Static Dhcp - ZyXEL Communications Vantage CNM 2.3 User Manual

Centralized network management
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Chapter 5 Device Network Settings
Table 14 Device Operation > Device Configuration > Network > LAN > LAN
(Prestige) (continued)
LABEL
RIP Version
Multicast
Any IP Setup
Active
Apply
Reset

5.2.1 Static DHCP

Note: This section refers only to the LAN screen, but the information is applicable for
the LAN, WLAN, and DMZ screens.
Use this screen to assign IP addresses to specific individual computers on the LAN
based on their MAC addresses. To open this screen, click Device Operation in the
62
DESCRIPTION
The RIP Version field controls the format and the broadcasting
method of the RIP packets that the device sends (it recognizes both
formats when receiving). RIP-1 is universally supported but RIP-2
carries more information. RIP-1 is probably adequate for most
networks, unless you have an unusual network topology. Both RIP-2B
and RIP-2M sends the routing data in RIP-2 format; the difference
being that RIP-2B uses subnet broadcasting while RIP-2M uses
multicasting. Multicasting can reduce the load on non-router machines
since they generally do not listen to the RIP multicast address and so
will not receive the RIP packets. However, if one router uses
multicasting, then all routers on your network must use multicasting,
also. By default, RIP direction is set to Both and the Version set to
RIP-1.
Select IGMP V-1 or IGMP V-2 or None. IGMP (Internet Group
Multicast Protocol) is a network-layer protocol used to establish
membership in a Multicast group - it is not used to carry user data.
IGMP version 2 (RFC 2236) is an improvement over version 1 (RFC
1112) but IGMP version 1 is still in wide use. If you would like to read
more detailed information about interpretability between IGMP version
2 and version 1, please see sections 4 and 5 of RFC 2236.
Select this option to activate the Any-IP feature. This allows a
computer to access the Internet without changing the network settings
(such as IP address and subnet mask) of the computer, even when the
IP addresses of the computer and the device are not in the same
subnet.
When you disable the Any-IP feature, only computers with dynamic IP
addresses or static IP addresses in the same subnet as the device's
LAN IP address can connect to the device or access the Internet
through the device.
Click this to save your changes back to the device.
Click this to begin configuring this screen afresh.
Vantage CNM User's Guide

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