User Manual Stratix 6000 Ethernet Managed Switch Catalog Numbers 1783-EMS04T, 1783-EMS08T
Important User Information Solid-state equipment has operational characteristics differing from those of electromechanical equipment. Safety Guidelines for the Application, Installation and Maintenance of Solid State Controls (publication SGI-1.1 available from your local Rockwell Automation sales office or online at http://www.rockwellautomation.com/literature/) describes some important differences between solid-state equipment and hard-wired electromechanical devices.
Summary of Changes This manual contains new and updated information. Changes throughout this revision are marked by change bars, as shown to the right of this paragraph.
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Table of Contents Preface Studio 5000 Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Terminology. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Additional Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Chapter 1 Basic Configuration Access the Home Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Table of Contents Chapter 4 Switch Management STP/RSTP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Spanning Tree Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . STP/RSTP Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VLAN Configuration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Table of Contents Appendix F Download or Upload a Configuration Upload Configuration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Download Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Appendix G Available SFP Modules and Cables Available SFP Modules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89 SFP Module Cable Specifications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Preface This manual is intended for users of the switch. We assume you are familiar with the procedures in the Stratix 6000™ Ethernet Managed Switch Installation Instructions, publication 1783-IN004. Read and understand this manual before using the products. Consult your Rockwell Automation representative if you have any questions or comments. For information about the features supported in your firmware revision, refer to the firmware release notes, publication 1783-RN003.
Preface Terminology Refer to this table for terms used in this publication. Table 1 - Managed Switch Terminology Term Description 1783-EMS All references to 1783-EMS in this manual refer to catalog numbers 1783-EMS04T and 1783-EMS08T. Auto-MDIX Automatic Medium-dependent Interface Crossover. Allows the switch to detect the required cable type (straight-through or crossover) for copper Ethernet connections and configures the interfaces accordingly.
Preface Additional Resources These documents contain additional information concerning related products from Rockwell Automation. Resource Description Stratix Ethernet Switch Specifications, publication 1783-TD001 Provides technical specifications for Stratix Ethernet switches. Stratix 6000 Ethernet Managed Switch Installation Instructions, publication 1783-IN004 Provides detailed specifications and information related to installation of the switch.
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Chapter 1 Basic Configuration This chapter covers how to access the switch’s web interface home page. It also includes information about how to set an IP address and security, work with miscellaneous options, and understand status indicators. Access the Home Page Use these steps to access the web interface home page for the switch. IMPORTANT Before connecting to the network, set the IP address of the switch as described in Set the IP Address. 1. Connect the switch to your computer’s LAN card.
Chapter 1 Basic Configuration Table 2 - Items on the Home Page Value Description Device Name You provide this entry to identify the switch. See page 18 for instructions on entering the switch’s name. Spanning Tree Indicates the current Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) mode of the switch. Possible values are Enabled (RSTP), Enabled (STP Compatibility), or Disabled. For more about setting the RSTP mode, see page 55. VLAN 802.
Basic Configuration Chapter 1 Table 2 - Items on the Home Page (continued) Value Description VLAN (Port Status) If virtual local-area network (VLAN) is enabled on the switch, the VLAN column indicates the VLAN ID assigned to each port. If the port is assigned the role of a switch or router, the VLAN column displays the word ‘trunk’. For more about VLAN configuration, see page 57. Speed (Port Status) Possible values are 10 or 100 signifying a 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps connection.
Chapter 1 Basic Configuration 4. Type your new IP address. 5. Change the subnet mask and default gateway, if needed. 6. Turn off BOOTP Client to prevent dynamic IP address assignment. If using host names on the network, Name Resolution must be turned on and the DNS server addresses must be configured (usually required if using the email function). 7. Click Apply Changes to change the IP and subnet. IMPORTANT The switch does not load the new IP and subnet address until power is cycled. 8. Cycle power.
Basic Configuration Set the IP Address with BOOTP Chapter 1 The 1783-EMS switch ships with the BOOTP client enabled by default. To assign an address, use this procedure. 1. Put the switch on a network with a BOOTP server. 2. Cycle power to the switch. The 1783-EMS switch attempts to obtain an IP address several times from the server before timing out and defaulting to the factory preset address of 192.168.1.1. IMPORTANT Set Security The MAC address of the switch is on the home page. 192.168.1.
