Page 2
• Online Help Click the help link for a description of the fields in the Switch menus. • More Information Go to https://businessforum.zyxel.com for product discussions. Go to support.zyxel.com to find other information on the Switch GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figures in this user guide may use the following generic icons. The Switch icon is not an exact representation of your device. Switch Generic Router Wireless Router / Access Point Generic Switch Smart TV Desktop Laptop IP Camera Printer Server GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
2.4 Rack Mounting ..........................29 2.4.1 Installation Requirements ..................... 29 2.4.2 Precautions ..........................30 2.4.3 Attaching the Mounting Brackets to the Switch ............... 30 2.4.4 Mounting the Switch on a Rack ..................30 Chapter 3 Hardware Panels..........................32 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 7
4.8.1 Restore Button ........................67 4.8.2 Restore Custom Default ....................... 67 4.8.3 Reboot the Switch ........................ 67 4.9 Log Out of the Web Configurator ....................68 4.10 Help ..............................68 Chapter 5 Initial Setup Example .........................69 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 8
8.6.5 Network Proxy Configuration ....................98 8.7 Port Setup ............................99 8.8 PoE Status ............................101 8.8.1 PoE Time Range Setup ....................... 103 8.8.2 PoE Setup ..........................104 8.9 Interface Setup ..........................107 8.10 IPv6 ............................... 108 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 9
10.2 Configure Static MAC Forwarding ................... 136 Chapter 11 Static Multicast Forwarding......................138 11.1 Overview ............................. 138 11.1.1 What You Can Do ......................138 11.1.2 What You Need To Know ....................138 11.2 Configure Static Multicast Forwarding ..................139 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 10
17.1.2 What You Need to Know ....................156 17.2 Link Aggregation Status ......................157 17.3 Link Aggregation Setting ......................158 17.3.1 Link Aggregation Control Protocol ................. 160 17.4 Technical Reference ........................161 17.4.1 Static Trunking Example ....................161 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 11
22.3 RADIUS Server Setup ........................177 22.4 AAA Setup ........................... 179 22.5 Technical Reference ........................182 22.5.1 Vendor Specific Attribute ....................182 22.5.2 Supported RADIUS Attributes ................... 183 22.5.3 Attributes Used for Authentication .................. 183 Chapter 23 DHCP Snooping ..........................185 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 12
27.2 LLDP-MED Overview ........................209 27.3 LLDP Settings ..........................210 27.4 LLDP Local Status ........................211 27.4.1 LLDP Local Port Status Detail ................... 212 27.5 LLDP Remote Status ........................215 27.5.1 LLDP Remote Port Status Detail ..................216 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 13
31.4.2 DHCPv4 Option 82 Profile ....................244 31.4.3 Configuring DHCPv4 Global Relay ................. 245 31.4.4 Configure DHCPv4 Global Relay Port ................246 31.4.5 Global DHCP Relay Configuration Example ..............247 31.4.6 DHCPv4 VLAN Setting ....................... 248 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 14
34.3 Configure SNMP .......................... 269 34.3.1 Configure SNMP Trap Group ................... 270 34.3.2 Enable or Disable Sending of SNMP Traps on a Port ............. 271 34.3.3 Configure SNMP User ......................272 34.4 Set Up Login Accounts ....................... 274 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 15
39.1 MAC Table Overview ......................... 305 39.1.1 What You Can Do ......................305 39.1.2 What You Need to Know ....................305 39.2 Viewing the MAC Table ......................306 Chapter 40 ARP Table ............................308 40.1 Overview ............................. 308 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 16
45.2 Summary ............................322 45.2.1 Neighbor Detail Screen ....................324 Chapter 46 Quick Setup ............................327 46.1 Quick Setup Screen ........................327 Chapter 47 System...............................328 47.1 What You Can Do ........................328 47.2 System Information ........................328 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 17
50.3 ONVIF ............................362 Chapter 51 Security .............................364 51.1 Access Control ..........................364 51.1.1 What You Can Do ......................364 51.2 Set Up Login Accounts ....................... 364 51.3 Remote Management ....................... 366 51.4 Configure SNMP .......................... 368 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 18
53.2 Switch Access and Login ......................383 53.3 Switch Configuration ........................384 Appendix A Customer Support ..................... 386 Appendix B Common Services ...................... 392 Appendix C IPv6..........................395 Appendix D Legal Information ...................... 403 Index ..............................407 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
H A P T E R Getting to Know Your Switch 1.1 Introduction The GS1350 Series consists of the following models: • GS1350-6HP • GS1350-12HP • GS1350-18HP • GS1350-26HP All models are referred to as the “Switch” in this guide. The Switch can be configured and managed by the Web Configurator.
The following example figure shows a Switch supplying PoE (Power over Ethernet) to Powered Devices (PDs) such as an IP camera, a wireless router, an IP telephone and a general outdoor router that are not within reach of a power outlet. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch’s port or connect other switches to the Switch. In this example, all computers can share high-speed applications on the server. To expand the network, simply add more networking devices such as switches, routers, computers, print servers, and so on. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch. You can provide a super-fast uplink connection by using a Gigabit Ethernet/SFP port on the Switch. Figure 3 Bridging / Fiber Uplink Example Application GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Shared resources such as a server can be used by all ports in the same VLAN as the server. In the following figure only ports that need access to the server need to be part of VLAN 1. Ports can belong to other VLAN groups too. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch to its factory default settings. If you backed up an earlier configuration file, you would not have to totally re-configure the Switch. You could simply restore your last configuration. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• The Switches with fans are not suitable for use in locations where children are likely to be present. To start using the Switch, simply connect the power cables and turn it on. 2.2 Desktop Installation Procedure Make sure the Switch is clean and dry. Remove the adhesive backing from the rubber feet. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
2.3.1 Installation Requirements • Distance above the floor: At least 1.8 m (5.9 feet) • Distance between holes: 78 mm (3.071 inches) • Two M4 screws and a #2 Philips screwdriver • Two screw anchors (optional) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 28
Align the holes on the back of the Switch with the screws on the wall. Hang the Switch on the screws. Note: Make sure there is enough clearance between the wall and the Switch to allow ventilation. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
20). Follow the steps below to mount your Switch on a standard EIA rack using a rack-mounting kit. Note: Make sure there is enough clearance between each equipment on the rack for air circulation. 2.4.1 Installation Requirements • Two mounting brackets. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Position a mounting bracket (that is already attached to the Switch) 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. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 31
Using a #2 Philips screwdriver, install the M5 flat head screws through the mounting bracket holes into the rack. Note: Make sure you tighten all the four screws to prevent the Switch from getting slanted. Repeat steps to attach the second mounting bracket on the other side of the rack. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
These are 10/100/1000Base-T auto-negotiating and auto-crossover Ethernet ports. T RJ-45 PoE Ports Connect these ports to a computer, a hub, a router, or an Ethernet switch. 1/2 SFP Slots Use SFP transceivers in these ports for high-bandwidth backbone connections. (only available for GS1350-6HP/12HP) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Ethernet port are the same in order to connect. 3.1.1.1 Default Ethernet Negotiation Settings The factory default negotiation settings for the Gigabit ports on the Switch are: • Speed: Auto GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 34
3.1.3.1 Transceiver Installation Use the following steps to install an SFP transceiver. Attach an ESD preventive wrist strap to your wrist and to a bare metal surface. Align the transceiver in front of the slot opening. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Note: Make sure the transceiver’s latch is pushed all the way down, so the transceiver can be pulled out successfully. Pull the latch, or use your thumb and index finger to grasp the tabs on both sides of the transceiver, and carefully slide it out of the slot. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• Transceiver Slots – Use SFP transceivers in these slots for connections to backbone Ethernet switches. Figure 20 Combo Port Example: Gigabit Port and SFP Transceiver Slot 3.2 Rear Panel The following figures show the rear panels of the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 37
Note: The specification for surge or ESD protection assumes that the Switch is properly grounded. Remove the M4 ground screw from the Switch’s rear panel. Secure a green or yellow ground cable (16 AWG or smaller) to the Switch's rear panel using the M4 ground screw. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Make sure the grounding terminal is connected to the buildings grounding electrode and has an earth resistance of less than 10 ohms, or according to your country’s electrical regulations. Figure 27 Connecting to the Building’s Main Grounding Electrode GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The Switch is not receiving power from the power module in the power slot. Green The Switch is on and functioning properly. Blinking The Switch is rebooting and performing self-diagnostic tests. The Switch is functioning abnormally. The power is off or the Switch is not ready/malfunctioning. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 40
Power supplied to all PoE Ethernet ports meets the IEEE 802.3at/bt standard. Amber Power supplied to all PoE Ethernet ports meets the IEEE 802.3af standard. 1-5 (GS1350- 6HP) There is no power supplied. 1-8 (GS1350- 12HP) 1-16 (GS1350- 18HP) 1-24 (GS1350- 26HP) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 41
