Planet WGSW-14020 User Manual

10/100/1000mbps managed gigabit ethernet switch

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10/100/1000Mbps
Managed Gigabit Ethernet Switch
WGSW-14020
User's Manual

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Table of Contents
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Summary of Contents for Planet WGSW-14020

  • Page 1 10/100/1000Mbps Managed Gigabit Ethernet Switch WGSW-14020 User’s Manual...
  • Page 2 Disclaimer PLANET Technology does not warrant that the hardware will work properly in all environments and applications, and makes no warranty and representation, either implied or expressed, with respect to the quality, performance, merchantability, or fitness for a particular purpose.
  • Page 3: Table Of Contents

    TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION ....................1 1.1 C ......................... 1 HECKLIST 1.2 A ......................1 BOUT THE WITCH 1.3 F .......................... 1 EATURES 1.4 S ......................... 2 PECIFICATIONS CHAPTER 2 HARDWARE INSTALLATION................3 2.1 F ........................3 RONT ANEL 2.2 R ........................
  • Page 4: Chapter 1 Introduction

    The available modules including 10/100/1000Base-T, 1000Base-SX and 1000Base-LX. It is ideal for backbone connection to other workgroup products. WGSW-14020 provide switch stacking function to manage up to 8 switches by single IP address. Through its proprietary management bus using standard RJ-45 cable, the distance between stacked switches can be up to 800m.
  • Page 5: Specifications

    Support SNMP MIB II (RFC 1213), Bridge MIB (RFC 1493) and enterprise private MIB w Port Trunking Support w Port Mirroring for dedicated ports monitoring w MDI/MDI-X auto-detection 1.4 Specifications Model WGSW-14020 Network Ports 14 x RJ-45, 10/100/1000Base-T Stack Ports 2 x RJ-45 Module slot...
  • Page 6: Chapter 2 Hardware Installation

    MASTER SWITCH ID STATUS RESET 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 WGSW-14020 WGSW-14020 Switch front panel LED indicators Green On: Power on MASTER Green When this LED steady green, it means the device acts competent leading role(Master), an indispensable essential for system administrator to control and monitor whole system.
  • Page 7 Stack ports There are two stack ports on the front panel. One is IN and the other is OUT. When stacked, the IN port should connect to the other switch’s OUT port and the OUT port should connect to other switch’s IN out. You can just use normal Cat 5 or better cable with RJ-45 connector to stack.
  • Page 8: Rear Panel

    CONSOLE 9600, 8, N, 1 50-60Hz WGSW-14020 Switch front panel Slide-in slots The two slide-in slots on the rear panel are reserved for following optional gigabit modules. They can provide fat pipes for up linking to backbone or connecting to servers.
  • Page 9: Hardware Installation

    You can use a normal RS-232 cable and connect to the console port on the device. After the connection, you can run any terminal emulation program (Hyper Terminal, Winterm, Telix, and so on) to enter the startup screen of the device. Power Receptacle For compatibility with electric service in most areas of the world, the switch’s power supply automatically adjusts to line power in the range 100-240 VAC and 50-60 Hz.
  • Page 10 Rack-mount Installation The switch may standalone, or may be mounted in a standard 19-inch equipment rack. Rack mounting produces an orderly installation when you have a number of related network devices. The switch is supplied with rack mounting brackets and screws. These are used for rack mounting the unit.
  • Page 11: Stack Installation

    2.4 Stack Installation There are two RJ-45 ports on the front panel for proprietary management stack. Only straight-through UTP/STP cable can be used. Plug one end of the cable in the “IN” port and the other end to the ”OUT” port of next device.
  • Page 12: Chapter 3 Console And Telnet Management

    CHAPTER 3. CONSOLE AND TELNET MANAGEMENT 3.1 Connect To PC by RS-232 serial Cable NOTE: If you have stacked several switches together, make sure you are working on Master switch (switch with least Switch ID). Other slave switches’ management interface allows only viewing the configuration by “guest” account. To configure the system, connect the provided serial cable to a COM port on a PC or notebook computer and to serial (console) port of the device.
  • Page 13: Telnet

