Ip Setup; Management Ip Addresses - ZyXEL Communications ES-2024A User Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for ES-2024A:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

ES-2024A User's Guide
Table 10 Switch Setup (continued)
LABEL
Priority Queue Assignment
IEEE 802.1p defines up to eight separate traffic types by inserting a tag into a MAC-layer frame that
contains bits to define class of service. Frames without an explicit priority tag are given the default
priority of the ingress port. Use the next two fields to configure the priority level-to-physical queue
mapping.
The switch has four physical queues that you can map to the 8 priority levels. On the switch, traffic
assigned to higher index queues gets through faster while traffic in lower index queues is dropped if the
network is congested.
Priority Level (The following descriptions are based on the traffic types defined in the IEEE 802.1d
standard (which incorporates the 802.1p).
Level 7
Level 6
Level 5
Level 4
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1
Level 0
Apply
Cancel

7.7 IP Setup

Use the IP Setup screen to configure the default gateway device, the default domain name
server and add switch IP address.

7.7.1 Management IP Addresses

The switch needs an IP address for it to be managed over the network. The factory default IP
address is 192.168.1.1. The subnet mask specifies the network number portion of an IP
address. The factory default subnet mask is 255.255.255.0.
You can configure up to 128 IP addresses which are used to access and manage the switch
from the ports belonging to the pre-defined VLAN(s).
Note: You must configure a VLAN first.
60
DESCRIPTION
Typically used for network control traffic such as router configuration messages.
Typically used for voice traffic that is especially sensitive to jitter (jitter is the
variations in delay).
Typically used for video that consumes high bandwidth and is sensitive to jitter.
Typically used for controlled load, latency-sensitive traffic such as SNA (Systems
Network Architecture) transactions.
Typically used for "excellent effort" or better than best effort and would include
important business traffic that can tolerate some delay.
This is for "spare bandwidth".
This is typically used for non-critical "background" traffic such as bulk transfers that
are allowed but that should not affect other applications and users.
Typically used for best-effort traffic.
Click Apply to save the settings.
Click Cancel to reset the fields to your previous configuration.
Chapter 7 Basic Setting

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents