Hamlet HRDSL300NW User Manual

Wireless adsl2+ broadband router with 4 ports ethernet switch

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Wireless ADSL2+ Broadband Router
with 4 ports Ethernet switch
USER MANUAL
www.hamletcom.com

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Summary of Contents for Hamlet HRDSL300NW

  • Page 1 Wireless ADSL2+ Broadband Router with 4 ports Ethernet switch USER MANUAL www.hamletcom.com...
  • Page 2: Table Of Contents

    1.2 Features of the Hamlet HRDSL300NW............. 4 1.3 Applications for the Hamlet Router HRDSL300NW........... 6 Chapter 2 ....................7 2.1 Important note for using the Hamlet HRDSL300NW ......... 7 2.2 Package Contents .................... 7 2.3 The Front LEDs ....................8 2.4 The Rear Ports ....................
  • Page 3 Dear Customer, thanks for choosing an Hamlet product. Please carefully follow the instructions for its use and maintenance and, once this item has run its life span, we kindly ask You to dispose of it in an environmentally friendly way, by putting it in the separate bins for electrical/electronic waste, or to bring it back to your retailer who will collect it for free.
  • Page 4: Chapter 1

    Introducing the Hamlet HRDSL300NW 1.1 Introducing the Hamlet HRDSL300NW Welcome to the Hamlet HRDSL300NW ADSL2+ Modem/Router. Your router is an “all-in-one” unit, combining an ADSL modem, ADSL router and Ethernet network switch, providing everything you need to get the machines on your network connected to the Internet over your ADSL broadband connection.
  • Page 5 for a hacker to target a machine on your network. Secondly, it can block and redirect certain ports to limit the services that outside users can access. For example, to ensure that games and other Internet applications will run properly, user can open some specific ports for outside users to access internal services in network.
  • Page 6: Features Of The Hamlet Hrdsl300Nw

    1.2 Features of the Hamlet HRDSL300NW ADSL Multi-Mode Standard Supports downstream rates of up to 24 Mbps and upstream rates of up to 1 Mbps. It also supports rate management that allows ADSL subscribers to select an Internet access speed suiting their needs and budgets. It is compliant with Multi-Mode standard (ANSI T1.413, Issue 2;...
  • Page 7 Firewall Supports simple firewall with NAT technology and provides option for blocking access from Internet, like Telnet, FTP, WEB, SNMP and IGMP. Domain Name System (DNS) relay Provides an easy way to map the domain name (a friendly name for users such as www.yahoo.com) and IP address.
  • Page 8: Applications For The Hamlet Router Hrdsl300Nw

    It also supports remote management capability for remote users to configure and manage this product. Firmware Upgradeable Device can be upgraded to the latest firmware through the WEB based GUI. 1.3 Applications for the Hamlet Router HRDSL300NW...
  • Page 9: Chapter 2

    Do not use the same power source for the Hamlet HRDSL300NW as other equipment. Do not open or repair the case yourself. If the Hamlet HRDSL300NW is too hot, turn off the power immediately and have it repaired at a qualified service center.
  • Page 10: The Front Leds

    2.3 The Front LEDs Hamlet HRDSL300NW Meaning Lit red when WAN port fails to get IP address. Lit green when WAN port gets IP address successfully. Lit when successfully connected to an ADSL DSLAM ADSL (“linesync”). Lit when WPS is ON.
  • Page 11: The Rear Ports

    2.4 The Rear Ports Hamlet HRDSL300NW Port Meaning POWER Connect the supplied power adapter to this jack. After the device is powered on, press it to reset the device or restore to factory default settings. 0-3 seconds: reset the device...
  • Page 12: Cabling

    2.5 Cabling One of the most common causes of problems is bad cabling or ADSL line(s). Make sure that all connected devices are turned on. On the front of the product is a bank of LEDs. Verify that the LAN Link and ADSL line LEDs are lit. If they are not, verify that you are using the proper cables.
  • Page 13: Chapter 3

    If not, please refer to your Windows-related or other operating system manuals. NOTE Any TCP/IP capable workstation can be used to communicate with or through the Hamlet HRDSL300NW. To configure other types of workstations, please consult the manufacturer’s documentation.
  • Page 14: Configuring Pc In Windows Xp

    Configuring PC in Windows XP 1. Go to Start / Control Panel (in Classic View). In the Control Panel, double-click on Network Connections 2. Double-click Local Area Connection. 3. In the Local Area Connection Status window, click Properties. 4. Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties.
  • Page 15: Configuring Pc In Windows 2000

