(V3) User Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1. INTRODUCTION
 - 2. INSTALLATION
 - 3. SWITCH MANAGEMENT
 - 4. WEB CONFIGURATION
- 4.1 Main Web page
 - 4.2 System
- 4.2.1 Management
- 4.2.1.1 System Information
 - 4.2.1.2 IP Configuration
 - 4.2.1.3 IP Status
 - 4.2.1.4 Users Configuration
 - 4.2.1.5 Privilege Levels
 - 4.2.1.6 NTP Configuration
 - 4.2.1.6.1 System Time Correction Manually
 - 4.2.1.7 Time Configuration
 - 4.2.1.8 UPnP
 - 4.2.1.9 DHCP Relay
 - 4.2.1.10 DHCP Relay Statistics
 - 4.2.1.11 CPU Load
 - 4.2.1.12 System Log
 - 4.2.1.13 Detailed Log
 - 4.2.1.14 Remote Syslog
 - 4.2.1.15 SMTP Configuration
 - 4.2.1.16 Fault Alarm
 - 4.2.1.17 Digital Input/Output
 
 - 4.2.2 Simple Network Management Protocol
 - 4.2.3 RMON
 - 4.2.4 DHCP server
 - 4.2.5 Industrial Protocol
 
 - 4.2.1 Management
 - 4.3 Switching
- 4.3.1 Port Management
 - 4.3.2 Link Aggregation
 - 4.3.3 VLAN
- 4.3.3.1 VLAN Overview
 - 4.3.3.2 IEEE 802.1Q VLAN
 - 4.3.3.3 VLAN Port Configuration
 - 4.3.3.4 VLAN Membership Status
 - 4.3.3.5 VLAN Port Status
 - 4.3.3.6 Private VLAN
 - 4.3.3.7 Port Isolation
 - 4.3.3.8 VLAN setting example:
 - 4.3.3.8.1 Two Separate 802.1Q VLANs
 - 4.3.3.8.2 VLAN Trunking between two 802.1Q aware switches
 - 4.3.3.8.3 Port Isolate
 - 4.3.3.9 MAC-based VLAN
 - 4.3.3.10 IP Subnet-based VLAN Membership Configuration
 - 4.3.3.11 Protocol-based VLAN
 - 4.3.3.12 Protocol-based VLAN Membership
 
 - 4.3.4 Spanning Tree Protocol
 - 4.3.5 Multicast
 - 4.3.6 MLD Snooping
 - 4.3.7 MVR (Multicast VLAN Registration)
 - 4.3.8 LLDP
 - 4.3.9 MAC Address Table
 - 4.3.10 Loop Protection
 - 4.3.11 UDLD
 - 4.3.12 GVRP
 - 4.3.13 PTP
 
 - 4.4 Quality of Service
 - 4.5 Security
 - 4.6 Power over Ethernet
 - 4.7 Ring
 - 4.8 ONVIF
 - 4.9 Maintenance
 
 - 5. SWITCH OPERATION
 - 6. TROUBLESHOOTING
 - APPENDIX A: Networking Connection
 - APPENDIX B : GLOSSARY
 
User’s Manual of IGS PoE series 
404 
QoS is an acronym for Quality of Service. It is a method to guarantee a bandwidth relationship between individual 
applications or protocols.   
A communications network transports a multitude of applications and data, including high-quality video and 
delay-sensitive data such as real-time voice. Networks must provide secure, predictable, measurable, and sometimes 
guaranteed services. 
Achieving the required QoS becomes the secret to a successful end-to-end business solution. Therefore, QoS is the 
set of techniques to manage network resources. 
QoS class 
Every incoming frame is classified to a QoS class, which is used throughout the device for providing queuing, 
scheduling and congestion control guarantees to the frame according to what was configured for that specific QoS 
class. There is a one to one mapping between QoS class, queue and priority. A QoS class of 0 (zero) has the lowest 
priority. 
R   
RARP   
RARP is an acronym for Reverse Address Resolution Protocol. It is a protocol that is used to obtain an IP address for a 
given hardware address, such as an Ethernet address. RARP is the complement of ARP.   
RADIUS 
RADIUS is an acronym for Remote Authentication Dial In User Service. It is a networking protocol that provides 
centralized access, authorization and accounting management for people or computers to connect and use a network 
service.   
RDI 
RDI is an acronym for Remote Defect Indication. It is an OAM functionality that is used by a MEP to indicate defect 
detected to the remote peer MEP 
Router Port   
A router port is a port on the Ethernet switch that leads switch towards the Layer 3 multicast device.   
RSTP   
In 1998, the IEEE with document 802.1w introduced an evolution of STP: the Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol, which 
provides for faster spanning tree convergence after a topology change. Standard IEEE 802.1D-2004 now incorporates 
RSTP and obsoletes STP, while at the same time being backwards-compatible with STP.   
S   
SAMBA   
Samba is a program running under UNIX-like operating systems that provides seamless integration between UNIX and 
Microsoft Windows machines. Samba acts as file and print servers for Microsoft Windows, IBM OS/2, and other SMB 
client machines. Samba uses the Server Message Block (SMB) protocol and Common Internet File System (CIFS), 










