ZyXEL Communications OLT-1308 User Manual

ZyXEL Communications OLT-1308 User Manual

Optical line terminal olt-1308 series
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OLT-1308 Series
Optical Line Terminal
User's Guide
Version 3.60
1/2007
Edition 1
www.zyxel.com

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Summary of Contents for ZyXEL Communications OLT-1308

  • Page 1 OLT-1308 Series Optical Line Terminal User’s Guide Version 3.60 1/2007 Edition 1 www.zyxel.com...
  • Page 3: About This User's Guide

    Help us help you. Send all User Guide-related comments, questions or suggestions for improvement to the following address, or use e-mail instead. Thank you! The Technical Writing Team, ZyXEL Communications Corp., 6 Innovation Road II, Science-Based Industrial Park, Hsinchu, 300, Taiwan. E-mail: techwriters@zyxel.com.tw OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 4: Document Conventions

    Syntax Conventions • The OLT-1308 and OLT-1308H may be referred to as the “OLT”, the “device” or the “system” in this User’s Guide. • Product labels, screen names, field labels and field choices are all in bold font.
  • Page 5 Document Conventions Icons Used in Figures Figures in this User’s Guide may use the following generic icons. The OLT icon is not an exact representation of your device. Computer Server Switch Router Internet Central Office/ISP OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 6: Safety Warnings

    • Do not use the device outside, and make sure all the connections are indoors. There is a remote risk of electric shock from lightning. • Do NOT obstruct the device ventilation slots, as insufficient airflow may harm your device. This product is recyclable. Dispose of it properly. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 7 Safety Warnings OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 8 Safety Warnings OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 9: Table Of Contents

    VLAN Profile ..........................163 Priority Profile .......................... 173 Static MAC Forward Setup ...................... 179 Destination Filter ........................181 Port Authentication ........................185 IP and Management ......................189 Static Route ..........................191 Maintenance ..........................193 Access Control ........................201 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 10 Cluster Management ....................... 219 MAC Table ..........................225 ARP Table ..........................229 IGMP Table ..........................231 Commands and Troubleshooting ..................233 Introducing the Commands ..................... 235 Command Examples ....................... 271 Troubleshooting ........................287 Appendix and Index ......................295 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 11: Table Of Contents

    Chapter 3 Hardware Overview......................... 39 3.1 Hardware Connection ......................39 3.1.1 Fiber Connections ...................... 40 3.1.2 Gigabit Ethernet Ports ....................40 3.1.3 Mini-GBIC Slots ......................40 3.1.4 Console Port ......................41 3.1.5 Power Connector ....................... 42 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 12 7.6 IP Setup ..........................79 7.6.1 Management IP Address .................... 79 7.7 Port Setup ........................... 82 7.8 IGMP Snooping ........................85 7.9 DBA (Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation) ................. 85 7.10 EPON Setup ........................85 7.10.1 Profile Setup ......................87 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 13 Chapter 11 Spanning Tree Protocol......................111 11.1 STP/RSTP Overview .......................111 11.1.1 STP Terminology ....................111 11.1.2 How STP Works .....................112 11.1.3 STP Port States .......................112 11.2 STP Status ........................112 11.3 Configure STP .........................114 Chapter 12 Bandwidth Control........................ 117 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 14 18.1 Classifier Overview ......................133 18.2 Configuring a Classifier ....................133 18.3 Classifier Example ......................136 Chapter 19 Policy ............................ 139 19.1 Policy Overview ......................139 19.1.1 DiffServ ........................139 19.1.2 DSCP and Per-Hop Behavior ................. 139 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 15 22.2.1 Example: Classification Filter Profile ..............161 Chapter 23 VLAN Profile .......................... 163 23.1 Introduction to IEEE 802.1Q Tagged VLANs ..............163 23.1.1 Forwarding Tagged and Untagged Frames ............163 23.2 VLAN Stacking ......................... 164 23.2.1 VLAN Stacking Example ..................164 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 16 27.2.1 Activating IEEE 802.1x Security ................186 27.2.2 Configuring RADIUS Server Settings ..............187 Part V: IP and Management..............189 Chapter 28 Static Route ........................... 191 28.1 Configuring Static Route ....................191 Chapter 29 Maintenance .......................... 193 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 17 30.9.2 Netscape Navigator Warning Messages ..............208 30.9.3 The Main Screen ....................209 30.10 Service Access Control ....................210 30.11 Remote Management ....................211 Chapter 31 Diagnostic..........................213 31.1 Diagnostic ........................213 31.2 Saving Logs ........................214 Chapter 32 Syslog ............................ 215 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 18 37.2.2 The Console Port ....................236 37.2.3 Telnet ........................237 37.2.4 SSH ........................237 37.3 The Login Screen ......................238 37.4 Command Syntax Conventions ..................238 37.5 Changing the Password ....................238 37.6 Command Modes ......................238 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 19 38.7.2 Restoring Configuration ..................279 38.7.3 Resetting to the Factory Default ................279 38.8 no Command Examples ....................280 38.8.1 no port-access-authenticator .................. 280 38.8.2 no ssh ........................280 38.9 priority-profile Commands ....................281 38.10 onu Commands ......................282 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 20 39.2.1 Pop-up Windows, JavaScripts and Java Permissions ........... 288 39.3 Problems with the Password ................... 293 Part VII: Appendix and Index .............. 295 Appendix A Product Specifications ................. 297 Appendix B Legal Information..................299 Appendix C Customer Support ..................303 Index............................307 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 21: List Of Figures

    Figure 10 Transceiver Removal Example ....................41 Figure 11 Web Configurator: Login ......................46 Figure 12 Web Configurator: Home Screen (Status): OLT-1308 ............46 Figure 13 Change Administrator Login Password ................. 52 Figure 14 Resetting the Device: Via the Console Port ................53 Figure 15 Web Configurator: Logout Screen ..................
  • Page 22 Figure 72 VLAN Profile: Example 2 ..................... 171 Figure 73 VLAN Profile: Example 2: Classification Filter Profile ............171 Figure 74 Priority Profile: OLT-1308 ....................174 Figure 75 Priority Profile: OLT-1308H ....................176 Figure 76 Priority Profile: Example ...................... 178 Figure 77 Static MAC Forwarding Status ....................
  • Page 23 Figure 118 Example: Uploading Firmware to a Cluster Member Switch ..........221 Figure 119 Configuring Cluster Management ..................222 Figure 120 MAC Table Flowchart ......................226 Figure 121 MAC Table: OLT-1308 ....................... 226 Figure 122 MAC Table: OLT-1308H ....................227 Figure 123 ARP Table ......................... 230 Figure 124 IGMP Table ........................
  • Page 24 Figure 128 Pop-up Blocker Settings ..................... 290 Figure 129 Internet Options ........................291 Figure 130 Security Settings - Java Scripting ..................292 Figure 131 Security Settings - Java ...................... 292 Figure 132 Java (Sun) .......................... 293 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 25: List Of Tables

    List of Tables Table 1 LEDs ............................32 Table 2 Port Connection ........................39 Table 3 Navigation Panel Sub-links Overview: OLT-1308 ..............47 Table 4 Navigation Panel Sub-links Overview: OLT-1308H ..............48 Table 5 Web Configurator Screen Sub-links Details ................49 Table 6 Navigation Panel Links ......................
  • Page 26 Table 55 Single and Double Tagged 802.11Q Frame Format ............. 165 Table 56 802.1Q Frame ........................166 Table 57 EPON VLAN Profile Setup ....................167 Table 58 Priority Profile: OLT-1308 ...................... 174 Table 59 Priority Profile: OLT-1308H ....................176 Table 60 Common Ethernet Types Numbers ..................177 Table 61 Common Protocol Names and Numbers ................
  • Page 27 List of Tables Table 82 FTP Upload to Cluster member Example ................221 Table 83 Configuring Cluster Management ..................222 Table 84 MAC Table: OLT-1308 ......................227 Table 85 MAC Table: OLT-1308H ......................227 Table 86 ARP Table ..........................230 Table 87 IGMP Table ...........................
  • Page 28 List of Tables OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 29: Introduction

    Introduction Introducing the OLT (31) Hardware Installation and Connection (35) Hardware Overview (39)
  • Page 31: Introducing The Olt

    OLT. 1.1 Overview The OLT-1308 series is a manageable optical line terminal with eight fiber ports, eight Gigabit uplink interfaces, one 10/100Mbps Ethernet management port and a console port. The OLT- 1308 series is capable of providing network access to customers at distances up to 20km.
  • Page 32: Good Habits For Managing The Olt

    OLT. You could simply restore your last configuration. 1.4 LEDs The following figure shown the LED labels on the OLT. Figure 2 LEDs (OLT-1308H) Figure 3 LEDs (OLT-1308) The following table describes the LEDs. Table 1 LEDs COLOR...
  • Page 33 This port is not connected to an Ethernet device. Green The link to a 100 Mbps Ethernet network is up. Blinking The port is receiving or transmitting data. at 100 Mbps. This port is not connected to an Ethernet device. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 34 Chapter 1 Introducing the OLT OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 35: Hardware Installation And Connection

