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Outdoor Router P-380
Users Guide
Revision 1.0 November, 2002
Copyright © 2002 Gemtek Systems Holding BV www.gemtek-systems.com
Outdoor Router P-380 Users Guide
1 Before You Start
1.1 Notice
Gemtek Systems Holding BV reserves the right to change specifications without prior notice.
While the information in this manual has been compiled with great care, it may not be deemed an assurance of product characteristics. Gemtek Systems Holding BV shall be liable only to the degree specified in the terms of sale and delivery.
The reproduction and distribution of the documentation and software supplied with this product and the use of its contents is subject to written authorization from Gemtek Systems Holding BV
1.2 Trademarks
The product described in this book is a licensed product of Gemtek Systems Holding BV.
Microsoft, Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows NT, Windows 2000,
Windows XP, and MS-DOS are registered trademarks of the Microsoft Corporation.
Novell is a registered trademark of Novell,Inc.
Mac OS is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.
Java is a trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Wi-Fi is a registered trademark of the Wi-Fi Alliance.
All other brand and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders.
1.3 National Radio Regulations
Please note:
The usage of wireless network components is subject to national and or regional regulations and laws.
Administrator must ensure that they select the correct radio settings according to their regulatory domain. Refer to the regulatory domains chapter in the appendix to get more information on regulatory domains. Please check the regulations valid for your country and set the parameters concerning frequency, channel, and output power to the permitted values!
Channel and output power settings may be modified by experienced service personnel only!
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2 Table of Contents
7 SYSTEM CONFIGURATION USING COMMAND LINE INTERFACE......................................... 43
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3 About this Guide
3.1 Purpose
This document provides information and procedures on hardware installation, setup, configuration, and management of the Gemtek Systems Operator Access Point P-380.
3.2 Prerequisite Skills and Knowledge
To use this document effectively, you should have a working knowledge of Local Area Networking
(LAN) concepts and wireless Internet access infrastructures. In addition, you should be familiar with the following:
Hardware installers should have a working knowledge of basic electronics and mechanical assembly, and should understand related local building codes.
Network administrators should have a solid understanding of software installation procedures for network operating systems under Microsoft Windows 95, 98, Millennium Edition, 2000, NT, and Windows XP and general networking operations and troubleshooting knowledge.
3.3 Conventions Used in this Document
The following typographic conventions and symbols are used throughout this document:
Very important information. Failure to observe this may result in damage!
Important information that should be observed.
Additional information that may be helpful but which is not required. bold code
<value> note
Menu commands, buttons and input fields are displayed in bold
File names, directory names, form names, and system-generated output such as error messages are displayed in constant-width type
Placeholder for certain values, e.g. user inputs
Comments or hints
3.4 Help Us to Improve this Document!
If you should encounter mistakes in this document or want to provide comments to improve the manual please send e-mail directly to: [email protected]
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3.5 Gemtek Systems Technical Support
If you encounter problems when installing or using this product, please consult the Gemtek Systems website at http://www.gemtek-systems.com for
The latest software, user documentation and product updates.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ).
Direct contact to the Gemtek Systems support centers.
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4 Introduction
Thank you for choosing the Gemtek Systems P-380 Operator Access Point.
This manual will give you a short introduction to the device and its hardware and show you how to install and set up the P-380.
4.1 Overview
Wireless Router and Access Point with Rugged Housing for Outdoor Applications
The Gemtek Systems P-380 Outdoor Router provides quality connectivity for Wi-Fi networks. The device is ideal for rough environments and outdoor applications.
Multiple Operating Modes
It can be configured in five different operating modes. As an inter-building wireless bridge it connects two wired networks on MAC address level. In router mode it can connect different IP subnets and in access point mode it connects wireless clients to a wired network. In client bridge or client router mode it connects a client PC or a workgroup to another WLAN Access Point..
Wi-Fi Compliant to Ensure Network Compatibility
Tested for interoperability with the Wi-Fi standard, the P-380 will support all Wi-Fi certified client devices; the global industry-standard for wireless networking.
High Performance for Maximum Coverage
Designed to support large areas, this AP combines high receiver sensitivity and proven antenna technology to maximize coverage.
Long Range
The P-380 can be ordered with an integrated high-gain antenna (P-380A), or with a connector
(reverse N ) for an external antenna (P-380N). With the integrated 10dBi directional antenna (40° beam width) two P-380A routers can connect at a distance of up to five kilometers.
Routing
Connecting two different networks via a wireless link is the job of a wireless router. A router can connect different networks (subnets) and minimizes the data transfer over the wireless link. One P-
380 can connect up to eight different networks in a point-to-multipoint configuration.
Bridging
When protocols other than TCP/IP need to be transmitted, the P-380 can be configured as a layer 2 bridge. With no license required for wireless bridges in the 2.4 GHz band, in almost every part of the world, the P-380 can be a cost effective alternative to leased-lines for line-of-sight connections.
Access Point
The P-380 can also be a Wi-Fi access point for environmentally challenged locations like industrial plants, or when an outdoor installation can better serve the application. The weatherproof housing has a NEMA classification of IP66, and incorporates a temperature control system to support operation from –20° to +65°C.
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Install and forget
A bright LED display of signal strength enables simple installation optimization. A Power over Ethernet client, the P-380 is supplied data and power over one cable, allowing remote power resets, thereby eliminating the need for any on-site-maintenance.
Installation and Set Up
The P-380 is very easy to install and set up. The Power-over-Ethernet connection additionally reduces mounting and maintenance efforts.
Management
Device management is provided through a secure web-based interface (HTTPs), a CLI (Command
Line Interface), and SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol). You can use any of these management interfaces to view and adjust the parameter settings of the P-380. Device management and firmware upgrade can be done remotely.
P-380 Features
IEEE 802.11b Wi-Fi Access Point
WLAN router mode, access point mode, bridge mode or client mode (configurable)
Weather proof and rugged housing
Wall or mast mount kit included (for both applications)
Operating temperature range from –20°C to +65°C
Integrated or external antennas
64/128-bit WEP security on wireless transmissions
Layer 2 User Isolation
10/100 Mbps Base-T RJ-45 Ethernet port
Power-over-Ethernet support
11Mbps, 5.5Mbps, 2Mbps, and 1Mbps auto-fall-back
Management via HTTPs, Telnet, SSH, and SNMP
Easy to use web-based management, including remote management and remote software upgrades and web configuration wizard
Performance Monitoring
Integrated Site Survey
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The P-380 can work in different operating modes: bridge access point (AP)
AP router client router client bridge
Even if a P-380 is connected to a wired network on one side and to a wireless network on the other side in all operating modes, there are some significant differences. The operating modes differ from each other by the possibilities to connect single or multiple stations in the same or in diffent IP subnets:
How many wireless connections are allowed?
How many wired connections are allowed?
Are connections possible to between different IP subnets?
Which IP addresses are used by the device?
To which wireless types can the P-380 connect remotely?
Is the wired network or the wireless network supposed to be the local area network (LAN)?
The last point is a key for understanding the IP settings including DHCP settings, IP masquerading or network address translation (NAT) and IP routing. The terms LAN and WAN depend on the devices operating mode.
Building 1 Building 2
P-380 in client router mode
P-380 in
AP router mode
Internet
Gateway
Gateway at ISPs site
Internet
Wired network
(LAN)
IP subnet 192.168.200.0
Wirless network
(WAN)
Wirless network
(LAN)
Wired network
(WAN)
IP subnet 192.168.99.0
LAN WAN
IP subnet 192.168.100.0
IP subnet 80.146.72.0
Figure 1 – Meaning of LAN and WAN in a P-380 topology
In the figure shown above we connect a subnet 192.168.200.0 in building 1 using a P-380 in client router mode and a P-380 in AP router mode to a subnet 192.168.100.0 in building 2. On the client routers side, the wired stations build his local network LAN, the wireless subnet 192.168.99.0 therefore must be the WAN. On the other hand the AP router assumes his wired network to be the
WAN, where it can find an internet gateway. In this case, the wireless network builds up the AP routers LAN. Going one step further, the internet gateway in the companies building 2 will take the wired network 192.168.100.0 for LAN and the ISPs subnet for WAN.
The following sections will give a short introduction in each of the operating modes.
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In bridge mode the P-380 connects two or more wired networks, for example networks in different buildings with no wired connections. On both sides of the connection you need a P-380 in bridge mode. In this case, the P-380 acts as a network bridge between wireless and wired networks. All data received by the P-380 on its wireless or Ethernet interface is broadcast on the wireless interface to all connected devices that are authorized in the ACL (access control list). In bridge mode the P-380 can connect can connect up to seven remote networks.
