interface, including framing characters.
The total number of packets transmitted out of the interface.Packets Transmitted Without Errors
Unicast Packets Transmitted
Multicast Packets Transmitted
Broadcast Packets Transmitted
Transmit Packets Discarded
Most Address Entries Ever Used
Address Entries in Use
Information
The total number of packets that higher-level protocols requested that are transmitted to a subnetwork-unicast address, including those that were discarded or not sent.
The total number of packets that higher-level protocols requested that are transmitted to a multicast address, including those that were discarded or not sent.
The total number of packets that higher-level protocols requested that are transmitted to the broadcast address, including those that were discarded or not sent.
The number of outbound packets that were discarded even though no errors were detected to prevent their being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol. A possible reason for discarding a packet could be to free up buffer space.
The highest number of Forwarding Database Address Table entries learned by this switch since the most recent reboot.
The number of learned and static entries in the Forwarding Database Address Table for this switch.
The maximum number of virtual LANs (VLANs) allowed on this switch.Maximum VLAN Entries
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Table 8. Switch statistics information (Continued)
DescriptionField
Most VLAN Entries Ever Used
Static VLAN Entries
Dynamic VLAN Entries
VLAN Deletes
Time Since Counters Last Cleared
The largest number of VLANs that were active on this switch since the last reboot.
The number of presently active VLAN entries on this switch that were created statically.
The number of presently active VLAN entries on this switch that were created by GVRP registration.
The number of VLANs on this switch that were created and then deleted since the last reboot.
The elapsed time, in days, hours, minutes, and seconds, since the statistics for this switch were last cleared.

View USB device information

To display the USB device information:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > USB Device Information. The USB Device Information page displays.
The Device Status field displays the current status of the device. The status is one of the following:
• Active: The device is USB plugged in and recognized by the switch.
• Inactive: The device is not mounted.
• Invalid: The device is not present or an invalid device is plugged in.
6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button.
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The following table describes the information in the USB Memory Statistics section.
Table 9. USB Memory Statistics information
DescriptionField
The USB flash device storage size in bytes.Total Size
The size of memory used on the USB flash device.Bytes Used
The size of memory free on the USB flash device.Bytes Free
The following table describes the information in the USB Directory Details section.
Table 10. USB Directory Details information
DescriptionField
The name of the file stored in the USB flash drive.File Name
The size of the file stored in the USB flash drive in bytesFile Size
The last modification time of the file stored in the USB flash drive.Modification Time

Loopback interface

You can create, configure, and remove loopback interfaces.
To configure a loopback interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > Loopback Interface. The Loopback Interface page displays.
6.
From the Loopback Interface Type menu, select IPv4 or IPv6.
7.
From the Loopback ID menu, select an interface.
8.
Configure the following settings, depending on the type of loopback interface:
IPv4: For an IPv4 interface, configure the following settings:
Primary IP Address: Enter the primary IPv4 address for this interface in
• dotted-decimal notation.
Primary IP Subnet Mask: Enter the primary IPv4 subnet mask in dotted-decimal
• notation.
IPv6: For an IPv6 interface, configure the following settings:
IPv6 mode: Select Enable to use the IPv6 address after you specify it. You can
• select this option only before you specify the IPv6 address.
IPv6 Prefix: Enter the IPv6 prefix.
Prefix Length: Enter the length for the IPv6 prefix.
EUI64: As an option, specify the 64-bit extended unique identifier (EUI-64).
9. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

IPv4 management interfaces and VLANs

The main UI provides separate options for IPv4 interface and port-based IP management.
If you configure port-based IP management, VLAN-based IP management is disabled. Similarly, if you configure VLAN-based IP management, port-based IP management is disabled.
By default, the source interface for applications is VLAN 1. If you change the IPv4 management VLAN and port to a non-default value, the source interface to the VLAN 1 default VLAN and port are also automatically changed.
You can access the switch over the main UI by one of the following methods:
IPv4 service port: The service port is a dedicated Ethernet port for out-of-band
• (OOB) management of the switch. Traffic on this port is segregated from operational
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network traffic on the switch ports and cannot be switched or routed to the operational network.
Management VLAN interface: The management VLAN is the logical interface used
• for in-band connectivity with the switch over any of the switch's network interfaces. To access the switch over a network you must first configure an IP address and subnet mask for the switch.
Optional single management interface: By default, you can use any of the switch's
• network interfaces as the management interface. However, you can restrict IPv4 management to one specific network interface.

Configure the IPv4 service port

You can configure network information on the IPv4 service port, also referred to as the out-of-band (OOB) port. The service port is a dedicated Ethernet port for out-of-band management of the switch. Traffic on this port is segregated from operational network traffic on the switch ports and cannot be switched or routed to the operational network.
By default, no IP address is set for the OOB port, but its DHCP client is enabled so that the port can receive an IP address from a DHCP server in your network. If the OOB port does not receive an IP address from a DHCP server in your network, the IP address for the port is set to 192.168.0.239 with 255.255.255.0 as the subnet mask. The same occurs if you connect the OOB port directly to a computer and reboot the switch.
To configure the IPv4 service port:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv4 Service Port Configuration.
The IPv4 Service Port Configuration page displays.
6.
Select a Service Port Configuration Protocol radio button:
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• Bootp: During the next boot cycle, the BootP client on the device broadcasts a
BootP request to acquire information from a BootP server on the network. The IP Address, Subnet Mask, and Default Gateway field display the information is dynamically acquired.
• DHCP: During the next boot cycle, the DHCP client on the device broadcasts a
DHCP request to acquire information from a DHCP server on the network. The IP Address, Subnet Mask, and Default Gateway field display the information is dynamically acquired.
None: The device does not attempt to acquire network information dynamically.
You must configure the address settings manually:
IP Address: Specify the IP address of the interface.
Subnet Mask: Specify the IP subnet mask for the interface.
Default Gateway: Specify the default gateway for the IP interface.
7. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields on the page.
Table 11. IPv4 service port configuration information
DescriptionField
The burned-in MAC address used for out-of-band connectivity.Burned-in MAC Address
Indicates whether the link status is up or down.Interface Status
If the selection is DHCP, the DHCP client ID.DHCP Client Identifier