    2.2 Mounting the OLT on a Rack This section lists the rack mounting requirements and precautions and describes the installation steps. 2.2.1 Rack-mounted Installation Requirements • Two mounting brackets. • Eight M3 flat head screws and a #2 Philips screwdriver. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 36: Attaching The Mounting Brackets To The Olt

    1 Position a mounting bracket (that is already attached to the OLT) on one side of the rack, lining up the two screw holes on the bracket with the screw holes on the side of the rack. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 37: Figure 5 Mounting The Olt On A Rack

    2 Using a #2 Philips screwdriver, install the M5 flat head screws through the mounting bracket holes into the rack. 3 Repeat steps to attach the second mounting bracket on the other side of the rack. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 38 Chapter 2 Hardware Installation and Connection OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 39: Hardware Overview

    CONSOLE Only connect this port if you want to configure the OLT using the command line interface (CLI) via the console port. Note: On the OLT-1308, the CONSOLE port is on the rear panel. MGMT Connect to a computer using an RJ-45 Ethernet cable for local configuration of the OLT.
  • Page 40: Fiber Connections

    1000 Mbps only. Connect only Gigabit Ethernet devices to these ports. On the OLT-1308, there are four pairs of Gigabit Ethernet/mini-GBIC ports for switching. The mini-GBIC ports have priority over the Gigabit Ethernet ports. This means that if a mini-GBIC port and the corresponding Gigabit port are connected at the same time, the Gigabit Ethernet port will be disabled.
  • Page 41: Console Port

    2 Pull the transceiver out of the slot. Figure 10 Transceiver Removal Example 3.1.4 Console Port For local management using the CLI (Command Line Interface) commands, you can use a computer with terminal emulation software configured to the following parameters: OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 42: Power Connector

    Connect the male 9-pin end of the console cable to the console port of the OLT. Connect the female end to a serial port (COM1, COM2 or other COM port) of your computer. 3.1.5 Power Connector Make sure you are using the correct power source as shown on the panel. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 43: Basic Setup

    Basic Setup The Web Configurator (45) Initial Setup Example (55) System Status and Port Statistics (59) Basic Setting (73)
  • Page 45: The Web Configurator

    1 Connect your computer to the MGMT port and set your computer IP address to the same subnet as the out-of-band management IP address of the OLT. On the OLT-1308, you can also access the web configurator through a switch port.
  • Page 46: The Status Screen

    4.3 The Status Screen The Status screen is the first screen that displays when you access the web configurator. The following figure shows the navigating components of a web configurator screen. Figure 12 Web Configurator: Home Screen (Status): OLT-1308 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 47: Table 3 Navigation Panel Sub-Links Overview: Olt-1308

    Chapter 4 The Web Configurator In the navigation panel, click a main link to reveal a list of submenu links. Table 3 Navigation Panel Sub-links Overview: OLT-1308 ADVANCED ADVANCED BASIC SETTING APPLICATION: SWITCH APPLICATION: EPON ROUTING PROTOCOL MANAGEMENT OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 48: Table 4 Navigation Panel Sub-Links Overview: Olt-1308H

    Chapter 4 The Web Configurator Table 4 Navigation Panel Sub-links Overview: OLT-1308H ADVANCED BASIC SETTING MANAGEMENT APPLICATION OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 49: Table 5 Web Configurator Screen Sub-Links Details

    The following table lists the various web configurator screens within the sub-links. Table 5 Web Configurator Screen Sub-links Details BASIC SETTING ADVANCED APPLICATION ROUTING PROTOCOL MANAGEMENT System Info Switch Advance (OLT-1308 only): Static Routing Maintenance General Setup VLAN Remote Firmware Upgrade OLT Chip Reset...
  • Page 50: Table 6 Navigation Panel Links

    This link takes you to screens where you can configure the filter ports, create profiles and service settings for ONUs. Advanced Application: Switch Advance (OLT-1308 only) VLAN This link takes you to screens where you can configure port-based or 802.1Q VLAN (depending on what you configured in the Switch Setup menu).
  • Page 51: Change Your Password

    After you log in for the first time, it is recommended you change the default administrator password. Click Management > Access Control > Logins in the OLT-1308 or Advanced Application > Access Control > Logins in the OLT-1308H to display the following screen.
  • Page 52: Device Lockout

    9600bps with 8 data bit, no parity, one stop bit and flow control set to none. The password will also be reset to 1234 and the default out-of-band management IP address to 192.168.0.1. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 53: Logging Out Of The Web Configurator

    Click Logout in a screen to exit the web configurator. You have to log in with your password again after you log out. This is recommended after you finish a management session for security reasons. Figure 15 Web Configurator: Logout Screen OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 54: Help

    Chapter 4 The Web Configurator 4.7 Help The web configurator’s online help has descriptions of individual screens and some supplementary information. Click the Help link from a web configurator screen to view an online help description of that screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 55: Initial Setup Example

    1 For OLT-1308H: Connect Gigabit Ethernet port 1 on the OLT to a Gigabit port on a switch that has access to the Internet. For OLT-1308: Connect a switch port to a router/switch that has access to the Internet. On OLT-1308H, the Gigabit Ethernet port connects only at 1000 Mbps.
  • Page 56: Creating A Service Profile

    ONU. Select Active and enter a descriptive name in the ONU Name field (for example, “TestSetup”). 7 Select Port 1 and enter the MAC address of the ONU in the MAC Address field. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 57: Testing The Internet Connection

    Make sure the computer is set to use a dynamic IP address. 2 Open a web browser and enter any web site address (for example, www.zyxel.com). When the web site displays, you have successfully accessed the Internet through the PON. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 58 Chapter 5 Initial Setup Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 59: System Status And Port Statistics

    The home screen of the web configurator displays a port statistical summary with links to each port showing statistical details. 6.2 Port Status Summary To view the port statistics, click Status in any web configurator screen. The Status screen as shown next. Figure 17 Status: OLT-1308 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 60: Table 7 Status: Olt-1308

    Chapter 6 System Status and Port Statistics The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 7 Status: OLT-1308 LABEL DESCRIPTION System up Time This field shows how long the system has been running since the last time it was started.
  • Page 61: Figure 18 Status: Olt-1308H

    This field shows the number of received frames on this port. Errors This field shows the number of packets with errors on this port. Up Time This field shows the total amount of time in hours, minutes and seconds the port has been up. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 62: Epon Info

    Upgrade Success - ONU firmware upgrade is completed without errors. The ONU will restart automatically and the state changes to Normal. MAC Address This field displays the MAC address of the ONU on this logical link. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 63: Epon Details

    Set Interval. Stop Click Stop to stop port statistic polling. 6.2.2 EPON Details To view detailed EPON statistics, click an LLID number in the EPON Info screen to display the EPON Details screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 64: Figure 20 Status: Epon Info: Epon Details

    Chapter 6 System Status and Port Statistics Figure 20 Status: EPON Info: EPON Details OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 65: Table 10 Status: Epon Info: Epon Details

    This field displays the maximum upstream bandwidth in Mbps. Bandwidth Maximum This field displays the maximum downstream bandwidth in Mbps. Downstream Bandwidth This field displays the Round Trip Time (RTT) in nanoseconds. OLT SW Version This field displays the firmware version the OLT uses. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 66 This field displays the number of octets transmitted successfully to the ONU. Rx OK This field displays the number of octets received successfully by the ONU. ONU PON Frames Total Tx Dropped This field displays the number of transmitted frames dropped on the ONU. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 67 This field displays the number of gate frames received by the ONU. Received OK Report Frames This field displays the number of report frames transmitted. Transmitted OK Report Frames This field displays the number of report frames received. Received OK OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 68: Ethernet Port Details

    Click a number (9-12) in the Port column or a number (1-8) in the Uplink Port column in the Status screen to display Ethernet port statistics. Use this screen to check status and detailed performance data about an Ethernet uplink port on the OLT. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 69: Figure 21 Status: Port Details

    This field shows the number kilobytes per second transmitted on this port. Rx KB/s This field shows the number of kilobytes per second received on this port. Up Time This field shows the total amount of time the connection has been up. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 70 This field shows the number of packets (including bad packets) received that were between 256 and 511 octets in length. 512-1023 This field shows the number of packets (including bad packets) received that were between 512 and 1023 octets in length. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 71 Poll Interval(s) The text box displays how often (in seconds) this screen refreshes. You may change the refresh interval by typing a new number in the text box and then clicking Set Interval. Stop Click Stop to stop port statistic polling. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 72 Chapter 6 System Status and Port Statistics OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 73: Basic Setting