The Switch is transmitting or receiving data at 1000 Mbps. 11-12 (GS1350- 12HP) Amber The uplink port is linking at 100 Mbps. Blinking The Switch is transmitting or receiving data at 100 Mbps. There is no link or port, the uplink port is shut down. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Address field. Press [ENTER]. Your computer must be in the same subnet in order to access this website address. Also, you can use the ZON Utility to check your Switch’s IP address. See Section 4.3 on page 47 for more information on the ZON utility. The following screen appears. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 44
Figure 27 Web Configurator: Login Click Login to log into the Web Configurator to manage the Switch directly. The default username is admin and associated default password is 1234. The following screen appears. Figure 28 Select Mode GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 45
If you did not change the default administrator password and/or SNMP community values, a warning screen displays each time you log into the Web Configurator. Click Password / SNMP to open a screen where you can change the administrator and SNMP passwords simultaneously. Otherwise, click Ignore to close it. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 46
Enter the Get Community string, which is the password for the incoming Get- and GetNext- requests from the management station. The Get Community string is only used by SNMP managers using SNMP version 2c or lower. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Note: To check for your Windows operating system version, right-click on My Computer > Properties. You should see this information in the General tab. Hardware Here are the minimum hardware requirements to use the ZON Utility on your PC. • Core i3 processor • 2GB RAM GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
ZON icon in the upper right hand corner of the screen. Then select the Supported model and firmware version link. If your device is not listed here, see the device release notes for ZON utility support. The release notes are in the firmware zip file on the Zyxel web site. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 49
Select a network adapter to which your supported devices are connected. Figure 34 Network Adapter Click the Go button for the ZON Utility to discover all supported devices in your network. Figure 35 Discovery The ZON Utility screen shows the devices discovered. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 50
7 Firmware Upgrade Use this icon to upgrade new firmware to selected devices of the same model. Make sure you have downloaded the firmware from the Zyxel website to your computer and unzipped it in advance. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch and its ports. – • VLAN to create a static VLAN, assign ports to the VLAN and set the ports to tag or untag outgoing – frames. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The Switch needs an IP address for it to be managed over the network. IP Subnet Mask The subnet mask specifies the network number portion of an IP address. Default Gateway Type the IP address of the default outgoing gateway in dotted decimal notation, for example 192.168.1.254. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 53
Select the SNMP version for the Switch. The SNMP version on the Switch must match the version on the SNMP manager. Choose SNMP version 2c (v2c), SNMP version 3 (v3) or both (v3v2c). Note: SNMP version 2c is backwards compatible with SNMP version 1. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 54
Click the arrows to add or delete icons located on the left to desired preference. Select Static if the ports are configured as static members of a trunk group. Select LACP if the ports are configured to join a trunk group via LACP. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 55
Enter a domain name server IP address in order to be able to use a domain name instead of an IP address. Change administrator's password and activate SNMP New Password This field displays asterisks when a new password has been created. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In Protection, you can set up loop guard and broadcast storm control. In order to set up loop guard, please do the following. Click Wizard > Protection > Step 1 Loop Guard to access this screen. Figure 42 Wizard > Protection > Step 1 Loop Guard GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 57
Specify how many broadcast packets the port receives per second. Previous Click Previous to show the previous screen. Next Click Next to show the next screen. Cancel Click Cancel to exit this screen without saving. After clicking Next, the Summary screen appears. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Review the information and click Finish to create the task. Cancel Click Cancel to exit this screen without saving. 4.4.3 VLAN In VLAN, you can create VLAN, and tag VLAN settings. Click Wizard > VLAN > VLAN Setting to access this screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Cancel to exit this screen without saving. 4.4.4 QoS In QoS, you can create QoS settings. In order to create QoS settings, please do the following. Click Wizard > QoS > QoS Setting to access this screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Review the information and click Finish to create the task. Cancel Click Cancel to exit this screen without saving. 4.5 Web Configurator Layout This guide uses GS1350-6HP screens as an example. The screens may very slightly for different models. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 61
Click this link to go to the Zyxel Community Biz Forum. – Click this icon to switch between the Web Configurator’s Standard or Surveillance mode. – Click this link to go to the NCC (Nebula Control Center) portal website. – GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 62
This link takes you to a screen where you can configure settings for individual interface type and ID. IPv6 This link takes you to a screen where you can view IPv6 status and configure IPv6 settings. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 63
This link takes you to a screen where you can configure a specific VLAN to run ONVIF. IP Application DiffServ This link takes you to screens where you can enable DiffServ, configure marking rules and set DSCP-to-IEEE802.1p mappings. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 64
This link takes you to a screen where you can view the port statistics. Table 18 Navigation Panel Sub-links Overview (Surveillance Mode) SUMMARY QUICK SETUP SYSTEM PORT Navigation Panel Sub-links Overview (Surveillance Mode) SWITCHING NETWORKING SECURITY MAINTENANCE GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 65
SNMP traps that should be sent to each SNMP manager, and add/edit user information. Service This link takes you to a screen where you can decide what services you may use to access the Access Switch. Control GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click the Save link in the upper right hand corner of the Web Configurator to save your configuration to non-volatile memory. Non-volatile memory refers to the Switch’s storage that remains even if the Switch’s power is turned off. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
LED behavior. 4.8.3 Reboot the Switch Press the RESET button to reboot the Switch without turning the power off. See Section 3.3 on page 39 more information about the LED behavior. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figure 49 Web Configurator: Logout Screen 4.10 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. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In this example, you want to configure port 1 as a member of VLAN 2. Figure 50 Initial Setup Network Example: VLAN Click Advanced Application > VLAN > VLAN Configuration in the navigation panel and click the Static VLAN Setup link. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use PVID to add a tag to incoming untagged frames received on that port so that the frames are forwarded to the VLAN group that the tag defines. In the example network, configure 2 as the port VID on port 1 so that any untagged frames received on GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
If the Switch fails to obtain an IP address from a DHCP server, the Switch will use 192.168.1.1 as the management IP address. You can configure another IP address in a different subnet for management purposes. The following figure shows an example. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 72
Open your web browser and enter 192.168.1.1 (the default IP address) in the address bar to access the Web Configurator. See Section 4.2 on page 43 for more information. Click Basic Setting > IP Setup > IP Configuration in the navigation panel. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 73
This is the same as the VLAN ID you configure in the Static VLAN screen. Click Add to save your changes back to the run-time memory. Settings in the run-time memory are lost when the Switch’s power is turned off. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
1 and 100 DHCP Client (B) 1 and 100 DHCP Client (C) 1 and 100 Access the Switch through http://192.168.1.1 by default. Log into the Switch by entering the user name (default: admin) and password (default: 1234). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 75
4, 5 and 6 to 100. This tags untagged incoming frames on ports 4, 5 and 6 with the tag 100. Figure 55 Tutorial: Tag Untagged Frames Go to Advanced Application > DHCP Snooping > Configure, activate and specify VLAN 100 as the DHCP VLAN as shown. Click Apply. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 76
If you want to add more information in the DHCP request packets such as source VLAN ID or system name, you can also select an Option82 Profile in the entry. See Section 23.4.1.3 on page 194. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In this example, you have configured your DHCP server (192.168.2.3) and want to have it assign a specific IP address (say 172.16.1.18) to DHCP client A based on the system name, VLAN ID and port number in the DHCP request. Client A connects to the Switch’s port 2 in VLAN 102. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Clear the TX Tagging check box to set the Switch to remove VLAN tags before sending. Click Add to save the settings to the run-time memory. Settings in the run-time memory are lost when the Switch’s power is turned off. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 79
Enter 102 in the PVID field for port 2 to add a tag to incoming untagged frames received on that port so that the frames are forwarded to the VLAN group that the tag defines. 10 Click Apply to save your changes back to the run-time memory. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figure 64 Tutorial: Set DHCP Server and Relay Information Click the Save link in the upper right corner of the Web Configurator to save your configuration permanently. The DHCP server can then assign a specific IP address based on the DHCP request. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
You configured the correct VLAN ID, port number and system name for DHCP relay on both the DHCP server and the Switch. You clicked the Save link on the Switch to have your settings take effect. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
7.2 Status The Status screen displays when you log into the Switch or click Status at the top right corner of the Web Configurator. The Status screen displays general device information, system status, and its IP addresses. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 83
Version and the decimal is the version of the hardware change. For example, V1.0 is a hardware version for the Switch where 1 identifies the GS1350 Series, and .0 is the first hardware change. System Up Time This field displays how long the Switch has been running since it last restarted or was turned on.
