Administration of the gateway is done through a web interface. All settings are accessible through an address on your local network.
To access the web interface, you need the following:
An installed gateway device.
A computer connected to the LAN or WLAN port on the device.
A web browser installed on the computer.
The default address for the web interface is http://192.168.1.1.
To access the web interface you need to use your web browser. There are multiple ways of accessing the interface.
The web interface uses Roles to provide and restrict access to the various features in the device.
There are four pre-defined roles: User, Support, Admin, and Root.
In addition to User Roles, the User Modes may provide further constraints on what settings and features are displayed in the web interface.
Note: The mode affects display only, the features are still available and operational.
Depending on your device and/or geographical region, certain features may be unavailable in the interface.
When you change a setting or a value in the interface, it gets added to a list of changes. The changes will not take effect until you click apply.
To access the web interface you need to use your web browser. There are multiple ways of accessing the interface.
The standard IPv4 address for the interface is http://192.168.1.1
.
The web interface can be accessed through a default hostname, for example inteno.lan/
or routerlogin.net/
, or through custom hostnames set up by the provider.
An IPv6 address or IPv6 hostname can also be used to access the web GUI. The exact address will vary with your provider.
You are taken to the web interface login page.
To login to the web interface, you use a user name and a password.
(For default passwords see: User Roles).
Note: Your operator may have specified different passwords and user levels. If so, you need to request those from your operator.
Log in to the web interface:
You are taken to the web interface Overview page.
In addition to User Roles, the User Modes may provide further constraints on what settings and features are displayed in the web interface.
Note: The mode affects display only, the features are still available and operational.
Basic mode provides access to a selected set of settings and aspects of features, displaying a reduced set of options. This mode is suitable for the most common tasks and configurations.
Expert mode provides access to a larger number of settings and aspects of features. This mode is suitable when you have deeper technical knowledge and want to do specific customizations or troubleshooting.
Basic mode provides access to a selected set of settings and aspects of features, displaying a reduced set of options. This mode is suitable for the most common tasks and configurations.
In basic mode, all Expert mode settings and views are hidden from the interface. However, if you select a particular task in basic mode that requires expert mode settings, they will automatically be displayed.
Expert mode provides access to a larger number of settings and aspects of features. This mode is suitable when you have deeper technical knowledge and want to do specific customizations or troubleshooting.
In expert mode, all Basic mode settings and views are also shown.
The web interface uses Roles to provide and restrict access to the various features in the device.
There are four pre-defined roles: User, Support, Admin, and Root.
The User role has restricted access to basic set of features.
login: user
password: user
The Support role has elevated access to basic and a set of advanced features.
login: support
password:support
The Admin role has unrestricted access to all basic and advanced features.
login: admin
password:admin
The Root role has unrestricted access to the device, and can be used for command line access to the device via ssh.
login: root
password:root
Depending on your device and/or geographical region, certain features may be unavailable in the interface.
Certain features may not be available in your interface, depending on several factors:
Device - Your device may be limited in which ports are avaible.
Geographical region - Features might not be offered in some regions or countries.
Operator Settings - Your operator may have restricted, altered or added features in the software.
When you change a setting or a value in the interface, it gets added to a list of changes. The changes will not take effect until you click apply.
The unapplied changes and apply button are shown at the bottom of the window.
To make the changes take effect click Apply.
To keep the current state without any changes click Cancel.
The Overview page shows the most important statuses and settings for your device.
The overview has three parts: a device network map, configuration shortcuts, and status panels.
The device map shows how your device is connected to the LAN and the WAN, as well as other devices in the local network.
The configurations show status for and provide shortcuts provide quick access to various common settings.
The status panels display status information about selected features. They also allow you quick access to configuration of the most common features.
The device map shows how your device is connected to the LAN and the WAN, as well as other devices in the local network.
The status of a device is indicated by the color of the icon.
Color | Status |
---|---|
Green | Enabled and active |
Black | Enabled, not active |
Yellow | Active, with warnings. |
Red | Active, not functional. |
More detailed Information about the status of an item in the map is availabe by pointing the cursor at an icon in the map.
The information displayed in the popups varies with the item being viewed.
The configurations show status for and provide shortcuts provide quick access to various common settings.
Option | |
---|---|
Wireless | Active wireless radios. |
Ethernet | LAN ports in use on the device. |
LAN | Active LAN |
WAN | Status of WAN connection. |
USB | Connected USB devices, if any. |
Voice | Voice port status, if any. |
Profile | Selected network profile, if any. |
The status panels display status information about selected features. They also allow you quick access to configuration of the most common features.
The WiFi status panel lets you change the default wireless security settings to make your network more secure.
You can also view the wifi status and edit the wireless interface.
Additonally, you can WPS to set up clients.
The WiFi status panel lets you change the default wireless security settings to make your network more secure.
You can also view the wifi status and edit the wireless interface.
Additonally, you can WPS to set up clients.
WPS makes it easier to connect other wireless devices to your device on an encrypted channel.
In the edit wireless interface view you can change different aspects of your interface.
In the edit wireless interface view you can change different aspects of your interface.
WPS makes it easier to connect other wireless devices to your device on an encrypted channel.
In the edit wireless interface view you can change different aspects of your interface.
To open The wifi status view for 2.4GHZ:
To edit the wireless interface for a radio:
In the edit wireless interface view you can change different aspects of your interface.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Enabled | Toggle interface on or off. |
WiFi Network Name | Edit name of SSID network. |
Broadcast SSID | Toggle to make the network SSID visible or invisible. |
Encryption | Selected encryption method. |
Cipher | Form of Cipher. |
WiFi Key (Password) | Text to use as wifi key. |
Show Key Text | Displays the wifi key text. |
To open the wifi status view for GHZ:
To edit the wireless interface for a radio:
The LAN panel shows basic information about the device and connected clients IP addresses.
From the LAN status panel you can configure the DHCP settings for the device.
To open the Edit LAN Settings dialog, click the edit button.
To view a more detailed overview of the clients, click the expand button
To view details about a client click the client in the list.
In The Detailed Client Overview, information about the clients in the LAN is displayed.
In The Edit LAN settings view you can change different features about your network.
The Client dialog displays information about the connected clients and allows you to edit their configuration.
In The Detailed Client Overview, information about the clients in the LAN is displayed.
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
Hostname | Client hostname. | |
IP Address | Client IPv4. | |
MAC Address | Client MAC Address . | |
Port | Device port. | |
Network | Network interface for the client. | |
Link Speed | Type of negotiation, speed and duplex for the connection. |
In The Edit LAN settings view you can change different features about your network.
Item | Description |
---|---|
IPv4 Address | Device DHCP address |
IPv4 Subnet Mask | IPv4 Subnet Mask |
IPv4 Broadcast Mask | IPv4 Broadcast Mask |
DHCP Server | Turn DHCP Server on or off. |
DHCP Pool Start | Start IP number for the DHCP Pool start number IP address |
DHCP Pool Size | Number of IP addresses in the DHCP Pool |
DHCP Lease Time | DHCP Lease Time for the LAN. |
Static DHCP | Reserve an IP address DHCP Lease for a connected device. |
The Static DHCP section lets you configure IP address DHCP Leases for connected devices.
To add a static DHCP lease:
The information for existing client is added automatically.
The Client dialog displays information about the connected clients and allows you to edit their configuration.
Information about the client is divided into several tabs.
In the Port Forwarding tab you can map incoming connections on different ports to ports on the client.
The Static Leases tab allows you to assign a static IP address dhcp lease to the client.
The Realtime Graphs view provides access to graphical representations of status for the device. The graphs scroll as time progresses and lines indicate the current status.
For WiFi clients (it is not shown for regular LAN clients), the Realtime Graphs tab you can map incoming connections on different ports to ports on the client.
The Status tab shows information about the client and the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Hostname | The client Hostname. |
IP Address | Assigned IP address. |
MAC Address | MAC address. |
DHCP | DHCP status. |
Connected | Connection status. |
Link Speed | Type of negotiation, speed and duplex for the connection. |
For WiFi clients, the Wireless Details section shows detailed information about the wireless connection. All data is measured since last downtime.
Item | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Frequency | WiFi frequency band for the access point. | 2.4GHz |
RSSI | RSSI strength for the signal. | -64 dBm |
SNR | Signal-To-Noise-Ratio. | 21 dBm |
Idle | Time idle. | 1 s |
In Network | Time in network. | 1813 s |
WME | Status of WMM. | True |
Power Save | Is Power save enabled? | False |
N Mode | Is 802_11n supported? | True |
VHT Mode | Is 802_11ac supported? | False |
TX Bytes | Transmitted bytes. | 2438426 |
RX Bytes | Recieved bytes. | 347988 |
TX Rate | Transmission rate. | 58 Mbps |
RX Rate | Recieve rate. | 6 Mbps |
In the Port Forwarding tab you can map incoming connections on different ports to ports on the client.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Name | Port name. |
Excluded ports | Protected ports that can't be mapped. |
Public port | Public (external) port. |
Private port | Private (client) port. |
Protocol | Protocol. |
The protocol setting filters traffic by protocol for the port forward.
To map incoming connections:
The mapping section lets you add configuration settings for the mapping.
Ports can be added one by one (80
), as comma-separated lists (8080, 8090
) or as ranges (21-22
).
Your information has now been saved and is visible in the mapping list.
The Static Leases tab allows you to assign a static IP address dhcp lease to the client.
To assign a static address to the client:
Parental control is used to restrict access to the network for particular devices.
Parental control is handled by setting schedules where access is restricted to explicitly named MAC addresses.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Weekdays | List of days the filter applies. |
Start Time | Time of day to start filtering. |
Stop Time | Time of day to stop filtering. |
Edit filtering rule. | |
Delete filtering rule. |
The Internet Access Schedule rules you add from the client panel will only apply to that client.
Parental control is handled by setting schedules where access is restricted to explicitly named MAC addresses.
When adding a parental control filter from the client panel, the MAC Address is automatically selected from the client.
The start time for a rule has to be lower than the end time.
If you want to have a rule that goes over midnight, you need to add two rules, one up until midnight, and one from midnight to when you want the rule to end.
For example:
Rule one: From 21:00
To 23:59
Rule two: From 00:00
To 06:00
A single rule of From 21:00
To 06:00
will not be saved.
For WiFi clients (it is not shown for regular LAN clients), the Realtime Graphs tab you can map incoming connections on different ports to ports on the client.
The display is shown in realtime, with lines representing traffic in kbit/s:
Color | Traffic |
---|---|
Blue | Downstream. |
Red | Upstream. |
The table below the graph displays collected data since the tab was opened, and the total connection uptime since last downtime.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Download Speed | Current download speed. |
Upload Speed | Current upload speed. |
Total Received Data | Downloaded data since the tab was opened. |
Total Transmitted Data | Transmitted data since the tab was opened. |
Total Uptime | Connection uptime since last downtime. |
The Realtime Graphs view provides access to graphical representations of status for the device. The graphs scroll as time progresses and lines indicate the current status.
The Load graph shows device load averages for different time recent periods.
The display is shown in realtime, and the lines represent the average over different intervals:
Color | Time |
---|---|
Blue | 1 minute |
Red | 5 minutes |
Purple | 15 minutes |
The Traffic graph shows upload and download traffic for the interfaces.
Each interface is available in its own tab. The display is shown in realtime, with lines representing traffic in kbit/s:
Color | Traffic |
---|---|
Blue | Downstream. |
Red | Upstream. |
Item | Description |
---|---|
Internet | Status of Internet connection. |
Link | Status of link. |
WAN IP(s) | IPv4 and IPv6 address to the device. |
Gateway(s) | IPv4 and IPv6 address to gateway. |
Link Type | Ethernet |
Link Speed | Auto-negotiated 1000 Mbps Full Duplex |
DNS-Servers | IPv4 and IPV6 addresses to DNS servers. |
WAN uptime | Time since last disconnect for IPv4 and IPV6 WAN connection. |
The Voice panel shows the status of the ringing schedule connected phone lines.
The Voice panel is not available in certain regions.
The Profile panel shows the network profiles configured on your device, if any.
The network profiles are configured by the manufacturer for each device type.
Depending on the network profile selected, additional panels may be displayed in the overview.
The Voice provides access to settings relating to voice communications through the device.
The Voice Lines view shows a list of available voice lines for the device and allows you to configure them.
The Advanced Settings view contains advanced settings for SIP , voice lines and dial plans.
The Number Blocking view allows you to block outgoing calls to specific numbers or or number ranges.
The Ringing Schedule view lets you define when telephones should be allowed to ring.
The Speed Dialing view lets you configure a set of shortcode numbers that convert to the specified numbers when dialled.
The Call Log view shows a list of the recent calls handled through the device.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Date | Date for the call. |
Time | Time for the call. |
External Number | Calling number. |
Internal Number | Receiving number. |
Duration | Duration of the call. |
The SIP Accounts view shows information about configured SIP accounts for the device.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable accounts.
When a particular account is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn account on or off. |
Account Name | Name of SIP account. |
SIP domain name | Name of SIP domain. |
SIP Username | The SIP account username for the account. |
SIP Authentication Name | SIP Authentication Name used with password to register with SIP server. |
SIP Password | Enter new password to change. |
Show Key Text | Display the password. |
Display Name | Display name used in Caller ID. |
SIP Server/Registrar | Address for SIP server. |
SIP Server/Registrar Port | Port for SIP server. |
SIP Outbound Proxy | Address for outbound proxy. |
SIP Outbound Proxy Port | Port for outbound proxy. |
Incoming Phone Lines | Check boxes for connected phone line ports. |
Preferred codecs | Order of preference for SIP codecs. |
G.711MuLaw Packetization | Packetization setting for G.711MuLaw. |
G.726 Packetization | Packetization setting for G.726. |
G.729a Packetization | Packetization setting for G.711ALaw. |
G.G.729a Packetization | Packetization setting for G.729a. |
Autoframing | Negotiate packetization when call is established. |
SIP Transport | UDP / TCP / TLS |
Encryption | Use Secure Real-time Transport Protocol. |
Use as Fax | Indicate that this SIP account will be used for a fax machine. This will force some settings. |
Mailbox | Voicemail inbox. |
You can add as many accounts as you needed.