    Configuring PC in Windows 2000 1. Go to Start / Settings / Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click on Network and Dial-up Connections. 2. Double-click Local Area Connection. 3. In the Local Area Connection Status window click Properties. 4. Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties.
  • Page 16: Configuring Pc In Windows 98/Me

    Configuring PC in Windows 98/Me 1.Go to Start / Settings / Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click on Network and choose the Configuration tab. 2.Select TCP/IP ->NE2000 Compatible, or the name of your Network Interface Card (NIC) in your PC. 3.Select the Obtain an IP address automatically radio button.
  • Page 17 Configuring PC in Windows NT4.0 1. Go to Start / Settings / Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click on Network and choose the Protocols tab. 2.Select TCP/IP Protocol and click Properties. 3.Select the Obtain an IP address from a DHCP server radio button and click OK.
  • Page 18: Factory Default Settings

    Start IP Address: 192.168.1.100 IP pool counts: 100 3.2.1 Username and Password The default username and password are “admin” and “hamlet” respectively. Attention If you ever forget the password to log in, you may press the RESET button up to 6 seconds...
  • Page 19: Lan And Wan Port Addresses

    3.3 LAN and WAN Port Addresses The parameters of LAN and WAN ports are pre-set in the factory. The default values are shown below. LAN Port WAN Port IP address 192.168.1.254 The PPPoE function is enabled to automatically get the Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0 WAN port...
  • Page 20: Configuring With Your Web Browser

    Open your web browser, enter the IP address of your router, which by default is 192.168.1.254, and click “Go”, a user name and password window prompt will appear. The default username and password are “admin” and “hamlet”. Congratulation! You are now successfully logon to the Hamlet HRDSL300NW ADSL2+ Router!
  • Page 21: Chapter 4

    Chapter 4 Configuration At the configuration homepage, the left navigation pane where bookmarks are provided links you directly to the desired setup page, including: • Quick Start (wizard setup) • Interface Setup (Internet, LAN, Wireless) • Advanced Setup (Firewall, Routing, NAT, QoS, ADSL) •...
  • Page 22: Quick Start

    4.1 Quick Start For detailed instructions on configuring WAN settings, see the Interface Setup section of this manual. The Quick Start Wizard is a useful and easy utility to help setup the device to quickly connect to your ISP (Internet Service Provider) with only a few steps required.
  • Page 23 Step2: Choose your time zone...
  • Page 24 Step3: Set your Internet connection...
  • Page 25 Step4: Restart your ADSL2+ Router...
  • Page 26: Interface Setup

    4.2 Interface Setup Click this item to access the following sub-items that configure the ADSL2+ router: Internet, LAN, and Wireless; these functions are described in the following sections.
  • Page 27 4.2.1 Internet ATM VC ATM settings are used to connect to your ISP. Your ISP provides VPI, VCI settings to you. In this Device, you can totally setup 8 VCs on different encapsulations, if you apply 8 different virtual circuits from your ISP. You need to activate the VC to take effect. For PVCs management, you can use ATM QoS to setup each PVC traffic line's priority.
  • Page 28 ENCAPSULATION • ISP: Select the encapsulation type your ISP uses from the Encapsulation list. Choices vary depending on what you select in the Mode field. Dynamic IP: Select this option if your ISP provides you an IP address automatically. This option is typically used for Cable services.
  • Page 29 • Multicast: 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. The Hamlet HRDSL300NW supports both IGMP version 1 (IGMP-v1) and IGMP-v2. Select None to...
  • Page 30 • Multicast: 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. The Hamlet HRDSL300NW supports both IGMP version 1 (IGMP-v1) and IGMP-v2. Select None to disable it •...
  • Page 31 DHCP client. If set to disabled, the DHCP server will be disabled. If set to Relay, the Hamlet HRDSL300NW acts as a surrogate DHCP server and relays DHCP requests and responses between the remote server and the clients. Enter the IP address of the actual, remote DHCP server in the Remote DHCP Server field in this case.
  • Page 32 4.2.3 Wireless This section introduces the wireless LAN and some basic configurations. Wireless LANs can be as simple as two computers with wireless LAN cards communicating in a peer-to-peer network or as complex as a number of computers with wireless LAN cards communicating through access points which bridge network traffic to the wired LAN.
  • Page 33 ACCESS POINT SETTINGS • Access Point: Default setting is set to Activated. If you do not have any wireless, both 802.11g, 802.11b and 802.11n, device in your network, select Deactived. • Channel ID: The range of radio frequencies used by IEEE 802.11b/g/n wireless devices is called a channel.
  • Page 34 AP which is already built-in to the router’s wireless interface. It is case sensitive and must not excess 32 characters. Make sure your wireless clients have exactly the SSID as the device, in order to get connected to your network. •...
  • Page 35 ("0-9", "A-F"). If you chose WEP 128-bits, then enter 13 ASCII characters or 26 hexadecimal characters ("0-9", "A-F"). You must configure all four keys, but only one key can be activated at any one time. The default key is key 1. WPA-PSK &...
  • Page 36: Advanced Setup