This screen shows the neighboring device first recognized on an Ethernet port of the Switch. Device information is displayed in gray when the neighboring device is offline. Click Status > Neighbor to see the following screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 85
Click the Cycle button to turn OFF the power of the neighbor device and turn it back ON again. A count down button (from 5 to 0) starts. Note: The Switch must support power sourcing (PSE) or the network device is a powered device (PD). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The following table describes the fields in the above screen. Table 23 Status > Neighbor > Neighbor Detail LABEL DESCRIPTION Local Port This shows the port of the Switch, on which the neighboring device is discovered. Desc. This shows the port description of the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 87
The Switch must support power sourcing (PSE) or the network device is a powered device (PD). • If multiple neighbor devices use the same port, the Reset button is not available. • You can only reset Zyxel powered devices that support the ZON utility. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In the navigation panel, click Basic Setting > System Info to display the screen as shown. Use this screen to view general system information. You can check the firmware version number and monitor the Switch temperature. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 89
CPU/MAC refers to the location of the temperature sensor on the Switch printed circuit board. (C/F) Current This shows the current temperature at this sensor. This field displays the maximum temperature measured at this sensor. This field displays the minimum temperature measured at this sensor. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Enter the geographic location of your Switch. You can use up to 32 printable ASCII characters; spaces are allowed. Contact Person's Enter the name of the person in charge of this Switch. You can use up to 32 printable ASCII Name characters; spaces are allowed. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 91
UTC). So in the European Union you would select Last, Sunday, October and the last field depends on your time zone. In Germany for instance, you would select 2:00 because Germany's time zone is one hour ahead of GMT or UTC (GMT+1). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Basic Setting > 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 Chapter 9 on page 121 for more information on VLAN. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 93
Typically used for controlled load, latency-sensitive traffic such as SNA (Systems Network Architecture) transactions. Priority 3 Typically used for “excellent effort” or better than best effort and would include important business traffic that can tolerate some delay. Priority 2 This is for “spare bandwidth”. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Note: You must configure a VLAN first. Each VLAN can have multiple management IP addresses, and you can log into the Switch via different management IP addresses simultaneously. 8.6.2 IP Status Figure 71 Basic Setting > IP Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
IP Address This is the IP address of your Switch in dotted decimal notation for example 192.168.1.1. IP Subnet Mask This is the IP subnet mask of your Switch in dotted decimal notation for example 255.255.255.0. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This displays the IP address of the primary and secondary DNS servers assigned by the DHCP server. 0.0.0.0 means no DNS server is assigned. 8.6.4 IP Configuration Use this screen to configure the default gateway device, default domain name server and add IP domains. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 97
Switch. You need to fill in the following fields when you select this option. IP Address Enter the IP address of your Switch in dotted decimal notation, for example, 172.21.40.x. This is the IP address of the Switch in an IP routing domain. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The proxy server of an organization may prohibit communication between the Switch and NCC (Nebula Control Center) (Section 8.11 on page 119). Use this screen to enable communication between the Switch and NCC through the proxy server. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Cancel to reset the fields to your previous configuration. 8.7 Port Setup Use this screen to configure Switch port settings. Click Basic Setting > Port Setup in the navigation panel to display the configuration screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 100
When the Switch’s auto-negotiation is turned off, a port uses the pre-configured speed and duplex mode when making a connection, thus requiring you to make sure that the settings of the peer port are the same in order to connect. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In the figure below, the IP camera and IP phone get their power directly from the Switch. Aside from minimizing the need for cables and wires, PoE removes the hassle of trying to find a nearby electric outlet to power up devices. Figure 78 Powered Device Examples GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 102
Note: The Switch must have at least 16 W of remaining power in order to supply power to a PoE device, even if the PoE device needs less than 16 W. Port This is the port index number. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to apply a schedule to the ports on the Switch. You must first configure a schedule in the Advanced Application > Time Range screen. Click the PoE Time Range Setup link in the Basic Setting > PoE Status screen. The following screen opens. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to set the PoE power management mode, priority levels, power-up mode and the maximum amount of power for the connected PDs. Click the PoE Setup link in the Basic Setting > PoE Status screen. The following screen opens. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 105
Select High to set the Switch to assign the remaining power to the port after all critical priority ports are served. Select Low to set the Switch to assign the remaining power to the port after all critical and high priority ports are served. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 106
The Power Via MDI TLV allows PoE devices to advertise and discover the MDI power support capabilities of the sending port on the remote device. • Port Class • MDI Supported • MDI Enabled • Pair Controllable • PSE Power Pairs • Power Class GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Cancel to reset the fields to your previous configuration. Index This field displays the index number of an entry. Interface Type This field displays the type of interface. Interface ID This field displays the identification number of the interface. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field displays whether the IPv6 interface is activated or not. 8.10.2 IPv6 Interface Status Use this screen to view a specific IPv6 interface status and detailed information. Click an interface index number in the Basic Setting > IPv6 screen. The following screen opens. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 109
This field displays the time period (in milliseconds) during which ICMPv6 error messages of up to Limit Error the bucket size can be transmitted. 0 means no limit. Interval Stateless This field displays whether the Switch’s interface can automatically generate a link-local address Address via stateless auto-configuration. Autoconfig GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 110
This field displays the address record when the Switch queries the DNS server to resolve domain names. Restart Click Click Here to send a new DHCP request to the DHCPv6 server and update the IPv6 address DHCPv6 Client and DNS information for this interface. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
DHCPv6 Client Setup Click the link to go to a screen where you can configure the Switch DHCPv6 client settings. 8.10.4 IPv6 Global Setup Use this screen to configure the global IPv6 settings. Click the link next to IPv6 Global Setup in the IPv6 Configuration screen to display the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to turn on or off an IPv6 interface and enable stateless auto-configuration on it. Click the link next to IPv6 Interface Setup in the IPv6 Configuration screen to display the screen as shown next. Figure 87 Basic Setting > IPv6 > IPv6 Configuration > IPv6 Interface Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Manually configure a static IPv6 link-local address for the interface. Address Default Set the default gateway IPv6 address for the interface. When an interface cannot find a routing Gateway information for a frame’s destination, it forwards the packet to the default gateway. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Cancel Click this to reset the Domain Name Server values in this screen to their last-saved values. Interface Select the IPv6 interface you want to configure. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to configure neighbor discovery settings for each interface. Click the link next to IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Setup in the IPv6 Configuration screen to display the screen as shown next. Figure 90 Basic Setting > IPv6 > IPv6 Configuration > IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click the link next to IPv6 Neighbor Setup in the IPv6 Configuration screen to display the screen as shown next. Figure 91 Basic Setting > IPv6 > IPv6 Configuration > IPv6 Neighbor Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to configure the Switch’s DHCP settings when it is acting as a DHCPv6 client. Click the link next to DHCPv6 Client Setup in the IPv6 Configuration screen to display the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 118
This field displays whether the Switch obtains a list of domain names from the DHCP server. Information This field displays the time interval (in seconds) at which the Switch exchanges other configuration Refresh information with a DHCPv6 server again. Minimum GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch, then it will be upgraded according to the firmware upgrade schedule for the Switch on the NCC. Below is the process for upgrading firmware: Download firmware via the NCC. Upgrade the firmware and reboot. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This screen has a QR code containing the Switch’s serial number and MAC address for handy NCC registration of the Switch using the Nebula Mobile app. First, download the app from the Google Play store for Android devices or the App Store for iOS devices and create an organization and site. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
2 bytes of TPID (Tag Protocol Identifier, residing within the type/length field of the Ethernet frame) and 2 bytes of TCI (Tag Control Information, starts after the source address field of the Ethernet frame). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 122
At the time of writing, you can create static VLANs, Voice VLANs, MAC-based VLANs and Vendor ID- based VLANs on the Switch when the VLAN type is set to 802.1Q. When a packet is received, the Switch processes the VLAN rules in sequence. The sequence (priority) of the VLANs is: GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
You can also tag all outgoing frames (that were previously untagged) from a port with the specified VID. 9.2 VLAN Status Use this screen to view and search all static VLAN groups. Click Advanced Application > VLAN from the navigation panel to display the VLAN Status screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Previous or Next to show the previous or next screen if all status information cannot be seen in one screen. 9.2.1 VLAN Details Use this screen to view detailed port settings and status of the static VLAN group. Click on an index number in the VLAN Status screen to display VLAN details. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Click Here to configure the Voice VLAN for the Switch. MAC Based VLAN Setup Click Click Here to configure the MAC Based VLAN for the Switch. Vendor ID Based VLAN Click Click Here to configure the Vendor ID Based VLAN for the Switch. Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this row only if you want to make some settings the same for all ports. Use this row first to set the common settings and then make adjustments on a port-by-port basis. Note: Changes in this row are copied to all the ports as soon as you make them. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to configure the static VLAN (IEEE 802.1Q) settings on a port. Click the VLAN Port Setup link in the VLAN Configuration screen. Figure 102 Advanced Application > VLAN > VLAN Configuration > VLAN Port Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• a tagged voice packet when the incoming port and VLAN tag belongs to a voice VLAN. It then checks the source packet’s MAC address against an OUI list. If a match is found, the packet is considered as a voice packet. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 129
Enter “0” for the bits of the matched traffic’s MAC address, which can be of any hexadecimal characters. For example, if you set the MAC address to 00:13:49:00:00:00 and the mask to ff:ff:ff:00:00:00, a packet with a MAC address of 00:13:49:12:34:56 matches this criteria. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
MAC address in the MAC-based VLAN setup screen. You can also delete a MAC-based VLAN entry in the same screen. Click the MAC Based VLAN Setup link in the VLAN Configuration screen to see the following screen. Figure 104 Advanced Application > VLAN > VLAN Configuration > MAC Based VLAN Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
As rules are processed one after the other, stating a priority order will let you choose which rule has to be applied first and which second. Click the Vendor ID Based VLAN Setup link in the VLAN Configuration screen to see the following screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 132
This field displays the VLAN ID of the vendor ID based VLAN entry. Priority This field displays the priority level which is assigned to frames belonging to this vendor ID based VLAN. Weight This field displays the weight of the vendor ID based VLAN entry. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
9.9.1 Configure a Port-Based VLAN Select Port Based as the VLAN Type in the Basic Setting > Switch Setup screen and then click Advanced Application > VLAN from the navigation panel to display the next screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 134
Chapter 9 VLAN Figure 106 Advanced Application > VLAN: Port Based VLAN Setup (All Connected) Figure 107 Advanced Application > VLAN: Port Based VLAN Setup (Port Isolation) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 135
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This may reduce the need for broadcasting. Click Advanced Application > Static MAC Forwarding in the navigation panel to display the configuration screen as shown. Figure 108 Advanced Application > Static MAC Forwarding GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 137
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Click Delete to remove the selected entry from the summary table. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figure 110 on page shows frames being forwarded to devices connected to port 3. Figure 111 on page 139 shows frames being forwarded to ports 2 and 3 within VLAN group 4. Figure 109 No Static Multicast Forwarding GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
11.2 Configure Static Multicast Forwarding Use this screen to configure rules to forward specific multicast frames, such as streaming or control frames, to specific ports. Click Advanced Application > Static Multicast Forwarding to display the configuration screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 140