Operating mode: bridge
Figure 2 – Bridge mode
Operating mode: bridge
Wireless network (LAN) Wired network (WAN)
4.2.2 Access Point Mode (AP Mode)
In AP mode it can connect multiple wireless client stations to a wired network. In this mode P-380 can be used as an Operator Access Point for outdoor hot-spots. Wireless client stations can be mobile like notebook or fixed like a P-380 in client router mode.
Like in the bridge mode all data received by the P-380 on its wireless or Ethernet interface is broadcast on the wireless interface to all connected devices that are authorized in the ACL (access control list). It is still working as a network bridge (OSI Layer 2) between wireless and wired networks, but in difference to the bridge mode it allows access to multiple client stations.
Internet
Operating mode: client router Operating mode: AP router
Wireless network (LAN) Wired network (WAN)
Figure 3 – AP mode
4.2.3 AP Router Mode
In AP router mode, the P-380 Outdoor Router can connect different IP subnets. Hence it does not bridge all data between Ethernet and wireless interface but only the data intended for the connected
IP network.
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As in AP mode, the P-380 in AP router mode allows access for multiple wireless stations like mobile stations and P-380 devices in client router or in client bridge mode. In this mode, the P-380 provides the full range of features including DHCP server, network address translation (NAT), firewall functions and port forwarding.
IP subnet: 192.168.200.0
Operating mode: client router
IP subnet: 192.168.100.0
Operating mode: AP router
Wireless network (LAN) Wired network (WAN)
Internet
Operating mode: client bridge
Figure 4 – AP router mode
In this mode, the P-380 is part of two networks in his router function. On the one side it is connected to a wireless network, where it provides DHCP services for example and which is called the LAN side.
On the other side it is connected to the wired network, where it may find a gateway to the internet and which is called the WAN side.
4.2.4 Client Bridge Mode
In client bridge mode, the P-380 acts as an wireless client (or station). It can connect a single computer to a wireless access point only. As far as user isolation is enabled in the access point, no connection between P-380 in client bridge mode an other wireless stations connected to the same access point is possible.
Internet
Operating mode: client bridge
Workstation Wireless network (LAN)
Figure 5 – Client bridge mode
Operating mode: AP or AP router
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Since the P-380 acts as a wireless network card in this mode, it assumes that the local network (LAN) can be found on its wireless side. So LAN in this operating mode doesn’t mean the connection between P-380 and workstations, but rather the wireless network in which the P-380 is one client beside others.
Note: For selecting the client bridge mode upload the client firmware from the P-380 product CD first.
4.2.5 Client Router Mode
In client router mode, the P-380 acts as an wireless client (or station). But in difference to the client bridge mode it can connect a whole IP subnet to a wireless access point. The P-380 in client router mode can connect to a single remote access point only.
Operating mode: client router
IP subnet: 192.168.210.0
Operating mode: AP router
IP subnet: 192.168.100.0
Operating mode: client router
IP subnet: 192.168.220.0
Internet
Operating mode: client router
IP subnet: 192.168.230.0
Wired network (LAN) Wirless network (WAN)
Figure 6 – Client router mode
In this mode, the P-380 is part of two networks in his router function. On the one side it is connected
(wired) to his own network, the LAN. Anything outside the LAN must be the WAN, and can be found on its wireless side. So the LAN IP of a P-380 in client router mode is the IP on its wired interface, the
WAN IP is the one on the wireless interface.
Note: For selecting the client bridge mode upload the client firmware from the P-380 product CD first.
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4.2.6 Comparison of the Operating Modes
The following table providse a short overview about the features of the different operating modes:
Wireless connections
Wired connections
Wireless Remote
Types
Client Router
Multiple Multiple Multiple Single Single
Multiple Multiple Multiple Single Multiple
IP addresses
DHCP server
DHCP client
NAT
Routing between different IP subnets
WL Clients,
AP Router,
Client Router,
Client Bridge
Bridge WL Clients,
Access Point,
AP Router,
Bridge,
Client Router,
Client Bridge
Access Point,
AP Router
Access Point,
AP Router
WAN (wired) not available
WAN (wired) not available
WAN (wired),
LAN (wireless)
Assigns IP to wireless network
WAN (wireless) WAN (wireless),
LAN (wired) not available Assigns IP to wired network
Receives IP from wired network
Receives IP from wired network
Receives IP from wired network
Receives IP from wireless network
Receives IP from wireless network not available not available Hides wireless stations to wired network not available Hides wired stations to wireless network no no yes no yes
Figure 7 – Operating modes table
The management of the P-380 is independent from your operating system. Windows operating systems are required only for using the AP search and AP upgrade tools. For HTTPS management you will need a Java and JavaScript enabled HTML browser with SSL support (e.g. Internet Explorer,
Netscape, Opera).
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5 Hardware and Software Installation
5.1 Overview
This chapter includes the following sections:
Package content
Hardware introduction
Hardware installation
Software installation and first access to the device
5.2 Scope of Delivery
Please ensure that the package is complete before beginning with the installation. The package should include the following components:
Outdoor Access Point P-380
Mounting kit for wall or mast mount
Twisted Pair LAN cable adapter
CD-ROM containing software and documentation
This manual
Note: There is no Power supply included in the standard package. P-380 can be used with E-110 Single Port PoE Adapter or E-810 8-Port PoE Switch.
On the right side of the P-380 Operator Access Point you will find the LEDs.
Figure 8 – P-380 LEDs
1. Signal strength LEDs (1 to 10)
These LEDs show the strength of the wireless signal received by the antenna (in client modes only). No 1 to 3 show a very poor signal in red, no 4 to 6 show a average signal in yellow and no 7 to 10 will show an excellent signal in green.
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2. Power LED
Off: Power supply connection not available or broken
On: Power supply connection OK
3. Wireless activity LED
Off: no activity
Blinking: sending and receiving data
4. LAN link LED
Off: No LAN connection available
On: LAN connection OK
5.4.1 Installing the Access Point
Users Guide
Figure 9 – Assembling the P-380 mount kin to the back of the case
2. If you are mounting the Access Point on a wall, first install the bracket 햳 of the mounting kit to a suitable position. Assemble the back of the P-380 case to the bracket subsequently.
3. If you are mounting the Access Point to a pole, first install the bracket 햳 and the clip 햴 of the mounting kit to a stout pole. Assemble the back of the P-380 case to the bracket subsequently.
4. Insert the twisted pair LAN cable to a Power-over-Ethernet socket. At least the power LED and the LAN link LED should light up.
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5.4.2 Connect to the Power Source and the Local Network
1. Connect the Ethernet cable from the P-380 outdoor router to a IEEE 802.3af compliant PoE hub (48V DC) (Power-over-Ethernet, E-110 PoE Single Port Adapter or E-810 8-Port Switch) labeled P-LAN OUT.
2. Connect a twisted pair Ethernet cable from the LAN-IN port of the PoE Adapter to a free port on the hub or switch within the local network.
Power outlet LAN switch or hub
PoE hub
Figure 10 –Connecting P380 to the power source and to the network
5.4.3 Adjusting the P-380 for Best Reception
1. Adjust the orientation of the antenna to get the maximum range. The signal strength LEDs of the P-380 will show you the best position of the P-380 in client bridge or client router mode.
2. Secure the unit in the position.
You will need to adjust the antennas for inter-building bridge configurations only.
Exact orientation of the antennas is particularly important for long-distance inter-building links. For more information please refer to the P-380 Specification section.
Figure 11 – Adjusting P-380 for best reception
Software is needed for setup and management of the P-380 Operator Access Point.
In general, there are four different ways to access the device for configuration:
Windows applications: AP search and AP upgrade
Standard HTML browser (Java and JavaScript enabled)
CLI (command line interface) via telnet or SSH client
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SNMPv1 or SNMPv2
Users Guide
Insert the installation CD delivered with the P-380 into your CD-ROM drive
The installation wizard starts automatically and will guide you through the rest of the installation process. If the installation wizard does not start automatically, please run “autorun.exe” from the root directory of the installation CD.
5.6 Find Your New P-380!
To find your new P-380 Operator Access Point you will need to connect the AP to the same logical IP network as your PC. The standard IP address of the P-380 in factory default status is 192.168.2.2.
To access the P-380 in its default configuration you will need to use one of the following IP settings in your network:
IP address space 192.168.x.x
Subnet mask 255.255.0.0
If are not using one of these IP address spaces you will either need to switch your network settings to these values or set the P-380’s IP address to a free IP address in your current network.
5.6.1 Test: Calling P-380 with Ping
To test the accessibility of your P-380 from your PC, just type the following from a command prompt: ping 192.168.2.2
If you get an answer like:
Reply from 192.168.2.2: Bytes=32 Time=7ms TTL=255 you can access the P-380 from this PC.
