RADIO FREQUENCY INTERFERENCE STATEMENT This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A computing device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
Products of other manufacturers sold by Advantech B+B SmartWorx are not subject to any warranty or indemnity offered by Advantech B+B SmartWorx, but may be subject to the warranties of the other manufacturers. Power supplies are limited to a six year warranty.
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION The ESWGP510-2SFP-T is a fully managed, full Gigabit PoE+ industrial switch, with eight (8) 802.3 af/at compliant Ethernet ports. The switch meets IP30 rating, and provides up to 30 Watts of power per port and offers two (2) SFP slots for Gigabit fiber. 100Mbps SFPs are not supported.
FEATURES • 10/100/1000Base-T Auto-Negotiation IEEE802.3af and IEEE802.3at, including two-event classification Supports legacy PD devices Managed, Plug and Play Full and Half Duplex Auto Cross feature for the RJ-45 copper port Four 10/100/1000 copper POE+ ports ...
FAULT RELAY The Fault Relay can be enabled/disabled through the GUI. The Green LED is ON when the relay is closed. The Green LED is OFF when the relay is open. If the relay is set for "Break on Fault" and a port is set for "Warn when link is up", the LED is ON when link is detected, and OFF when link is broken.
POE RESET Figure 3. PoE DIP switch – Default setting shown (PoE enabled) There are two PoE DIP Switches. One is for a Hardware Reset (HW RESET). The other is for an Auto Reset (AUTO RESET). By default, PoE is set to ON, and supplying PoE, Power over Ethernet. Hardware Reset: When the DIP Switch #1 is set to the ON position, the PoE function will be turned off, and the power sourcing for a PD device is unavailable.
LED DESCRIPTION Device Face Status Description PWR (P1, P2) Green ON Power applied Green OFF No power Green Flashing System is UP, passing data Green ON/OFF System is DOWN Fault Green ON Relay closed Green OFF Relay open Console NO LED Connection for a CLI Using a hyperterminal program...
DIN RAIL MOUNTING The DIN Rail mounting clips are connected to the switch when shipped and ready to be mounted on a 35mm size DIN Rail. Figure 4. Din Rail Mounting PANEL MOUNTING Figure 5. Panel Mounting...
RJ-45 ETHERNET CONNECTION All copper ports on the switch support the Auto Cross feature, which allows the end user to use a Straight-through or cross over cable. Each RJ-45 port provides PoE+ power simultaneously. PIN ASSIGNMENTS PIN# Signal Direction Description 10/100M Out* PoE &...
SFP INSTALLATION AND CONNECTION To connect the transceiver and fiber cable, follow the steps below. The SFP port is not proprietary. Any MSA-compliant 100Mbps fiber SFP can be installed in the port. (Note: SFP modules typically terminate with an LC fiber connector) First, insert the SFP transceiver into the SFP module cage.
POWER INPUT CONNECTIONS ESWGP510-2SFP-T accepts 44-57 VDC input voltage using terminal blocks. Figure 8. Power Input Connections Figure 9. Console mode NOTE: 1. The supplied RS-232 cable must be used. Straight through or cross over cable will not work. 2. If the Console screen does not appear select Enter.
HyperTerminal configuration: • Serial baud rate: 115200 • Data Bits: 8 • Parity: NONE • Stop bits: 1 • Flow Control: NONE 3. If the Console screen does not appear, check the COM ports available on your system and the configuration settings.
• IP address: 192.168.118.100 • Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0 • Gateway: 192.168.118.1 Figure 11. Switch status IP Settings The IP Settings page allows two methods of network address configuration, DHCP or Static. DHCP Setup • Use down arrow key to select IP Settings / select Enter •...
Factory Default The Factory Default page allows the managed switch to be set back to default settings. This will include the user name, password, and network settings. Figure 13. Factory default selection Log out When finished with viewing and configuring the settings in Console Mode. Move the arrow down to the Logout page and select Yes.
Figure 15. Browser URL The security login window will open requesting login user name and password. Defaults: • User Name: admin • Password: admin Figure 16. Logon screen for entering User Name, Password The browser will display the Overview page. The left column will display a list of configurable options. The Help button is at the top right.
BASIC SETTINGS The following selections are available under Basic Settings: System Info Password Accessible IP Port Time System Information The System Information page allows the user to assign a unique name for the switch, the location of the switch, description of the switch, and contact name for the network administrator.
Figure 19. Configuration for User Name, Password, and user index The maximum number of characters is 32 and a blank password can be configured. If a blank password is used the log file will not trace the login of this user. Accessible IP Two web server types are available, HTTP and HTTPS.
The web server connection, HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol), is a communications protocol used to transfer or convey information on the Internet using default port 80. Https is a URL that implements a Secure HTTP connection using default port 443. All entered access IP Addresses must be a legal IP address. Accessible IP addresses cannot be broadcast addresses or net mask (for example: 255.255.255.0).
Setting Description Default value Media Type The type of media, copper or fiber Copper or Fiber Mode Auto Negotiation or FORCE mode settings Auto-Negotiation Flow Control Managing data transmission of packets Enable MDI/MDIX Medium dependent interface of nodes Auto MDI/MDIX Enable Enable port configuration options Disable...