    7.2 System Information In the navigation panel, click Basic Setting > System Info to display the screen as shown. You can check the firmware version number and monitor the OLT temperature, fan speeds and voltage in this screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 74: Figure 22 System Info

    This field displays Normal for temperatures below the threshold and Error for those above. If Error displays, check that the fans are working and make sure that you do not block ventilation holes on the OLT. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 75: General Setup

    Click Basic Setting > General Setup in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. Use this screen to configure the system name, the system time and date or set the OLT to save system logs. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 76: Figure 23 General Setup

    Enter the IP address of your timeserver. The OLT searches for the timeserver for Address up to 60 seconds. If you select a timeserver that is unreachable, then this screen will appear locked for 60 seconds. Please wait. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 77: Introduction To Vlans

    Click Basic Setting and then Switch Setup in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. The VLAN setup screens change depending on whether you choose 802.1Q or Port Based in the VLAN Type field in this screen. Refer to the chapter on VLAN. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 78: Figure 24 Switch Setup

    Leave All Timer sets the duration of the Leave All Period timer for GVRP in Timer milliseconds. Each port has a single Leave All Period timer. Leave All Timer must be larger than Leave Timer; the default is 10000 milliseconds. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 79: Ip Setup

    IP address. The factory default subnet mask is 255.255.255.0. On the OLT-1308, 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).
  • Page 80: Figure 25 Ip Setup: Olt-1308

    Chapter 7 Basic Setting Figure 25 IP Setup: OLT-1308 The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 15 IP Setup: OLT-1308 LABEL DESCRIPTION Domain Name Enter the IP address of the domain name server in dotted decimal notation, for Server example 192.168.1.20.
  • Page 81 Chapter 7 Basic Setting Table 15 IP Setup: OLT-1308 (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Static IP Address Select this option if you don't have a DHCP server or if you wish to assign static IP address information to the switch. You need to fill in the following fields when you select this option.
  • Page 82: Port Setup

    Use the Port Setup screen to configure the uplink and/or the switch ports. Click Basic Setting > Port Setup in the navigation panel to display the configuration screen. On the OLT-1308, the Gigabit/Mini-GBIC switch ports are labeled 9 through 12 on the device front panel.
  • Page 83: Figure 27 Port Setup: Olt-1308

    Chapter 7 Basic Setting Figure 27 Port Setup: OLT-1308 The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 17 Port Setup: OLT-1308 LABEL DESCRIPTION Port This is the port index number. This number corresponds to the port label on the front panel.
  • Page 84: Figure 28 Port Setup: Olt-1308H

    Chapter 7 Basic Setting Table 17 Port Setup: OLT-1308 (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION BPDU Control Configure the way to treat BPDUs received on this port. You must activate bridging control protocol transparency in the Switch Setup screen first. Select Peer to process any BPDU (Bridge Protocol Data Units) received on this port.
  • Page 85: Igmp Snooping

    7.10 EPON Setup Use the EPON Setup screen to configure general PON (or fiber) interface settings. Click Basic Setting > EPON Setup. Not all fields are available on all models. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 86: Figure 29 Epon Setup: Olt-1308H

    Use the next two fields to configure the priority level-to-physical queue mapping. On the OLT, traffic assigned to higher index queues gets serviced faster while traffic in lower index queues may be dropped if the network is congested. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 87: Profile Setup

    MAC address learning settings. Once you have set the profile settings, you can apply it to the ONU in the Service Setup (or ONU Setup) screens (refer to Section 7.10.2 on page 91). OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 88: Figure 30 Epon Setup: Profile Setup

    Current field settings are displayed in bold text labels. Click Basic Setting > EPON Setup > Profile Setup to display the configuration screen. Not all fields are available on all models. Figure 30 EPON Setup: Profile Setup OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 89: Table 20 Epon Setup: Profile Setup

    The number you entered is multiplied by 128. Queue 3 Size Specify the size (in byte) for queue 3. The number you entered is multiplied by 128. Downstream Policing Active Select Active to control the downstream traffic (from the OLT to the ONU). OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 90 Select this option to enable flow control for the connection to the ONU. Address Learning MAC address learning reduces outgoing broadcast traffic. For MAC address learning to occur on a port, the port itself must be active with address learning enabled. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 91: Service Setup

    ONU has successfully registered (or connected) to the OLT, settings in the associated profiles are set to the ONU. Click Basic Setting > EPON Setup and the Service Setup (or ONU Setup) link to display the configuration screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 92: Figure 31 Epon Setup: Service Setup (Or Onu Setup)

    ONU is allowed on the port. EPON Profile This field displays the name of the EPON profile the ONU on this port uses. Click a name to configure the EPON profile. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 93 This field displays the name of the priority profile the ONU on this port uses. Click a name to configure the priority profile. Delete Click Delete to remove the selected entry from the summary table. Note: You cannot delete the default services. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the Delete check boxes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 94 Chapter 7 Basic Setting OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 95: Advanced: Switch

    Advanced: Switch VLAN (97) Static MAC Forward Setup (107) Filtering (109) Spanning Tree Protocol (111) Bandwidth Control (117) Broadcast Storm Control (119) Mirroring (121) Link Aggregation (123) Port Security (127) Queuing Method (129) Classifier (133) Policy (139) Multicast (145) DHCP Relay (155)
  • Page 97: Vlan

    802.1Q VLAN-unaware switch to an 802.1Q VLAN-aware switch, the switch first decides where to forward the frame, and then inserts a VLAN tag reflecting the ingress port's default VID. The default PVID is VLAN 1 for all ports, but this can be changed. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 98: Automatic Vlan Registration

    Enable VLAN Trunking on a port to allow frames belonging to unknown VLAN groups to pass through that port. This is useful if you want to set up VLAN groups on end devices without having to configure the same VLAN groups on intermediary devices. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 99: Select The Vlan Type

    Click Advanced Application, VLAN from the navigation panel to display the VLAN Status screen as shown next. Use this screen to view the current static VLAN group(s) you have configured. Refer to Section 8.1 on page 97 for background information. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 100: Configure A Static Vlan

    To configure a static VLAN, click Static VLAN in the VLAN Status screen to display the screen as shown next. Use a static VLAN to decide whether an incoming frame on a port should be • sent to a VLAN group as normal depends on its VLAN tag. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 101: Figure 35 Vlan: Static Vlan

    Click Add to add the settings as a new entry in the summary table below. Cancel Click Cancel to reset the fields. Clear Click Clear to start configuring the screen again. This field displays the ID number of the VLAN group. Click the number to edit the VLAN settings. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 102: Configure Vlan Port Setting

    Select this check box to activate ingress filtering. Clear this check box to disable ingress filtering. PVID Enter a number between 1and 4094 as the port VLAN ID. GVRP Select this check box to allow GVRP on this port. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 103: Port-Based Vlan

    Ethernet ports. 8.6.1 Configure a Port-based VLAN Select Port Based as the VLAN Type in the Switch Setup screen (see Figure 33 on page and then click VLAN from the navigation panel to display the next screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 104: Figure 37 Port Based Vlan Setup (All Connected)

    Chapter 8 VLAN Figure 37 Port Based VLAN Setup (All Connected) Figure 38 Port Based VLAN Setup (Port Isolation) OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 105: Table 26 Port Based Vlan Setup

    By default it forms a VLAN with all Ethernet ports. If it does not form a VLAN with a particular port then the switch cannot be managed from that port. Apply Click Apply to save the changes. Cancel Click Cancel to start configuring the screen again. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 106 Chapter 8 VLAN OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 107: Static Mac Forward Setup

    Select this check box to activate your rule. You may temporarily deactivate a rule without deleting it by clearing this check box. Name Enter a descriptive name for identification purposes for this static MAC address forwarding rule. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 108 This field displays the port where the MAC address shown in the next field will be forwarded. Delete Click Delete to remove the selected entry from the summary table. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the Delete check boxes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 109: Filtering

    Make sure to select this check box to activate your rule. You may temporarily deactivate a rule without deleting it by deselecting this check box. Name Type a descriptive name for this filter rule. This is for identification purpose only. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 110 This field displays the filter action. Delete Check the rule(s) that you want to remove in the Delete column and then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the selected checkbox(es) in the Delete column. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 111: Spanning Tree Protocol

    Path Cost 4Mbps 100 to 1000 1 to 65535 Path Cost 10Mbps 50 to 600 1 to 65535 Path Cost 16Mbps 40 to 400 1 to 65535 Path Cost 100Mbps 10 to 60 1 to 65535 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 112: How Stp Works

    11.2 STP Status Click Advanced Application, Spanning Tree Protocol in the navigation panel to display the screen. View current STP status on the switch in this screen. Refer to Section 11.1 on page 111 for background information. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 113: Figure 41 Spanning Tree Protocol: Status

    The text box displays how often (in seconds) this screen refreshes. You may change the refresh interval by typing a new number in the text box and then clicking Set Interval. Stop Click Stop to halt STP statistic polling. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 114: Configure Stp