To add a account:
The SIP Users view shows information about configured SIP users for the device.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable accounts.
When a particular account is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn user on or off. |
Name | Display name used in Caller ID. |
Extension | Extension for this user. |
User Name | SIP user name. |
User Password | Enter new password to change. |
Show Key Text | Display the password. |
Call out using SIP provider | SIP account for outbound calls. |
Mailbox | Voicemail inbox. |
Preferred codecs | Order of preference for SIP codecs. |
Host | Specific host for this user. |
Qualify | Check that the user is reachable. |
You can add as many users as you needed.
To add a user:
The Voice Lines view shows a list of available voice lines for the device and allows you to configure them.
Each available voice line has its own panel. Detailed information about each line is shown when you expand the panel.
The panels allow you to configure individual voice lines.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Name | Identifier for the DECT line. |
Internal Number | Diect call number. |
Outgoing Calls Number | SIP account for external calls. |
Call Waiting | Enable call waiting notification. |
Call ID Restriction | Hide caller ID. |
Voice Activity Detection | Detect voice (Transparent / Aggressive / Conservative ). |
Comfort Noise Generation | Generated noise (White / Hot / Spectrum estimate ). |
Echo cancellation | Remove echoes. |
Transmit gain | Increase transmitted signal. |
Receive gain | Increase received signal. |
The Advanced Settings view contains advanced settings for SIP , voice lines and dial plans.
The Advanced SIP Settings view lets you configure detailed parameters for your SIP services.
The Advanced Line Settings view lets you configure detailed parameters for your voice lines .
The Custom Dial plan view allows you to configure dialling digits for various services and networks.
The Advanced SIP Settings view lets you configure detailed parameters for your SIP services.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Sip Proxy servers | Proxies to allow incoming calls from. |
Bind Interface | Restrict listening to particular WAN interface. |
Bindport | Port to use for UDP listening. |
User Agent | Custom User-Agent information in the SIP header. |
RTP Port Range | Ports to use for RTP |
DTMF Mode | Mode for DTMF (Compatibility / RFC 2833 / SIP INFO / Inband ). |
Register Interval | Time in seconds between registration attempts. |
Realm | SIP Realm for digest authentication. |
Localnet | Network addresses that are considered inside of the NAT network. |
Register Attempts | Number of registration attempts before giving up. |
Register Timeout | Time before giving up a registration attempt. |
Register Back-off Attempts | Number of attempts before back-off. |
Register Back-off Timeout | Time in back-off before giving up attempt to register. |
Remote Hold | Send hold events to proxy (Let network handle music on hold). |
SRV Lookup | Enable DNS SRV lookup. |
DNS Manager | Enable Asterisk DNS manager. |
DNS Manager Refresh Interval | Refresh interval for the DNS manager. |
Line suffix in contact header | Add suffix to SIP contact header with information about called lines. |
SIP DiffServ | Differentiated services type of service for SIP data. |
Audio DiffServ | Differentiated services type of service for audio data. |
Congestion tone | Tone to play on congestion. (Congestion / Info ) |
STUN server | STUN service provider. |
TLS/SSL Version | TLS v1 / TLS v2 / TLS v3. |
Cipher string | Cipher identifier string. |
Trusted CA | Public key for a trusted Certificate Authority. |
To add a Trusted CA Certificate key:
The Advanced Line Settings view lets you configure detailed parameters for your voice lines .
Item | Description |
---|---|
Locale selection | Country for device location. |
Enable Jitter Buffer | Turn jitter prevention buffer on or off. |
Force Jitter Buffer | Forces the receiver to use a jitter buffer. |
Jitter Buffer implementation | The type of jitter buffer Fixed / Adaptive . |
Maximum Jitter Buffer size | Size of jitter buffer (ms). |
Enable Packet Loss Concealment | Turn PLC on or off. |
Inter-digit timeout | Time between dialled digits before timing out (ms). |
The Custom Dial plan view allows you to configure dialling digits for various services and networks.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enable incoming | Turn dial plan on or off for incoming calls. |
Enable outgoing | Turn dial plan on or off for outgoing calls. |
Enable custom hangup | Turn custom hang up on or off. |
All Ports Extension | Port test extension. |
Test Audio Extension | Audo tests the audio quality. |
Test Echo Extension | Echo returns the outgoing audio from a channel back to the channel. |
The Number Blocking view allows you to block outgoing calls to specific numbers or or number ranges.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Outgoing Number Blocking | Turn blocking on or off for outgoing calls. |
Do not allow connections to these numbers | List of blocked numbers. |
Block connections to all foreign numbers | Block calls to different locales. |
Block connections to all special rate numbers | Block calls to premium rate or pay services. |
Item | Description |
---|---|
Incoming Number Blocking | Turn blocking on or off for incoming calls. |
Do not allow connections from these numbers | List of blocked numbers. |
To block a number:
You can use #
as wildcard to define number ranges. For example “0160#” blocks all numbers starting with “0160”.
To block a sequence of numbers:
The Ringing Schedule view lets you define when telephones should be allowed to ring.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Ringing Schedule | Turn the schedule on or off. |
During the times below ringing is | Enabled / Disabled . |
Day | List of days when status applies. |
Time | Time interval when status applies. |
Status | Enabled / Disabled . |
The Speed Dialing view lets you configure a set of shortcode numbers that convert to the specified numbers when dialled.
The speed dialling list consists of the numbers 0 to 9. For each of these, you can add a number or extension that will be called when somebody dials the number.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Speed Dialing | Turn speed dialling on or off. |
Remove all entries from speed dial list | Clears the list |
The Dect Radio view allows you to configure DECT radio settings.
The Network view provides access to the devices, connections and available configurations in the network.
The Connections view allows you configure various connection interfaces to use in your device.
Static routes are useful if you have several networks accessible from your router and you want to correctly route packets between them.
The firewall lets you filter traffic, set up port forwarding or expose particular services to the outside world.
The Quality Of Service view allows you to configure parameters for Quality of Service through applying groups of classes to interfaces.
The MultiWAN view allows you to create and configure WAN traffic divisions for load balancing and failover and applying traffic rules.
The Devices view allows you to configure settings for various network types.
The Ethernet Ports view allows you to configure the physical ethernet interfaces of your device.
The Base Device view shows you a list of devices that are used to access the network.
The status of a device is indicated by the color of the icon.
Color | Status |
---|---|
Green | Enabled and active |
Black | Enabled, not active |
Note: These are the default colors. Your operator may use a different coloring scheme.
The Ethernet Ports view allows you to configure the physical ethernet interfaces of your device.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable ethernet port devices.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Port Speed | Configuration of transmission speed, port speed. |
Below the ethernet interface list you can find the uplink setting.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Uplink Port | Select uplink interface. |
The Edit button next to each interface allows you to edit the parameters for the interface.
The Uplink section view allows you to select which interface to use as uplink for the device.
The Edit button next to each interface allows you to edit the parameters for the interface.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Port Speed | Configuration of transmission speed, duplex setting and auto-negotiation. |
Pause Frame | Enable Pause Frame for flow control. |
In the Port Speed dropdown, you can select a combination of duplex setting and auto-negotiation settings for the interface.
Option | Comment |
---|---|
Full auto-negotiation | Applies to both auto-negotiation and duplex setting. |
Max 100Mb auto-negotiation, full duplex. | |
Max 100Mb auto-negotiation, half duplex. | |
Max 10Mb auto-negotiation, full duplex. | |
Max 10Mb auto-negotiation, half duplex. | |
Only 100Mb, full duplex. | |
Only 100Mb, half duplex. | |
Only 10Mb, full duplex. | |
Only 10Mb, half duplex. | |
Disabled | Interface is disabled. |
The Uplink section view allows you to select which interface to use as uplink for the device.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable ethernet port devices.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Uplink | Port to use as uplink for the device. |
Note: Selecting None
will disable uplink traffic.
The ADSL view allows you to configure ADSL devices.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable devices.
When a particular device is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Name | Name of the device. |
VPI | ATM Virtual Path Identifier. |
VCI | ATM Virtual Channel Identifier. |
DSL Link Type | EoA / PPPoE / IPoE. |
Encapsulation Mode | LLC SNAP / VC-MUX. |
Service Type | Service Type. |
Bridge | Setting to enable network bridge use. |
Service types define the guaranteed level of service in a ATM network. This involves such things as the timing between the source and destination, the guaranteed bandwidth and how many cells get lost in transmission.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
UBR without PCR | Use Unspecified Bit Rate without Peak Cell Rate. |
UBR with PCR | Use Unspecified Bit Rate with Peak Cell Rate. |
CBR | Use Constant Bit Rate. |
Non-Realtime VBR | Use Non-Real-Time Variable Bit Rate. |
Realtime VBR | Use Real-Time Variable Bit Rate. |
The VDSL view allows you to configure VDSL devices.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable devices.
When a particular device is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Name | Name of the device. |
DSL Latency Path | DSL Latency Path 1, 2 or both 1 & 2. |
PTM Priority | Normal or High PTM Priority . |
IP QoS Schedule Algorithm | Strict Priority Precedence / Weighted Fair Queuing. |
Bridge | Setting to enable network bridge use. |
The DSL Latency Path comes in three modes: Path 1 (Fast), Path 2 (Interleaved) and Both 1 & 2. Fast is used for applications sensitive to delay. Interleaved suits applications sensitive to errors.
The PTM Proprity defines how PTM traffic packets should be handled.
Priority | Description |
---|---|
Normal Priority | Send packets according to their priority. |
High Priority | Use preemption; lower-priority packets are paused when higher-priority packets are sent. |
The IP Quality of Service Algorithm determines which type of QoS to provide.
Strict Priority Precedence means that where the the packets with the highest priority always are sent first.
Weighted Fair Queuing means that bandwidth is adjusted automatically according to traffic priority and weight value.
The VLAN view allows you to configure VLAN devices.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable devices.
When a particular device is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Name | Name of the device. |
Base Device | Base Device to create interface for. |
802.1q | 802_1q tag. |
802.1p | 802_1q priority. |
IEEE 802.1Q is a standard for Ethernet VLANs where VLANs are given a numeric tag. The tag is used to identify traffic in networks, and decide how to handle it.
This allows multiple bridged networks to share the same physical link without leaking information to each other networks.
802.1p is a standard for priority levels, identifying the class of service a VLAN is to be used for. There are 8 different levels, numbered from 0 to 7.
Priority | Acronym | Traffic types | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
0 | BK | Background | Lowest |
1 | BE | Best Effort | |
2 | EE | Excellent Effort | |
3 | CA | Critical Applications | |
4 | VI | Video | < 100 ms latency and jitter |
5 | VO | Voice | < 10 ms latency and jitter |
6 | IC | Internetwork Control | |
7 | NC | Network Control | Highest |
The xDSL view allows you to configure line settings and profiles.
The xDSL settings are divided into several tabs.
The modulation tab lets you turn various line modulations on or off.
Profile | Description | Down Mbit/s | Up Mbit/s |
---|---|---|---|
G.Dmt | G.Dmt modulation. | 12 | 1.3 |
G.lite | G.lite modulation. | 1.5 | 0.5 |
T.1413 | T.1413 modulation. | 8.1 | 1.5 |
ADSL2 | ADSL2 modulation. | 12 | 1.0 |
AnnexL | AnnexL modulation. | 5 | 0.8 |
ADSL2+ | ADSL2+ modulation. | 24 | 1.0 |
AnnexM | AnnexM modulation. | 24 | 3.5 |
VDSL2 | VDSL2 modulation. | 100 | 100 |
The VDSL Profile tab lets you turn various VDSL2 profiles on or off.
Profile | Bandwidth (MHz) | Downstream carriers | Carrier bandwidth (kHz) | Maximum downstream transmit power (dBm) | Max. downstream throughput (Mbit/s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8a | 8.832 | 2048 | 4.3125 | +17.5 | 50 |
8b | 8.832 | 2048 | 4.3125 | +20.5 | 50 |
8c | 8.5 | 1972 | 4.3125 | +11.5 | 50 |
8d | 8.832 | 2048 | 4.3125 | +14.5 | 50 |
12a | 12 | 2783 | 4.3125 | +14.5 | 68 |
12b | 12 | 2783 | 4.3125 | +14.5 | 68 |
17a | 17.664 | 4096 | 4.3125 | +14.5 | 100 |
The capabilites tab lets you turn various xDSL capabilites on or off.
Profile | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
US0 | Upstream 0 Band. | 20 to 138 kHz |
Bitswap | Bitswap. | Used for DMT modulation. |
SRA | Seamless Rate Adaptation. |
The Connections view allows you configure various connection interfaces to use in your device.
This page allows to configure IP addresses used in your home network. In case DHCP is used, your router automatically assignes an IP address to devices connected to the network.
The page contains a list of interfaces, with one widget for each interface.
To turn a connection on:
To turn a connection off:
To change the settings for a connection:
The connection editor is shown below the connection list.
You can view, manage and configure the settings for interfaces from the connections page.
To change the settings for a connection:
To add new connection interface:
The new interface dialog is shown.
The Create New Network Interface wizard allows you to create a new interface according to your needs through a number of dialogs.
The Create New Network Interface wizard allows you to create a new interface according to your needs through a number of dialogs.
The dialog is a wizard where you add information in several steps.
The number of steps and their contents varies depending on the type of interface you create.
Note: As a last step you finalize the setup, but you can further edit the settings from the connections page.
In the first step, you can choose the type of interface: Uplink
, Downlink
, or Unmanaged
.
Depending on your choice in the first step, different options become available.
An uplink interface type is an interface to services.
A Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet connection uses PPPoE to establish the network.
A Point-to-Point Protocol over ATM connection uses PPPoA to establish the network.
A Dual-Stack Lite connection uses DS-Lite through an Address Family Transition Router to establish the network.
A Point-to-Point Protocol over L2TP connection uses PPP and L2TP server to establish the network.
A Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN), is a wireless network that extends over a large geographical distance.