If the answer is more like:
Request time limit exceeded. there is a problem accessing the P-380 in default status from this PC. You should either change the
IP address of your PC or of the P-380.
5.6.2 Setting the P-380 IP Address
You can change the P-380’s IP address using the Gemtek Systems AP Search tool.
1. Click Start > Programs > Gemtek Systems > AP Search to launch the application.
2. Enter the MAC (Media Access Control) address of your P-380 into the specified field on the bottom left corner of the window. You will find the MAC address label on the rear of the housing.
3. Enter a free IP address (e.g. 10.0.0.3) in your network into the “IP to set” field.
If you are not sure whether the selected IP address is free or not, first check it from a command prompt with “ping 10.0.0.3”. If you get n positive answer, the IP address is already in use! If you need more information about the address space used in your network, get your IP configuration with “ipconfig” (Win 2000, Win NT and Win XP) or
“winipcfg” (Win 9x and Win Me) from the command prompt.
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Figure 12 – Setting IP address with AP search (1)
4. After confirming the change the IP address will be set to the new value and the AP will appear in the list after a new search:
Figure 13 – Setting IP address with AP search (2)
Note: Double-clicking an item in the list will launch the web browser for configuration via
HTTPs.
5.7 Modifying the Network’s IP Address Space
If you don’t want to change the P-380 IP address, you can change the IP settings of your network to the required values. If you are using a DHCP server, set the available IP address pool to:
192.168.2.x with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 or
192.168.x.x with a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0
After rebooting the PCs, you should find PCs as well as the P-380 within one logical network.
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5.8 Reset to Factory Defaults
If you have configured your device in a way, that you cannot get access via browser or CLI to modify parameters, you can set the device back to factory defaults using the AP Search tool.
1. Enter the MAC (Media Access Control) address of your P-380 into the specified field on the bottom left corner of the window. You will find the MAC address label on the rear of the housing.
2. Enter the IP address into the “IP to set” field.
3. Click the Reset button. The AP Search tool will now find the device and set it back to factory defaults.
Note: Keep in mind that resetting the device is an irreversible process. to-factory-default or IP set.
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6 System Configuration Using HTML Interface
6.1 Overview
This chapter describes the configuration of the P-380 Outdoor Router using a standard web browser
(Java and JavaScript enabled). The chapter is divided into the following sections:
System status
System setup
Advanced settings
System tools
To log in to the P-380 configuration interface, launch your browser and connect to https://192.168.2.2, where 192.168.2.2 is the default IP address of your P-380. The network identification dialogue appears:
Figure 14 – Log in to HTML configuration
Use root as the user name and pass as the password. The username is fixed and cannot be changed, the password can be changed later on in the advanced settings menu.
After successful log-on, the following user interface is displayed.
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Figure 15 – Main Management Tool Page
Note: The following figures will show the content of the browser without the navigation and address bars.
In the upper part of the screen you find some general important information: The SSID of this device, the uptime since last reboot, the average processor load and the number of clients currently connected to this device.
Figure 16 – Status headline
In the center of the screen you find a menu list with links to the four different setup areas: device status setup wizard advanced settings system tools
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The device status page shows some information about the P-380 itself, its position in your network and the data traffic on the wireless interface.
Figure 17 – Device status
Version is the current version of the firmware. This is important information for support requests and for preparing firmware upload.
Uptime is the time in days since last system reboot.
Average Load shows the average load of the P-380 processor.
System Memory Total shows the total P-380 memory.
System Memory Free shows the currently available P-380 memory.
Device Mode shows the P-380 operating mode (AP or Bridge).
Hostname shows the name of the P-380 in the network used for statistic routines.
Wireless Interface IP is the IP address of the wireless interface of the P-380.
In the list of all Interfaces you can find information about the data traffic on the wireless interface:
Tx Data: data volume transmitted successfully [MB]
Tx Errors: errors while transmitting data
Rx Data: data volume received successfully [MB]
Rx Errors: errors while transmitting data
Collisions: number of data packet collisions
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Note: No settings on the setup wizard pages are stored until you press the save
settings button on the wireless configuration setting page at the end of the wizard!
On the first page of the setup wizard you can select the operating mode.
Figure 18 – Operating mode settings
Select AP Router mode if you want to allow mobile stations to access your wired network and you need to build up a wireless connection to a different IP subnet.
Select AP (Access point) mode if you want to allow mobile stations to access your wired network.
Select Bridge mode if you want to connect two or more separate wired networks.
Select Client Router mode if you want to connect a whole IP subnet (workgroup) to an AP router in another IP subnet.
Select Client Bridge mode if you want to connect a workstation to an access point or AP router.
Please note: to run the P-380 in client bridge or client router mode you need a client firmware from the P-380 product CD!
Please refer to the Operating Modes section for more details about the different modes.
6.4.2 General Configuration Settings
On the general settings page you can specify information about the name and location of your P-380.
Figure 19 – General configuration settings
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Host Name is the name under which the device will appear for example in the AP Search tool.
DNS Server Address is the IP address of a domain name server. This IP address, provided by your
ISP, will be assigned to all PCs requesting address information through DHCP from the P-380.
Available in AP router mode only!
If you are not sure about the IP address of the DNS server currently responsible for your local network, please get your IP configuration with “ipconfig” (Win 2000, Win NT and
Win XP) or “winipcfg” (Win 9x and Win Me) from the command prompt.
System Identification is a more specific device name for better identification by service staff.
Address is the street and postal address of the location where the device is deployed.
Coordinates specifies the longitude and latitude or other coordinates of the device location.
Customer name is the customer’s name
Please note: All of the parameters above on the general configuration setting page are required!
6.4.3 Network Configuration Settings
On the network configuration settings page you can modify the IP settings for the P-380 and the default gateway.
WAN Interface Settings
Figure 20 – Network configuration settings: WAN interface
Interface: Use this option to switch the WAN interface of P-380 on (Enable) or off (Disable).
Available in AP router and client router mode only!
Note: In AP router mode you disable the wired interface to the Ethernet using this radio button. When the interface is disabled, there are no connections possible between
Ethernet devices and the P-380(see Comparison of the Operating Modes).
In client router mode you disable wireless interface using this radio button. When the interface is disabled, there are no connections possible between wireless devices and
the P-380 (see Comparison of the Operating Modes).
IP Address assigned by ISP is the device’s IP address on the WAN interface. If the DHCP client function is enabled, the IP address assigned by the DHCP server will be used. If no DHCP server can be found via WAN interface, the IP entered here will be used.
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If you change the IP address manually, please make sure that the chosen IP address is free and belongs to the same IP subnet as the old one. Otherwise you will loose the connection to the P-380 from your current PC.
If you enable the DHCP client via web browser, the browser will loose the connection after rebooting, because the IP address assigned by the DHCP server is not predictable.
IP Subnet Mask is the corresponding network mask for the IP address on the WAN interface.
ISP Default Gateway is the gateway to other networks on WAN side (required).
If you are not sure about the IP address of the gateway currently responsible for your local network, please get your IP configuration with “ipconfig” (Win 2000, Win NT and
Win XP) or “winipcfg” (Win 9x and Win Me) from the command prompt.
DHCP Client: enable this option, when a DHCP server is running in the network on WAN side and you want the DHCP server to assign a free IP address the WAN interface of P-380.
If you are not sure about the IP address of the gateway currently responsible for your local network, please get your IP configuration with “ipconfig” (Win 2000, Win NT and
Win XP) or “winipcfg” (Win 9x and Win Me) from the command prompt.
LAN Interface Settings (AP router and client router mode only)
Figure 21 – Network configuration settings: LAN interface
IP Address is the device’s IP address on the LAN interface. In AP router mode this is the IP address on the wireless interface, in client router mode it is the IP address on the wired (Ethernet) interface.
If you enable the DHCP server on the wireless interface in AP router mode, please make sure that the LAN IP address specified for the wireless interface here is in the same IP subnet as the IP address pool range of the DHCP server.
IP Subnet Mask is the corresponding network mask for the IP address on the LAN interface.
Please make sure that you use different IP subnets for the WAN and LAN interfaces. If both address spaces are in the same IP subnet, all routing functions will be disabled!
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NAT: When you enable this function, the router will use his network address translation (NAT) function. In this case all LAN IP addresses are hidden to the WAN network behind the routers WAN IP address. A P-380 in client router mode will forward all data packets from his wired LAN using his own
WAN IP address to the wireless network it is connected to. The P-380 in AP router mode on the other side of the wireless network will forward the data packets using his own WAN IP address to the wired
(Ethernet) network it is connected to.