Configure an IPv4 management VLAN

For you to manage the switch over the main UI, you must define the management IP address. A management VLAN interface is created by default and it gets an IP address if a DHCP server is present. If the management VLAN interface cannot get an IP address, the automatically assigned fallback IPv4 address is 169.254.100.100 and the subnet mask is 255.255.0.0.
A management VLAN is used as the default source interface for the syslog, the message log, an SNMP client, and so on. The network interface is disabled by default.
The management VLAN is the logical interface used for in-band connectivity with the switch through any of the switch’s front panel ports. The configuration parameters
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associated with the switch’s management VLAN do not affect the configuration of the front panel ports through which traffic is switched or routed.
To access the switch over a network you must first configure an IP address and subnet mask for the switch. You can configure the IP information using any of the following:
DHCP
Terminal interface through the EIA-232 port
After you establish in-band connectivity, you can change the IP information using any of the following:
Terminal interface through the EIA-232 port
Terminal interface through Telnet
SNMP-based management
Web-based management
To configure an IPv4 management VLAN or reset the IPv4 management VLAN:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv4 Management VLAN Configuration.
The IPv4 Management VLAN Configuration page displays.
6.
In the Management VLAN ID field, specify the management VLAN ID of the switch. The IPv4 management VLAN is used for management of the switch. You can configure
any value in the range of 1 to 4093.
7. Select the Enable or Disable Routing Mode radio button to enable or disable global routing on the switch.
The default value is Enable.
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8.
Select the Configuration Method DHCP or Manual radio button to specify the switch startup action:
DHCP: The switch requests IP address information from a DHCP server.
Manual: The switch loads the IP address information that you specify:
IP Address: Specify the IP address of the interface.
• The default value is 169.254.100.100.
Subnet Mask: Specify the IP subnet mask for the interface. This is also referred
• to as the subnet/network mask and defines the portion of the interface’s IP address that is used to identify the attached network. The default value is 255.255.0.0.
Gateway: Specify the gateway for the interface.
• The default value is 0.0.0.0.
9. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Note: If you need to reset the IPv4 management VLAN, in the Reset IPv4 Management Interface section of the page, select the Set Management Interface to Default check box and click the Apply button. Doing so deletes the port-based IPv4 management interface configuration and sets the IPv4 management interface back to the default VLAN 1.
The Current IPv4 Management Interface Status section displays the following nonconfigurable fields.
Table 12. Nonconfigurable IPv4 management interface status information
DescriptionField
Displays the current IPv4 management VLAN.Management Interface
Indicates whether the link status is up or down.Link State
Routing Interface Status
Information
Indicates whether the link status is up or down for the management interface.
The MAC address assigned to the management interface.MAC Address
Indicates whether the IP address configuration method is DHCP or manual.IP Address Configuration Method
The IP address of the management interface.IP Address
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Table 12. Nonconfigurable IPv4 management interface status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
The IP subnet mask for the management interface.Subnet Mask
The specified default gateway for the management interface.Gateway

Configure an IPv4 management interface

You can restrict IPv4 management to one specific interface. By default, you can use any of the interfaces as an IPv4 management interface.
To configure an IPv4 management interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv4 Management Interface Configuration.
The IPv4 Management Interface Configuration page displays.
6.
From the Interface menu, select the interface that must become the IPv4 management interface.
7.
Select the Set Management Interface option check box so that you can configure the interface IP address settings
8.
Select a Configuration Method radio button:
DHCP: The switch obtains the management interface IP address settings from a
DHCP server in the network.
Manual: Configure the management interface IP address settings manually:
Information
IP Address: Specify the IP address for the management interface.
Subnet Mask: Specify the subnet mask for the management interface.
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Gateway: Specify the IP address of the default gateway for the management
• interface.
9. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Note: If you need to reset the IPv4 management interface, in the Reset IPv4 Management Interface section of the page, select the Set Management Interface to Default check box and click the Apply button. Doing so deletes the IPv4 management interface configuration and sets the IPv4 management interface back to the default setting.
The Current IPv4 Management Interface section displays the following nonconfigurable fields.
Table 13. Nonconfigurable IPv4 management interface status information
DescriptionField
Displays the current IPv4 management interfaceManagement Interface
Indicates whether the link status is up or down.Link State
Routing Interface Status
Indicates whether the link status is up or down for the management interface.
The MAC address assigned to the management interface.MAC Address
Indicates whether the IP address configuration method is DHCP or manual.IP Address Configuration Method
The IP address of the management interface.IP Address
The IP subnet mask for the management interface.Subnet Mask
The specified default gateway for the management interface.Gateway

IPv6 management interfaces and VLANs

The main UI provides separate options for IPv6 interface and port-based IP management.
If you configure port-based IP management, VLAN-based IP management is disabled. Similarly, if you configure VLAN-based IP management, port-based IP management is disabled.
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By default, the source interface for applications is VLAN 1. If you change the IPv6 management VLAN and port to a non-default value, the source interface to the VLAN 1 default VLAN and port are also automatically changed.
You can access the switch over the main UI by one of the following methods:
IPv6 service port: The service port is a dedicated Ethernet port for out-of-band
• management of the switch. Traffic on this port is segregated from operational network traffic on the switch ports and cannot be switched or routed to the operational network.
Management VLAN interface: The management VLAN is the logical interface used
• for in-band connectivity with the switch over any of the switch's network interfaces. To access the switch over a network you must first configure an IP address and subnet mask for the switch. To configure an IPv6 management VLAN, you can either use the same VLAN that is used for IPv4 management or a different VLAN. The switch does not provide a default IPv6 management VLAN. If you want to use one, you must create it manually.
Optional single management interface: By default, you can use any of the switch's
• network interfaces as the management interface. However, you can restrict IPv6 management to one specific network interface.

Configure an IPv6 service port

You can configure IPv6 network information on the service port. The service port is a dedicated Ethernet port for out-of-band management of the switch Traffic on this port is segregated from operational network traffic on the switch ports and cannot be switched or routed to the operational network.
To configure the IPv6 service port:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Service Port Configuration.
The IPv6 Service Port Configuration page displays.
6. Select the IPv6 mode Enable or Disable radio button. This specifies the IPv6 administrative mode on the service port.
7.
Select the Service Port Configuration Protocol None or DHCP radio button. This specifies whether the device acquires network information from a DHCPv6
server. Selecting None disables the DHCPv6 client on the service port.
If you select the DHCP radio button, the DHCPv6 Client DUID field displays the client identifier used by the DHCPv6 client when sending messages to the DHCPv6 server.
8.
Select the IPv6 Stateless Address AutoConfig mode Enable or Disable radio button:
• Enable: The service port can acquire an IPv6 address through IPv6 Neighbor
Discovery Protocol (NDP) and through the use of router advertisement messages.
Disable: The service port does not use the native IPv6 address autoconfiguration
feature to acquire an IPv6 address.
This sets the IPv6 stateless address autoconfiguration mode on the service port.
9.
To configure the IPv6 gateway, do the following: a. select the Change IPv6 Gateway check box.
The IPv6 gateway is the default gateway for the IPv6 service port interface.
b.
In the IPv6 Gateway field, specify the default gateway for the IPv6 service port interface.
10. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
11.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Manage IPv6 addresses for the IPv6 service port

You can add a static IPv6 address that is specific to the IPv6 service port. You can also remove an IPv6 address that you no longer need for the IPv6 service port.
To add or remove an IPv6 address for the IPv6 service port:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
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3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Service Port Configuration.
The IPv6 Service Port Configuration page displays.
The Add/Delete IPv6 Address table lists the static IPv6 addresses that you manually added to the service port interface.
6.
To add an IPv6 address, in the Add/Delete IPv6 Address section, do the following: a.
In the IPv6 Address field, specify the IPv6 address that you want to add.
b.
From the EUI FLAG menu, select True to enable the Extended Universal Identifier (EUI) flag for the IPv6 address, or select False to omit the flag.
c. Click the Add button.
The IPv6 address is added to the IPv6 service port.
7.
To remove an IPv6 address, in the Add/Delete IPv6 Address section, do the following: a.
Select the check box for the IPv6 address that you want to remove.
b. Click the Delete button.
The IPv6 address is removed from the IPv6 service port.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure an IPv6 management VLAN

