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Ruijie Reyee RG-ES Series Configuration Manual
Ruijie Reyee RG-ES Series Configuration Manual

Ruijie Reyee RG-ES Series Configuration Manual

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Ruijie Reyee RG-ES, NIS2100
Series Switches 1.0(1)B1P39
Configuration Guide
Document Version: V1.1
Date: 2024.09.10
Copyright © 2024 Ruijie Networks

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Summary of Contents for Ruijie Reyee RG-ES Series

  • Page 1 Ruijie Reyee RG-ES, NIS2100 Series Switches 1.0(1)B1P39 Configuration Guide Document Version: V1.1 Date: 2024.09.10 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 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 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 3.7 Setting the Port Media Type ....................12 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 ..................13 4.1.4 Configuring Static MAC Address ................. 14 4.2 VLAN Settings ..........................
  • Page 7 7.3.1 Major Ring and Subring ....................22 7.3.2 Basic Topologies ......................22 7.3.3 Node ..........................23 7.3.4 Ring Member Port ......................23 7.4 RPL and Nodes ........................24 7.5 ERPS Packet ........................... 25 7.6 ERPS Timer ..........................25 7.7 Ring Protection ........................26 7.8 Protocols and Standards ......................
  • Page 8 9.5.2 Online Upgrade ......................39 9.6 Restoring Factory Configuration ....................40 10 Monitoring ............................40 10.1 Cable Test ..........................40 10.2 Multi-DHCP Alarming ......................41 10.3 Viewing Switch Information ....................41 11 FAQs .............................. 43...
  • Page 9 Configuration Guide Release Note Release Note This section describes the hardware support and software feature changes in the 1.0(1)B1P39 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 10 Configuration Guide Login 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.  Resolution: 1024 x 768 or a higher resolution is recommended.
  • Page 11 Configuration Guide Login Figure 2-1 Web Interface for First Login (3) On the web page that is displayed, enter the password and click Log In to enter the home of the web interface. Description To change the login password, see9.2 Password Settings.
  • Page 12 Configuration Guide Port Settings Caution Restoring factory settings will delete the current configurations. Exercise caution when performing this operation. Port Settings Managing Port Information 3.1.1 Port Status Bar The port status bar is at the top of the web page, showing port ID, port attribute (uplink/downlink), and the connection status.
  • Page 13 Configuration Guide Port Settings Port Icon Description The color of the port icon is yellow, showing there is a loop. The color of the port icon is green, showing the port is working normally. The number above the port icon is the port ID used to identify the device port.
  • Page 14 Configuration Guide Port Settings  Click PoE to view and set PoE parameters of the port. For details, see6 PoE Settings.  Click Search in the Downlink Device column to search for the downlink device of the selected port. After the search is done, click View to view the MAC address of the downlink device.
  • Page 15 Configuration Guide Port Settings Note The EEE function can be configured on ports that meet the following criteria: RJ45 port type, operating at 100/1000 Mbps, with auto-negotiation enabled (rate and duplex mode set to auto). Figure 3-5 Port Parameter Configuration Table 3-2 Basic Port Configuration Parameters Parameter...
  • Page 16 Configuration Guide Port Settings  For the RG-NIS2100 series, set the port speed to 10 Mbps through the DIP switch on the device's front panel or through the web interface (On the web interface, set Speed to 10M, Duplex to Auto, and Flow Control to Enabled.).
  • Page 17 Configuration Guide Port Settings Caution  You can select multiple source ports but only one mirror port. The source ports cannot contain the mirror port. Only one port mirroring rule can be configured. If multiple rules are configured, the rule configured last ...
  • Page 18 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 19 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 20 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 4.2.1 Global VLAN Settings.  The management VLAN must be selected from the existing VLANs. To create a static VLAN, refer to 4.2.2 Static VLANs Settings.
  • Page 21 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 22 Configuration Guide Switch Settings 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. Enter MAC address and VLAN ID, and then click Search. The MAC address entries that meet the search criteria will be displayed in table right below the Search button.
  • Page 23 Configuration Guide Switch Settings VLAN Settings 4.2.1 Global VLAN Settings Choose Home. This page displays the status of VLAN settings. Toggle the on-off switch to enable or disable VLAN settings. When VLAN is disabled, the device operates like an un-managed switch. The device forwards packets according to the destination MAC address, and the VLAN information of the forwarding packets remains unchanged during the forwarding process.
  • Page 24 Configuration Guide Switch Settings Figure 4-6 Static VLANs Settings 4.2.3 Port VLAN Settings Caution You can configure port VLAN only when the VLAN Settings function is enabled. For details, see 4.2.1 Global VLAN Settings. Choose VLAN > VLAN Settings. Configure the port mode and VLAN members of a port, and you will know the allowed VLANs of the port and whether the packets forwarded by the port carry tags.
  • Page 25 Configuration Guide Switch Settings 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. This VLAN is called an access VLAN. The frames from the access port do not carry VLAN tag.
  • Page 26 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 27 Configuration Guide Security 5.2.2 Configuration Steps Choose QoS > 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 28 Configuration Guide PoE Settings PoE Settings Specification 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. The device supports PoE power supply. You can view and configure the current power status. ...