IP subnet: 192.168.200.0
IP subnet: 192.168.99.0
IP subnet: 192.168.100.0
IP: 192.168.200.99
From: 192.168.200.99
To: 193. 99.144.71
Operating mode: client router
LAN IP: 192.168.200.1
WAN IP: 192.168.99.1
Figure 22 – NAT
From: 192.168.99.1
To: 193. 99.144.71
From: 192.168.100.1
To: 193. 99.144.71
Internet
Operating mode: AP router
LAN IP: 192.168.200.1
WAN IP: 192.168.100.1
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6.4.4 Wireless Configuration Settings
On the wireless configuration settings page you can modify all parameters necessary for establishing wireless connections between mobile clients and the access point.
Note: Depending on the operation mode selected on the general configuration setting page, the parameters available on this page will vary.
Figure 23 – Wireless configuration settings
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Access Point SSID: The SSID is the key name of the wireless network area you are establishing using the P-380. The SSID can be string of up to 32 characters of your choice.
Note: The SSID is case sensitive! The SSID may not contain special characters like [ ] { } / \ or spaces. Only dots and underscores are allowed.
When you are operating the P-380 in bridge mode, the SSID must different for all devices forming the wireless bridge network.
In access point mode, the SSID must be made known to all mobile clients, or they have to use the “auto connect to any wireless network” function in their WLAN card.
If you are running more than one P-380 and want to enable the roaming function, please use the same SSID in all access points.
If you want to run separate wireless networks on a site, please use different SSIDs for each wireless network.
Bridge ID (in bridge mode or client bridge mode only): This ID must be different at the two devices forming the wireless bridge.
Regulatory Domain: The full frequency range of the 2.4 GHz ISM band is not permitted to be used in all countries. Depending on the selection of the regulatory domain here the available frequency channels will vary!
Channel: Frequency channels are used to avoid interference between nearby access points. If you wish to operate more than one access points in overlapping coverage areas, we recommend a distance of at least four channels between the chosen channels. For example, for three Access Points in close proximity choose channels 1, 5 and 11.
Refer to the regulatory domains chapter in the appendix to get more information concerning the regulations valid for your country and set the parameters for frequency channel to the permitted values!
Layer 2 User Isolation: Use this parameter to enable or disable the direct communication between the mobile clients (in AP or AP router mode only). Layer 2 User Isolation is meant not only to reduce traffic but also to isolate (or separate) WLAN subscribers from each other. With Layer 2 User Isolation switched on, user A cannot see user B on the wireless network. This separation is done on network layer 2.
Note: Use the site survey tool in the System Tools to check the used channels in your surrounding and their signal strength.
Encryption Algorithm: Select No, 64-Bit or 128-Bit Encryption.
Key 0 to 3: The WEP keys are entered as a series of colon-separated HEX pairs: 5 pairs for 64-Bit
(e.g. 01:23:45:67:89), 13 pairs for 128-Bit (e.g. 00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:AA:BB:CC). If the key entered does not match the required length, the configuration wizard will return an error message.
The encryption key must also be entered into the WLAN card configuration of the mobile clients.
Output power
The Output Power, dBm, is the strength of the radio signal transmitted by the integrated antenna. The higher the number, the stronger the signal.
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Refer to the regulatory domains chapter in the appendix to get more information concerning the regulations valid for your country and set the power output to the permitted values!
Setting up advanced P-380 settings requires advanced knowledge of the TCP/IP network structure and functionalities. It is recommended that only skilled network administrators should use these settings.
6.5.1 Firewall
The firewall settings allows to specify IP packet filters to enhance the data security. The firewall takes effect between LAN and WAN and is supposed to avoid forbidden intrusion to your local network.
The firewall rules are divided into Input and Output rules to assign special procedures to a certain data transmission direction (AP router and Client router mode only). In AP mode, bridge mode and client bridge mode the corresponding table is called Prerouting table.
Please remember that LAN and WAN have different meanings depending on operating mode. For a P-380 in AP router mode, the incoming data packets are received on the
Ethernet interface, for a P-380 in client router mode, incoming packets are received on the wireless interface!
Figure 24 – Firewall settings
On the main firewall settings page you will find one table for input and output rules and a switch to enable or disable the firewall. Within the tables you can insert new rules, modify existing ones, delete rules and change their position by moving up or down.
The position of a rule within the list is very important, because the list is worked through from top to down. If a packet is dropped in the first lines by a very general rule, it does not help to accept it further down with a more specific rule. So please check the rules right position after defining or modifying them.
To specify a new rule please click Add New Rule and insert the related interface, destination, gateway and metric values.
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Figure 25 – Specifying a new rule
Target – this implementation of firewall control supports two types of rules – ACCEPT and DROP.
The appropriate policy defines what to do if the data packet received matches the rule.
Source IP Address – source IP address, leave field empty to specify as “any”.
Source Netmask – source subnet.
Source port(s) – can be specified in two ways: “All” or a given port range.
Destination IP Address – specified the same as Source IP.
Destination Netmask – specified the same as source net mask.
Destination port(s) – specified the same as Source port.
Network protocol – network protocol which the rule affects. Can be specified as one of
TCP/UDP/ICMP or “any”.
Note: When defining rules, avoid DENY type rules using “any” as the address space, which can cause inadvertently loss of web management connection (e.g., deny traffic from any to any IP address).
When using the masquerading function of the P-380, IP addresses used in the LAN are not visible to the external world or WAN. Please check if packet filters needs to be specified with destination in masked subnets.
6.5.2 ACL (Access Control List)
In the ACL Settings page you can restrict access to the P-380. Access control is based on the networks devices’ MAC address and is individually controlled for the wireless and Ethernet networks.
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Network devices whose MAC addresses are listed in the ACL control table has specific rules for accessing the AP which will override the default policy.
Figure 26 – ACL settings
Default ACL policy for wireless network: Select Accept to allow all mobile clients to access this access point or Deny to prevent all mobile clients from accessing this access point. Clients may also be subject to rules in the Access control table.
Default ACL policy for Ethernet: Select Accept to allow all LAN clients to access this access point or Deny to prevent all LAN clients from accessing this access point. Clients may also be subject to rules in the Access control table.
If you need to define special rules for specific network devices, you can add new rules to the Access control table.
Figure 27 – Specifying a new rule
1. Click the Add New Rule button to open the Access Control Table.
2. Specify the MAC address of the device you want to add to the ACL. The format is a list of colon separated hexadecimal numbers (for example: 00:00:78:0A:CD:FF).
3. Select the state of the rule, whether the specified network device should be allowed or denied as an Access Points client.
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Note: The improper use of the ACL rules (e.g. Deny all from all interfaces) without special rules for some clients may lock you out of accessing the device.
Use the reset function in this cases as described in the Reset to Factory Defaults section.
6.5.3 IP Routing Table
In the Static Routing Settings you can add or delete static routes, and modify static routes settings.
Figure 28 – Static routing table
Opening the page you will find a list of all present routes, each consisting of the related interface, the destination IP address, the gateway and the subnet mask. The default values in this list are generated from your current IP settings in the Network Configuration Settings menu.
The routing list shows, how the router will handle data packets received on an interface at destination to a specific IP address. In this example, all data received on the Ethernet interface with an destination IP address in the 192.168.2.0 network will be forwarded to the default gateway. All other data packets received on the Ethernet interface will be forwarded to the gateway 192.168.2.254.
If there is more than one route specified for one destination, the metric value shows the priority, how the router will try the routes. The metric value indexes the number of gateways between sender and destination.
To specify a new static route please click Add New Route and insert the related interface, destination, netmask, gateway and metric values.
Figure 29 – Specifying a new route
6.5.4 DHCP
The DHCP server settings specify, which IP addresses are assigned to the DHCP clients in the LAN.
For a P-380 in AP router mode, these are the mobile wireless stations or P-380 devices in client router mode with DHCP client function enabled.
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Figure 30 – DHCP server settings
On the DHCP server settings page you can switch the DHCP server on or off and specify the IP address pool range, which is intended to be assigned to the clients.
Click the Save Settings button to confirm. The changes will take immediately without rebooting the device.
Note:
Clients probably needs to refresh their IP configuration to get a new IP address from the
P-380.
To avoid IP address conflicts we advise to run one DHCP server in an IP subnet only.
If you enable the DHCP server on the wireless interface in AP router mode, please make sure that the static LAN IP address of the wireless interface is in the same IP subnet as the IP address pool range of the DHCP server.
Port forwarding service provides access to computers in the LAN with dedicated services by overriding the NAT (Network Address Translation) feature. Example of such services could be a web server on a computer in the LAN, which should be open to public access for testing purposes. The administrator can define the port of the application, which should be open to public access, the LAN
IP address of the computer running the service and a destination port, which is used in the router to override the network address translation.
In the Port Forwarding Settings main page you can add, modify or delete forwarding rules.
Figure 31 – Port Forwarding Settings
To specify a new port forwarding rule please click Add New Rule and insert the port type, the local port, the destination IP address and the destination port.
