Advertisement

Quick Links

Ruijie Reyee RG-ES2 Series Switches
1.0(1)B1P35
Configuration Guide
Document Version: V1.0
Date: 2024.06.27
Copyright © 2024 Ruijie Networks

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading
Need help?

Need help?

Do you have a question about the Reyee RG-ES2 Series and is the answer not in the manual?

Questions and answers

Subscribe to Our Youtube Channel

Summary of Contents for Ruijie Reyee RG-ES2 Series

  • Page 1 Ruijie Reyee RG-ES2 Series Switches 1.0(1)B1P35 Configuration Guide Document Version: V1.0 Date: 2024.06.27 Copyright © 2024 Ruijie Networks...
  • Page 2 All rights are reserved in this document and this statement. Any reproduction, excerption, backup, modification, transmission, translation or commercial use of this document or any portion of this document, in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of Ruijie Networks is prohibited.
  • Page 3: Preface

    Intended Audience This document is intended for:  Network engineers  Technical support and servicing engineers  Network administrators Technical Support  The official website of Ruijie Reyee: https://reyee.ruijie.com  Technical Support Website: https://reyee.ruijie.com/en-global/support  Case Portal: https://www.ruijienetworks.com/support/caseportal  Community: https://community.ruijienetworks.com...
  • Page 4 Note An alert that contains additional or supplementary information that if not understood or followed will not lead to serious consequences. Specification An alert that contains a description of product or version support. Note This manual introduces the product model, port type and GUI for your reference. In case of any discrepancy or inconsistency between the manual and the actual version, the actual version prevails.
  • Page 5: Table Of Contents

    Contents Preface ..............................I 1 Release Note ............................. 1 1.1 Hardware Support ........................1 1.2 Software Feature Changes ......................1 2 Login ..............................2 2.1 Configuration Environment Requirements ................2 2.2 Login to the Web Management System ..................2 2.2.1 Connecting the Device ....................2 2.2.2 Login to the Web Management System ................
  • Page 6 4 Switch Settings ..........................13 4.1 Managing MAC Address ......................13 4.1.1 Overview ........................13 4.1.2 Viewing MAC Address Table ..................13 4.1.3 Searching for MAC Address ..................14 4.1.4 Configuring Static MAC Address ................. 14 4.2 VLAN Settings .......................... 15 4.2.1 Global VLAN Settings ....................
  • Page 7 8.1.1 Viewing Device Information ..................23 8.1.2 Editing the Hostname....................24 8.1.3 Cloud Management ...................... 24 8.2 Password Settings ........................25 8.3 Device Reboot ......................... 25 8.4 System Upgrade ........................26 8.4.1 Local Upgrade ......................26 8.4.2 Online Upgrade ......................26 8.5 Restoring Factory Configuration ....................
  • Page 8: Release Note

    Web-based Configuration Guide Release Note Release Note This section describes the hardware support and software feature changes in the 1.0(1)B1P35 version. For details about hardware changes, see the release notes of relevant software versions. Hardware Support The following table lists the hardware models supported by this version. Table 1-1 Supported Hardware Models Hardware Type...
  • Page 9: Login

    Web-based Configuration Guide Login Figure 1-1 EEE Function Display Page Login Configuration Environment Requirements  Browser: Google Chrome, Internet Explorer 9.0, 10.0, and 11.0, and some Chromium/IE kernel-based browsers are supported. Exceptions such as messy code and format errors may occur when other browsers are used.
  • Page 10: Port Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Note If the static IP address of the device is changed, or the device dynamically obtains a new IP address, the new IP address can be used to access the web interface of the device as long as the PC and the device are in the same network segment of a LAN.
  • Page 11 Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Figure 3-1 Port Status Bar Different colors and shapes of the port icons represent different port statuses. See Table 2-1 for details. Move the cursor over a port icon and the port status will be displayed, including the connection status, port rate, duplex mode, and flow control status.
  • Page 12: Port Info Overview

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Port Icon Description The device port is classified into the uplink port and the downlink port. The uplink port is used to connect network devices in the upper layer and access the core network. The downlink port is used to connect the endpoints.
  • Page 13: Port Packet Statistics