NOTE: Incorrect Subnet Mask configuration may cause erratic RingOn functionality. Time Setting Time Settings allows the user to select the appropriate Time Zone for the location. The NTC (Network Time Protocol) synchronizes the clocks of computer systems over packet-switched, variable-latency data networks. NTP uses UDP port 123 as its transport layer.
ADVANCED SETTINGS Under Advanced Settings, the following options are available: RingON VLAN Trunking IGMP Snooping GMRP Broadcast Storm Bandwidth Port Mirroring Static MAC address Forwarding Config. PoE Management Settings Supplying up to 30 watts of power per port, these PoE+ switches simplify the installation of powered devices (PD) such as IP CCTV, wireless access points, IP phones, and sensors.
Actual Power: Read only. Actual power of each port. Device Class: Read only. 0 – Class power for class 0, 1 – Class power for class 1, 2 – Class power for class 2, 3 – Class power for class 3, >=4 – Class power for class 4. ...
Figure 27. Dynamic mode PORT PRIORITY There are three levels of power priority: Low, Middle and High. The priority is used in the case where the remote devices require more power specified in “Power Supply Max” (this value is specific to the power supply being used).
build the active link and backup link. When the ring network gets interrupted unexpectedly, the backup link will be activated automatically. Please refer to the following figure: Single RingOn configuration Figure 28. Single Ring The web configuration screen shot illustrates the steps needed to implement a single ring. In this case the switch is automatically configured as Master.
Dual RingOn: Dual loop (Couple) configurations connect two or more single loops. When configuring dual rings, unique IDs are assigned for each ring. Two single rings connect with each other through one common switch to build an interchangeable ring. The two single rings can work independently and have their own blocking port, active link and backup link.
Status and Port State definition Status Port State Default value Port 1 Fwd, Port 2 Fwd RingOn not enabled Complete Port 1 Fwd, Port 2 Block RingOn Master Complete Port 1 Fwd, Port 2 Fwd Ring Slave Incomplete Port 1 Fwd, Port 2 Down Port 2 RJ-45 link broken Incomplete Port 2 Down...
Port Information under Port Configure Figure 33. Port information Port Configuration • Port Number • Priority: (0 - 240) A method of prioritizing how ports are blocked. The value is configured in multiples of 16 with the highest value being blocked. •...
• Admin Edge: Used to define ports as end stations which prevent bridging loops in the network. True - configures it as an End port • Admin Non STP: The port includes the STP mathematic calculation. True is not including STP mathematic calculation, False is including the STP mathematic calculation.
VLAN 1 to access and manage the switch. VLAN 1 also allows the switch to operate as a standard switch. Every port must belong to a VLAN and ports may belong to more than one VLAN ID. Advantech B+B SmartWorx managed switches will support up to 26 port based VLAN groups. Figure 36. VLAN Settings...
802.1Q VLAN Setup Advantech B+B SmartWorx managed switches also support IEEE 802.1q VLAN. Implemented 802.1q VLANs can extend over multiple switches. Switches can be from different manufactures as long as they support 802.1q A typical 802.1Q VLAN network and the web server configuration page can be found below. Note the difference between VLAN ID (frames that are tagged) and PVID (frame that are untagged).
Figure 38. 802.1Q VLAN settings Trunking Trunking, sometimes called Link Aggregation, is a method of paralleling more multiple ports between two switches. The ability to configure this type of connection will increase the speed beyond the limits of a single port. The multiple links between switches can also act as a redundant path if one port loses communication.
Figure 39. Trunking settings QoS (Quality of Service) Quality of Service is a method of prioritizing Ethernet applications or device communications on a LAN. Once a packet is received by the switch it can take persistence over other packets being received thus reducing latency and establishing a reliable method of data delivery.
Figure 40. QoS settings Port Priority • Two settings are available, Normal and High. When set to high, the packets have the lowest latency. 802.1p Priority The 802.1p header includes a three-bit field for prioritization, which allows packets to be grouped into various traffic classes.
Figure 42. Priority settings DiffServ Priority DiffServ or Differentiated Services is a computer networking architecture that specifies scalable and coarse-grained mechanism for classifying, managing network traffic and providing quality of service (QoS) guarantees on modern IP networks. DiffServ can, for example, be used to provide low-latency, guaranteed service (GS) to critical network traffic such as voice or video while providing simple best- effort traffic guarantees to non-critical services such as web traffic or file transfers.
Once DiffServ Priority is selected, open the DSCP Priority Settings, which will allow a value (0-63) to be assigned to different queues. Figure 44. DSCP settings Setting Description Default value QoS enable Enable QoS function Disable Port-based QoS enable Enable Port-based QoS function Enable this group 802.1p QoS enable Enable 802.1p QoS function...
IGMP Snooping (Internet Group Management Protocol) IGMP Snooping provides a way to route multicast traffic and reduce unwanted traffic. IP multicasting is commonly used when sending the same information to many receivers. IGMP routes the multicast traffic to the correct devices and will not broadcast the message to unintended devices. IP multicast addresses are in the range of 224.0.0.0 through 239.255.255.255.
