User Manual
Table Of Contents
- 24-Port and 48-Port Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Smart Switches with 4 SFP Ports
- 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 se 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 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 system information
- Configure the IP network settings for management access
- Configure the time settings
- Configure denial of service settings
- Configure DNS settings
- Configure green Ethernet settings
- Use the Device View
- Configure Power over Ethernet
- Configure SNMP
- Configure Link Layer Discovery Protocol
- Configure a DHCP L2 relay
- Configure DHCP snooping
- Configure Dynamic ARP Inspection
- 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 and remove it from the table
- 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 VLANs
- Display the status of the IGMP snooping querier for VLANs
- Manage MLD snooping
- Enable MLD snooping
- Configure MLD snooping for interfaces
- Configure the MLD VLAN settings
- Modify the MLD snooping settings for a VLAN
- Remove MLD snooping from a VLAN
- Configure one or more MLD multicast router interfaces
- Configure an MLD multicast router VLAN
- Configure an MLD snooping querier
- Configure the MLD snooping querier VLAN settings
- Configure multicast VLAN registration
- View, search, and manage the MAC address table
- Configure Layer 2 loop protection
- 4 Configure Routing
- 5 Configure Quality of Service
- 6 Manage Device Security
- Change the device admin password for the device UI
- Manage the RADIUS settings
- Configure the TACACS+ settings
- Configure authentication lists
- 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
- 7 Monitor the Switch and the Traffic
- 8 Maintain or Troubleshoot the switch
- A Configuration Examples
- B Specifications and Default Settings
24-Port and 48-Port Gigabit Ethernet PoE+ Smart Switches with 4 SFP Ports
Configure Switching User Manual214
7. Select one of the following radio buttons:
• Select the Disable radio button to globally disable
Auto-Video administrative mode for
the switch.
• Select the Enable radio button to globally enable
Auto-Video administrative mode for
the switch.
The Auto-Video VLAN field shows the number of autoconfigured IGMP snooping VLANs.
8. Click the Apply button.
Your settings are saved.
Manage IGMP snooping
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping is a feature that allows a switch to
forward IPv4 multicast traffic intelligently. Multicast IPv4 traffic is traffic that is destined to a
host group. Host groups are identified by class D IP addresses, which range from 224.0.0.0
to 239.255.255.255. Based on the IGMP query and report messages, the switch forwards
traf
fic only to the ports that request the multicast traffic. This prevents the switch from
broadcasting the traffic to all ports and possibly affecting network performance.
A traditional Ethernet network can be separated into different network segments to prevent
placing too many devices onto the same shared media. Bridges and switches connect these
segments. When a packet with a broadcast or multicast destination address is received, the
switch forwards a copy to each of the remaining network segments in accordance with the
IEEE MAC Bridge standard. Eventually
, the packet is made accessible to all nodes
connected to the network.
This approach works well for broadcast packets that are intended to be detected or
processed by all connected nodes. For multicast packets, this approach could lead to a less
ef
ficient use of the network bandwidth, particularly when the packets are intended for a small
number of nodes only. Packets are flooded into network segments where no node is
receptive to the packet. Although nodes rarely incur any processing overhead to filter packets
addressed to unrequested group addresses, the nodes cannot transmit new packets onto the
shared media while the multicast packets are being flooded. Such as waste of bandwidth is
even worse when the LAN segment is not shared, for example in full-duplex links.
Allowing switches to snoop IGMP packets can solve this problem. While the IGMP packets
are being forwarded throughout the network, the switch uses the information in the packets to
determine which segments must receive packets that are directed to the group address.