    4.3 Advanced Setup 4.3.1 Firewall Your router includes a firewall for controlling Internet access from your LAN and helping to prevent attacks from hackers. In addition to this, when using NAT (Network Address Translation) the router acts as a “natural” Internet firewall, since all PCs on your LAN use private IP addresses that cannot be directly accessed from the Internet.
  • Page 37 4.3.2 Routing If you have another router with a LAN-to-LAN connection, you may create a static routing on the router that is the gateway to Internet. • #: Item number • Dest IP: IP address of the destination network • Mask: The destination mask address. •...
  • Page 38 • Destination IP Address This is the destination subnet IP address. • IP Subnet Mask It is the destination IP addresses based on above destination subnet IP • Gateway IP Address This is the gateway IP address to which packets are to be forwarded.
  • Page 39 The DMZ Host is a local computer exposed to the Internet. When setting a particular internal IP address as the DMZ Host, all incoming packets will be checked by the Firewall and NAT algorithms then passed to the DMZ host, when a packet received does not use a port number used by any other Virtual Server entries.
  • Page 40 The reason for this is that when using NAT, your publicly accessible IP address will be used by and point to your router, which then needs to deliver all traffic to the private IP addresses used by your PCs. Please see the WAN configuration section of this manual for more information on NAT.
  • Page 41 • End Port Number: Enter a port number in this field. IP ADDRESS MAPPING • Address Mapping Rule: Shows the PVC where the rule will be applied to • Rule Index: Choose the rule number. • Rule Type: One-to-one: This is the mode maps one local IP address to one global IP address. Note that port numbers do not change for the One-to-one NAT mapping type.
  • Page 42 local IP addresses, then enter 0.0.0.0 as the Local Start IP address and 255.255.255.255 as the Local End IP address. This field is N/A for One-to-one and Server mapping types. • Public Start IP: This is the start range for Inside Public IP Address. Enter 0.0.0.0 here if you have a dynamic IP address from your ISP.
  • Page 43 4.3.4 QoS Quality of Service (QoS) helps to prioritize data as it enters your router. By attaching special identification marks or headers to incoming packets, QoS determines which queue the packets enter, based on priority. This is useful when there are certain types of data you want to give higher priority to, such as voice data packets given higher priority than Web data packets.
  • Page 44 RULE You can set 16 different QoS rules. Each QoS rule has its detail setting conditions like: 802.1p,application, DSCP, IP, MAC, Protocol, TOS, VLAN…etc, you can modify the default value to any new one you wish. Please notice that only when the packet fulfill every detail setting conditions here, then this packet will be remarked as the priority queue of each rule.
  • Page 45 • Source MAC: Set the Ethernet MAC value that you want to filter in source side. • Source IP: Set the IP address value that you want to filter in source side. • Source Mask: Set the subnet mask value that you want to filter in source side. •...
  • Page 46 4.3.5 ADSL • ADSL Mode: The default setting is Auto Sync-UP. This mode will automatically detect your ADSL, ADSL2+, ADSL2, G.dmt, G.lite, and T1.413. But in some area, multimode cannot detect the ADSL line code well. If it is the case, please adjust the ADSL line code to G.dmt or T1.413 first.
  • Page 47: Access Management

