User manual

NETWORK
TCP/IP
Settings Description
Network
Speed
Max Supported Speed and 100 Mbps.
DHCP
When enabled, all IP settings will be assigned by a DHCP
server. When disabled, IP settings need to be configured
manually using the remaining entry fields.
IP Address
The IP address of the network interface. If entering this
manually make sure IP address fits with the network IP
addressing and subnetting scheme. Separate subnets
may be used for NAS devices to improve ecient use of
available network bandwidth.
Subnet Mask
IP subnet mask.
Gateway
IP Address
IP address of router, or gateway IP device used for access
to the subnet.
DNS Server
IP Address
DNS server IP address.
Secondary
DNS Server
IP Address
Auxiliary DNS server IP address.
Administration > Network > Setup
Network
Settings Description
Computer
Name
Shows the name of the DataGuard Appliance as it
appears on the network.
Enable Network
Bonding
Enables the selected network bonding mechanism. To
configure the Device Name and network bonding:
1. From the Administration tab, click Network, then
click Setup.
2. Complete the settings in the Setup window, then
click Submit.
Network
Bonding
Allows you to choose one of the following options:
Balance-ALB (Adaptive Load Balancing): Supports
transmit load balancing and receive load balancing for
IPV4 trac; does not require special switch support.
Receive load balancing is achieved by ARP negotiation.
The bonding driver intercepts ARP Replies from the local
system and overwrites the source hardware address with
the address of a slave in the bond, so that dierent peers
use dierent hardware addresses for the server.
Balance–RR (Round Robin): Transmits packets in
sequential order from the slave. This mode provides load
balancing and fault tolerance.
Balance–TLB (Adaptive Transmit Load Balancing):
Outgoing network packet trac is distributed according
to current load (relative to speed) on each network
interface slave. Incoming trac is received by one
currently designated slave network interface.
Active Backup (Fail Over): If the slave interface fails, the
remaining master interface becomes the fail over port.
The bond’s MAC address is externally visible on only one
port to avoid confusing the switch. This mode provides
fault tolerance.
Balance XOR: Transmit based on [(source MAC address
XOR’d with destination MAC address) modulo slave
count]. This selects the same slave for each destination
MAC address. This mode provides load balancing and
fault tolerance.
Broadcast: Transmits everything on the slave interface.
Provides fault tolerance.
802.3ad: IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation aka
LACP. Creates aggregation groups that share the same
speed and duplex settings. Uses the slave in the active
aggregator according to the 802.3ad specification.
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