For you to manage the switch over the main UI, you must define the management IP address. A management VLAN interface is created by default and it gets an IP address if a DHCP server is present. If the management VLAN interface cannot get an IP address, the automatically assigned fallback IPv4 address is 169.254.100.100 and the subnet mask is 255.255.0.0.
A management VLAN is used as the default source interface for the syslog, the message log, an SNMP client, and so on. The network interface is disabled by default.
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The management VLAN is the logical interface used for in-band connectivity with the switch through any of the switch’s front panel ports. The configuration parameters associated with the switch’s management VLAN do not affect the configuration of the front panel ports through which traffic is switched or routed.
To access the switch over a network you must first configure an IP address and subnet mask for the switch. You can configure the IP information using any of the following:
DHCP
Terminal interface through the EIA-232 port
After you establish in-band connectivity, you can change the IP information using any of the following:
Terminal interface through the EIA-232 port
Terminal interface through Telnet
SNMP-based management
Web-based management
To configure an IPv6 management VLAN, you can either use the same VLAN that is used for IPv4 management or a different VLAN. The switch does not provide a default IPv6 management VLAN. If you want to use one, you must create it manually.
To configure an IPv6 management VLAN or reset the IPv6 management VLAN:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Management VLAN Configuration.
The IPv6 Management VLAN Configuration page displays.
6.
In the Management VLAN ID field, specify the management VLAN ID of the switch.
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The IPv6 management VLAN is used for management of the switch. You can configure any value in the range of 1 to 4093.
7.
Select the IPv6 Enable Mode Enable or Disable radio button to specify he administration mode for the IPv6 management VLAN.
8.
Select the Address Autoconfigure Mode Enable or Disable radio button to specify the address autoconfiguration mode.
If you enable this mode, the IPv6 network settings (IPv6 prefix and prefix length) are automatically configured for the configured management VLAN interface. By default, for VLAN 1, the mode is enabled so that the settings are automatically configured.
Note: The Address Autoconfigure mode option is available only if unicast routing is globally disabled.
9.
Select the Address DHCP Mode Enable or Disable radio button to specify if the IPv6 settings are obtained from a DHCP server.
10. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
11.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Note: If you need to reset the IPv6 management interface, in the Reset IPv6 Management Interface section of the page, select the Set Management Interface to Default check box and click the Apply button. Doing so deletes the IPv6 management interface configuration.
The Current IPv6 Management Interface Status section displays the following nonconfigurable fields.
Table 14. Current IPv6 management interface status information
DescriptionField
Management Interface
The IPv6 management interface. (By default, no IPv6 management interface is configured).
Indicates if the link status is up or down.Link State
Status/Operational Mode
Information
Indicates if the link status is up or down for the IPv6 management interface.IPv6 Routing Interface
The MAC address that is assigned to the IPv6 management interface.MAC Address
Indicates if IPv6 is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.IPv6 Enable Mode
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Table 14. Current IPv6 management interface status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
IPv6 Routing Mode
Stateless Address Autoconfig Mode
DHCPv6 Client Mode
IPv6 Prefix/Prefix Length
Indicates if IPv6 routing is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.
Indicates if the IPv6 address autoconfiguration mode is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.
Indicates if the DHCPv6 Client Mode is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.
The IPv6 address of the default gateway of the switch.IPv6 Default Gateway
The IPv6 address of the next hop interface of the switch.IPv6 Next Hop Interface
The IPv6 prefix and prefix length that is used for the IPv6 management interface.
The EUI-64 flag of the IPv6 address on the IPv6 management interface.EU164
The current state of the IPv6 address on the IPv6 management interface.Current State

Manage IPv6 addresses for the IPv6 management VLAN

You can add a static IPv6 address that is specific to the IPv6 management VLAN. You can also remove an IPv6 address that you no longer need for the IPv6 management VLAN.
To add or remove an IPv6 address for the IPv6 management VLAN:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Management VLAN Configuration.
The IPv6 Management VLAN Configuration page displays.
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If the Address Autoconfigure Mode is enabled, the autoconfigured IPv6 prefix and prefix length are displayed in the IPv6 VLAN Interface Configuration section.
6.
To add an IPv6 address, in the IPv6 VLAN Interface Configuration section, do the following:
a.
In the IPv6 Prefix/Prefix Length field, specify the IPv6 address and prefix length that you want to add.
b.
From the EUI64 menu, select True to enable the Extended Universal Identifier (EUI) flag for the IPv6 address, or select False to omit the flag.
c. Click the Add button.
The IPv6 address is added to the IPv6 management VLAN.
7.
To remove an IPv6 address, in the IPv6 VLAN Interface Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the check box for the IP address and prefix that you want to remove.
b. Click the Delete button.
The IPv6 address is removed from the IPv6 management VLAN.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Manage the IPv6 default route addresses for the IPv6 management VLAN

You can add an IPv6 default route address that is specific to the IPv6 management VLAN. You can also remove an IPv6 default route address that you no longer need for the IPv6 management VLAN.
To add or remove an IPv6 default route address for the IPv6 management VLAN:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Management VLAN Configuration.
The IPv6 Management VLAN Configuration page displays.
6.
To add an IPv6 default route address, in the IPv6 Default Route Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the Change IPv6 Default Route check box.
b.
In the IPv6 Default Route Address field, specify the IPv6 address and prefix length that you want to add.
c. Click the Add button.
The IPv6 default route address is added to the IPv6 management VLAN.
7.
To remove an IPv6 default route address, in the IPv6 Default Route Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the check box for the IPv6 default route address that you want to remove.
b. Click the Delete button.
The IPv6 default route address is removed from the IPv6 management VLAN.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure an IPv6 management interface

You can restrict IPv6 management to one specific interface. By default, you can use any of the interfaces as an IPv6 management interface.
To configure an IPv6 management interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Management Interface Configuration.
The IPv6 Management Interface Configuration page displays.
6.
From the Interface menu, select the interface that must become the IPv6 management interface.
7.
Select the Set Management Interface option check box so that you can configure the interface settings.
8. Select the Routing Mode Enable or Disable radio button to enable or disable routing on the IPv6 management interface.
9. Select the IPv6 Enable Mode Enable or Disable radio button to enable or disable IPv6 on the IPv6 management interface.
10.
Select the Stateless Address Autoconfigure Mode Enable or Disable radio button to enable or disable the on the IPv6 management interface.
You can enable this mode only if unicast routing is globally disabled.
11. Select the DHCPv6 Client Mode Enable or Disable radio button to enable or disable the DHCPv6 client mode on the IPv6 management interface.
12. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
13.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Note: If you need to reset the IPv6 management interface, in the Reset IPv6 Management Interface section of the page, select the Set Management Interface to Default check box and click the Apply button. Doing so deletes the IPv6 management interface configuration.
The Current IPv6 Management Interface Status section displays the following nonconfigurable fields.
Table 15. Current IPv6 management interface status information
DescriptionField
Management Interface
The IPv6 management interface. (By default, no IPv6 management interface is configured).
Status/Operational Mode
Information
Indicates if the link status is up or down.Link State
Indicates if the link status is up or down for the IPv6 management interface.IPv6 Routing Interface
The MAC address that is assigned to the IPv6 management interface.MAC Address
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Table 15. Current IPv6 management interface status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
Indicates if IPv6 is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.IPv6 Enable Mode
IPv6 Routing Mode
Stateless Address Autoconfig Mode
DHCPv6 Client Mode
IPv6 Prefix/Prefix Length
Indicates if IPv6 routing is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.
Indicates if the IPv6 address autoconfiguration mode is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.
Indicates if the DHCPv6 Client Mode is enabled or disabled on the IPv6 management interface.
The IPv6 address of the default gateway of the switch.IPv6 Default Gateway
The IPv6 address of the next hop interface of the switch.IPv6 Next Hop Interface
The IPv6 prefix and prefix length that is used for the IPv6 management interface.
The EUI-64 flag of the IPv6 address on the IPv6 management interface.EU164
The current state of the IPv6 address on the IPv6 management interface.Current State