    The allowed range is 4 to 30 seconds. As a general rule: 2 * (Forward Delay - 1) >= Max Age >= 2 * (Hello Time + 1) Port This field displays the port number. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 115 The slower the media, the higher the cost - see Table 29 on page 111 for more information. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the switch. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 116 Chapter 11 Spanning Tree Protocol OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 117: Bandwidth Control

    Select this check box to enable bandwidth control on the switch. Port This field displays the port number. Active Make sure to select this check box to activate your rule. You may temporarily deactivate a rule without deleting it by deselecting this check box. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 118 The switch rounds the number to the next 1000 Kbps (1 Mbps). For example, if you enter 1090 in this field, the switch sets the egress rate to 2000 Kbps (2 Mbps). Apply Click Apply to save the settings. Cancel Click Cancel to reset the fields to your previous configuration. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 119: Broadcast Storm Control

    You can specify limits for each packet type on each port. 13.2 Broadcast Storm Control Setup Click Advanced Application, Broadcast Storm Control in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown next. Figure 44 Broadcast Storm Control OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 120: Table 34 Broadcast Storm Control

    Select this option and specify how many destination lookup failure (DLF) packets the port receives per second. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the switch. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 121: Mirroring

    You must first select a monitor port. A monitor port is a port that copies the traffic of another port. After you select a monitor port, configure a mirroring rule in the related fields Figure 45 Mirroring OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 122: Table 35 Mirroring

    Select this option to mirror the traffic on a port. Direction Specify the direction of the traffic to mirror. Choices are Egress (outgoing), Ingress (incoming) and Both. Apply Click Apply to save the changes. Cancel Click Cancel to start configuring the screen again. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 123: Link Aggregation

    Configure trunk groups or LACP before you connect the Ethernet switch to avoid causing network topology loops. 15.1.2 Link Aggregation ID LACP aggregation ID consists of the following information Table 36 Link Aggregation ID: Local Switch SYSTEM PRIORITY MAC ADDRESS PORT PRIORITY PORT NUMBER 0000 00-00-00-00-00 0000 0000 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 124: Link Aggregation Status

    Click Configuration in the Link Aggregation Control Protocol Status screen to display the screen shown next. Section 15.1 on page 123 for background information. Port Priority and Port Number are 0 as it is the aggregator ID for the trunk group, not the individual port. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 125: Figure 47 Link Aggregation Control Protocol: Configuration

    Select either 1 second or 30 seconds. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the switch. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 126 Chapter 15 Link Aggregation OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 127: Port Security

    MAC address(es) for a port. It is not recommended you disable Port Security together with MAC address learning as this will result in many broadcasts. 16.2 Port Security Setup Click Advanced Application > Port Security to display the screen as shown. Figure 48 Port Security OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 128: Table 40 Port Security

    0 to 16383. “0” means this feature is disabled, so the switch will learn MAC addresses up to the global limit of 16383. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the switch. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 129: Queuing Method

    Q2 is transmitted until Q2 empties, and then traffic is transmitted on Q1 and so on. If higher priority queues never empty, then traffic on lower priority queues never gets sent. SPQ does not automatically adapt to changing network requirements. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 130: Weighted Round Robin Scheduling (Wrr)

    This queuing mechanism is highly efficient in that it divides any available bandwidth across the different traffic queues and returns to queues that have not yet emptied. 17.2 Configuring Queuing Click Advanced Application > Queuing Method. Figure 49 Queuing Method OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 131: Table 42 Queuing Method

    Queues with larger weights get more service than queues with smaller weights. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the switch. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 132 Chapter 17 Queuing Method OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 133: Classifier

    (or policy) to act upon the traffic that match the rules. To configure policy rules, refer to Chapter 19 on page 139. Click Advanced Application and Classifier in the navigation panel to display the configuration screen as shown. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 134: Figure 50 Classifier

    A value of 802.3 indicates that the packets are formatted according to the IEEE 802.3 standards. A value of Ethernet II indicates that the packets are formatted according to RFC 894, Ethernet II encapsulation. Layer 2 Specify the fields below to configure a layer-2 classifier. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 135 Select Any to apply the rule to all TCP/UDP protocol port numbers or select the second option and enter a TCP/UDP protocol port number. Click Add to save the changes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 136: Classifier Example

    Table 45 Common Protocol Port Number PORT NUMBER NAME Telnet SMTP HTTP POP3 18.3 Classifier Example The following screen shows an example where you configure a classifier that identifies all traffic from MAC address 00:50:ba:ad:4f:81 on port 2. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 137: Figure 51 Classifier: Example

    Chapter 18 Classifier After you have configured a classifier, you can configure a policy (in the Policy screen) to define action(s) on the classified traffic flow. Figure 51 Classifier: Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 138 Chapter 18 Classifier OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 139: Policy

    Resources can then be allocated according to the DSCP values and the configured policies. 19.2 Configuring a Policy You must first configure a classifier in the Classifier screen. Refer to Chapter 18 on page 133 for more information. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 140: Figure 52 Policy

    Chapter 19 Policy Click Advanced Applications and then Policy Rule in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. Figure 52 Policy The following table describes the labels in this screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 141: Table 46 Policy

    Select Send the packet to priority queue to put the packets in the designated queue. Select Replace the 802.1 priority field with IP TOS value to replace the 802.1 priority field with the value you set in the TOS field. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 142: Policy Example

    The figure below shows an example Policy screen where you configure a policy to limit bandwidth and discard out-of-profile traffic on a traffic flow classified using the Example classifier (refer to Section 18.3 on page 136). OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 143: Figure 53 Policy Example

    Chapter 19 Policy Figure 53 Policy Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 144 Chapter 19 Policy OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 145: Multicast

    With IGMP snooping, group multicast traffic is only forwarded to ports that are members of that group. IGMP snooping generates no additional network traffic, allowing you to significantly reduce multicast traffic passing through your switch. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 146: Multicast Status

    Click Advanced Applications and Multicast to display the screen as shown. Use this screen to enable and configure multicast settings on the switch and apply IGMP profiles to ports. Section 20.1 on page 145 for background information. Figure 55 Multicast OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 147: Igmp Filtering Profile

    Then assign the IGMP filter profile to the ports (in the Multicast screen) that are allowed to use the service. Click Advanced Applications and Multicast in the navigation panel. Click the IGMP Filtering Profile link to display the screen as shown. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 148: Mvr Overview

    Delete Rule column, then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the Delete Profile/Delete Rule check boxes. 20.5 MVR Overview Multicast VLAN Registration is designed for applications (such as Media-on-Demand (MoD)) that use multicast traffic across a service provider network. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 149: Types Of Mvr Ports

    If the IGMP report matches one of the configured MVR multicast group addresses on the switch, an entry is created in the forwarding table on the switch. This maps the subscriber VLAN to the list of forwarding destinations for the specified multicast traffic. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 150: General Mvr Configuration

    You can create up to three multicast VLANs and up to 266 multicast rules on the switch. Your switch automatically creates a static VLAN (with the same VID) when you create a multicast VLAN in this screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 151: Figure 59 Mvr

    Select this option to set the port not to participate in MVR. No MVR multicast traffic is sent or received on this port. Tagging Select this checkbox if you want the port to tag the VLAN ID in all outgoing frames transmitted. Click Add to save the settings. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 152: Mvr Group Configuration

    Configure MVR IP multicast group address(es) in the Group Configuration screen. Click Group Configuration in the MVR screen. A port can belong to more than one multicast VLAN. However, IP multicast group addresses in different multicast VLANs cannot overlap. Figure 60 MVR: Group Configuration OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 153: Mvr Configuration Example

    A, B and C in VLAN are able to receive the traffic. Figure 61 MVR Configuration Example To configure the MVR settings on the switch, create a multicast group in the MVR screen and set the receiver and source ports. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 154: Figure 62 Mvr Configuration Example

    To set the switch to forward the multicast group traffic to the subscribers, configure multicast group settings in the Group Configuration screen. The following figure shows an example where two multicast groups (News and Movie) are configured for the multicast VLAN 200. Figure 63 MVR Group Configuration Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 155: Dhcp Relay

    • System name (up to 32 bytes, this is optional) 21.2 DHCP Relay Configuration To configure DHCP relay information and specify the DHCP server(s), click Advanced Application and DHCP Relay to display the screen as shown next. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 156: Figure 64 Dhcp Relay

    Select the check box to add the switch name to the DHCP client requests that the switch relays to a DHCP server. Click Add to inset the entry to the summary table below. Cancel Click Cancel to reset the fields back to your previous configuration. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 157: Advanced: Epon

    Advanced: EPON Classification Filter Profile (159) VLAN Profile (163) Priority Profile (173) Static MAC Forward Setup (179) Destination Filter (181) Port Authentication (185)
  • Page 159: Classification Filter Profile