GMRP GMRP, GARP Multicast Registration Protocol, is a mechanism that allows bridges and switches to support a constrained multicast flooding of packets similar to IGMP snooping. It allows these devices to register and de-register attribute values, such as VLAN identifiers and multicast group membership. Figure 46.
Max Bit Rate Max Bit Rate is a setting available if Broadcast Storm Protection is enabled. The bit rate setting can be adjusted between 65 Kbps and 90 Mbps or set to no limit. The storm protection feature will also allow the administrator to select the types of packets that are controlled.
NOTE: I. The switch monitors all types of packets, but all packets have the same latency value. 2. The Switch will drop packets at a limited rate when flow control is disabled. Port Mirroring Port mirroring is used on a network switch to monitor the network traffic of a specific port. The selected port's Ethernet traffic is duplicated and sent out a second specified port.
The action field can be toggled between "Add" and "Delete". The "Static MAC Address" field requires a valid input from the user. It is not case sensitive. When invalid addresses are entered the switch will display a warning message. Table configuration: •...
Note: 1. Defined MAC addresses assigned port can be modified. 2. Improper static unicast address may cause communication problems. 3. All static addresses can be found in MAC Address Table. 4. Do not add reserved addresses such as GMRP address to the address table. A Reserved Address is often used as managed address.
Figure 51. SNMP settings Diagnostics Scan Network and Ping are two diagnostic tools provided within the SNMP software. Scan Network will display a list of active network devices. The Ping function uses the PING command to give users a simple but powerful tool for troubleshooting network problems. Scan Network Scan Network will display IP address, MAC address, and its current status (active or Inactive).
Ping Test The Ping function implements the ping command to give users a simple but powerful tool for troubleshooting network problems. The function's most unique feature is that the PING command is entered from the user's PC, but the actual PING command originates from Managed switch itself. In this way, the user understands the LAN being tested.
Alerts: Email Warning The Email Warning function allows e-mail alerts to be sent to defined users when port link (Up or Down) changes state, Relay Warning is enabled, Broadcast Storm events take place, and every 12 hours. The 12 hour report displays a log file of switch activities Figure 55.
Relay Warning The managed switch has a relay output that can be used to signal the occurrence of one or more events when configured by the user. Figure 56. Relay Warning Performance Monitor Performance monitoring is available for each port and displayed on the webpage. The data is captured and will display the total number of events that have occurred since last power cycle.
Figure 57. Port packets monitor MAC Address Table MAC (Media Access Control) address is a hardware address that network devices are assigned by the manufacturer. The managed switch provides an 8K MAC address table with automatic learning and aging. The MAC address table displays this table only if the network administrator is logged on. In the address table, the MAC addresses can be sorted by specified type.
Figure 58. Sort function Figure 59. MAC address list Log Information The Log Info page will display the Index (event number), Date of event, Time of event, Type, and Event description. A total of 16 messages can be displayed on each page. Each available page is selectable using the Page drop down menu.
Figure 60. Log info Note: This operation is support by Java. Make sure the Java version on your OS is up to date. Logging Event Table: • Cold start • Warm start • Port link up and down • Power off •...
NOTE: 1. When upgrading firmware, the power should not be shut down or the information can be corrupted. Backup Settings The managed switch’s configuration can be saved as a .cfg file and stored for later use. Select Download, then select Save. At that point you will be able to select a file location. NOTE: 1.
Factory Default The Factory Default is used to restore the shipped default configuration. To restore, select "start" then "OK". Figure 63. Factory default It is recommended to save a current .cfg file before restoring default settings.
SPECIFICATIONS Interfaces RJ45 Port 10/100/1000Base-T Auto-Negotiation, Full/Half Duplex, Auto-MDI/MDIX Fiber Ports 1000Base slot for MSA-compliant SFPs PoE+ Pinout V+, V+, V-, V-, for pin 4, 5, 7, 8 Alternative A Power Input Standard 4-pin dual power terminal blocks Connection Relay Output Standard 2-pin terminal blocks Console Port RJ45...
STANDARDS AND CERTIFICATIONS IEEE Standards IEEE802.3af/at, 802.3, 802.3u, 802.3ab, 802.3z, 802.3x, 802.1w, 802.1Q, 802.1p, 802.1D Processing Type Store and Forward MAC Address Packet Buffer Size 512KB Jumbo Frame Size Store and Forward Broadcast Storm Automatic Broadcast Control Control Flow Control Full Duplex Flow Control, Half Duplex Back Pressure Control Jumbo Frame Size...
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The products described here in comply with the Council Directive on Electromagnetic Compatibility (2004/108/EC) and the Council Directive on Electrical Equipment Designed for use within Certain Voltage Limits (2006/95/EC). Will be certified for Information Technology Equipment including Electrical Business Equipment (Pending). European Directive 2002/96/EC (WEEE) requires that any equipment that bears this symbol on product or packaging must not be disposed of with unsorted municipal waste.
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