Intellinet 560535 User Manual

Intellinet 560535 User Manual

Poe web-managed gigabit ethernet switch with 2 sfp ports
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POE WEB-MANAGED

GIGABIT ETHERNET

SWITCH
with 2 SFP Ports

USER MANUAL

MODELS 560535 & 560559
INT-560535/560559-UM-0212-03
1  
 

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Summary of Contents for Intellinet 560535

  • Page 1: Gigabit Ethernet

    POE WEB-MANAGED GIGABIT ETHERNET SWITCH with 2 SFP Ports USER MANUAL MODELS 560535 & 560559 INT-560535/560559-UM-0212-03 1    ...
  • Page 2: Table Of Contents

    Contents CHAPTER 1 Introduction ..................5 Web Browser ......................5 Logging In ......................6 CHAPTER 2 System....................8 System Information ....................8 IP Address Setting ....................8 IPv6 Address Setting .................... 9 User Account ...................... 10 Port Setting ......................10 CHAPTER 3 Configuration..................
  • Page 3 Priority to Queue Mapping Setting..............31 Packet Scheduling Setting.................. 32 LLDP Configurations ..................33 LLDP Neighbors ....................34 SNMP Setting ..................... 35 Trap Receivers Setting ..................36 Port Mirroring Setting..................37 Port Security Setting ................... 38 Bandwidth Control Setting .................. 40 Jumbo Frame Setting ..................
  • Page 4 PoE Web-Managed Gigabit Ethernet Switch, ™ Model 560535 (16-port) or 560559 (24-port). This handy switch is designed to pass both data and electrical power to a number of PoE-compatible devices via standard Cat5e or Cat6 network cables. Easy-to-follow instructions in this user manual help make installation quick and simple, so you’ll also soon be enjoying the benefits of these additional features:...
  • Page 5: Chapter 1 Introduction

    CHAPTER 1 Introduction Web Browser You can log in to the Web Management Switch through a Web browser, and manage and maintain the switch intuitively by interacting with the built-in Web server. The home page is displayed as shown below. It displays the Main Menu on the left side of the screen and an image of the front panel on the right side.
  • Page 6: Logging In

    Logging In Follow these steps to configure this switch. Step 1: Use Ethernet Cat5 cable to connect this switch to your PC. Step 2: Check that your PC has an IP address on the same subnet as the switch. For example, the PC and the switch are on the same subnet if they both have addresses that start 192.168.1.x.
  • Page 7 Figure 3: Web-Based Management Interface 7    ...
  • Page 8: Chapter 2 System

    CHAPTER 2 System System Information To look up system information in the Web browser, click System, then Information. Web Smart switch interface Figure 4: System Information IP Address Setting To set up a static IP address for the switch. Web Smart switch interface Click System, then IP Setting.
  • Page 9: Ipv6 Address Setting

    IPv6 Address Setting IPv6 is an Internet Layer protocol for packet-switched internetworking and provides end-to-end datagram transmission across multiple IP networks. IPv6 includes two distinct address types; link-local unicast and global unicast. Web Smart switch interface Figure 6: IPv6 Address Setting Hint The following parameters are displayed on the IPv6 Address Setting page: ■...
  • Page 10: User Account

    User Account To set up the system password in the Web browser: Web Smart switch interface Click System, then User Account. Enter the new user name. Enter the new password. Enter the new password again to confirm your input. Click Save. Figure 7: User Account Setting Port Setting To specify options for enabling auto-negotiation or manually setting the speed and duplex mode, or for enabling...
  • Page 11 Figure 8: Port Setting Hint The following parameters are displayed on the Port Setting configuration screen: ■ Port—Lets you set up one or more ports. Hold down the CTRL key and click port numbers to select multiple ports. Hold down the SHIFT key to select a range of ports. ■...
  • Page 12: Chapter 3 Configuration