    (tagged or untagged). As the name implies, the “Stop_traffic” filter profile discards all packets, thus preventing the subscriber from sending traffic through the ONU. Click Advanced Application > (EPON Advance >) Classification Filter Profile to display the configuration screen. Figure 65 Classification Filter Profile Setup OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 160: Table 53 Classification Filter Profile Setup

    This field displays the index number. Active Select this option to enable the packet prioritization setting. Direction Select the direction of the traffic to which the setting is applied. Classifier This field displays the type of packets. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 161: Example: Classification Filter Profile

    The following example sets the ONU to forwards all untagged packets and drops all tagged packets from the OLT. The ONU drops outgoing packets with VLAN ID 10 to the OLT. Figure 66 Classification Filter Profile: Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 162 Chapter 22 Classification Filter Profile OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 163: Vlan Profile

    VLAN tag or add a new VLAN tag. To forward a frame from an 802.1Q VLAN-unaware switch to an 802.1Q VLAN-aware switch, the ONU first decides where to forward the frame, and then inserts a VLAN tag reflecting the ingress port's default VID. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 164: Vlan Stacking

    VLANs within its network by adding tag 37 to distinguish customer A and tag 48 to distinguish customer B at edge device 1 and then stripping those tags at edge device 2 as the data frames leave the network. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 165: Vlan Tag Format

    Table 55 Single and Double Tagged 802.11Q Frame Format Len/ Data FCS Untagged Etype Ethernet frame TPID Priorit Len/ Data FCS IEEE 802.1Q Etype customer tagged frame DA SA SPTPI Priority VID TPID Priorit Len/ Data FCS Double-tagged Etype frame OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 166: Configuring A Vlan Profile

    No action is done on the OLT which forwards the packets to the destination through the uplink Gigabit Ethernet ports. Click Advanced Applications > (EPON Advance >) VLAN Profile in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 167: Figure 68 Epon Vlan Profile Setup

    Specify the action to perform on the packets. Select Add to insert a VLAN tag to the outgoing packets. Select Exchange to replace the VID with the one specified in the VLAN ID field. Select None to forward packets without any changes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 168 Select Add to insert a new VLAN tag to the outgoing packets. Select Exchange to replace the VID with the one specified in the VLAN ID field. Select None to send the packets without any changes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 169: Vlan Profile: Example

    OLT. If a packet has a VLAN ID of 100, the ONU adds a second tag with VID 200 before transmitting. Figure 69 VLAN Network Example 1 100 200 100 200 The following figure shows the VLAN profile setting on OLT A. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 170: Vlan Profile: Example 2

    The ONU discards all untagged packets. Figure 71 VLAN Network Example 2 100 200 100 200 The following figure shows settings in the VLAN Profile screen to remove the VLAN tags from the incoming packets. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 171: Figure 72 Vlan Profile: Example 2

    Chapter 23 VLAN Profile Figure 72 VLAN Profile: Example 2 In the Classification Filter Profile screen, set the Downstream Default Filter to discard all untagged packets on the ONU. Figure 73 VLAN Profile: Example 2: Classification Filter Profile OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 172 Chapter 23 VLAN Profile OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 173: Priority Profile

    Use this screen to change the precedence bits (TOS-COS mappings) and VLAN priority and assign specified packets to queues. Once you have configured a priority profile, associate it to a service profile to apply to an ONU. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 174: Figure 74 Priority Profile: Olt-1308

    Chapter 24 Priority Profile Figure 74 Priority Profile: OLT-1308 The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 58 Priority Profile: OLT-1308 LABEL DESCRIPTION Active Select this option to enable this profile. Name Enter a descriptive name (up to 20 alphanumerical characters) to identify this profile.
  • Page 175 Chapter 24 Priority Profile Table 58 Priority Profile: OLT-1308 (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Active Select this option to enable the packet prioritization setting. Direction Select the direction of the traffic to which the setting apply. Classifier Specify the type of packets to group into a traffic flow.
  • Page 176: Figure 75 Priority Profile: Olt-1308H

    Select the direction of the traffic to which the setting apply. Classifier Specify the type of packets to group into a traffic flow. Select Ethertype to group packets based on the Ethernet type. Select IPv4 Protocol to group packets based on a protocol number. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 177: Table 60 Common Ethernet Types Numbers

    0807 Banyan Systems 0BAD BBN Simnet 5208 IBM SNA 80D5 AppleTalk AARP 80F3 Some of the most common protocol names and port numbers are: Table 61 Common Protocol Names and Numbers PROTOCOL NAME NUMBER ICMP IGMP OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 178: Example: Priority Profile

    VLAN group. The AppleTalk packets are sent out through queue 3. Thus AppleTalk packets in a VLAN group have the highest priority and get sent first. The following figure shows the example configuration. Figure 76 Priority Profile: Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 179: Static Mac Forward Setup

    This field displays the number of static MAC forwarding rules you have configured for Static MAC this port. Static MAC Click the link to display a screen where you can configure a static MAC forwarding Forwarding rule. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 180: Configuring Static Mac Forwarding

    This field displays the MAC address of the packets that will be forwarded. Delete Select the entry(ies) that you want to remove in the Delete column and then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the Delete check boxes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 181: Destination Filter

    Click the link to display a screen where you can configure a destination filter. Filter 26.3 Destination Filter Setup Configure a destination filter in the DA Filter screen. Click Advanced Application > Destination Filter and click a Destination Filter link to display the configuration screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 182: Figure 80 Destination Filter: Da Filter

    This field displays the MAC address of the packets that will be filtered. Address Delete Select the rule(s) that you want to remove in the Delete column and then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the selected checkbox(es) in the Delete column. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 183: Example: Destination Filter

    Chapter 26 Destination Filter 26.3.1 Example: Destination Filter The following example sets the OLT to blocks packets with a destination MAC address of 00:00:00:00:a0:5f to the ONU named CA1101. Figure 81 Destination Filter: Example OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 184 Chapter 26 Destination Filter OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 185: Port Authentication

    In essence, RADIUS authentication allows you to validate an unlimited number of users from a central location. On the OLT-1308 or the OLT-1308H, you MUST connect the RADIUS server to the MGMT port. Figure 82 RADIUS Server Network Example RADIUS Server At the time of writing, only Windows XP of the Microsoft operating systems supports it.
  • Page 186: Configuring Port Authentication

    DESCRIPTION Active Select this check box to permit 802.1x authentication on the OLT. Note: You must first enable 802.1x authentication on the OLT before configuring it on each port. Port This field displays a port number. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 187: Configuring Radius Server Settings

    RADIUS server and the OLT. This key is not sent over the network. This key must be the same on the external RADIUS server and the OLT. Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the OLT. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 188 Chapter 27 Port Authentication OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 189: Ip And Management

    IP and Management Static Route (191) Maintenance (193) Access Control (201) Diagnostic (213) Syslog (215) Cluster Management (219) MAC Table (225) ARP Table (229) IGMP Table (231)
  • Page 191: Static Route

    Enter the IP address of the gateway. The gateway is an immediate neighbor of your Address switch that will forward the packet to the destination. The gateway must be a router on the same segment as your switch. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 192 Metric This field displays the cost of transmission for routing purposes. Delete Click Delete to remove the selected entry from the summary table. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the Delete check boxes. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 193: Maintenance

    1 From the Maintenance screen, click the Click Here button next to Load Factory Defaults to clear all OLT configuration information you configured and return to the factory defaults. The following message appears. Figure 88 Load Factory Default: Conformation 2 Click OK to display the screen shown next. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 194: Reboot System

    ONUs every time you upgrade the firmware on the OLT. Follow the steps below to perform remote firmware upgrade on an ONU connected to the OLT. 1 Click Management > Maintenance access the Remote Firmware Upgrade screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 195: Chip Reset

    Resetting PON ports disconnects the links. Resetting PON ports does NOT restart the OLT. Follow the steps below to reset the PON ports. 1 Access the Chip Reset screen from the Maintenance screen. Figure 93 Maintenance: Chip Reset OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 196: Remote Device Reset

    Be sure to upload the correct model firmware as uploading the wrong model firmware may damage your device. From the Maintenance screen, display the Firmware Upgrade screen as shown next. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 197: Restore Configuration

    Backing up your OLT configurations allows you to create various “snap shots” of your device from which you may restore at a later date. Back up your current OLT configuration to a computer using the Backup Configuration screen. Figure 97 Backup Configuration OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 198: Ftp Command Line

    OLT only recognizes “config” and “ras”. Be sure you keep unaltered copies of both files for later use. Be sure to upload the correct model firmware as uploading the wrong model firmware may damage your device. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 199: Ftp Command Line Procedure

    • FTP service is disabled in the Access Control screen. • The IP address(es) in the Secured Client Set in the Remote Management screen does not match the client IP address. If it does not match, the OLT will disconnect the Telnet session immediately. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 200 Chapter 29 Maintenance OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 201: Access Control