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Figure 32 – Specifying a new forwarding rule
In this example, all requests to the P-380 on port 80 will be redirected to the IP address
192.168.2.111 on port 4711.
Note: Port forwarding is a kind of reverse function to IP masquerading. Hence this function can take effect only when NAT is enabled!
Please refer to your firewall settings to check if the port forwarding settings are suitable.
On the administrator settings page you can change the administrator’s password (default: pass). Type the old password, enter the new password of your choice and retype it. Click the Save Settings button to store the new password to the P-380.
Figure 33 – Administrator settings
6.6.1 Clients
All clients connected to the AP are listed by MAC address in the Connected Clients table:
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Figure 34 – Connected clients statistic table
Refresh – click the button to refresh connected clients statistic information.
The loopback test is used for wireless link diagnostics. The loopback test graphically shows the data transfer rate in Mb/s between the P-380 and a specified wireless network device. The transfer rate is measured by sending an ICMP stream to the specific device. Data is refreshed every 10 seconds.
Figure 35 – Loopback test results
To start the loopback test, do the following:
Endpoint IP – specify the device’s IP address, whose transfer rate needs to be measured.
Start – click to start measuring the specified wireless link.
The status line will show the last measured data transfer rate and the time when this data was received from the wireless network device.
To stop loopback testing simply click the Stop button.
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6.6.3 SNMP
SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) can be configured using the SNMP Settings. Readonly and read-write communities can be specified here. The Community strings are used for SNMP authentication purposes. It is possible to allow or deny IP address groups from accessing the P-380 using SNMP. An IP address and netmask combination of 0.0.0.0/32 means “ANY” IP address can connect. Access can be controlled for one specified IP (for example 192.168.2.100/32) or by a range
(for example 192.168.2.0/24 for IP numbers 192.168.2.1 to 192.168.2.254).
Figure 36 – SNMP settings
Read-Only Community String – community name for read-only access.
Allow Read-Only Community Access from IP – IP address/netmask for read-only community.
Read-Write Community String – community name for read-write access.
Allow Read-Write Access from IP – IP address/netmask for read-write community.
Note: For security purposes, use only local IP addresses for Read/Write access.
Click the Reset button to reset all page fields to their default values or click the Save Settings button to save the SNMP settings.
The site survey test shows overview information for wireless networks in a local geography. Using this test, users can scan for working access points, check their operating channels and see signal/noise levels. To start the scan simply select the Site Survey menu. The following confirmation message appears:
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Outdoor Router P-380
Figure 37 – Site survey confirmation message
Confirm the Site Survey process and get the results in the following table:
Users Guide
Figure 38 – Site survey results table
Available access points are listed in the table by MAC address and SSID.
To refresh the access points availability list simple click the Rescan button.
6.6.5 Monitoring
The monitoring function shows Received/Transmitted bytes statistics per device.
These statistics show a five-minute average traffic rate over the last 24 hours period. RX (blue) indicates incoming (Received) traffic and TX (red) indicates outgoing (Transmitted) traffic.
TX/RX monitoring is restarted on every reboot of the device. The reason is that the device has no real time clock, so the time used is relative to the restart time. The first statistics appear as two points, five minutes after the device has been restarted. A normal view is acquired 10 minutes after the P-380 reboots. First click the Show button to view the initial TX/RX statistics in the browser window. Click the
Refresh button instead of the Show button to get updated TX/RX statistics.
You can also change the TX/RX graph time interval. There are two drop-down menus used for this purpose. The first one is used to choose the start hour of the interval. It is possible to choose any hour from the last 24 hours, but the choice may be limited depending on the devices reboot time. The second drop-down is used to choose the time interval duration in hours. The possible choices are from 1 to a maximum of 25 hours.
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Figure 39 – Monitoring test
RX – Received Kbytes per selected interval.
TX – Transmitted Kbytes per selected interval.
This function is used to update the current firmware version to a new one. If there is need to change the firmware, a valid firmware file must be selected first by clicking the Browse button.
Figure 40 – Upgrade settings
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After selecting a valid firmware version file, click the Upgrade button to proceed. The upgrade process page with the upgrade status messages is displayed:
Figure 41 – Upgrade process status page
Do not switch off and do not disconnect P-380 from power supply during firmware update process because the device could be damaged. Best use Ethernet connection
(not wireless) for firmware update process.
After a successful upgrade process, the device firmware is upgraded, the Menu Management page is displayed, and the previous device configuration set is maintained.
6.6.7 Reboot
Use the Reboot function to stop all working device functions and restart the device.
Figure 42 – Reboot device
Reboot – click the button to restart device.
Note: To complete the reboot process, confirm the reboot request.
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Outdoor Router P-380
To reset the device settings to factory defaults use the Reset Device menu:
Users Guide
Figure 43 – Reset device
Reset – click the button to reset the device to its default settings.
Note: Keep in mind that resetting the device is an irreversible process. The confirmation message appears before starting the reset process. Read it carefully and confirm as described.
You must enter the administrator password to perform the reset function. Please note that even the password will be set back to the factory default!
The device is restarted. All previous device configuration settings will be erased and the factory default values applied.
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7 System Configuration Using Command Line Interface
7.1 Overview
The CLI (Command Line Interface) software is a configuration shell for the Operator Access Point (P-
380). Using the CLI, the operator can:
Configure all essential Access Point configuration settings;
View system, interface, network status, and network statistics;
Use the system tools, such as Site Survey.
In general, there are two ways to connect to the CLI:
Telnet
SSH client (encrypted)
These following sections describe the CLI command line interface used with telnet and the command set available.
The commands and parameters shown in the CLI configuration will vary depending on operating mode. The screenshots in this section just show examples, which may differ from your display.
To get more information about the full range of commands and parameters please refer to the CLI Configuration Commands and Parameters section.
7.2 Login
To access the P-380 via the CLI, open a command prompt and type telnet 192.168.2.2 where 192.168.2.2 is your device’s IP address. CLI mode starts automatically. The login password is the same as the HTML system’s administrator password.
Figure 44 – CLI Login Dialog
After successful login, the command prompt is displayed and the CLI is ready for commands. Press
‘?’ to get a list of available commands:
Note: The ? will not appear on the screen. In the same moment you are pressing this character, the display changes to the desired help page.
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Figure 45 – CLI Main Menu Commands
7.3 Show
Show is a category of commands that display system statistics and settings. The show commands list depends on the device mode. In general its usage is show <command> where <command> is one of the following:
Figure 46 – Show Commands List
Use one of these commands to get the desired information.
7.4 Configure
Configure is a category of commands that configures all essential system settings. The configure commands themselves contain several subcommands and the subcommands again contain several parameters. In general, configure usage is as follows: configure <command> <subcommand> [parameter]
To get a list of all available commands in the configure category please type: configure?
Figure 47 – Configure Commands List
To get a list of all available subcommands for a specific command please type: configure <command>?
(e.g. configure acl?)
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Figure 48 – Configure ACL Commands List
To get a list of all the available parameters for a specific subcommand please type: configure <command> <subcommand>?
, (e.g. configure acl add?)
Figure 49 – Configure ACL Add Parameters List
In this example, the command configure acl add has two parameters: The ACL policy can be set either to accept or to deny and the MAC address of the target network device must be defined.
If you wish to allow a specific network device to access the P-380, please type: configure acl add accept 00:40:4B:31:8F:08 where 00:40:4B:31:8F:08 is the MAC address of the specific device.
Note: A full list of all available commands, subcommands and parameters can be found in the reference section.
7.5 The Defaults Command
To set Access Point device settings values back to their default values, type the Default command in the command line.
7.6 The Exit Command
Type the Exit command to exit the CLI mode.
7.7 The Reboot Command
To reboot the Access Point and stop all processes type the Reboot command in the command line.
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8 Appendix
Users Guide
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9
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Channel Frequency in MHz
2412
2417
2422
2427
2432
2437
2442
2447
2452
2457
2462
2467
2472
2484
USA,
Canada
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Maximum power levels
30 dBm 20 dBm 20 dBm 20 dBm 10 dBm 20 dBm 20 dBm
Mexico is included in the Americas regulatory domain; however, channels 1 through 8 are for indoor use only while channels 9 through
11 can be used indoors and outdoors. Users are responsible for ensuring that the channel set configuration complies with the regulatory standards of Mexico.
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8.2 CLI Configuration Commands and Parameters
acl dhcpserver firewall forwarding general network password routes snmp wireless
Access control list settings.
DHCP server settings
Firewall settings
Port forwarding settings
General device settings.
Device network settings
Change administrator password.
Routes management
SNMP settings.
Wireless settings. configure acl add rm change default
Add entry to the access control list.
Remove entry from the access control list.