This field displays the ID number of a VLAN group to which frames containing the specified multicast MAC address will be forwarded. Port This field displays the ports within a identified VLAN group to which frames containing the specified multicast MAC address will be forwarded. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 141
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Click Delete to remove the selected entry from the summary table. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
12.2 Configure a Filtering Rule Use this screen to create rules for traffic going through the Switch. Click Advanced Application > Filtering in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown next. Figure 113 Advanced Application > Filtering GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 143
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Check the rules that you want to remove and then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the selected check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Path cost is the cost of transmitting a frame onto a LAN through that port. The recommended cost is assigned according to the speed of the link to which a port is attached. The slower the media, the GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 145
Note: The listening state does NOT exist in RSTP. Learning All BPDUs are received and processed. Information frames are submitted to the learning process but not forwarded. Forwarding All BPDUs are received and processed. All information frames are received and forwarded. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Spanning Tree. Topology This is the number of times the spanning tree has been reconfigured. Changed Times Time Since Last This is the time since the spanning tree was last reconfigured. Change GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
LAN segment to which this port is connected. 13.3 Configure Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Use this screen to configure RSTP settings, see Section 13.1 on page 144 for more information on RSTP. Click RSTP in the Advanced Application > Spanning Tree Protocol screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 148
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. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 149
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
150) to limit the bandwidth for traffic going through the Switch. 14.2 Bandwidth Control Setup Click Advanced Application > Bandwidth Control in the navigation panel to bring up the screen as shown next. Figure 116 Advanced Application > Bandwidth Control GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 151
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to reset the fields. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
(DLF) packets the Switch receives per second on the ports. 15.2 Broadcast Storm Control Setup Click Advanced Application > Broadcast Storm Control in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown next. Figure 117 Advanced Application > Broadcast Storm Control GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 153
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to reset the fields. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Advanced Application > Mirroring in the navigation panel to display the Mirroring screen. Use this screen to select a monitor port and specify the traffic flow to be copied to the monitor port. Figure 118 Advanced Application > Mirroring GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 155
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to reset the fields. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
When you enable LACP link aggregation on a port, the port can automatically negotiate with the ports at the remote end of a link to establish trunk groups. LACP also allows port redundancy, that is, if an GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Section 17.1 on page 156 for more information. Figure 119 Advanced Application > Link Aggregation Status Port Priority and Port Number are 0 as it is the aggregator ID for the trunk group, not the individual port. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
LACP - if the ports are configured to join a trunk group via LACP. 17.3 Link Aggregation Setting Click Advanced Application > Link Aggregation > Link Aggregation Setting to display the screen shown next. See Section 17.1 on page 156 for more information on link aggregation. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 159
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Group ID The field identifies the link aggregation group, that is, one logical link containing multiple ports. LACP Active Select this option to enable LACP for a trunk. Port This field displays the port number. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
T1, select the traffic distribution algorithm used by this group and select the ports that should belong to this group as shown in the figure below. Click Apply when you are done. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 162
Figure 123 Trunking Example Configuration Screen – Your trunk group 1 (T1) configuration is now complete. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
18.2 Port Security Setup Click Advanced Application > Port Security in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. Figure 124 Advanced Application > Port Security (Standalone Mode) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 164
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
165) to view or define a schedule on the Switch. 19.2 Configuring Time Range Click Advanced Application > Time Range in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. Figure 125 Advanced Application > Time Range GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 166
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Check the rules that you want to remove and then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the selected check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This queue then moves to the back of the list. The next queue is given an equal amount of bandwidth, and then moves to the end of the list; and so on, depending on the number of queues being used. This works in a looping fashion until a queue is empty. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this row only if you want to make some settings the same for all ports. Use this row first to set the common settings and then make adjustments on a port-by-port basis. Note: Changes in this row are copied to all the ports as soon as you make them. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 169
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
IGMP snooping allows the Switch to learn multicast groups without you having to manually configure them. The Switch forwards multicast traffic destined for multicast groups (that it has learned from IGMP GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 75 Advanced Application > Multicast > IPv4 Multicast LABEL DESCRIPTION Index This is the index number of the entry. This field displays the multicast VLAN ID. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Select Active to enable IGMP Snooping to forward group multicast traffic only to ports that are members of that group. Querier Select this option to allow the Switch to send IGMP General Query messages to the VLANs with the multicast hosts attached. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 173
This defines how many seconds the Switch waits for an IGMP report before removing an IGMP snooping membership entry when an IGMP leave message is received on this port from a host. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Snooping link and then the IGMP Snooping VLAN link to display the screen as shown. See IGMP Snooping and VLANs on page 171 for more information on IGMP Snooping VLAN. Figure 130 Advanced Application > Multicast > IPv4 Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Snooping VLAN GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 175
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Check the entries that you want to remove, then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Accounting is the process of recording what a user is doing. The Switch can use an external server to track when users log in, log out, execute commands and so on. Accounting can also record system related actions such as boot up and shut down times of the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
RADIUS servers and Section 22.5.2 on page 183 for RADIUS attributes utilized by the authentication features on the Switch. Click on the RADIUS Server Setup link in the AAA screen to view the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 178
Enter the IP address of an external RADIUS server in dotted decimal notation. UDP Port The default port of a RADIUS server for authentication is 1812. You need not change this value unless your network administrator instructs you to do so. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. 22.4 AAA Setup Use this screen to configure authentication, authorization and accounting settings on the Switch. Click on the AAA Setup link in the AAA screen to view the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 180
Switch to check another source for access privilege level specify it in the Method 2 field. Select local to have the Switch check the access privilege configured for local authentication. Select radius to have the Switch check the access privilege via the external server. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 181
• stop-only – to have the Switch send information to the accounting server only when a user ends a session. Method RADIUS is the only method for recording System or Exec type of event. Privilege This field is not configurable for System and Exec types of events. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
VSAs for users authenticating via the RADIUS server. The following table describes the VSAs supported on the Switch. Table 80 Supported VSAs FUNCTION ATTRIBUTE Ingress Bandwidth Vendor-Id = 890 Assignment Vendor-Type = 1 ingress rate (Kbps in decimal format) Vendor-data = GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
22.5.3 Attributes Used for Authentication The following sections list the attributes sent from the Switch to the RADIUS server when performing authentication. 22.5.3.1 Attributes Used for Authenticating Privilege Access User-Name GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 184
Chapter 22 AAA – The format of the User-Name attribute is $enab#$, where # is the privilege level (1 – 14). User-Password NAS-Identifier NAS-IP-Address 22.5.3.2 Attributes Used to Login Users User-Name User-Password NAS-Identifier NAS-IP-Address GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
DHCP option 82 profile to certain ports in a VLAN. 23.2 DHCP Snooping Use this screen to look at various statistics about the DHCP snooping database. To open this screen, click Advanced Application > DHCP Snooping. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 186
This field displays the location of the DHCP snooping database. Write delay timer This field displays how long (in seconds) the Switch tries to complete a specific update in the DHCP snooping database before it gives up. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 187
This section displays the number of times and the reasons the Switch ignored bindings counters the last time it read bindings from the DHCP binding database. You can clear these counters by restarting the Switch or using CLI commands. See the CLI Reference Guide. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
DHCP server is located, and configure the DHCP snooping database. The DHCP snooping database stores the current bindings on a secure, external TFTP server so that they are still available after a restart. To open this screen, click Advanced Application > DHCP Snooping > Configure. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 189
Enter how long (10 – 65535 seconds) the Switch waits to update the DHCP snooping database the first time the current bindings change after an update. Once the next update is scheduled, additional changes in current bindings are automatically included in the next update. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this row only if you want to make some settings the same for all ports. Use this row first to set the common settings and then make adjustments on a port-by-port basis. Note: Changes in this row are copied to all the ports as soon as you make them. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Specify the VLANs you want to manage in the section below. Use a comma (,) to separate individual VLANs or a dash (–) to indicates a range of VLANs. For example, “3,4” or “3–9”. Search Click this to display the specified range of VLANs in the section below. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Enter the number of ports to which you want to apply the specified DHCP option 82 profile. You can enter multiple ports separated by (no space) comma (,) or hyphen (–). For example, enter “3–5” for ports 3, 4, and 5. Enter “3,5,7” for ports 3, 5, and 7. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Note: If DHCP is enabled and there are no trusted ports, DHCP requests will not succeed. Untrusted ports are connected to subscribers. The Switch discards DHCP packets from untrusted ports in the following situations: GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 194
When the DHCP server responds, the Switch removes the information in the Agent Information field before forwarding the response to the original source. You can configure this setting for each source VLAN. This setting is independent of the DHCP relay settings (Chapter 31 on page 241). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 195
Enable DHCP snooping on the Switch. Enable DHCP snooping on each VLAN, and configure DHCP relay option 82. Configure trusted and untrusted ports, and specify the maximum number of DHCP packets that each port can receive per second. Configure static bindings. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• The switch (not in loop state) will receive broadcast messages sent out from the switch in loop state. • The switch (not in loop state) will receive its own broadcast messages that it sends out as they loop back. It will then re-broadcast those messages again. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 197
Figure 144 Loop Guard – Network Loop Note: After resolving the loop problem on your network you can re-activate the disabled port via the Web Configurator (see Section 8.7 on page 99) or via commands (See the CLI Reference Guide). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• Use the Errdisable Recovery screen (Section 25.6 on page 204) to set the Switch to automatically undo an action after the error is gone. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click the Click here link next to Errdisable Status in the Advanced Application > Errdisable screen to display the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 201
This field displays whether the control packets (ARP, BPDU, and/or IGMP) on the port is being detected or not. It also shows whether loop guard, anti-arp scanning, BPDU guard or ZULD is enabled on the port. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Note: After you configure this screen, make sure you also enable error detection for the specific control packets in the Advanced Application > Errdisable > Errdisable Detect screen. Figure 148 Advanced Application > Errdisable > CPU protection GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Changes in this row are copied to all the entries as soon as you make them. Active Select this option to have the Switch detect if the configured rate limit for a specific control packet is exceeded and take the action selected below. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Select this check box to allow the Switch to wait for the specified time interval to activate a port or allow specific packets on a port, after the error was gone. Clear the check box to turn off this rule. Interval Enter the number of seconds (from 30 to 2592000) for the time interval. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 205
