User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. INSTALLATION
- 3. SWITCH MANAGEMENT
- 4. WEB CONFIGURATION
- 4.1 Main Web Page
- 4.2 System
- 4.3 Port Management
- 4.4 Link Aggregation
- 4.5 VLAN
- 4.5.1 VLAN Overview
- 4.5.2 IEEE 802.1Q VLAN
- 4.5.3 Management VLAN
- 4.5.4 Create VLAN
- 4.5.5 Interface Settings
- 4.5.6 Port to VLAN
- 4.5.7 Port VLAN Membership
- 4.5.8 Protocol VLAN Group Setting
- 4.5.9 Protocol VLAN Port Setting
- 4.5.10 GVRP Setting
- 4.5.11 GVRP Port Setting
- 4.5.12 GVRP VLAN
- 4.5.13 GVRP Statistics
- 4.5.14 VLAN setting example:
- 4.6 Spanning Tree Protocol
- 4.7 Multicast
- 4.8 Quality of Service
- 4.9 Security
- 4.10 ACL
- 4.11 MAC Address Table
- 4.12 LLDP
- 4.13 Diagnostics
- 4.14 Power over Ethernet (GS-4210-16P2S and GS-4210-24P2S only)
- 4.15 RMON
- 4.16 Maintenance
- 5. COMMAND LINE INTERFACE
- 6. Command Line Mode
- 6.1 User Mode Commands
- 6.2 Privileged Mode Commands
- 6.2.1 clear command
- 6.2.2 clock command
- 6.2.3 configure command
- 6.2.4 copy command
- 6.2.5 debug command
- 6.2.6 delete command
- 6.2.7 disable command
- 6.2.8 end command
- 6.2.9 exit command
- 6.2.10 no command
- 6.2.11 ping command
- 6.2.12 reboot command
- 6.2.13 renew command
- 6.2.14 restore-defaults command
- 6.2.15 save command
- 6.2.16 show command
- 6.2.17 ssl command
- 6.2.18 traceroute command
- 6.2.19 udld command
- 6.3 Global Config Mode Commands
- 6.3.1 aaa Command
- 6.3.2 boot Command
- 6.3.3 bridge Command
- 6.3.4 class-map Command
- 6.3.5 clock Command
- 6.3.6 dos Command
- 6.3.7 dot1x Command
- 6.3.8 do Command
- 6.3.9 enable Command
- 6.3.10 end Command
- 6.3.11 errdisable Command
- 6.3.12 exit Command
- 6.3.13 gvrp Command
- 6.3.14 hostname Command
- 6.3.15 interface Command
- 6.3.16 ip Command
- 6.3.17 ipv6 Command
- 6.3.18 jumbo-frame Command
- 6.3.19 l2 Command
- 6.3.20 lacp Command
- 6.3.21 lag Command
- 6.3.22 line Command
- 6.3.23 lldp Command
- 6.3.24 logging Command
- 6.3.25 mac Command
- 6.3.26 management-vlan Command
- 6.3.27 mirror Command
- 6.3.28 no Command
- 6.3.29 policy-map Command
- 6.3.30 port-security Command
- 6.3.31 qos Command
- 6.3.32 radius Command
- 6.3.33 rate-limit Command
- 6.3.34 rmon Command
- 6.3.35 Snmp Command
- 6.3.36 sntp Command
- 6.3.37 spanning-tree Command
- 6.3.38 storm-control Command
- 6.3.39 system Command
- 6.3.40 tacacs Command
- 6.3.41 udld Command
- 6.3.42 username Command
- 6.3.43 vlan Command
- 6.3.44 voice-vlan Command
- 7. SWITCH OPERATION
- 8. POWER OVER ETHERNET OVERVIEW
- 9. TROUBLESHOOTING
- APPENDIX A
User’s Manual of GS-4210-16T2S_24T2S_16P2S_24P2S_48T4S
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up configuration file, which is called configuration save. To prevent illicit file
upload and easier configuration, switch mandates the name of running
configuration file to be running-config.
• Startup Configuration
Refers to the configuration sequence used in switch startup. Startup
configuration file stores in nonvolatile storage, corresponding to the so-called
configuration save. If the device supports multi-config file, name the configuration
file to be .cfg file, the default is startup.cfg. If the device does not support
multi-config file, mandates the name of startup configuration file to be
startup-config.
• Backup Configuration
The backup configuration is empty in FLASH; please save the backup
configuration first by “Maintenance > Backup Manager”.
Button
: Click to save configuration.
4.1.2.1 Saving Configuration
In the Managed Switch, the running configuration file stores in the RAM. In the current version, the running configuration
sequence of running-config can be saved from the RAM to FLASH by ”Save Configurations to FLASH” function, so that the
running configuration sequence becomes the startup configuration file, which is called configuration save. To save all applied
changes and set the current configuration as a startup configuration. The startup-configuration file will be loaded automatically
across a system reboot.
1. Click”SAVE > Save Configurations to FLASH” to login “Configuration Manager” Page.