    • ACL Rule Index: This is item number • Secure IP Address: The default 0.0.0.0 allows any client to use this service to remotely manage the Hamlet HRDSL300NW. Type an IP address to restrict access to a client with a matching IP address.
  • Page 48 4.4.2 Filter You can Filter the packages by IP port , MAC and Application. FILTER TYPE • Filter Type Selection: There are three types ”IP/MAC Filter”, ”Application Filter”, and “URL Filter” that user can select for this connection. IP/MAC FILTER SET EDITING •...
  • Page 49 IP/MAC FILTER RULE EDITING • IP/MAC Filter Rule Index: This is item number • Rule Type: Choose “IP” or “MAC” rules • Active: Select Yes from the drop down list box to enable IP filter rule. • Source IP Address: The source IP address or range of packets to be monitored. •...
  • Page 50 APPLICATION FILTER • Application Filter: Select this option to Activated/Deactivated the Application filter. • ICQ: Select this option to Allow/Deny ICQ. • MSN: Select this option to Allow/Deny MSN. • YMSG: Select this option to Allow/Deny Yahoo messenger. • Real Audio/Video: Select this option to Allow/Deny Real Audio/Video.
  • Page 51 URL FILTER • Active: Select Actived to enable URL Filter. • URL Index: This is item number. • URL: llow you to prevent users on your network from accessing particular websites by their URL.
  • Page 52 Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is a protocol used for exchanging management information between network devices. SNMP is a member of the TCP/IP protocol suite. Hamlet HRDSL300NW supports SNMP agent functionality which allows a manager station to manage and monitor the router through the network.
  • Page 53 Hamlet HRDSL300NW 's IP address • Auto-configured: Select this check box to allow UPnP-enabled applications to automatically configure the Hamlet HRDSL300NW so that they can communicate through the Hamlet HRDSL300NW, for example by using NAT traversal, UPnP applications automatically reserve a NAT forwarding port in order to communicate with another UPnP enabled device;...
  • Page 54 • Dynamic DNS: Select this check box to use dynamic DNS. • Service Provider: www.dyndns.org • My Host Name: Type the domain name assigned to your Hamlet HRDSL300NW by your Dynamic DNS provider. • E-mail Address: Type your e-mail address.
  • Page 55: Maintenance

    4.5 Maintenance 4.5.1 Administrator In factory setting, the default password is admin, and that for user is also password. You can change the default password to ensure that someone cannot adjust your settings without your permission. Every time you change your password, please record the password and keep it at a safe place.
  • Page 56: Time Zone

    4.5.2 Time Zone The router does not have a real time clock on board; instead, it uses the Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) to get the current time from an SNTP server outside your network. Choose your local time zone. After a successful connection to the Internet, the router will retrieve the correct local time from the SNTP server you have specified.
  • Page 57 To upgrade the firmware of Hamlet HRDSL300NW, you should download or copy the firmware to your local environment first. Press the “Browse…” button to specify the path of the firmware file.
  • Page 58 4.5.4 SysRestart Click SysRestart with option Current Settings to reboot your router (and restore your last saved configuration). If you wish to restart the router using the factory default settings (for example, after a firmware upgrade or if you have saved an incorrect configuration), select Factory Default Settings to reset to factory default settings.
  • Page 59: Status

    4.6 Status 4.6.1 Device Info This page displays the current information for the ADSL Router. It will display the Firmware version, LAN, WAN, and MAC address information. DEVICE INFORMATION • Firmware version: This is the Firmware version • MAC Address: This is the MAC Address •...
  • Page 60 • Status: “Not connected” or “Connected” • Virtual Circuit: There are eight groups of PVC can be defined. VPI: The valid range for the VPI is 0 to 255 VCI: The valid range for the VCI is 1 to 65535 •...
  • Page 61: System Log

    4.6.2 System Log Display system logs accumulated up to the present time. You can trace historical information with this function.
  • Page 62 4.6.3 Statistics Read-only information here includes port status and packet specific statistics. Also provided are "Transmit Statistics" and "Receive Statistics". ETHERNET • Interface: This field displays the type of port • Transmit Frames: This field displays the number of frames transmitted in the last second.
  • Page 63 ADSL • Transmit total PDUs: This field displays the number of total PDU transmitted in the last second. • Transmit total Error Counts: This field displays the number of total error transmitted in the last second. • Receive total PDUs: This field displays the number of total PDU received in the last second.
  • Page 64: Help

    • Rx Frames Count: This field displays the number of frames received in the last second. • Rx Errors Count: This field displays the number of errors frames received in the last second. • Rx Drops Count: This field displays the number of drops frames received in the last second.
  • Page 65: Chapter 5

    Chapter 5 Troubleshooting If the ADSL2+ Router is not functioning properly, you can refer first to this chapter for simple troubleshooting before contacting your service provider. This could save your time and effort but if the symptoms persist, then consult your service provider. Problems starting up the router Problem Corrective Action...
  • Page 66: Problems With The Lan Interface

    Frequent loss of Ensure that all other devices connected to the same ADSL linesync telephone line as your router (e.g. telephones, fax machines, (disconnections) analogue modems) have a line filter connected between them and the wall socket (unless you are using a Central Splitter or Central Filter installed by a qualified and licensed electrician), and ensure that all line filters are correctly installed and the right way around.

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