    Section 37.2.1 on page 236 for more information on disabling multi-login. 30.2 The Access Control Main Screen Click Management (or Advanced Application) > Access Control in the navigation panel to display the main screen as shown. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 202: About Snmp

    Examples of variables include such as number of packets received, node port status etc. A Management Information Base (MIB) is a collection of managed objects. SNMP allows a manager and agents to communicate for the purpose of accessing these objects. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 203: Supported Mibs

    This trap is sent when an SNMP request comes from non-authenticated hosts. 30.3.3 Configuring SNMP From the Access Control screen, display the SNMP screen. You can click the Access Control link to go back to the Access Control screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 204: Login Accounts

    • A non-administrator (username is something other than admin) is someone who can view but not configure OLT settings. It is highly recommended that you change the default administrator password (1234). Click Access Control from the navigation panel and then click Logins from this screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 205: Ssh Overview

    Unlike Telnet or FTP, which transmit data in clear text, SSH (Secure Shell) is a secure communication protocol that combines authentication and data encryption to provide secure encrypted communication between two hosts over an unsecured network. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 206: How Ssh Works

    After the identification is verified and data encryption activated, a secure tunnel is established between the client and the server. The client then sends its authentication information (user name and password) to the server to log in to the server. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 207: Ssh Implementation On The Olt

    1 HTTPS connection requests from an SSL-aware web browser go to port 443 (by default) on the OLT’s WS (web server). 2 HTTP connection requests from a web browser go to port 80 (by default) on the OLT’s WS (web server). Figure 104 HTTPS Implementation OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 208: Https Example

    OLT. If Accept this certificate temporarily for this session is selected, then click OK to continue in Netscape. Select Accept this certificate permanently to import the OLT’s certificate into the SSL client. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 209: The Main Screen

    30.9.3 The Main Screen After you accept the certificate and enter the login username and password, the OLT main screen appears. The lock displayed in the bottom right of the browser status bar denotes a secure connection. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 210: Service Access Control

    The following table describes the fields in this screen. Table 75 Access Control: Service Access Control LABEL DESCRIPTION Access Click the Access Control link to return to the main screen. Control Services Services you may use to access the OLT are listed here. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 211: Remote Management

    Select the service(s) that may be used for managing the OLT from the specified HTTP/ICMP/ trusted computers. SNMP/SSH/ HTTPS Apply Click Apply to save your changes back to the OLT. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 212 Chapter 30 Access Control OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 213: Diagnostic

    Type the IP address of a device that you want to ping in order to test a connection. Click Ping to have the OLT ping the IP address (in the field to the left) through the MGMT port. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 214: Saving Logs

    OLT wraps around and deletes the old logs. • To save logs on an external syslog server, configure the Syslog Server Setup screen (refer Section 32.2 on page 215). Make sure the syslog server is connected to the MGMT port on the OLT. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 215: Syslog

    32.2 Syslog Setup On the OLT-1308H, make sure the external syslog server is connected to the MGMT port. On the OLT-1308, make sure the external syslog server is in the same subnet as the OLT. Click Management > Syslog in the navigation panel to display this screen. The syslog feature sends logs to an external syslog server.
  • Page 216: Syslog Server Setup

    32.3 Syslog Server Setup Click Management > Syslog and click the Syslog Server Setup link to open the following screen. Use this screen to configure a list of external syslog servers. Figure 113 Syslog: Server Setup OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 217: Table 80 Syslog: Server Setup

    This field displays the severity level of the logs that the device is to send to this syslog server. Delete Select an entry’s Delete check box and click Delete to remove the entry. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 218 Chapter 32 Syslog OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 219: Cluster Management

    In the following example, switch A in the basement is the cluster manager and the other switches on the upper floors of the building are cluster members. Figure 114 Clustering Application Example Cluster management may also be referred to as “iStacking” in other ZyXEL documentation. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 220: Cluster Management Status

    Index hyperlink from the list of members to go to that cluster member switch's web configurator home page. This cluster member web configurator home page and the home page that you'd see if you accessed it directly are different. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 221: Figure 117 Cluster Member Web Configuration Screen

    The web configurator password default is 1234. Enter this command to list the name of cluster member switch’s firmware and configuration file. fw-00-13-49-00-00-01 The cluster member switch’s firmware name as seen in the cluster manager switch. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 222: Cluster Management Configuration

    Status is displayed as Error in the Cluster Management Status screen and a warning icon ( appears in the member summary list below. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 223 This is the cluster member switch’s model name. Remove Select this checkbox and then click the Remove button to remove a cluster member switch from the cluster. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this part of the screen afresh. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 224 Chapter 33 Cluster Management OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 225: Mac Table

    If peer-to-peer communication is disabled, the frame is sent to the uplink ports. • If the OLT has already learned the LLID for this MAC address, but the destination LLID is the same as the source LLID, then it filters the frame. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 226: Viewing The Mac Table

    Filter this frame. outgoing port. 34.2 Viewing the MAC Table Click Management > MAC Table in the navigation panel to display the following screen. Click Get to display the MAC address entries. Figure 121 MAC Table: OLT-1308 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 227: Figure 122 Mac Table: Olt-1308H

    Chapter 34 MAC Table The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 84 MAC Table: OLT-1308 LABEL DESCRIPTION Sort by Select an option to display and arrange the MAC address information based on the MAC address, VID or LLID/port number.
  • Page 228 Chapter 34 MAC Table OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 229: Arp Table

    ARP Table for future reference and then sends the packet to the MAC address that replied. 35.2 Viewing ARP Table Click Management in the navigation panel and then ARP Table to open the following screen. The ARP table can hold up to 500 entries. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 230: Figure 123 Arp Table

    MAC address below. This is the MAC address of the device with corresponding IP address above. Address Type This shows whether the MAC address is dynamic (learned by the switch) or static (manually entered in Static MAC Forwarding). OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 231: Igmp Table

    Select the number of a port from which you want to get the information and click Get. Index This field displays the index number. Group This field displays IGMP group address. Destination Address Members This field displays the LLID(s) that is a member of the group. (LLID) OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 232 Chapter 36 IGMP Table OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 233: Commands And Troubleshooting

    Commands and Troubleshooting Introducing the Commands (235) Command Examples (271) Troubleshooting (287)
  • Page 235: Introducing The Commands

    You can use a direct console connection or Telnet to access the CLI on the OLT. The OLT automatically logs you out of the management interface after five minutes of inactivity. If this happens to you, simply log back in again. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 236: Multiple Login

    After the initialization, the login screen displays (refer to Section 37.3 on page 238). Copyright (c) 1995 - 2006 ZyXEL Communications Corp. initialize mgmt, ethernet address: 00:13:49:00:00:01 initialize switch, ethernet address: 00:13:49:00:00:02 Initializing switch unit 0...
  • Page 237: Telnet

    X11 forwarding re-enabled. Host key saved to C:/Documents and Settings/user/Application Data/SSH/ hostkeys/key_22_192.168.0.1.pub host key for 192.168.0.1, accepted by user Thu Jul 20 2006 01:16:58 admin's password: Authentication successful. Copyright (c) 1994 - 2006 ZyXEL Communications Corp. sysname> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 238: The Login Screen

    <password> where Specifies the new password (up to 32 alphanumeric characters) <password> users have to type in to enter Enable and Config modes. 37.6 Command Modes There are three CLI command modes: User, Enable and Configure. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 239: Getting Help

    The system includes a help facility to provide you with the following information about the commands: • List of available commands under a command group. • Detailed descriptions of the commands. 37.7.1 List of Available Commands Enter to display a list of available commands and the corresponding sub commands. help OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 240: Detailed Command Information

    <command> ? parameters. sysname> ping help Commands available: ping <ip|host-name> < [ in-band|out-of-band|vlan <vlan-id> ] [ size <0-1472> ] [ -t ] > sysname> sysname> ping ? <ip|host-name> destination ip address help Description of ping help sysname> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 241: Using Command History

    37.10.2 on page 243 for the available commands. Logs out from the CLI. exit Displays help information. help Displays a list of previously command(s) that you have history executed. The OLT stores up to 256 commands in history. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 242 Displays the p2p port number(s). p2p-access Displays port authentication settings on all ports. port-access- authenticator Displays port authentication settings on the specified <port-list> port. Displays the priority profile summary table. priority- profile Displays the queue mappings. queue-mapping OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 243: Enable Mode