High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) is an extension of 3G mobile networks utilizing WCDMA.
Evolved High Speed Packet Access (HSPA+) is a furhter improvement on HSPA allowing for higher speeds.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
An DHCP v4 connection uses an IPv4 address provided by a DHCP server.
Internet Protocol Version 4 - IPv4 - is the first major version of the Internet Protocol.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol, adapter and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
Ethernet Adapter | Base Device to create interface for. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
An DHCP v6 connection uses an IPv6 address provided by a DHCP server.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol, adapter and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
Ethernet Adapter | Base Device to create interface for. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol connection uses PPP to establish the network.
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) is a protocol for providing a direct data link connection with authentication, encryption and compression.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet connection uses PPPoE to establish the network.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Ethernet Adapter | Base Device to create interface for. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol over ATM connection uses PPPoA to establish the network.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Ethernet Adapter | Base Device to create interface for. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
Third-generation wireless telephone technology (3G), is a cellular network for digital mobile data communication for broadband traffic.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PTPT) is a technology for virtual private networks through TCP and a GRE with PPP packets.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A IPv6 Tunnel in IPv4 connection uses IPv4 to transmit IPv6 traffic.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A IPv6 Tunnel to IPv4 connection uses IPv4 to transmit IPv6 traffic.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A IPv6 rapid deployment interface for IPv4 infrastructures.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A Dual-Stack Lite connection uses DS-Lite through an Address Family Transition Router to establish the network.
Dual-Stack Lite (DS-Lite) is a method for sharing of IPv4 addresses by combining IPv4-in-IPv6 and NAT.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol over L2TP connection uses PPP and L2TP server to establish the network.
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) is a protocol for providing a direct data link connection with authentication, encryption and compression.
Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) is a protocol used to support VPNs, where security is provided in the transmitted packages rather than in the tunneling.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Name | Name for the interface. |
Interface Type | Select interface protocol type. |
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Select protocol. |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
A Downlink interface is an interface to subscribers/clients.
In the final step you select protocol and firewall settings for the interface.
Item | Description | Applies to |
---|---|---|
Interface Type | Select interface type (Standalone / Anywan / Bridge ). | |
Physical Device | Device(s) to use for the connection. | |
Add network to a firewall zone | Connects interface to firewall zone. |
For Standalone
, you need to select the base device to use for the connection.
For Anywan
and Bridge
, you need to add a physical device to use for the connection.
Item | Description | Applies to |
---|---|---|
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. | Standalone |
Add Device | Dialog to select network device to use for the connection. | Anywan / Bridge |
The Select Network Device dialog is shown.
The interface protocol type Unmanaged means that the connection has no defined protocol.
In the first step you select basic settings for the interface.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Interface Type | Select interface type. |
Add/Remove Devices | Select interface protocol type. |
The Add Device dialog is shown.
You can view, manage and configure the settings for interfaces from the connections page.
To edit a connection:
The Connection Section is displayed at the bottom of the page.
The connection section consists of a number of tabs, showing details the connection.
Depending on connection type the tabs will be different, but the standard tabs are General, Physical Settings, and Advanced.
Additional tabs become visible as they are needed.
A Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet connection uses PPPoE to establish the network.
A Point-to-Point Protocol over ATM connection uses PPPoA to establish the network.
A IPv6 rapid deployment interface for IPv4 infrastructures.
Edit (ade:network:connections:6rd:start)
A Dual-Stack Lite connection uses DS-Lite through an Address Family Transition Router to establish the network.
A Point-to-Point Protocol over L2TP connection uses PPP and L2TP server to establish the network.
The default LAN connection is a DHCP v4 connection using a static IPv4 address.
Internet Protocol Version 4 - IPv4 - is the first major version of the Internet Protocol.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
The protocol section contains detailed settings for the connection.
The IPv4 section contains IP configuration.
Item | Description |
---|---|
IPv4 Address | Device DHCP address |
IPv4 Subnet Mask | IPv4 Subnet Mask |
IPv4 Broadcast Mask | IPv4 Broadcast Mask |
The IPv6 section contains IP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IPv6 Assignment Length | Number betwen 48 and 64 . |
|
IPv6 Assigned Prefix Hint | Hexadecimal number between 1 and FFFF |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Interface type | The connection interface type. |
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
These DNS entries will be applied on the interface
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
Note: These custom DNS entries only affect the interface where they are added.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The DHCP tab allows you to enable and use a specific DHCP server for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
DHCP Server | Turn DHCP Server on or off. |
DHCP Pool Start | Start IP number for the DHCP Pool start number IP address |
DHCP Pool Size | Number of IP addresses in the DHCP Pool |
DHCP Lease Time | DHCP Lease Time for the LAN. |
To view more details for a section, click the expand button.
The Static DHCP section lets you configure IP address DHCP Leases for connected devices.
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
DHCP options | DHCP option ID:s to apply. | |
Dynamic DHCP | Dynamically allocate client addresses. | If disabled, only configured static clients are served. |
Force | Forces DHCP serving on the specified interface even if another DHCP server is detected on the same network segment. |
To add DHCP option as needed:
The Static DHCP section lets you configure IP address DHCP Leases for connected devices.
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
Add a device to the static DHCP list | ||
Device Name | Hostname for IPv4 | |
MAC Address | Client MAC Address. | |
IP Address | IP address for IPv4 | |
DUID | DUID for IPv6 | |
Host ID | Host ID for IPv6 | |
Tag | Tag with further DHCP Options as configured in the DHCP/DNS tags settings. |
To add a static DHCP lease:
The information for existing client is added automatically.
The default WAN connection uses an IPv4 address provided by a DHCP server.
Internet Protocol Version 4 - IPv4 - is the first major version of the Internet Protocol.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Hostname | Hostname to use for DHCP requests. |
Create default route | Automatically generated routing information. |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Interface type | The connection interface type. |
Add/Remove Devices | Devices to associate with the connection. |
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use broadcast flag | Add broadcast flag to traffic. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
Item | Description |
---|---|
Additional DHCP options to request from the server | DHCP option ID:s for additional options. |
Client ID to send when requesting DHCP | Custom ID to use for DHCP requests. |
Vendor Class to send when requesting DHCP | Use for device-specific DHCP options. |
The default WAN6 connection is a IPv6 address provided by a DHCP server.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Request IPv6 Address | Try / Force / None |
Request Prefix Length | 48 / 52 / 56 / 60 / 64 / Auto / Disabled |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Interface type | The connection interface type. |
Add/Remove Devices | Devices to associate with the connection. |
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
Item | Description |
---|---|
Custom delegated IPv6-prefix | Prefix for prefix delegation. |
Client ID to send when requesting DHCP | Custom ID to use for DHCP requests. |
An unmanaged connection has no predefined protocol for the connection.
The interface protocol type Unmanaged means that the connection has no defined protocol.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The bridge devices section lets you add or remove bridged devices to the connection.
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
A static address uses a fixed IP address for the connection.
A static IP address is an address that doesn't change, unless manually changed by the administrator.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
The protocol section contains detailed settings for the connection.
The IPv4 section contains IP configuration.
Item | Description |
---|---|
IPv4 Address | Device DHCP address |
IPv4 Subnet Mask | IPv4 Subnet Mask |
IPv4 Broadcast Mask | IPv4 Broadcast Mask |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The IPv6 section contains IP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IPv6 Assignment Length | Number betwen 48 and 64 . |
|
IPv6 Assigned Prefix Hint | Hexadecimal number between 1 and FFFF |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Interface type | The connection interface type. |
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
The DHCP tab allows you to enable and use a specific DHCP server for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
DHCP Server | Turn DHCP Server on or off. |
DHCP Pool Start | Start IP number for the DHCP Pool start number IP address |
DHCP Pool Size | Number of IP addresses in the DHCP Pool |
DHCP Lease Time | DHCP Lease Time for the LAN. |
Static DHCP | Reserve an IP address DHCP Lease for a connected device. |
An DHCP v4 connection uses an IPv4 address provided by a DHCP server.
Internet Protocol Version 4 - IPv4 - is the first major version of the Internet Protocol.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Hostname | Hostname to use for DHCP requests. |
Create default route | Automatically generated routing information. |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Interface type | The connection interface type. |
Add/Remove Devices | Devices to associate with the connection. |
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use broadcast flag | Add broadcast flag to traffic. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
Item | Description |
---|---|
Additional DHCP options to request from the server | DHCP option ID:s for additional options. |
Client ID to send when requesting DHCP | Custom ID to use for DHCP requests. |
Vendor Class to send when requesting DHCP | Use for device-specific DHCP options. |
An DHCP v6 connection uses an IPv6 address provided by a DHCP server.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Request IPv6 Address | Try / Force / None |
Request Prefix Length | 48 / 52 / 56 / 60 / 64 / Auto / Disabled |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Interface type | The connection interface type. |
Add/Remove Devices | Devices to associate with the connection. |
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
Item | Description |
---|---|
Custom delegated IPv6-prefix | Prefix for prefix delegation. |
Client ID to send when requesting DHCP | Custom ID to use for DHCP requests. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol connection uses PPP to establish the network.
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) is a protocol for providing a direct data link connection with authentication, encryption and compression.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Hostname | Hostname to use for DHCP requests. |
Create default route | Automatically generated routing information. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Enable IPv6 on the PPP link | Enables IPv6 connection from the provider. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The LCP options section contains LCP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
LCP echo failure threshold | Number of echo failures before peer is considered dead. | Use 0 to ignore failures. |
LCP echo interval | How often to send echo-requests. | Used together with failure threshold. |
Inactivity timeout | Time until inactive connection is closed. | Use 0 to persist connection. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet connection uses PPPoE to establish the network.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Enable IPv6 on the PPP link | Enables IPv6 connection from the provider. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The LCP options section contains LCP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
LCP echo failure threshold | Number of echo failures before peer is considered dead. | Use 0 to ignore failures. |
LCP echo interval | How often to send echo-requests. | Used together with failure threshold. |
Inactivity timeout | Time until inactive connection is closed. | Use 0 to persist connection. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol over ATM connection uses PPPoA to establish the network.
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Hostname | Hostname to use for DHCP requests. |
Create default route | Automatically generated routing information. |
The physical settings tab contains settings for hardware management and devices for the connection.
Section | Description |
---|---|
Ethernet Adapter | Selector for base device to use for the connection. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Enable IPv6 on the PPP link | Enables IPv6 connection from the provider. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The LCP options section contains LCP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
LCP echo failure threshold | Number of echo failures before peer is considered dead. | Use 0 to ignore failures. |
LCP echo interval | How often to send echo-requests. | Used together with failure threshold. |
Inactivity timeout | Time until inactive connection is closed. | Use 0 to persist connection. |
Third-generation wireless telephone technology (3G), is a cellular network for digital mobile data communication for broadband traffic.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Modem device | Modem to use for 3G traffic. |
Service Type | Both UMTS and GPRS / Only UMTS / Only GPRS. |
APN | Access Point Name. |
PIN-Code | PIN code for identification. |
PAP/CHAP Username | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
PAP/CHAP Password | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Enable IPv6 on the PPP link | Enables IPv6 connection from the provider. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Modem Init timeout | Use DHCP DNS server. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The LCP options section contains LCP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
LCP echo failure threshold | Number of echo failures before peer is considered dead. | Use 0 to ignore failures. |
LCP echo interval | How often to send echo-requests. | Used together with failure threshold. |
Inactivity timeout | Time until inactive connection is closed. | Use 0 to persist connection. |
A Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN), is a wireless network that extends over a large geographical distance.
High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) is an extension of 3G mobile networks utilizing WCDMA.
Evolved High Speed Packet Access (HSPA+) is a furhter improvement on HSPA allowing for higher speeds.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device in use. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Item | Description |
---|---|
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Modem device | Modem to use for WWAN traffic. |
APN | Access Point Name. |
PIN-Code | PIN code for identification. |
Authentication type | PAP / CHAP / Both / None . |
Username | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
Password | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
Modes | Comma-separated list of allowed network modes (all / lte / umts / gsm / cdma / td-scdma). |
Delay | Seconds to wait before trying to interact with the modem. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Fourth-generation wireless telephone technology (4G), is a cellular network for digital mobile data communication for high-speed broadband.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Modem device | Modem to use for 4G traffic. |
APN | Access Point Name. |
PIN-Code | PIN code for identification. |
PAP/CHAP Username | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
PAP/CHAP Password | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
Hostname to send when requesting DHCP | Hostname to include in DHCP requests. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use broadcast flag | Add broadcast flag to traffic. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Client ID to send when requesting DHCP | Custom ID to use for DHCP requests. | |
Vendor Class to send when requesting DHCP | Use for device-specific DHCP options. |
Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PTPT) is a technology for virtual private networks through TCP and a GRE with PPP packets.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
VPN Server | Virtual Private Network server. |
PAP/CHAP Username | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
PAP/CHAP Password | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Enable IPv6 on the PPP link | Enables IPv6 connection from the provider. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
The LCP options section contains LCP configuration.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
LCP echo failure threshold | Number of echo failures before peer is considered dead. | Use 0 to ignore failures. |
LCP echo interval | How often to send echo-requests. | Used together with failure threshold. |
Inactivity timeout | Time until inactive connection is closed. | Use 0 to persist connection. |
A IPv6 Tunnel in IPv4 connection uses IPv4 to transmit IPv6 traffic.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Local IPv4 address | IPv4 address to use instead of WAN address. |
Remote IPv4 address | Address to use tunnel broker Point of Presence |
Local IPv6 address | Endpoint provided by the tunnel broker. |
IPv6 routed prefix | Prefix to be used by clients. |
Dynamic tunnel | Dynamic update of endpoint. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use TTL on tunnnel interface | Data Time To Live. |
A IPv6 Tunnel to IPv4 connection uses IPv4 to transmit IPv6 traffic.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Local IPv4 address | IPv4 address to use instead of WAN address. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use TTL on tunnnel interface | Data Time To Live. |
A IPv6 rapid deployment interface for IPv4 infrastructures.