Chapter 1 Basic Configuration 2. Change the user name and password. See Appendix B for recommendations. 3. Click Apply Changes. 4. Cycle power to the switch to load the new user name and password. The administrative password applies to Telnet, FTP, and the web browser interface. IMPORTANT Work with Miscellaneous Settings The 1783-EMS switch does not load the new settings until power is cycled. Use these steps to configure miscellaneous switch settings. 1.
Basic Configuration Chapter 1 Table 3 - Miscellaneous Switch Settings Setting Description Box Name Lets you give your 1783-EMS switch a name that describes its location or connected devices. This feature is useful when multiple 1783-EMS switches are installed. The switch reports this name on the home page. To change this setting, complete this procedure. 1. Click Basic Configuration. 2. Click Miscellaneous. 3. Type the new name in the text box and click Apply Changes.
Chapter 1 Basic Configuration Status Indicators The figures and table show the status indicators. 1783-EMS04T 1783-EMS08T 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 Item Indicator State Description 1 Link state(1) Solid green Ethernet link exists. Flashing green Valid link is present and transmitting data. 2 Data rate(1) Solid amber 100 Mbit link is present. Off 10 Mbit link is present. 3 PWR Solid green Power to the switch is present.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup This chapter covers information related to network services setup using the switch’s web interface, including how to configure these protocols: • Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) • Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) • Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) For information about how to access the web interface for the switch, refer to Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup Supported MIBs The Stratix 6000 switch supports the MIBs listed below. • MIB-II—The published definition of MIB-II has been modified for the Stratix 6000 switch, as described in MIB-II Modifications below. For a detailed definition of MIB-II, refer to RFC 1213 at http://www.ietf.org/ rfc/rfc1213.txt. • ETHERLIKE-MIB—For a detailed definition, refer to RFC 1643 at http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1643.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 ip.ipNetToMediaTable.ipNetToMediaEntry.ipNetToMediaIfIndex ip.ipNetToMediaTable.ipNetToMediaEntry.ipNetToMediaPhysAddress ip.ipNetToMediaTable.ipNetToMediaEntry.ipNetToMediaIpAddress ip.ipNetToMediaTable.ipNetToMediaEntry.ipNetToMediaType (A static entry cannot be added into the ARP cache table) tcp.tcpConnTable.tcpConnEntry.tcpConnState (An established or pending TCP connection cannot be reset) SNMP Configuration Enable SNMP if you want to run SNMP on your network.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup 2. From the SNMP Enabled pull-down menu, choose Enabled to use SNMP. 3. Change the deault case-sensitive community names if desired. • The read-only community enables the switch to validate Get (readonly) requests from a network management station. If you set the SNMP read community, users can access MIB objects, but cannot change them. • The read-write community enables the switch to validate Set (readwrite) requests from a network management station. 4.
Network Services Setup IGMP Chapter 2 Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping sorts multicasting devices into groups. This limits the multicast packets received by hosts that do not need the information and makes the network more efficient and deterministic. Option Description Broadcast Without IGMP snooping, an I/O module acts like a broadcasting device and all devices on the subnet are flooded with I/O traffic.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup IGMP Querier The IGMP querier function can be enabled to query your network for group information at a specified time interval. The configuration options available for IGMP querier depend on whether VLANs are enabled on your network. • If you plan to use VLANs on your network, the IGMP querier function can be enabled for only one VLAN per switch. The IP address of the querier may be different on each VLAN.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 IGMP Configuration Use these steps to configure IGMP. 1. From the navigation pane, expand the Network Services Setup folder and select IGMP Configuration. 2. From the IGMP Snooping pull-down menu, choose Enabled to use IGMP snooping. When you enable IGMP snooping, additional configuration options appear on the screen. 3. From the IGMP Version menu, choose version 1 or 2. Version 2 is the default when IGMP snooping is enabled and is the recommended setting.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup 4. If VLAN is not enabled on the switch, choose to enable or disable the IGMP querier function from the Querier Mode pull-down menu. or If VLAN is enabled on the switch, choose one of these options from the Querier Mode pull-down menu: • Disabled—The IGMP querier function is disabled on all VLANs. • Enabled on Management VLAN—The IGMP querier function is enabled and assigned to the management VLAN only. This is the default setting.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 7. In the Router Ports Configuration area, choose the methods to use for detecting when a multicast router is connected to a switch port. When a multicast router, including IGMP querier, is connected to a switch port, all multicast packets and IGMP reports are forwarded on that port. This behavior is important for the proper functioning of IGMP snooping.