    CHAPTER 3 Configuration Trunk Group Setting To configure a trunk group. Web Smart switch interface Click Configuration, Link Aggregation, Trunk Group Setting. Select the trunk group ID to be created or modified. Select the trunk type: Static or LACP. Assign up to four port members to the trunk. Click Add/Modify.
  • Page 13: Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting

    Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting To configure a trunk’s load-balancing settings. Web Smart switch interface Click Configuration, Link Aggregation, Trunk Setting. Select the trunk group ID to be configured or modified. Select the trunk Distribution Algorithm Parameters as required. Click Apply. Figure 10: Trunk Distribution Algorithm Setting Hint The switch provides five load-balancing methods to distribute a balanced load across all links in a trunk.
  • Page 14 Destination MAC - All traffic with the same destination MAC address is output on the same link in a trunk. ■ This mode works best for switch-to-switch trunk links where traffic through the switch is destined for many different hosts. Do not use this mode for switch-to-router trunk links where the destination MAC address is the same for all traffic.
  • Page 15: Lacp Setting

    LACP Setting The LACP (Link Aggregation Control Protocol) dynamically aggregates ports and removes aggregations. LACP interacts with its peer by sending LACPDUs (Link Aggregation Control Protocol data units). Web Smart switch interface To arrange LACP settings, Click Configuration, Link Aggregation, LACP Setting. Enable LACP on the switch.
  • Page 16: Static Vlan Table Setting

    Static VLAN Table Setting The VLAN (virtual local area network) technology is developed for switches to control broadcast operations in LANs. By creating VLANs in a physical LAN, you can divide the LAN into multiple logical LANs, each of which has a broadcast domain of its own. Hosts in the same VLAN communicate with each other as if they are in a LAN.
  • Page 17: Vlan Port Setting

    VLAN Port Setting Arranging VLAN attributes for specific interfaces, including the default Port VLAN identifier (PVID). Web Smart switch interface To specify attributes for VLAN port members, Click Configuration, VLAN, VLAN Setting. Select one or more ports or trunks to configure. Configure the required PVID setting.
  • Page 18: Vlan-Stacking Table Setting

    VLAN-Stacking Table Setting Set the stacking VLAN membership for selected interfaces to be part of the Service Provider VLAN (S-VLAN); that is, uplink ports for a 802.1Q Tunnel. This stacking VLAN is used to segregate and preserve customer VLAN IDs for traffic crossing the service provider network. The switch supports up to 64 S-VLAN IDs. Web Smart switch interface To manage stacking VLAN port members: Click Configuration, VLAN Stacking, S-VLAN Table.
  • Page 19: Vlan Stacking Setting

    VLAN Stacking Setting After configuring port members for stacking VLANs on the switch, the ports connected to a service provider network need to be enabled as double-tagged ports. Also, the Tag Protocol Identifier (TPID) value must be set for the double-tagged ports to identify 802.1Q tagged frames. Web Smart switch interface To manage stacking VLAN port settings, Click Configuration, VLAN Stacking, S-VLAN Setting.
  • Page 20 Hint The following parameters are shown on the VLAN-Stacking Table Setting screem: ■ Tag Protocol ID – The Tag Protocol Identifier specifies the Ether type of incoming packets on a tunnel port. (Range: 0 x 0600 – 0 x FFFF hexadecimal; Default: 0 x 88a8) ■...
  • Page 21: Igmp Multicast Group Information

    IGMP Multicast Group Information To display multicast group and router port information, click Configuration, IGMP Snooping, Multicast Entry Table. The IGMP Multicast Router Information table displays the current multicast groups learned through IGMP Snooping. Multicast routers that are attached to ports on the switch use information obtained from IGMP, along with a multicast routing protocol such as DVMRP or PIM, to support IP multicasting across the Internet.
  • Page 22: Igmp Snooping

    IGMP Snooping IGMP Snooping (Internet Group Management Protocol Snooping) is a multicast constraining mechanism that runs on a Layer 2 switch to manage and control multicast groups. Figure 17: IGMP Snooping 22    ...
  • Page 23: Igmp Global Setting