Manage IPv6 addresses for the IPv6 management interface

You can add a static IPv6 address that is specific to the IPv6 management interface. You can also remove an IPv6 address that you no longer need for the IPv6 management interface.
To add or remove an IPv6 address for the IPv6 management interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Management Interface Configuration.
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The IPv6 Management Interface Configuration page displays.
6.
To add an IPv6 address, in the IPv6 Management Interface Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the Set Management Interface check box. It is likely that you already did this when you started the configuration of the IPv6 management interface.
b.
In the IPv6 Prefix field, specify the IPv6 address that you want to add.
c.
In the Prefix Length field, specify the prefix length for the IPv6 address that you want to add.
d.
From the EUI64 menu, select Enable to enable the Extended Universal Identifier (EUI) flag for the IPv6 address, or select Disable to omit the flag.
e. Click the Add button.
The IPv6 address is added to the IPv6 management interface.
7.
To remove an IPv6 address, in the IPv6 Management Interface Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the check box for the IPv6 that you want to remove.
b. Click the Delete button.
The IPv6 address is removed from the IPv6 management interface.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Manage the IPv6 default route addresses for the IPv6 management interface

You can add an IPv6 default route address that is specific to the IPv6 management interface. You can also remove an IPv6 default route address that you no longer need for the IPv6 management interface.
To add or remove an IPv6 default route address for the IPv6 management interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
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4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Management Interfaces > IPv6 Management Interface Configuration.
The IPv6 Management Interface Configuration page displays.
6.
To add an IPv6 default route address, in the IPv6 Default Route Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the Change IPv6 Default Route check box.
b.
In the IPv6 Default Route Address field, specify the IPv6 address and prefix length that you want to add.
c. Click the Add button.
The IPv6 default route address is added to the IPv6 management interface.
7.
To remove an IPv6 default route address, in the IPv6 Default Route Configuration section, do the following:
a.
Select the check box for the IPv6 default route address that you want to remove.
b. Click the Delete button.
The IPv6 default route address is removed from the IPv6 management interface.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Time and SNTP settings

The switch supports the Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP). As its name suggests, it is a less complicated version of Network Time Protocol (NTP), which is a system for synchronizing the clocks of networked computer systems, primarily when data transfer is handled through the Internet. You can also set the system time manually.

Configure the time setting manually

To configure the time setting manually
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch.
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The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > Time Configuration. The Time Configuration page displays.
6. Select the Clock Source Local radio button. The default is SNTP.
7.
In the Date field, specify the current date in months, days, and years.
8.
In the Time field, specify the current time in hours, minutes, and seconds.
9. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure the time settings with SNTP and configure the global SNTP settings

To configure the time by using SNTP and configure the global SNTP settings:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > Time > Time Configuration. The Time Configuration page displays.
6. Select the Clock Source SNTP radio button. The default is SNTP.
In the SNTP Global Configuration section of the page, configure the following settings.
7.
Select a Client mode radio button to specify the operation mode of the SNTP client: on the switch:
Disable: SNTP is not operational. No SNTP requests are sent from the client and
no received SNTP messages are processed.
• Unicast: SNTP operates in a point-to-point mode. A unicast client sends a request
to a designated server at its unicast address and expects a reply from which it can determine the time and, optionally, the round-trip delay and local clock offset relative to the server. The default selection is Unicast. You can add the IP address or DNS name of one or more SNTP servers for the switch to poll. For more information, see Configure SNTP servers on page 71.
Broadcast: SNTP operates uses a local broadcast address instead of a multicast
address. The broadcast address has a single subnet scope while a multicast address has an Internet wide scope.
8.
In the Port field, specify the local UDP port on which the SNTP client receives server packets.
The port number is 123 or in a range from 1025 to 65535. The default is 123. When the default value is configured, the actual client port value used in SNTP packets is assigned by the operating system.
9.
From the Source Interface menu, select the interface that the SNTP client must use:
None: The primary IP address of the originating (outbound) interface is used as
the source address.
Routing interface: The primary IP address of a physical port is used as the source
address.
Routing VLAN: The primary IP address of a VLAN routing interface is used as the
source address.
Routing loopback interface: The primary IP address of a routing loopback
interface is used as the source address.
Tunnel interface: The IPv6 tunnel interface.
• Service port: The management port source IP address is used as the source
address.
By default VLAN 1 is used as the source interface.
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10.
In the Unicast Poll Interval field, specify the number of seconds between unicast poll requests expressed as a power of 2. to The range is from 6 to 10. The default is
6.
11.
In the Broadcast Poll Interval field, specify the number of seconds between broadcast poll requests expressed as a power of 2.
Broadcasts received prior to the expiry of this interval are discarded. The range is from 6 to 10. The default is 6.
12.
In the Unicast Poll Timeout field, specify the number of seconds to wait for an SNTP response to a unicast poll request.
The range is from 1 to 30. The default is 5.
13.
In the Unicast Poll Retry field, specify the number of times to retry a unicast poll request to an SNTP server after the first time-out before the switch attempts to use the next configured server.
The range is from 0 to 10. The default is 1.
14.
In the Time Zone Name field, specify a time zone. In the Offset Hours and Offset Minutes fields, you can also specify the number of
hours and number of minutes that the time zone is different from the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The time zone can affect the display of the current system time.
Note: When you use an SNTP or NTP time server, the time data that is received from the server is based on the UTC, which is the same as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). This might not be the time zone in which the switch is located.
15.
In the Offset Hours field, specify the number of hours that the time zone is different from UTC.
The range is from -12 to 14. The default is 0.
16.
In the Offset Minutes field, specify the number of minutes that the time zone is different from UTC.
The range is from 0 to 59. The default is 0.
17. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
18.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
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View the SNTP global status

When you select the SNTP option as the clock source, you can view the SNTP global status.
To view SNTP global status:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > Time Configuration. The Time Configuration page displays.
The SNTP Global Status section displays the following nonconfigurable fields:
Table 16. SNTP global status information
DescriptionField
The SNTP version that the client supports.Version
Supported mode
Last Attempt Time
The SNTP modes that the client supports. Multiple modes can be supported by
a client.
The local date and time (UTC) that the SNTP client last updated the system clock.Last Update Time
The local date and time (UTC) of the last SNTP request or receipt of an unsolicited
message.
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Table 16. SNTP global status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
Last Attempt Status
Server IP Address
The status of the last SNTP request or unsolicited message for both unicast and
broadcast modes. If no message was received from a server, a status of Other
is displayed. These values are appropriate for all operational modes.
Other: None of the following enumeration values.
Success: The SNTP operation was successful and the system time was updated.
Request Timed Out: A directed SNTP request timed out without receiving a
• response from the SNTP server.
Bad Date Encoded: The time provided by the SNTP server is not valid.
Version Not Supported: The SNTP version supported by the server is not
• compatible with the version supported by the client.
Server Unsynchronized: The SNTP server is not synchronized with its peers.
• This is indicated through the leap indicator field on the SNTP message.
Server Kiss Of Death: The SNTP server indicated that no further queries were
• to be sent to this server. This is indicated by a stratum field equal to 0 in a
message received from a server.
The IP address of the server for the last received valid packet. If no message was
received from any server, an empty string is shown.
Unicast Server Max Entries
Information
The address type of the SNTP server address for the last received valid packet.Address Type
The claimed stratum of the server for the last received valid packet.Server Stratum
The reference clock identifier of the server for the last received valid packet.Reference Clock ID
The mode of the server for the last received valid packet.Server mode
The maximum number of unicast server entries that can be configured on this
client.
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Table 16. SNTP global status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
The number of current valid unicast server entries configured for this client.Unicast Server Current
Entries
Broadcast Count
The number of unsolicited broadcast SNTP messages that were received and
processed by the SNTP client since the last reboot.