Chapter 2 DHCP Network Services Setup The 1783-EMS switch can function as a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) or BOOTP server. IMPORTANT Do not confuse this with the BOOTP/DHCP client, which lets the 1783-EMS switch receive an address from a DHCP/BOOTP server. Dynamic IP Address Assignment by IP Address Pool IMPORTANT Keep this feature shut off if this device is on a larger IT-controlled network.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 4. Type your subnet and gateway addresses for the network. 5. Type the primary and secondary DNS server addresses. 6. Type the domain name, if applicable. 7. Use DHCP Pool From and DHCP Pool To to assign a range of addresses. The switch assigns an address within the specified range. 8. Enable Dynamic BOOTP to answer BOOTP requests. 9. Type the number of days to specify the default lease time for DHCP requests. The default value is 7 days. 10.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup 4. Type your subnet and gateway addresses for the network. 5. Type the primary and secondary DNS server addresses. The domain name is automatically populated if the 1783-EMS switch resides on a domain. 6. Type an IP addresses for each port. 7. Click Apply Changes and cycle power for the changes to take effect. DHCP Address Table 32 The DHCP Address table is populated when the server is set to assign an IP address from a pool.
Network Services Setup MAC Address Labels Chapter 2 MAC address labels let you associate a user-friendly label to a MAC ID within the 1783-EMS user interface. When a label is associated with a MAC ID, it is reflected in the MAC ID table and the MAC ID management interface. This feature eases troubleshooting a network. The labels are reflected in the MAC Address Report and the MAC ID Management Configuration page.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup Use these steps to set up SMTP server parameters. 1. From the navigation pane, expand the Network Services Setup folder and select Email Configuration. 2. In the IP or Hostname field, type your SMTP server name or IP address. 3. If authentication is used, as required by most ISPs, check SMTP Authentication and type your user name and password.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 SMS Configuration If you intend to use a Short Message Service (SMS) gateway service to send text messages to a mobile telephone or portable wireless device, use this procedure. 1. From the navigation pane, expand the Network Services Setup folder and select SMS Configuration. 2. In the SMS GW Server field, type the email address of your SMS gateway provider. 3. Type your account ID. 4. Type your user name and password.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup EMS_EMAIL. Create a second controller-scoped tag of this new data type to contain the transmission status named EmailDstStr. Both of these tags are of the type EmailString. Use these steps to send an email via a Logix controller-initiated message instruction. 1. Open the Logix Designer application. 2. From the Controller Organizer, expand Data Types and Strings. 3. Create an EmailString type and note the initial LEN field.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 Both tags are of the type EmailString. These tags can be created later when the MSG instruction is inserted. The text of the email does not have to be static. You can program a Logix controller project to collect specific data to be sent in an email. For more information on using ladder logic to manipulate string data, see the Logix5000 Controllers Common Procedures Programming Manual, publication 1756-PM001. 6. Create a tag of the type MESSAGE.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup 8. Open your routine window (for example, MainRoutine) and insert an MSG instruction. 9. Select the SendEmail MESSAGE tag. 10. Double-click the MSG block and choose source (EMS_EMAIL) and destination (EmailDstStr) tags. In our example, we have GetAttributeValue and SetAttributeValue tags and GetAttribute/SetAttribute MESSAGE tags for individual attribute handling. Message sending is triggered by the trigger_send BOOL tag.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 The figure shows an example of a program that sends an email when any unauthorized MAC is detected by the 1783-EMS switch. Enter the Text of the Email Message Use the string browser to enter the text of the email. In the example, you enter the email text into the EWEB_EMAIL tag. To include To, From, and Subject fields in the email, use symbols to separate each of these fields. The To and From fields are required. The Subject field is optional.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup Send an SMS from the Logix Controller Text messages are sent in the same way as a normal email message. The only difference is the recipient in the To: field is a telephone number instead of an email address. The email format for sending text messages by using a SMS gateway service is as follows: • api_id:nnnnnnn$r$l • user:xxxxx$r$l • password:ppppp$r$l • to:cell_phone#$r$l • text:Simple text$r$l • text:on all$r$l • text:3 lines.
Network Services Setup Chapter 2 Email and SMS Error Codes Examine the destination element of the email MSG to see if the email was successfully delivered to the mail relay server. This indicates that the mail relay server placed the email message in a queue for delivery. It does not mean the intended recipient successfully received the email message. This table shows possible codes that could be in this destination element.