    IGMP Global Setting Web Smart switch interface To manage IGMP Snooping global settings: Click Configuration, IGMP Snooping, IGMP Snooping Setting. Enable IGMP Snooping on the switch. Modify other IGMP global settings as required. Click Update. Hint The following parameters are shown on the IGMP Snooping global settings screen: ■...
  • Page 24: Igmp Vlan Setting

    IGMP VLAN Setting Web Smart switch interface To manage IGMP Snooping settings: Click Configuration, IGMP Snooping, IGMP Snooping Setting. Specify the VLAN ID. Enable IGMP Snooping on the VLAN. Enable IGMP Querier on the VLAN if you want this switch to be elected as querier. Click Apply.
  • Page 25: Spanning Tree

    Spanning Tree The Spanning Tree Protocol is used to eliminate loops in a local area network. A switch running this protocol detects any loop in the network by exchanging information with one another and eliminates the possible loop by blocking certain ports until the loop network is pruned into a loop-free tree, thereby avoiding infinite recycling of packets in a loop network.  ...
  • Page 26 configuration messages at regular intervals. Any port that ages out STP information (provided in the last configuration message) becomes the designated port for the attached LAN. If it is a root port, a new root port is selected from among the switch ports attached to the network. (Note that references to “ports” in this section mean “interfaces,”...
  • Page 27: Spanning Tree Port Setting

    Spanning Tree Port Setting Use the STP Port Setting screen to configure Spanning Tree attributes for specific interfaces, including path cost, port priority, edge port (for fast forwarding), automatic detection of an edge port, and point-to-point link type. Web Smart switch interface To configure port settings for Spanning Tree: Click Configuration, Spanning Tree, STP Port Setting.
  • Page 28 is detecting network loops. Where more than one port is assigned the highest priority, the port with the lowest numeric identifier will be enabled. (Range: 0-240, in steps of 16; Default: 128) ■ P2P - The link type attached to an interface can be set to automatically detect the link type, or to be manually configured as a point-to-point or shared medium.
  • Page 29: Quality Of Service (Qos)

    Quality of Service (QoS) QoS is the evaluation on the service ability of network delivery or on the capacity of dealing with situations such as delay, delay jitter and packet loss rate in packet delivery.     Port-based Priority Setting Management of the default port priority for each port on the switch.
  • Page 30: Dscp-Based Priority Setting

    DSCP-based Priority Setting The Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) is a six-bit field in the IP header, allowing coding for up to 64 different forwarding behaviors. The DSCP replaces the ToS bits, but it retains backward compatibility with the three precedence bits so that non-DSCP-compliant, ToS-enabled devices will not conflict with the DSCP mapping.
  • Page 31: Priority To Queue Mapping Setting

    Priority to Queue Mapping Setting The QoS technique known as class of service (CoS) is a three-bit field within an Ethernet frame header when using tagged frames on an 802.1 network. So up to eight separate traffic priorities are defined in IEEE 802.1p. You can map the priority levels to the switch’s output queues in any way that benefits application traffic for a network.
  • Page 32: Packet Scheduling Setting

    Packet Scheduling Setting You can set the switch to service the queues based on a strict rule that requires all traffic in a higher-priority queue to be processed before lower-priority queues are serviced. Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) or Weighted Round-Robin (WRR) queuing specifies a relative weight of each queue. The traffic classes are mapped to one of the eight egress queues provided for each port.
  • Page 33: Lldp Configurations

    Weight-round-robin - Share bandwidth at the egress ports by using the scheduling weights for queues 1 ■ through 8, respectively. WRR specifies a relative weight for each queue that determines the percentage of service time the switch services each queue before moving on to the next queue. ■...
  • Page 34: Lldp Neighbors

    ■ Transmission Interval - Configure the periodic transmit interval for LLDP advertisements. (Range: 5-32768 seconds; Default: 30 seconds) This attribute must comply with the following rule: (Transmission Interval * Transmission Hold Time) ≤ 65536, and Transmission Interval ≥ (4 * Transmission Delay) ■...
  • Page 35: Snmp Setting

