SONIQ CWR300ND User Manual

300M ADSL2+Wireless Router
CWR300ND-AU
CWR300ND
User Manual
Contents
1 Introduction ....................................................................................................- 3 -
1.1 Packing List .......................................................................................- 3 -
1.2 Safety Precautions ............................................................................- 3 -
1.3 LEDs and Interfaces ..........................................................................- 4 -
1.4 System Requirements .......................................................................- 6 -
1.5 Features ............................................................................................- 7 -
2 Hardware Installation .....................................................................................- 8 -
3 Web Configuration .......................................................................................- 11 -
3.1 Access the Router ...........................................................................- 11 -
3.2 Wizard .............................................................................................- 12 -
3.3 Status...............................................................................................- 29 -
3.3.1 System..................................................................................- 29 -
3.3.2 LAN.......................................................................................- 30 -
3.3.3 WLAN ...................................................................................- 30 -
3.3.4 WAN .....................................................................................- 31 -
3.3.5 Port Mapping ........................................................................- 32 -
3.3.6 Statistics................................................................................- 32 -
3.3.7 ARP Table.............................................................................- 34 -
3.4 Network ...........................................................................................- 35 -
3.4.1 LAN.......................................................................................- 35 -
3.4.2 WAN .....................................................................................- 42 -
3.4.3 WLAN ...................................................................................- 48 -
3.5 Service.............................................................................................- 60 -
3.5.1 DNS ......................................................................................- 60 -
3.5.2 Firewall .................................................................................- 62 -
3.5.3 UPNP....................................................................................- 72 -
3.5.4 IGMP Proxy ..........................................................................- 72 -
3.5.5 TR-069..................................................................................- 73 -
3.5.6 ACL.......................................................................................- 75 -
3.6 Advance...........................................................................................- 78 -
3.6.1 Bridge Setting .......................................................................- 78 -
3.6.2 Routing .................................................................................- 80 -
- 1 -
3.6.3 Port Mapping ........................................................................- 83 -
3.6.4 QoS.......................................................................................- 85 -
3.6.5 SNMP ...................................................................................- 88 -
3.6.6 Others ...................................................................................- 89 -
3.7 Admin ..............................................................................................- 89 -
3.7.1 Commit/Reboot.....................................................................- 89 -
3.7.2 Upgrade ................................................................................- 90 -
3.7.3 System Log...........................................................................- 91 -
3.7.4 Password ..............................................................................- 92 -
3.7.5 Time Zone.............................................................................- 94 -
3.7.6 Logout...................................................................................- 95 -
3.8 Diagnostic........................................................................................- 95 -
3.8.1 Ping.......................................................................................- 95 -
3.8.2 ATM Loopback......................................................................- 96 -
3.8.3 ADSL ....................................................................................- 97 -
3.8.4 Diagnostic Test .....................................................................- 97 -
- 2 -
1 Introduction
The CWR300ND is an ADSL access device that supports multiple line modes. It
provides one 10/100Base-T Ethernet interface at the user end. The device
provides high-speed ADSL broadband connection to the Internet or Intranet for
high-end users, such as net cafes and office users. The device provides high
performance access to the Internet, downlink up to 24 Mbps and uplink up to 1
Mbps.
The device supports WLAN access. It can connect to the Internet through a WLAN
AP or WLAN device. It complies with IEEE 802.11, 802.11b/g/n specifications, WEP,
WPA, and WPA2 security specifications.
1.1 Packing List
1 x CWR300ND
1 x external splitter
1 x power adapter
2 x telephone cables (RJ11)
1 x Ethernet cable (RJ45)
1 x CD
1 x WARRANTY CARD
1.2 Safety Precautions
Follow the following instructions to prevent the device from risks and damage
caused by fire or electric power:
Use volume labels to mark the type of power.
Use the power adapter packed within the device package.
Pay attention to the power load of the outlet or prolonged lines. An
overburden power outlet or damaged lines and plugs may cause electric
shock or fire accident. Check the power cords regularly. If you find any
damage, replace it at once.
- 3 -
Proper space left for heat dissipation is necessary to avoid damage caused
by overheating to the device. The long and thin holes on the device are
designed for heat dissipation to ensure that the device works normally. Do
not cover these heat dissipation holes.
Do not put this device close to a place where a heat source exists or high
temperature occurs. Avoid the device from direct sunshine.
Do not put this device close to a place where it is over damp or watery. Do
not spill any fluid on this device.
Do not connect this device to any PCs or electronic products, unless our
customer engineer or your broadband provider instructs you to do this,
because any wrong connection may cause power or fire risk.
Do not place this device on an unstable surface or support.
1.3 LEDs and Interfaces
Front Panel
The following table describes the LEDs of the device:
LED Color Status Description
Power
ADSL Green
Green
Red On The device is self-testing or self-testing is
On The device is powered on and the
initialization is normal.
