User`s guide
Table Of Contents
- About This User's Guide
- Document Conventions
- Safety Warnings
- Table of Contents
- Part I: Introduction
- 1. Getting to Know Your MWR222
- 2.
- 2. Introducing the Web Configurator
- 3. Monitor
- 4.
- 4.
- 4. MWR222 Modes
- 5. Router Mode
- 6. Access Point Mode
- 5.
- 5.
- 7. WISP Mode
- 7
- 7
- 8 Tutorials
- 8.3 Connecting to Internet from an Access Point
- 8.4 Configuring Wireless Security Using WPS
- 9 Wireless LAN
- 9.1 Overview
- 9.2 What You Can Do
- Use the General screen to enable the Wireless LAN, enter the SSID and select the wireless security mode.
- 9.3 What You Should Know
- 9.4 General Wireless LAN Screen
- 9.5 Security
- 9.6 MAC Filter
- 9.7 Wireless LAN Advanced Screen
- 9.8 Quality of Service (QoS) Screen
- 9.9 WPS Screen
- 9.10 WPS Station Screen
- 9.11 Scheduling Screen
- 9.12 WDS Screen
- 10.1 Overview
- 10.2 What You Can Do
- 10.3 What You Need To Know
- 10.2
- 10.3
- 10.4 Internet Connection
- 10.5 Mobile WAN
- 10.7 IGMP Snooping Screen
- 11 LAN
- 12 DHCP Server
- 13. Network Address Translation (NAT)
- 14 Dynamic DNS
- 15. OpenDNS
- 16 Static Route
- 17.
- 17.
- 17. Routing Information Protocol
- Part III
- Part V
- Maintenance and Troubleshooting
- Part VI
- Appendices and Index
- Appendix A
- Pop-up Windows, JavaScripts and Java Permissions
- End-User License Agreement for “MWR222”
- NOTE: Some components of this product incorporate free software programs covered under the open source code licenses which allows you to freely copy, modify and redistribute the software. For at least three (3) years from the date of distribution of t...
- Notice
- Information herein is subject to change without notice. Companies, names, and data used in examples herein are fictitious unless otherwise noted. No part may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, for any p...
- Notice
- GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
- GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
MWR211 User’s Guide
339
The following individuals contributed in part to the Network Time
Protocol Distribution Version 4 and are acknowledged as authors of
this work.
1. Mark Andrews <mark_andrews@isc.org> Leitch atomic clock
controller
2. Bernd Altmeier <altmeier@atlsoft.de> hopf Elektronik serial
line and PCI-bus devices
3. Viraj Bais <vbais@mailman1.intel.com> and Clayton Kirkwood
<kirkwood@striderfm.intel.com> port to WindowsNT 3.5
4. Michael Barone <michael,barone@lmco.com> GPSVME fixes
5. Jean-Francois Boudreault <Jean-
Francois.Boudreault@viagenie.qc.ca>IPv6 support
6. Karl Berry <karl@owl.HQ.ileaf.com> syslog to file option
7. Greg Brackley <greg.brackley@bigfoot.com> Major rework of
WINNT port. Clean up recvbuf and iosignal code into separate
modules.
8. Marc Brett <Marc.Brett@westgeo.com> Magnavox GPS clock
driver
9. Piete Brooks <Piete.Brooks@cl.cam.ac.uk> MSF clock driver,
Trimble PARSE support
10. Reg Clemens <reg@dwf.com> Oncore driver (Current
maintainer)
11. Steve Clift <clift@ml.csiro.au> OMEGA clock driver
12. Casey Crellin <casey@csc.co.za> vxWorks (Tornado) port and
help with target configuration
13. Sven Dietrich <sven_dietrich@trimble.com> Palisade
reference clock driver, NT adj. residuals, integrated Greg's Winnt
port.
14. John A. Dundas III <dundas@salt.jpl.nasa.gov> Apple A/UX
port
15. Torsten Duwe <duwe@immd4.informatik.uni-erlangen.de>
Linux port
16. Dennis Ferguson <dennis@mrbill.canet.ca> foundation code
for NTP Version 2 as specified in RFC-1119
17. John Hay <jhay@icomtek.csir.co.za> IPv6 support and testing