Ubee DVW326 User Manual page 78

Advanced wireless voice gateway
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WPA Pre-Shared Key
Show Key
RADIUS Server
RADIUS Port
RADIUS Key
Group Key Rotation Interval
WPA/WPA2 Re-auth Interval
WEP Encryption
Shared Key Authentication
802.1x Authentication
Network Key 1-4
Current Network Key
Passphrase
Ubee DVW326 Advanced Wireless Voice Gateway Subscriber User Guide • March 2014
Label
Displays (checked) or hides (unchecked) the WPA key. The
encryption mechanisms for WPA and WPA-PSK are the
same, except that WPA-PSK uses a simple common
password instead of user-specific credentials.
Displays the pre-shared key when checked. The pre-shared
key for the DVW326 is the last 13 characters of the device's
serial number.
Defines the IP address of the RADIUS server, if used.
Defines a RADIUS port number when WPA or 802.1x network
authentication is selected.
Defines the RADIUS Key when WPA or 802.1x network
authentication is selected.
Allows the device to generate the best possible random
group key and update all the key-management capable
stations periodically. This field is set to 0 by default.
Sends a new group key to all clients at the specified interval
for a wireless router (if using WPA-PSK key management) or
RADIUS server (if using WPA key management). The re-
keying process is the WPA equivalent of automatically
changing the WEP key for a wireless access point and all
stations in the WLAN on a periodic basis. Setting the WPA
Group Key Update Timer is also supported in WPA-PSK
mode.
Enables or disables WEP encryption. If you do not have
wireless clients that can use WPA or WPA2, you can use WEP
key encrypting. A higher bit key offers better security. WEP
encryption scrambles the data transmitted between the wireless
stations and the DVW326 to keep network communications
private. It encrypts unicast and multicast communications in a
network. Both the wireless stations and the DVW326 must use
the same WEP key. Data Encryption can be set to WEP 128-
bit, 64-bit, or Disable.
Defines Shared Key Authentication as optional or required.
Shared Key is an authentication method used by wireless
LANs, which follow the IEEE 802.11 standard. Wireless
devices authenticate each other by using a secret key that is
kept by both devices.
Enables or disables 802.1x to authenticate wireless clients.
Pre-defines up to 4 keys for 64-bit or 128-bit (64-bit keys
require 10 hexadecimal digits) (128-bit key require 26
hexadecimal digits).
Selects one of the four pre-defined keys as the current
network key.
Sets the WEP encryption key by entering a word or group of
printable characters in the Passphrase box and clicking
Generate WEP keys. These characters are case sensitive.
Using the Primary Network Option
Description
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