Edit (ade:network:connections:6rd:start)
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
Local IPv4 address | IPv4 address to use instead of WAN address. |
Remote IPv4 address | Address to the relay. |
IPv6 prefix | Prefix assigned to provider. |
IPv6 prefix length | no or 48 to 64 |
IPv4 prefix length | Up to 43 bits. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use TTL on tunnnel interface | Data Time To Live. |
A Dual-Stack Lite connection uses DS-Lite through an Address Family Transition Router to establish the network.
Dual-Stack Lite (DS-Lite) is a method for sharing of IPv4 addresses by combining IPv4-in-IPv6 and NAT.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
DS-Lite AFTR address | Address to Address Family Transition Router. |
Local IPv6 address | IPv6 address to use instead of WAN address. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Tunnel Link | Connection to use as tunnel link. |
Use TTL on tunnnel interface | Data Time To Live. |
A Point-to-Point Protocol over L2TP connection uses PPP and L2TP server to establish the network.
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) is a protocol for providing a direct data link connection with authentication, encryption and compression.
Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) is a protocol used to support VPNs, where security is provided in the transmitted packages rather than in the tunneling.
The general tab contains status information and settings relating to the protocol.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Status | Connection status. |
Device | Device for the connection. |
Protocol | Protocol in use. |
L2TP Server | Address to Layer 2 Tunneling Protoco server. |
PAP/CHAP Username | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
PAP/CHAP Password | For authentication with PAP or CHAP. |
The advanced tab contains settings for management of advanced features for the connection.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Bring up on boot | Start the connection when device starts. |
Use gateway metric | Gateway metric to use. |
Override MAC address | Enforced MAC address to use. |
Override MTU | MTU size to use. |
Enable IPv6 on the PPP link | Enables IPv6 connection from the provider. |
Use default gateway | Use default route. |
Use DNS servers advertised by peer | Use DHCP DNS server. |
You can add as many custom DNS servers as you like, but they must be unique.
To add a custom DNS server:
To remove a custom DNS server:
Static routes are useful if you have several networks accessible from your router and you want to correctly route packets between them.
To add a static route:
The IPv4 section lets you add static routes for IPv4 .
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
Interface | Affected connection for the route. | |
Target | Destination IP address. | |
Netmask | Applicable netmask. | |
Gateway | IP address to the internet gateway. | |
Metric | Route metric. | |
MTU | MTU size to use. | |
Delete | Remove route. |
The IPv6 section lets you add static routes for IPv6 .
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
Interface | Affected connection for the route. | |
Target | Destination IP address. | |
Gateway | IP address to the internet gateway. | |
Metric | Route metric. | |
MTU | MTU size to use. | |
Delete | Remove route. |
The firewall lets you filter traffic, set up port forwarding or expose particular services to the outside world.
Port Forwarding allows remote computers to connect to a specific device within your private network.
A local network device can be made an Exposed Host. It is placed in the DMZ outside of the firewall, which provides unrestricted Internet access to the network device.
The general settings view allows you to turn the firewall on or off.
To enable the firewall:
The Zones view lets you can configure firewall zones to group your firewall rules.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable zones.
By default this list contains the LAN and WAN zones, which contain default settings for local and Internet traffic.
When a particular interface is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Name | Identifier for the zone. |
Default policy | Default behavior for various traffic. |
Masquerading | Enable firewall masquerading. |
MSS Clamping | MSS Clamping limit. |
Allow forward to destination zones | Check zones to permit forwarding. |
Allow forward from source zones | Check zones to permit forwarding. |
Zone members | Interfaces that are part of the zone. |
The default policy setting defines firewall rules that apply unless specific rules override them.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Input | Incoming traffic from WAN. |
Output | Outgoing traffic to WAN. |
Forward | Traffic from LAN to WAN. |
The different default policy values determine the firewall behavior, through the firewall actions:
The firewall action defines how traffic is handled by the firewall.
Item | Description |
---|---|
ACCEPT | Allow the traffic. |
REJECT | Refuse the traffic. |
DROP | Ignore the traffic. |
FORWARD | Pass the traffic along. |
To add a firewall zone:
Once the zone has been created, you can use it with your connections.
If you have networks/devices set up, you can add them to the zone.
To add a device as a zone member:
The Select network device dialog opens.
Firewall rules are more fine grained filtering rules for filtering your traffic.
The page shows the configured rules. Each rule can be modified by clicking the Edit button.
Once you have chosen to edit one rule, the edit view is shown consistently, and you can quickly switch between configured rules by selecting them in the list.
When a particular interface is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Enabled | Turn firewall rule on or off. | |
Expose To | Users with access to the rule. | |
Name | Identifier for the rule. |
Where applicable, the configuration is divided into separate sections for source and destination zones.
A new rule named new_rule
is added at the bottom of the list.
The firewall rules are applied in order from top to bottom in the list.
You can rearrange the rules by using the buttons:
Move up | ||
Move down |
A number of sample firewall rules are enabled by default, providing a basic set of filtering for the network.
Rule | Purpose |
---|---|
Allow-Ping | Permit ping from WAN to device. |
Allow-DHCP-Renew | Permit traffic from WAN to any zone. |
Allow-IGMP | Permit IGMP traffic from WAN to IPv4 devices. |
Allow-DHCPv6 | Permit IPV6 traffic from WAN to IPV6 device. |
Allow-MLD | Permit MLD traffic over ICMP from WAN to IPV6 devices. |
Allow-ICMPv6-Input | Permit ICMP traffic from WAN to IPV6 devices. |
Allow-ICMPv6-Forward | Permit ICMP traffic from WAN to any zone. |
Allow-IPsec/ESP | Permit IPsec over ESP traffic from WAN to LAN. |
Allow-ISAKMP-Passthrough | Permit ISAKMP over UDP traffic from WAN to LAN. |
Port Forwarding allows remote computers to connect to a specific device within your private network.
The forwarding list shows information about any configured port forwarding rules.
The Add or Edit Port Mapping view allows you to add or change port mapping settings.
The Add or Edit Port Mapping view allows you to add or change port mapping settings.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Rule Name | Rule name. | |
Source Zone | Incoming zone. | |
Destination Zone | Destination zone. | |
Source IP Address | Source IP address (for filtering). | |
Dst. Device | Client hostname. | |
Dst. IP Address | Client IP address. | |
Protocol | Mapping protocol | (UDP / TCP / TCP + UDP ). |
Public port(s) | Public (external) port. | |
Private port(s) | Private (client) port. | |
NAT Loopback | Enable NAT Loopback |
The protocol setting filters traffic by protocol for the port forward.
To map incoming connections:
The port mapping dialog lets you add configuration settings for the mapping.
Ports can be added one by one (80
) or as ranges (21:22
).
Your information is saved and is visible in the mapping list.
A local network device can be made an Exposed Host. It is placed in the DMZ outside of the firewall, which provides unrestricted Internet access to the network device.
WAN IP Address | Public IPv4 and IPv6 address for the DMZ. |
Host IPv4 Address | IPv4 of device to place in DMZ. |
Host IPv6 Address | IPv6 of device to place in DMZ. |
Select Existing Host | Dropmenu to select connected devices. |
To allow DMZ/exposed host:
Note: You should also configure the DMZ IP address as static DHCP address for your device.
Parental control is used to restrict access to the network for particular devices.
Parental control is handled by setting schedules where access is restricted to explicitly named MAC addresses.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Weekdays | List of days the filter applies. |
Start Time | Time of day to start filtering. |
Stop Time | Time of day to stop filtering. |
Host Names | List of devices / MAC addresses. |
The Add / Edit MAC Filter Scheduling view allows you to add or change parental control rules.
The Add / Edit MAC Filter Scheduling view allows you to add or change parental control rules.
Item | Comment | Comment |
---|---|---|
Time Frame | Quick select for time predefined time periods. | Individual Days /Every Day /Every Workday /All Weekend |
Item | Description |
---|---|
Weekdays | List of days the filter applies. |
Start Time | Time of day to start filtering. |
Stop Time | Time of day to stop filtering. |
Mac List | Dropdown to select list of devices / MAC addresses to include in the rule. |
The start time for a rule has to be lower than the end time.
If you want to have a rule that goes over midnight, you need to add two rules, one up until midnight, and one from midnight to when you want the rule to end.
For example:
Rule one: From 21:00
To 23:59
Rule two: From 00:00
To 06:00
A single rule of From 21:00
To 06:00
will not be saved.
The Quality Of Service view allows you to configure parameters for Quality of Service through applying groups of classes to interfaces.
The interface tab lets you select interfaces and configure Quality of Service profiles for them.
The Classification Group tab lets you manage groupings of QoS classes.
classgroup blocks are used to define different class groupings. This is only really useful if you wish to have multiple interfaces with different class considerations, for example, you might want eth1 to have an ultrapriority class or something.
This is useful when you have multiple interfaces and want to manage classes differently for them.
The Reclassify tab lets you configure filtering parameters in order to redefine types of traffic to include in which Class.
Reclassification can override the class on a per packet basis without altering the defined classification .
In order to use Quality of Service on the traffic for your device, you need to perform a number of configurations.
The classes define how network traffic is to be prioritized and allocated.
There are a number of predefined classes, but you can add your own.
In order to direct traffic to the correct classes, you need to define classificaton rules in the Classify tab.
Since the classification only affects connections that haven't already been classified you may also need to apply filters in the Reclassify tab.
With the classes defined, you can add and order them in a class group in the Class Group tab.
If you have multiple interfaces, and want different QoS settings for them, you can create multiple class groups.
In order to use Quality of Service on the traffic for your device, you need to perform a number of configurations.
The order of operations involved in configuring QoS is different from the order in which the interface displays the setting tabs. Not all settings are needed in all cases.
The classes define how network traffic is to be prioritized and allocated.
There are a number of predefined classes, but you can add your own.
In order to direct traffic to the correct classes, you need to define classificaton rules in the Classify tab.
Since the classification only affects connections that haven't already been classified you may also need to apply filters in the Reclassify tab.
With the classes defined, you can add and order them in a class group in the Class Group tab.
If you have multiple interfaces, and want different QoS settings for them, you can create multiple class groups.
The classes define how network traffic is to be prioritized and allocated.
There are a number of predefined classes, but you can add your own.
There are a number of predefined classes QoS classes. Each class is a set of definitions for a token bucket.
The predefined classes can be edited and all values changed, but they have default settings that should be suitable in normal cases.
The priority class is an upstream class for high priority traffic such as handshaking and ICMP packets.
The Priority_down class is an downstream class for high priority traffic.
The Express class is for interactive applications that require bandwidth above standard services so that interactive apps run smoothly.
The Normal Class is the standard upstream class for all services.
This class will apply to all services not otherwise defined.
The Normal_down class is the standard downstream class for all services.
This class will apply to all services not otherwise defined.
The bulk class is suitable for very low priority traffic. It will be allocated available bandwidth if other classes are idle. When other classes are active, it will be allocated bandwidth according to the priority setting.
It is suitable for transfer services such as (P2P and FTP).
The class tab lets you manage QoS classes.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classes.
When a particular class is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Priority | Bandwidth allocation limit (%). | |
Average Rate | Average target rate (%). | |
Limit Rate | Maximum allowed bandwidth (%). | |
Packet Size | Size of packets (bytes). | See note. |
Packet Delay | Target delay for packets (ms). | See note. |
Max Size | Maximum size of packets (bytes). |
Note: Packet Size and Packet Delay rely on the Average Rate setting. The average rate is impacted by the maximum packet delay and the transfer time for the packet size. Generally the delay is lower for smaller packet sizes.
The Priority indicates the bandwidth allocation limit as a percentage of total available bandwidth.
ls m2 = priority / sum (priority) * max_bandwidth
The Limit Rate provides a maximum allowed bandwidth, expressed as a percentage of the total available bandwidth.
ul rate = limitrate * max_bandwidth / 100
The Average target rate is a percentage of the total available bandwidth.
Average rate for this class, value in % of bandwidth (this value uses for calculate vaues
'Nx' of 'tc … hfsc rt m1 N1 d N2 m2 N3'
Note: Packet Size and Packet Delay rely on the Average Rate setting. The average rate is impacted by the maximum packet delay and the transfer time for the packet size. Generally the delay is lower for smaller packet sizes.
Size of packets (bytes).
packetsize & packetdelay: (only works if avgrate is present)
rt d = max( packetdelay, 'time required for packetsize to transfer') ls d = rt d
Target delay for packets (ms).
The maximum size of packets indicates the maximum packet size in iptables.
In order to direct traffic to the correct classes, you need to define classificaton rules in the Classify tab.
Since the classification only affects connections that haven't already been classified you may also need to apply filters in the Reclassify tab.
The classify tab lets you configure filtering parameters in order to define types of traffic to include in which Class.
Classification assigns a class to traffic in a connection, but only affect connections which have not been assigned a traffic class already.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classification groups.
When a particular group is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Adding a parameter will filter out traffic according to the parameters and assign it to the group.
Item | Description | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|
Target | Classification Group to assign. | As configured in classification group settings | |
Protocol | Protocol affected. | All / UDP / TCP / ICMP | |
Source Host | Originating host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Destination Host | Receiving host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Ports | Settings for ports filtering. | Port /Source /Destination /Port range | |
Direction | Direction of traffic to be affected by the classificaton. | Both /In /Out | |
Connbytes | Connection Bytes for when to start filtering. |
The Reclassify tab lets you configure filtering parameters in order to redefine types of traffic to include in which Class.
Reclassification can override the class on a per packet basis without altering the defined classification .
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classification groups.
When a particular group is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Adding a parameter will filter out traffic according to the parameters and assign it to the group.
Item | Description | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|
Target | Classification Group to assign. | As configured in classification group settings | |
Protocol | Protocol affected. | All / UDP / TCP / ICMP | |
Source Host | Originating host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Destination Host | Receiving host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Ports | Settings for ports filtering. | Port /Source /Destination /Port range | |
Direction | Direction of traffic to be affected by the classificaton. | Both /In /Out | |
Connbytes | Connection Bytes for when to start filtering. | ||
Precedence | Quality of service parameters relating for precedence. | ||
Packet Size | Size of packets to match. | Minimum size From or From -To range. | |
Mark | Hexadecimal mark code to att to the packets. (0x000000 -0xFFFFFF ) | ||
TCP flags | TCP Flags to match. | SYN /ACK /FIN /RST /URG /PSH |
With the classes defined, you can add and order them in a class group in the Class Group tab.