Off The power is off.
failed.
Slow
Blinks
Fast
Blinks
On The device is connected to the physical layer
No signal is detected.
The device is handshaking with the physical
layer of the office.
of the office.
- 4 -
LED Color Status Description
Internet
LAN4-1 Green
WLAN Green
WPS Green
Green
Red On The Internet connection fails after successful
On The Internet connection is normal in the
routing mode (for example: PPP dial-up is
successful), and no Internet data is being
transmitted.
Blinks Internet data is being transmitted in the
routing mode.
Off The device is in bridged mode.
synchronization in the routing mode (for
example: PPP dial-up is failed).
On The LAN connection is normal.
Blinks Data is being transmitted through the LAN
interface, or the Internet data is being
transmitted in bridged mode.
Off The LAN connection is not established.
On The WLAN connection has been activated.
Blinks Data is being transmitted through the WLAN
interface.
Off The WLAN connection is not activated.
Blinks WPS is activated and the device is waiting
for negotiation with the clients.
Off WPS is not activated.
Rear Panel
- 5 -
The following table describes the interfaces of the device:
Interface/Button Description
Press the button silently less than 1s to enable
WLAN function.
WPS/WLAN
ADSL
LAN4/3/2/1
Power
Power switch, power on or off the device.
Reset
Press the button for more than 5s to enable WPS
function.
If you press the button between 1s and 5s, no function
takes effect.
RJ-11 interface, for connecting to the ADSL interface or
a splitter through a telephone cable.
RJ-45 interface, for connecting to the Ethernet interface
of a PC or the Ethernet device through an Ethernet
cable.
Power interface for connecting to the power adapter of
12 V DC ,1A.
Reset to the factory defaults. To restore factory defaults,
keep the device powered on and insert a needle into the
hole for 3 to 6 seconds and then release.The device is
reset to the factory default configuration.
1.4 System Requirements
Recommended system requirements are as follows:
A 10/100 base-T Ethernet card is installed on your PC
A hub or Switch. (connected to several PCs through one of Ethernet
interfaces on the device)
Operating system: Windows 98SE, Windows 2000, Windows ME, Windows
XP
Internet Explorer V5.0 or higher, Netscape V4.0 or higher, or Firefox 1.5 or
higher
- 6 -
1.5 Features
The device supports the following features:
Various line modes
External PPPoE dial-up access
Internal PPPoE/PPPoA dial-up access
1483Briged/1483Routed/MER/IPoA access
Multiple PVCs (up to eight) and these PVCs can be isolated from each other
A single PVC with multiple sessions
Multiple PVCs with multiple sessions
802.1Q and 802.1P protocol
DHCP server
NAPT
Static route
Firmware upgrading through Web, TFTP, or FTP
Resetting to the factory defaults through Reset button or Web
DNS
Virtual server
DMZ
Two-level passwords and usernames
Web interface
Telnet CLI
System status display
PPP session PAP/CHAP
IP filter
IP quality of service (QoS)
Remote access control
Line connection status test
Remote managing through Telnet or HTTP
Backup and restoration of configuration file
Ethernet interface supporting crossover detection, auto-correction, and
polarity correction
Universal plug and play (UPnP)
- 7 -
2 Hardware Installation
Step 1 Connect the ADSL interface of the device and the Modem interface of
the splitter through a telephone cable. Connect the phone to the Phone
interface of the splitter through a cable. Connect the incoming line to the
Line interface of the splitter.
The splitter has three interfaces:
Line: Connect to a wall phone jack (RJ-11 jack).
Modem: Connect to the ADSL jack of the device.
Phone: Connect to a telephone set.
Step 2 Connect the LAN interface of the device to the network card of the PC
through an Ethernet cable (MDI/MDIX).
Note:
Use twisted-pair cables to connect with the hub or switch.
Step 3 Plug one end of the power adapter to the wall outlet and connect the
other end to the Power interface of the device.
Connection 1
Figure 1 shows the application diagram for the connection of the router, PC, splitter
and the telephone sets, when no telephone set is placed before the splitter.
- 8 -
Figure 1 Connection diagram (Without connecting telephone sets before the splitter)
Connection 2
Figure 2 shows the connection when the splitter is installed close to the router.
Figure 2 Connection diagram (Connecting a telephone set before the splitter)
- 9 -
Note:
When connection 2 is used, the filter must be installed close to the telephone
cable. See Figure2. Do not use the splitter to replace the filter.
Installing a telephone directly before the splitter may lead to failure of connection
between the device and the central office, or failure of Internet access, or slow
connection speed. If you really need to add a telephone set before the splitter, you
must add a microfilter before a telephone set. Do not connect several telephones
before the splitter or connect several telephones with the microfilter.
- 10 -
3 Web Configuration
This chapter describes how to configure the router by using the Web-based
configuration utility.