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
26.2 Configuring Green Ethernet Click Advanced Application > Green Ethernet in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. Note: EEE, Auto Power Down and Short Reach are NOT supported on an uplink port. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 207
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• Power via MDI TLV (optional, For PoE models only) • Link Aggregation TLV (optional) • Maximum Frame Size TLV (optional) The optional TLVs are inserted between the Time To Live TLV and the End of LLDPDU TLV. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Since LLDPDU updates status and configuration information periodically, network managers may check the result of provision via remote status. The remote status is updated by receiving LLDP-MED TLVs from endpoint devices. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Table 94 Advanced Application > LLDP LABEL DESCRIPTION LLDP LLDP Local Click here to show a screen with the Switch’s LLDP information. Status LLDP Remote Click here to show a screen with LLDP information from the neighboring devices. Status GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This screen displays a summary of LLDP status on this Switch. Click Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP Local Status to display the screen as shown next. Figure 155 Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP Local Status GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This screen displays detailed LLDP status for each port on this Switch. Click Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP Local Status and then, click a port number, for example 1 in the local port column to display the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 213
Chapter 27 Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) Figure 156 Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP Local Status > LLDP Local Port Status Detail GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 214
Network Policy • Location • Extend Power via MDI PSE • Extend Power via MDI PD • Inventory Management Device Type This is the LLDP-MED device class. The Zyxel Switch device type is: • Network Connectivity GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This is an alpha-numeric string that contains the specific identifier for the port from which this LLDPDU was transmitted. The port ID is identified by the port ID subtype. Port Description This displays a description for the port from which this LLDPDU was transmitted. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Table 98 Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP Remote Status > LLDP Remote Port Status Detail (Basic TLV) LABEL DESCRIPTION Local Port This displays the number of the Switch’s port to which the remote device is connected. Basic TLV GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 217
System Capabilities Supported • System Capabilities Enabled Management This displays the management address of the remote device. Address TLV • Management Address Subtype • Management Address • Interface Number Subtype • Interface Number • Object Identifier GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 218
This displays the IEEE 802.1 Port Protocol VLAN ID TLV, which indicates whether the VLAN ID VLAN ID TLV and whether it is enabled and supported on the port of remote Switch which sent the LLDPDU. • Port-Protocol VLAN ID • Port-Protocol VLAN ID Supported • Port-Protocol VLAN ID Enabled GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 219
• Port Class • MDI Supported • MDI Enabled • Pair Controllable • PSE Power Pairs • Power Class Max Frame Size This displays the maximum supported frame size in octets. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 220
Chapter 27 Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) Figure 160 Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP Remote Status > LLDP Remote Port Status Detail (MED TLV) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 221
Power Priority – the Endpoint Device’s power priority (which the Network Connectivity Device may use to prioritize which devices will remain in service during power shortages). • Power Value – power requirement, in fractions of Watts, in current configuration. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this row to make the setting the same for all ports. Use this row first and then make adjustments to each port if necessary. Changes in this row are copied to all the ports as soon as you make them. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Select the check boxes to enable or to disable the sending of System Description TLVs on the ports. System Name Select the check boxes to enable or to disable the sending of System Name TLVs on the ports. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. 27.8 LLDP-MED Network Policy Click Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP-MED Network Policy (Click Here) to display the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 226
This field displays the priority value of the network policy. DSCP This field displays the DSCP value of the network policy. Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Cancel to clear the selected check boxes. 27.9 LLDP-MED Location Click Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP-MED Location (Click Here) to display the screen as shown next. Figure 166 Advanced Application > LLDP > LLDP-MED Location GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 228
ELIN Number Enter a numerical digit string, corresponding to the ELIN identifier which is used during emergency call setup to a traditional CAMA or ISDN trunk-based PSAP. The valid length is from 10 to 25 characters. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 229
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Check the locations that you want to remove, then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the selected check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The PD may stop responding to the Switch’s detection over ping or LLDP during firmware upgrade. Disable the Auto PD Recovery function to prevent damage to the PD caused by a power cutoff during firmware upgrade. To open this screen, click Advanced Application > Auto PD Recovery. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 231
Count starts from 1. After Polling Count reaches 3, the PD Health status LED will turn to red in the Status > Neighbor screen (see Section 7.2.1 on page 84 for details). The Switch will then perform your choice in the Action field. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click this to reset the values in this screen to their last-saved values. 28.2.1 Activate the Automatic PD Recovery Follow the steps below to activate the automatic PD recovery. In the Advanced Application > Auto PD Recovery screen, activate the feature. Figure 169 Auto PD Recovery (Ping Mode) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 233
LLDP table based on your value for Resume Polling Interval. When the PD Reboot Count value is reached, the Switch will no longer perform the PD recovery process. The PD Health status LED will turn to red in the Status > Neighbor screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 234
PD before firmware upgrade is finished, it may permanently damage the PD or require a hard reset to recover it. It is strongly advised to disable the Switch's Auto PD Recovery function before upgrading the PD's firmware. This will prevent damage caused by a power cutoff. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
235) to enable the ONVIF protocol on the Switch. 29.2 ONVIF Screen This screen lets you turn on the ONVIF protocol on the Switch and its Ethernet ports. To open this screen, click Advanced Application > ONVIF. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 236
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Check the entries that you want to remove, then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The DSCP value determines the PHB (Per-Hop Behavior), that each packet gets as it is forwarded across the DiffServ network. Based on the marking rule different kinds of traffic can be marked for different priorities of forwarding. Resources can then be allocated according to the DSCP values and the configured policies. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figure 173 DiffServ Network 30.2 Activating DiffServ Activate DiffServ to apply marking rules or IEEE 802.1p priority mapping on the Switch. Click IP Application > DiffServ in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The Switch forwards all DHCP requests to the same DHCP server. – • VLAN The Switch is configured on a VLAN by VLAN basis. The Switch can be configured to relay – DHCP requests to different DHCP servers for clients in different VLAN. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The Switch can be configured as a global DHCP relay. This means that the Switch forwards all DHCP requests from all domains to the same DHCP server. You can also configure the Switch to relay DHCP information based on the VLAN membership of the DHCP clients. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
(1 byte) (1 byte) The 1 in the first field identifies this as an Agent Circuit ID sub-option and two identifies this as an Agent Remote ID sub-option. The next field specifies the length of the field. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Select this option to have the Switch append the Remote ID sub-option to the option 82 field of DHCP requests. Select this option to have the Switch add its MAC address to the client DHCP requests that it relays to a DHCP server. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Select a pre-defined DHCPv4 option 82 profile that the Switch applies to all ports. The Switch adds the Circuit ID sub-option and/or Remote ID sub-option specified in the profile to DHCP requests that it relays to a DHCP server. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field displays a sequential number for each entry. Click an index number to change the settings. Port This field displays the ports to which the Switch applies the settings. Profile Name This field displays the DHCP option 82 profile that the Switch applies to the ports. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch to send additional information (such as the VLAN ID) together with the DHCP requests to the DHCP server. This allows the DHCP server to assign the appropriate IP address according to the VLAN ID. Figure 182 DHCP Relay Configuration Example EXAMPLE GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
For DHCP relay configuration, this field displays the first remote DHCP server IP address. Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field displays a sequential number for each entry. Click an index number to change the settings. This field displays the VLAN to which the ports belongs. Port This field displays the ports to which the Switch applies the settings. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
(VLAN 1) to the DHCP server with an IP address of 192.168.1.100. Requests from the academic buildings (VLAN 2) are sent to the other DHCP server with an IP address of 172.16.10.100. Figure 185 DHCP Relay for Two VLANs For the example network, configure the VLAN Setting screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to configure DHCPv6 relay settings for a specific VLAN on the Switch. Click IP Application > DHCP > DHCPv6 in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 252
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Check the entries that you want to remove and then click the Delete button. Cancel Click Cancel to clear the selected check boxes. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In the following example, the Switch does not have IP address and MAC address mapping information for hosts A and B in its ARP table, and host A wants to ping host B. Host A sends an ARP request to the GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 254
Therefore in the following example, the Switch can learn host A’s MAC address from the ARP request sent by host A. The Switch then forwards host B’s ICMP reply to host A right after getting host B’s MAC GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figure 188 IP Application > ARP Setup 32.2.1 ARP Learning Use this screen to configure each port’s ARP learning mode. Click the link next to ARP Learning in the IP Application > ARP Setup screen to display the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 256
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
264) to see the Certificate screen and import the Switch's CA-signed certificates. 33.2 Maintenance Settings Use this screen to manage firmware and your configuration files. Click Management > Maintenance in the navigation panel to open the following screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Certificates Click Click Here to see the Certificate screen and import the Switch's CA-signed certificates. 33.2.1 Erase Running-Configuration Follow the steps below to reset the Switch back to the Zyxel default configuration settings. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Follow the steps below to reboot the Switch. In the Maintenance screen, click a configuration button next to Reboot System to reboot and load that configuration file. The following screen displays. Figure 192 Reboot System: Confirmation GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Be sure to upload the correct model firmware as uploading the wrong model firmware may damage your device. Click Management > Maintenance > Firmware Upgrade to view the screen as shown next. Figure 193 Management > Maintenance > Firmware Upgrade GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Choose File/Browse to locate it. After you have specified the file, click Restore. "config" is the name of the configuration file on the Switch, so your backup configuration file is automatically renamed when you restore using this screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch. The Tech Support menu eases your effort in obtaining reports and it is also available in CLI command by typing “Show tech-support” command. Click Management > Maintenance > Tech-Support to see the following screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 263
Switch is shutdown or during power outage. Memory Section Click Download to see the memory section log report. This log report is stored in flash memory. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
C (Country). It is recommended that each certificate have unique subject information. Issuer This field displays identifying information about the certificate’s issuing certification authority, such as a common name, organizational unit or department, organization or company and country. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to view the HTTPS certificate details. Click a hyperlink in the Service column in the Management > Maintenance > Certificates screen to open the following screen. Figure 198 Management > Maintenance > Certificates > HTTPS GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Be sure to upload the correct model firmware as uploading the wrong model firmware may damage your device. 33.8.3 FTP Command Line Procedure Launch the FTP client on your computer. Enter open, followed by a space and the IP address of your Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• FTP service is disabled in the Service Access Control screen. • The IP addresses in the Remote Management screen does not match the client IP address. If it does not match, the Switch will disconnect the FTP session immediately. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
“trusted computers” from which an administrator may use a service to manage the Switch. 34.2 Access Control Main Settings Use this screen to display the main screen. Click Management > Access Control in the navigation panel to display the main screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch. 34.3 Configure SNMP Use this screen to configure your SNMP settings. Click Management > Access Control > SNMP to view the screen as shown. Figure 200 Management > Access Control > SNMP GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