If you have multiple interfaces, and want different QoS settings for them, you can create multiple class groups.
The Classification Group tab lets you manage groupings of QoS classes.
classgroup blocks are used to define different class groupings. This is only really useful if you wish to have multiple interfaces with different class considerations, for example, you might want eth1 to have an ultrapriority class or something.
This is useful when you have multiple interfaces and want to manage classes differently for them.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classification groups.
When a particular group is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Default Class | Class to use as fallback if packets don't match any other class. | |
Classes | Classes to include in the group. | Note: You need to create a class for it to be available in the list. |
The Default Classgroup contains these standard classes: - Priority - Express - Normal - Bulk
As a final step, you enable QoS for the desired interface in the Interface tab.
The interface tab lets you select interfaces and configure Quality of Service profiles for them.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable interfaces.
When a particular interface is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|
Enable QoS | Turn the Quality of Service on for the interface. | ||
Classification Group | Classification group to use for the interface. | Note: You need to create the group for it to be available in the list. | |
Calculate Overhead | Include overhead in the packet calculations for shaping and policing. | ||
Limit Download Speed | Restrict the network speed to clients. | ||
Limit Upload Speed | Restrict the network speed from clients. |
The class tab lets you manage QoS classes.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classes.
When a particular class is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Priority | Bandwidth allocation limit (%). | |
Average Rate | Average target rate (%). | |
Limit Rate | Maximum allowed bandwidth (%). | |
Packet Size | Size of packets (bytes). | See note. |
Packet Delay | Target delay for packets (ms). | See note. |
Max Size | Maximum size of packets (bytes). |
Note: Packet Size and Packet Delay rely on the Average Rate setting. The average rate is impacted by the maximum packet delay and the transfer time for the packet size. Generally the delay is lower for smaller packet sizes.
You can add as many classes as you like.
To add a class:
There are a number of predefined classes QoS classes. Each class is a set of definitions for a token bucket.
The predefined classes can be edited and all values changed, but they have default settings that should be suitable in normal cases.
The priority class is an upstream class for high priority traffic such as handshaking and ICMP packets.
The Priority_down class is an downstream class for high priority traffic.
The Express class is for interactive applications that require bandwidth above standard services so that interactive apps run smoothly.
The Normal Class is the standard upstream class for all services.
This class will apply to all services not otherwise defined.
The Normal_down class is the standard downstream class for all services.
This class will apply to all services not otherwise defined.
The bulk class is suitable for very low priority traffic. It will be allocated available bandwidth if other classes are idle. When other classes are active, it will be allocated bandwidth according to the priority setting.
It is suitable for transfer services such as (P2P and FTP).
The interface tab lets you select interfaces and configure Quality of Service profiles for them.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable interfaces.
When a particular interface is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|
Enable QoS | Turn the Quality of Service on for the interface. | ||
Classification Group | Classification group to use for the interface. | Note: You need to create the group for it to be available in the list. | |
Calculate Overhead | Include overhead in the packet calculations for shaping and policing. | ||
Limit Download Speed | Restrict the network speed to clients. | ||
Limit Upload Speed | Restrict the network speed from clients. |
You can add Interfaces as needed.
To add an interface:
The interface dialog opens.
The Classification Group tab lets you manage groupings of QoS classes.
classgroup blocks are used to define different class groupings. This is only really useful if you wish to have multiple interfaces with different class considerations, for example, you might want eth1 to have an ultrapriority class or something.
This is useful when you have multiple interfaces and want to manage classes differently for them.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classification groups.
When a particular group is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Default Class | Class to use as fallback if packets don't match any other class. | |
Classes | Classes to include in the group. | Note: You need to create a class for it to be available in the list. |
The Default Classgroup contains these standard classes: - Priority - Express - Normal - Bulk
You can add Classification Groups as needed.
To add a class group:
The classify tab lets you configure filtering parameters in order to define types of traffic to include in which Class.
Classification assigns a class to traffic in a connection, but only affect connections which have not been assigned a traffic class already.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classification groups.
When a particular group is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Adding a parameter will filter out traffic according to the parameters and assign it to the group.
Item | Description | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|
Target | Classification Group to assign. | As configured in classification group settings | |
Protocol | Protocol affected. | All / UDP / TCP / ICMP | |
Source Host | Originating host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Destination Host | Receiving host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Ports | Settings for ports filtering. | Port /Source /Destination /Port range | |
Direction | Direction of traffic to be affected by the classificaton. | Both /In /Out | |
Connbytes | Connection Bytes for when to start filtering. |
You can add Classification Filters as needed.
To add a filter:
The filters are prioritized in order from top to bottom in the list.
You can rearrange the classes by using the buttons:
Move up | ||
Move down |
The Reclassify tab lets you configure filtering parameters in order to redefine types of traffic to include in which Class.
Reclassification can override the class on a per packet basis without altering the defined classification .
At the top of the page is a list of selectable classification groups.
When a particular group is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Adding a parameter will filter out traffic according to the parameters and assign it to the group.
Item | Description | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|
Target | Classification Group to assign. | As configured in classification group settings | |
Protocol | Protocol affected. | All / UDP / TCP / ICMP | |
Source Host | Originating host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Destination Host | Receiving host(s) to affect. | All / Specific host | |
Ports | Settings for ports filtering. | Port /Source /Destination /Port range | |
Direction | Direction of traffic to be affected by the classificaton. | Both /In /Out | |
Connbytes | Connection Bytes for when to start filtering. | ||
Precedence | Quality of service parameters relating for precedence. | ||
Packet Size | Size of packets to match. | Minimum size From or From -To range. | |
Mark | Hexadecimal mark code to att to the packets. (0x000000 -0xFFFFFF ) | ||
TCP flags | TCP Flags to match. | SYN /ACK /FIN /RST /URG /PSH |
The filters are prioritized in order from top to bottom in the list.
You can rearrange the classes by using the buttons:
Move up | ||
Move down |
You can add Reclasssify filters as needed.
To add a filter:
The MultiWAN view allows you to create and configure WAN traffic divisions for load balancing and failover and applying traffic rules.
Using the MultiWAN feature, you can enable up to 250 WAN interfaces to:
Why should I use mwan3?
If you have multiple internet connections, you want to control which traffic goes through which WANs
Mwan3 can handle multiple levels of primary and backup interfaces, load-balanced or not. Different sources can have different primary or backup WANs.
Mwan3 uses netfilter mark mask to be compatible with other packages (such as OpenVPN, PPTP VPN, QoS-script, Tunnels, etc) as you can configure traffic to use the default routing table.
Mwan3 can also load-balance traffic originating from the router itself
The MultiWAN settings are divided into tabs.
The MultiWAN Settings tab allows you to add or edit multiple WAN connections and turn them on or off. You can also configure thresholds for WAN up/down detection and reliability monitoring.
The Members tab allows you to create member groups for interfaces, to use with policies for traffic management. The metric and weight settings are used to manage traffic in the member groups.
The Policies tab allows you to group members into policy sets for use with the traffic rules.
The Rules tab allows you to define how LAN traffic should be filtered and distributed over the available WANs.
Rules are the way the Policies are applied to the traffic. Each Rule targets packets with some kind of filter.
The Rules are applied in order from top to bottom. Multiple rules that can use the same policy but target different traffic.
As a first step, you need to add all network interfaces that should be part of the MultiWAN.
Next, each interface must have at least one member, with per interface giving it appropriate Metric and Weight.
With the members set up, you must create at least one policy containing at least two members.
In order to use the multiwan feature, you need to do a number of configurations.
The order of operations involved in configuring MultiWan is roughly the same as the order in which the interface displays the setting tabs.
As a first step, you need to add all network interfaces that should be part of the MultiWAN.
Next, each interface must have at least one member, with per interface giving it appropriate Metric and Weight.
With the members set up, you must create at least one policy containing at least two members.
As a first step, you need to add all network interfaces that should be part of the MultiWAN.
The following prerequisites apply:
The MultiWAN Settings tab allows you to add or edit multiple WAN connections and turn them on or off. You can also configure thresholds for WAN up/down detection and reliability monitoring.
Below the general settings is a list of selectable WANs.
When a particular WAN is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Enabled | Turn WAN on or off. | |
Family | Type of WAN. | IPv4 / IPv6 |
Tracking Type | Method to determine if the WAN is online. | IP / Gateway / DNS |
Host(s) to ping | List of hosts to ping. | Used to determine WAN status. If this value is not set, the interface is always considered up. |
Interface Reliability | Number of hosts that must reply for the interface to be considered up. | At least this many hosts must be defined or the interface will always be considered down. |
Number of Pings | Number of pings to send to each host. | |
Timeout | Number of seconds to wait for reply from host. | |
Interval | Number of seconds between each test. | |
Up | Number of successful tests to consider interface as up. | |
Down | Number of failed tests to consider interface as down. |
Next, each interface must have at least one member, with per interface giving it appropriate Metric and Weight.
A good way to keep track of the members and make them easier to find when applying policies, is to use a regular naming scheme.
The following scheme will provide a good structure:
<interface>_m<metric>_w<weight>
and allow you to know the setup from the name alone.
The Members tab allows you to create member groups for interfaces, to use with policies for traffic management. The metric and weight settings are used to manage traffic in the member groups.
Below the general settings is a list of selectable members.
When a particular member is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Interface | Interface configured in the settings tab. | |
Metric | Precedence metric. | Members within one policy with a lower metric have precedence over higher metric members. |
Weight | Distribution weight. | Members with same metric will distribute load based on this weight value. |
With the members set up, you must create at least one policy containing at least two members.
The Policies tab allows you to group members into policy sets for use with the traffic rules.
At the top of the page is a list of policies.
When a particular policy is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Selected members | List of members configured in the members tab. |
As the final step you can set up the rules that will govern how traffic is handled.
The Rules tab allows you to define how LAN traffic should be filtered and distributed over the available WANs.
Rules are the way the Policies are applied to the traffic. Each Rule targets packets with some kind of filter.
The Rules are applied in order from top to bottom. Multiple rules that can use the same policy but target different traffic.
At the top of the page is a list of rules.
When a particular rule is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Policy to use | Policy configured in the policies tab. | Default means the default routing table will be used. |
Any Source IP | Enable to match all origins, regardless of IP address. | |
Source Address | External target IP address. | |
Source Port | Range of ports to match. | |
Any Destination IP | Enable to match all destinations, regardless of IP address. | |
Destination Address | External target IP address. | |
Destination Port | Range of ports to match. | |
Protocol | Protocols affected by the rule. | All / TCP / UDP / ICMP |
Members is a way to define multiple ways to prioritize the Interfaces that Multiwan is using. The prioritizing is done using Metric and Weight. The Member within one policy with a lower metric have precedence over higher metric members. Members within one policy with the same metric will distribute load based on this weight value (Example weight 1 and 4 will balance the traffic so the first interface gets 20% of traffic and the second gets 80%.
Policies is just a way to hold 1 or more members.
It is NOT possible to add multiple members from the same interface if they have the same metric (if the metric are different it doesn’t make sense to add multiple members from the same interface because the one with the lowest will always be used but its allowed).
Rules are the way the Policies are applied to the traffic. Each Rule targets packets with some kind of filter. The Rules are applied in order from top to bottom, this means that there can be multiple rules that is using same or different policy that targets different traffic.
Make sure that the Host(s) to ping are reachable from the interface when the interface is working correctly and that the interface is Enabled! All network interfaces used in Multiwan must work by them self and all of them need to have a default route, this is only possible if the interfaces have different metric set in the network configuration.
A good naming practice is to name the Members <interface>m<metric>w<weight>, this way they will be easy to add to the Policies.
The MultiWAN Settings tab allows you to add or edit multiple WAN connections and turn them on or off. You can also configure thresholds for WAN up/down detection and reliability monitoring.
Below the general settings is a list of selectable WANs.
When a particular WAN is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Enabled | Turn WAN on or off. | |
Family | Type of WAN. | IPv4 / IPv6 |
Tracking Type | Method to determine if the WAN is online. | IP / Gateway / DNS |
Host(s) to ping | List of hosts to ping. | Used to determine WAN status. If this value is not set, the interface is always considered up. |
Interface Reliability | Number of hosts that must reply for the interface to be considered up. | At least this many hosts must be defined or the interface will always be considered down. |
Number of Pings | Number of pings to send to each host. | |
Timeout | Number of seconds to wait for reply from host. | |
Interval | Number of seconds between each test. | |
Up | Number of successful tests to consider interface as up. | |
Down | Number of failed tests to consider interface as down. |
You can add as many WANS as you have WAN interfaces.
To add a WAN:
A new WAN is added to the list.
The Members tab allows you to create member groups for interfaces, to use with policies for traffic management. The metric and weight settings are used to manage traffic in the member groups.
Below the general settings is a list of selectable members.
When a particular member is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Interface | Interface configured in the settings tab. | |
Metric | Precedence metric. | Members within one policy with a lower metric have precedence over higher metric members. |
Weight | Distribution weight. | Members with same metric will distribute load based on this weight value. |
You can add as many rules as you like.
To add a member:
A new rule is added to the list.
The Policies tab allows you to group members into policy sets for use with the traffic rules.
At the top of the page is a list of policies.
When a particular policy is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Selected members | List of members configured in the members tab. |
You can add as many Policies as you like.
To add a policy:
A new member is added to the list.
The Rules tab allows you to define how LAN traffic should be filtered and distributed over the available WANs.
Rules are the way the Policies are applied to the traffic. Each Rule targets packets with some kind of filter.
The Rules are applied in order from top to bottom. Multiple rules that can use the same policy but target different traffic.
At the top of the page is a list of rules.