Configure SNTP servers

SNTP assures accurate time synchronization for network device clock, up to the millisecond. Time synchronization is performed by a network SNTP server. The switch operates as an SNTP client only and does provide time services to other devices.
Time sources are established by stratums. Stratums define the accuracy of the reference clock. The higher the stratum (zero is the highest), the more accurate the clock. The switch receives time from stratum 1 or stratum 0 devices because the switch itself is a stratum 2 device.
The following are examples of stratums:
Stratum 0: A real-time clock is used as the time source, for example, a GPS system.
Stratum 1: A server that is directly linked to a stratum 0 time source is used. Stratum
• 1 time servers provide primary network time standards.
Stratum 2: The time source is distanced from the stratum 1 server over a network
• path. For example, a stratum 2 server receives the time over a network link, through
NTP, from a stratum 1 server.
Information received from SNTP servers is evaluated based on the time level and server type.
SNTP time definitions are assessed and determined by the following time levels:
T1: Time that the original request was sent by the client.
T2: Time that the original request was received by the server.
T3: Time that the server sent a reply.
T4: Time that the client received the server's reply.
The switch can poll unicast server types for the server time. The switch polls for unicast information to detect a server for which the IP address is known. SNTP servers that you configure on the switch are the only ones that are polled for synchronization information. T1 through T4 are used to determine the server time. This is the preferred method for
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synchronizing device time because it is the most secure method. If this method is selected, SNTP information is accepted only from SNTP servers that are configured on the switch.
The switch retrieves synchronization information, either by actively requesting information or at every poll interval.
Add an SNTP server To add an SNTP server:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > SNTP Server Configuration. The SNTP Server Configuration page displays.
6.
From the Server Type menu, select the type of SNTP address to enter in the address field.
The address can be an IPv4 address, IPv6 address, or host name (DNS). The default is DNS.
7.
In the Address field, specify the IP address or the host name of the SNTP server. This is an IP address or a text string of up to 64 characters, containing the encoded
unicast IP address or host name of an SNTP server. Unicast SNTP requests are sent to this address. If this address is a DNS host name, the host name is resolved into an IP address each time an SNTP request is sent to it.
8.
In the Port field, specify the port number. This is the UDP port on the SNTP server to which SNTP requests are sent. The range
is from 1 to 65535. The default is 123.
9.
In the Priority field, specify the priority order in which the switch must query the servers.
The SNTP client on the switch continues to send SNTP requests to different servers until a successful response is received, or all servers were tried. The priority indicates the order in which the switch must query the servers. The switch first sends a request
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to an SNTP server with a priority of 1, then to a server with a priority of 2, and so on. If any servers are assigned the same priority, the SNTP client contacts the servers in the order that they are listed in the table. The priority range is from 1 to 3. By default, the first server that you add gets priority 1, the second server priority 2, and the third server priority 3.
10.
In the NTP Version field, specify the NTP version that is supported by the switch. The range is from 1 to 4. The default is 4.
11. Click the Add button. The SNTP server entry is added.
12. To add additional SNTP servers, repeat the previous steps. You can configure up to three SNTP servers.
13.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The SNTP Server Status table displays the following information.
Table 17. SNTP server status information
DescriptionField
The IP address of the SNTP server.Address
Last Update Time
Last Attempt Status
The local date and time (UTC) that the response from the server was used to update the system clock.
The local date and time (UTC) that the SNTP server was last queried.Last Attempt Time
The status of the last NTP request to the server:
Other: No packet was received from the server.
Success: The SNTP operation was successful and the system time was updated.
Request Timed Out: A directed SNTP request timed out without receiving
• a response from the SNTP server.
Bad Date Encoded: The time provided by the SNTP server is not valid.
Version Not Supported: The SNTP version supported by the server is not
• compatible with the version supported by the client.
Server Unsynchronized: The SNTP server is not synchronized with its peers.
• This is indicated through the leap indicator field on the SNTP message.
Server Kiss Of Death: The SNTP server indicated that no further queries were
• to be sent to this server. This is indicated by a stratum field equal to 0 in a message received from a server.
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Table 17. SNTP server status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
The number of SNTP requests made to the server since the last reboot.Requests
The number of failed SNTP requests made to the server since the last reboot.Failed Requests
Change the settings for an existing SNTP server To change the settings for
an existing SNTP server:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > SNTP Server Configuration. The SNTP Server Configuration page displays.
6.
Select the check box next to the configured server.
7. Change the settings as needed.
8. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
9.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Remove an SNTP server To remove an SNTP server:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
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4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > SNTP Server Configuration. The SNTP Server Configuration page displays.
6.
Select the check box next to the configured server to remove.
7. Click the Delete button.
The server is removed.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure daylight saving time settings

You can configure settings for summer time, which is also known as daylight saving time. Used in some countries around the world, summer time is the practice of temporarily advancing clocks during the summer months. Typically clocks are adjusted forward one or more hours near the start of spring and are adjusted backward in autumn.
To configure the daylight saving time settings:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > Daylight Saving Configuration. The Daylight Saving Configuration page displays.
6.
Select one of the following Daylight Saving (DST) radio buttons:
• Disable: Disable daylight saving time.
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• Recurring: Daylight saving time occurs at the same time every year. You must
manually configure the start and end times and dates for the time shift. Configure the settings that are described in Step 7.
• Recurring EU: The system clock uses the standard recurring summer time settings
used in countries in the European Union. With this option, the rest of the applicable fields on the page are automatically populated and you cannot change them. Configure the settings that are described in Step 7.
• Recurring USA: The system clock uses the standard recurring daylight saving
time settings used in the United States. With this option, the rest of the applicable fields on the page are automatically populated and you cannot change them. Configure the settings that are described in Step 7.
Non Recurring: Daylight saving time settings are in effect only between the start
date and end date of the specified year. With this option, the summer time settings do not repeat on an annual basis. Configure the settings that are described in Step 8.
7.
If you select Recurring, Recurring EU, or Recurring USA radio button, configure the fields that are shown in the following table.
Begins At
Ends At
DescriptionField
These fields are used to configure the start values of the day and time.
Week: Configure the start week.
Day: Configure the start day.
Month: Configure the start month.
Hours: Configure the start hours.
Minutes: Configure the start minutes.
These fields are used to configure the end values of day and time.
Week: Configure the end week.
Day: Configure the end day.
Month: Configure the end month.
Hours: Configure the end hours.
Minutes: Configure the end minutes.
Configure recurring offset in minutes. The valid range is 1-1440 minutes.Offset
Configure the time zone.Zone
8.
If you select the Non Recurring, configure the fields that are shown in the following table.
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DescriptionField
Begins At
Ends At
Offset
These fields are used to configure the start values of the date and time.
Month: Configure the start month.
Date: Configure the start date.
Year: Configure the start year.
Hours: Configure the start hours.
Minutes: Configure the start minutes.
These fields are used to configure the end values of date and time.
Month: Configure the end start date.
Date: Configure the end date.
Year: Configure the end year.
Hours: Configure the end hours.
Minutes: Configure the end minutes.
Configure the non-recurring offset in minutes. The valid range is 1-1440
minutes.
Configure the time zone.Zone
9. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