Replace existing acl rule.
Change default acl policy for wireless network or Ethernet network
configure acl add
<accept/deny> Acl policy
<text> MAC address configure acl rm
<text> Either rule number or MAC address of the rule to be removed configure acl change
<text> Either rule number or MAC address of the rule to be changed
<text>
<text>
New acl policy: accept/deny
New MAC address
Users Guide
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<1/2> 1 for wireless network, 2 for Ethernet default policy
<accept/deny> New default acl policy
8.2.3 DHCP Server Configuration configure dhcpserver service iprange
Enable/Disable firewall
IP address range configure dhcpserver service
<enable/disable> Enable/Disable DHCP service configure dhcpserver iprange
<ipaddress> Starting IP address
<ipaddress> Ending IP address
Users Guide configure firewall service Enable/Disable firewall rules add new rule configure firewall service
<enable/disable> Enable/Disable firewall service configure firewall rules
<-A/-D/-R/-I>
<chain>
<number>
action: -A:add/-D:delete/-R:replace/-I:insert
Chain name. Can be INPUT or OUTPUT in station and ap router modes, otherwise has to be PREROUTING
Number of rule in the chain (has to be used with actions D, R and I only)
<-p tcp/udp/icmp/any>
<-s [ip[/netmask]]>
Protocol
Source IP and netmask
<-d [ip[/netmask]]> Destination IP and netmask
<-j ACCEPT/DROP/REJECT/LOG> Firewall rule target
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<--source-port [port[:port]]>
<--destination-port> [port[:port]]
<--icmp-type number>
Users Guide
Source port(s). Can be used only with '-p tcp' and '-p udp'
Destination port(s). Can be used only with '-p tcp' and 'p udp'
ICMP type. Can be used with '-p icmp' only configure forwarding service Enable/Disable port forwarding add rm change
Add new rule
Remove existing rule
Replace existing rule with new one configure forwarding service
<enable/disable> Enable/Disable port forwarding service configure forwarding add
<udp/tcp> Port type
<port>
<ipaddress>
<port>
Local port
Destination
Destination port configure forwarding rm
<value> Rule number configure forwarding change
<value>
<udp/tcp>
<port>
<ipaddress>
<port>
Rule number
Port type
Local port
Destination
Destination port configure general devicemode Device mode.
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Outdoor Router P-380 hostname systemid address coordinates customer
Hostname.
System identification.
Device address(country, state etc.)
Device coordinates (longitude and latitude).
Customer name. configure general devicemode
<text> Device mode: sta_router, ap_router, ap, bridge, sta_bridge configure general hostname
<text> Hostname configure general systemid
configure general address
<text> Address(country, state, city, street address)
configure general coordinates
<x,y> Geodesic coordinates (i.e. longitude and latitude)
configure general customer
<text> Customer name
Users Guide
configure network lan wan
LAN interface settings.
WAN interface settings.
The assignment of LAN and WAN to wired and wireless interfaces is dependent on operating mode. Please refer to the operating modes section to find more information about the meaning of LAN and WAN in different modes.
configure network lan
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Set LAN interface
Enable/Disable masquerading
configure network lan interface
<ipaddress> LAN IP address
<netmask> LAN subnet mask
configure network lan masquerade
<enable/disable> Enable/disable LAN masquerade.
configure network wan dhcp Enable/disable DHCP client service interface Set WAN interface
configure network wan interface
<enable/disable> Enable or disable WAN interface. MUST be the only parameter.
<ipaddress>
<netmask>
<ipaddress>
WAN IP address
WAN subnet mask
WAN default gateway
configure network wan dhcp
<enable/disable> Enable/disable DHCP client on WAN interface
Users Guide configure routes add rm
Add new rule
Remove existing rule configure routes add
<text> Interface: eth0/prism0 (Ethernet/Wireless)
<destination>
<netmask>
<ipaddress>
Destination
Netmask
Gateway
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<value> Metric configure routes rm
<value> Route number configure snmp
<text>
<ipaddress>
<number>
<text>
<ipaddress>
<number>
Read only community string.
Allow read only access from IP.
Netmask bits for RO access IP.
Read write community string.
Allow read write access from IP.
Netmask bits for RW access IP.
8.2.10 Wireless Configuration configure wireless ssid Access point SSID. separate channel
Blocks traffic between clients
Default channel for BSS. encryption power
Encryption settings.
Output power, dBm.
configure wireless ssid
<ssid> Access port SSID.
configure wireless separate
<enable/disable> Enable/disable Layer 2 User Isolation
Users Guide
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configure wireless channel
<domain> The domain to which your country belongs
<channel>
Note:
Default channel for BSS: channel number
Only the following domains are available:
FCC: USA, Canada, frequency 2412-2462 MHz
ETSI: European countries, frequency 2412-2472 MHz
WORLD: frequency 2412-2472 MHz
FRANCE: frequency 2457-2472 MHz
Japan: frequency 2484 MHz
China: frequency 2412-2472 MHz
MANUAL: frequency 2412-2484 configure wireless encryption wep key activekey
Enable/disable WEP.
Edit encryption keys.
Set the active key.
configure wireless encryption wep
<no/64/128> Choose either no encryption, 64-bit, or 128-bit encryption
configure wireless encryption key
<number> Encryption key number
Users Guide
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8.3 Menu Items by Operating Mode
AP Router AP
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Firewall
Enable/Disable
Input rules
Output rules
Prerouting rules
ACL
AC policy
AC Table
Routes
DHCP
Enable/Disable
IP Addr. pool
Port FW
Enable/Disable
Port FW table·
Admin. password
System tools
Clients·
Loopback test·
SNMP settings·
Site Survey·
Monitoring·
Upgrades·
Reboot·
Reset
Set Up Wizard
Operating Mode
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AP Router
AP
Bridge·
Client Bridge
Client Router
General
Host name
DNS Server
System ID
Serial No
Address
Coordinates
Cust. Name
Network
Interface Enable
IP Address
IP Mask
Default Gateway
DHCP Client
LAN IP Address
LAN IP Mask
LAN Default Gateway
Masquerade
Wireless
SSID
Bridge ID
Channel
Encryption
WEP Keys
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Page 55
Outdoor Router P-380
8.4 Device Configuration Default Values
Parameter Default value
ACL Configuration Settings
Default ACL policy for wireless network
Accept
Accept Default ACL policy for ethernet
Rules no rules defined
Firewall Configuration Settings
Firewall function disabled
Input rules
Output rules no rules defined no rules defined
Routes Configuration Settings interface wireless wireless
Destination Gateway Netmask
255.255.255.255 default
LAN IP default host route
Metric
0
255.255.255.0 0 ethernet ethernet default
WAN IP
192.168.2.1 0.0.0.0 default
0
255.255.255.0 0
DHCP Server Configuration Settings
DHCP server disabled
Starting IP
Ending IP xxx.xxx.xxx.3, where xxx.xxx.xxx is the WAN IP xxx.xxx.xxx.254, where xxx.xxx.xxx is the WAN IP
Forwarding Configuration Settings
Forwarding function disabled
Rules no rules defined
General Configuration Settings
Device mode AP (AP firmware), sta_router (client firmware)
Hostname
System identification
P380a (AP firmware), P380s (client firmware) identification
Serial number
Address
Coordinates
Customer name devices MAC address address coordinates customer_ name
Network Configuration Settings
Users Guide
Gemtek Systems Page 56
Outdoor Router P-380
Interface
WAN IP address
WAN Subnet mask
Default gateway
DHCP client
WAN IP address
WAN Subnet mask
Masquerade enabled
192.168.2.2
255.255.255.0
192.168.2.1 disabled
192.168.2.2
255.255.255.0 disabled
Wireless Configuration Settings
SSID P380a (AP firmware), P380s (client firmware)
Bridge-ID
Domain
Channel
1
World
11
User Isolation
Encryption
Key 0
Key 1
Key 2
Key 3
Output power disabled disabled not set, default key not set not set not set
20 dBm
SNMP Configuration Settings
Read-Only Community
String public
Allow Read-Only Access from IP
0.0.0.0
Allow Read-Only Access from netmask
255.255.255.255
Read-Write Community
String private
Allow Read-Write Access from IP
0.0.0.0
Allow Read-Write Access from netmask
255.255.255.255
Users Guide
Gemtek Systems Page 57
Outdoor Router P-380 Users Guide
Features
IEEE 802.11b Access Point, Router, Bridge
Wi-Fi compliant
40/128-bit WEP security
Layer 2 isolation for security
802.1x/EAPoLAN/with MD-5/TLS/TTLS/SIM support (in preparation)
IAPP roaming (in preparation)
RADIUS AAA client with EAP support (in preparation)
Remote management via HTTPs, Telnet, SNMP (MIB II, Ethernet MIB, Bridge MIB, private MIB
IP routing with NAT, port forwarding and firewall filters Remote software upgrade via HTTP
Integrated Site Survey, Loop-back test
DHCP server, DHCP client
Access Control List (MAC address filter)
Programmable output power
Interface
Ethernet Interface, 10/100 Base-T, RJ-45 Power-over-Ethernet port for connection to Power-
Switch
Wireless
Standard
Data Rate
Transmit Power
Sensitivity
Antenna connector
(P-380N only!)