34.3.1 Configure SNMP Trap Group From the SNMP screen, click Trap Group to view the screen as shown. Use the Trap Group screen to specify the types of SNMP traps that should be sent to each SNMP manager. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
34.3.2 Enable or Disable Sending of SNMP Traps on a Port From the SNMP > Trap Group screen, click Port to view the screen as shown. Use this screen to set whether a trap received on the ports would be sent to the SNMP manager. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
From the SNMP screen, click User to view the screen as shown. Use the User screen to create SNMP users for authentication with managers using SNMP v3 and associate them to SNMP groups. An SNMP user is an SNMP manager. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 273
AES – Advanced Encryption Standard is another method for data encryption that also uses a secret key. AES applies a 128-bit key to 128-bit blocks of data. Password Enter the password of up to 32 ASCII characters for encrypting SNMP packets. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• A non-administrator (username is something other than admin) is someone who can view and/or configure Switch settings. The configuration right varies depending on the user’s privilege level. Click Management > Access Control > Logins to view the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 275
CLI see the Ethernet Switch CLI Reference Guide. User Name Set a user name (up to 32 ASCII characters long). Password Enter your new system password. Retype to Retype your new system password for confirmation. confirm GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Service Port field. If you change the default port number then you will have to let people (who wish to use the service) know the new port number for that service. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Management > Access Control > Remote Management to view the screen as shown next. You can specify a group of one or more “trusted computers” from which an administrator may use a service to manage the Switch. Click Access Control to return to the Access Control screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. 34.7 Technical Reference This section provides technical background information on the topics discussed in this chapter. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
SNMP v3 and Security SNMP v3 enhances security for SNMP management. SNMP managers can be required to authenticate with agents before conducting SNMP management sessions. Security can be further enhanced by encrypting the SNMP messages sent from the managers. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 280
This trap is sent when the temperature goes tOfRange above or below the normal operating range. zyHwMonitorTemperatureOu 1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.26.2.7 This trap is sent when the temperature is tOfRangeRecovered recovered from the out of range to normal operating range. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 281
1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.9.4.1 This trap is sent when users log in. zyAccessControlLogoutRec 1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.9.4.2 This trap is sent when users log out. zyAccessControlLoginFail 1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.9.4.3 This trap is sent when users fail in login. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 282
Storm-control zyPortStormControlTrap 1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.78.2.1 This trap is sent when storm control is detected on a specific port. A packet filter action has been applied on the interface. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 283
1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.4 This trap is sent when more than 99% of the MAC table is 8.2.1 used. zyMacForwardingTableFullReco 1.3.6.1.4.1.890.1.15.3.4 This trap is sent when the MAC address switching table vered 8.2.2 has become normal from full. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Figure 208 SSH Communication Example 34.7.2.1 How SSH Works The following table summarizes how a secure connection is established between two remote hosts. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 285
Your Switch supports SSH version 2 using RSA authentication and three encryption methods (DES, 3DES and Blowfish). The SSH server is implemented on the Switch for remote management and file transfer on port 22. Only one SSH connection is allowed at a time. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
If you have not changed the default HTTPS port on the Switch, then in your browser enter “https://Switch IP Address/” as the web site address where “Switch IP Address” is the IP address or domain name of the Switch you wish to access. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 287
Figure 212 Security Certificate Warning (Internet Explorer 7 or 8) After you log in, you will see the red address bar with the message Certificate Error. Click on Certificate Error next to the address bar and click View certificates. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 288
Mozilla Firefox Warning Messages When you attempt to access the Switch HTTPS server, a Your connection is not secure screen may display. If that is the case, click I Understand the Risks and then the Add Exception... button. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 289
Chapter 34 Access Control Figure 215 Security Alert (Mozilla Firefox) Confirm the HTTPS server URL matches. Click Confirm Security Exception to proceed to the Web Configurator login screen. Figure 216 Security Alert (Mozilla Firefox) EXAMPLE GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
After you accept the certificate and enter the login username and password, the Switch main screen appears. The lock displayed in the bottom right of the browser status bar or next to the website address denotes a secure connection. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 291
Figure 218 Example: Lock Denoting a Secure Connection EXAMPLE GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Management > Diagnostic in the navigation panel to open this screen. Use this screen to ping IP addresses, run a traceroute, perform port tests or show the Switch’s location between devices. Figure 219 Management > Diagnostic GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 293
An Ethernet cable usually has 4 pairs of wires. A 10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX port only use and test 2 pairs, while a 1000BASE-T port requires all 4 pairs. This displays the descriptive name of the wire-pair in the cable. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 294
Enter a time interval (in minutes) and click Blink to show the actual location of the Switch between several devices in a rack. The default time interval is 30 minutes. Click Stop to have the Switch terminate the blinking locater LED. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The summary table shows the time the log message was recorded and the reason the log message was generated. Click Refresh to update this screen. Click Clear to clear the whole log, regardless of what is currently displayed on the screen. Click Download to save the log to your computer. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The syslog feature sends logs to an external syslog server. Use this screen to configure the device’s system logging settings and configure a list of external syslog servers. Click Management > Syslog Setup in the navigation panel to display this screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 297
Server Address Enter the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the syslog server. UDP Port The default syslog server port is 514. If your syslog server uses a different port, configure the one it uses here. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 298
Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. Delete Click Delete to remove the selected entries. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
38.1.1 What You Can Do • Use the Cluster Management Status screen (Section 38.2 on page 300) to view the role of the Switch within the cluster and to access a cluster member Switch’s Web Configurator. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Error (for example the cluster member Switch password was changed or the Switch was set as the manager and so left the member list, and so on) Offline (the Switch is disconnected – Offline shows approximately 1.5 minutes after the link between cluster member and manager goes down) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Apply to save your changes to the Switch’s run-time memory. The Switch loses these changes if it is turned off or loses power, so use the Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Web Configurator home page. This cluster member Web Configurator home page and the home page that you would see if you accessed it directly are different. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 303
Figure 225 Cluster Management: Cluster Member Web Configurator Screen example 38.4.1.1 Uploading Firmware to a Cluster Member Switch You can use FTP to upload firmware to a cluster member switch through the cluster manager switch as shown in the following example. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 304
This is the name of the firmware file you want to upload to the cluster member 460ABPI0.bin switch. This is the cluster member switch’s firmware name as seen in the cluster fw-00-a0-c5-01-23-46 manager switch. This is the cluster member switch’s configuration file name as seen in the cluster config-00-a0-c5-01-23-46 manager switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• If the Switch has already learned the port for this MAC address, but the destination port is the same as the port it came in on, then it filters the frame. Figure 227 MAC Table Flowchart GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
39.2 Viewing the MAC Table Use this screen to check whether the MAC address is dynamic or static. Click Management > MAC Table in the navigation panel to display the following screen. Figure 228 Management > MAC Table GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 307
This is the VLAN group to which this frame belongs. Port This is the port where the above MAC address is forwarded. Type This shows whether the MAC address is dynamic (learned by the Switch) or static (manually entered in the Static MAC Forwarding screen). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
MAC address that replied. 40.2 Viewing the ARP Table Use the ARP table to view IP-to-MAC address mappings and remove specific dynamic ARP entries. Click Management > ARP Table in the navigation panel to open the following screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 309
This shows 0 for a static entry. Type This shows whether the IP address is dynamic (learned by the Switch) or static (manually configured in the Basic Setting > IP Setup or IP Application > ARP Setup > Static ARP screen). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field displays the maximum transmission unit of the links in the path. Expire This field displays how long (in minutes) an entry can still remain in the Path MTU table before it ages out and needs to be relearned. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Cloning allows you to copy the basic and advanced settings from a source port to a destination port or ports. Click Management > Configure Clone to open the following screen. Figure 231 Management > Configure Clone GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 312
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field displays the IPv6 address of the Switch or a neighboring device. This field displays the MAC address of the IPv6 interface on which the IPv6 address is configured or the MAC address of the neighboring device. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 314
• static (S): The interface address is statically configured. Interface This field displays the ID number of the IPv6 interface on which the IPv6 address is created or through which the neighboring device can be reached. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
When LACP (Link Aggregation Control Protocol) and STP are in blocking state, it displays Blocking. This field displays whether or not a powered device (PD) is allowed to receive power from the Switch on this port. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
44.2.1 Port Details Click a number in the Port column in the Port Status screen to display individual port statistics. Use this screen to check status and detailed performance data about an individual port on the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 317
13.1 on page 144 for more information. If STP is disabled, this field displays FORWARDING if the link is up, otherwise, it displays STOP. When LACP (Link Aggregation Control Protocol) and STP are in blocking state, it displays Blocking. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 318
This field shows the number of packets (including bad packets) received that were 64 octets in length. 65 to 127 This field shows the number of packets (including bad packets) received that were between 65 and 127 octets in length. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
44.2.3 DDMI Details Use this screen to view the real-time SFP (Small Form Factor Pluggable) transceiver information and operating parameters on the SFP port. The parameters include, for example, transmitting and receiving power, and module temperature. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 320
This displays the milliamps (mA) being supplied to the SFP transceiver’s Laser Diode Transmitter. TX Power This displays the amount of power the SFP transceiver is transmitting. (dbm) RX Power This displays the amount of power the SFP transceiver is receiving from the fiber optic cable. (dbm) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field shows the transmission speed of data received on this port in kilobytes per second. Rx Utilization% This field shows the percentage of actual received frames on this port as a percentage of the Link speed. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The Summary screen displays when you log into the Switch or click Summary at the top right corner of the Web Configurator. The Summary screen displays general device information, system status, connected ports, used power for PoE devices, and its IP addresses. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 323
Switch. This allows you to plan and use within the power budget of the Switch. Bandwidth Tx/Rx This field displays the percentage of bandwidth usage on this port as a percentage of the Link Speed. This field displays the number of packets received with CRC (Cyclic Redundant Check) errors. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
When the maximum number of neighboring device records per Ethernet port is reached, new device records automatically overwrite existing offline device records, starting with the oldest existing offline device record first. Click Summary > Neighbor Detail to see the following screen. Figure 240 Summary > Neighbor Detail GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 325
This shows the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the neighbor device. The IPv4 or IPv6 address is a hyper link that you can click to log into and manage the neighbor device through its Web Configurator. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 326
This field displays the IP-based security products, for example IP camera or NVR (network video recorder), that is connected to this Switch. Flush Click the Flush button to remove information about neighbors learned on the selected ports. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This link takes you to a screen where you can configure settings for individual Switch ports. & Port Setup ONVIF This link takes you to a screen where you can configure a specific VLAN to run ONVIF. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