View the daylight saving time status

You can display information about the summer time settings and whether the time shift for summer time is currently in effect.
To view the daylight saving time status:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
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4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Time > Daylight Saving Configuration. The Daylight Saving Configuration page displays.
6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table displays the nonconfigurable daylight saving (DST) status
information.
Table 18. Daylight saving status information
Daylight Saving (DST)
Begins At
Ends At
Offset (in Minutes)
DescriptionField
The Daylight Saving value, which is one of the following:
Disable
Recurring
Recurring EU
Recurring USA
Non Recurring
Displays when the daylight saving time begins. This field is not displayed
when daylight saving time is disabled.
Displays when the daylight saving time ends. This field is not displayed when
daylight saving time is disabled.
The offset value in minutes.This field is not displayed when daylight saving
time is disabled.
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Table 18. Daylight saving status information (Continued)
DescriptionField
Zone
The zone acronym. This field is not displayed when daylight saving time is
disabled.
Displays whether daylight saving time is in effect.Daylight Saving (DST) in Effect

Precision Time Protocol

Precision Time Protocol (PTP, IEEE 1588) is a protocol that enables precise synchronization of clocks with a sub-microsecond accuracy across a packet-based network. PTP lets network devices of different precision and resolution synchronize to a grandmaster clock through an exchange of packets across the network. The switch supports a PTP end-to-end transparent clock, which is enabled by default, both globally and at the port level.
Note: The switch itself is not affected by PTP.

Manage the global PTP settings

By default, PTP is enabled globally on the switch. You can disable PTP to globally, in which case the switch does not support PTP pass-through.
To configure the PTP end-to-end transparent clock settings globally:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > PTP TC > Global Configuration. The Global Configuration page displays.
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6. Select the Admin Mode Enable or Disable radio button.
The default is Enable.
7. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Manage the PTP interface settings

On a standalone switch, by default, PTP is enabled globally on all interfaces. In a switch stack, by default, PTP is disabled for all interfaces. You can select individual interfaces on which you can enable or disable PTP. If you disable PTP on an interface, the interface does not support PTP pass-through.
To configure the PTP end-to-end transparent clock settings for one or more interfaces:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > PTP TC > Interface Configuration. The Interface Configuration page displays.
6.
Select whether to display physical interfaces, LAGs, or both by clicking one of the following links above the table heading:
1: Only physical interfaces are displayed. This is the default setting.
• LAG: Only LAGs are displayed.
All: Both physical interfaces and LAGs are displayed.
7.
Select one or more interfaces by taking one of the following actions:
To configure a single interface, select the check box associated with the interface, or type the interface number in the Go To Interface field and click the Go button.
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To configure multiple interfaces with the same settings, select the check box associated with each interface.
To configure all interfaces with the same settings, select the check box in the heading row.
8.
From the Configured Mode menu, select Enable or Disable. The default is Enable.
9. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
The Operational Mode field shows whether PTP is enabled or disabled for an interface.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Domain Name System

You can configure information about Domain Name System (DNS) servers that the network uses and how the switch operates as a DNS client.

Configure the global DNS settings and add a DNS server

You can configure the global DNS settings and DNS server information.
To configure the global DNS settings and add a DNS server:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > DNS > DNS Configuration. The DNS Configuration page displays.
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6. Select the DNS Status Disable or Enable radio button:
• Enable: Allows the switch to send DNS queries to a DNS server to resolve a DNS
domain name. The default value is Enable.
Disable: Prevents the switch from sending DNS queries.
7.
In the DNS Default Name field, enter the name that must be includes in DNS queries. When the switch looks up on an unqualified host name, this field provides the domain
name. For example, if the default domain name is netgear.com and you enter test, then test is changed to test.netgear.com to resolve the name). The maximum length of the name is 255 characters.
8.
In the Retry Number field, specify the number of times that the switch must retry to send DNS queries to the DNS server.
Enter a number from 0 to 100. The default is 2.
9.
In the Response Timeout (secs) field, specify the time in seconds that the switch must wait for a response to a DNS query.
Enter a number from 0 to 3600. The default is 3.
10.
From the Source Interface menu, select the interface that must be the source interface for DNS:
None: The primary IP address of the originating (outbound) interface is used as
the source address.
Routing interface: The primary IP address of a physical port is used as the source
address.
Routing VLAN: The primary IP address of a VLAN routing interface is used as the
source address.
Routing loopback interface: The primary IP address of a routing loopback
interface is used as the source address.
Tunnel interface: The IPv6 tunnel interface.
• Service port: The management port source IP address is used as the source
address.
By default, VLAN 1 is used as the source interface.
11. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
12.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
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13.
To add a DNS server to which the switch sends DNS queries, do the following: a.
In the DNS Server Address field in the DNS Server Configuration table, enter an IP address in standard IPv4 or IPv6 dot notation.
b. Click the Add button.
The server is added to the table. You can specify up to eight DNS servers. The precedence is set in the order that you add the servers.
14.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The following table displays non-configurable DNS server information.
Table 19. DNS server configuration information
DescriptionField
The sequence number of the DNS server.Serial No
Preference
The preference of the DNS server. The preference is determined by the order in which you add the servers.

Remove a DNS server

You can remove a DNS server that you no longer need.
To remove a DNS server:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > DNS > DNS Configuration. The DNS Configuration page displays.
6.
In the DNS Server Configuration table, select the check box for the DNS server.
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Note: If you do not select a DNS server, all the DNS servers are removed after you
click the Delete button.
7. Click the Delete button.
The DNS server is removed.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure and view host name-to-IP address information

You can manually map host names to IP addresses or view dynamic host mappings.
Add a static entry to the dynamic host mapping table To add a static entry
to the local dynamic host mapping table:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > DNS > Host Configuration. The Host Configuration page displays.
6.
In the Host Name field, specify the static host name. The maximum length of the name is 255 characters.
7.
In the IP Address field, enter the IP address to associate with the host name.
8. Click the Add button.
The entry displays in the Dynamic Host Mapping table.
9.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
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Remove an entry from the dynamic host mapping table To remove an
entry from the dynamic host mapping table:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > DNS > Host Configuration. The Host Configuration page displays.
6. Select the check box next to the entry that you want to remove.
7. Click the Delete button.
The entry is removed.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
Change the host name or IP address in an entry of the dynamic host mapping table, view all entries, or clear all entries To change the host name
or IP address in an entry of the dynamic host mapping table, view all entries, or clear all entries:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
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5.
Select System > Management > DNS > Host Configuration. The Host Configuration page displays.
6. Select the check box next to the entry to update.
7.
Enter the new information in the appropriate field.
8. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
9.
To clear all the dynamic host name entries from the list, click the Clear button.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The dynamic host mapping table shows host name-to-IP address entries that the switch learned. The following table describes the dynamic host fields.
Table 20. Dynamic Host Mapping information
DescriptionField
Lists the host name that you assign to the specified IP address.Host
Time since the dynamic entry was first added to the table.Total
Time since the dynamic entry was last updated.Elapsed
The type of the dynamic entry.Type
Lists the IP address associated with the host name.Addresses