    SNMP Setting SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) monitors network switches through the TCP/IP protocol suite. It offers automatic network management and avoids the physical differences between various switches, and thus provides automatic management of products from different manufacturers.    ...
  • Page 36: Trap Receivers Setting

    Hint The following parameters are shown on the SNMP Setting, Community Strings Setting. ■ SNMP Status - Enable or disable SNMP service. (Default: Disabled) ■ System Name - A name assigned to the switch system. ■ System Location - Specify the system location. ■...
  • Page 37: Port Mirroring Setting

    Port Mirroring Setting Port mirroring includes local mirroring groups, remote source mirroring groups and remote destination mirroring groups.   Web Smart switch interface To configure port mirroring: Click Configuration, Port Mirroring. Select the Mirror Set Index. Select the Mirror Direction. Select the Mirroring (target) port.
  • Page 38: Port Security Setting

    Port Security Setting Port security is a feature that allows you to configure a switch port with a maximum number of MAC addresses that are authorized to access the network through that port. When port security is enabled on a port, the switch stops learning new MAC addresses on the specified port when it has reached a configured maximum number.
  • Page 39 ■ Maximum L2 Entry - The maximum number of MAC addresses that can be learned on a port. (Range: 0 - 16447, where 0 means disabled) ■ Action - Indicate the action to be taken when a port security violation is detected: Trap to CPU: Send an SNMP trap message.
  • Page 40: Bandwidth Control Setting

    Bandwidth Control Setting This function allows the network manager to control the maximum rate for traffic received on a port or transmitted from a port. Rate limiting is configured on ports at the edge of a network to limit traffic into or out of the switch.
  • Page 41 ■Type - Specify ingress or egress traffic. (Default: Ingress) ■State - Enable or disable the rate limit. (Default: Disabled) ■Rate (kbit/sec) - Set the rate limit level. (Range: 0 - 1048544 kbps in steps of 16) 41    ...
  • Page 42: Jumbo Frame Setting

    Jumbo Frame Setting The switch provides more efficient throughput for large sequential data transfers by supporting jumbo frames up to 9216 bytes. Web Smart switch interface To configure Jumbo Frames: Click Configuration, Jumbo Frames. Select the frame size to configure. Click Apply.
  • Page 43: Management Access Filter

    Management Access Filter To create up to eight IP addresses or IP address groups that are allowed access to the switch through the Web browser. Web Smart switch interface 1. Click Configuration, Management Access Filter. 2. Enter an IP address. 3.
  • Page 44 Power over Ethernet Setting Power over Ethernet (PoE) means that power-sourcing equipment (PSE) supplies power to powered devices (PD) such as IP telephones, wireless LAN access points and Web camera from Ethernet interfaces through twisted pair cables. Web Smart switch interface 1.
  • Page 45: Chapter 4 Security

    CHAPTER 4 Security MAC Address Information To display the MAC address forwarding table. Web Smart switch interface 1. Click Configuration. 2. Then click Security, MAC Address, MAC Forwarding Table. Figure 33: MAC Address Information Hint The following parameters are shown on the MAC Address Information screen: ■...
  • Page 46: Static Mac Setting

    Static MAC Setting A static address can be assigned to a specific interface on the switch. Static addresses are bound to the assigned interface and will not be moved. Web Smart switch interface To configure static MAC addresses: 1. Click Security, MAC Address, Static MAC. 2.
  • Page 47: Mac Filtering Setting

    MAC Filtering Setting The MAC Filtering screens are used to filter service to clients attempting to access the Internet based on protocol type, destination/source MAC address and the direction of traffic for each packet. Web Smart switch interface To configure MAC Address Filtering: Click Security, MAC Address, MAC Address Filtering.
  • Page 48: 802.1X Setting

