802.11g Wireless 4-port Router User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- User’s Guide
- Copyright
- Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Interference Statement
- ZyXEL Limited Warranty
- Customer Support
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Getting to Know Your ZyAIR
- 1.1 Introducing the ZyAIR
- 1.2 ZyAIR Features
- 1.2.1 Physical Features
- 1.2.2 Firmware Features
- 1.2.2.1 Internal RADIUS Server
- 1.2.2.2 Wi-Fi Protected Access
- 1.2.2.3 802.11b Wireless LAN Standard
- 1.2.2.4 802.11g Wireless LAN Standard
- 1.2.2.5 STP (Spanning Tree Protocol) / RSTP (Rapid STP)
- 1.2.2.6 Certificates
- 1.2.2.7 Limit the number of Client Connections
- 1.2.2.8 SSL Passthrough
- 1.2.2.9 Firewall
- 1.2.2.10 Brute-Force Password Guessing Protection
- 1.2.2.11 Wireless LAN MAC Address Filtering
- 1.2.2.12 WEP Encryption
- 1.2.2.13 IEEE 802.1X Network Security
- 1.2.2.14 Universal Plug and Play (UPnP)
- 1.2.2.15 Dynamic DNS Support
- 1.2.2.16 PPPoE Support (RFC2516)
- 1.2.2.17 PPTP Encapsulation
- 1.2.2.18 Network Address Translation (NAT)
- 1.2.2.19 Traffic Redirect
- 1.2.2.20 NAT for Single-IP-address Internet Access
- 1.2.2.21 DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)
- 1.2.2.22 Multicast
- 1.2.2.23 IP Alias
- 1.2.2.24 IP Policy Routing
- 1.2.2.25 SNMP
- 1.2.2.26 Full Network Management
- 1.2.2.27 Logging and Tracing
- 1.2.2.28 Diagnostics Capabilities
- 1.2.2.29 Embedded FTP and TFTP Servers
- 1.2.2.30 Wireless Association List
- 1.2.2.31 Wireless LAN Channel Usage
- 1.3 Applications for the ZyAIR
- Introducing the Web Configurator
- Wizard Setup
- System Screens
- LAN Screens
- Wireless Configuration and Roaming
- Wireless Security
- 7.1 Wireless Security Overview
- 7.2 Security Parameters Summary
- 7.3 WEP Overview
- 7.4 Configuring WEP Encryption
- 7.5 Introduction to WPA
- 7.6 Configuring WPA-PSK Authentication
- 7.7 Wireless Client WPA Supplicants
- 7.8 Configuring WPA Authentication
- 7.9 Introduction to RADIUS
- 7.10 Configuring RADIUS
- 7.11 802.1x Overview
- 7.12 Dynamic WEP Key Exchange
- 7.13 Configuring 802.1x and Dynamic WEP Key Exchange
- 7.14 Configuring 802.1x and Static WEP Key Exchange
- 7.15 Configuring 802.1x
- 7.16 MAC Filter
- Internal RADIUS Server
- WAN
- Single User Account (SUA) / Network Address Translation (NAT)
- Static Route Screens
- Remote Management Screens
- UPnP
- Firewalls
- Firewall Screens
- Content Filtering
- Certificates
- 17.1 Certificates Overview
- 17.2 Self-signed Certificates
- 17.3 Configuration Summary
- 17.4 My Certificates
- 17.5 Certificate File Formats
- 17.6 Importing a Certificate
- 17.7 Creating a Certificate
- 17.8 My Certificate Details
- 17.9 Trusted CAs
- 17.10 Importing a Trusted CA’s Certificate
- 17.11 Trusted CA Certificate Details
- Log Screens
- Maintenance
- Introducing the SMT
- General Setup
- Menu 2 WAN Setup
- LAN Setup
- Internet Access
- Remote Node Configuration
- Static Route Setup
- Dial-in User Setup
- Network Address Translation (NAT)
- Filter Configuration
- Enabling the Firewall
- SNMP Configuration
- System Security
- System Information and Diagnosis
- Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance
- System Maintenance and Information
- Remote Management
- Call Scheduling
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
- Appendix C
- Appendix D
- Appendix E
- Appendix F
- Appendix G
- Appendix H
- Appendix I
- Appendix J
- Appendix K
- Appendix L
- Index

ZyAIR G-2000 Plus User’s Guide
Chapter 1 Getting to Know Your ZyAIR 40
1.2.2.16 PPPoE Support (RFC2516)
PPPoE (Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet) emulates a dial-up connection. It allows your
ISP to use their existing network configuration with newer broadband technologies such as
ADSL. The PPPoE driver on the ZyAIR is transparent to the computers on the LAN, which
see only Ethernet and are not aware of PPPoE thus saving you from having to manage PPPoE
clients on individual computers.
1.2.2.17 PPTP Encapsulation
Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) is a network protocol that enables secure transfer of
data from a remote client to a private server, creating a Virtual Private Network (VPN) using a
TCP/IP-based network. PPTP supports on-demand, multi-protocol and virtual private
networking over public networks, such as the Internet. Use PPTP to connect to a broadband
modem to achieve access to high-speed data networks via a familiar "dial-up networking" user
interface.
1.2.2.18 Network Address Translation (NAT)
NAT (Network Address Translation - NAT, RFC 1631) allows the translations of multiple IP
addresses used within one network to different IP addresses known within another network.
1.2.2.19 Traffic Redirect
Traffic Redirect forwards WAN traffic to a backup gateway on the LAN when the ZyAIR
cannot connect to the Internet, thus acting as an auxiliary backup when your regular WAN
connection fails.
1.2.2.20 NAT for Single-IP-address Internet Access
The ZyAIR's SUA (Single User Account) feature allows multiple-user Internet access for the
cost of a single IP account. NAT supports popular Internet applications such as MS traceroute,
CuSeeMe, IRC, RealPlayer, VDOLive, Quake, and PPTP. No configuration is needed to
support these applications.
1.2.2.21 DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) allows the individual clients (computers) to
obtain the TCP/IP configuration at start-up from a centralized DHCP server. The ZyAIR has
built-in DHCP server capability enabled by default. It can assign IP addresses, an IP default
gateway and DNS servers to DHCP clients. The ZyAIR also acts as a surrogate DHCP server
(DHCP Relay) where it relays IP address assignment from the actual real DHCP server to the
clients.