Switch database management template

A switch database management (SDM) template determines the maximum resources the switch can use for various features. SDM templates allow different combinations of scaling factors and therefore allocations of resources, depending on how the switch is used. That is, SDM templates let you reallocate switch resources to support a different combination of features based on your network requirements.
The following table shows how the hardware resources are divided.
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Table 21. SDM hardware resources
Number of IPv6 EntriesNumber of IPv4 EntriesModels SupportedTemplate Name
10% of total available90% of total availableAll modelsIPv4-Basic
90% of total available10% of total availableAll modelsIPv6-Basic
10% of total available90% of total availableM4250-16XFIPv4-Advanced
90% of total available10% of total availableM4250-16XFIPv6-Advanced
The main UI provides more information about the templates (see the steps in this task).
The default SMD is IP4v-Basic. You can change the SDM template for the switch.
To change the SDM template
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login
button. The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must
specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > SDM Template Preference. The SDM Template Preference page displays.
6. From the SDM Next Template ID menu, select a template.
By default, the IPv4-Basic template is selected.
7. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
9. To activate the new template, restart the switch. The following table displays Summary information.
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Table 22. SDM template summary information
DescriptionField
Identifies the template.SDM Template
ARP Entries
ECMP Next Hops
The maximum number of entries in the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) cache
for routing interfaces.
The maximum number of IPv4 unicast forwarding table entries.IPv4 Unicast Routes
The maximum number of IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP) cache entries.IPv6 NDP Entries
The maximum number of IPv6 unicast forwarding table entries.IPv6 Unicast Routes
The maximum number of next hops that can be installed in the IPv4 and IPv6
unicast forwarding tables.
The maximum number of IPv4 multicast forwarding table entries.IPv4 Multicast Routes
The maximum number of IPv6 multicast forwarding table entries.IPv6 Multicast Routes
The maximum number of VLAN entries, which is 4093 for any SDM template.Maximum VLAN Entries

Green Ethernet settings

You can configure the green Ethernet features to reduce power consumption.

Configure the global green Ethernet settings

You can configure the global green Ethernet settings.
To configure the global green Ethernet settings:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
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The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Green Ethernet > Green Ethernet Configuration. The Green Ethernet Configuration page displays.
6. Select the Auto Power Down Mode Disable or Enable radio button. By default, this mode is disabled. When a port link is down, the underlying physical
layer goes down for a short period and then checks for port link pulses again so that auto-negotiation remains possible. In this way, the switch saves power when no link partner is present for the port.
7. Select the EEE Mode Disable or Enable radio button. By default, this mode is disabled. Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) combines the MAC
with a family of physical layers that support operation in a low power mode. It is defined by the IEEE 802.3az standard. Lower power mode enables both the send and receive sides of the link to disable some functionality for power savings when lightly loaded. Transition to low power mode does not change the link status. Frames in transit are not dropped or corrupted in transition to and from low power mode. Transition time is transparent to upper layer protocols and applications.
8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
9.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure green Ethernet interface settings

You can configure green Ethernet settings for individual interfaces.
To configure the green Ethernet interface settings:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
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The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Green Ethernet > Green Ethernet Interface Configuration.
The Green Ethernet Interface Configuration page displays.
6.
Select one or more interfaces by taking one of the following actions:
To configure a single interface, select the check box associated with the interface, or type the interface number in the Go To Interface field and click the Go button.
To configure multiple interfaces with the same settings, select the check box associated with each interface.
To configure all interfaces with the same settings, select the check box in the heading row.
7. From the Auto Power Down mode menu, select Enable or Disable. By default, this mode is disabled for the interface. When a port link is down, the
underlying physical layer goes down for a short period and then checks for port link pulses again so that auto-negotiation remains possible. In this way, the switch saves power when no link partner is present for the port.
8. From the EEE mode menu, select Enable or Disable. By default, this mode is disabled for an interface. When a port link is down, the
underlying physical layer goes down for a short period and then checks for port link pulses again so that auto-negotiation remains possible. In this way, the switch saves power when no link partner is present for the port.
9. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Configure and display detailed green Ethernet settings for an interface

You can select a single interface and configure and display detailed green Ethernet settings.
To configure and display detailed green Ethernet settings for a single interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button.
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The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > Green Ethernet > Green Ethernet Details. The Green Ethernet Details page displays.
6.
From the Interface menu, select the interface.
7. From the Energy Detect Admin Mode menu, select to enable or disable this mode. By default, this mode is disabled for the interface. When a port link is down, the
underlying physical layer goes down for a short period and then checks for port link pulses again so that auto-negotiation remains possible. In this way, the switch saves power when no link partner is present for the port.
8. From the EEE Admin Mode menu, select to enable or disable this mode. With Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) mode enabled, the port transitions to low power
mode during a link idle condition. The default value is Disabled.
9.
In the EEE Transmit Idle Time field, enter the period that the interface must remain idle (without receiving packets for transmission) before entering the low-power idle (LPI) state.
The range is from 600 to 4294967295 seconds. The default is 600 seconds.
10.
In the EEE Transmit Wake Time field, enter the period that the interface must remain in the LPI state before returning to the active state after it receives a packet for transmission.
The range is from 8 to 65535 seconds. The default is 17 seconds.
11. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
12.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields.
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Table 23. Green Ethernet local device information
DescriptionField
Cumulative Energy Saved on this port due to Green mode(s) (Watts * Hours)
Rx Low Power Idle Event Count
Rx Low Power Idle Duration (uSec)
Tx Low Power Idle Event Count
Tx Low Power Idle Duration (uSec)
Tw_sys_tx Echo (uSec)
Tw_sys_rx Echo (uSec)
The cumulative energy saved on the port because of the green modes that are enabled on the port in watts * hours.
The operational state (Active or Inactive) of the Energy Detect mode.Energy Detect Operational Status
The reason for the operational state that is displayed in the previous field.Reason
The total number of times that the port entered the low-power idle (LPI) state since the EEE counters were reset.
The total period (in 10 us increments) that the port remained in the LPI state since the EEE counters were reset.
The total number of times that the link partner of the port entered the LPI state since the EEE counters were reset.
The total period (in 10 us increments) that the link partner of the port remained in the LPI state since the EEE counters were reset.
The value of ‘Tw_sys’ that the port can support.Tw_sys_tx (uSec)
The link partner’s ‘transmit Tw_sys’ that the port uses to compute the ‘Tw_sys’ that it requests from its link partner.
The value of ‘Tw_sys’ that the port requested from its link partner.Tw_sys_rx (uSec)
The link partner’s ‘receive Tw_sys’ that the port uses to compute the ‘Tw_sys’ that it can support.
Fallback Tw_sys (uSec)
Tx_dll_enabled
Tx_dll_ready
Information
The value of the ‘fallback Tw_sys’ that the port requested from its link partner.
The initialization status of the transmit EEE transmit Data Link Layer (DLL) function on the port.
The transmit DLL status, which indicates if the ‘tx system’ initialization is complete and if port is ready to receive or update LLDPDUs that contain EEE TLVs.
The status of the EEE capability negotiation on the port.Rx_dll_enabled
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Table 23. Green Ethernet local device information (Continued)
DescriptionField
Rx_dll_ready
The receive DLL status, which indicates if the ‘rx system’ initialization is complete and if port is ready to receive or update LLDPDUs that contain EEE TLVs.
The time since the counters were reset.Time Since Counters Last Cleared