In the navigation panel, click System > System Information to display the screen as shown. Use this screen to view general system information. You can check the firmware version number and monitor the Switch temperature. Figure 242 System > System Information GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This field displays the upper temperature limit at this sensor. 47.3 General Setup Use this screen to configure general settings such as the system name and time. Click System > General Setup in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 330
This field displays the date you open this menu. New Date (yyyy- Enter the new date in year, month and day format. The new date then appears in the Current mm-dd) Date field after you click Apply. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The Switch is managed and provisioned automatically by the NCC (Nebula Control Center) when: • The Switch is connected to the Internet. • The Nebula Control Center Discovery feature is enabled. • The Switch has been registered in the NCC. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 332
This screen has a QR code containing the Switch’s serial number and MAC address for handy NCC registration of the Switch using the Nebula Mobile app. First, download the app from the Google Play store for Android devices or the App Store for iOS devices and create an organization and site. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The ping is sent through the Switch's default management IP address to the designated port. To ping the PD, the port must share the same VLAN as the Switch's management VLAN. Figure 245 Auto PD Recovery Application To open this screen, click Port > Auto PD Recovery. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 334
Polling Interval Specify the number of seconds the Switch waits for a response before sending another ping (sec) request. For example, the Switch will try to detect the PD status by performing ping requests every 20 seconds. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
You can also set priorities so that the Switch is able to reserve and allocate power to certain PDs. Note: The PoE (Power over Ethernet) devices that supply or receive power and their connected Ethernet cables must all be completely indoors. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 336
This field displays the power management mode used by the Switch, whether it is in Classification or Consumption mode. Total Power (W) This field displays the total power the Switch can provide to the connected PoE-enabled devices on the PoE ports. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 337
This field displays the current amount of power consumed by the PD from the Switch on this port. Power (W) Max Power (W) This field displays the maximum amount of power the PD could use from the Switch on this port. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Changes in this row are copied to all the ports as soon as you make them. Active Select this to provide power to a PD connected to the port. If left unchecked, the PD connected to the port cannot receive power from the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 339
If the returned current is within the IEEE 802.3AF/AT standard range, the device will be considered as a valid PD by the Switch. However, in real cases, environmental interferences might easily cause the returned current to be out of the standard range. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. 48.5 Port Setup Use this screen to configure Switch port settings. Click Port > Port Setup in the navigation panel to display the configuration screen. Figure 250 Port > Port Setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 341
Select Flow Control to enable it. 802.1p Priority This priority value is added to incoming frames without a (802.1p) priority queue tag. See Priority Queue Assignment in Table 168 on page 336 for more information. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 342
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this row only if you want to make some settings the same for all ports. Use this row first to set the common settings and then make adjustments on a port-by-port basis. Note: Changes in this row are copied to all the ports as soon as you make them. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use the Link Aggregation Status screen to view ports you have configured to be in the trunk group, ports that are currently transmitting data as one logical link in the trunk group and so on. Click Switching > Link Aggregation > Link Aggregation Status in the navigation panel. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
However, the more ports you aggregate then the fewer available ports you have. A trunk group is one logical link containing multiple ports. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 346
Select the trunk group to which a port belongs. Note: When you enable the port security feature on the Switch and configure port security settings for a port, you cannot include the port in an active trunk group. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Switching > Link Aggregation > Link Aggregation Control Protocol to display the screen shown next. Dynamic Link Aggregation on page 156 for more information on dynamic link aggregation. Figure 254 Switching > Link Aggregation > Link Aggregation Control Protocol GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch. While you can use Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) to prevent loops in the core of your network. STP cannot prevent loops that occur on the edge of your network. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
N on switch A sending a probe packet P to switch B. Since switch B is in loop state, the probe packet P returns to port N on A. The Switch then shuts down port N to ensure that the rest of the network is not affected by the switch in loop state. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 350
Click Switching > Loop Guard in the navigation panel to display the screen as shown. Note: The loop guard feature cannot be enabled on the ports that have Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) enabled. Figure 259 Switching > Loop Guard GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
(Section 49.10 on page 358) to configure the static VLAN (IEEE 802.1Q) settings on a port. 49.7.2 What You Need to Know Read this section to know more about VLAN and how to configure the screens. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 352
VID (except the ingress port itself), thus confining the broadcast to a specific domain. 49.7.2.1 Automatic VLAN Registration GARP and GVRP are the protocols used to automatically register VLAN membership across switches. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 353
A and B. Without VLAN Trunking, you must configure VLAN groups 1 and 2 on all intermediary switches C, D and E; otherwise they will drop frames with unknown VLAN group tags. However, with VLAN Trunking enabled on ports in each intermediary switch you only need to create VLAN groups in the end devices GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This is the VLAN identification number that was configured in the corresponding VLAN configuration screen. Name This fields shows the descriptive name of the VLAN. Tagged Port This field shows the tagged ports that are participating in the VLAN. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
This column displays the ports that are participating in a VLAN. A tagged port is marked as T, an untagged port is marked as U and ports not participating in a VLAN are marked as “–“. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click this button to configure the static VLAN. Delete Click this button to remove the static VLAN. Click Add or Edit button to open the following screen. Use this screen to configure a static VLAN for the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 357
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Clear Click Clear to reset the fields to the factory defaults. Cancel Click Cancel to change the fields back to their last saved values. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Select Untag Only to accept only untagged frames on this port. All tagged frames will be dropped. VLAN Trunking Enable VLAN Trunking on ports connected to other switches or routers (but not ports directly connected to end users) to allow frames belonging to unknown VLAN groups to pass through the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 359
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
362) to enable the ONVIF protocol on the Switch. 50.2 IP Setup Use the IP Setup screen to configure the default gateway device, the default domain name server and add IP domains. See Section 8.6 on page 94 for more information on IP setup. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 361
Use these fields to add, edit, or delete the IP address of the DNS server. Select an entry’s check box to select a specific entry. Otherwise, select the check box in the table heading row to select all entries. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
IP address. This lets you to know which IP-based security products, for example IP camera or NVR (network video recorder), is connected to the Switch. Use the ONVIF screen to enable the ONVIF protocol on the Switch. Figure 268 Networking > ONVIF GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 363
Click this button to create new ONVIF settings for the VLAN port. Edit Click this button to configure the ONVIF settings for the VLAN port. Delete Click this button to remove the ONVIF settings for the VLAN port. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• A non-administrator (username is something other than admin) is someone who can view and/or configure Switch settings. The configuration right varies depending on the user’s privilege level. Click Security > Access Control > Logins to view the screen as shown. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 365
This field displays the index number of an entry. User Name Set a user name (up to 32 ASCII characters long). Password Enter your new system password. Retype to Retype your new system password for confirmation. confirm GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Use this screen to specify a group of one or more “trusted computers” from which an administrator may use a service to manage the Switch. Click Security > Access Control > Remote Management to view the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 367
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
SNMP v3 and Security SNMP v3 enhances security for SNMP management. SNMP managers can be required to authenticate with agents before conducting SNMP management sessions. Security can be further enhanced by encrypting the SNMP messages sent from the managers. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 369
Specify the version of the SNMP trap messages. Enter the IP addresses of up to 4 managers to send your SNMP traps to. Port Enter the port number upon which the manager listens for SNMP traps. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
SNMP managers. You must first configure a trap destination IP address in the SNMP Setting screen. Use the rest of the screen to select which traps the Switch sends to that SNMP manager. Type Select the categories of SNMP traps that the Switch is to send to the SNMP manager. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 190 Security > Access Control > SNMP > Trap Group Port LABEL DESCRIPTION Option Select the trap type you want to configure here. Port This field displays a port number. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click this button to remove the selected entry from the summary table. Click Add or Edit button to open the following screen. Use this screen to create or edit SNMP users for authentication with managers using SNMP v3 and associate them to SNMP groups. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 373
– Members of this group have read and write rights, meaning that the user can create and edit the MIBs on the Switch, except the user account and AAA configuration. readonly – Members of this group have read rights only, meaning the user can collect information from the Switch. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Enter how many minutes (from 1 to 255) a management session can be left idle before the session times out. After it times out you have to log in with your password again. Very long idle timeouts may have security risks. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 375
Save link on the top navigation panel to save your changes to the non-volatile memory when you are done configuring. Cancel Click Cancel to begin configuring this screen afresh. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Switch configuration and log files to a server or as local files to your computer. Figure 278 Maintenance > Maintenance > Backup Configuration Follow the steps below to back up the current Switch configuration to your computer in this screen. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
To reboot, go to Maintenance > Maintenance > Reboot System and click Current Configuration, Factory Default, or Custom Default (Current Configuration, Factory Default, and Custom Default are the configuration files you want the Switch to use when it restarts). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
If you select Factory Default, the following warning will appear. Figure 282 Reboot System: Use the Factory Default Confirmation If you select Custom Default, the following warning will appear. Figure 283 Reboot System: Use the Custom Default Confirmation GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Choose File or Browse to locate the configuration file you wish to restore to the Switch. Click Restore. The restore progress is shown. Figure 285 Restoring Configuration (Progress Bar) 52.6 Save Configuration Click Maintenance > Maintenance > Save Configuration to view the screen as shown next. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Download to see all the log report and system status. This log report is stored in flash memory. If the All log report is too large, you can download the log reports separately below. Click Download to see the Read Only Memory (ROM) log report. This report is stored in flash memory. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Inspect your cables for damage. Contact the vendor to replace any damaged cables. Turn the Switch off and on. Disconnect and re-connect the power adapter or cord to the Switch. If the problem continues, contact the vendor. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Advanced Suggestion • Try to access the Switch using another service, such as Telnet. If you can access the Switch, check the remote management settings to find out why the Switch does not respond to HTTP. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Click Save at the top right corner of the Web Configurator to save the configuration permanently. See also Section 33.2.2 on page 259 for more information about how to save your configuration. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 385
If you plug the power cable back to the Switch, it will reboot and load the configuration file that was used the last time. For example, if Config 1 was used on the Switch before you accidentally unplugged the Switch, Config 1 will be loaded when rebooting. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
• Brief description of the problem and the steps you took to solve it. Corporate Headquarters (Worldwide) Taiwan • Zyxel Communications Corporation • http://www.zyxel.com Asia China • Zyxel Communications (Shanghai) Corp. Zyxel Communications (Beijing) Corp. Zyxel Communications (Tianjin) Corp. • https://www.zyxel.com/cn/zh/ India • Zyxel Technology India Pvt Ltd • https://www.zyxel.com/in/en/ Kazakhstan •...