Chapter 2 Network Services Setup Table 4 - Error Codes 42 Error Code (hex) Extended-error Code (hex) Description 0xFF 0x0104 Unable to connect to SMTP mail server set in Attribute 5. If the mail server address is a hostname, make sure that the device supports DNS and a Name Server is configured. If the hostname is not fully qualified, for example, mailhost and not mailhost.xx.yy.com, then the domain must be configured as xx.yy.com.
Chapter 3 Diagnostics This chapter provides information about these switch diagnostic features available through the web interface: • Device utilitization • Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) report • Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) report • MAC address report • Alarm setup • PLC configuration • Automatic email alerts • Email queue status • Switch controller restart • Display switch counters For information about how to access the web interface for the switch, refer to Chapter 1.
Chapter 3 Diagnostics Device Utilization The Device Utilization tab provides a way to download these files that may be useful to send to Technical Support for diagnostic purposes: • Device utilization file—Includes various performance metrics about how the memory and processor is affected by your network. • Device configuration file—Includes all of the switch’s configuration settings. To download device files to your computer, use these steps. 1.
Diagnostics RSTP Report Chapter 3 If Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) mode is set to Enabled or STP Compatible on the RSTP Configuration tab, the STP/RSTP status for all switch ports appears on the RSTP Report tab. To access the RSTP Report tab, from the navigation pane, expand the Diagnostics folder and click RSTP Report. The Clear Statistics button lets you reset the data on the page without having to cycle power after testing.
Chapter 3 Diagnostics MAC Address Report All Ethernet equipment has a MAC address (hardware address). To access a list of these addresses, from the navigation pane, expand the Diagnostics folder and click MAC Address Report. A pool of MAC addresses is assigned to each Ethernet product manufacturer. For example, Allen-Bradley Ethernet equipment MAC addresses usually begin with 00:00:BC. Alarm Setup 46 The Alarm Setup tab displays the bandwidth on each port.
Diagnostics Chapter 3 The bar turns red when the bandwidth is out of range. The Alarm Setup tab also displays these items: • Refresh—Used to refresh your screen with the latest information, the screen automatically refreshes at the rate configured under Basic Configuration and Refresh Rate. • Save Traffic Reference—Used as a benchmark for the system network. Click this button when the network is running as it should in production.
Chapter 3 Diagnostics PLC Configuration The PLC Configuration tab display read-only information about the 1783-EMS switch relating to the PLC connection. Information includes the EDS file name, multicast address used by the 1783-EMS switch, and status information on the 1783-EMS switch. To access the PLC Configuration tab, from the navigation pane, expand the Diagnostics folder and click PLC Configuration.
Diagnostics Chapter 3 To enable this capability, use this procedure. 1. From the navigation pane, expand the Diagnostics folder and select Automatic Alerts. 2. From the Automatic Alerts pull-down menu, choose Enabled. 3. Specify the recipients for the alerts by typing up to six email addresses or mobile telephone numbers. 4. Specify which alerts you want to automatically trigger a message by checking the checkbox next to each alert. You can select any number of automatic alerts from the list. 5.
Chapter 3 Diagnostics Email Queue Status Use the Email Queue Status tab to view these email statuses: • Number of emails sent successfully • Any dropped messages • Pending messages To access the Email Queue Status tab, from the navigation pane, expand the Diagnostics folder and click Email Queue Status. Switch Restart You can restart 1783-EMS switch on the Controller Restart tab. Restarting the switch is useful when making configuration changes.
Diagnostics Chapter 3 Counters are displayed in hex where an octet equals 8 bits. Table 5 lists Transmit (Tx) counters. Table 5 - Tx Counters Counter Description Tx Octet Count Total of transmitted good octets from the selected port. Tx Drop Pkts Count Packet is not acknowledged by the receiving host. Tx BroadcastPkts Count Number of good packets sent with destination of everyone. Receivers are unspecified. Tx MulticastPkts Count Packets sent to members of multicast group.
Chapter 3 Diagnostics Table 6 lists Receive (Rx) counters. Table 6 - Rx Counters 52 Counter Description Rx Octets Total good octets received on selected port. Rx Undersize Pkts Good packets that are under 64 octets long. Rx Pause Pkts Pause packets received by this port. Pkts64 Octets Data packets = 512 bits. Pkts65to127 Octets Data packets = 520…1016 bits. Pkts128to255 Octet Data packets = 1024…2040 bits. Pkts256to511 Octet Data packets = 2048…4088 bits.