    Resets the link statistics on the link ID(s). onu <port> <llid- list> Resets interface counters on an Ethernet interface <port- port. number> Resets the log table. logging Accesses Configuration mode. See configure Section 37.10.3 on page 248 for the available commands. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 244 VLAN(s) with the band|vlan <vlan- specified parameters. id> ][ size <0- 1472> ][ -t ] Displays command help information. help Starts the loopback test to the specified port-test port <port> <llid- ONU. list> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 245 Displays port IGMP member information. igmp-group <port-number> Displays LLID IGMP member <port-number> information. <llid> Displays global IGMP snooping settings. igmp-snooping Displays current interface status. interface <port- number> Displays current interface configuration. interfaces config <port-list> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 246 Displays the ONU status on all ports. Displays a list of service profiles or <port-number> detailed service profile settings. <onu-name> Displays P2P access settings. p2p-access Displays all policy related information. policy Displays the specified policy related <name> information. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 247 Displays the status of all VLANs. vlan Displays the status of the specified <vlan-id> VLAN. Displays GVRP setting. vlan1q gvrp Displays port isolation setting. port-isolation Displays VLAN profile summary table. vlan-profile Displays detailed settings of the specified <profile-name> VLAN profile. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 248: General Configuration Mode

    The following table lists the commands in Configuration (or Config) mode. Table 91 Command Summary: Configuration Mode COMMAND DESCRIPTION Changes the administrator admin-password <pw-string> <confirm- password. string> Enables bandwidth control. bandwidth- control Enables Bridge Control bcp-transparency Protocol Transparency. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 249 Configures a name to identify name <cluster name> the cluster manager. Logs into a cluster member rcommand <mac-address> device. Specifies through which traffic default- <in-band|out-of-band> flow the device is to send management packets. dhcp-relay OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 250 <0-65535> Enables IGMP filtering. igmp-filtering Sets the starting and ending <profile name> start- IGMP addresses. address <ip> end- address <ip> Enables IGMP snooping. igmp-snooping Sets the action on unknown unknown-multicast- multicast frames received. frame <drop|flooding> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 251 Sets a monitor port. <port-num> Enters the MVR (Multicast mvr <vlan-id> VLAN Registration) configuration mode. Section 37.10.8 on page for more information. Disable bandwidth control on bandwidth-control the switch. Disables Bridge Control bcp-transparency Protocol (BCP) transparency. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 252 Removes a specified IP static route <ip> <mask> route. Enables a specified IP static route <ip> <mask> route. inactive Disables the link aggregation lacp control protocol (dynamic trunking) on the switch. Disables log saving. log periodical-save OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 253 Disables the specific service service <name> <port- profile on the PON port(s). list> Disables FTP access to the service-control OLT. Disables web browser control http to the OLT. Disables secure web browser https access to the OLT. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 254 Removes ports from the trunk interface <port- group. list> Disables LACP in the trunk lacp group. Disables login access for the user <name> specified account name. Disables GVRP on the switch. vlan1q gvrp Disables port isolation. port-isolation OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 255 Sets the maximum number of max-reauth-number times the OLT is to prompt for <1-10> the subscriber username and password to stay connected to the network. Specifies how many times the max-request-number OLT tries to connect to the <1-10> RADIUS server. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 256 Sets the IP address of the radius-server host <ip> external RADIUS server, Sets the authentication port [auth-port <1024- and shared key for the external 65535>] [key <key- RADIUS server. string>] Enables a remote management remote- <index> setting. management OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 257 Sets the priority for a specified <port-list> priority port. <0-255> Sets Hello Time, Maximum Age hello-time <1-10> and Forward Delay. maximum-age <6-40> forward-delay <4-30> Displays command help help information. Sets the bridge priority of the priority <0-61440> switch. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 258 Enables GVRP. vlan1q gvrp Enables VLAN port isolation on port-isolation all ports. Enters the VLAN profile vlan-profile <name> configuration mode. See Section 37.10.12 on page 269 for the available commands. Specifies the VLAN type. vlan-type <802.1q|port-based> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 259: Classifier-Filter-Profile Commands

    <discard|pass> Sets the action for upstream untag-frame untagged frames. <discard|pass> Sets and action for the Ethernet upstream-rule <1-8> action type classifier rule. <table1|table2|table3> <discard|pass> <1-8> : Classifier rule index. Enables this classifier rule. <1-8> active OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 260: Epon-Common Commands

    Sets the time interval between igmp-last-mem-query- group leave confirmation interval <1-13> checks. Sets the query timeout count igmp-query-timeout- when the first query is snooped. count <1-16> Enables IGMP snooping. igmp-snooping Disables IGMP group leave igmp-last-member confirmation check. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 261: Epon-Profile Commands

    8000> entered is multiplied by 64. Enables downstream priority queuing. dn-queue Sets the queue size. <0-3> size <0- 9200> Enables downstream queue policing. dn-queue-policing Sets the maximum bandwidth for the queue <0-3> max- queue. bw <1-10000> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 262 ONU. <10H|10F|100H|10 0F|1000F> Enables downstream priority queuing. up-queue Sets the queue size. <0-3> size <0- 9200> Enables upstream queue policing. up-queue-policing Sets the maximum upstream for the queue <0-3> max- queue. bw <1-10000> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 263: Interface Commands

    Enables this function to permit VLAN gvrp groups beyond the local switch. Displays a description of the interface port- help channel commands. Applies the specified IGMP filtering profile. igmp-filtering profile <name> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 264 Sets the outgoing traffic port list for a port- egress set <port- based VLAN. list> Disables flow control on the port(s). flow-control Disable GVRP on the port(s). gvrp Disables IGMP filtering. igmp-filtering profile Disables IGMP group limitation. igmp-group-limit OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 265: Mvr Commands

    37.10.8 mvr Commands The following table lists the commands in configuration mode. Table 96 mvr Commands COMMAND DESCRIPTION Enters the MVR (Multicast VLAN mvr <1- Registration) configuration mode. 4094> Exist from the MVR configuration mode. exit OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 266: Onu Commands

    Enables this profile. active Sets the classifier profile for this classification-profile service. <profile-name> Exits from the priority-profile mode Sets the EPON profile for this epon-profile <profile- service. name> Exits from the configuration exit mode. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 267: Priority-Profile Commands

    Specifies the source or address <IPv4 destination IP address of the Address> packets to classify. Sets a classifier type. classifier <src- ip|dest-ip> Selects the direction of the direction traffic to apply the policy <downstream|upstream> settings. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 268: Vlan Commands

    <cr> Releases the dynamic in-band IP address. inband-default dhcp-bootp release Updates the dynamic in-band IP address. inband-default dhcp-bootp renew Specifies a name for identification purposes. name <name-str> Sets fixed port(s) to normal port(s). fixed <port- list> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 269: Vlan-Profile Commands

    <original| priority- profile setting. profile> Sets the rule type. type <ethertype| ipv4| vlan> Specifies the Ethernet type or the value ethertype:<0- protocol number for the rule. 65295>|ipv4:<1- 255>|vlan:<1-4094> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 270 Sets the VLAN type for the rule. vlan-type <8100|9100|88A8> Sets the default rule settings for upstream-def-rule action <add|exchange> upstream traffic. vlan-type <8100|9100|88A8> vid <1-4094> priority-src <original|priority- profile> Clears the default rule settings for action none upstream traffic. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 271: Command Examples

    The following example shows detailed PON port 8 status. sysname# show epon 8 EPON Port No: 8 Status: Up MAC Addr: 00:13:49:00:00:0a The Number of LLID: 1 Up Time: 2:47:20 ONU Name LLID MAC Address Default 00:00:00:00:00:09 sysname# OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 272: Show Epon-Counter

    = 1483575993 Rx OK = 1462133544 PON Frames: Rx OK = 88361 Rx HEC Error sysname# 38.2.3 show epon-counter onu Syntax: show epon-counter onu <port-number> <llid> This command displays the port counters obtained from the ONU. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 273: Show Hardware-Monitor

    Tx Broadcast sysname# 38.2.4 show hardware-monitor Syntax: system hardware-monitor <C|F> This command displays the device temperature and voltage readings and fan speeds. You can choose to display the temperature in Celsius ( ) or Fahrenheit ( OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 274: Show Ip

    OLT interfaces. The following figure shows the default interface settings. sysname> show ip Out-of-band Management IP Address = 192.168.0.1 Management IP Address IP[192.168.0.1], Netmask[255.255.255.0], VID[0] IP Interface IP[172.23.37.106], Netmask[255.255.255.0], VID[1] sysname> 38.2.6 show system-information Syntax: show system-information OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 275: Ping

    172.23.37.120 172.23.37.120 172.23.37.120 sysname# 38.4 traceroute Syntax: traceroute <ip|hostname>[ttl <1-255>] [wait <1-60>] [queries <1-10>] where The IP address or hostname of an Ethernet device. <ip|hostname> Specifies the Time To Live (TTL) period. [ttl <1-255>] OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 276: Epon-Common Commands

    1. When this number reaches zero, a group member is removed from the group if no report message is received. Use these commands to set common EPON settings on the OLT and ONU. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 277: Epon-Profile Commands

    <0-7> Sets the OLT to encrypt data using AES128 to provide secure encryption- mode communication through the ONUs. You can apply data encryption to <both|downstr downstream or both the downstream and upstream traffic. eam> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 278: Configuration File Maintenance

