Route Table - Zoom X5v Technical Reference

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Entry
Trellis
Handshake Protocol
Wiring Selection
Bit Swapping

2.6 Route Table

Most users do not need to define IP routes for Internet and
network data. In a typical small home or office LAN, the default
routes in the X5v or V3 define the most appropriate path for
Internet traffic to and from your LAN computer.
You may need to define routes if your setup includes two or more
networks or subnets, if you connect to two or more Internet
service providers, or if you connect to a remote corporate LAN.
Without a route table, any computer residing on an additional
network or subnet would be invisible to the gateway. The route
table acts as a map for the gateway, directing traffic to the correct
location.
To access the Route Table page, click the Route Table button at
the top of the Advanced Setup page.
34
Explanation
Enabled by default. "Trellis" is the name for a
graphical description of the relationships between
data-carrying bands in DSL.
The default is Autosense - G.dmt, indicating that
the X5v automatically discovers the handshake
protocol being used by the telephone company's
Central Office. It first checks to see if the g.dmt
protocol is being used. If it isn't, the X5v continues
through the Handshake Protocol list until it finds a
protocol that the Central Office is using.
The default is Tip/Ring, a term for the two wires in
a telephone electrical circuit. Tip is the positive wire
and Ring is the negative wire.
Disabled by default.

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