Chapter 4 Switch Management This chapter provides information about switch management options provided through the switch’s web interface. The web interface provides these management options: • STP/RSTP configuration • VLAN configuration • Port configuration • Mirror configuration • MAC ID management • Port segmenting • QoS setup For information about how to access the web interface for the switch, refer to Chapter 1.
Chapter 4 Switch Management STP uses a spanning-tree algorithm to select one switch of a redundantly connected network as the root of the spanning tree.
Switch Management Chapter 4 STP/RSTP Configuration To configure the switch for STP or RSTP, use the following procedure. 1. From the navigation pane, expand the Switch Configuration folder and select RSTP Configuration to display the RSTP Configuration tab. 2. Configure bridge parameters as described in the table below. Bridge Parameter Description RSTP Mode Choose one of the following network modes: • Disabled—The switch does not run RSTP or STP. This is the default mode.
Chapter 4 Switch Management 3. Configure port parameters as described in the table below. Port Parameter Description Priority Type a hex value from 00h…F0h to specify the port priority. The port priority is used in conjunction with the path cost to determine which redundant port on the network will be blocked. The default value for each port is 80. Auto Cost Check this box to automatically configure the path cost according to the port speed.
Switch Management VLAN Configuration IMPORTANT Chapter 4 The virtual local-area network (VLAN) feature used in earlier firmware revisions has been renamed port segmenting. As of firmware revisions 0.11 and 0.53, a new VLAN feature is provided for only the 1783-EMS08T switch. For more information about port segmenting, refer to Port Segmenting on page 64. A VLAN is a logical segment of network users and resources grouped by function, team, or application.
Chapter 4 Switch Management To configure a VLAN, use this procedure. 1. From the navigation pane, expand the Switch Configuration folder and select VLAN Configuration. 2. From the VLAN Enabled pull-down menu, choose Enabled. 3. To create a custom VLAN, perform these steps: a. Click Add New VLAN. b. From the Add New VLAN dialog box, type a VLAN ID from 1…4094, type a descriptive name to identify the VLAN, and then click Add VLAN. The new VLAN appears in the VLAN ID Definitions area below the default VLAN.
Switch Management Chapter 4 6. If you assigned the End Station role to a port, choose the VLAN to which the port belongs from the Access VLAN pull-down menu. By default, end stations are assigned to an access VLAN of Default - 1. or If you assigned the Switch/Router role to a port, choose the VLAN to use as the native VLAN from the Native VLAN pull-down menu. The trunk port uses the specified Native VLAN if a received packet is missing the tag used to identify its VLAN.
Chapter 4 Switch Management \ Table 7 - Configuration Options for Ports 1…8 Configuration Option Description Transmit & Receive Controls port communication. Values: • Both (default) • Tx • Rx • None Negotiation Indicates whether the port configuration settings are autonegotiated. Select None to manually configure the port. Values: • None • Auto (default) Rate Autonegotiates 10 or 100 mbit/s depending on the connected device. The speed must be manually selected if the negotiation parameter is None.
Switch Management Mirror Configuration Chapter 4 Use the Mirror Configuration tab to configure the rules or filters for port mirroring. Optional filters can be configured to capture packets from certain devices (MAC addresses). You can also configure filters to capture packets with a specified destination address. Port mirroring is disabled by default. IMPORTANT Port mirrroring is a diagnostic tool. Disable this feature while running in a production environment.
Chapter 4 Switch Management 2. From the Mirroring Configuration pull-down menu, choose Enabled. 3. In the Mirror From column, specify the traffic to capture and send to a destination port for analysis. • To monitor incoming traffic for a port, check the In checkbox next to the port number. • To monitor outgoing traffic for a port, check the Out checkbox next to the port number. • To monitor both incoming and outgoing for a port, check the In and Out checkboxes next to the port number.
Switch Management MAC ID Management Chapter 4 Use the MAC ID Management feature to authorize or deauthorize MAC addresses. The MAC ID Management tab displays the following: • Learned MAC Addresses area—Lists MAC addresses detected on the network by the 1783-EMS switch. The port number and MAC ID are shown for each device detected on the network. This list is built automatically by the 1783-EMS switch. • Authorized MAC Addresses area—This list indicates which MAC addresses are allowed on the network.