    2000 max-up-bw 30000 sysname(config-epon-profile)# dba priority-class 4 38.7 Configuration File Maintenance This section shows you how to backup or restore the configuration file on the OLT using TFTP. 38.7.1 Backing up Configuration Syntax: copy running-config tftp <ip> <remote-file> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 279: Restoring Configuration

    Follow the steps below to reset the OLT back to the factory defaults. 1 Enter to reset the current running configuration. erase running config 2 Enter to save the changes to the current configuration file. write memory OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 280: No Command Examples

    <host-ip> [1024|ssh-rsa|ssh-dsa] bit RSA1, RSA or DSA). An example is shown next. • Disable the secure shell RSA1 encryption key. • Remove the remote host with IP address 172.165.1.8 from the list of known hosts. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 281: Priority-Profile Commands

    Enter a number between 0 and 7. The bigger the number, the higher the priority. = Sets the TOS-COS mapping. tos-to-cos tos <0-7> cos <0-7> Use these commands to create and configure a priority profile. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 282: Onu Commands

    = Specifies a priority profile for this ONU profile. If you do not priority-profile <profile-name> specify a priority profile, the default profile applies. = Specifies a VLAN profile for this ONU profile. If you do not vlan-profile <profile- name> specify a VLAN profile, the default profile applies. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 283: Vlan-Profile Commands

    <name> downstream rule <1-7> value <ethertype<0-65295>|ipv4<1- 255>|vid <1-4094>> vlan-profile <name> downstream-def-rule action <delete|exchange> vlan-type <8100|9100|88A8> vid <1-4094> priority-src <original| priority-profile> vlan-profile <name> downstream-def-rule action none where = Specifies a VLAN profile. <name> = Specifies a rule to configure. rule <1-7> OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 284 VProfile sysname(config-vlan-profile)# active sysname(config-vlan-profile)# downstream rule 1 active sysname(config-vlan-profile)# downstream rule 1 type vlan sysname(config-vlan-profile)# downstream rule 1 value 14 sysname(config-vlan-profile)# downstream rule 1 new-vid 14 sysname(config-vlan-profile)# downstream rule 1 action delete sysname(config-vlan-profile)# OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 285 Chapter 38 Command Examples OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 286 Chapter 38 Command Examples OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 287: Troubleshooting

    IP address, your computer’s IP address must match it. Refer to the chapter on access control for details. Your computer’s and the OLT’s IP addresses must be on the same subnet. See the following section to check that pop-up windows, JavaScripts and Java permissions are allowed. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 288: Pop-Up Windows, Javascripts And Java Permissions

    Privacy tab. 1 In Internet Explorer, select Tools, Internet Options, Privacy. 2 Clear the Block pop-ups check box in the Pop-up Blocker section of the screen. This disables any web pop-up blockers you may have enabled. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 289: Figure 126 Internet Options

    Alternatively, if you only want to allow pop-up windows from your device, see the following steps. 1 In Internet Explorer, select Tools, Internet Options and then the Privacy tab. 2 Select Settings…to open the Pop-up Blocker Settings screen. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 290: Figure 127 Internet Options

    3 Type the IP address of your device (the web page that you do not want to have blocked) with the prefix “http://”. For example, http://192.168.1.1. 4 Click Add to move the IP address to the list of Allowed sites. Figure 128 Pop-up Blocker Settings OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 291: Figure 129 Internet Options

    3 Scroll down to Scripting. 4 Under Active scripting make sure that Enable is selected (the default). 5 Under Scripting of Java applets make sure that Enable is selected (the default). 6 Click OK to close the window. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 292: Figure 130 Security Settings - Java Scripting

    2 Click the Custom Level... button. 3 Scroll down to Microsoft VM. 4 Under Java permissions make sure that a safety level is selected. 5 Click OK to close the window. Figure 131 Security Settings - Java OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 293: Problems With The Password

    If you have changed the password and have now forgotten it, you will need to upload the default configuration file. This restores all of the factory defaults including the password. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 294 Chapter 39 Troubleshooting OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 295: Appendix And Index

    Appendix and Index Product Specifications (297) Legal Information (299) Customer Support (303) Index (307)
  • Page 297: Appendix A Product Specifications

    P P E N D I X Product Specifications The following table lists the product specifications.Switch features discussed in this guide are for the OLT-1308 only. Table 104 General Product Specifications Interface Eight PON ports Compliant with IEEE 802.3ah SC/UPC optical connectors with shutters TDMA/burst for upstream &...
  • Page 298: Table 105 Management Specifications

    Table 106 Physical and Environmental Specifications LEDs Per OLT: PWR, SYS/ALM Per PON port: PON Per Gigabit Ethernet port (OLT-1308): 10, 100, 1000 Per Management port: 10, 100 Dimension Standard 19” rack mountable, IU hight 440 mm (W) x 450 mm (D) x 43.6 mm (H) Weight <...
  • Page 299: Appendix B Legal Information

    ZyXEL Communications Corporation. Published by ZyXEL Communications Corporation. All rights reserved.
  • Page 300 ZyXEL will, at its discretion, repair or replace the defective products or components without charge for either parts or labor, and to whatever extent it shall deem necessary to restore the product or components to proper operating OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 301 Registration Register your product online to receive e-mail notices of firmware upgrades and information at www.zyxel.com for global products, or at www.us.zyxel.com for North American products. OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 302 Appendix B Legal Information OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 303: Appendix C Customer Support

    • Regular Mail: ZyXEL Costa Rica, Plaza Roble Escazú, Etapa El Patio, Tercer Piso, San José, Costa Rica Czech Republic • E-mail: info@cz.zyxel.com • Telephone: +420-241-091-350 • Fax: +420-241-091-359 • Web Site: www.zyxel.cz • Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications, Czech s.r.o., Modranská 621, 143 01 Praha 4 - Modrany, Ceská Republika OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 304 • Support E-mail: support@zyxel.fi • Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.fi • Telephone: +358-9-4780-8411 • Fax: +358-9-4780 8448 • Web Site: www.zyxel.fi • Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications Oy, Malminkaari 10, 00700 Helsinki, Finland France • E-mail: info@zyxel.fr • Telephone: +33-4-72-52-97-97 • Fax: +33-4-72-52-19-20 •...
  • Page 305 • Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.com • Telephone: +1-800-255-4101, +1-714-632-0882 • Fax: +1-714-632-0858 • Web Site: www.us.zyxel.com • FTP Site: ftp.us.zyxel.com • Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications Inc., 1130 N. Miller St., Anaheim, CA 92806- 2001, U.S.A. Norway • Support E-mail: support@zyxel.no • Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.no •...
  • Page 306 Appendix C Customer Support • Web Site: www.zyxel.es • Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications, Arte, 21 5ª planta, 28033 Madrid, Spain Sweden • Support E-mail: support@zyxel.se • Sales E-mail: sales@zyxel.se • Telephone: +46-31-744-7700 • Fax: +46-31-744-7701 • Web Site: www.zyxel.se • Regular Mail: ZyXEL Communications A/S, Sjöporten 4, 41764 Göteborg, Sweden Ukraine •...
  • Page 307: Index

    Bridge Protocol Data Unit See BPDU connection test 213, 214 broadcast console port connector broadcast storm control setting contact information copyright CPU management port CRC (Cyclic Redundant Check) Canonical Format Indicator See CFI create login account certifications OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 308 DiffServ Code Point See DSCP firmware version disclaimer flow control 83, 84 freestanding installation double-tagging front panel See also VLAN stacking front panel connection DSCP command example Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation procedure See also DBA restriction dynamic link aggregation FTTH OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 309 IEEE 802.1Q 97, 165 logical link IEEE 802.1w RSTP Logical Link ID IEEE 802.1x See also LLID Note login IEEE 802.3ad password IEEE 802.3x 83, 84 login account account type IGMP 145, 231 number of snooping OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 310 Multicast policy multicast example address PON port reset setup POP3 multicast group port multicast traffic and MVR multicast VLAN port authentication multiple login maximum reauthentication count maximum request count configuration quiet period configuration example server timeout OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 311 RFC 3164 Round Robin Scheduling route cost RSTP 133, 173 Quality of Service See QoS queue assigement Queue priority safety warnings Queue weight 130, 131 save log Queuing Secure Shell See SSH Queuing algorithm 129, 131 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 312 Tag Protocol Identifier See TPID port isolation status tagging TCP/UDP protocol port numbers Status test connection VLAN testing a port status 46, 59, 73 time server setup EPON details time service protocol EPON info time zone OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 313 Number of VLANs port isolation 102, 105 port trunking port-based priority priority frame select type stacking static Status tagged VLAN tagging Trunking Type VLAN ID 97, 163 VLAN Identifier See VID VLAN priority 173, 175, 177 OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 314 Index OLT-1308 Series User’s Guide...

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