    “guest”: guest can view the whole switch information only, moreover, access to Web management interface is not allowed. The default password is “guest”. Main menu appears after successfully login WGSW-14020. To enter any of the submenus, simply type the number after the command prompt. When select further options, you may be asked for the device ID which you want to configure.
  • Page 14: Chapter 4. Web Management

    CHAPTER 4. WEB MANAGEMENT 4.1 Start A Web Browser Session The Web Interface of WGSW-14020 is coded by Java Applet and running on the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) version 1.3.1 platform. You should configure the management station with an IP address and subnet mask compatible with WGSW-14020 for accessing it.
  • Page 15: Stack Main Page

    4.2 Stack Main Page The stack main page contains two options: Topology This screen displays one or more switches of the management stack. Basic properties can be read by the screen, including Hardware characteristic, Device Name, Up time, Master and Slave relationship. Also, by mouse clicking listed items can enter for further operation.
  • Page 16: Switch Main Page

    4.3 Switch Main Page Switch Main Page appears after you click one of the switch(es) on the topology page. There are 8 function button listed on top: Home, Save, Default, Reboot, Ping, Telnet, Contact, and Upgrade. <Home> Shortcut to back to stack home page <Save>...
  • Page 17 <Reboot> You can specify switch(es) and reboot it. Warm Boot Reboot the switch in a short time. Cold Boot Boot the switch and with fully Power On Self Test (POST). The system is completely checked but spends much time. <Ping> The Ping is a commonly used tool to detect the remote host or IP address exists or not.
  • Page 18 WEB Upload Select Device ID and “WEB Upload” radio button then click OK Specify the file path by clicking Browse button and click Start TFTP Download Select Device ID and “TFTP Download” radio button then click Enter the TFTP server’s IP address in Server IP field Enter file name in File Name field Click Start button to download the code and system update with it automatically Local File Transfer...
  • Page 19: Device Configuration

    Device The shortcut to go to another member switch in the management stack 4.4 Device Configuration Panel Display Slide-in Modules MASTER LED SWITCH ID STATUS LED RJ-45 ports Port Status Port Link Down (Black): Port is not connected or attached device shuts down Port Link Up (Green): Port links up and working correctly Port Link Up (Amber):...
  • Page 20: Topology Info

    Device Information Name: Naming the system (optional) Contact : Who the System administrator is (optional) Location: Where the management stack locates (optional) NOTE: The Network Configuration and Device Information of Master Device in the management stack will become system parameters automatically. 4.5 Topology Info This page displays information about the switch(es), such as Device ID, Hardware version, Boot-Up version, POST version, Runtime version (Firmware version), JAVA...
  • Page 21 Configuration Port attributes can be setup in this page. Setup Port Attributes Click the “Name” column of the port. Enter a name for identification, like ‘Richard’; and press Enter Leave the “Admin” column ‘Enable’ value to make the port to be in operation or ’Disable’...
  • Page 22 Duplicate Port Attributes Click “Duplicate” button, the dialogue screen appears. Select Source Port (for example Port 1) Select Target Port, click for select all (for example Port 2, 3, 4, 5) Select the port attributes you want to duplicate Click to submit values Click Apply button to apply settings As the following result, port 1 is duplicated to port 2, 3, 4, 5 accompany with...
  • Page 23 Also accomplished by simply mouse right-click the port on the ‘Panel Display’ NOTE: then select ‘Copy Setting’ to duplicate port properties and select ’Past Setting’ when point at destination port Statistic Ether Like Frame Types RX Bytes Number of bytes received in good and bad frames RX Frames Number of good and bad packets received RX crc_err...
  • Page 24: Security