3.1 Access the Router
The following is the detailed description of accesing the router for the first time.
Step 1 Open the Internet Explorer (IE) browser and enter http://192.168.1.1
Step 2 In the Login page that is displayed, enter the username and password.
The username and password of the super user are admin and admin.
The username and password of the common user are user and user.
If you log in as a super user, the page shown in the following figure appears. You
can check, configure and modify all the settings.
.
- 11 -
When you log in as a common user, you can check the status of the router, but can
not configure the most of the settings.
Note:
In the Web configuration page, you can click Apply Changes to save the
settings temporarily. If you want to save the settings of this page permanently,
click Save of Attention that appears at the bottom of the Web page after the
configuration.
3.2 Wizard
When subscribing to a broadband service, you should be aware of the method by
which you are connected to the Internet. Your physical WAN device can be either
PPP, ADSL, or both. The technical information about the properties of your Internet
connection is provided by your Internet Service Provider (ISP). For example, your
ISP should inform you whether you are connected to the Internet using a static or
dynamic IP address, and the protocol that you use to communicate on the Internet.
The Wizard page guides fast and accurate configuration of the Internet connection
and other important parameters. The following sections describe these various
configuration parameters. Whether you configure these parameters or use the
default ones, click NEXT to enable your Internet connection.
- 12 -
In the navigation bar, choose Wizard. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
You may change the password by entering a new one, or enter the current
password and then click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure appears. In
this page, you can set the system time and Network Time Protocol (NTP) server.
- 13 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field
You can disable or enable NTP function. You have to
State
Server IP Enter the IP address of the specified time server manually.
Interval
Time Zone Choose the time zone of your country.
GMT time It displays the Greenwich mean time.
After finishing the configuration, click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
enable it if you want to configure the parameters in this
page.
Set the interval that the router obtains the time from the
time server and verifies it with the server.
Description
- 14 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field
Country Select the Country from the drop-down list.
Select the ISP according to the country from the
ISP
Protocol
Connection
Type
VPI/VCI
User name The correct user name that your ISP provides to you.
Password The correct password that your ISP provides to you.
After finishing the configuration, click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
drop-down list. If you do not find the ISP that matches
the country, you can select Others.
Select the WAN connection type. You can select from
the drop-down list.
You can select LLC or VC-Mux.
VPI:Virtual path between two points in an ATM
network. Its valid value range is from 0 to 255.
VCI: The virtual channel between two points in an
ATM network, ranging from 32 to 65535 (0 to 31 is
reserved for local management of ATM traffic).
Description
- 15 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field
WLAN
Interface
Band
SSID
Encryption
You can choose Enable or Disable. By default, WAN
interface is enabled.
You need to enable WAN interface, and then you can
set the parameters in this page.
Choose the working mode of the router. You can choose
24 GHz(B), 24 GHz(G), 24 GHz(B+G), 24 GHz(N), 24
GHz(G+N) or 24 GHz(B+G+N).
The service set identification (SSID) is a unique name to
identify the router in the wireless LAN. Wireless stations
associating to the router must have the same SSID.
Enter a descriptive name that is used when the wireless
client connecting to the router.
Configure the wireless encryption mode. You can
choose None, WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA (AES), WPA2
(AES), WPA2 (TKIP) or WPA2 Mixed.
Wired equivalent privacy (WEP) encrypts data
Description
- 16 -
Field
frames before transmitting over the wireless
network.
Wi-Fi protected access (WPA) is a subset of the
IEEE802.11i security specification draft.
WPA2 Mixed is the collection of WPA and WPA2
encryption modes. The wireless client establishes
the connection between the router through WPA or
WPA2.
Key differences between WPA and WEP are user
authentication and improved data encryption.
After finishing the configuration, click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
Description
- 17 -
Note:
If the WAN connection type is set to PPPoA, the parameters of the WAN
connection type are the same as those of PPPoE. For the parameters in these
pages, refer to the parameter description of PPPoE.
1483 Bridged
In the WAN Interface Setup page, set the WAN connection type to 1483 Bridged.
The page shown in the following figure appears.
Click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure appears.
- 18 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field
WLAN
Interface
Band
SSID
Encryption
You can choose Enable or Disable. By default, WAN
interface is enabled.
You need to enable WAN interface, and then you can
set the parameters in this page.
Choose the working mode of the router. You can choose
24 GHz(B), 24 GHz(G), 24 GHz(B+G), 24 GHz(N), 24
GHz(G+N) or 24 GHz(B+G+N).
The service set identification (SSID) is a unique name to
identify the router in the wireless LAN. Wireless stations
associating to the router must have the same SSID.
Enter a descriptive name that is used when the wireless
client connecting to the router.
Configure the wireless encryption mode. You can
choose None, WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA (AES), WPA2
(AES), WPA2 (TKIP), or WPA2 Mixed.