When a particular rule is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Policy to use | Policy configured in the policies tab. | Default means the default routing table will be used. |
Any Source IP | Enable to match all origins, regardless of IP address. | |
Source Address | External target IP address. | |
Source Port | Range of ports to match. | |
Any Destination IP | Enable to match all destinations, regardless of IP address. | |
Destination Address | External target IP address. | |
Destination Port | Range of ports to match. | |
Protocol | Protocols affected by the rule. | All / TCP / UDP / ICMP |
You can add as many rules as you like.
To add a rule:
A new rule is added to the list.
The Services view allows you to configure the services connected device.
The Printer Server Settings view allows you to change different features about your printer server for connected printers.
The Printer Server Settings view allows you to change different features about your printer server for connected printers.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Enable | Turn printer server on or off. |
Interface | Interface to listen on |
Port | Port to listen on. |
Bidirectional mode | Allow printer to communicate with client. |
The MiniDLNA view lets you configure the MiniDLNA server.
For Enabled At the top of the page is a status window that can be expanded to display the current MiniDLNA status.
In the General settings tab you can change different general features about your MiniDLNA server.
For Enabled At the top of the page is a status window that can be expanded to display the current MiniDLNA status.
To view the status window, click the expand icon.
In the media library table, the number of audio, video and image files on the server is shown.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Audio files | 0 |
Video files | 0 |
Image files | 0 |
The Connected Clients table displays information about possible clients and their connections to the server.
In the General settings tab you can change different general features about your MiniDLNA server.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Port | Port for HTTP traffic. |
Network | List of interfaces to serve. |
Friendly Name | Name to display to clients. |
Root Container | Start point when browsing. |
Media Directories | File system locations for media. |
Album-Art Names | List of file names for album art. |
In the Advanced tab you can change different advanced features about your media server.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Database directory | Directory for database and cache storage. |
Log directory | Directory to store logs. |
Enable inotify | Turn Inotify on or off. |
Enable TIVO | Support for streaming files to TiVo. |
Strict to DLNA standard | Only use DLNA standard features. |
Presentation URL | Default presentation URL. |
Notify interval | Time between notification messages. |
Announced serial number | Serial number to show to clients. |
Announced model number | Model number to report to clients. |
miniSSDP socket | Path to miniSSDPd socket for SSDP. |
The UPNP view allows you to configure UPNP services.
At the top of the page is a list of currently open UPnP ports, if any.
The UPnP settings are divided into tabs.
The General tab allows you to enable and configure the service parameters.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enable UPNP | Enable UPNP protocol |
Enable NAT-PMP | Enable NAT-PMP protocol. |
Enable secure mode | Only add forwards to requesting ip addresses. |
Enable additional logging | Add extra debugging information to the system log. |
Downlink | Nominal uplink speed (KByte/s). |
Uplink | Nominal downlink speed (KByte/s). |
Port | Port for the service. |
External Interface | Interface for external access. |
Internal Interface | Interface to use for local access. |
The Advanced tab lets you configure advanced UPNP settings.
Device UUID | UUID |
Announced serial number | Serial number to show to clients. |
Announced model number | Model number to show to clients. |
Notify interval | Time between notification messages. |
Clean rules threshold | Number of rules to keep. |
Clean rules interval | Time between cleaning of UPnP rules. |
Presentation URL | Location for service control web interface. |
UPnP lease file | Location for file containing leases. |
The DDNS view allows you configure Dynamic DNS services for your device.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable services.
When a particular service is selected, details about it is shown in the connection section.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn service on or off. |
Label | Identifier in the service list. |
IP Retrieval Method | Interface / Network / Script / Web . |
Select Interface | For Interface: Interface. |
Select Connection | For Network: Connection. |
Script Path | For Script: Local path to IP detection script. |
Enter website to poll for ip address | For Web: Address to IP detection service. |
Provider | Service provider list. |
Enter DDNS Provider | Manually add service provider. |
Domain name | Full hostname to use for the device. |
Username | Service account username. |
Password | Service account password. |
Use HTTPS | USe secure communication with service. |
You can add as many DDNS Services as you like.
To add a DDNS Service:
A new service is added to the list.
The IPTV view lets you configure the IPTV server.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Differentiated Services Code Point | DSCP to use for tagging outgoing IGMP packets. |
Proxy interface | Interface to use as proxy. |
Default version | IGMP version. |
Query interval | Time between IGMP query messages. |
Query response interval | Time to wait for response to query beofre timeout. |
Last member query interval | Time between queries to determine the loss of the last member in an IGMP group. |
Robustness value | Tolerance for lost packets. |
LAN to LAN multicast | Allow multicast between LANs. |
Max groups | Maximum allowed multicastgroups. |
Max sources | Maximum allowed multicast sources. |
Max members | Maximum allowed members in a multicast group. |
Fast leave | Leave multicast groups immediately after the last host. |
Join immediate | Join group directly. |
Enable IGMP proxy | Turn on IGMP Proxy handling. |
Ignore SSM Range | Ignore SSM and deliver regular multicasting. |
IGMP snooping mode | IGMP snooping mode: Disabled / Standard / Blocking . |
IGMP snooping interfaces | Interfaces to use for IGMP snooping. |
The DHCP view lets you configure the DHCP server settings.
The DHCP settings are divided into several tabs.
The Hostname Entries tab allows you to configure hostnames for IPv4 or IPV6 addresses in the LAN.
The General tab allows you to configure the DHCP server basic settings.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Local domain | Local domain suffix appended to DHCP names and hosts file entries. | |
Log queries | Write received DNS requests to system log. | |
Leasefile | file where given DHCP leases will be stored. | |
Ignore resolve file | Do not use the local Resolve file. | |
Resolve file | Local DNS file storage. | File used by dnsmasq to find upstream name servers. |
Ignore Hosts file | Do not use the local Hosts file. | |
Hostname Entries file(s) | Path to additional host files to read for serving DNS responses. |
The Advanced tab allows you to configure advanced settings for the DHCP server.
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
Domain required | Do not forward DHCP-requests without DNS-Name. | |
Authoritative | This is the only DHCP in the local network. | |
Filter private | Do not forward reverse lookups for local networks. | |
Filter useless | Do not forward requests that cannot be answered by public name servers. | |
Localise queries | Localise hostname depending on the requesting subnet if multiple IPs are available. | |
Local server | Domain resolved from DHCP or hosts files only. | |
Expand hosts | Add local domain suffix to names served from hosts files. | |
No negative cache | Do not cache negative replies. | |
Strict order | DHCP servers will be queried in the order of the resolve file. | |
Bogus NX Domain Override | List of hosts that do not supply non-existent domain (NXDOMAIN) results. | |
DNS forwarding | List of DNS servers to forward requests to. | |
Rebind protection | Discard upstream RFC1918 responses. | |
Allow localhost | Allow upstream responses in the 127.0.0.0/8 range. | |
Domain whitelist | List of domains to allow RFC1918 responses to. | |
DNS server port | Listening port for inbound DHCP queries. | |
DNS query port | Fixed source port for outbound DNS queries. | |
Max DHCP leases | Maximum allowed number of active DHCP leases. | |
Max. EDNS0 packet size | Maximum size of EDNS0 UDP packets. | |
Max. concurrent queries | Maximum number of concurrent DNS queries. |
The Hostname Entries tab allows you to configure hostnames for IPv4 or IPV6 addresses in the LAN.
You can add as many entries as you like, and each entry can have any number of hostnames for each IP address.
To add a hostname entry:
The Classifications tab lets you add classifications for connected clients.
The classifications can be used to provide specific DHCP Options options for the classified clients, based on client parameters.
The classification can be based on client parameters:
At the top of the page is a list of configured classifications.
When a particular account is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
For all classification types, the configuration is similar:
Item | Description |
---|---|
Parameter value | Value for the classification parameter, according to its type. |
Network ID | Option value. |
ID | DHCP option ID. |
Option | Option value. |
You can add as many tags as you like.
To add a tag:
The Select type of Classification dialog opens:
The tag is added to the list.
The SNMP Configuration view lets you configure the Simple Network Management Protocol service.
The SNMP settings are divided into tabs.
The System tab lets you configure general information about the SNMP service.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Location | Physical location of the device. |
Contact | Contact information for the responsible person. |
Name | Name of the server. |
Services | Offered services. |
Description | Server description for presentation. |
Object ID | Identifier for the device. |
The Agent tab allows you to manage SNMP agents.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Agent Address | Protocol and port for the agent variable. |
You can add as many agents as you like.
To add an agent:
The Com2Sec tab lets you configure Com2Sec access profiles for the SNMP service.
Item | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Community | Community group to access. | private |
Source | Hostname or subnet. | localhost |
SecName | Access string. | rw |
You can add as many profiles as you like.
To add a profile:
The Group tab allows you to configure Com2Sec access groups for the SNMP service.
Item | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Community | Community group to access. | public |
Source | Hostname or subnet. | usm |
SecName | Access string. | ro |
You can add as many groups as you like.
To add a group:
The View tab lets you configure Com2Sec views for the SNMP service.
Item | Description |
---|---|
View Name | Name of the view. |
Type | Type of view. |
OID | Object ID |
Mask | Netmask. |
You can add as many views as you like.
To add a view:
The Access tab allows you to configure Com2Sec access directives for the SNMP service.
The access directive maps from group/security model/security level to a view.
Item | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Group | Group. | |
Context | Security name or empty. | |
Version | Version access. | any / v1 / v2c / usm |
Level | Access level. | noauth / auth / priv |
Prefix | Context matching. | exact / prefix |
Read | Read permissions | |
Write | Write permissions | |
Notify | Notify permissions. |
You can add as many acces groups as you like.
To add an access group:
Item | Description |
---|---|
Persist | Enable permanent passthrough. |
Priority | Passthrough priority. |
MIB OID | Object ID for the MIB. |
Program | Execution for the arguments. |
You can add as many passthroughs as you like.
To add a passthrough:
In the Samba view you can change settings for the Sambaserver.
The Samba settings are divided into sections.
The General section of the view allows you to change the general Samba settings, such as name, workgroup and interface.
The General section of the view allows you to change the general Samba settings, such as name, workgroup and interface.
Option | Description |
---|---|
Name | Service identifier. |
Workgroup | Service workgroup. |
Description | Description of the service. |
Interface | Interfaces to provide the service to. |
To change the interface that Samba will listen on:
The Samba Users section of the view allows you to change the user settings.
Option | Description |
---|---|
Username | user name |
Password | password |
Description | description |
To add a Samba user:
The WiFi view shows you information about your wireless network.
The WPS Settings view lets you change the default wireless security settings (WPS) to make your network more secure.
In the MAC Filter view you can make your wireless network more secure. Just specify which devices are allowed to connect, or explicitly lock out devices.
In the General WiFi view you can view and edit the wireless interface.
In the Wireless view you can view and edit the wireless interfaces.
Each radio can have up to 4 SSIDs.
The Wireless Radios view allows you to configure wireless radios installed on your system.
At the top of the page is a list of radios.
Clicking the Edit button will open the edit view for that radio.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Radio On/off | Turn radio on or off. |
WiFi Mode (SSID) | Choose wifi mode. |
Channel | Choose WiFi Channel. |
Bandwidth | Choose bandwidth. |
Scan Timer | Determine the dwell time for channel hopping. |
DFS Channels | Turn DFS channels on or off. |
Beamforming | Turn beamforming on or off. |
Airtime Fairness | Turn ATF on or off. |
Maximum Associated Stations | Maximum number of clients allowed. |
RX Chain PowerSave Quiet Time | Turn RXC PS Quiet Time on or off. |
RX Chain PowerSave PPS | Turn RXC PS PPS on or off one of the receive chains to save power. |
Enable WMM Multimedia Extensions | Turn WMM multimedia extensions on or off. |
Disable WMM Ack | Turn WMM acknowledgement on or off. |
Enable WMM UAPSD Power Saving | Turn WMM UAPSD power saving on or off. |
In the Wireless view you can view and edit the wireless interfaces.
Each radio can have up to 4 SSIDs.
At the top of the page is a list of selectable interfaces.
When a interface is selected, the edit view for the interface is shown below.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn on or off. |
WiFi Network Name | Edit name of SSID network. |
Broadcast SSID | Toggle to make network visible or invisible. |
AP isolation | Toggle to turn access point isolation on or off. |
Wireless Multicast Forwarding | Toggle to turn multicast forwarding on or off. |
Maximum Number of Connected Clients | Maximum number of connected clients. |
Encryption | Change to a different encryption method. |
Cipher | Choose form of Cipher. |
WiFi Key (Password) | Reset to default password. |
Show Key Text | Change format of wifi key text. |
The Band Steering view allows you to enable and configure band steering for the device.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Enable | Turn band steering on or off. |
Steering Policy | RSSI or bandwidth. |
Threshold | Bandwidth or RSSI threshold value. |
To enable band steering:
The Access Point Steering view allows you to enable and configure AP Steering for the device.
Note: This feature is only enabled if the device discovers another Inteno device in the same network.
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Enable | Turn AP steering on or off. | |
RSSI Threshold | Deauthentication RSSI threshold value. | Client will be de-authenticated if RSSI goes below this value. |
Reassoc Timer | Grace period in seconds. | Clients returning below the RSSI threshold are immune from de-authentication until after Retry Interval. |
Retry Interval | Timeout period in seconds. | After this time, the client can be de-authenticated. |
To enable AP Steering:
The WPS Settings view lets you change the default wireless security settings (WPS) to make your network more secure.
The WPS Settings section allows you to choose and configure different connection methods on an encrypted channel.
The WPS-PBC: Push Button on Device section lets you pair your devices.
The section WPS-REG: Device provides PIN lets you generate a personal identification number through WPS.
The section WPS-PIN: Another Device provides PIN allows you to enter a PIN provided by another device.
The section WPS-PIN: Another Device provides PIN allows you to enter a PIN provided by another device.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Enter your device PIN | Enter device PIN |
Pair (within 2 minutes) | Pair button. |
The section WPS-REG: Device provides PIN lets you generate a personal identification number through WPS.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
WPS Using Generated PIN | Turn on or off. |
Generated PIN | Generated PIN shown |
Generate PIN | Generate button. |
To generate a PIN through WPS:
The WPS Settings section allows you to choose and configure different connection methods on an encrypted channel.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
WPS Function | Turn on or off for device. |
Enable WPS on (5GHz) | Turn WPS on or off for radio. |
Enable WPS on (2.4GHz) | Turn WPS on or off for radio. |
The WPS-PBC: Push Button on Device section lets you pair your devices.