Chapter 4 Switch Management Port Segmenting IMPORTANT The virtual local-area network (VLAN) feature used in earlier firmware revisions has been renamed port segmenting. As of firmware revisions 0.11 and 0.53, a new VLAN feature is provided for only the 1783-EMS08T switch. For more information about VLAN, refer to VLAN Configuration on page 57. When network bandwidth becomes critical, port segmenting is used to eliminate traffic caused by multicast and broadcast Ethernet traffic.
Switch Management QoS Setup Chapter 4 QoS (quality of service) provides for the classification of Ethernet traffic into high and low priority queues. High priority packets are forwarded to their destination address before a low priority packet. WARNING: I/O devices do not support the QoS protocol. Packets can be classified as high or low by MAC address, 802.1p priority tag, and/or port ID. To access QoS setup, from the navigation pane, expand the Switch Configuration folder and click QoS Setup.
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Appendix A Upgrade Firmware This appendix provides information about how to upgrade 1783-EMS firmware. WARNING: The 1783-EMS switch cycles power automatically at the end of the upgrade procedure. Any switching activity is temporarily interrupted. Upgrade with the Web Management Interface Use this procedure to upgrade the 1783-EMS switch by using the web interface. For information about how to access the web interface for the switch, refer to Chapter 1. 1.
Appendix A Upgrade Firmware Notes: 68 Rockwell Automation Publication 1783-UM001D-EN-P - January 2013
Appendix B User Name and Password Rules This appendix provides information about user name and password characters and rules. User Name and Password Characters Use these characters for user name and password: • Uppercase letters A…Z • Lowercase letters a…z • Numbers 0…9 • Spaces, hyphens (-), periods (.
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Appendix C Factory Reset This appendix provides information about how to accomplish a factory reset, setting the 1783-EMS switch to the factory default settings. You have two levels of reset as described in this appendix. To complete the reset, you need the following: • Small screwdriver • Means to turn off the power to the switch Access the Reset Button Complete the reset by using a small button on the back of the switch.
Appendix C Factory Reset Reset IP Address To reset only the IP address, use this procedure. 1. With power applied, push the reset button with a small screwdriver. 2. Hold the button in for 30 seconds. 3. Cycle power to complete the IP reset. Your IP address defaults to 192.168.1.1. Change Settings to Default To change all settings back to default, use this procedure. 1. Remove power. 2. Push the reset button with a small screwdriver. 3. Apply power while continuing to hold the reset button. 4.
Appendix D Data Layout This appendix provides information about the data layout for DINT input and output bits. DINT Input These tables show the data layout.
Appendix D Data Layout DINT Output 74 This table shows the data layout.
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software The method for adding the switch to software depends on your version of the software. Generic Profile Software Method RSLogix 5000, version 13.04.00 or earlier Generic Profile, as described on page 75 RSLogix 5000, version 15.02.00 or later or Logix Designer, version 21.00.00 or later Add-on Profile, as described on page 77 Use the switch with the Logix platform only. To add the switch to RSLogix 5000 software, version 13.04.
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software 3. From the General tab of the Module Properties dialog box, complete this procedure. a. Type a name for the 1783-EMS switch. b. Type the IP address of the 1783-EMS switch. c. Enter the Assembly instance and size for Input, Output, and Configuration. d. Click OK. 4. From the Connection tab of the Module Properties dialog box, enter an RPI of 100…700 ms, (we recommend 700 ms), and click OK. The 1783-EMS switch appears under your I/O configuration.
Add the Switch to Software Add-on Profile Appendix E To add the switch to RSLogix 5000 software, version 15.02.00 or later, or the Logix Designer application, version 21.00.00 or later, by using the Add-on Profile (AOP), follow this procedure. 1. Locate the module AOP at http://www.rockwellautomation.com/ support/controlflash/LogixProfiler. IMPORTANT You need a Rockwell Automation MySupport account to download the AOP.
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software Enter General Information From the Module Properties dialog box, click the General tab. The General tab is available offline and includes these fields: • Name—Required field gives the module a descriptive name in your Logix program. • Description—Optional field used for descriptive text. • Module Definition—Do not change the default values. • IP Address or Host Name—Required field must be populated with the IP address of the 1783-EMS switch.