    802.1x Setting The 802.1x Protocol provides port authentication and must be enabled globally for the switch system before port settings are active. Web Smart switch interface To configure 802.1x global settings: 1. Click Security, 802.1x, 802.1x Setting. 2. Set 802.1x to Enabled. 3.
  • Page 49: 802.1X Port Setting

    802.1x Port Setting When 802.1x is enabled, you need to configure the parameters for the authentication process that runs between the client and the switch (that is, authenticator), as well as the client identity lookup process that runs between the switch and authentication server.
  • Page 50: Ip Filter Configurations

    IP Filter Configurations IP Filter Security is a feature that filters IP traffic on port interfaces based on manually configured entries in the IP Filter table or allowed IP address assignment through DHCP. IP Filter Security can be used to prevent traffic attacks caused when a host tries to use the IP address of a neighbor to access the network.
  • Page 51 ■ IP Address - An IP address, or an address specifying a range, that is allowed access through the switch. ■ IP Netmask - A mask that specifies a single IP address or defines a range of IP addresses. (Default: 255.255.255.0) ■...
  • Page 52: Storm Control Settings

    Storm Control settings Broadcast storms may occur when a device on your network is malfunctioning, or if application programs are not well designed or properly configured. If there is too much broadcast traffic on your network, performance can be severely degraded or everything can come to complete halt. You can protect your network from broadcast storms by setting a threshold for broadcast traffic.
  • Page 53: Port Isolation

    Port Isolation The feature provides port-based security and isolation of local ports. The switch isolates port traffic by specifying those ports to which it can forward or receive traffic. Web Smart switch interface To configure Port Isolation settings: Click Security, Port Isolation. Select one or more ports to configure.
  • Page 54: Defence Engine

    Defence Engine Defence (sic) Engine is an advanced feature that can prevent the switch’s CPU from being overwhelmed by flooded packets, such as unknown unicast, unknown multicast or broadcast packets. This function can be used to prevent malicious viruses or worm attacks. Web Smart switch interface To configure Defence Engine settings: Click Security, Defence Engine.
  • Page 55: Chapter 5 Monitoring

    CHAPTER 5 Monitoring Port Statistics Information You can display standard statistics on network traffic passing through each port. This information can be used to identify potential problems with the switch, such as a faulty port or unusually heavy loading. All values displayed have been accumulated since the last system reboot.
  • Page 56: Chapter 6 Tools

    CHAPTER 6 Tools Http Upgrade Use the HTTP Upgrade screen to upgrade the switch’s system firmware by specifying a new software file. You can also use the HTTP Upgrade screen to save the current configuration to a file on your computer or to restore previously saved configuration settings to the switch.
  • Page 57: Reset Factory Defaults

    Reset Factory Defaults To restore factory defaults. Web Smart switch interface Click Tools, Reset, then click the Reset button. The reset will be complete when the Web browser displays the login page. Figure 44: Reset 57    ...
  • Page 58: Reboot

    Reboot To restart the switch. Web Smart switch interface To click Tools, Reboot, then click the Reboot button. The reboot will be complete when the Web interface displays the login page. Figure 45: Reboot 58    ...
  • Page 59: Specifications

    Specifications Standards • IEEE 802.1d (Spanning Tree Protocol) • IEEE 802.1p (Traffic Prioritization) • IEEE 802.1q (VLAN Tagging) • IEEE 802.1w (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol) • IEEE 802.3ad (Link Aggregation) • IEEE 802.3 (10Base-T Ethernet) • IEEE 802.3ab (Twisted Pair Gigabit Ethernet) •...
  • Page 60 - Port Aggregation/LACP: 8 groups with up to 8 member ports per trunk - Broadcast Storm configuration with broadcast rate, multicast rate and flooded unicast rate - IGMP Snooping - Quality of Service (QoS): 802.1p or DSCP - Integrated VeriPHY cable diagnostics tool - Integrated ICMP Ping client sends ping requests to other network nodes - SNMPv1/v2c (Simple Network Management Protocol) - LAN settings (IP address, DHCP, Gateway, etc.)

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