Item | Comment |
---|---|
Enable WPS button on device | Turn on or off. |
Pressing WiFi on/off button on your device for long time activates pairing | Turn on or off. |
Pair (within 2 minutes) | Pair button. |
To a device via WPS:
Your device will be open for pairing for two minutes.
In the MAC Filter view you can make your wireless network more secure. Just specify which devices are allowed to connect, or explicitly lock out devices.
Filters can be applied separately for each radio .
The devices are identified by their MAC address. You can manage up to 32 devices.
Section | Description |
---|---|
MAC Filtering | Turn filtering on or off. |
Access for listed devices | Access setting for clients in the list. |
Currently added devices | List of filtered devices. |
Add currently connected hosts ot the list | Collect all currently active devices to the list. |
To enable MAC Filtering:
The System view provides access to device information, management, provisioning and settings.
The General Settings view contains basic device settings.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Local Time | Local time for the device. |
Timezone | Device timezone setting. |
Hostname | Device hostname. |
The Firmware Upgrade view lets you upgrade the device firmware by using image files.
The IUP view allows you to set up parameters for provisioning services and configurations with Inteno Universal Provisioning.
The TR69 Settings view allows you to configure TR069 support for device management and provisioning from the WAN.
The Power Management view allows you to manage CPU effiency and Ethernet hardware ports.
The General Settings view contains basic device settings.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Local Time | Local time for the device. |
Timezone | Device timezone setting. |
Hostname | Device hostname. |
The Time Servers section shows NTP time servers in use.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Time Servers (NTP) | List of NTP servers to use. |
Server Mode | Turn NTP server mode on or off. |
To add a time server:
The Log Settings view contains settings for the system logs.
Item | Description |
---|---|
System Log Level | System Logging level |
Cron Log Level | Cron Logging level |
Kernel Log Level | Kernel Logging level |
Log File | Location to save the log file. |
Log IP | IP address of remote log server. |
Log Port | Port for the remote log server. |
Log Prefix | Prefix to use in log. |
Log Protocol | Protocol for transfer of log information (UDP / TCP). |
Log Remote | Turn remote logging on or off. |
Log Size | Max size of log in Kb. |
Trailing null | Use trailing null insted of newline when using TCP |
Log Type | Type of logging to use (circular = limited /file = unlimited number of files). |
The Connectivity Test view allows for automatic verification of the Internet connection by accessing a predefined URL.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Internet | URL for checking Internet connection. |
The Passwords view lets you change passwords for device users.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Current Password | The existing password. |
New Password | Password to change to. |
Reenter Password | Verification of new password. |
Password Strength | Indicates the security level of the new password. |
Note: For security reasons, the current password is never displayed.
To change password for a user:
The change password dialog opens.
The Firmware Upgrade view lets you upgrade the device firmware by using image files.
The Current Firmware Version shows currently installed firmware on the device.
With the Online Update function, you can perform an automatic search for upgrade image file on an upgrade server.
Note: The type of image file and server adddress and to use for upgrades is defined in Firmware options.
In the USB Firmware Upgrade section you can perform an automatic search for upgrade image file on USB devices, and perform the upgrade.
The check for upgrade starts a search for image files on any connected USB devices.
Note: The type of image file to use for upgrades is defined in Firmware options.
In the manual firmware upgrade section you can select an image file on your computer, upload it to the device, and perform the upgrade.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Select firmware file to upload | Upgrade image file on local computer. |
Start upgrade | Button to start upgrade. |
The Backup/Restore view allows you to manage backups and resets of the device.
In the Backup Configuration section you can save a copy of your device configuration or load a saved configuration into the device.
The Backup Settings view lets you select which services and settings to include in backups.
In the Backup Configuration section you can save a copy of your device configuration or load a saved configuration into the device.
The Save Configuration dialog opens.
The file is saved as a compressed file archive to your local computer.
To load a saved configuration after the factory reset:
The Load New Configuration dialog opens.
In the Factory Reset section you can restore the device to factory settings.
Alternatively, you can choose to perform a Soft Reset, where you select particular settings to keep when doing the factory reset.
Note: Reset restores your device to the factory defaults and removes any configurations you have made. You can only keep settings if you select them in the Soft Reset section.
These are the settings you can protect:
Settings | |
---|---|
Port redirects | |
Parental rules | |
User password | |
ICE config | |
WiFi Settings |
To perform a soft reset:
To perform the factory reset:
The Backup Settings view lets you select which services and settings to include in backups.
The list contains a selection of services and settings that can be included when performing backups.
You can change the status of any item by moving the associated slider.
The IUP view allows you to set up parameters for provisioning services and configurations with Inteno Universal Provisioning.
The IUP view is divided into several sections.
In the General section you can manage general provisioning settings.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn provisioning on or off. |
Update frequency start time | Time of day to start update. |
Update frequency | Hourly / Daily / Weekly . |
Export file | Download provisioning file. |
In the Main Provisioning Server section you can add a manual provisioning server address.
Note: This will override DHCP Discover Provisioning, even if it is enabled.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Reboot | Reboot after configuration has been applied. |
Keep user config | Address to the provisioning server. |
Enabled | Turn main provisioning server on or off. |
In the DHCP Discover Provisioning Server section you can enable automatic discovery of provisioning server.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn software update on or off. |
In the Software Update Config section you can configure online update of software.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn software update on or off. |
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enabled | Turn software update on or off. |
Default reset | Remove device configurations and set to default. |
Software URL | Location of software configuration. |
In the sub configs section you can add sub configurations of specific parts.
Item | Description |
---|---|
URL | Location of configuration file. |
Package Control | |
Enabled | Turn sub configurations on or off. |
To add a sub configuration:
The TR69 Settings view allows you to configure TR069 support for device management and provisioning from the WAN.
The TR69 view is divided into sections.
In the ACS section, you can configure ACS settings.
Item | Description |
---|---|
ACS User Name | User name for the ACS connection. |
ACS Password | Password for the ACS connection. |
URL | Location of the ACS server. |
Periodic Inform Enable | Turn Periodic Inform on or off. |
Periodic Inform Interval | Wait time between Periodic Inform calls for CPEs. |
DHCP Discovery | Turn automatic discovery of server on or off. |
In the CPE section, you can configure CPE connection settings.
Item | Description |
---|---|
WAN Interface | Interface for the connection. |
Connection Request User Name | User name for the ACS connection |
Connection Request Password | Password for the ACS connection. |
Port | Specific connection port. |
Log Severity Level | Logging information level. |
Log to console | Display logging messages in the console. |
Log to file | Turn logging to file on or off. |
Log file max size | Size of log file. |
Provisioning Code | Identifier for provisioning. |
The ICE view allows you to configure ICE support for device management and provisioning from the WAN.
Item | Description | |
---|---|---|
ICE | ||
Enabled | Turn ICE communication engine on or off. | If ICE is disabled, Cloud is disabled automatically. |
Cloud | ||
Status | Current status for the cloud service. | Offline /Registered |
Enabled | Turn Cloud service on or off. | Enables the XMPP connection to the Cloud URL. |
Cloud URL | URL for access to the the device. |
The Management view lets you configure WAN to SSH connections and access to services.
The Services view lets you configure WAN access to device services, if your device has this capability.
The OWSD view lets you configure settings for the open web-server daemon.
The server listens on a number of interfaces, and allows for separate configuration of access for each of them.
At the top of the page is a list of interfaces the server listens on.
When a particular interface is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
The Configure firewall rule section allows you to enable and configure a firewall rule for the selected service.
The firewall settings are displayed.
Select an interface in the list.
The SSH view allows you to configure SSH access, server instances, and keys.
The Dropbear Instances section lets you create SSH server instances with different parameters.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Password Autentication | Turn access with password authentication on or off. |
Port | Connection port. |
Enable Root Password Auth | Turn root access with password authentication on or off. |
Enable Root Login | Turn root account access on or off. |
Enable Forwarded Ports | Turn forwarded ports on or off. |
Interface | Restrict SSH server to particular interface. |
To add a SSH Server instance:
The SSH view allows you to configure SSH access, server instances, and keys.
To add a SSH key:
The CATV view lets you enable the CATV service, if your device has this capability.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Ebnable | Turn CATV / RF Enable on or off. |
The Services view lets you configure WAN access to device services, if your device has this capability.
At the top of the page is a list of services.
When a particular service is selected, details about it is shown in the configuration section.
The Configure firewall rule section allows you to enable and configure a firewall rule for the selected service.
Where applicable, the configuration is divided into separate sections for source and destination zones.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Enable WAN forwarding for this service | Turn WAN access on or off. |
Name | Identifier for the rule. |
Zone | Device / Any / LAN / WAN |
IP | IPv4 / IPv6 address. |
MAC | MAC address. |
Port | Port affected. |
IP version | Any / IPv4 / IPv6 |
Protocol | Protocol affected: (UDP / TCP / ICMP / TCP + UDP / ESP) |
Firewall action | Firewall action to perform. |
Select a service in the list.
The firewall settings are displayed.
The LED view allows you to enable or disable the status LEDs on your device.
The exact LEDs available vary with device type. The status of each LED is shown on the left of the name.
BROADBAND
DECT
DSL
EXT
INTERNET
LOGO
STATUS
VOICE1
WAN
WIFI
WPS
To switch a LED on or off:
The Power Management view allows you to manage CPU effiency and Ethernet hardware ports.
Item | Description |
---|---|
CPU Speed | CPU Sync. |
CPU r4k Wait | Sleep mode configuration. |
Ethernet Auto Power Down | Turn Ethernet Auto Power Down on or off. |
Energy Efficent Ethernet | Turn Energy-Efficient Ethernet on or off. |
The Services view lets you manage system services on the device.
The list contains system running and available services.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Priority | System priority. |
Service | Service identifier. |
Enable | Enable or disable service. |
Action | Buttons to start, stop and restart the service. |
The Restart page allows to restart your Internet connection and reboot your device.
Note: Restarting the device will disconnect all phone, Internet and TV services while the device is restarting.
To restart your device:
A confirmation dialog is shown
A restart dialog is shown.
When the device has restarted, the browser reconnects and the login dialog is shown.
The Status area provides an overview of the current situation for your device, network and services, and also contains diagnostic tools.
The System Status view displays information about a number of parameters regarding your gateway and its operation.
The IGPM TV Status views shows information about your IPTV services and their connection status.
The WiFi Status view shows information about the wireless network, and allows you to scan the local area for other wireless access points.
The USB devices views displays information about any USB devices connected to the gateway device.
Note: Supported file systems for USB devices are NTFS and FAT32.
The Voice Status view shows information about SIP accounts, phone numbers and voice lines connected to the device.
The System Status view displays information about a number of parameters regarding your gateway and its operation.
The System Status overview shows basic data about the device.
Option | Description | Sample value | |
---|---|---|---|
Hostname | The hostname for the gateway. | Inteno | |
Model | Gateway model. | DG400A | |
Serial No | Device serial number. | G542012033 | |
MAC Address | Device MAC address. | 00:22:07:A9:CE:F9 | |
Filesystem | Filesystem used in gateway storage. | UBIFS | |
Firmware Version | Version of installed firmware. | DG400-WU7U_INT3.5.5-160513_1617 | |
Other Bank | Alternative firmware. | DG400-WU7U_INT3.13-170904_1354 | |
Kernel Version | The gateway operating system kernel version. | 3.13 | |
BRCM Version | (Broadcom Devices only) Version number for the Broadcom driver. | 4.16L.04 | |
CFE Version | Version of CFE. | 4.16L.05 | |
Local Time | Time according to the gateway internal clock. | Mon May 23 2049 17:21:12 GMT+0200 (CEST) |
| Uptime | Time the gateway has been runnning since last startup. | 5d 2h 53m 14s |
| CPU | Percentage of CPU processing in use. | 0% |
| Active Connections | Number and percentage of connections to the gateway. | 259 / 7660 (3%)` |
The System Memory Status view displays information about memory usage in the device.
Option | Description | Sample value |
---|---|---|
Usage | Memory used by the system. | 163144 kB / 226308 kB (72%) |
Shared | Shared memory in use. | 0 kB / 226308 kB (0%) |
Buffered | Memory buffer in use. | 0 kB / 226308 kB (0%) |
Swap | Swap file system used. | 0 kB / 0 kB (0%) |
The System Storage Status view shows information about file systems and space used.
Option | Description |
---|---|
rootfs(/) | Root. |
tmpfs(/tmp) | Temporary. |
tmpfs(/dev) | Devices. |
tmpfs(/mnt) | Mount point. |
tmpfs(/dev/sda1) | An attached USB stick. |
The Processes view shows information about system processes and CPU usage.
The overview shows a summary of the processes:
Item | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Total number of processes | 96 | |
Total CPU usage | 9% |
You can access detailed realtime information about running processes, by clicking the information toggle.
To open the Details view:
In the details view, you can get detailed information about all processes running on the device.
For each process, information about a number of properties is displayed:
Property | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
PID | Process ID | Unique identifier for the process. |
PPID | Parent Process ID | Unique identifier for the parent process. |
USER | User running the service. | |
STAT | State Code. | |
VSZ | Virtual Memory Size. | |
VSZP | Virtual Memory Size Percentage. | |
CPU | CPU Percentage. | |
COMMAND | The command used to run the process. |
The Network Status view shows information about various aspects of your network.
The Routing Status view shows the static routes configuration for the various network types.
The Network Status view provides an overview of network elements for your device.
The WAN6 view shows information about any connected IPv6 network.
The LAN view shows information about the local network connected IPv4 network.
Option | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IP Address | IP address of the device on the local network. | Typically 192.168.1.1 . |
The WAN view shows information about any connected IPv4 network.