Wired equivalent privacy (WEP) encrypts data
Description
- 19 -
Field
frames before transmitting over the wireless
network.
Wi-Fi protected access (WPA) is a subset of the
IEEE802.11i security specification draft.
WPA2 Mixed is the collection of WPA and WPA2
encryption modes. The wireless client establishes
the connection between the router through WPA or
WPA2.
Key differences between WPA and WEP are user
authentication and improved data encryption.
After finishing the configuration, click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
Description
1483 MER: DHCP
In the WAN Interface Setup page, set the WAN connection type to be 1483 MER:
DHCP. The page shown in the following figure appears.
- 20 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field Description
Country Select the Country from the drop-down list.
Select the ISP according to the country from the
ISP
Protocol
drop-down list. If you do not find the ISP that matches
the country, you can select Others
Select the WAN connection type. You can select from
the drop-down list.
- 21 -
Connection
Type
VPI/VCI
Click NEXT, the page shown in the following figure appears.
You can select LLC or VC-Mux.
VPI: Virtual path between two points in an ATM
network. Its valid value range is from 0 to 255.
VCI: The virtual channel between two points in an
ATM network, ranging from 32 to 65535 (0 to 31 is
reserved for local management of ATM traffic).
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
- 22 -
Field
You can choose Enable or Disable. By default, WAN
WLAN
Interface
Band
SSID
Encryption
After finishing the configuration, click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
interface is enabled.
You need to enable WAN interface, and then you can
set the parameters in this page.
Choose the working mode of the router. You can choose
24 GHz(B), 24 GHz(G), 24 GHz(B+G), 24 GHz(N), 24
GHz(G+N) or 24 GHz(B+G+N).
The service set identification (SSID) is a unique name to
identify the router in the wireless LAN. Wireless stations
associating to the router must have the same SSID.
Enter a descriptive name that is used when the wireless
client connecting to the router.
Configure the wireless encryption mode. You can
choose None, WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA (AES), WPA2
(AES), WPA2 (TKIP), or WPA2 Mixed.
Wired equivalent privacy (WEP) encrypts data
frames before transmitting over the wireless
network.
Wi-Fi protected access (WPA) is a subset of the
IEEE802.11i security specification draft.
WPA2 Mixed is the collection of WPA and WPA2
encryption modes. The wireless client establishes
the connection between the router through WPA or
WPA2.
Key differences between WPA and WEP are user
authentication and improved data encryption.
Description
- 23 -
1483 Routed/1483 MER: Static IP
- 24 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field Description
Country Select the Country from the drop-down list.
Select the ISP according to the country from the
ISP
Protocol
drop-down list. If you do not find the ISP that matches
the country, you can select Others
Select the WAN connection type. You can select from
the drop-down list.
- 25 -
Connection
Type
VPI/VCI
WAN IP
Address
Subnet Mask
Default
Gateway
Primary DNS
Server
Click NEXT, the following page appears.
You can select LLC or VC-Mux.
VPI: Virtual path between two points in an ATM
network. Its valid value range is from 0 to 255.
VCI: The virtual channel between two points in an
ATM network, ranging from 32 to 65535 (0 to 31 is
reserved for local management of ATM traffic).
Enter the IP address of the WAN interface provided by
your ISP.
Enter the subnet mask concerned to the IP address of
the WAN interface provided by your ISP.
Enter the default gateway of the WAN interface provided
by your ISP.
Enter the primary DNS server of the WAN interface
provided by your ISP.
- 26 -
The following table describes the parameters of this page:
Field
WLAN
Interface
Band
SSID
Encryption
You can choose Enable or Disable. By default, WAN
interface is enabled.
You need to enable WAN interface, and then you can
set the parameters in this page.
Choose the working mode of the router. You can choose
24 GHz(B), 24 GHz(G), 24 GHz(B+G), 24 GHz(N), 24
GHz(G+N) or 24 GHz(B+G+N).
The service set identification (SSID) is a unique name to
identify the router in the wireless LAN. Wireless stations
associating to the router must have the same SSID.
Enter a descriptive name that is used when the wireless
client connecting to the router.
Configure the wireless encryption mode. You can
choose None, WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA (AES), WPA2
(AES), WPA2 (TKIP), or WPA2 Mixed.
Wired equivalent privacy (WEP) encrypts data
frames before transmitting over the wireless
Description
- 27 -
Field
network.
Wi-Fi protected access (WPA) is a subset of the
IEEE802.11i security specification draft.
WPA2 Mixed is the collection of WPA and WPA2
encryption modes. The wireless client establishes
the connection between the router through WPA or
WPA2.
Key differences between WPA and WEP are user
authentication and improved data encryption.
After finishing the configuration, click NEXT. The page shown in the following figure
appears.
Description
- 28 -
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