Display green Ethernet information for the link partner of an interface

The switch can detect green Ethernet information for the link partner of an interface, that is for the remote device.
To display the green Ethernet information for the link partner of an interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > Green Ethernet > Green Ethernet Details. The Green Ethernet Details page displays.
6.
Scroll down to the Remote Device Information section.
7.
From the Interface menu, select the interface. The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields.
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Table 24. Green Ethernet remote device information
DescriptionField
The identifier that is assigned to the link partner of the port.Remote ID
The value of ‘Tw_sys’ that the link partner can support.Remote Tw_sys_tx (uSec)
The value of ‘transmit Tw_sys’ that the link partner returns to the port.Remote Tw_sys_tx Echo (uSec)
The value of ‘Tw_sys’ that the link partner requests from the port.Remote Tw_sys_rx (uSec)
The value of ‘receive Tw_sys’ that the link partner returns to the port.Remote Tw_sys_rx Echo (uSec)
The value of ‘fallback Tw_sys’ that the link partner returns to the port.Remote Fallback Tw_sys (uSec)

Display the green Ethernet statistics summary

The green Ethernet statistics summary displays information about both the switch and the interfaces.
To display the green Ethernet statistics summary:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > Green Ethernet > Green Ethernet Summary. The Green Ethernet Summary page displays.
6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields in the Green Ethernet
Statistics Summary section.
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Table 25. Green Ethernet statistics summary information
DescriptionField
The power consumption by all ports on the switch in mWatts (mW).Current Power Consumption (mW)
Percentage Power Saving (%)
Cumulative Energy Saving (W*H)
The percentage of power saved on all ports on the switch when green
Ethernet mode is enabled.
The cumulative energy saved on the switch in (watts * hour) when all
green features are enabled.
The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields in the Green Ethernet Feature Summary section.
Table 26. Green Ethernet feature summary information
DescriptionField
The unit is always 1.Unit
Green Features supported on this
unit
The green features that are supported on the switch:
Energy-Detect
EEE (Energy Efficient Ethernet)
LPI-History (EEE low power idle history)
LLDP-Cap-Exchg (EEE LLDP capability exchange)
Pwr-Usg-Est (Power usage estimates).
The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields in the Green Ethernet Interface Summary section.
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Table 27. Green Ethernet interface summary information
DescriptionField
The interface for which information is displayed.Interface
Energy Detect Admin Mode
EEE Admin mode
Indicates the status of the mode (Enable or Disable).
If the mode is enabled and a port link is down, the underlying physical
layer goes down for a short period and then checks for port link pulses
again so that auto-negotiation remains possible. In this way, the switch
saves power when no link partner is present for the port.
The operational state (Active or Inactive) of the Energy Detect mode.Energy Detect Operational Status
Indicates the status of the mode (Enable or Disable).
If this mode is enabled, the port transitions to low power mode during
a link idle condition.

Configure and display the green Ethernet EEE LPI history for an interface

You can configure and display the green Ethernet EEE low-power idle (LPI) history for an interface.
To configure and display the green Ethernet EEE LPI history for an interface:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > Green Ethernet > Green Ethernet LPI History. The Green Ethernet LPI History page displays.
6.
From the Interface menu, select the interface.
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7.
In the Sampling Interval field, enter the interval at which EEE LPI data is collected. The range is from 30 to 36000 seconds.The default is 3600 seconds.
8.
In the Max Samples To Keep field, enter the maximum number of samples to keep. The range is from 1 to 168.The default is 168.
The Percentage LPI time field displays the time that the interface was in LPI mode since the EEE counters were reset.
9. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
10.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
11.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields.
Table 28. Interface green mode EEE LPI history information
DescriptionField
The sample index.Sample No.
The period that past since the sample was recorded.Time Since The Sample Was
Recorded
Percentage Time spent in LPI
mode since last sample
Percentage Time spent in LPI
mode since last reset
The percentage of time that the interface was in LPI mode since the last
sample was recorded.
The percentage of time that the interface was in LPI mode since the EEE
counters were reset.

Bonjour settings

A Mac that supports Bonjour can discover the switch in the network so that you can find the switch IP address and log in to the main UI of the switch. Bonjour is enabled by default. You can disable Bonjour for security reasons.
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Enable or disable Bonjour

To enable or diable Bonjour:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Management > Bonjour > Bonjour Configuration. The Bonjour Configuration page displays.
6.
Select one of the following radio buttons:
Enable. Bonjour is enabled. This is the default setting.
• Disable. Bonjour is disabled.
7. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
8.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.

Display Bonjour information

To display Bonjour information:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
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The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5. Select System > Management > Bonjour > Bonjour Details. The Bonjour Details page displays.
The Bonjour Administration Mode field displays whether Bonjour is enabled or disabled.
6.
To refresh the page, click the Refresh button. The following table describes the nonconfigurable fields on the page.
Table 29. Bonjour Published Services
DescriptionField
The Bonjour service names in the switch.Service Name
The Bonjour service type names in the switch.Type
The Bonjour service domain in the switch.Domain
The Bonjour service port number.Port
The Bonjour service text.TXT Data

IPv4 DHCP server

You can configure settings for an IPv4 DHCP server, DHCP pools, and DHCP bindings. You can also view DHCP statistics and, if they occur, DHCP conflicts.

Configure a DHCP server

To configure a DHCP server:
1. Launch a web browser.
2.
In the address field of your web browser, enter the IP address of the switch. The login page displays.
3. Click the Main UI Login button. The main UI login page displays in a new tab.
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4. Enter admin as the user name, enter your local device password, and click the Login button.
The first time that you log in, no password is required. However, you then must specify a local device password to use each subsequent time that you log in.
The System Information page displays.
5.
Select System > Services > DHCP Server > DHCP Server Configuration. The DHCP Server Configuration page displays.
6. Select the Admin Mode Disable or Enable radio button. This setting specifies whether the DHCP service is enabled or disabled.
The default is Disable.
7.
In the Ping Packet Count field, specify the number of packets a server sends to a pool address to check for duplication as part of a ping operation.
The value can be 0 or from 2 to 10. Setting the value to 0 disables the function. The default is 2.
8.
Select the Conflict Logging Mode Disable or Enable radio button. This setting specifies whether conflict logging on a DHCP server is enabled or
disabled. The default is Enable.
9. Select the BootP Automatic Mode Disable or Enable radio button. This setting specifies whether BootP for dynamic pools is enabled or disabled. The
default value is Disable.
10.
To exclude addresses, do the following: a.
In the IP Range From field, enter the lowest address in the range or a single address to be excluded.
b.
In the IP Range To field, to exclude a range, enter the highest address in the range. To exclude a single address, enter the same IP address as specified in the IP Range From field, or leave it as 0.0.0.0.
c. Click the Add button.
The addresses that must be excluded are added to the switch.
11. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved.
12.
To save the settings to the running configuration, click the Save icon.
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