Integrated Antenna
(P-380Aonly!)
IEEE 802.11b DSSS (2.4GHz ISM band)
11Mbps, 5.5Mbps, 1Mbps (Auto scaling)
P-380A: 29 ±1dBm, P-380N: 19 ±1dBm
Data Rate
11Mbps
5.5Mbps
1Mbps
Sensitivity
-82dBm
-84dBm
-90dBm
Reverse N-type connector (FCC compliant)
Modulation
CCK
CCK
DBPSK integrated 10dBi directional antenna, 45° beam width vertical and horizontal, vertical polarization
Gemtek Systems Page 58
Outdoor Router P-380 Users Guide
Physical Specification
Dimension 180 x 160 x 58mm (7.1 x 6.3 x 2.3in)
Weight 1100g (includes mounting kit)
Environment Specification
Temperature -20° to +65°C
Humidity up to 95%
Power Supply
Type external AC/DC converter 100/230V to 5V DC/1.5A, 3W max.
Power-over-Ethernet IEEE 802.3af compliant
Mechanical Specification
Ruggedized and flame-resistant plastic housing, wall or mast mount
LEDs
3 + 10 LEDs
Management
Interfaces
RF activity, LAN activity, Power, 10 LED link quality display
Software Update
Test
Reset
Warranty
2 years
HTTPs, Telnet, SSH, SNMP (MIB II, Ethernet MIB, Bridge MIB, private
MIB), Terminal
Remote Software Update via HTTPs
Integrated site survey, Loop-back test
Remote reset / Manufacturing reset
Package Contents
P-380 Outdoor Access Point & Router
CD-ROM with software and documentation
Mounting kit
Gemtek Systems Page 59
Outdoor Router P-380
Related Products
Gateways:
Client Adapters:
Switches:
Management:
G-6000/4000 Hot-spot
Gateways
T-300 series (2.4 GHz)
E-810 8-port Power-over-
Ethernet Switch
S-6000 Network
Management System
8.5.2 P-380 Antenna Pattern
H-plane antenna pattern
P-360 Hot-spot Access Point
Users Guide
T-800 series (Dual-band 2.4 & 5 GHz) PoE
E-110 Single-port PoE Feeder Network
S-200 Smart Client Manager
Peak gain: 10dBi
3dB beam width: 47°
Gemtek Systems Page 60
Outdoor Router P-380
E-plane antenna pattern
Users Guide
Peak gain: 10dBi
3dB beam width: 48°
Gemtek Systems Page 61
Outdoor Router P-380
9 Glossary
Symbols:
10BASET 10 Mbps/baseband/twisted pair.
The IEEE standard for twisted pair Ethernet.
802.11b The IEEE standards for the definition of the Wireless high speed (11Mbit) protocol for wireless communication.
A
Authorization the process of determining what types of activities a user is permitted to undertake. Usually, authorization is in the context of authentication: once you have authenticated a user, they may be authorized for different types of access or activity.
B
backbone The primary connectivity mechanism of a hierarchical distributed system. All systems, which have connectivity to an intermediate system on the backbone, are assured of connectivity to each other. This does not prevent systems from setting up private arrangements with each other to bypass the backbone for reasons of cost, performance, or security.
bandwidth Technically, the difference, in
Hertz (Hz), between the highest and lowest frequencies of a transmission channel.
However, as typically used, the amount of data that can be sent through a given communications circuit. For example, typical
Ethernet has a bandwidth of 100Mbps.
bps bits per second. A measure of the data transmission rate.
D
DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. A service that lets clients on a LAN request configuration information, such as IP host addresses, from a server.
Users Guide
DNS Domain Name System. The distributed name/address mechanism used in the
Internet. It comprises distributed online databases that contain mappings between human-readable names and IP addresses, and servers, which provide translation services to client applications.
domain A part of the DNS naming hierarchy.
Syntactically, an Internet domain name consists of a sequence of names (labels) separated by periods (dots), e.g.,
“machine.company.com”. See DNS.
E
Ethernet A common, 10Mbps local area network technology invented by Xerox
Corporation at the Palo Alto Research Center.
Ethernet is a best-effort delivery system that uses CSMA/CD technology. Ethernet can be run over thinwire coaxial cable (10BASE2), thickwire coaxial cable (10BASE5), twisted pair cable (10BASET), or fibre optic cable.
F
filter Within the router, A filter is a process used to select which packets will be processed by the router, and which will be ignored or discarded. Selection may be based on addresses or protocol type.
firewall A system or combination of systems that enforces a boundary between two or more networks.
FLASH A new memory technology, which combines the nonvolatile features of EPROMs with the easy in-system reprogramming of conventional volatile RAM. See EPROM.
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Outdoor Router P-380
G
gateway The original Internet term for what is now called router or more precisely, IP router.
In modern usage, the term “gateway” and
“application gateway” refers to systems, which perform translation from some native protocol, or physical data format to another. Examples include electronic mail gateways, which translate between X.400 and RFC 822 mail message formats. See router.
H
host An (end-user) computer system that connects to a network, such as a PC, minicomputer of mainframe.
I
ICMP Internet Control Message Protocol. The
TCP/IP protocol used to handle errors and control messages at the IP layer. ICMP is part of the IP protocol. Gateways, routers and hosts use ICMP to send reports of problems about datagrams back to the original source that sent the datagram.
interface One of the physical ports on the router, including the Ethernet and asynchronous ports.
interface type The type (Ethernet or Point-to-
Point) of one of the interfaces on the router.
Internet A collection of networks interconnected by a set of routers, which allow them to function as a single, large virtual network.
Internet (note the capital “I”) The largest internet in the world consisting of large national backbone networks (such as MILNET,
NSFNET, and CREN) and a myriad of regional and local campus networks all over the world.
The Internet is a multiprotocol network, but generally carries TCP/IP.
Internet address See IP address.
Internet Protocol See IP.
Users Guide
ISP Internet service provider. A company that provides Internet - related services. Most importantly, an ISP provides Internet access services and products to other companies and consumers.
IP Internet Protocol. The network layer protocol for the TCP/IP protocol suite. It is a connectionless, best-effort packet switching protocol.
IP address A 32-bit address assigned to hosts using TCP/IP. The address specifies a specific connection to a network, not the host itself.
See dotted decimal notation.
L
LAN Local Area Network. Any physical network technology (such as Ethernet) that operates at high speed (typically 10 Mbit per second or more) over short distances (up to a few kilometers). See WAN.
LED Light Emitting Diode. A luminous indicator.
M
MAC address. The hardware address of a device connected to a shared media. For example, the MAC address of a PC on an
Ethernet is its Ethernet address.
metric A concept used to describe the cost of a route across a network, the distance to the destination at the remote end of the route, or the capacity of the route.
N
name resolution The process of mapping a name into the corresponding address. See
DNS.
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Outdoor Router P-380
NAT Network Address Translation, an Internet standard that enables a local-area network
(LAN) to use one set of IP addresses for internal traffic and a second set of addresses for external traffic. A NAT box located where the LAN meets the Internet makes all necessary IP address translations. NAT is used for two main tasks – to provide a type of firewall by hiding internal IP addresses and enable a company to use more internal IP addresses. Since they're used internally only, there's no possibility of conflict with IP addresses used by other companies and organizations.
network A computer network is a data communications system which interconnects computer systems at various different sites. A network may be composed of any combination of LANs or WANs.
network address The network portion of an IP address. For a class A network, the network address is the first byte of the IP address. For a class B network, the network address is the first two bytes of the IP address. For a class C network, the network address is the first three bytes of the IP address. In each case, the remainder is the host address. In the Internet, assigned network addresses are globally unique. See IP address.
node An addressable device attached to a computer network. See host, router.
P
packet The unit of data sent across a network.
“Packet” is a generic term used to describe units of data at all levels of the protocol stack, but it is most correctly used to describe application data units. See datagram, frame.
policy Organization-level rules governing acceptable use of computing resources, security practices, and operational procedures.
Users Guide
port The abstraction used by Internet transport protocols to distinguish among multiple simultaneous connections to a single destination host. A port is a transport layer demultiplexing value. Each application has a unique port number associated with it. It is also used to refer to one of the physical network connectors on the router.
protocol A formal description of message formats and the rules two computers must follow to exchange those messages. Protocols can describe low-level details of machine-tomachine interfaces (e.g., the order in which bits and bytes are sent across a wire) or highlevel exchanges between allocation programs
(e.g., the way in which two programs transfer a file across the Internet).