Page 388
Appendix A Customer Support • https://www.zyxel.com/be/fr/ Bulgaria • Zyxel България • https://www.zyxel.com/bg/bg/ Czech Republic • Zyxel Communications Czech s.r.o • https://www.zyxel.com/cz/cs/ Denmark • Zyxel Communications A/S • https://www.zyxel.com/dk/da/ Estonia • Zyxel Estonia • https://www.zyxel.com/ee/et/ Finland • Zyxel Communications • https://www.zyxel.com/fi/fi/ France •...
Page 389
• Zyxel Communications Poland • https://www.zyxel.com/pl/pl/ Romania • Zyxel Romania • https://www.zyxel.com/ro/ro Russia • Zyxel Russia • https://www.zyxel.com/ru/ru/ Slovakia • Zyxel Communications Czech s.r.o. organizacna zlozka • https://www.zyxel.com/sk/sk/ Spain • Zyxel Communications ES Ltd. • https://www.zyxel.com/es/es/ Sweden • Zyxel Communications • https://www.zyxel.com/se/sv/ Switzerland •...
Page 390
Appendix A Customer Support Turkey • Zyxel Turkey A.S. • https://www.zyxel.com/tr/tr/ • Zyxel Communications UK Ltd. • https://www.zyxel.com/uk/en/ Ukraine • Zyxel Ukraine • http://www.ua.zyxel.com South America Argentina • Zyxel Communications Corporation • https://www.zyxel.com/co/es/ Brazil • Zyxel Communications Brasil Ltda. • https://www.zyxel.com/br/pt/ Colombia •...
Page 391
Appendix A Customer Support Middle East • Zyxel Communications Corporation • https://www.zyxel.com/me/en/ North America • Zyxel Communications, Inc. - North America Headquarters • https://www.zyxel.com/us/en/ Oceania Australia • Zyxel Communications Corporation • https://www.zyxel.com/au/en/ Africa South Africa • Nology (Pty) Ltd. • https://www.zyxel.com/za/en/...
File Transfer Program, a program to enable fast transfer of files, including large files that may not be possible by e-mail. H.323 1720 NetMeeting uses this protocol. HTTP Hyper Text Transfer Protocol - a client/server protocol for the world wide web. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 393
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol is the message- exchange standard for the Internet. SMTP enables you to move messages from one e-mail server to another. SNMP TCP/UDP Simple Network Management Program. SNMP-TRAPS TCP/UDP Traps for use with the SNMP (RFC:1215). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 394
Its primary function is to allow users to log into remote host systems. TFTP Trivial File Transfer Protocol is an Internet file transfer protocol similar to FTP, but uses the UDP (User Datagram Protocol) rather than TCP (Transmission Control Protocol). VDOLIVE 7000 Another videoconferencing solution. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
54 bits 64 bits Global Address A global address uniquely identifies a device on the Internet. It is similar to a “public IP address” in IPv4. A global unicast address starts with a 2 or 3. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 396
The following table describes the multicast addresses which are reserved and cannot be assigned to a multicast group. Table 199 Reserved Multicast Address MULTICAST ADDRESS FF00:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF02:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF03:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF04:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF05:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF06:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF07:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF08:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF09:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF0A:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF0B:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF0C:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF0D:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF0E:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 FF0F:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 397
DHCP server to assign and pass IPv6 network addresses, prefixes and other configuration information to DHCP clients. DHCPv6 servers and clients exchange DHCP messages using UDP. In IPv6, all network interfaces can be associated with several addresses. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 398
48) to generate its LAN IP address. Through sending Router Advertisements (RAs) regularly by multicast, the Switch passes the IPv6 prefix information to its LAN hosts. The hosts then can use the prefix to generate their IPv6 addresses. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 399
If the Switch cannot find an entry in the neighbor cache or the state for the neighbor is not reachable, it starts the address resolution process. This helps reduce the number of IPv6 solicitation and advertisement messages. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 400
Install Dibbler and select the DHCPv6 client option on your computer. After the installation is complete, select Start > All Programs > Dibbler-DHCPv6 > Client Install as service. Select Start > Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Services. Double click Dibbler - a DHCPv6 client. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 401
To enable IPv6 in Windows 7: Select Control Panel > Network and Sharing Center > Local Area Connection. Select the Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6) check box to enable it. Click OK to save the change. GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
The contents of this publication may not be reproduced in any part or as a whole, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, translated into any language, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, magnetic, optical, chemical, photocopying, manual, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Zyxel Communications Corporation. Published by Zyxel Communications Corporation. All rights reserved.
Page 404
PRODUCT COMPLIES WITH 21 CFR 1040.10 AND 1040.11. (for products with mini-GBIC slots or laser products, such as fiber-optic transceiver and GPON products) • APPAREIL À LASER DE CLASS 1 (for products with mini-GBIC slots or laser products, such as fiber-optic transceiver and GPON products). GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 406
Register your product online at www.zyxel.com to receive e-mail notices of firmware upgrades and related information. Trademarks ZyNOS (Zyxel Network Operating System) and ZON (Zyxel One Network) are registered trademarks of Zyxel Communications, Inc. Other trademarks mentioned in this publication are used for identification purposes only and may be properties of their respective owners.
Page 409
260, 377 file names dual personality interface filtering Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 rules (DHCPv6) filtering database, MAC table dynamic link aggregation Filtering screen GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 410
Internet Protocol version 6, see IPv6 comparison table models configuration GVRP routing domain 94, 360 GVRP (GARP VLAN Registration Protocol) status IP address 95, 96 IP Address Information IP interface 94, 360 IP Setup quick link hardware installation GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 412
279, 368 Neighbor Detail screen 86, 324 management IP address Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP) management port Neighbor screen managing the device network applications cluster management network element (NE) good habits network management system (NMS) 279, 368 GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 413
PoE ports speed/duplex number of standby PoE Setup Power Budget quick link PoE Setup screen power connections PoE standards power connector PoE Status screen power management mode PoE Time Range Setup screen port powered device (PD) setup GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 414
276, 374 reboot system 259, 378 service port 276, 374 Reboot System screen Service Access Control screen recurring schedule Setup Wizard registration parts product Setup Wizard screen Regulatory Notice and Statement SFP interface GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 415
MAC address Syslog Setup screen static MAC forwarding System Info screen 88, 328 Static MAC Forwarding screen system information 88, 328 static multicast forwarding system reboot 259, 378 Static Multicast Forwarding screen GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 416
123, 124, 125, 354, 355 tunnel protocol attribute tagged 121, 352 and RADIUS terminology tutorial trunking 122, 128, 353, 358 DHCP snooping type 93, 123 tutorials VLAN (Virtual Local Area Network) Type of Service VLAN Detail screen GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Page 417
Web browser pop-up window 43, 384 Web Configurator getting help home home screen login logout navigating components navigation panel online help usage prerequisite weight Windows OS version check wizard setup WRR (Weighted Round Robin Scheduling) GS1350 Series User’s Guide...
Need help?
Do you have a question about the GS1350 Series and is the answer not in the manual?
Questions and answers