  • Page 29 Configuration Guide ERPS Packet Receiving Status PoE Watchdog is Action Taken on the PD of the PoE Port Enabled PoE port of the device still No action is initiated on the PD. stops receiving packets. During the ping interval, a The ping interval is reset.
  • Page 30 Configuration Guide ERPS assigned to a data VLAN. A data VLAN is also known as a protected VLAN. Basic Model of an Ethernet Ring A group of interconnected devices in the same control VLAN (R-APS VLAN) constitute an Ethernet ring (ERPS ring), in which each device is called a node.
  • Page 31 Configuration Guide ERPS 7.3.3 Node According to the different topological relationships between nodes and Ethernet rings, nodes are classified into single-ring nodes, tangent nodes, and intersecting nodes by role.  Single-ring node: In an Ethernet ring, the nodes that belong to only one Ethernet ring (either major ring or subring) are called single-ring nodes.
  • Page 32 Configuration Guide ERPS RPL and Nodes An Ethernet ring can be in either of the following two states regardless of whether it is a major ring or subring:  Idle state: The physical links in the entire ring network are connected. ...
  • Page 33 Configuration Guide ERPS Figure 7-3 Typical Topology of Intersecting Rings RPL owner for ERPS4 G0/1 G0/2 Node 1 Node 7 Node 4 Node 6 G0/5 G0/5 ERPS4 G0/1 G0/2 G0/1 G0/4 G0/1 RPL owner for ERPS3 RPL owner ERPS3 G0/2 G0/3 G0/2 for ERPS1...
  • Page 34 Configuration Guide ERPS device detects that a link failure is cleared, it sends link recovery packets and starts the Guard timer. Before the timer expires, all packets except Flush packets indicating a subring topology change will be discarded.  WTR timer: The timer is effective only for RPL owner nodes. It is used to avoid ring status misjudgment by the RPL owner node.
  • Page 35 Configuration Guide ERPS (1) As shown in Figure 7-4, after configuring the ERPS ring parameters, click Add to add the ERPS ring. Note  The west port and the east port must be trunk ports. For details on how to configure trunk ports, see 4.2.3 Port VLAN Settings.
  • Page 36 Configuration Guide ERPS Parameter Description Default Value  RPL OWNER: Indicates an RPL owner node.  RPL NEIGHBOR: Indicates an RPL neighbor node. WTR Timer Specifies the interval of the WTR timer. 5 min Guard Timer Specifies the interval of the Guard timer. 500 ms 0 ms, indicating a topology switch is performed...
  • Page 37 Configuration Guide ERPS Parameter Description Default Value Specifies the link state of the selected port.  Clear: Clears the forced switch state of the port, Link State and allows the protocol to elect the port to be blocked.  Block: Indicates that the port is blocked by a forced switch operation.
  • Page 38 Configuration Guide ERPS (4) As shown in the following figure, set the ERPS ring parameters (only ID and Control VLAN are mandatory, and should be configured according to the user's network setup. Other parameters can be left at their default values).
  • Page 39 Configuration Guide ERPS (6) As shown in the following figure, click Save to save the configuration. (7) As shown in the following figure, choose Network-Wide > Workspace > Wired > ERPS Ring. On the page that opens, click Edit.
  • Page 40 Configuration Guide ERPS (8) As shown in the following figure, click Next to access the ERPS Ring Configuration page. (9) As shown in the following figure, add the remaining devices on the ERPS Ring Configuration page. Select the optical ports on the devices and configure the interfaces connected to the RPL OWNER as RPL NEIGHBOR, following the example of Gi9 in the figure below.
  • Page 41 Configuration Guide ERPS (10) As shown in the following figure, click Save to apply all configurations. As shown in the figure below, after all cables are connected according to the topology, the devices will automatically form an ERPS ring.
  • Page 42 Cloud Settings Choose Toolkit > 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. ...
  • Page 43 ○ 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 44 Configuration Guide System Settings The Device Info pane on the Home page displays basic information about the device, including hostname, device model, serial number, firmware version, IP address, MAC address, cloud status, and uptime. You can view more information about the device by choosing Monitoring > Device Info. Figure 9-1 Device Info Figure 9-2...
  • Page 45 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 46 Network-wide Management Mode Caution If this device is managed by Ruijie Cloud or Ruijie Reyee App, you can modify the network-wide management password through Ruijie Cloud or Ruijie Reyee. Changing the management password on the device will not synchronize the changes with Ruijie Cloud or Ruijie Reyee App.
  • Page 47 Configuration Guide System Settings Setting the Maximum Power of the Power Supply Choose Configuration > Power Settings. If the power of the actual power supply differs significantly from the default power of the switch, adjust the power settings on the Power Settings page in a timely manner to avoid misoperation or unnecessary power consumption.
  • Page 48 Configuration Guide Monitoring Figure 9-12 Online Upgrade Note The time that online upgrade takes depends on the current network speed. It may take some time. Please be patient. Restoring Factory Configuration Choose System > Reset. Click Reset to restore factory configuration and reboot the device. Figure 9-13 Restoring Factory Configuration Monitoring...
  • Page 49 Configuration Guide Monitoring Figure 10-1 Cable Test Caution If you select an uplink port for diagnostics, the network may be intermittenly disconnected. Exercise caution when performing this operation. 10.2 Multi-DHCP Alarming Caution Multi-DHCP alarming will fail when the device IP address is not obtained dynamically. For relevant IP address configuration, see Management IP Address.
  • Page 50 Configuration Guide Monitoring The first row of Switch List displays information of the current device, and the following rows display information of other devices. Click IP Address of a device to access the web interface of the device (login required). Figure 10-3 Viewing Switches on the Network Note...
  • Page 51 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).

This manual is also suitable for:

Nis2100 series