Q
QOS Quality of Service. Transmission system qualities measure in terms of reliability and availability.
R
route The path that network traffic takes from the source to the destination. It may include many gateways, routers, hosts and physical networks.
route table A table listing information about routes to other hosts or networks, such as the remote network or host address, the interface down which the route exists, the distance to the remote address and the cost of sending data over the route.
router A system responsible for making decisions about which of several paths network (or Internet) traffic will follow. To do this it uses a routing protocol to gain information about the network, and algorithms to choose the best route based on several criteria known as “routing metrics”.
S
server A network device that provides services to client stations. Examples include file servers and print servers.
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Outdoor Router P-380
service A term used with the router to refer to a connection to another port on (another) router, used to access dialup modems, hosts that do not support TCP/IP and other asynchronous devices.
SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol.
The Internet standard protocol developed to manage nodes on an IP network. See MIB.
subnet A portion of a network, which may be a physically independent network segment, which shares a network address with other portions of the network and is distinguished by a subnet number. A subnet is to a network what a network is to an internet.
subnet address The subnet portion of an IP address. In a subnetted network, the host portion of an IP address is split into a subnet portion and a host portion using an address or subnet mask. See subnet mask, IP address and network address.
subnet mask A bit mask used to select bits from an Internet address for subnet addressing. The mask is 32 bits long and selects the network portion of the Internet address and one or more bits of the local portion. Sometimes called address mask.
T
TCP Transmission Control Protocol. The
TCP/IP standard transport layer protocol in the
Internet suite of protocols, providing reliable, connection-oriented, full-duplex streams. It uses IP for delivery.
TCP/IP Protocol Suite Transmission Control
Protocol over Internet Protocol. This is common shorthand, which refers to the suite of transport and application protocols that runs over IP. See IP, ICMP, TCP, UDP, FTP,
Telnet, and SNMP.
Telnet The virtual terminal protocol in the
TCP/IP suite of protocols, which allows users of one host t o log into a remote host and interact as normal terminal users of that host.
Users Guide
topology A network topology shows the computers and the links between them. A network layer must know the current network topology to be able to route packets to their final destination.
U
UDP User Datagram Protocol. A transport layer protocol in the TCP/IP suite of protocols.
UDP, like TCP, uses IP for delivery; however, unlike TCP, UDP provides for exchange of datagrams without acknowledgements or guaranteed delivery.
URL Uniform Resource Locator. A standard format for specifying the name, type and location of documents and resources on an
Internet. The syntax is type://host.domain[:port]/path/filename, where type specifies the type of document or resource (e.g. http is a file on a WWW server; file is a file on an anonymous FTP server; telnet is a connection to a Telnet-based service). See WWW.
W
WAN Wide Area Network. Any physical network technology that spans large geographic distances. WANs usually operate a slower speeds than LANs. See LAN.
WWW World Wide Web. A hypertext-based, distributed information system based on client
- server architecture. Web browsers (client applications) request documents from Web servers. Documents may contain text, graphics and audiovisual data, as well as links to other documents and services. Web servers and documents are identified by URLs (Uniform
Resource Locators). See URL.
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Outdoor Router P-380
10 Index
Access Point .....9, 10, 11, 14, 26, 31, 32, 35, 41, 42
ACL .............................12, 35, 36, 49, 51, 52, 59, 61
Address 9, 11, 13, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29,
30, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 47, 49, 51,
52, 54, 55, 62, 63, 68, 69, 70, 71
Antenna...............................9, 18, 19, 33, 64, 66, 67
AP search ................................................ 16, 20, 21
Application ..............................10, 20, 38, 69, 70, 71
Average load ........................................................ 25 bridge ...9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 19, 26, 32, 33, 52,
53, 54, 56
Browser.............................16, 20, 22, 23, 24, 28, 42
Channel.......................................... 3, 50, 56, 57, 68
CLI ................................5, 10, 20, 22, 47, 48, 49, 51
Client....9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19, 20, 26,
28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 36, 37, 47, 55, 56, 61, 62, 63,
68, 70, 71
Commands..................................... 7, 47, 48, 49, 51
Community..................................................... 41, 56
Configuration 7, 9, 10, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26, 27, 28, 29,
31, 32, 37, 45, 47, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 61,
68
Coordinates.............................................. 27, 54, 62
Data traffic............................................................ 25
Default 20, 22, 23, 28, 35, 36, 37, 39, 41, 45, 49, 51,
52, 55, 61, 62
Device mode ........................................................ 48
Device status.................................................. 24, 25
DHCP server .........13, 16, 22, 28, 29, 37, 51, 61, 63
DNS ................................................... 27, 60, 68, 69
Domain................................3, 27, 32, 50, 57, 68, 71
Encryption .......................................... 32, 56, 57, 59
Ethernet ............................................. 35, 51, 52, 61
Examples ......................................................... 5, 47
Exit ....................................................................... 49
Firewall..................13, 33, 34, 39, 51, 52, 63, 68, 70
Firmware .........10, 14, 15, 25, 26, 43, 44, 45, 61, 62
Firmware upload .................................................. 25
Frequency .................................................. 3, 32, 57
Frequency channel........................................... 3, 32
General configuration..................................... 27, 31
Hardware ............................................... 5, 7, 17, 18
Hardware installation.............................................. 7
HEX...................................................................... 32
Hostname....................................................... 52, 54
Hot-Spot............................................................... 12
HTML browser................................................ 16, 20
HTTPS ................................................................. 16
ICMP .............................................34, 39, 53, 69, 71
Installation...................................... 7, 10, 17, 18, 20
IP address 11, 16, 20, 21, 22, 23, 25, 27, 28, 29, 30,
34, 36, 37, 38, 40, 41, 47, 52, 55, 62, 68, 69, 70,
71
JavaScript ................................................ 16, 20, 23
Gemtek Systems
Users Guide
Key ..................................................... 11, 32, 57, 62
LAN 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 29, 30, 33,
34, 35, 37, 38, 55, 60, 61, 64, 68, 69, 70, 71
Log in........................................................ 23, 47, 71
Loopback........................................................ 39, 40
MAC9, 21, 22, 27, 35, 36, 39, 42, 49, 51, 52, 62, 63,
69
Management ...................... 7, 10, 16, 20, 34, 51, 63
Mobile............................... 12, 13, 26, 31, 32, 35, 37
Monitoring............................................................. 42
Mounting....................................... 10, 17, 18, 19, 64
NAT ............................ 11, 13, 16, 30, 38, 39, 63, 70
Network configuration........................................... 28
Network statistics ................................................. 47
Network status...................................................... 47
Operating mode 9, 11, 12, 14, 16, 25, 26, 33, 47, 55
Operating system ............................................. 7, 16
Output power.................................................... 3, 63
Package content................................................... 17
Parameter..................................... 10, 28, 32, 48, 55
Password.......................... 22, 23, 39, 45, 47, 51, 59
Ping ................................................................ 20, 21
Policy.......................... 34, 35, 49, 51, 52, 59, 61, 70
Port Forwarding............................ 13, 38, 39, 53, 63
Processor load ..................................................... 24
Reboot.......................................... 24, 25, 42, 45, 49
Reset ............................................ 22, 36, 41, 45, 65
Roaming ......................................................... 32, 63
Router...9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 19, 26, 27, 28, 29,
30, 32, 33, 37, 38, 53, 54, 61, 68, 69, 70, 71
Rule ................ 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 51, 52, 53, 56
Set up ............................................................... 9, 10
Setup .............................................. 7, 20, 23, 24, 26
Setup wizard................................................... 24, 26
SNMP ............. 10, 20, 41, 51, 56, 59, 62, 63, 64, 71
Software ............................................... 5, 17, 20, 65
Software installation ............................................... 7
SSID................................. 24, 32, 42, 56, 57, 60, 62
Status ............................... 20, 23, 24, 25, 40, 44, 47
Subcommands ............................................... 48, 49
Subnet mask ...................................... 22, 36, 55, 71
Survey ................................................ 32, 41, 42, 65
System tools................................................... 24, 47
Telnet ........................................... 10, 47, 63, 64, 71
Upgrade.................................. 10, 16, 20, 44, 45, 63
Uptime .................................................................. 24
User isolation........................................................ 14
Version ..................................................... 25, 43, 44
WEP ..................................................................... 57
Wireless... 3, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 25,
26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 45,
51, 52, 55, 56, 57, 61, 68
Wireless configuration .................................... 26, 31
WLAN ......................................................... 9, 10, 32
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Gemtek Systems Page 67
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