User Manual
Table Of Contents
- 16-Port Gigabit (Hi-Power) PoE+ Ethernet Smart Managed Pro Switch with 2 SFP Ports and Cloud Management
- Contents
- 1 Get Started
- Available publications
- Switch management options and default management mode
- Manage the switch by using the device UI
- About on-network and off-network access
- Access the switch on-network and connected to the Internet
- Use a Windows-based computer to access the switch on-network and connected to the Internet
- Use the NETGEAR Insight mobile app to discover the IP address of the switch
- Use the NETGEAR Switch Discovery Tool to discover the switch when it is connected to the Internet
- Discover the switch in a network with a DHCP server using the Smart Control Center
- Use other options to discover the switch IP address
- Access the switch on-network and connected to the Internet when you know the switch IP address
- Access the switch off-network and not connected to the Internet
- Credentials for the device UI
- Register the switch
- Change the language of the device UI
- Change the management mode of the switch
- Use the Device View of the device UI
- Configure interface settings
- Access the NETGEAR support website
- Access the user manual online
- 2 Configure System Information
- View or define switch system information
- Configure the switch IP address settings
- Configure the IPv6 network interface
- Configure the time settings
- Configure Denial of Service settings
- Configure the DNS settings
- Configure green Ethernet settings
- Use the Device View
- Configure Power over Ethernet
- Configure SNMP
- Configure LLDP
- Configure DHCP snooping
- Set up PoE timer schedules
- 3 Configure Switching
- Configure the port settings and maximum frame size
- Configure link aggregation groups
- Configure VLANs
- Configure a voice VLAN
- Configure Auto-VoIP
- Configure Spanning Tree Protocol
- Configure multicast
- Manage IGMP snooping
- Configure IGMP snooping
- Configure IGMP snooping for interfaces
- View, search, or clear the IGMP snooping table
- Configure IGMP snooping for VLANs
- Modify IGMP snooping settings for a VLAN
- Disable IGMP snooping on a VLAN
- Configure one or more IGMP multicast router interfaces
- Configure an IGMP multicast router VLAN
- IGMP snooping querier overview
- Configure an IGMP snooping querier
- Configure an IGMP snooping querier for a VLAN
- Display the status of the IGMP snooping querier for VLANs
- View, search, and manage the MAC address table
- Configure Layer 2 loop protection
- 4 Configure Quality of Service
- 5 Manage Device Security
- Change the device admin password for the device UI
- Manage the RADIUS settings
- Configure the TACACS+ settings
- Manage the Smart Control Center
- Configure management access
- Control access with profiles and rules
- Configure port authentication
- Set up traffic control
- Configure access control lists
- Use the ACL Wizard to create a simple ACL
- Configure a MAC ACL
- Configure MAC ACL rules
- Configure MAC bindings
- View or delete MAC ACL bindings in the MAC binding table
- Configure a basic or extended IPv4 ACL
- Configure rules for a basic IPv4 ACL
- Configure rules for an extended IPv4 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
- 6 Monitor the System
- 7 Maintain or Troubleshoot the Switch
- A Configuration Examples
- B Specifications and Default Settings
16-Port Gigabit (Hi-Power) PoE+ Ethernet Smart Managed Pro Switch with 2 SFP Ports
Configure Quality of Service User Manual223
mapped to their Ethertype value. You can also select User Value from the menu and
enter a value in the hexadecimal range from 600 to ffff.
• Source MAC. Select this radio button to require a packet’s source MAC add
ress 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 configu
re 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 MA
C
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 configur
e 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. You can also select
Other from the menu and enter a protocol number from 0 to 255.
• Source IP. Select this radio button to require a packet’s source IP addr
ess 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. You can also
select Other from the menu and enter a port number from 0 to 65535.
• 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.