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Figure 3-3 Viewing or Configuring Port Settings 3.1.3 Port Packet Statistics Choose Monitoring > Packet Statistics. The Packet Statistics page displays the port status, the connection status, Rx/Tx rate (kbps), Rx/Tx packets (KB), Rx/Tx success, and Rx/Tx failure. Click Clear to clear current packet statistics of all ports and reset the statistics.
  • Page 14: Port Status

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Figure 3-5 Port Parameter Configuration Table 3-2 Basic Port Configuration Parameters Parameter Description Default Port Select the ports you want to configure. Status When the port is disabled, it cannot receive or Enabled transmit packets (PoE is not affected). Speed Configure the operating speed of the Ethernet Auto...
  • Page 15: Port Mirroring

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Note The display of EEE status information is supported by every model listed in the Supported Hardware Models, except for the RG-ES218GC-P and RG-ES226GC-P switches. Figure 3-6 Port Status Port Mirroring 3.3.1 Overview In network monitoring and troubleshooting scenarios, users need to analyze data traffic on suspicious network nodes or device ports.
  • Page 16: Port Isolation

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Figure 3-8 Configuring Port Mirroring Table 3-3 Port Mirroring Parameters Parameter Description Source Port Member The source port is also called the monitored port. Packets on the source port will be mirrored to the mirror port for network analysis or troubleshooting. You can select multiple source ports.
  • Page 17: Port-Based Rate Limiting

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Figure 3-9 Port Isolation Caution  The number of the uplink/downlink ports and port IDs of different devices vary. Please refer to the specific device's documentation for accurate information.  Port isolation can be enabled on devices featuring DIP switches on the panel. The last configuration applied takes effect.
  • Page 18: Management Ip Address

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Parameter Description Default Type The direction of the rate-limited data traffic:  Input & output: Rate limiting for all packets forwarded over the port, including the received packets and the transmitted packets.  Input: Rate limiting for packets received by the port. ...
  • Page 19: Setting The Port Media Type

    Web-based Configuration Guide Port Settings Figure 3-11 IP Settings Note  Disable VLAN settings, and the management packets will be untagged. If you want to tag packets, please enable VLAN settings. For details, see 3.2.1.  The management VLAN must be selected from the existing VLANs. To create a static VLAN, refer to 3.2.2.
  • Page 20: Switch Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide Switch Settings Switch Settings Managing MAC Address 4.1.1 Overview The MAC address table records mappings of MAC addresses and ports to VLANs. The device queries the MAC address table based on the destination MAC address in a received packet. If the device finds an entry that is consistent with the destination MAC address in the packet, the device forwards the packet through the port specified by the entry in unicast mode.
  • Page 21: Searching For Mac Address

    Web-based Configuration Guide Switch Settings 4.1.3 Searching for MAC Address Choose Switch Settings > Search MAC. You can search for MAC address entries according to MAC address and VLAN ID. Caution If you disable VLAN, the VLAN ID will not be recorded in the MAC address table.MAC address entries can only be found through MAC address.
  • Page 22: Vlan Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide Switch Settings Figure 4-3 Configuring Static MAC Address If you want to delete a static MAC address, select the MAC address entry you want to delete in the table and click Delete. Figure 4-4 delete static MAC address VLAN Settings 4.2.1 Global VLAN Settings...
  • Page 23: Static Vlans Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide Switch Settings 4.2.2 Static VLANs Settings Caution Static VLANs can be created only when the global VLAN settings feature is enabled. For details, see 3.2.1. Choose VLAN Settings > VLAN Members. Enter VLAN ID and click Add to create a static VLAN. The VLAN table contains the existing VLANs.
  • Page 24 Web-based Configuration Guide Switch Settings (3) Click Save. The configured port information is synchronized to the table on the VLAN Settings page. Figure 4-7 Configuring Port VLANs Table 4-1 Port Modes Port Mode Description Access One access port can belong to only one VLAN and allow frames from this VLAN only to pass through.
  • Page 25: Security