Option | Description | |
---|---|---|
IP Address | IP address for the device on the Internet. | |
Gateway | IP address to the internet gateway. | |
Primary DNS | First priority DNS server. | |
Secondary DNS | Second priority DNS server. |
The Connected Clients view shows a list of clients connected to the network.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Hostname | Client hostname. | |
MAC Address | Client MAC Address . | |
IPv4 Address | Client IPv4. | |
IPv6 Address | Client IPv6 address. | |
Active Connections | Number of active connections. |
The Routing Status view shows the static routes configuration for the various network types.
The IPv6 Neighbors view shows information about IPv6 devices in the network neighborhood.
The ARP status view shows information about ARP routes.
The table displays information about static ARP routes.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IPv4 Address | IPv4. | |
MAC Address | Client MAC Address . | |
Device | Network device type. | Displayed as virtual interface name. |
The IPv4 status view shows information about IPv4 routes.
The table displays information about static IPv4 routes.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IPv4 Address | IPv4. | |
Gateway | IP address to the internet gateway. | |
Genmask | Route genmask. | |
Device | Network device type. | Displayed as virtual interface name. |
The IPv6 status view shows information about IPv6 routes.
The table displays information about static IPv6 routes.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IPv6 Address | IPv6 address. | |
Next Hop | Next Hop device. | |
Device | Network device type. | Displayed as virtual interface name. |
The IPv6 Neighbors view shows information about IPv6 devices in the network neighborhood.
The table shows information about discovered IPv6 neighbors.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
IPv6 Address | IPv6 address. | |
IPv6 Status | Device status. | INCOMPLETE / REACHABLE / STALE / DELAY / PROBE |
Device | Connected device. | |
MAC address | MAC address for the device. | |
Router | Is the device a router? | true /false |
The RFC 4861 defines a number of statuses:
Status | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
INCOMPLETE | Address resolution is in progress and the link-layer address of the device has not yet been determined. | |
REACHABLE | Device is known to have been reachable recently (within tens of seconds ago). | |
STALE | Device is no longer known to be reachable but until traffic is sent to the neighbor, no attempt should be made to verify its reachability. | |
DELAY | Device is no longer known to be reachable, and traffic has recently been sent to the neighbor. Probes should be delayed in order to give upper-layer protocols a chance to provide reachability confirmation. | |
PROBE | Device is no longer known to be reachable, and unicast Neighbor Solicitation probes are being sent to verify reachability. |
The Active DHCP Leases view shows the status of any DHCP leases currently in use.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Hostname | Client hostname. |
IPv4 Address | Client IPv4. |
MAC Address | Client MAC Address. |
Leasetime remaining | Time until the lease expires. |
Column | Description |
---|---|
Hostname | Client hostname. |
IPv6 Address | Client IPv6 address. |
DUID | Client DUID. |
Leasetime remaining | Time until the lease expires. |
The NAT view shows a list of active NAT mappings in the device network.
The Active Connections gauge shows how many NAT mappings are in use out of the allowed total, as a percentage and as a count.
Connections to and from the local network to the external network are added to the table, allowing the device to handle traffic routing decisions.
The table displays information about active NAT connections.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Protocol | Communication protocol used. | |
Source | Internal IP address. | |
Destination. | External IP address. | |
Source Port | Internal Port. | |
Destination Port | External Port. |
The WiFi Status view shows information about the wireless network, and allows you to scan the local area for other wireless access points.
The general WiFI Status view displays information about your wireless channels and network interfaces.
The WiFi scan view allows you to scan the area around the device to find out what other access points are visible.
The general WiFI Status view displays information about your wireless channels and network interfaces.
For each wireless radioinformation is displayed about:
For each connected client, more infomation about the connected client is available.
To view more details about a client, click the expand button.
Item | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
IP-Address | Client IPv4 address. | 10.0.0.154 |
MAC-Address | Client MAC address. | 1A:97:1C:C7:76:63 |
DHCP | Does client use DHCP? | true |
Idle | Is the device transmitting? | 0 |
In Network | ID for connected network. | 74 |
RSSI | Received signal strength indicator value. | -42 dBm |
SNR | Signal to Noise Ratio value. | 41 dB |
Number of Antennas | Client antennas in use. | 2 |
TX Rate | Transmission rate. | 130 Mbps |
RX Rate | Receive rate. | 144 Mbps |
Flags | Provided device flags. | BRCM, WME, N_CAP, AMPDU |
HT Capabilities | Supported HT Capabilities (data rates). | LDPC, BW40, SGI20, SGI40 |
TX Total Packets | Total number of transmitted packets. | 22589 |
Unicast Packets | Total packets transmitted through unicast. | 224 |
TX Unicast Packets | Packets transmitted through unicast. | 224 |
TX Multicast/Broadcast Packets | Packets transmitted through multicast. | 22365 |
TX Failures | Transmission failures. | 0 |
RX Data Packets | Received packets. | 440 |
RX Unicast Packets | Received packets transmitted through unicast. | 209 |
RX Multicast/Broadcast Packets | Received packets transmitted through multicast. | 231 |
TX Data Packets Retried | Resent data packets. | 0 |
TX Total Packets Sent | Total data packets transmitted through unicast. | 7 |
TX Packets Retries | Retransmitted data packets. | 1 |
TX Packets Retry Exhausted | Data Packets failed after retry. | 0 |
RX Total Packets Retried | Retransmitted data packets. | 107 |
The WiFi Utilization view displays information about usage for the connected devices in the network.
Each available radio is displayed in a table, with one client per row.
The WiFi scan view allows you to scan the area around the device to find out what other access points are visible.
The scan results table displays all detected access points and information about each in a graphical manner.
The horizontal axis shows the discovered channels.
The vertical axis shows the signal strength, according to RSSI.
Color | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Red | Poor. | |
Yellow | Acceptable. | |
Green | Good. |
The scan results table displays all detected access points and information about each:
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
SSID | SSID identifying the access point. | |
Frequency | WiFi frequency band for the access point. | |
Channel | Channel used by the access point. | |
RSSI | RSSI strength for the signal. | |
Noise | Noise level for the connection to the access point. | |
Cipher | Cipher used for encryption in the access point. | |
WPS | WPS version used by the access point. |
To scan a frequency band:
The results for the selected band are displayed in the graph and table.
The Band Steering view shows information about band steering.
The status section shows the current band steering status.
The information is displayed in the STA info summary
table.
Column | Description |
---|---|
STAMAC | Station (client) MAC address. | | Interface | Client interface name. | | TimeStamp | Timestamp for the steering event. | | Txrate | Transmission rate. |
RSSI | Received signal strength indicator . |
Bounce | Does the client bounce back to a particular bandafter steering? (yes /no ). |
Picky | Does the client prefer a particular band? (yes /no ). |
PSTA | Is the client a proxy station? (yes /no ). |
DUALBAND | Is the client dual-band capable? (yes /no ). |
The log section contains the log file, which shows the band steering events.
The information is displayed in the Band Steering Record
table.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Seq | |
TimeStamp | Timestamp for the steering event. |
STAMAC | Station (client) MAC address. | | Fmch | From channel (hex code). |
To_ch | To channel (hex code). |
Reason | Event (hex code). |
Description | Description of event. |
The DSL status view shows information about any DSL connections to the device.
The DSL Status Information section shows the status for the DSL line.
Status | Description |
---|---|
Idle | No connection. |
Handshake | Searching for connection, negotiating transfer. |
Training | Connection found, testing cable. |
Showtime/Active | Connection established. |
The DSL Mode section shows the DSL.
The Bit Rate section shows transmission rates for streams in bits per second (bps).
Column | Description |
---|---|
Downstream | Rate to the device. |
Upstream | Reate from the device. |
The Operating Data section shows signal strength for the DSL line.
The SNR Margin section displays the signal-to-noise margin for the streams.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Downstream | To the device. |
Upstream | From the device. |
The Loop Attentuation section shows signal attentuation for the streams.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Downstream | To the device. |
Upstream | From the device. |
The Error Counter section lists the number of (discovered) errors for the connection.
The FEC Corrections table shows FEC corrections for the streams.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Downstream | To the device. |
Upstream | From the device. |
The CRC Corrections table shows CRC corrections for the streams.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Downstream | To the device. |
Upstream | From the device. |
The Cell Statistics section shows the number of cells transmitted for the streams.
Column | Description |
---|---|
Received | To the device. |
Transmitted | From the device. |
The IGPM TV Status views shows information about your IPTV services and their connection status.
The table shows any connected IGMP TV channels and information about each:
The USB devices views displays information about any USB devices connected to the gateway device.
Note: Supported file systems for USB devices are NTFS and FAT32.
The USB device information table shows information about the USB devices.
Column | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Device ID | Identification for the USB device. | |
Vendor ID | Identification for the manufacturer. | |
Vendor Name | Name of the manufacturer. | |
Device Name | Name reported by the USB device. |
The CATV Status view shows information about CATV services connected to the device.
Note: Available on EG300 & EG400 only.
Option | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Inteno model | Model. | CATV-302 |
VPD | Reverse voltage on Protection Device. | -inf dBm |
RF | Range. | 75.7 dBµV |
RF enable | Enable RF. | OFF |
The SFP Status view shows information about SFP connectors enabled in the device.
Information is shown in two tables; ROM information and DDM information.
Note: Available on EG300 & EG400 only.
The DDM table shows information about the DDM retrieved from the SFP.
Option | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
voltage | Port voltage. | 3.1872 (V) |
current | Port current. | 26.448 (mA) |
tx-pwr | Broadcasting power. | 0.3530 (mW) |
tx-pwr-dBm | Broadcasting power. | -4.5223 (dBm) |
rx-pwr | Received signal power. | 0.3026 (mW) |
rx-pwr-dBm | Received signal power. | -5.1913 (dBm) |
rx-pwr-type | Received power type. | average |
The ROM table shows information about the ROM.
Option | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
connector | Connector type. | SC |
ethernet | Ethernet type. | LX |
encoding | Encoding type. | 8B10B |
rate | Line rate. | 1300 |
single-mode | Single mode distance. | 20000 |
vendor | Port manufacturer or vendor. | Skylane Optics |
oui | Organizationally Unique Identifier. | 00:25:cd |
pn | Product name. | SBU35020DR3D000 |
rev | ROM Revision. | A |
sn | Serial Number | b19bmjrx1857 |
date | ROM date. | 2016-04-21 |
ddm | DDM version | 9.3 |
The Diagnostic Utility allows you to perform diagnostic tests from the web interface.
The Speed Test view allows you to perform a TP Test for your network, using your device as the endpoint.
The Ping Test view allows you to perform a Ping for a selected host.
To perform a ping test against an endpoint:
The result of the ping is shown below the utility.
PING 127.0.0.1 (127.0.0.1): 56 data bytes 64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.208 ms 64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.130 ms 64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.129 ms 64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.146 ms 64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: seq=4 ttl=64 time=0.130 ms --- 127.0.0.1 ping statistics --- 5 packets transmitted, 5 packets received, 0% packet loss round-trip min/avg/max = 0.129/0.148/0.208 ms
The Tracing tool view allows you to perform a Traceroute Test for a selected host.
To perform a tracroute test against an endpoint:
The result of the trace is shown below the utility.
Trace results:
traceroute to 127.0.0.1 (127.0.0.1), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets 1 127.0.0.1 0.033 ms
The Speed Test view allows you to perform a TP Test for your network, using your device as the endpoint.
Option | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Direction | Traffic direction to test. | Up and Down , Up , Down . |
Package Size | Size of test data packages to send. | Size of test packages to send. |
Speedtest Server | Server to use for the test. | A number of default servers are provided, but you can edit the list. |
Test results:
Downstream: 103.45 Mbit/s Upstream: 44.10 Mbit/s
If you have additional test servers you want to use, you can add them to the dropdown list.
To add a test server:
A dialog is shown allowing you to enter parameters:
Servers in the test server list can be removed.
To remove a test server:
The server is removed from the list immediately.
The Realtime Graphs view provides access to graphical representations of status for the device. The graphs scroll as time progresses and lines indicate the current status.
The Load graph shows device load averages for different time recent periods.
The display is shown in realtime, and the lines represent the average over different intervals:
Color | Time |
---|---|
Blue | 1 minute |
Red | 5 minutes |
Purple | 15 minutes |
The Traffic graph shows upload and download traffic for the interfaces.
Each interface is available in its own tab. The display is shown in realtime, with lines representing traffic in kbit/s:
Color | Traffic |
---|---|
Blue | Downstream. |
Red | Upstream. |
The Connections graph shows the number of currently active connections for the device.
The lines representing different connection types:
Color | Traffic |
---|---|
Blue | TCP connections. |
Red | UDP connections. |
The Voice Status view shows information about SIP accounts, phone numbers and voice lines connected to the device.
Information is shown in two tables.
Option | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
Name | SIP account name. | Uses type and number unless otherwise set. |
User | SIP user. | |
Domain | SIP domain. | |
Registration interval | SIP registration interval domain. | |
Last registration | Last registration time. | |
Status | Current status of the line. |
The Voice lines shows a list of connected voice lines.
Option | Description | |
---|---|---|
Name | Voice line name. | Uses type and number unless otherwise set. |
State | Current state of the line. |
The Event Log view lets you view and manage the event log for the device.
The Log section contains log settings and lets you download the logs.
Item | Description |
---|---|
Download All Logs | Save the logs to the local computer. |
Limit Log List | Limit the number of events. |
Filter Log Messages By Source | Filter out events by freetext search in source. |
Filter By Type | Filter out event types by Logging level. |
Filter By | Filter out events in the log (firewall / network / system / iptv ). |
For JUCI version 3.10.0+, online help is enabled by default.
However, if you upgrade from an earlier version, this option may not have been enabled. If so, you may need to connect to your device via SSH and run console commands to enable the setting.
To enable online help:
ssh admin@192.168.1.1
Note: The address may be different from 192.168.1.1
for your device. Use the same address as for the usual login.
Note: You may need to enable SSH access to your device from the System > Management > SSH.
Note: For login, use the password defined in System > Passwords.
The command line commands to run are the following:
To enable the help:
uci set juci.wiki.visible=1
To apply the setting:
uci commit juci