    4.7 Security This is reserved for future use. 4.8 SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is a communication protocol for managing devices on a network. It is commonly used for network administrators to communicate with multiple devices (hub, switch, router ……) for configuring and monitoring while convenient for troubleshooting but no miscellaneous platform consideration.
  • Page 25 Click Modify button to update the entry Trap Manager Trap Manager specifies the Network Management Stations (NMS) that will receive trap messages from the SNMP agent and can up to 5 entries. A Trap Manager entry with Aging Time “0” will never expire; and Aging Time “10” will expire when 10 minutes is up and no trap messages can corresponding entry receive.
  • Page 26: Vlan

    Trap Filtering Check the “Enable” boxes by mouse clicking to receive a notice when corresponding event occurs. 4.9 VLAN The VLAN is a group of ports that may spread around the network but communicate as though they belong to one subnet. By using IEEE802.1Q compliant VLAN, all ports can be reorganized into separate broadcast domains for security reasons and reduce bandwidth occupation instead of using routers to divide whole network into subnets.
  • Page 27 To remove a VLAN group Select a VLAN group you want to remove from the “Current” list Click Remove>> button to remove it Attention: If a removed port is no longer belonged to any other group, it is temporarily disabled because no one can communicate with it. If one port’s PVID is equal to this VLAN ID, removing this VLAN group will not allow until you change it.
  • Page 28: Port Aggregation

    VLAN Port Configuration When the VLAN-enabled switch receives an untagged packet, the packet will be sent to the port’s default VLAN according to the PVID (port VLAN ID) of the receiving port. To change the PVID Double click the “PVID” column of a port Input a new VLAN ID (1~255) Press “Enter”...
  • Page 29: Sta

    The ports at both ends of a Port Aggregation connection must be configured as Aggregation Ports. The ports at both ends of a Port Aggregation connection must have the same port properties, including Speed, Duplex mode. All the ports of a Port Aggregation must be treated as an integer when added to/deleted from a VLAN.
  • Page 30 Information This screen displays summaries of STA information. For further configuration, please go to next section. Parameter Description STA State Shows if STA is enabled on the switch and participated an STA compliant network Designated Root The unique Bridge Identifier of the Bridge recorded as the Root in the Configuration BPDUs transmitted by the Designated Bridge for the segment to which the port is attached Bridged ID...
  • Page 31 Root Path Cost The cost of the path to the root device as seen from this bridge Configuration Changes The total number of topology changes detected by this bridge since the management entity was last reset or initialized Last Topology Change The time (in a second) since the last time a topology change was detected by the bridge entity Configuration Parameter...
  • Page 32: Address Table

    STA Port Configuration Parameters Description Port Port number of the port Priority The value of the priority field which is contained in the first (in network byte order) octet of the (2 octet long) Port ID Path Cost The contribution of this port to the path cost of paths towards the spanning tree root, which include this port.
  • Page 33: Mirror

    Configuration Dynamic Address Counts Number of MAC addresses automatically learned by the current clustering switch Static Address Counts Number of MAC addresses manually added to the current clustering switch To add a static address Click the combo box and select a port, then the MAC address table of the port appears Fill in configuration value (VLAN ID, MAC address), then click “<<Add”...
  • Page 34: Chapter 5. Troubeshooting

    CHAPTER 5. TROUBESHOOTING This chapter contains information to help you solve problems. If WGSW-14020 is not functioning properly, make sure the Switch was set up according to instructions in this manual. The port is connected but the port LED is not lit...
  • Page 35: Switch ' Srj-45 Pin Assignments

    APPENDIX A A.1 Switch‘s RJ-45 Pin Assignments 1000Mbps, 1000Base T Contact MDI-X BI_DA+ BI_DB+ BI_DA- BI_DB- BI_DB+ BI_DA+ BI_DC+ BI_DD+ BI_DC- BI_DD- BI_DB- BI_DA- BI_DD+ BI_DC+ BI_DD- BI_DC- Implicit implementation of the crossover function within a twisted-pair cable, or at a wiring panel, while not expressly forbidden, is beyond the scope of this standard.
  • Page 36: Cable Pin Assignment

    A.3 RJ-45 cable pin assignment EM-GSW14V1 - 33 -...

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