User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Insight Managed 28-Port and 52-Port Gigabit Ethernet Smart Cloud Switches with 2 SFP 1G & 2 SFP+ 10G Fiber Ports
 - Contents
 - 1. Getting Started
- Switch Management Options and Default Management Mode
 - Available Publications
 - Web Browser Requirements and Supported Browsers
 - User-Defined Fields
 - Interface Naming Conventions
 - Access the Switch
 - Change the Management Mode of the Switch
 - Register the Switch
 - How to Configure Interface Settings
 - Local Browser Interface Device View
 
 - 2. Configure System Information
- View and Configure the Switch Management Settings
- View or Define System Information
 - View the Switch CPU Status
 - Configure the CPU Thresholds
 - Configure the IPv4 Address for the Network Interface and Management VLAN
 - Configure the IPv6 Address for the Network Interface
 - View the IPv6 Network Neighbor
 - Configure the Time Settings
 - Configure Denial of Service Settings
 - Configure DNS Settings
 - Configure Green Ethernet Settings
 
 - Manage the Bonjour Settings and View Bonjour Information
 - Control the LEDs
 - Use the Device View
 - Configure Power over Ethernet
 - Configure SNMP
 - Configure Link Layer Discovery Protocol
 - Configure DHCP L2 Relay and DHCP Snooping
 - Set Up PoE Timer Schedules
 
 - View and Configure the Switch Management Settings
 - 3. Configure Switching
 - 4. Configuring Routing
 - 5. Configure Quality of Service
 - 6. Manage Device Security
- Management Security Settings
 - Configure Management Access
 - Configure Port Authentication
 - Set Up Traffic Control
 - Configure Access Control Lists
- Use the ACL Wizard to Create a Simple ACL
 - Configure a Basic MAC ACL
 - Configure MAC ACL Rules
 - Configure MAC Bindings
 - View or Delete MAC ACL Bindings in the MAC Binding Table
 - Configure an IP ACL
 - Configure Rules for a Basic IP ACL
 - Configure Rules for an Extended IP ACL
 - Configure an IPv6 ACL
 - Configure Rules for an IPv6 ACL
 - Configure IP ACL Interface Bindings
 - View or Delete IP ACL Bindings in the IP ACL Binding Table
 - Configure VLAN ACL Bindings
 
 
 - 7. Perform Maintenance Tasks
 - 8. Manage Power over Ethernet
 - 9. Monitor the System
 - A. Configuration Examples
 - B. Hardware Specifications and Default Values
 
Configure Quality of Service 
231
 Insight Managed 28-Port and 52-Port Gigabit Ethernet Smart Cloud Switches
• Source MAC. Select this radio button to require a packet’s source MAC address to 
match the specified MAC address. After you select this radio button, use the following 
fields to configure the source MAC address match criteria:
- Address. The source MAC address to match. The source MAC address is 
specified as six two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated by colons.
- Mask. The MAC mask, which specifies the bits in the source MAC address to 
compare against the Ethernet frame. Use Fs and zeros to configure the MAC 
mask. An F means that the bit is checked, and a zero in a bit position means that 
the data is not significant. For example, if the MAC address is aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, 
and the mask is ff:ff:00:00:00:00, all MAC addresses with aa:bb:xx:xx:xx:xx result 
in a match (where x is any hexadecimal number). Note that this is not a wildcard 
mask, which ACLs use.
• Destination MAC. Select this radio button to require a packet’s destination MAC 
address to match the specified MAC address. After you select the radio button, use 
the following fields to configure the destination MAC address match criteria:
- Address. The destination MAC address to match. The destination MAC address 
is specified as six two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated by colons.
- Mask. The MAC mask, which specifies the bits in the destination MAC address to 
compare against an Ethernet frame. Use Fs and zeros to configure the MAC 
mask. An F means that the bit is checked, and a zero in a bit position means that 
the data is not significant. For example, if the MAC address is aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, 
and the mask is ff:ff:00:00:00:00, all MAC addresses with aa:bb:xx:xx:xx:xx result 
in a match (where x is any hexadecimal number). Note that this is not a wildcard 
mask, which ACLs use.
• Protocol Type. Select this radio button to require a packet’s Layer 4 protocol to match 
the specified protocol, which you must select from the menu. The menu includes 
Other as a selection, which lets you enter a protocol number from 0 to 255.
• Source IP. Select this radio button to require a packet’s source IP address to match 
the specified IP address. After you select the radio button, use the following fields to 
configure the source IP address match criteria:
- Address. The source IP address format to match in dotted-decimal.
- Mask. The bit mask in IP dotted-decimal format indicating which parts of the 
source IP address to use for matching against packet content.
• Source L4 Port. Select this radio button to require a packet’s TCP/UDP source port to 
match the specified protocol, which you must select from the menu. The range is 0 to 
65535. The menu includes Other as an option for unnamed ports.
• Destination IP. Select this radio button to require a packet’s destination IP address to 
match the specified IP address. After you select the radio button, use the following 
fields to configure the destination IP address match criteria:
- Address. The destination IP address format to match in dotted-decimal.
- Mask. The bit mask in IP dotted-decimal format indicating which parts of the 
destination IP address to use for matching against packet content.