    Web-based Configuration Guide Security Security DHCP Snooping 5.1.1 Overview The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) snooping function allows a device to snoop DHCP packets exchanged between clients and a server to record and monitor the IP address usage and filter out invalid DHCP packets, including request packets from the clients and response packets from the server.
  • Page 26: Configuration Steps

    Web-based Configuration Guide Security 5.2.2 Configuration Steps Choose QoS Settings > Storm Control. Select the storm control type, port, status, and enter the rate limit, and then click Save. The storm control type and corresponding rate are displayed in the table right below the Save button. When storm control is disabled, the rate of broadcast, unknown multicast, and unknown unicast data flows is not limited.
  • Page 27: Poe Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide PoE Settings PoE Settings Note This function is supported by switch models suffixed with -P, -LP, -HP, or -UP in the Supported Hardware Models, such as the RG-ES220GS-P. Choose PoE Settings. The device supports PoE power supply. You can view and configure the current power status. ...
  • Page 28: Diagnostics

    Cloud Settings Choose Diagnostics > Cloud Settings. On Ruijie Cloud, you can check the status of your device, including its cloud connectivity status, reason for failure to connect, and the domain name and IP address of the cloud server. To change the domain name of the device, enter the new domain name in the Domain field, and then click Save.
  • Page 29: System Logs

    ○ No Internet connection or DNS resolution failure. ○ This device failed to connect to Ruijie Cloud. Connectable: This device is not registered to Ruijie Cloud. Domain name of the cloud server Caution  The coap:// prefix is not required in the domain name field as it is Domain added by default.
  • Page 30: System Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide System Settings Figure 7-3 System Logs Caution If the preceding troubleshooting steps fail to resolve the issue, and remote assistance from technical support is needed, you can contact them to assist in enabling the developer mode. The technical support team can then perform diagnostics to identify and address the issue effectively.
  • Page 31: Editing The Hostname

    Cloud status displays whether the device is connected to the cloud. After the device is bound to a cloud management account, the Cloud Status will display Connected, and you can manage the device remotely through Ruijie Cloud webpage or APP. Click Connected to access the homepage of Ruijie Cloud (https://cloud- as.ruijienetworks.com).
  • Page 32: Password Settings

    Web-based Configuration Guide System Settings Password Settings When the device password is the default password, you will be prompted to reset the password when logging into the web interface. Click Yes to access the Account Settings page (or choose System Settings > Account Settings to access the page).
  • Page 33: System Upgrade

    Web-based Configuration Guide System Settings System Upgrade 8.4.1 Local Upgrade Choose System Settings > Upgrade. Click Select File to select the upgrade package from the local files (the upgrade package is a bin file. If it is a tar.gz file, you need to decompress the package and select the bin file for upgrade). Keep Old Config is selected by default.
  • Page 34: Monitoring

    Web-based Configuration Guide Monitoring Figure 8-10 Restoring Factory Configuration Monitoring Cable Diagnostics Choose Monitoring > Cable Diagnostics. Cable diagnostics allows you to check the status of Ethernet cables. For example, you can check whether the cables are short-circuited or disconnected. Select the ports you want to detect, and then click Start to start cable diagnostics.
  • Page 35: Viewing Switch Information

    Web-based Configuration Guide Monitoring Figure 9-2 Multi-DHCP Alarming Move the cursor to to view the alarm details, including the VLAN where the conflicts occur, port, IP address of DHCP server, and MAC address. Viewing Switch Information Choose Monitoring > Switches. If the switch is under uniform management, some features cannot be configured independently (such as password settings).
  • Page 36: Faqs

    Web-based Configuration Guide FAQs FAQs Q1: I failed to log into the web interface. What can I do? (1) Verify that the Ethernet cable is properly connected to the LAN port of the device and the LED indicator blinks or is steady on. (2) Before accessing the web interface, you are advised to configure the PC with a static IP address in the same network segment as the device IP address (default device IP address: 10.44.77.200 and subnet mask: 255.255.255.0).

Table of Contents