Add the Switch to Software Appendix E Enter Connection Information From the Module Properties dialog box, click the Connection tab to display these fields: • Requested Packet Interval (RPI)—Default value is 700 ms and supports RPI from 50…750 ms. Because this is a multicasting device and does not need a fast RPI to fulfill its purpose, we recommend a slow RPI to minimize network impact. Available online and offline.
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software View Identification and Status Information From Module Properties dialog box, click the Module Info tab. The Module Info tab displays identification and status information for the 1783-EMS switch. The information appears when the Logix controller is in Run mode only. • To refresh the identification and status on the tab, click Refresh. • To reset the 1783-EMS switch (communication to the module will be interrupted), click Reset Module.
Add the Switch to Software Appendix E Use these fields in the Network Configuration area to configure the network: • Box Name—Descriptive name for the switch. • IP Address—IP address of the 1783-EMS switch must match the IP address on the General tab. • Subnet Mask—The subnet mask is used to determine where the network number in an IP address ends and the node number in an IP address begins. • Gateway Address—Address of router on the network (if one exists, if not leave this at 0.0.0.0).
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software View Port Diagnostic Information From Module Properties dialog box, click the Port Diagnostic tab to display data for a specified port. • To display data for a port, choose the port number from the Select Port Number pull-down menu. • To clear the counters, click Clear Counters.
Add the Switch to Software Appendix E Configure IGMP From the Module Properties dialog box, click the IGMP tab to configure Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) using these fields: • Enable IGMP—Enables the IGMP feature in the 1783-EMS switch. See Chapter 2 of this manual for additional information. • Version—Select from version 1 or version 2. See Chapter 2 of this manual for additional information. • Query Period—Select the interval rate that the network is queried for IGMP information.
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software Configure DHCP From the Module Properties dialog box, click the DHCP tab to configure Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) using these fields: • Mode—Select from Assigned by Port, Assigned by Pool, Off. • Subnet Mask—Subnet Mask given to all devices assigned IP addresses with the 1783-EMS switch. • Default Gateway—Leave blank if no gateway exists on the network. • DNS Primary—Leave blank if no DNS server is present on the network.
Add the Switch to Software Appendix E Configure Bandwidth and MAC ID Management Alarming From the Module Properties dialog box, click the Alarms tab to display this information: • Bandwidth Alarm area – Used to configure bandwidth alarming and displays a graph of current network traffic. The bars are red if the port is in alarm and green if it is not. – The bandwidth alarm requires a point of comparison. This must be set in the HTML interface.
Appendix E Add the Switch to Software controller or when the Logix controller goes into Program mode. Use this feature to disable ports while the Logix controller is in Run mode and enable them when the Logix controller is offline. The Fault/Idle State tab includes these fields: • Communication Fault Behavior – The default value is Enable All Ports. – Enables all ports when the 1783-EMS switch loses communication with the Logix controller.
Appendix F Download or Upload a Configuration This appendix provides information about downloading and uploading switch configurations. The 1783-EMS switch can accept its configuration from a file stored on a personal computer. This is useful if the same configuration must be used in multiple switches. This file can be retrieved from a switch and downloaded to another switch. You can also download the configuration file from the Utilization tab, as described in Device Utilization on page 44.
Appendix F Download or Upload a Configuration Notes: 88 Rockwell Automation Publication 1783-UM001D-EN-P - January 2013
Appendix G Available SFP Modules and Cables This appendix provides information about the small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module and cabling used with the 1783-EMS08T switch. For instructions on installing, removing, and connecting an SFP module, refer to the Stratix 6000 Ethernet Managed Switches Installation Instructions, publication 1783-IN004.
Appendix G Available SFP Modules and Cables Notes: 90 Rockwell Automation Publication 1783-UM001D-EN-P - January 2013
Index A Add-on Profile 77 address hardware 46 MAC report 46 administrator password 17 alarm setup 46 E email configuration 33 embedded client 33 error codes 41 error codes 41 F B bandwidth 47 alarm 85 basic configuration 13 boot.
Index Q QoS MAC-based list 65 setup 53, 65 qsdata.img 67 quality of service. See QoS querier, IGMP 26 R Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol. See RSTP read-only password 17 reset factory 71 IP address 72 RSTP about 54 configuration 55 report 45 uploading configuration 87 user datagram protocol 10 User Datagram Protocol. See UDP user name 13, 17, 18, 34, 35, 67 rules 69 V virtual local area network. See VLAN VLAN about 57 configuration 58 setup 53 W webdata.
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